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TE PICKENS SEN1INEfL4 URN. Entered April 23, 1903 at Pickens, S. C. as second class matter, under act ofConjgres of .1larch :, 1S9 39th Year PICKENS. S. C. JULY, 8, 1909. Number 14 State News I Ul th Ll.ted Ntw from Zyir A feature of the fair in Colum bia this fall will be a dog show. The Civic club of Abbeville has undertaken to build a hospital in that town. Sixty-three cases have been docketed for trial at the Green ville term of court. The people of Barn well county have started a movement in the interest of 6ood roads. Thomas B. Cturtis, a well known lawyer of Charlcston, is dead at his home. A '3-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. I L1-"ies of Yorkville, was bitten by a garter snake. The Funeral Directors' and Embalmers association of South Carolina i. ii session in Charles ton. BeI and Fr.m1aa Looney, who are wanteL in Hartsville, Ga., on the charge of swindling, have lben arrested in Gaffnev. The Pee Dee Trust company, has been organized at Florence with a capital stock of -50,000. 'The company will write insur .ance and loan money. The young 1- ;school teacher who W"assaultebi -G9orge t 1is identified the negro nder arrest as her assailant. She begged her father to kill the negro. In the court of conmnon pleas in Columbia a jury awarded Miss Clara Best damages in the sum oif 3,000 for personal inju ries. She sued the Columbia Traction company for ,-5,COO. Rev'. J. R. Moore of Westmin ster has been called to the pasto rate of the First church, Ninety Six. He will enter upon his la bors with this church about the first (if September. He will con tinue to serv,! the cLurch at Pen dleton f.r the present. Mr. Moore has been pastor at West minster for several years. Bill Broadnax, the negro who killed his daughter, in Edgefield county about a month ago and fied, and for whose capture the governor offered a reward of a hundred dollars, was captured by Sheriff Ouzts, of Edgefield, in Burke county, Georgia, on Sunday. and is now in jail there, to await trial. Some of the cit izens in the community in which the hmicide iccuired, say it was a cold-blooded murder. Others say it wastecidental. Pro f. 0. J1. Peterson has accept ed the presi(dency Of Keatchie Female College, the only Baptist school for girls in Loisiana. Prof. Pe'terso n was for several years principal of the North high sehcol and made mianv friends while a resident in this state who will wish him happiness andl suc cess in his nmw position. The past two or thee years he has been princip)al of the school at Mavsville, Ga. The James 1). Nance Camp of Newberry is the largest camp of (onfeder ate veterans in the st.ate. A t the reunion in Chester l ist week the camp cast 12 votes representing a membership of 210, while the next largest camp e' tat only 8 votes representing a membership of only 160. The (irectors of the Pacolet Manufacturing~ company have at a meeting held in the office of Pr asident V. M. Montgomery, Monday morning. Passed a reso lation calling a meeting of the stockhold!ers oif the company to be held Jnly 17 for the purpose (if increasing the capital stock of the company from 82,000,000 to $3,000,000) by voting $1,000,000 oif preferred stock. The purpose in increasing the capital stock is to pay for the construction of Mill No.5, already 'onstruicted and the power plant, which was erected some months ago. )aragraphed. The brick building of E. J. Sawyer at Bennettsville, was Idestroyed by fire Simon P. Wingard, a promi nent citizen of Lexington is dead at his home at the age of SO years. A commission has been issued to the Farmers' Bank of Travel ers' Rest, Greenville county, which will have a capital of $15,000. A. M. Jenkins, who is wanted in Gaff ney on the charge of seduction, has been arrested in Charlotte. A gang of robbers are at work in Greenville. Several houses have recently been broken into and