University of South Carolina Libraries
54 Vol. HE.. PEOPL. E'SJO RA. Vol.___ PICKENS, S. C., THURSDAY JUNE 14418. N.4 it ItolEltIP K I KEIIY, ' Physician and qur eon, i. t . n 1- -. A till .d reVn . Mlarch 8,' 1894 I. 0. BowaN. L. E. CIuLnI:ss. B""" ""N & """1c - Attorneys at Law, i'i~:esn S. p. 1 51, I .T. -it. J. W. :DlWOD De t r. ) W M. N', awoon, Assistain Ollice, 88,1 Mbi Sret, Greenville, S. C. .jan. 9, '92 y ville, S. (. Otffie over Vi1 1i*1 4X Nleue's Drug Store. J. S. COTiRA N, G. U. WA4tt4, Greenville, Sr, C. M. F. ANsix, T. P. Uo-ritnAN, C. L. lHOLLINO4WOnTH1, PICkIens1, S. 0., Ihave associated thomolves together for the pratieo of law iit it various branches, and will give carefui attentioln,to all b"si, iess undertaken by them. Loans anid discoints negotiated. May 1, 18914. The Exchange Hotel, GREENVILLE, 1. C. C. W. HENDERSON, Proprietor. Idaacernl Impr-ements Tiargo Rooms. Special attentiou to Coiniercial Travel an Tourists. Table Fare Unisurpassed. Fine Climate the year round. Ap. 7, 9'z J. E-. IiAGOOD, .1. 1,. TilORNLEY, Jnt L. C. THORN LEY. HAGOOD & THORNLEY BROS., Livery, reed, Salo& 1 4ane tablose Easley and Pck-:ns, S. (Opposite 11001.) Carriages, Buggies. and Saddle [Horses, at reasonable rates. ?gQ' Your patronage solicited. ABE CLAlK. GEO. E. COOPERI Clark & Cooper, Dealers in MAi6 ani oranito Monmenta, TOMBSTONES, of every description Also. MIANTELAS, STATUARY, VASES and Wrought Iron FENCING, Grecnville. S. C. Sept. 19, '91. If vou want lhe file.9t, PICTUlES imlade in the State, go to Wheeler's Studio, 11l MeBee %veum Greenville, S. C ger Crayon Port raits i specialty A pril 7-y. Veterinary Surgeon. Illiving 1111 experi nice of fifteen .earsL ill 1.reting ill disensem of cittle, an5 having imade the dikeso ol Murrin, in all of its forms, .1 specilt , I offer IyI ser'vi-o to ie public. Wi I l rvA' eat .u tou fferinug with a y oY Ordinary di I ' .4. Feb. 1-1y- l'iekCns, PRIZE WINNERS Fulrni I-vd ou 16 41.\s 1(.,t Trial whel, If you womt na'o arranu .' .g eutaution Bov theu Carpenter Organ. I1,IW I, PRlICE,' Ot UASil. W. J. B. STILES. Nov 9, 93'* Dealer in WNatches, Diamonds & Jewelry, GREE~NVILL~E, S. C. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. Oct. 19.-3m INewvStore W E no0w have for ins peeti-mn tihe most complete line of MILLINERY. DRESS 00ODS, NOTIONS AND LATEST NOVELTIES of( the Seau~n, seectedt in peron'Im in the EasIlternl Markets. Misses Rogers, 45 C'offee S~treet, Imuder the Opera IIouise. h~Gree nville, S. (., May t, 1891 Hasi just Op)oned all inst stylos ofi Spri,1g and Summer Millinery A pril 19, 1891. CU M-4LASTIC costs only~ 8 .00 peri 100) sinuau n.jv Miakes a goodV roof for ymand a. 01l0 can1 pilt, ! on. cents puer gall. in hl.~ l'.ts, o~ y for 5 gdl. ib. C'olo, dlark n. Will stop leaks ini tin or irom, roo~f. 'tnd will last for yearIs. TaYy r Sem rlsti m pS for' samp~jles, am~ wl i p)articullars. GUM ELASTIC ROOFING CO., 89 & 41 Wost Broadway, NEW YORK LoiAi. AGEN'as WANT'IEI. Fe b. 8 1.894.-m. A. K. PARK. DRY 8OODS AND SHOES, [West En d] 10 PENDLETON STREET, OREENVILILE, S. C. A Ribbons. Our asso tmdent is now complete both as to width and collerings. %slhree sthimel)fnts received last, week ( Satiu and muoro Ribbons in white, ( cream, black and all leading Shades, n in width from tiny No. 2, includig all numbers up to 22. V e buy ncth ing but all silk goods. We sell them froin 15 to 25 per cent less than most houses ask for same quality. t Laces. 