The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, September 19, 1900, Page 2, Image 2
uNCLE SAM'S
Larger Treasure Bo:
rowed !
A firs am
Washington, September 8.?I'nclc |
Gain's treasure boxes are undergoing
some important alterations. They arc
not at all up to date in the mode of
their construction, nor burglar-proof
by any means, and it might be a good
thing if they were torn out altogether
and replaced with vaults of the proper
kind, such as the safe deposit compa
nies have nowadays. But that would
cost a great deal of money?perhaps
as much as a million dollars?and the
Government would prefer to avoid
such an expenditure.
Away back in 1892 this question
was agitated and Congress went so
far as to appoint a special committee,
with an appropriation of $3,000 to
make an examination of the vaults in
the treasury and report on their condi
tion. The report was decidedly un
favorable, condemning the arrange
ments as practically obsolete, but
nothing was attempted in the way of
substantial improvements. It was in
the same year that an expert came on
from New York and, at the request of
the Treasurer, with only a few ordi
nary tools of tho kind used in safe
repairing opened one of the big strong
rooms in a few minutes.
Seventy-five thousand dollars have
4)een appropriated for the present
alterations, which consist in part of a
-new vestibule and strong doors for the
great silver Sworagc vault. This vault
cost $H0}000 originally and extends
under the terrace at the south end of
the treasury Building. It .contains a
mighty box of steel lattice-work, 89
feet long, 51 feet wide and 12 feet
high, filledohock full of silver dollars.
Visitors are .permitted to walk around
the mass of treasure, following a nar
row passage which runs between the
aides of the box and the steel walls of
the vault.
This lattice-work receptacle holds
101,000,000 in silver, whiehis packed
irr wooden boxes, two bags of standard
idollars to a box, and each box weigh
ing 120 pounds. Formonly t/ho coin
was simply stacked up in bags, but,
notwithstanding the walls of steel,
dampness rotted tho bags and the
.money ran out of them. This made
extra trouble, requiring fresh counts, [c
-and it is no small job to reokon over d
Buch a gigantic sum in metal. Hence p
it was deoided to pack tho stuff in n
boxes. Each sack contains $1,000 and o
so long as the Treasurer's seal on it is 8
intact its contents do not have to be a
verified on occasions when recounts 1
arc made. b
'Jhe hood vault is to bo enlarged
.-greatly, doubling its capacity?a n
change made necessary by the inoress- v,
ing number of national banks whioh *
deposit bonds in the treasury. Many c
private and State banks, taking ad- n
vantage of the recent ?ot of Congress, v,
are coming in as national banks. A k
new and thoroughly modern strong ti
.room is to be built for the register's b
office, to hold cancelled paper money c
that is awaiting destruction in the ?
.macerator. Meanwhile the sub-tress- I
ury in New York is putting in two n
additional vaults, one for gold and the n
.other for silver, the latter measuring fi
47 feet in length by 28 feet in width e
.and 12 feet in height. Gold and sil
ver are pouring in there by tons daily, p
-and there is no place to put all of it. o
At the present time the sub-treasury f<
has on hand $170,000,000 in gold coin g
and $58,000,000 in silver ooin. tl
There are now 153,000,000 silver o
dollars in the treasury at Washington, li
ibotDtily $6,000,000 in gold coin. The o
treasury never keeps much gold on v
hand here, the great stock of the yel- r
low metal being held in New York t
.and at the mint in Philadelphia. If t
one wants - to see orudo gold in masses t
lie should visit the mint in the Quaker <
City, where he will -find it stacked up l
dn heaps of bricks?itons.on tons of it \
?all ready for conversion into ooin. \
At the present moment there is $53,- *
000,000 worth of gold bullion at this I
mint, with 437,000,000 in gold coin
not to mention #150,000,000 in silver
bullion and coin. j i
Notwithstanding the fact that the j <
treasury vaults compare so poorly
with the impregnable steel-clad struct
ures now used by great private con
corns that have valuables to protect,
the Government feels fairly secure as
to the safety of its stored wealth.
The best safeguard for ooin is its
weight. Jost to illustrate this point
it may he mentioned that the $162,
000,000 in silver dow held in the
strong rooms at Washington weighs
nearly 6,000 tons. A million dollars
gold coin weighs about two tons, and
it would take a very strong man to
-carry off $50,000 worth of the yellow
etaff. Though a gold brick the shape
I and siso of an ordinary building briok
represents $8,000, its "hoff* is some
thing astonishing. Suggestions have
NEW VAULTS.
tes to I-Iold his 33or
Money.
