X Little Pu 3 J' - r . a 1 -iHHIi"- GREAT DOWAGER, . WHO MADE PU YI Lad jr. (Copyright, 1909. by Frank fJ. Carpenter.) EKINQ, UC. (Special Corra- P epondence of Tha B.) Under I the shadow of tha Pink Forbid den city, go near its yellow pal ace that I can almost hear the almond - eyed nurea alnsinr 3 i iii their lullablea, I wriu of little Pu Tl. tha baby ruler of China. Of all the children on earth he rank flrat In ImfKirtance. Ha baa under him a country larger than Europe, and hla aubjecta are one-fourth of mankind. They worship him aa heav en's own son, and from now on tha oldest and highest officials will remain on their knees In his presence. Ha Is so holy that tha house In which he was born has been Klven up by his parenta, and, according to custom, it can ba ueed only aa a templa 'hereafter. Little Pu Tl is too saored for his own mother to have charge of him. He haa ,bn taken away from her, and given over to the cars of tha new empress dowager, that Is, to the wife of Kwang Bu, who died last November. His real mother cannot enter the palaca except by permission, and the only way sha can see her own baby Is by calling upon tha dowager and asking to have him brought Into her presenoe. If tha dowager consents tha eunuchs will carry the mes sage to the Imperial nurses and they will trot in Pu Tl. - - - I am told that Ms majesty cried much upon his accession. He was then t years old, as the Chinese reckon such things. Ha was only S years by our accounting, and like most Manchu chtldren of that a;e, was still being nursed by his mother. When they tore him away he howled like a young satyr, and tha eunuohs and other palaca officials were In despair. They published a notice asking for twenty-five Manchu wet nurses. Thesawera straight way brought to tha palace. They were examined as to their age. beauty and health by the imperial physlolana, and aa ' ti result . the emperor's cries wera soon drowned In milk. How r Yl Gets Hla Job. But let me tell you how little Pu YS comes to be ruler of this great Chinese empire. I call him Pu Yl, although since hla accession his name haa been changed to the more dignified Imperial title, Hsuan Tung. But Pit Yl Is mora baby like, and , It brings us closer to tha little one aa ho Is. It Is tha name he received from hla parents. It was his milk name given just - , r-iju jf, 'ft vt New Oliver-Carnegie Library He very beginning of library T aollvlty In tha town of Onawa, la., was In a collection of books of fictloa plaoed In a general store and rented out to willing patron. This undertaking by Miss Joanna Oliver was followed up In 190S by her father, Judge Addison Oliver, with a cenerous gift of to.OOO for the establish ment of a frte public library for the town of Onawa and Monona county, on the con- dltlon that the town purchase a suitable building and provide an annual tux of ? mil! fcr support conditions upon which the women's vote helped effectually In carrying the day. . The Congregational church. In that year vacated for the new building, was selected i as suitable and purchastd for the use of the library. A corner of the building was partitioned off for a workroom and the old primary room was set apart as the . reference room, trustees' room and retiu- lar meeting place of tha Women' club of I th town. Wall case war t up, th en tire floor was covered with cork carpet, the woodwork painted a cream color and ; the walls .apeied in dull greens, alto gether presenting a surprisingly attractive Interior. Miss Fannie Puren. now librarian at Ottumwa, was sent to Onawa by the State Library commission to organize the library. Sha was assisted by aeveral young Progress in Public Lighting OT 104 years ago Broadway, New N York, after nightfall war al most pitch dark and infested with roughea and thieve. It wa not saf to travel It by night without armed guard and boy currying torches. Today thl great ' thoroughfare la famous aa tha "Great White Way," because of tha brilliancy of kits night Illumination. T Leat than a hundred years ago street i lighting wa opposed by th very bfkt men ' of that day on theological ground as being ! a rrw.u;nptuous thwarting of the intentions ' of Protldime. which had appointed dark I nets for th hour of night. It wa oppoacd i on medical ground, a gas and oil were secUred unwholesome, and thay argued toat It was a bad thlug to encourage peo ple to tay outdoor bight and caieh cold. Yi, the Baby Ruler of China's T-tSsrr ! Si vt 1 1' ' V1 ' I. .. - :. u .. 