University of South Carolina Libraries
TUE ANDERSON INTELLIGENCER Fouii(Ieil Augunt 1, 18410. 12? North. Main St ret AMlKKSON, S. C. WILLIAM HATJKS. Editor W. W. SMOAK .... HUHlfWHsMunnKor Entered as second-claHS matter Ap ril 28, 1S14, at tli3 post office ut An derson, South Carolina, under the Act of March 3, 1879. 8emi-Weekly edition?$1.60 p?'r 'ear. Daily edition?$5.00 per annum; V^.GO for Six Months; $1.25 for Three Months. IN ADVANCE. A larger circulation than any other newspaper in this Congressional Dis trict. Tf'LI.PHONESt Editorial.327 Bm,:=v? Olllcc.'321 Job Priming.C93-L Local News.327 Soclct> Newri .321 Tlie I. !.'lliieneer is delivered by carrier-* i'i ihn city. If you fall to get your papof regularly please notify U8. Oi>! M'-tl-yf ytfin name on label of your pnuer/jtr'prnhd date to which your paper is pa d. All ehccks and drafts should be drawn to The Ander son Intel! ige ii err The Went her. Washington, duly IS.?Forecast: South Carolina?Partly cloudy Sunday and Monday. I ?hi Content Happy the man that, when his day 1b done, Lies down.to sleep with nothing of regret? - 1 The battle ho has tV -rht may not bo . . . won? The fame ho sought bo jusi - " in g Mi1, Folding at last biB linn dp upon bis breast, Happy la he, If nuuxy ?^?.? ion--spent. . Breathing}<only these words: "I am content." ?Eugeno Field. o Enroll atJiQ&&_ Enroll your-lull name. v Now that TOcrfs? naa gone., did he | saloot -tjie frttgT -0 Dental parlors next to Wi F "rawing | ^nys; Ouch. JW , . ; ?o? Uja.Jiest, -Tbsyjr ,,.:.bee. ..?wHiobo?y ought to tflvent a way to | cahl watermelons. I CrapeiWceV $o dritk that made | W?vphite house f?mouL ' 'O I . One thlag about a hit wave?feels so good after It Is ovoi\ . - iM..,Mr. .?:> _ ., -, vmTT0-i Did one of'thy dog days, got by? This Is a year of,pinny surprises. ,.| l|lO" J Thank goodness, there is but one more month of this campaign. ;.i r i:"j'0 The home (, pf, |he rice president Should be .called ''The Shelf.' i V.ii lHta ; . Tangoing1'''Is good training for "cooning the log""at picnics. fl oht:: I 0 The early, bird def.n't get the hook Worm, but.the greedy fish does. V -L_o- ^ Money tilke?but talks In a whisper | wheg |hrt^o^ii^ platea is in sight. .1?r-0 Sherman anti-trust law does not prohibit a corner on pie?political The world.la growing incredulous. No man believes a elgn reading "fresh jpalnt." -o Gen. Hlanuuot ,ia the subject of a good many paragraphs since Huerta | took to cover.'1' The Townvllle vestibule is a truck line and alt sorts of, a Une, and it Is doing the business. .. The principal thing for each voter la , to onroll-r-and then commence I picking: candidates. It Is rare that'nn honest man has .complaint of, mistreatment at the hands of newspapers. Ono thing about it, when tho sun*, is smashing ah'op ytndowB, things are] quilt at homo tW^'whlie. -v. d'-9' A hotel Ib a place where a fellow ! swaps dollars for. qua r ter s?and that's | just ?the wa* ba.fs-fc.-best it. ?-ri: SmitH^jSSTthe cotton ex change almost ?ha,'Invincible and quite as rapacious as the, boll wevil. j". . ?.?..0. . In Washington-!lithe Investigators found that they got better results with "subpooh'o ??cum duces" than Some people g^^'lto dictographs. Ettor, the Northern.or foreign labor agitator in Greenville working up the | ' I.- W. Wh man* lWl opeech defending ai ?VM?Si? of his tmipn.V ENROLLMEN1 Enrollment I1? : ; close T ocrais 2 1 years of : (or tho fore the succeeding ,eneral e dents of the State . ,r two ye months prior to t -e succeedin club district GO da_> prior to tl offer to enroll are entitled to t district to vote in the primar citizens of the United States ai Democrats who wish to primary elections must preset! the secretary of the club or bel of the book of the club dis*ric must sign the roll, giving the and place of residence. In case the applicant for he must make his mark on tl which he resides, and the persi will put his name on the club r I'm.. UIBNOVS DENIAL. The editor of The Duily Intelligen cer bus received from Col. J. I'. Glb roii of Hcnncttsville u personal letter in which lie very bitterly assails Mr. Pollock for mentioning the "calico ticket," proposition. Col. Gibson says the charge ugulnst him is In famous. The only charge was that he is a member of Gov. Blouse's stuff and that his name was on a ticket in 1KS0 along with some negroes who were candi dates for office. Quite a number of Anderson people saw the ticket and auw tho name J. P. Gibson. Mr. Pol lock made no attack upon Mr. Gibson, merely made a statement. This was done, not to humiliate Col. Gibson, as we judged the