8 Our sales on Laces has been simply 4q laninnenlse. Uaily we are receiving i au1d eInerm new goods. Customo.1 teil us tihat a more coiplete assort nment, aidI better values were never shown Im the city. .uiondfay we open two shipments ill ,this line. Pliee. if anything will be lower than that 01 i previous offerngs. Silks and Woolens for Even ing Wear. Creai benriettas :ian.i-djwI, crys tat cloth, ceiai surah, elaine an1d motic .silke, eriati amnd lwhlite wash silks now ill stUk a1d at prie's to Stitl the times. New otl dottd 1(swi.", riev fer.m 10 to 0). . t n1 ili *1.25 hidies' iini tim jhella in tHi e itv. Very bi.ek lii ia liljiol lawns -n 10, 12ht 20 :awd -25c, wlrne ast black, Ill whit gopds no one can, show yOai a glrCI Vill'l y OJ' off1r voli Illore at tractive prices. Iveryti ing in plain, s C r i p v d anhd pIuid lawns. IlI)v's a11 X. C. pill cord, 1'. K. in vhiteo aid colors. Many new thi ing to arrive ih t of s I his week. A.K. PA IHK. June 7th, 189.1. ! Are i OU jout of epomno ni a epo eno iposition that yout (do not S Slike? Possibly the solic-i S !itinig of ~ife Insurance is S Syour~ special forte. Many Speople have, after trial, S bee surprisedl at their 5fitness for it. To all such !it has proved a most con.. Sgenial and profitable occul Spation. The Management Sof the IEquitable Life inth Department of the: 5Carolinas, desires to adid i Sto its force, sonme agents 5of character and ability. I SWrite for information. : SW. J. Roddey, Manager, : Rock HIll, 5. c. : * . TAKE T.*HE BEST *i 50cts. and $1.00 liottlo. EE U Ono cont a doso, woro i orso fa C01m5 prompty YCUres Throat, Hoarseneos, tioplln Cogh ~oro aen in tim uSo by Drugsta on agur szIeo '*orname hOanko ha s f..UH' CTARR H q R EMEDYE FO. - . .,1A Unie llr'I a. Irim iitters. i'hy,teinsi re Ommenl,,d it. h alcra 'c.'p it. th ottle. Geonulue SSON OF K1IT CAIRSON. iO.1E AND FAMILY OF A DESCENDANT OF TH. FAMOUS SCOUT. 'n, Adole zab i I liheShaii( of a Spread jug Oak Iip at Sati Moiicta Canyou Shel. ters; Samu Carsion, H11. Inliffan Wi1fe, nmad ThiOr Dark Wrowed On'apring. Whlvn old Kit Carson died, full of ears and Indian fights, ho left a-soh, vho, resting content with the naino chich his father had won, betook him elf far i rom the strifo of this world aid uilt him a homo under the suns of outhern California. Far up in on of lie canyone of Santa Monica h cut oVn a few sturdy cedars and built his heltor. Then ho covered it with the tud which he dug fromi the bed of the iountain torrent. flowing noisily at. the o toim of the Canyon. His house was on lie hilsido overlooking the stream and ias Hhaded by a huge live oak, which pead its branches this way and that for Is half Indian children to sit and wing uponi. This was the home of Sam Carson, id just beforo ho built his adobo lie ad taken to wife a comely Indian won n whoso tribe for centuries had lived Li the foothills of tho Sierras Santa lonica, wlienc they could look out ponl the blue Paciflo, with Santa Cata ina rising, a bluo hump in the ocean, 0 miles away. A wanderer up the canyon green un or the warm February sun found Mine. arson sitting placidly on a stump in n onion field, mending her lord's jeans. he was Indian, and Indianlike was rinkled and worn and bent, though er eyes were still bright and sparkling. he looked at least 60 years old as she at there, glancing