4 6 i I'M fin w L EMPEROR. Prom a Photo by Palace a month after birth. Before that ha was known aa "tha little one" and aa "baby" or "darling." At the age of one month his head was shaved and ha waa known aa Pu Yt. Tha hair has alnce grown and it la now braided In four long plaits which stand out Ilka tails on tha differ ent aldea of hla head. Tha Tl, or the last part of tha name, Is that which distinguishes him from the other children of the same generation of tha imperial family. According to prece dent and tha unwritten law of tha coun try the emperors should run in one long uninterrupted suocesslon from father to son. If there are no aons, tha children of other princes are adopted to take thoir places, and this Is the case with Pu Tl, Kwang Bu had no children, so Juat beforfl dying the great empress dowager sent out an edict that Pu Tl should ba regard ed aa the adopted son of Kwang Su and heir to the throne. This was done, not withstanding Prince Chun, little Pu Yl's father who was the brother of tha em peror, Kwang Bu, was still living, and that In any other country ha would have been Kwang Su'a successor. The baby em peror is thus really the nephew of the last emperor, but he Is his son by adoption. Pu Tl la 'the great-grandson of the Em peror Tao Kwang, who ruled China from 1S21 to 1930. His grandfather by adop tion was Emperor Hslen Fang, who mar ried tha great empress dowager, of whom Pu Yl in- hla edlcta now speak of as his "holy grandmother." Row Pa Yl Waa Crowned. I was In Peking when Pu Yl waa crowned. Tha ceremonlea took place In side tha Pink Forbidden City, and only tha highest offlolala of China were present. Tha baby was brought forth and made to go through tha rites fixed for tha occa sion. Soma of the requirements ha oould only perform by proxy, but word was sent out over the country giving hi Imperial actions, and according to the publications he acted as a young man rather than a baby. He was really carried Into tha throne room In the arms of hia father, Prince Chun, who had already been mad tha Imperial regent. I am told ha cried when he came In, and that his father quieted him by promising! to buy him a pony. Tha officials wore their gorgeous oourt woman volunteers, of whom Mia Mauda Oliver, nleoe of Judge Addison Oliver, wa unanimously chosen by th newly-appointed board to be th librarian Th library waa formally opened for th circulation of book February IS, 1802, with 1,975 volume on th shelve, nearly all eeceailoned and catalogued. Sine that time the library ha been opened for thre day a week for seven hour a day. Sur passing the expectations of tha moat san guine enthusiasts, tha circulation for tha first year was 10,326 books, with a separate pay collection of seventy-five book circu lating 864 times. Six hundred dollars wa received from th tax levy. The total ex penditures for tha first year amounted to 12.5:4. The librarian attended the summer school for library training at Iowa City, and under her administration tha library grew and prospered greatly. Upon her resignation In 1908, Miss Stella Wiley, a graduate of Pratt Institute library achool, succeeded. The people of Onawa were not content to rest with the possession of their well selected stock of books, but looked forward to the time when a real library building might ba theirs. One more Judge Addison Oliver came forward with an offer of an additional 110,000 toward a new building and 110,000 endowment for the purchase of books. It was then suggested that pneumonia and fevers. On moral, philo sophic grounda It was held that the peo ple's moral standard would be lowered by street lighting, aa tha drunkard would feel ther waa no hurry to get home, and late sweetheartlng would be encouraged, w hurra black night sent people home early, thus preserving them from a multitude of Ins.- They also argued that lights would make thieves .alert and that national Illu minations would loe their effect if ther were tret lighting rry night Seventy-flv yeara ago streets war being lighted with oil and ga. Twenty-rtv year ago the electrlo lights wera introduced and the eyateinaUo lighting of streets began; now ther 1 scarcely a hamlet ao small It cannot boast of lighted street. Men who kuow aay th daw a of artificial light 1 juat breaking. Review ot Uerlewa, ill THE OMAHA' . 1 U , :'! 7 ! i (tf dresses. Tha new empress dowager was on the throne, and, according to the Pe king G a setts, the baby emperor got down before her and mad three kneeltngs and nine prostrations. The officials also kneeled when they asked hla majesty to accept the throne, and after a lot of other flubdubbery they placed him on "the Jew eled seat with hi face to tha south." If tha regular caremonlea were carried out as Is asserted this little two-year-old mon arch then changed hla clothes a half dozen times, and at the end put on somber gar ments as a sign of his grief for the deaths of Kwang Su and the great dowager. The Golden Phoenix. All that I saw of tha crowning was from the gata of Chlen Men, on the top of the wall, opposite the tower which rises above the gate of tha Forbidden olty. I was several hundred feet away, but I could sea tha gorgeous officials come out of the palace and stand under that tower waiting for tha proclamtion of the crown ing of his majesty an It came down from heaven, In