incident, but to make sport of Gov. Please who had been decrying tho negro and any one tu would associate in politics direct ly or indliectty with negroes. Mr. Pollock In ether words, merely "re plied in kind" and used no offensive language uuuut Mr. Gibscn. Mr Gibson bas sent this paper a two column article from a paper In which he gives the history of his political career and declares that in 1880 ho was a candidate on tho democratic tocket and that his name, was put on the republican "calico" ticket without his knowledge or consent Mr. Gib son Bays in part: "Now I will explain the.existence of the "calico checked hack ticket," which was sent to Mr. Follbck from this county and which 1b being exhibited by him In the upper part of the state. ' That' cnecked hack ticket ! was not bur ! ticket. - If I had to-go ?nxo judgment this moment I did not know anything about the existence? of that republican ticket with our names on * it, until I went to Brightsvllie on the day of election. "Mr. D. D. McColl who was my per sonal friend as long as he lived, and who. waB the father of the present democratic chairman of this county, told mo after the election in 1880, that he and other white republicans In this county had advised the republicans to pl xce our names on their ticket. My name was placed there without my consent or knowledge, and any Inti mation ar declaration, that I havo ever catered to or affiliated with the ne groes or republican party 1b an abso lute falsehood as black as perdition." We publish this much of Mr. Glb Bon'B statement in justice to him, al though aa we said boforo, Mr. Pollock Instead of trying to mortify poor Col. Gibson seemed to ho trying to ridicule Gov Blease's manner of political, speech. LET US HELP OUR NEIGHBORS. J. W. Rothrock, farm demonstrator for Anderson coointy, has returned from a trip over a portion of the coun ty visited by hall. This is tho section between Pendloton and Anderson, out toward Porthian. The farms of Mrs. Fred C. Brown, IT, W. K. Sharp? and others were foHnJ to Luve received severe dam age the young cotton being ruined be yond recovery and the old cotton be ing seriously retarded aud perhaps killed. Of 1,200 ucrcs it is probably Hint 800 will produce nothing. Ncwb was received here yeBlerday that Congressman Wyatt Alken had introduced in congress a resolution to provido $25,000 if bo much be nces sary, for the bent Jit of the hull storm sufforers in this county. Tho Andersod. county farmers who havo lost so heavily?and some have lost their all In the way of growing crops?are not beggars. They are true blue citizens and are game through and through. But It doea seem that when such nn unusual and destructive storm cctr.ca Upon. mem. they should be ns t.isted to get started again. Some of them live on mortgaged lands. What a splendid thing it would be it the ?oiders of the mortgages would waive the interest or a portion thereof. Some will need nothing but seed end fertilizer for uowlhg peas or some other such crop. We trust that tho people of Anderson will deal gener ously with those, people and will aid them to get started again We sug gest that there be an open discussion of this, mai tor at tho! grain festival next Tuesday, trades duy, when it is r". '. . r-'.'- . I IS NECESSAR' uesday, July 2S. White dem se who will reac i that age be lection), who have been resi ars and of the county for six ig general election and of the le first primary following their mroll in the book of their club y election, provided they are id of South Carolina, enroll in order to vote in the t themselves in person before ore the person having custody :t in which they reside. They ir full name, age, occupation enrollment is unable to write, le book of the club district in m having custody of the book oil. expected that a large crowd of farm ers will he in the city. THE OLD tit A HO IS PASSING. With sorrow we read of the parsing of Ireilell Jones. Me was more than n man. he was a type. And the splen did race of which he was one is pass ing, In a few short days will he gone. What an asset to the South it has been to have hud men of this kind. At the age of f>F> he received his diploma from the University of South Carolina. This is because he left the institution in the spring, while be was a member of the senior cIiibs, and commanded a company of cadets In the first operations around Charleston. Later he performed one of the moBt Jf1P.rWHuJt acts of courage in the iBory of the war, riding in an open boat across Charleston harbor under lire of the enemy, with dispatches for the detached Confederate forts. For