/ < 'ouricv.
been made that it might be practica
ble to burrow beneath the treasury by
tunnel and thus pillage 1'ncle Sam's
coffers by a sort of rat hole method,
but even were this accomplished it is
difficult to imagine how it would
be practicable to remove much of the
coin.
There was quite a scare a few years
ago, when Gilfillon was Treasurer, be
cause the vault in the cash room,
where the ready money is kept, re
fused to open. It is always set for
8.30 a. m. with a time-lock, but on
this occasion something seemed to be
wrong with the mechanism, and the
steel doors remained obstinately
closed. Nine o'clock arrived and still
the money was locked up. For once
Uncle Sam's bank was obliged to sus
pend payments. Kxperts were sent
for and came with their tools to break
open the vault, but before they got.
there the big safe had opened of its
own accord. It turned out that the
time-lock had been set by an accident
for ?J.30.
In this vault not only gold and sil
ver, but many millions in paper
money, arc always kept. If thieves
could obtain access to it they might
easily walk away with an enormous
?um, the notes and certificates being
done up in packages and neatly labell
ed with the sums they contain in large
red figures. Kach parcel holds 4,000
notes and is in size just about a foot
jube. If the denomination is $500, a
single such package represents $2,
100,000. However, if anybody did
succeed in gettiog away with cash in
,his shape he could hardly fail to be
saught, inasmuch as the numbers of
ihe bills would be advertised imme
liatoly and every bank in the eonntry
voulu be on the lookout for them.
Burglars may be practically ex
cluded, but the treasury does not
daim to be theft-proof. On an on
uoky day in 1870 a visitor came into
he Treasurer's room with a large
'anama hat in his band. The Treas
ircr's attention was distracted by
omc other people who were trying to j'
alk to him and the man dropped his ,,
> at carelessly over a package which
ontained 3,000 $10 notes lying on the (
leak. It was ono of several s-uoh j,
lackages and the loss of it wae not ' (
lotiocd until some hours later. Of (
ourse the notes were advertised and (
ome time afterwards a part of them i ]
rero deposited in a New York bank. ,,
'he depositor was arrested, but no- !(
ody was punished for the crime. I
A singular immunity from punish-'j.
lent seemed to have attended thieves !
rho have robbed the treasury in su oh (
rays. In 1875 a clerk aamod. Bon ja- (
?in Hallook passed a package of $&00' j
otos, representing $47,000^ out of a ^
rindow in the cash room to a saloon- }
eeper nsmed Ottman. For some
ime the robbery remained a mystery, ' (
ut later on one Theodore Brown v?ao
aught betting on the races at Saratoga ?
rith some of the missing $500* notes, j
le was arrested, and implicated Ott- j
isn and Hallook, but Brown waa {
ever tried and the other two ware not (
nally oonvieted. Of the stolen mon- i(
y $20,000 was recovered. 4
It has been said that no> trust oom- ;g
any would accept the responsibility {
f the Treasurer of the United States
or the $6,000 a year salary which he |
ets. Ho is responsible for all monoya ?
hat may be stolen, aad on more thaa> j
ne occasion Congresa has been oV (
tged to relieve by formal Act an of?r j
ial in that position,, who would other
rise have been liable for the repay
aent of large losses. On one occasion
wo men nsmed Harden and J oka son, |
,he latter an assistant paying teller,
ook $62,000 byoollusion. The Gov
ernment got baok $12,706? of this ;
money and the off endors escaped with
? year in prison for each. There
Slave been a good majay thefts in the
redemption division, where the temp
tations are exceptionally great, the
noet famous of them being that per
petrated hy a woman who invented a
method for making nine notes out of
sight, incidentally to the process of
putting together scraps of torn bills
Bent in to he redeemed. Nobody ever
knew how muoh she stole, though it
was probably a very large amount, but
she gave up a portion of her ill-gotten
ersinn ?.nd nnk ??0???n???L.