the mouth of the Phoenix. This, according to the Chinese tradition, Is a part of every emperor's coronation, and the fiction waa' carried out In reality as far as appearances went. A golden bird with the proclamation In Its mouth was let down by a string from the tower, and was caught as It fell by tha proper officials below. They took out the paper and put It In a sedan chair, which was covered with yellow silk, and then started In a grand procession to lay It away In the Imperial archives. There were soldiers to guard the procession, and men with whips went In advance to drive tha com mon people out of the way. Incense ws carried In front of tha chair bearing the proclamation, and men with great umbrel laa of Imperial yellow followed behind. Tha officials who went witn it were gor geously dressed, and tho whole was really Imposing. i-The procession marched right down to tha gata above whloh I waa stand ing, and I photographed It aa It passed on below m. Pa Yl's First Edlets, The baby monarch began to work im mediately after he came to the throne. According to law, all tha Imperial edicts are put forth In hla name, and many have been Issued which seem ridiculous as com ing from the mouth of a t-year-old child. I understand that they war written by the great atatrsman and scholar, Chang Chi Tung, but that th people auppoaa that they -come from tha mouth of tha emperor. Here is tha way In which Pu Yl describes his feelings aa to the deaths of tha emporer" and the old empress dow ager: "All who have blood and breath cannot but mourn. We weep tear of blood and beat upon our hearts. How can we bear to express our feelings? The late emperor haa ascended the dragon to be a guest on high, and wa have received tha com mands of tha empress dowager to enter upon tha succession. Wa havo lamenteJ NEW tf Andrew Carnegie could ba per suaded to donat 810,000 for th build ing such a library might ba built a would do credit to a town of twice th size of Onawa. The first appeal on the part of tha secretary of the library board to Mr. Carnegie was met by a courteous reply congratulating th town of Onawa on tha possession of such a cltlsen as Judge Oliver and offering felicitations to htm personally upon th opportunity of which he had availed himself In giving to th town a free library and declining to add to his beneficence. Mr. Carnegie had nut reckoned on the argumentative and hypnotic pewer of tha dauntless secretary of the library board, and after a third ap peal a reply came from Mr. Carnegie's secretary ajklng that he be privileged to add 810.tt to th building fund with th well-known proviso that the community furnish a site and agree to supply an an nual maintenance fund of at leaat 10 per cent of tha amount of th gift condition heretofore met In th acceptance of Judge Oliver' donation. Tha condition were put before th tax-' payer for a vet an 4 war aoceptej, Two " J L rj ; . fci t SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 12, 1909. 4 ' T If" ? '-4' Si w ONE OF PU YI'S PALACES. to earth and Heaven, and we stretch 'out our hands walling . our Inefficiency. Wa had hoped that her majesty would be vigor ous and live to be 100 years old that wa might receive her Instructions. But her toll day and night weakened her, and on the 21st day of the moon, when the late Mir peror ascended the dragon to ba a guest on high, her grief was so excessive that th end suddenly came. On tha following day she took the fairy ride, and ascended to tha far country. Wa shall strive to be temperate so aa to comfort the spirit of the late empress dogawer in Heaven." It was at this same time that the baby emperor sent hla first telegram to th United States. It wa addressed to th president and read: "Again tha imperial family Is unfortun ate. Again we have met great calamity. Tha 22d day of tha present moon our holy grandmother, the great empress dowager, wa taken up by the fairies to th far-off land. Our mourning and lamentations have no limit. Prostrate, we reflect how the gracious counsel and excellent virtues of the great departed were revered by all be yond tha seas. China ha long been on terms of friendly Intimacy with the United States and your excellency, the president, on receiving this new will surely mourn with us." Where the Baby Monarch Lives. I wish I could take you Into the home Of little Pu YL From now on he will live In the palaces of the Pink Forbidden City In tha most secluded part of Peking. To this city strangers are never admitted, ex cept they be members of the foreign le gations or ladies Invited to visit the em press. Such visits have been mad only within the last few years, and it is a ques tion whether any but tha minister will b admitted In tha future. I have Information, however, from con fidential source among the highest Chi nese, which enables me to give you one or two peeps at these royal quarters. Tho palaces are