this gallant work he was given a com mission In the regulur army of the Confederacy, and, If we mistake not, he served in the regulars throughout the war. He never returned to col lege but bis alma mater a few years ago complimented htm with a di ploma. His father was colonel for a regi ment and every brother who was old enough to bear arms became an of ficer in the Confederacy. In 187G he was true to hlB- people and in later years he was loved, hon ored and respected. He lived at a typical Southern home "Strawberry Hill," and we doubt if the door was ever shut, except per haps in severe weather. Hospitality and charity radiated from its very presence. ' Capt: Jones possessed the social elements such as are not per mitted to many men to enjoy, and was by nature endowed wit h a love of music. As a violinist he had few superiors in the state, and until his eyesight failed he was for years a member of the Iredcil orchestra of Winthrop college. He was the typical southern gen tleman. HIb manners were lovely, mannerisms none. And above all he was n kindly, gentle and courageous man. Fow like him are left. The younger generation of men may be as true, as honorable, an warmhearted, but somehow wo miss In the most of them that Indcfinible charm of cour tesy which marked tho well bred; well reared ante bellum man. h'uuki -is T?UHII ON 8UFF. - I _ Will the aftermath man please .*h>me the following: Suff. lllufr. Cuff. Hough. Stuff. Luff. Tough. 'Nough. . We trust the mill managers and mill operatives in Greenville will con tinue to get along well together, When tho pay roll stops everybody feels it. It can be taken for granted that the man who "rusBes" the newspapers has had some of his monnnesa told of by tho newspapers at some time or oth er. . H merchants will take hold of the parcols post right, there will never be any dead le.ter office for them. Coney at tue Pay Window. New York Arno, lean. When mighty Casey was enjoined tin town was plunged in gloom, Tho grandstand and the bleeckcr; sowu wefo lonely as a tomb. The gato receipts are absent now, the magnate in despair, For no one cares to see a. game If Ca sey isn't there. But somewhere In this favored lane .the lights are shining bright. And Casey lingers there- and gets ? shine on every night, For, .though they shoo him from the field and will not let him play. He doesn't care a whoop as long ai Casey draws his pay. Ai the Top and Bottom. Of all the people in Europa the French have the' fowost children and th? Irlak Utemost, " The Sick G > olumhla .State I)o the people of South Carolina realize that if the values of farms and hoiuct? ami Ptores hud dropped as much in the last seven years as has the value of cotton inf 11k. the state would be lu the midst of a panic? Do they realize that the owners of mill sharvs in this state are poorer by millions on millions of dollars than | they were seven years ugo? One does not hear much of it be cause owners of mill shares usually own other properties?they are well to-do people. We could name half a dozen mills in South Carolina in which the Investors have lost from three to five millions of dollars In lute years. Share holders have lost money even In the prosperous mills. There are mills paying regularly 8 per cent and the share won't sell for their par value. Whenever we hear a mill whistle sound before daylight, especially In the winter time, we think of what a hard life the mill worker's Is. Uy tin1 way, the man plowing under the July sun while we write has no easy job Confidentially, nine or ten hours in an office in July isn't pleasant. Conditions in the mills ought to be Improved. Of that there Is no doubt. It >h also not to.be denied that they have been greatly Improved In the last twenty years. \ We wish that the mill hours were shorter and that no children worked in the mills. The State favors, and urges the raising of the age limit for child labor ih all industries in South Carolina. Hut do we wan^the mills destroyed? Would that help the mill people! Ho they want to be driven back to the farms or thrown on the world, without employment I Yonder is a mill employing some Massachusetts, North Carolina and hundreds of people It Is making goods in competition with thy mills of Pennsylvania?but that is not all. It must meet the competition of mills In Japan. t England. Germany,' China, India and T?ie rivalry between a South Caro lina mill and one in England is just as sharp as that between Grocer Jones and Grocer Smith whose stoves are on opposite corners'. We can't make'mill laws for North Carolina when we make them for South Carolina. We havo pointed to mill legislation that ought to be enacted ; there are re forms which we "heartily favor and shall work for?