" In 1865 there was muoh ezeitement
over the loss of $1,000,000 in paper
morcy, whioh had been shipped from
Washington to the assistant Treasurer
in 8an Francisco. The shipment was
made hy a sailing vessel called the
Golden Rule and consisted of one
thousand $1,000 notes. Unfortunate
ly the ship was wrecked on Ronosdor
Reef and the safe that contained the
cash was lost with it. Nevertheless a
conspiracy was suggested and a
theory was formed to the effect that
the vessel had beet) deliberately cast
away for the sake of stealing the
money. If this had been true sonic
of the notes would certainly have
turned up later; but, as a matter of
fact, none of them has ever been seen
since and it may therefore be taken
for granted that the missing wealth
still lies at the bottom of the sea.
Of course, being only paper money, it
was no loss to Uncle Sam.
Immense quantities of gold are
shipped nowadays across the ocean
and the danger of loss is so small that
the precious stuff may be insured at
so low a rate as one-tenth of 1 per
cent. It is insured just like so much
grain and the documents, written in
old style legal phrases, guarantee its
safety against all perils of the seas,
including "men-of-war, fires, enemies,
pirates, rovers, thieves, jettisons, let
ters of marque, reprisals, takings at
sea, arrests and dctainments of all
kings, princes," etc. Every large
transatlantic steamship has on board
a treasure room, which is a great steel
box built inu >:h like a vault on land.
Shipments of gold coin from this
country to Europe have been extraor
dinarily large recently. The banker
in New York buys it from the sub
treasury there, receiving it in sacks of
$10,000 each. It is carefully weighed,
because Europe will accept our gold
only by weight, though the quality of
the coin?its purity and degree of
fineness?is guaranteed by Uncle
Sam's stamp. Usually it is packed in
casks that are much like herring
casks, ten sacks to each cask, which
weighs ISO pounds when thus filled.
Thefts on the voyage are practically
unknown, but in 1804 a cask of gold
coin was lost on its way to Paris, be
ing finally located on the platform of
a railroad station between Havre and
Paris. The station agdrn had thought
it contained white lead.
Rene Bache.
Moving Train,
"The 'moving train' illusion i?
anm?lt?nrv ika .n?la..m?. 1
.O ? ~ "-fx""1
been at work on for years," said an
old showman, talking about tricks of
the trade. "The idea is to-present 1
the sawie effect one gets in- looking :
out of the window of a passenger oar
moving at fall speed, and; the-thing i
suggested itself almost as- soon> ao the
modern eyslorama wae invented1. In
the abstract it seems- very simple?
merely the matter of seating the spec
tators in a dummy car and then-reel
ing a long panorama of landscape past I
the windows. Nine people out of ton- 1
would say sooh a eontrivanoe would' '
produce an illusion*of motion;, but1 it >]
doesn't do anything of the kind. If' i
you will stop- to think about it you- !
will remember that' a- real landscape* |
seen through a oar window, appears to- j4
be moving past you. at different raftee- it
dP speed. The foreground, nearest 3
the train, whiszes by like lightning;. *
the middle distance- glides- away Lose
rapidly, and; the horizon line reoe?ea- t
?ery gradually from. view. In or&nr <
bo 800uro the-same illusion it is-necse- <
>ary to observe the same graduations- t
in speed, and thabwae-app&rentlysaeb. i
v complicated probSsaa that most of
ihe oyolorama- people- gave it u>in 1
lespair. But I h ear that it has-fixally 1
?eeu solved in Paris*.in tbo big Sibe
rian Railroad' panotaa?, .and> peepfe
?ho-have seen. the. tknng. teil irae that
ihe offloot is so-nealistio that ib is
dmostt impoB&ible-t? believe thafcone
s- nob actually o? a moving, train.
Ohe landscape is- represented;by three
nag; rolls- of- canvass of different
leighie, the firsthand lowest staring,
he rooks and. hushes of< tbe>-fore
ground,, the second- the- midofia dis
tance and. the third the background
ind sky. They, move at speeds-of 30,
?fc and 3; miles a* hour, andithe spec
tators are seated in ordinaty. parlorr
iara, whioh ara given a sligfrt rocking
notion by machinery undeathe trucks*.
The result is-the heat illusion in the
history of oseloramas up, to the prae
snt day. It understand th* show will
be broughb to this couutry after the
Exposition is over.-?JSfe? Ondfcan*.
7Ym?a-jPegft*craf.