robbed. Will Hardy, colored, who is wanted in Oconee county, Ga., has been arrested in Aiken. He was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to serve ten years. The residence of J. A. Terrell in Greenville was destroyed by fire. Two members of the fami ly barely escaped with their lives. Gold mining in York county is being revived. Engineers and :hemists say there is much gold in the western portion of York ounty. The merchants of Florence lecided to close their places at 2 )'clock every Wednesday in tead of 6 o'clock every day dur ing the week. ,rof. W. S. Hough, who has been principal of the Cross Hill igh school for the two sessions past, has declined to accept the positon for another year. W. H. T. Hughes, charged with the murder of Wilson B. Bausey at Hampton in April, will be tried either in Aiken or Barnwel, Judge Ernest Gary having granted a change of venue. Frank A. Miller and Robert Macfarlan, well known la ers of Darlington, engaged ii ht in the office of a magistrate dur ing the trial o' a. case. One of the jurors fled from the court room. Mr. J. B. Stephenson, former superintendent of the York county home, dropped dead in Yorkville. He was in the lum ber yard of J. J. Keller & Col when stricken. He was about 30 years old and was a victim of heart disease. He leaves a family. The new labor inspectors are about through with the work in the un-country. The reports being highly satisfactory. Week after next one will be sent to the low country and the other to the mills between Columbia an Augusta. The ptople of Laurens were ra'ned this week to learn that Rev. W. E. Thayer was suffer ing an attack of scarlet fever. Such an illness is rare among adults and usually severe. The physician in charge states that Mr. Thayer. while g raduallyv getting rid of the fever, is still suffering from the effects, which are more to be feared than the fever itself. The Biblical Recorder makes this announcement, which will be pleasing news to the m~any riends of Dr. Vines in this state as well as in North Carolina: "The first Baptist church of Asheville has recalled to its pas torate Dr. W. M. Vines. now 3f the Hanson Place Baptist church, Brooklyn N. Y. His many friends in North Carolina and through the south will be gad to hea'r of his acceptance. He is to supply prominent pul pits in Great Britain during July and August, but will enter upon his duties in Asheville the frt of September.'' The Keystone Lumber conm pany has been organized in Marl boro county with a capital of $75,000. Walter (I. Eichelberger has been elected a memibcrl. of the Laurens police force to succed J. T. Langston, resigned. At a meeting of the Spartan burg County Medical Societv a committee was appointed for the purpose of organizing an anti tuberculosis league. Frank Holmes, James Single ton and Aios lomles, all color ed, tried in Charleston on the charge of killing a constable on Edisto island. were found not guilty. The body of A. L. Rovster, who was drowned in the Colun bia ca.ial Mondav was found Tuesday niiglit floating in the water about a mile and a half below the scene of the accident. The stockholders of the First National Bank of Aiken have or ganized with the following tem porary oficers: President, Dr. T. G. Croft; vice president, B. Sherwood Dunn: Cashier, R. L. Gunter. The bank will probably open in the early fall. TPemlpora ry quarters will be secured and a new building will be erected later. R. W. Davenport, 23 years of age, and a well known Young man who went to Greenville to work for a credit concern some six months ago, has been arrest ed on the charge of forging the name of negroes to notes that he deposited -with the company. He is alleged to have taken sums aggregating the notes from the cash drawer. He was locked up for a time at the county jail but later was admitted to bail. Superintendent Of Education Swearingen is sending out cup plies to the county superinten