--but suppose we enact legislation that will close the doors of the mill, is the mill worker helped? "Ye9," some one says, "even though the mill is i forced Into bankruptcy F.omehody will'Buy it and fun it." How does "some one" know? Aft In dustry will survive bankruptcies and reorganizations?but not too many of EXTEN&s?re^?RBAS ': Two Elec'rlc Railway 'Systems Are Merged, The following is from the Manufac turers F.?cord: "The Interurbnn railways built In North and South Carolina by J. B. Duke and others havo been mergod under the nume of the Piedmont & Northern Railway company, und have filed a mortgage to secure $50,000,000 of f> per cent 40-year bonds, the Farm ers' Loan & Trust Coiupnr.y, of New York being trustees and the proceeds of tho securities being/ designed for the construction of extensions and branches, betterments, etc., In addi tion to payment of the purchase mon ey of the present lines by the rail* road company, equipment,.; real estate, etc. It is expected ". at 'Charlotte, where the headquarters are situated, that a further extension and more improvements will be made aeon. "Heretofore there have .- been two companies for these electric railways, the Piedmont Traction company, op erating between Charlotte, and Gas tonia, N. d 23 miles*, and the Green ville, Spartanhurg Anderson Elec tric Rntdway company^.'operating her tween Spartanhurg, Greenville, An derson and Greenwood, ' S. 'iC.,' 102 miles. It will require tho construc tion of about 50 m 11 eg of lino through difficult country to/conneot>,the two divisions of the system by ah exten 1 slon from Oastonia to Spartr.nhu.rg. It Is plso proposed to extend ' north . ward from Charlotte/td-.Concorut;N. C, about 25 miles,1 and.\pbS8tbly far ther to Salisbury. \Gre?ghsborO ^ and Durham, which would ! ? demand'W[ building of 150 miles more of new I railroad, although construction be , yond Concord may be Referred: for ,a , considerable time. " "'"' . "J. B. Duke, of NeW'?orft, 1? pr?si dent of the line; Wi-B lotte, vice presldeiit'an^^.'Thom?rsou treasurer and, geii?'r^TOui^ol^v W. , C. Murphy is superlntie^d??t?V'- ?^i(-*v! "Fulfillment of theWuMas, herd, outlined will provid? an, extensive sys tem of interurban eleetrle railways through a rich cottott'?tll district of the Carolinas. Alreab>*<he 'eotapany has built and is now operating 125 i miles of lines, with high-speed pas senger cars, and It i? SW? epsduciing : freight service, interchanging business with the steam railroads. It seems to be understood at charlotte that fur ther construction will begin with the prposed lines northward from here, although work between Gastonln and I Spartanhurg may be started soon thereafter. Already it is reported that 1 plans for a short extension from Oas tonia to King's Mountain aro under * consideration." ? By Proij* Pity the blind rv. walled the profes sional beggar. "But you are not blind," sold. the pisserby. pausing. "No, sir; but my bid grandmother Is." replied the protosslonnl toeggor. MPm doing this for her."? Judge; otton Mills thorn. Comes the day wehn theflres in tho englno room go out not to bo lit again. THE PLAIN TRUTH IS THAT THE COTTON MILL INDUSTRY IN SOUTH CAROLINA IS IN A SERIOUS CON DITION. Wo hear politicians talk about tpo northern ownership of the mills. Will force them into bankruptcy put them hito the hands of southern peo ple? The iiiieHtion Is on*e to make any owner of Kouthcrn mill stocka laugh. Finding a southern man who will in vest in mill properties at any price in these days is not easy. The truth is that the Yankees can get practically the whole southern mill industry at half its cost of establishment or less If they want It. Rut they don't want It. The southern owner of mill shares in these times is, as a rule, a sick man so far as his mill shares are concern ed. Yet we hear politicians denouncing the mills and mill owners. Suppose that politicians should say that farming is an iniquitous business in South Carolina, would It help Hie value of the farm lands? In time, de nunciation of farming would kill the business. Either the mills ought to he closed and the manufacturing of clothing and thread outlawed in South Carolina or? Their affairs ought to be discussed considerably and understanding^ and the people who own these properties, who are trying to keep them going, ought to be given a chance to save them. Do the mill workers wish the mills closed? If the denunciation of the mill business goes on, the mills