cannily at me and hon pointing out the ravages which torm and fire had made in past years. She put her sewing down on her knee nd in broken English, mixed with Mex an Spanish and frequent expressive Mttle grunts, she told me all their trou les of 1he past. The old Indian woman suddenly arned to watch threo little dark browed hilhien that were chasing one another long t ho hill's crest, their chubby odies silhionet ted against tho bluo sky eyoli(. "Mine-all mine, " she said proudly, 'Saim's and mine. I havo had seven hildrenv, four grown,, three littie. See?" ud sie poinitel her wrinkled finger at lie yoiugsters, now rolling gloefully own t he hillside. "'t" r i L uhi, h il 'reln I" sho screamed. "I'rant alas lihev thi warmi earth oil the miny hill :1ana como (.11L and sting ometim ittin hilrendeadl," 0ho e'x ilaind, ain theii she started sewing igain, leamviig the youngsters and th aranit las t1 their own devices. "lHow-ho-w old are you?" the visitor The old woman dug thoughtfully Into he dirt with one of her brown toes. .l'en she drw it back hastily beneath er skirt and looked over at the ioun ain,. "MAfaybo 4911, " she said, wvith a udden smnile. 'Oh, no, not so much as that. Sii thought again for a long timo, -atcling the Pacific gleaming in the uilight. "Well, maybo 80 then, " and lio siiled contentedly. The ocean breezo blow up the canyon, ringing with it the faint roar of the reakers. Occasionally one could hear io crack of a rifle, at, which tho old udian wonmn never failed to glance up ilyh. Hel(r sewing was almost done Ihen Sami Carson, her husband, walked ut of the thickets up the canyon and lalked hazily across the field, gunm ini and and a small yellow dog at his erols. The wife aroiso quickly, and Sam Lit dlownm on the smooth stump. IHe was s larown as hiis Indhiani wife, his hair 'as gray, and his bea~d was grizzled. Io spoke in a low t oned, deliberato fash >nl, as most people do w~hio live long nder a semit ropic sun. ''Do you see that little cur?'' he said. 'That darned little dog has just killed a rildent, '' and t lhe son of the old1 scent riped his brow and prepared to tell the est of his story. Ha. had a reputation or thrilling and Impossible tales, "'Me and Baldy-I niamed hinm after hie old1 mounitaini over there--me and laldy, we wvas a-slyin through the un terbr-ush. I thought I 'd shoot somei( ophiers just for luck. Well, sir, I was tanin~ in front of ai big live oak, way LIp the canyon there where it gets narrer. tIl of ai s1uddin I heard a whirrini noise n the air. I looked up, and bless inc f there wvasn't a big wvildent. flying right lown on me'. I gave 0110 jumip, but I xpceled the cat would -have inc the iiext ickc. Oh, shio was a big uin, I'm telin 'en. "Blut Baldy was there. Hie just sailed nto thatecat. My, how Blddy did shake or, '" and Sani caressingly shied a ump of dirt at the dimiiutivo our's uese. It would have b~een an unpardon ,ble insult to suggest that aniy wildcat vould have made two meuthfuls of little laldy. "Did( lBaldy kill her?'' 'As (lrad asM a snail, "' Said Sami. ''Wel, wherte is tihe skini of the oat nyway:'' I askedM. "BIaley cheiv.ed himi all lip,'" said lami th Ii.hlt fiully. "Choiwed him all LIp. "I aIsn't. wort riniiugina home,"' iud him. IuS 1 a rili to his wife to ear y mi. 'on d I lowly~ ba'ck amnong the iion i .at md dhisalpeared w~'ith her ni the (. .i fu ILi-r lhe bi oak.