Free BM Csre-As ffftr Pruvlsa.Fsjth
to Saff^rsrs.
Is your blood puss ?- Are you, sure
of it $ Bo outs or soratehes heal slow
ly ? Poes your skin itoh or. burn ?
Haw you pimples, cruptUns, aohing
bouse or baok, eeeema, old sores,, boils,
eciwfula, rheumatism, fou) breath, ear
taj-vh ? Are yea pale ? tf so purify
jour blood at mce with KKB. {Bo*
tanie Blood Balm.) It makes the
blood pure and rich, heals every sore
and gives a clear, smooth, healthy
skin. Deep-seated ?ases like ulcers,
cancer, eating sores, painful swellings,
blood poison are umekly ouied by BL
B. B., made especially rot all obsti
nate blood and skin troubles. B.R.B.
is different from other remedies be
cause B.B.B, drains the poison and
humors out of the blood and entire sys
tem and oftonot return. Intelligencer
'readers are advised to giveB.PJS. a
trial. It oures when all else fails.
Thoroughly tested for 30 years. Sold
at drug stores and Hill-Orr Drug Co.
Wilhitc & Wilhite and Evans Phar
macy at ose dollar ($1.00) per. large
bottle, $6 large bottles (full treatment)
$5. So sufferers may test it a trial
bottle given away absolutely free.
Write for it. Address Blood Balm
Co., 380 Mitchell St., AtlanU, Oa.
Write to-day. Describe the trouble
and free medical advice given.
? The tiok ?? a watch is inside, and
that of a bed is outside. ,
The Growth of Animals.
It is not generally known that the
human baby is smaller at birth in
proportion to the size it ultimately
attains than most other animals.
The size of the young of any ani
mal varies iu proportion to the size
of the brain, and is significant in
mauy ways. The average height of
a baby at birth is about 12 inches,
and as the average height of a man is
generally put dowa at 5 feet 10 inches,
the proportion is as 1 to 583.
The young rhinoceros is 2 feet long
when he its bora, but when he grows
up he is 7 feet in length. Thus the
proportion ;s 1 to 3.5. The very same
measurements apply to young master
elephant, though the pachydrem in
question is always measured bj the
height of his back from the ground.
However, tho young one is about 2
feet high, and the average height of
a mature elephant is 7 feet, so the
proportions remain the same. The
same relative measurements hold good
in thecase of tho young hippopotamus.
~n case of the deer we find that
the young are 2? feet in height, while
the full-grown deer is so more than
4J feet, or a proportion of 1 to 1.8.
The giraffe's proportions are those of
1 to 3.3, for it is l? feet tall at birth,
aad 6 feet when full grown.
A lion cub at birth is about 8 inches
lon>; while the grown-up Leo meas
ures about 5 feet, or the enormous
proportion of 1 to 7.5. The tiger's
measurements are about the same,
and scare those of Brer Bear.
The rapidity of growth of anismls
also varies greatly.
In general, the larger the anima? at
maturity the slower its growth. A
man is not fully grows octil he is 2&
years old, though he at tains his height
sooner.
So with animals. A colt or calf
gets his height at 'S'yetvca, but there
after slowly gains in power nntil his
5th yesr?the man's* development
being five times as slow.
An elephant matures a.ftrtowSj, and
lives as long, bb a man. There are
fables telling of the extremely Jong
Kfeof crows and eagles, baft in- few
eases have these been fully verified.
?London Exjpre**.
?vm?of C&rsnie DSarrbeea after ?B*r
tj nesrs ef Suffering;
"3 suffered for thirty years wrthV ?i
arrheea and; thought I was past fc?icg
curod," says- John S. Halloway*. of
Fro noil Camp, Miss. uiJ bad spent* so
muoh'time an mon try and suffered 30
muoh that I had'givee* up-el) hope* of
recovery. I was- so Heebie from the
affeota-of the diarrhoea that I or old do
no kiodiof 1 aboi7,.could) not even travel1,
but by accident) Ii wae permitted to fiixJ
a bottle-of' Chamber!??'? (Sotte, Ghc4
3raaDd'Diarrho?s< He needy, aad after
taking* several bottles- 1 aoa entirely
jured ef* that trouble-. I am se> pleaa
?d witir-the result that I am anxious
that ibfrein roach-of aSP who suffer aa
['have." For sale- by EE 11 Orr Drug
So. ___tm>^mm__
?"Shear that-youesmahand is very
licky Aunt Dlnab.'" "Tea'm,"
'Nothing serious, 2 bags-. His con
?ition is-nofc oar?iesi-V." "Critical! I
ihoul&say he maal' He aaWs satisfied
lyitfraoSm'."