surrounded by a yellow tiled wall more than two miles In length, and many feet high. There are huge .towers over the gatea to this wall, and officers In uniform stand Just below. They keep out all but the servants of the palace and the highest of Chinese officials, and the ordinary Chinaman has no Idea of what goes on within. It Is only by standing upon the wall of tha Tartar City that a stranger can see anything, and then only the roofs. All he sees la a wilderness of high, broad buildings, covered with bright, yellow Ulfts, which, fillatea Ilk gold under tha un. The building run up and down both sides of a lake, upon which are boats, and inside which on a little island Is the palace where Kwang Su, the laxt emperor, was confined by the great dowager, when he would not do as she commanded. It may b that aa Pu Yl grows older he may object to the orders of the present empress dowa ger and have the same prison home for a time. The Imperial baby will have many at tendants. There are something like 10.000 souls In th palacea and tha buildings Just Completed and a OLIVER-CARNEGIE LIBRARY, AT ONAWA. excellent lota on th main business street of the city were donated by Messrs. B. U. and P. K. Holbrook. and a third lot bought by th residents of the east side. Plans for tha new building were submitted by vtriuiu architects. Those of Patton A Miller of Chicago were deemed moat satisfactory. The, contract waa let early In the fall to W. O. Merten of Emerson, Neb., and the work of excavation waa soon under way. Th idea of permanence was a funda mental one In planning the building. It waa Judge Oliver a wish to construct ku edifice which might endure through the changing years. The building has been designed and equipped with the greatest regard for its usefulness and artistic ap pearance. It is an example of modern renaissance style of architecture, built with a high basement and two stories. The ma terials of construction for the foundation and bearing walla are brick and stone, with fireproof construction for partition and floors. Tha roof is a red tile. The Interior woodwork la of white oak, with art and craft finish. The wall ar painted In plain color, tho iccll abovt being do u oUa, Jh entlr floor Four Hundred Million People 'A V. ! i i about and It Is their duty to do as tha empress dowager wills. There are mat servants and woman servants, as well aa princes and ladles In waiting. One of th largest classes of the household Is com posed of eunuchs. They have been tha servants of the Chinese emperor as far back as the time of Christ, and they ar mentioned In Chinese history about 1.000 B. C. There are mora than 1,000 of them employed to serv hi Imperial majetfty and each has a Job of his own. Tha eunuchs belong to forty-alght different de partments. Some are mere servants, others take care of the Imperial silks, jewelry and all sorts of treasures, and some wait on the ladles in the employ of the emperor. The empress dowager ha her own fore, and there are also lama priests, who supply the spiritual wants of the household. PNTalan-LI, The Sejneeaer. At th head of these eunuchs is a man who has cut a big figure In the recent his tory of China. He was for year the favor ite of th great dowager, and It wa charged that he larpely ruled China through her. He has committed all sort of extortion and has made a great for tune by squeezing th officials Who through him got the ear of the old empress dow ger. It is sure that he Is now a man of enormous wealth. . Indeed, h had ao much money In the Chinese banks of Peking that he created a panio when the otd empress died by saying that ha was going to withdraw his deposit. A half dozen banks then failed on this account. This man's name Is LI Lien Ylr.g, or, as he is sometimes called, Pl-Tsiau-Lt or "Cobbler LI," because h I the ton of a cobbler of Tung Chow, about fourteen miles from Peking. LI wa taken Into the palace a a boy,- and grew up under the empress dowager. He was In charge of her toilet and personal wants, and later on became her business manager. He Invested her money In pawnshops and in loan at high rate of Interest and organized a system by which millions of dollars oame Into the palace. Toward th last he wa placed in charge of all of th servants, and at the great dowager'a death wis the head of her Imperial household. X understand that he holds the same position today and that the new empress dowager has made htm the chief of the eunuchs. Kew Rmprru Dowager, But before I go farther let me tell you something about the new empress dowager, the woman whom Pu Yl from now on must regard as his mother, and to whom, during his childhood, he must be subservient. She is the late empress of China, the wife of Kwang Su, who died last November. Sha Is the niece of the old empress dowager, and was first cousin of the late emperor, whom she married little more than twenty years ago. Her father was 