dents for the scholastic year be ginning July 1. Some changes have been made in the teachers register, calling for more detail ed information. In order to make next year's report coni plete, it will be necessary for every teacher to have one of the new registers. James Galloway, a young man from Cherokee Springs, Spartan burg county. w~ho ran away and married a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Shepard was ar rested and put in jail on a charge of abduction, the bride, being oni lV fifteen years old. The case didl niot ('ome up for trial, as a compr'omise was effected, the parents consenting t(o the match. providied the girl dlid not leave her father's home. A remarkal e case is reported from the colored hospital in Spar' tanburg. A woman was taken to the hospital in a state of vio lent insanity, to be operated on for appendicit is anwl tumnor. She was so crazed that she had to he tied to the bed. As soon as the appendix and1 tumor were re noved, however. her reason re turned to her and now she seems perfectly rational. TIhe board of trustees (of the Oklahoma Baptist College con ferred the degree of D)octor of Divinityv upon Rev. W. D. Moor er, at the recent c'omm'ieenemenlt of that instituitioni. Mr. Moorer is a native of this state, a grad uate of Fornman, and for several years has been the Sunday School1 secre tary fo r the Baptists of Oklahoma. lie is a useful man in that state. Secretary ofState McCown is sending out to) all election comi mfissionmers' and others who are legally interested c'opies o f the law governing the vote on the dispensary on the second Tues day in August. The law re. quires that the dispensaries be closed two weeks prior to this election and also, following the general election law, requires that t.he books be closed 80 (days before the vote is taken which means that next Monday will be he last day for registration. President John 0. Willson and Prof. Sam Prince are now travel ing in the interest of Lander Col lege. Prof. N. M. Salley. sup erintendent of the Greenwood public schools, has been secured to travel for the college also by President Willson and will enter upon his duties at once in the lower part of the state. The new dormitory for the college is practically a certainty. The Southside church, Spar tanburg. is one of the livest and most vigorous churches il the state. It is rapidly increasing in membership and is already, altho only a year old, a great moral and spiritual force in Spartanburg. Within the past ten weeks, during which a meet ing of four weeks was held, -6 have been received by baptismi, 28 by letter, and 12 umier Watch care. Rev. R. E. Neighbour is the pastor. The third death of the past four days in Aikei occured Tues day afternoon, when Mrs. Julia B. Kennedy, wife of Mr. J. H. Kennedy, died at her home near the passenger depot. Mrs. Ken nedy was strickein with heart failure and was found dying in her room. She had evidently been combing her hair\ when heart failure attacked her with fatal result. There was only a small child in the huse at the time, and when Mrs. Kennedy was found she was in a dying condition. It was advertised by Supervis or Humbert of Laurens that the contract for the Maddox bridge would be let on Tuesday. But because of a message from the supervisor of Abbeville county to the effect that lie was not pre pared to make the award, the letting is postponed to a futie date which will be advertised later. Supervisor Humbert was prepared to let this contract, hav ing had it properly advertised: but, the laws require joint action on the part of the supervisors, hence the necessity for postp ii im. Robert L. McMillan, one of the old st and most prominent ci.t zens of Spai anburg county, (lied on Friday Juone 25th at his home near McMiliians. Mr. McMillian has been one of the largest far mers of the country for the last fifty years and in add(it.ion, own ed extensive interests