Write Dr, <?i. Jl fiSofiett. St. Louis,
VIb>rf, for-his- traluublo ?bt? Teefehina
ivasbOUist Book, free._
Anderson is
so are
They ha*e> opened up a iarg
Furniture,
House I
?O?? o^eay thing that belongs U
Btr. Ben. B, Bleekley and II
gem, am? will take pleasure*
EMKEKSE STOCK and CHEA1
X&ebr stock was bought i? <
factories fox Cash, and they fee]
can ho pleased. Go to see then
They also haye an elegant ]
Gaskets ai
VANDIVER BRO?
MBRCHANT99
ui..a %/^..? ?f?~-?~
We are pushing Ssj
V/ITH ail the energy wo pofsess, desiri
In our line. Wo are offering rare Barg
buyers.
We are constantly adding to our li
ing a heavy business, if large stock, elo
elation are worth anything.
We highly appreciate every bill yc
isn't worthy of your patronage.
Try U3 and see.
Thought Herself to Death.
The startling fuilfilment of the pre
diction of Mrs. Elizabeth Horstman,
of Mishawaka, Ind., made last July,
when she was apparently in the best
of health, that she would die on Aug.
15, has set the press onoo more to
discussing the probability of premoni
tion of death. Mrs. Horstman, who
was related by marriage to Bishop
Horstman, cf Cleveland, is said to
have been a person of great piety, ft
is not known that she was of melan
choly or a superstitious disp*. : ion.
Neither is anything known as to the
motive that prompted her to make the
gloomy prediction. It is known posi
tively, however., that she made it,
and it waB fulfilled to the letter.
There are, of course, numerous in
terpretations of this event. One of
the commonest is that founded on the
fatalist theory. Her day had been
appointed and she was informed of
the time by some ojoult or supernat
tural agency. The spiritualist view,
in the broadest sense, is hardly less
common. She was advised by some
departed near and dear one as to the
time when she should die. The
rational belief is that advaneed by the
J'ittsburg Dispatch. Her death is
clearly an example of the remarkable
power which the mind exercises over
the body.
It is known that fatal results fol
lowed the experiment of making aman
believe that he had been laneed and
was slowly bleeding to death. The
story ef the practical jote played by
a lot ofyouogFreneh medical students
on the janitor of their college is famil
iar. They aooused him of sow iefei
tious offense, gave h?m a mo ok ferial
and sentenced him to death by decap
itation. Ho was led to> a block. Be
side it was en- axe. HS? upper bo?y
was bared and his eye? were band
aged. His head) was forced* down to'tbr
bloefc. One of? the the stcd?ntssmofee
him across the aeok with a> wet toweB
and*-be was deadX It* was-held that
it was not the ilftusage or Ole shook
that'ksUed him, but his firm* oonvio
tion tiiat his time Hod come.
There-are many oases recorded* in*
whioh people have predioted the time
of their'death. Theathc^ is the case
where a? man predicted the ver? hour
at whioh'-be wonld give up the ghost.
A few minutes before the hour sfcrocfc
he was toM'febat he bad been deceiv
ed; that the clock had been set back
three hours, , and that the appointed'
time was lowp-past. Hb at onoe re
covered and'remained in* good bc-?tb
for many; yews: It is held that? if
Mrs. Horstmco bad bee* misled- in
regard to- the- calendar she* would sitili
be living.?QFMcago IhtevO?ean,
CtttsuswttswiseB QuickC Hoaledi
Chamberlain's Bain Balm<appliediso>
a cut, bruise, barn, soaldo*>like injury
will instantly allay the pain and wiH'l
heal the-- parts- in less time than aogr|
other treatment. Unless IM? injury f
rery severe? it* will not leave a soacc
Pain Balte- ebo? cures rweumausw,
sprains, s Wellings-and lameness* FW]
sale by Hil 1-O?r-Brug Co,
?The best' way fon a> woman te?