--Cor. Into rl ie ones. l''encinLg i a L huest. 1.ad for little tirl * , i n r : i ti vs ha;ve long bleeni 'xpeii ink thie art-. l-ena tinly c-reature-s if , or :n. now t aght toi put th-i -he llhi de. ued littlec maid is (ilto a namrv~ns prii*dniet of thio times withI her iudinig, fencing, ballet daincinig, etc., md it will bo curious to see what will ,o thio effect of t-hesc isnms of the day on ier later dhevelopmeint. - Now York World. An English judge has decided that at i marriage ceremony, if the church doors ire olosed ~Or oe witness *bsent, the narringoun vowdA THE SAGE OF ENOREE af Exbrnastiveiy Review the snilver dC Quueaetion. c1 1E CLAIMS THAT SI'viRM HAs NP~v- A ER BEEN DEMONETIZED ANT) THAT FREE COINAoE OF SILVER IS LE- th GALLY IN Fontc Now-A LoGIcAL n ARGUMENT. dc [Continued.] it on the part of tho govornmonef and 811 buying silvor bullion and having it. struck and coined into currency, t did niot in any way inpair the rights 1 of the owners of oithor gold or sil vor bullion to tako their bullion to in tie iit and havo it struck and coined is clearly proved by tho 11th ho section of tho Act of March the 3d, d 1853. d( And be 'it further enacted, c That the owner or owners ot t any gold or silver bullion, in or dust; or otherwise, or of any of foreign coin, shall be entitled to h deposit the same in the said office and the treasurer thereof s81 shall give a receipt stating the weight and description thereof la in the manner and under the 81 regulations that are or may be of provided in like cases of deposit TI at the mint of the United States st with the treasurer thereof. And t" such bullion shall without delay P1 be melted, parited, reflned and la assayed and the next value (i thereof, and of all foreign coins ti deposited in said office, shall be e ascertained, and the treasurer ai shall thereupon forthwith issue A his cortificate of the net value theroof payable in coins of the same metal as that deposited dt either at the office of the Assist ant Treasurer of the United r States in New York, or at the mint of the United States, at the d option of the depositor, to be " expressed in the certificate, d which certificate shall bo receiv d able at any time within sixty d days from the date thereof in payment of all debts due the t United States at the port of Nem w York for the full sum therein tli certified. .1: We have clearly shown that up to this time gold and silver ro had the samo rights of coinage th and the same debt-paying pow- at ers-that the parity between sill these two metals was finally cha readjusted and fixed by the Act si of -January 18, 1837, and that do the standard silver dollar 412 M 1-2 grains, nine-tenths fine, was log adopted as our .money unit on ar<( the 2d of April, 1702, when our in monetary system wvas establish- tot ed, it being of the same v alue as a the old Spanish milled dollar sil that had been recognized (do throughout all the coloniesof elf North America for centuries, as im the money unit, the dollar of 18 account, and was madeO a legal chi tenor in 1 750, even by3 old Enig. tia landl. lat Tlhen camne the war between sin the States wvith its deaths and~ gri (esolations. Special payments wYere suspended for eighteen toc years. But beyond the middle pi of the time of suspension the Act of of the 12th~ day of February, gri 1873, to receive and amend the laws relative to the mint, go, assay oflices andl