in mills of various kinds. Four children survive Mr. McMillian, Mrs. John HI. Shores of Spartanburg, Mrs. P. P. Bhlock of Edgefield, 31r. W. K. McMillian of Chicota. Tex., and Mr. E. B. McMillian of Inman. Mayor Hart of Yorkville has not vet been able to get any as sistance from the state in defray ing the expenises :ne(urred by the town council of Yorkv-ille in (on niectioni with the smallpox epi demiic last winter. The govern or states that he has no initia tive in expending the funds ap propriated for the use of the state board of health, and noth ing to say until after the botu (1 has taken the initiative. The governor advised Mayor Hart to take the nmatter- before the state board of health, but as to wheth er Mr. Hart will do this, he has not fu lly decided. He f Is, however, that the town is veryv properly entitled to assistance from the state board's apprUopri ation. . The Aike'n Journal and R~e vie w has on exhibi tio n t we( freak guinea eggs, presented to it by Mr. Jamer W idener- of the Tread way- section. One of the e gs has on it a good1 likeness of a (uck, in a sitting posture. while the other has the patriotic em blecm of an American eagle em blazoned on it. The likenesses are almost perfect, and the eggs are quite a curiosity to all those wxho have seen them. The eggs were laid by the same guinea. they are normal in every respect, except the pictures, which are in white, while the rest of the egg sufae s in the natural brown. og iveo By FRAN '. 5/EET Cor::ie . 1:I I m RlINI- n h;i-- (! riv( t!wre is : i :!!: b t just : : 8 - i::ly if I : < , wi f 111L:1 te I.-4 W;:--V ' and t wri:er .-:V.. C . wVith1 lilt!" ';I: f,-r li:',- r 1i' Th, driVo 11:1SL t :, 0-,-It Ce i::-:m1-t ::-d I, : ill.- zit wh:rito"cre .1: : .t . :n 1r.. if Ile s 8r d olf lessL, t,*. - a u \ :e : finr It rs. -.; ! drann away fnI . ew:ny' drifts in,to a ctve or ..r :z,:;,ninst a b:ik it is left behiid for Litor rI v cry iml., z i rive n ac nr ii strng e1wil-_, i i.f) dolil sw. (..e it) hurry forward the ig-ard. The I). H1. J(inu-; Liumber (ompanY had a unusu !y Id. ditve 111:1t Sprinl", for vaiu esn, chief amin l-, which was lnok (If w :11i4 col'o high and dry I'n 1lh* b:e8.:1. II *f wi--h quod h ver lilt-d by I:-lrs i h-, g I l br' k ! i::Y :(id fI ttut the servi'es of' th1.; !e ha a-so f' i ke muell wil, :i1 d 1'i1n e'rf' to look after tin-ni. So no I: h lin e r:iftlk e 1:11 . 1 in ' in.g wI n on the M 'c l it r u i e' er. IenI .eStuUsI! surf a' e. 1on tl ; I Ir IuO s te! .h-. . Wheni*' th. Iiv : asmo t I 1 hetw en 1r io:: A 111i::-. teIr: wo('uld bet. :;'reely a1 (qui 'er un' al '~ Im t') . 1 Th11 n at V I t f r ! r ! 1:.:0 ' mil - e I -e:l v1 w' i' in1 c, in ' l i f: 1 8 1. :L:; t h.e yv t n w I : : " -rtly eiite n to ' n!: t'h jour ndy in s own.' w iay whii r:.I::r t ott. 1itsfelNs.tunousrnrr:: w : udt t-he Nv:hi;- 4 'f thir i n n '. ani :(er', lit h illn-r e 1I. : 1 wesi'n to ;-:1rvy thv o re o a ql,-rn; ' l l.,.r avert a threatened jnm I> I. JTes :1 , l' en: at t heI::in ctrp mls ju fi c19 w :nr. wat".chd.(, In I-) :u i deimuh i :w n t andi when ,,n:w fe!! n :o, eN e e l jw1J:--, and' .11l tou.Ih vit! l ri .;N Is :U a -1l,v;ttc M'1 o ' 1 : . f 10 h n.11 nt Io . . lo'g was: -Ii. .' hpen:.: e i lu LI e'" int wIIII of l I i1118.-: ta(t S thili r!n'' hII. 11 1 v: h ir fli'1 d: :':: :. - v d we rep!! tthe ar din .I taes r!!'h- n( w .eTe itre?i Lerep near the shore, h w'ver. and it) a-v-i the swifter cur ::.The '.l -'Mniian was an expe ri-ned boatinutol. But nvither expe rience nor streng1h1 nor skill could be counted on a.s a safe;;uard against a siring fln,d. The third mornina they were cut almost with the light, and n"w. as I ho river abo14ive theim began. to (l(%r. the Ild man'1s face lost its ex p n of impatient anxiety. Far up Il or m. vwere it narrowed into h"r:ii i r.pid. t1ie w.iter seemed s 'u11 ':ly 11st In a ,olid wall of logs, vhih were running and leaping 1Erms wnhh eve at that distice C':e.ov ' e:awer eyes could trace into f ilar shapes. A n hour, and Ih fOr:: wer:- ilainly visile. An : . :u1 1 he drv wvan; 1:Posite, with thi.!rr :d his 07-m;1h1*r u,"on the 1:m . 