'Duke Chow, a noble Manchu, and her mother a Manchu lady. I was In Peking at tha time of nor marriage and saw the carts containing tha girls from whom ah waa chosen on their r. & " e I space la covered with the best quality of cork carpet of a dark green shade that matches the green tone in the wood finish. The main entrance vestibule leads with winging door Into th delivery room. To right and left are the reading room and the children's room and behind la the stark room. These three rooms are really one, being separated by wide archways. Back of the reading room and children's room are two smaller rooms for reference and administration. The delivery room 1 deco rated with Kesota marble to the height uf seven feet. Marble bases extend about tha lower floor walls. The reading room has movable shelving all around the room, three feet high, except under th windows, where space 1 taken by radiators. The rack for current periodicals Is built Into the wall and paneled above to bring It on a line with the (helve. Th tables, In arts and crafts flrit.ih, are oblong and supplied with branched light. Tne children room baa th same gen eral shape and dimensions aa th reading room, and la located la tha opposite frout corner of the building. Tha shelving runs all and one-baif feat bigb, and abov it 1 I- . .i.ii-.., ,i j, , W .. I I,, . . 7' -r- eV : f . -4 ' MANCHU WOMAN AND CHILD way to tha palaca. According to law, tho emperor of China can marry none but a full-blooded Manchu. It 1 also provided that when he reaches marriageable age all th daughter of th Manchu nobility be tween 11 and 11 are to go to th palace In order that they may be looked over by the empress dowager, and the best ones elected for the imperial consorts. This 1 what will occur fourteen years from now, when little Pu Yl I It, and It 1 just what took place In 1SS8, when the empress dow ager was picked out as the wife of Kwang Su. Of th crowd which then came there were only three who were kept, and, the ohief of these wa Ye-ho-no-lah, who now rule tho palace. The other two were hi majesty' secondary wives, and were re spectively IS and IS yeara of age. ' The Selection was made by the empress dowager, and, as Ye-ho-no-lah waa her nleoe, tha choice probably went by favor rather than beauty. This woman is now between 80 and 40 years of age I am told she la short and lean and that the haa a yellow complexion, almond eyes, a large mouth and a long chin. Her nose Is bigger than that of most Chines ladles, and her teeth are decayed. Sha 1 yald to ba a woman of tact and ' good sehte. She has not th force of th old empress dowager and will probably allow herself to be ruled by the prince regent and the other high Chinese officials. She will, however, be supreme In the palace and will have much to do with the education and training of bis Imeprlal majesty. Pu Yl's Hdauatlon. And this brings me" to the question of Pu Yl's education. The officials are al ready discussing what It shall be. and the more progressive of them want him trained along modern lines. They propose to hire foreign govrnetue to teach, ,hiui tho modern language, a Is done by the Im perial families of Europe, and he Is to have a knowledge of our civilization. Tho achool books now In use In the new Chi nese schools are being examined with a view to preparing some special ones for this little baby. He will be made to learn the Chinese classics and to commit tho wisdom of Confucius and Menclus. When he reaches tha right age he will have man teacher, who, according to tha old Chi nese custom, will remain on their knes while they Instruct him. No ordinary man Dedicated a fries of Elizabeth Shlppen Green pic ture. Th picture above the dark wood are highly decorative. Built Into the wall are th children' catalogue, a cupboard for the picture file, and above a bulletin board. Four low tables are used of the am size as In the reading room. Tha large, semi-octagonal charging desk stands in th center of the building. All wltohea for lights on this floor are at the charging desk. The reference room Is just back of the reading room. It is fur nished with a long table and shelving about the wall for bound magazines and reference book. It baa doors from the reading room, and Into the large stack room, which Is Just back of the delivery desk. Stacks are to be supplied here aa needed. Here is also a lavatory for gen eral use. Back of the children's room Is the librarian's room, which Is provided with a desk, closed shelves and ruhboirls. This room open into a small hallway, which has an outside door leading to the talrway to th second floor. ' The space of the second floor Is dlvtdfd Into a large auditorium across the front of the building covered with cork carpet and providing a seating capacity for 200 people. This room is separated by double Oldest Land TRETCHINQ across Canada. SI north or the St. Lawrence, and I ending In