maka.a?man wooden why he everwaus-l
ad to marryyher-is-to lethissiknow alse-|
wonders why herself._
pandi wtUr4s^i>tM:tA9*k of
"urnishiiigs,
htikskt Use- ofluMfaiinr
ft. Keel & Shai$oare Ute man
xa sher?ag ?wuywbody their
r*Pmi?K&
nut le&S lets wed trevm the beak I
L bbt? that the meet f astidioro
B L?BSE, and carry a full -fine
id Coffins*
D. 8, VAN DIVER.
E. 9. VANDTVEB.1
5-,
vaifl muy ?Sflcav? M\ r\
tS^SSSSSSSaSBOmWB?Bm
? deeds. Shoes. &c .
Dg to make certain important changea
uiDS that can't fi?l to ba of interest to
ne of GROCERIES, und propose do-1
m. prices, hard work, and high appro
?u favor us with, and he who don't |
Yours truly,
VANDIVBR UROS.
?VefJdable Prtparalionfor As
similating foe Food andReguIa
Ung th?Stomacte andBow?is of
Promotes DgeslionjCheerfur
neassndltestContains neilkcr
Opiurtv,Morpl?ne nor Mineral.
WOT l&AH C OTIC.
nape (af??t?rSAKUXLPtTCHEfl
MxStwutt?
non, Sour Stomacltv
Worrn^.Convulsior^.r^ffiwish
ness and Loss ?V
NEW YORK
GASTORM
For Infants and Children.
the Kind You Have
Always Bought
/
Bears
In
Ose
Fur Over
Thirty Tears
FRUIT JARS !
FRUIT JARS !
Wow is the time to bay your Jhra before they advance
in? price..
There- being: ? big crop of fruit aW over thecoantry, Jars will be much
htgoer later in the- season. I have a big lot' of then* oa hand at a low price
Fruit Kettles* Fly Fans and Fly Traps, and1 all ether summer goods.
1 have a lot of J>eeorated goods in odd pieces-at a bargain. I am run
nine? out of stock at very low prices.
ffcring me year Rags and Beeswax*
Your patronage solicited;.
JOHN T. BURRIS8.
T? Please Every One,.and at Prices
to Suit You !
! I AH SOLS AGENT FOR?
BABCOOK?
TYSON & jhobs?
COLUMBIA, ?**
JEWKiiL
And a tot of otasr Standard makes of?
Busies and ?ariia^es,
And also fbr?
OLD HICKORY*
RlILBUftf* aav?
PIBPMOftT
WAGrONS.
All Goads bought for Spot Caah*andt wsQ sell them to you on sama-basis,
which meaaa a good deal to any one thak vr?shea to bay.
I have oa Band now a large and new Hoe to select from, and if r you are
thinking of porchasiag an outfit it will-not do for yon io buy until you visit
my Repository aad see my line of Goods.
Will sell for Cash or on Time^-rotfe good papers?at CASEEi BflEICES.
Call areoad and let us trade r?tihjttn. .
Respectfully, . - .
?TOS? J. FEE1WMX.
GARDEN SEED.
Btiist and. T^erry's.
Remember whoa yen go to get yen? Seed to get fresh
estes. AstMsis ojo^Srstyearin^ieSec?hnBinesB we have
no seed carried ops* from last year. ;
Toms?
F B. GRAYTON & GO.
Hear thej Peat Office.
Ailes Swo Years Piresaicras hs>v& fe?sa Vzl? ?a S2*s
MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Of NewAi-k. H.jr.,
YOUR POSJOY HAS-r '
i 2. Oata Value:
8. Paid-up la&urasoe.
-4. &s^ded2i3au?? oe&tatwo*lui sutomaUoally.
k w? ^? if arrears be paid within one month while yon are living,
or within three years after lapse, upon aatiaftotory evidence of insurability and pay
it of arcesra with Interest.
T. Wo Fiat I tat Ion, after aseoad year.
tneoatsst abMc
aactaedloff
Oje beginntng of the aeoand and of each anooe?
for tha current yea* be paid, To** muj be used?
or
all
laenranes,
IT the Mutual Benefit is euro of fair aad liberal treatment und?
and no matter what happens ha will get fcla money's wotth la
all put down in btook oadwhita <?^n tfaepoUey."
*eo#eV iBaakBoUdlwc* A?n>aR%>N.e^