coinage of the at United States, was passedl by un Congress. lIi This Act has been styled and of is known as the crime of the 18 ages. It can serve no good pur- doe pose to enquire at this late (lay thi who is responsible for it. Suf- thE ficient it to say every member un' of the Congress of the United Ilai States of 1873 is resp~onsible for its it by his act, either of commis- no sion 01' omhission. The intelli- of gence, virtue and nmanhood of vi< the South had no part in it co They were not there. They were denlied repr'esentation. If of their representatives had been or there that law could not, andl ro( wvould not have be'n enacted. So The crime would not have been 22 The Act is a very voluminous nul one, embracing sixty iseven sec. to ions. Let us analy ze it and see lat what the elements that conIs'i- anl tute the crime of its passage are, in and what it has accomplished, no The first element is, the Act was ag rushed through both houses of Congress without even being w( read when it should have been in ter section, touching as it os on matters of the gravest aracter to the nation. The t dropped from the list of ins to be struck and coined o standard silver dollar, the incy unit of the nation. It os not even mention that coin. substitutcd for the standard ver dollar, the money unit of e nation, an unkuown coin, yled the trade dollar with its Actional parts, and made it a ral tender for only five dollars any one payment. Section 15 of the Act is as fol ws: The silver coins of the lited States shall be a trade illar, a half dollar or a fifty nt piece, .a quarter dollar or enty-five cent piece, a dime ten cent pieco;and the weight the trade dollar shall be four ndred and twenty grains troy; L' weight of the half dollar all be twelve grains and one if of a grain the quarter dol and the dime shall be re ectively one-half and one-fifth the weight of said half dollar. 10 silver coins of the United tes shall be a legal tender at eir nominal value for any yrment not exceeding five (101 e's il any one payment, Repro tce in Revise Statutes, Sec mis 3,513 and.3,586, which was acted on June 22. 1874, An talysis of the section of the et, above quoted reveals the et. tiat. the limitation of ten 'r applies only on the trade >llar and its practieal parts. Tho first, part of tlie setion ads: "The silver coins of the iited States shall be a legal ten i, ote.'. The coincidenco of >rds is perfect. Iti there is any mht that tiho limit at ion1 of legal ndor tappliie4 mly to the trado 111ar1 and its fr'actional parts and d not and doesL iot apply to the andard silvor dollar, the 28th etion of teio Act reproduced in e Rovised Statutes, Soction 3.527, i Juno 22, 1877, will dospel it. Sectio) 2,527, Revised Statutes, ids: "Silvor coinmt other than > trado dollar shall be paid out th sovoral mints and at, the as offico in NON York city, in ex iogo for goltl coins at par in ns not loss than ono hundred lars." This section of tho Act kos it porfoectly clear that tho al tn(lor qualities of the stand Isilver dlollar was not impaired ainy wayl. Thel, limitation of der applied to the trado dollar mec. T he Act left the standard rdollar im iho plenttitudo of its 1)t-paying p)ower. One of the mnrits of ('rime in the enact ntt of the laws of February 12, 7was the sneaking attempt to mgo the money unit of the ua ni from the standlardl silver (101. 