In time will close. "Not this year or the next or the next perhaps?but no industry can endure assault forever. The cotton mill industry in Soutn Carolina is a sick industry now. If any politician doesn't believe it, we can refer him to a man who will sell him shares In a mill that Is npw running shares that cob?. $100 that once were worth $120, that have paid no dividend In six years so that $40 has been iooi in interest on the money in vested In each share for $10 a share. We think he can buy the whole mill at that price, subject of course to Its in debtedness. And we think that our friend can of fer him any one of 25 or 30 mills in pretty much tiie same condition and on similar terms. However, if it bo advisable, in the interest of the mill operatives, to kill the industry, let the hammering pro ceed. There is absolutely no danger in hammering the cotton mills. We wish the politicians would tako them and run. them In their way. They can certainly get them, at .a bargain price-^-the' whole ' outfit, "lock/ 'stock and barrel."_'_ DO YOU KNOW?' A Swiss prison appears to bo. the very place in which to spend a cheap, holiday, as you have practically ail you want?a comfortable cell, central heating, electricity, good food, a. fair quantity of wine or beer, and tobac co and a library. You -Can- learn a trade, have plenty of exercise and there s little work to do lb return for all these advantages. There are a million and a half more women than men.in Great Britain Tho proportion of women to men is slight ly on the decrease however. At the cenpus of 1301 the proportion was 1063 women to 1000 men. Now it is 1061 to 1000. How Schools Can Keip. Farm and Fireside. In a certain rural school in Cook county, Illinois, a "parcel post club" 1ms been 'organized. Tho boys and girls bring their eggs, green torn, rad ishes, butter and other produce to school, put the goods In hampers, and ship by parcel post to a select list of customers in tho city. They keep the records of this club as a ? art cf the school exercises. They figur? the profits and the iosses. Ten' years from now this new agency of'trans portation will have been pretty well developed. A Great Field. Science. v; If tho economic botanists and plant breeders can give ns a series ot new cropping of trees which will furnish new foods for both man and beast, we shall have an economic fsctor which will combine a number , of needs. It will greatly stimulate food production, also - wood production. Through the development of the plow loss agriculture and terrace water holding, we shall have conservation of the soil and of fertility. We shall also have in this combination' the greatest of all forces'-yet brought to bear upon the problem of flood control and also a great aid to navigation and Irrigation , because of the better conr servatlon of water in tH? ?ol! for springs and Btreams. It is a problem with which the individual farmer of an Intellectual turn ot mind .can experi ment In ? small-way, but above all it Is one which needs even demands, the attention of the federal government and many of the agricultural experi ment stations. Feeding Alfalfa to Horses. It is not well to' feed alfalfa bay In too large Quantities to brood mares caution should be taken, according t<y and this Is a matter in which pre Clemson College. Horses tend to be, come bloated if allowed to overfeed on ai.ral.fa hay. especially i #he ^ayjs in, a, more or leu green 4&&-ot-W.al? waya advisable when alfalfn/l^ Jajto be fed to horses to allow the alfalfa to V ... - ' - .' : - .. -v , CSD' Jib ? No poor ones. Prices 5Oc to $3.50. Our shirt family is lar ger; it branches into silk as well as flannel, from silk to printed and wov en madras and novel fabrics. A wonderful array of colors, ga;y and gaudy as well as staid and staple. Novelties in silk Man hattan shirts $3.50. Manhattan shirts in madras and percale I #1.50 and $2. Eclipse shirts $1 a n d $1.50. Soft or laundered cuffs. A splendid showing of shirts at 50e.1 A special showing of summer neckwear. 25c 50c to $1. Order by Parcel Post. ! We prepay all charges. "Tim Ston.wOh mJOoassknea ' ' ?. <r' ? * * __ ? _ : ? ANDERSON IN LEAD Gets More School Money Than Any] Other County. According to information received from the state department of educa tion by Superintendent J. B. Felton, the county of Anderson leads all the counties in the state of South .