'ryin' t di:tin uih .Iat the fe:-:nannon theWthr Shor,)e Was To h :Irl it w.,- (,I!v a SuLct:e.'slion of hr an:.:>. Put hor father lis i::d. ca; i;\ry :md fripin time to time n' .4d his headl:4e.* arvingly. shil :inig a o ; a o i di em . Ai I;Iat ti:nl lamunin hwin rnho . nwr or e Xi1 n.na Io- ro:.21ee Iisiled to "Wax that just a rm-:!in yell. liP the ioys make, fathir." she ques tiont.d. "*. was it somue sort of sig Ier f:,,!h-r d m own at her in "Ma' ws ~ t!::: 'e a:out the drive." h:e nnere"d. "nd . they mi. -,:nna for t" C:eTp the hulk of Ih i in :1 41'q1! we:. Of (Unso ::s: 4r4- o : - : o12 (f 1he 1 un1 :11 ef T!! iriv' :!::d the Inf-k of men t,, co'ri-I it. bnt ihey ::re :mnvh fewer :1 o 'ne mie' t : :2 t n::ier the cir e 's: e. I -'-! .1 i - nOt tno bz-A ther 1- : -r !. ry 1!P helow, thIN to :. rm::n:1 t- dii: dge all the ;r ;,7: snafe-rd lo7n n(l start :::;t a f the 'main body. Be ym th Ilnr 1 :.!: the river will be clearer. :n:- Mac ct1n easily spare a :n!. if nly th water will keep up h. ':: enn i' I think we enn get tlf:n 2!1 0,v:I t' ) :r'o. :m(d thon". with nn (:<41 ! f I if wn:ring antielpation in hiY vmi'e. -we will strt off on cur in v:n--:-. r !laven't ta'.wn a rest fr- iw(r in tveir thiriy y yea.:. Flor -lnt w1l these few stray 1A:s make nnv <irmnco. father':" t he ,irl asked. hr'' v egr4vin:: tendier. "Thoy are 441 a 'iny, tiny part of the whole "Ikno, an( v-ery like!y I could sparl them'T without feeiNg it, but last :: 1. : ' f::: to run. and I I:vo twn yc:m' expense:: to mact. w:p ronwed f:r th :tns wg.es. p y m -f(,r ti!:i!;r 1: d4and miany iwhr P-- :nof Ve-m. ThV amount will ]' verN '1r e. :nd. thom:r that great ww:w ofl Po:;M far mor than m^et :.I (4 va::t to tako any eh;iices. T' ::e. r c Str:!y I-!:, will likely run intI inu:'re.s and tiheir value into 14 ''s. . It w!!l 1e several d:ys be f, r" n w:n (on I.w sont L:k, nf Courme, In if tho w:ter Wiays up ten days I 're a :n float them all'In." 1- h 4' s."4' (4 'ou ttfully . '"At any rat" It i.' :ll thiat enn b:e done. The nIt as:: thet I;nt rapids undler fur days. :mda it will take - th12r1n to reach here: '1 4 v 4 :4 2im:' to l:oosen and 4 'J ('\ r s. :.-h a di't ance." 4...........1 r ::2:. tlhen,t at once," 4.'. 4' 4'4~ '!'n- 44 waste so) much "'4$. -Yo 11 : . :n14 wv thle (country at this a . Florentcet.* he sid (. "'I am not 4e ' i : 4' I couldn't hire a man, or Myevn.nr:my pri' 2''. They are all "Th-- .ll .':rt the l1' leIOse my-~ "in he 4ietr w"ter, yes5. but not 4in 1144 r::Oi s :ad sw:ift 1.u'rrentS. But 1!71 1 y .' wh4 we1 ' :m 44441. Florence. Inth :' re:g 'ill ro4w up the riv''n ::r.s v :. a:. keepIng awvay '"r''41 d .an (r.uw p tlaces. We enn '-Pt -s4: :41:l.ient lrapls, and eve'ry w'l 4v: 44 rn. A few' weeC(ks ago I . 1 4 41':v T:ethe jo4'~b myself. but I . :' ::t P.nre'1 444 atIC lmpt it no0w." 441'"4 !ing44 thiey were again I 44.. 4X4 14anld ro4wing slowly 4 1 er4.. 1Bi 24m1e1( keeping wach a 1:44a!.:, especia!!yV where 4d4 in und!er ov.erhiang 4 1' "' the ban11ks fell away -' -''44 "'ve '4ud4 shallows. The 4 d44istan't, w'ith too swift -m .-: currents for themi to 'ven-i ....-.::.l''s w"re fo 'und and released, :4l I.n ju:I ste were'. passinig a1 r'4.a ile 'er so up. ID. II. Jones u.Y"de: :4 pasta 4:1 J4:s 4!ars. w.ithi ant I ::. ':mia 4.1 wonder1444. L.ogs were1 --:i. ,'n 41the river, d1'Zn of045(4 4n'a hm'''4'.ed '. it5( s eee, :' s his gaze 4e e' in' r inl'usly fruim side to side :.4d. 