421 1-2 grains 9-10) fine, lo the ndlardl g (I I d (dollars 25 8-10 Linis 9-10 fine. Section 14 roads: 'That the gold coins of the Uni I States shaill be a one (dolar ice, which at the standard weight twenrty-fiv'o and eight-tenths is shall be the unit of' value.'' fi'is is an admission that the [d dollar 25 8-10 grains was not the time anid novel' hadl hoonl the it of money of the ni a t io n,. ivinrg shown while the framers the Act of' February 12th, to v3, dlropped1 tho stand(ard silver liar from the list of coins au >rizod to he struck and coined at mint anrd substituted for it an known coin styled the trade (do1 , they utterly failedl to imp~air logal tendor qualities. I will w' proceed to shtow that the Act the 12th of February, 1873, pro los for thme free and utnlimnited nago of silver. Boctiont 21 pr'ovides for deposits si lve' huhllion, casting into bars coining uinto lirado( (1011ar and is >r'od ucod in Itovi sod S tatuites ation 3,520, of thme Act of June 1, 1874. It reads: 'Any13 ownerI ofI silver bullion, y (deposit thme same at any mint b)o formned inito bers or into dol s of the weight of four hundred El twenty grains troy designated this title as tra'ido dollars and (deposit of sllver for other coin a shall bo rJceivedl, etc." Section 22 providIos for the 'ighing of bullion and dotermin g its fitness and modo of molt g and is reroduce in n-vs 22, 1874. It roads: "W hen hililion i:.. ( a ii ;i any of the mintts it shal bejj wIiI. Od by tho suprintendai h( whn practicablo i, I 1,( p e 411 1114 depositor to whom a rcuipt ,il state the descriptn a,.nd i,] oi tho buihon' Section 25 )1(\ 141-- 1I. - .I for converting hallin it ,..'n and tho proparation of h t vr,.r: I roproduced in liwiSei skttitw,. Section 3,521. It radk s: "Tho charges .or ciom 0ri standard si.vor into t iado (1d Ir. for molting and rnining u ini, hul.. lion is bolow stifnda rd. Imr it'It ening when metis aro cn9taindiii4. in it which render it m1i for 1' ago, for coI))er used for all( . v tho bullion is above st andm.<!. I. separatinog tiho goIld .un1( 51 ile . theso m14t114 (x i o( . . i n i . bullion and for Oh prepa)Iy144.nuI 4,1 bars shall b fixed from tim. ti tino by the dliveo il th Ow curronce of tho Cert-otm- v 4 Troasury so 1s to equal hait oiii excood, inl t-hoir j1du1IIi al t h . tual average los1 t iach mim :mo1 assay oio of1 thi un11r11i, M wastago anld use of, num-hhio-ty 4111 ployod in each of the I4- Ir. me1k0ntionled. Section .1 ,1' t1h .\'. of Fobruary 12th, IS72. definii4 i hi powors and dut ies ofl tihl ujrin. tendent, reproduced in Ihe j.-1 .. ed Statutes, Sectioi 3.503. :t5() 3,505 3,509. Seel ion 3.-503.( :. 1 : "Tho Sulperilitelldunil il 414-l llints81111ill l11vetw vi 4 41111-rl1 . I. of, tl1o SupelrinI laI(-l(n-. il I- .', corm ad lIersols (iIlfI'\ip.i l i I alid tho suporvisiol <>f H.- iln thereof, subject to Iih a;prm the director of I hi mint. 11 b niako rormits to h lir-ter I, mint at, such time- midnee to such forms as t ie d i proscribo; which shal -%h161 deta:1il 11nd un1 derv n p tr-.. the leposuit I.f Iu1II .4. of gold, silver miiim and tle amoiiunt (4f Iu I1i!. ard and rofined bars n! no such other statis lJ('s :md44 1 1 n1.. tion 11s ma111y ho rolpijird. Sectol 3.50 1: lii H and relnder (jourtk i--i;,r director of tho 1111111 )ll, h 14 pos of l(lju l wi nt :n-c-1'i 11'i such formasa ni V k . -r. r : by t ho Soerotil- (1 ry 1oft1i T ron: 'r. regular and faithful :e, 11 . his trtictions wi l - 11w4- b. r ficors of th1mi olimi 111h li.. ters, etc. Section 8,50)0: Thi supel~ in brought to 11h( mmt11 hu 4r a a4 . .r coinage; shall b he 1.I0~.pir i hllion or coiln ini ihe' mbint 4. 