^arollnn In' the amount of money received as state aid for the schools. Anderson county received during the year which closed June 30, 1914. the sum of $13, 077.64. The countv of Greenville "comop I next with $11.787.32. The third county is Spartanburg with $10,839.60, and so on down to Charleston county, which | toils the ticket with only $586. The circular received by Superln-j tendent Felton contains considerable interesting information, interesting to i the patrons of the schools of the county. Particular attention is call-1 od to tho issuance of teachers' licen ses. Tho circular on this subject says: An obscure amendment to sectio/ 1708 of the code, adopted at the 1914 Bossiun of the legislature, withdrew i'.om tho state department of edoca tio,\ the right to issue teachers' cer tificates. Heretofore such certificates were issued to: (a) Full graduates of accredited colleges In South Carolina whose cur riculum, standing, faculty and equip ment had been examined and approv ed by th? state board of education. . (b) Full graduates of reputable col leges and universities located in other states' receive receive similar credit from their home school, authorities'?;*' (o) Teachers holding state certifi cated fronv other .' comomnwaalths which had established reciprocal, re cognition of teochers' licenses w(ith South Carolina. (d) Teachers completing nthe courses of successful summer school work at some summer school approv ed by the -state board of education.. (e) Experienced teachers pursuing successfully the reading circle course outlined by the state board of educa tion. 4 .The ch?ngo in the law' prohibits the issuance of any further state cer tificate's whatsoever. Graduates of ac credited coll?ges in class, A may ro c??v? county licenses by presenting their full diplomas to any county sup erintendent of pducatlon. All other applicants for teachers' certificates must take the regular teachers' exam ination1 ts>''be held at every county court house on. Friday. October 2,1S14. - \ &*if LUIS POT08I ??l&slonqry - Center ef the A. B. P. Church Has Snrrenderd. f By Associated Press:) .. , Laredo;' Tex*,. inly . 18?Federal troops'late yesterday or early today evacuated San Luis Potosl and trofip? andL pook possession of Jbe, city, ac ,?w^brft; .WV^ reao>tat >erp ,>ate DEATH RATE IS VERY LOW Fewer Deaths In 1914. Tlnn in Prev ious Yours. R. A. McConnell. superintendent of Silver Brook cemetery, says that the year ending August 15th promises to be a record breaking year as far an interments in the- cemetery are conr. cerned. The number of burials is leaa than 115, and the year ends in less than one month's time. During the past week, when n-nc interments were made. The number of burials for the past 11 months was brought up in tho neighborhood of 100. One year ago the record was 148; ' two years ago it wae 13G, and three years ago it was 163. The nverage for the part six. or eight years has boon about 140. Superintendent McConnell says his . records show that the number of in terments is greater during the months when the seasons arc changing. For instance the number is larger in Feb ruary and March, and again in June . and July, and again In September and October. The summer months bring the largest number of burials. WILL GO TO A 81 ATM' WATERS Ensign Hndden Geer Has Been Visit ing H?me In Helton. Belton, July 18.?Ensign and Mrs. Hadden Geer, who have been spending the past month in Belton, left Friday , " for Landrum and Jones vil le to visit relatives 4or a few days, after which. Mr. Geer will leave for a cruise of'ttao- -, years In Asiatic waters.' He will go by way of Now Orleans to attend th? marriage of a classmate and from there there to San Francisco from which point he will Bail. He has not yet been Informed as to what ship he will do duty on, but the assignment Will be made on reaching San Fran cisco. -? - oo ob o o o o o o o o o t 0 GOOD TIMES; ? ?. : ... o . ;. o0oo0o0oqo0o0 0oooooo '-'".V: . ' ??? ' The signs of material advancement on a great scale are evident all over tho south. The universal Interest in good roads is leading communities to vie with each other in.their construe- ' tlon. j Roads open new territory and make the traffic oi commerce cheaper and quicker. The Increasing perfec tion of the autotmoblle is an important factor. 1 Competent obsorvers say that while there may be "psychological" depres sion in business in the north there. Is ' optimism and prospjerity in the South Atlantic states, particularly in North Carolina, and it la not psychological ePher but based on solidly . founded i>. business and .industry. Audi healthy.;,><>\r.?-i active enterprlco-and good: crop* ore i *4h?t.: Jot to beidaunted by ptrycho?ogloatiIn-- V'-ft ?IWbfi??Qi '.\i\? i : -vi ij.' : .' -v.[f,t;. : .*>; v" x--v^,tj'>i Ashevll?o Cilitea.