'evral'I4 '1f the foremo14st were1' al 4 :'1 dy !.:2 n:al1: and(4 past their . T 1 a l.w wart2 ::: from Flor e 1u:e hi to !4k -4iv:rd mid - 41 '4d4t(ere 4a m 1r14 than three er i r r av:y 4na binlg borne 14i'y: Ihe 41urre'' . was14 a1 young I.::n .. :d.:' nihin a boat and en::: G-wrd :a.:n Fr in ii nstant 1. IL .h na.mau:tho his face dark. -. : 4.' >4a < 41 a coo.k I disc(har1ge<l Iw, ria:70f ;;r ist sejling." lie said " 3 144. th f4.r''m1an I laid befort "Adyt'I thin I hleard1 you say tht -e ' chr- edi Unrker himself fo: "Ye4. n now youn411!g Brown is fol lowing4 in theijr foots.teps. A few doz ('n of! 1 b44>4 log4 enr1efuilly ('oncealet for : '1414iid with my mark remov-e< would be valuable booty. HI, yoi there, T1e Brow.n," raising his VwaC4 suddenly, "what are you doing wit my logs?" "Floating 'em," the boy answered grimly. "Can't you see?" "What for?" "Another fool question. To follow your drive, of course. I haven't been able to get any work, thanks to the way you turned off my father, so I'm looking after the logs. I've started down 268 so far. I can't stand seeing good logs wasted, even if they do be long to somebody I don't like." "Are you telling the truth;" sharply, "and not" "Stealing them, do you mean?" in dignantly. "No, sir, my people don't steal. It was your own foreman took the things my father was turned off for. Barker is working over by Coon 9-:x FOR AN INSTANT D. I. ,TONEs STARED. lake,now and Is wearing the very over-' coat and pair of boots. You can go and see for yourself." D. H. Jones looked at his daughter with troubled face. "I'm balf afraid young Brown is tell ing the truth," he said slowly, "and that Barker was a rascal all the way through, though I didn't know till aft erward. I'm afraid" "Afraid!" echoed his daughter. "Why, you mean glad, father." "Yes, Yes, of course. I ought to have said that." He looked across toward the young man. The space was widen in1- between them. "-h, look here, Ike," he called, "you keep, on with the logs just as you are doing, and if things turn out as you say I'll give you $20 for the job and will 'get you steady employment with the man who buys me out. And, oh, Yes! Tell your father I'll make it all right with him too. I'll send a man over to Coon lake this very day." thin for Ike-NTD. H. Jons STdAlle hakepromised and warn ite vry er Fcst ndtzeir Mad botn Amerca.g Adsecorn yoursef."ainfunse by an onekd an, thi auhteril of' Lalfafrai young Browsivn ste zegsthe trh, coutr sid slowy,arn10 Iti adthat ehes frscatl prte aey etroughd thhe didn'tkso till Schuy erward (I'm e ~adi dasone y h oman gad,f117. . Issaid thate loe acoss twllard ofhep hatsg mandh srooms was wide ibteeran co rgaiomt.tk up, bakr, tk"he naflleitz "you in eed of with thelogp.s a yonnteo dosing onitngtrn wt ais trade sn ay anlv oud 2 ora thapenedbto thcalupn whoh au mou.And, rotur yefoe or fateria'l asmek'er t each rihm th secretoo.f'l maen:d wat man ovledoCo lketzs. They aked.n" smal diay atd firt wasjus asocal traid, Ambosauh thenwihpoe ao ver gohn, wat dding br.-. oes thrduahlthe hacomisyatte time an litere.lduo ist rtzel.t ade him erca.t zAccoding toae informtook frishe dbey, andfton the eofh farticu oacaster county, Pra.. i gie the credto o seve the tirhst pret zelthia thist coldntry in enet1810 ithsi hatse, frequet pretze akuryo estblihled otebns ofithesu Srhul klln ading has ownedo btmy take tetheple o nuts bcornat inudge. IThe issihat nee tehWllingm.aidm Rauh Mcbloh trae raeran. mtae ofl chihtsmand broe, wand asked byate beenraing cogeton te sae Ine bstuff tat he town ofritit wtsa profanation toctalklof suchcanwriter ts do soet." cone,cting with emotion,e Oe aynce i.o..a Gerangyrpeendoetr call apo :dsrJon Ranche pno etrnv imcethe mser y of abeaty wthe tr caledatetonsof nT,he baleurin ae smallmwynt fhirst forlal tre.atto ofbrohe anch thel "A caaogu Joh. contr at toe,"ihe said. "Trevis upo; sc fthernt alpoetr hin tomer et-m (life. To he fame of this herndeut lamae tha cn speappe thot anh setea cona wheret."dHe its is the slee crandhpae, with litmaz-h uchs ig chuency frqndlyicts ouatn hcho."At oten wio op mor boui isoetyhesi, and al that heto i a ths theaceot in trhoooml"te Dges". "Theym havtebentligm.sad