4. while the lo 141 8 u legal I li 4 hands of otheir iilliecrs :n144 -:a dliver 1all (co)1 inst ruck! aI III 444 u to the( persons toi wh144a t lb be0 logally pa"yable'. Section '45 pro'4vidi: (.r 44 i :. mont of coins 0or har1 i di ' anid is r(eprodu1ced1 in lIevi .' l t uitos, Soc t i oJ n'. :I51. 11 r.4 Whenou the coins' ori h4ar'.. whi I the l)qu1ivaflent It o Iny d 'p'i u a , b~ullion are readyV for1 dlivery, 41h~, shall b)e paid to the dlepo4-lio.r ,ll his ordor by the 5upein14~ia'V' andi( the p~aymonts shuall 1b' nu)b. dIemnhudedl, in the0 order inl whi tho bullion shall havu' hm brought to the mint. In the' d.1 nominations of com1 d1elivered'( the superintend(1nt sha 511 omoh'4)4 with the wihe of th4e. depou :r, oxcept when imuprailit lenbl or conivoniont to do0 so. No bini' be clearer that thei Aol il iia ry 12, 1873, provided9( freel" :1on 4 citizen of the1( Unlib-d4 Nn owner of silve'~r buionj.4 If\ shown by3 theo aho,\ 4' l a1. the Act of Fohrua ry 1:., .'(:1 vide~d to every cit i/io ~..l Unlited States the( 4we iW f 0, uh bullion freo and)( unl144utin . ago of his or her 141ino in4 !' or tradlo do~hllrs ofi *I .124r14i ri.. year the m1inlts (l tbi li. States woro tharon ''p''o I'u nations of the'IlV art.- anld ; wore invited to iri'iig tii-ir huillhii to our mints and( haive it. coined Free and unlim4'ited1 co)inngo wn extended to thorn. See the Act of JIanuary 29, 187. It reads: Be. it onacted1 by th Senate and House of RopresentA tives, of the Unitnd States of mmoo * i r )ongressa u Iubled, That it. h i .l 1:0 lawul fr coinago to bo uitvd at th niint4 of tho Uii.. ale, fr ily oreign co-. tres aplying. 1fr 8h11sam0, ac loing( i ll thO 14 y113 prescribed istnbdId.- and dioms of Such eaunir ~ Mi (f uc e gu a iot ~ , .the Tr~oaury t r inv in'v ding aIbor, n 44 4 ' ; Iil I''vtnc l hiy ri o r t h e1 i I I~r I fir. i'uimu tacttii or at heh Ith hal' n4 t intrfrs wtht o h * I II. la- i i dl oli eI lii irol* V W 1 : 11 I Ila , t,en dion . un it f li I8h i. coijed Ml jil ha zi v> b( le sIr nek mid1( coitld, PInt ay 4izl'l "I be stru ck Id nor4 II was this Act rushed iriwi Iillb hoth (As f1 C(ong very, lw 1:w it Ihti bveen dom, '"' u1 a1: it general1'ly known for)I .\Ii vr..a r in (,t 1 1ior than 114)1111. 111(0 n v I,, 11f w11-11 I()11-oli, ' : II Iv, i %* uni,( \y 1 1 )1144O' enal~ ~~~~. htbthiuhso on r4ss. - l' n If 11i 1 * 0. iir n - i1n" I itri. hIth r - - I li I s lio . i lt Vin f i - a mit is l h mw~i . pok n ' 4 :1 i l 1 t 4 I hill n-!. , 1 Hnn o iii 'N l la i )n Iv I heliu (111\1110, ~vi 441 ( It (If t ic aind ,:I Iwd ~ ,1 l t rInine,-1 (on. I ll -ut i wi \' oorh'7 i * 114 ii . .l . V, ~ ~ hll(l. Il-114 Im ll-h mdil Iw 'l ' 4,It if he('t nl .. wn 4)liv: n 4t ()ivt Vte I (1i - I vil >Ia nd i n b bill 4 lu- lnih Con. h 7 bee bn. in *Jnhin.. n I , , li 4 v- i ne * ii' ,l( l 'lI i i I i.'~ ((rot .O I r Jngj 'ri 141 lrf~ Oil d. .1.,'' yi' rt jre th hll 4 1 . 04 I it his e t ofiI( !u~r t body pron ly pass-lI~d ri t I oi" by4 a 1 wo-thlir volticii 'I A I ' i in l'QIs~ 0)11 4 l it o ur ( oiqo~ "',h thi7 I i o ~, tie. and i he 12th AIv i'a' I L'; , th.- aey qu~luie.~ vi Thl' ia d ihd&ier dhllab, 1 [o 143 ontu i r welv nuadsl