the regions about the I .mirna rf tV, Vf I .ul -Dt r.r.1 I- - range of low granite hills called tha Laurentlan Highlands. These hills are really mountains that are almost worn out, for they are tha oldest land In America and, ac cording to Agassis, the oldest in the world. In tha daya when there was nothing but water on the face of th globe, these moun tanls cam up a long island of primitive rock with universal ocean chafing against ita shores. None of tha other continents had put in their appearance at tha time America wa thus looking up. Th United State began to com to light by th grad ual uplifting of thl land to th north and the appearance of th top of th Alle gheniea, which wera tha next In order. Later th Rockies started up. Th United State grow aoutbward from WlaoonaU 4 -h t Vi 'VT' ytf - PU YI LOOKS LIKE THIS. Is supposed to stand In hla presence, al though In th reformation which China 1 now undertaking thl may ba changed. There Is one thing sure, and that Is they will never whip little Pu Yl. When Kwang Su was little he had hi whipping boya, who atudled with him and recited th am lesson a he. If hi majesty dll wrong th teaoher wa allowed to whip on of these boys, and this waa supposed, to answer th purpose. If not, th great dowager took the matter In hand and or dered an eunuch to punish Kwang Bu. Th same will probably ba tha nil a to Fa YL Baby Emperor's Playthings. This Imperial Infant will have all aorta of toy. The Chinese ar famous for making uch thing. They bar anlmala of wood,, iron, paper and cloth. They, have mechanical toy and toy which teach certain things. Tha last mpro had many foreign toy and tha imperial 1 baby will first learn of tha new clviUaa- II tton by playthings brought from abroad, He will have railroad trains, phonograph and electrical car line, and ba may per- . haps hava Teddy Bear and Blllla Po- j sums. He will have watchea and clock ' of all kinds. Indeed, ther 1 already j large collection of auch In the Imperial, J palaces, and when th last emperor wa a boy he amused himself by taking ther I to pieces and trying" to put them together I again. He did not always succeed, anot the old empress dowager was In constant , fear the Kwang Su would ruin th clock" I she loved most. As his baby majesty grow older ho should have all sorts of tutors and it may be that he will be allowed to travel ove the country and see something of his em pire as It really Is. Such a thing ha not been possible with th emperor of tho, pasf. but Infant majesty la no morw" secluded tow than the mikado was when, he was a baby, and the present crown prince of Japan goes everywhere. Chin, is so rapidly changing that it Is Imposslbl to tell what th people mayt allow their emperor to do before he grows up and tskes the actual Tula In his hands. If ho lives, he will surely be the master of 400, 000 000 millions, and of what may then pro bably be the richest and greatest manu facturing nation on earth. FRANK Q. CARPENTER. at Onawa sliding doors from a, large room to b used by the women's club. A smaller room for the trustees' use, a toilet room and hall are also on this floor. The basement, as yet unfinished, may ultimately be used for an additional stock room and work room. The building is lighted throughout by electricity and heated from the power house In the same block. Light, heat and telephone service ar supplied gratia by the city. It has been sought to make th new building a means of public comfort a well as public education, and so to attract peo ple as yet little accustomed to the minis try of books. The whole building Is per vaded with the spirit of open shelve. There are now over 6,000 book in tho library. Th circulation last year num bered 14.155, of which 49 per cent war Juvenile books. The endowment of 110,000, furnixhlng MX additional book fund per year, will enable the supply of book to be constantly freshened by tha beat and latest contributions to literature along all lines. The llht ary spirit Is growing In and about Onawa. Th building may go to decay, but the animating spirit whloh re sides in good books cannot die. in the World and westward from th Blue Ridge. As, early view of the country would bavoj showed a large Island which I now north ern Wisconsin, and a long thin tongue of this primitive rock sticking down from Can ada into Minnesota, and these two growing tatea looking out over th water at th mere beginnings of mountain range east and west. They were waiting for the rent of the United Statea to appear. AUantla Monthly. In Those Daya. Marc Antony turned Impatiently to tho energetic young man who bad touched bia elbow. "tit. Antony," said th young man, "can you tell me bow much money Caesar left hi family V "I oannot," Bald Marc, abruptly. "I cam, to bury Caesar, not to appraise him!" And th reporter, wno wa not very curate, want away and misquoted Antony.! a4 fli4 14at fanouaa;. AUlX,l5ft4cbJ. ;