The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, September 07, 1882, Image 1
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• '
kl J U4
•• M !• iMi flB kwli
|^** fMf BMM m4 (VhI I
kf*r« MKj
mju!r«d. - _
*. A rtlclM for pnblicotlon thou Id bt
writU* la a olaor, legible head, and on
only one ride of the page.
4, All changee In ad?ertiMm<«nta mmt
rrach ui on Friady.
A.SOUQ FOR WOMEN.
Wtthln a dreary, narrow room, <
7j u P° n a noisome street,
Half-fBlntJntt with the stifling heat,
A 8 v! r y ^ f 1 ” wor ' t3 out her aoom.
let not the less in God's sweet air
-» 81 “K free of care.
Ana hawthorns blossom everywhere,
e Ti f ]i ceRS, ‘ l0 ? 8 toil scarce winneth broad;
iwta early dawn till twilight falls,
£taut in by four dull, ugly wall*. - -
The hours crawl round with murderous tread.
And all the while. In some still place, *
here intertwining boughs embrace, .
The blackbirds build; time flies apace.
With envy of the folk who die,
Who may at last their leisure take,
Whose longed-for slo. p none roughly wake.
Tired hands the restless needle ply.
But far and wide In meadows green
The golden buttercups are seen.
And reddening sorrel nodi between.
Too pure and t roud to soli her pool.
Or stoop to basely gotten gain,
lly.days of changeless want and pain
The scamstresa earns a prisoner's dole.
While in the peaceful fields the sheep
reed, quiet; and through hAavon s blue
deep
The silent cloud-wings stainless sweep.
And If she be'atlre or dead
That weary woman scarcely knows.
But back and forth her needle gwa,
in tune with thrvhUBc heart and h*eiL
Ml whriw the lining aiders pert
whHi-i» sy«e -d swallow*, blithe ad heart,
Ab<>** »tlWw*i.n ,knu and dart.
O Oed la Hehrr-n I •Snll I, who •hors
Tht drinr w<aaar. • worcanhiaad.
T***e oH th- srane-r * bTHtnosMsa at,
t aburimed by her • .rf ■ >
TW whltr m-• *tar the |r— -
Th^irngiW n eg aha U*w* e'er th'm yeaa,
The ■ -eg IW prnd m »*» -4k am Hama
—A. Whhi ■> te Mmm.tam i JPagaauw,
orh.it or rortUR i
THE PEOPLE.
K
VOL. V, NO. 51. BARNWELL,'C. H„ 8. C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1882.
$2 a Year.
for three days; they saw not one anoth
er, neither rose atiy one from his place
for three days; but all the children of
Israel had light in their dwelliags.”
Lynch Law.—This term, as common-
ly in use in the United States, is a per
son! lication of violent and illegal justice.
According to some authorities, the
term was derived from a Virginia fann
er named Lynch. But ft can be traced
to a much earlier date in Ireland.
When, in 1498, James Fitastephens
Lynch was Mayor and Warden ot Gal
way, ho traded largely with Spain, and
sent his son thither to purchase & cargo
of wine. The young man squandered
the money intrusted to him, but suc
ceeded in running in debt for a cargo
to a£paniard, by whose nephew he was
accompanied in the return Toyage to
Ireland, where the money was to be
paid. Young Lynch, to conceal his de
falcation, caused the Spaniard to be
thrown overboard, and was received
at home with great honor. But a
Milor revealed to the Mtfjror of
Galwav the crime which his goo had
>■001 milled. The young man was tried
warr his own lather, ooovicted. and
'• ntrnagd to be banged. Hu family
and other* d-ter mined to prevent the
r location The father, finding that the
■ratenre could not ha carried into elect
the uaoal w»». conducted hi* eoa to a
window ««ert<aili ng the pwblw street,
» th hu own hand* (warned the halter
ftltorftMNril to litfi
Bmk. TV# <Wnv»i*« o! iV*» «•
P M ftl-f*«! 1 iV- til tk£ r% 'tkRT'flt
k to a
la
Mhmwk *
that Jan*.* Ljarh.
bat tnkk. Ml
III}
• f'M Rikiffca k» m *w*m4 iMl
•" A Flying Ship. J
Almost everv one has reid of Ezekiel
Green and his flytng machine, and a
great many boys and ‘men have been
quite sure that they could manufacture
wings that would enable them to fly.
As long ago as the reign of James IV.
of Scotland an Italian who pretended to
be able to change common metals into
gold, and who wasted a great deal of
the King’s money in this way, but all to
no purpose, “took in hand to fly with
wings” as far as France, and to be
before the King's ambassadors,
traveled in the ordinary way. He
pair of wings made of feathers,
and when these had been fastened upon
him he flow off the wall of Stirling
Castle, bat only to fall heavily to the
ground and break his thigh-bone.
The Abbot of Tarryland (for so he
had been created by the credulous King)
declared that the blame ef this failure
sbonld be laid upon the fact that there
were hen ftaihert in the wings, and
that bens are more inclined to the
barn-yard than to the skies—a very in-
ganious way of defending himself; but
it could n<>t quiet the twinges in his
broken limb.
Another czperiment, which wai made
three hundred year, later, wae m»te
•tu cweeful If Was Tried oa a convict
from the galley*, who*# tile was not
thought W»> valuaM# lo risk, and when
r*wd» (or flight he mu«t here beam aa
object capable of (ngMealng all the
bards <4 the air **H* was ewmi«iw*led
• Mh whirls of (rether*. cwrkuwWy later •
lecrd. awd siteskdiag gradeslly at swMa
Me dwiaacea te a Minmmlel dOwtOm
Irwm he* lees «p Me narR H Ubew Am
Imewcrird (rum a he*gM el weseer last.
Iee***gr« **mk4 net he** eeew ewtta-
o*4 tbe grews mate <4 »pe rseinv*
A JIngharlbee Bcdaweea at DfTotloa.
The Arab race is commonly divided
into two sections. Tbe“Ahl iiadr, M or
“dwellers in towns,” and the “Ahl
Ikdoo,” or “dwellers in the open.”
From the latter words is deiivcd the
well-knowQftame Bedouin or Bedaween.
The latter iffe the best known to Eu
ropean travelers, and have usually been
described with great exaggeration.
Among them all, widely dkpersed as
they aie, community of origin and of
modes of life results in producing a cer
tain similarity. In person the Ueda-
ween arc rather undersized, active, and
cnduiing, with well-formed features.
Like all pastoral tribes which lead a
roving life, frequent quarrels arise
among them. t'he loneliness of the
desert, and the absence of fixed law or
civil order, render It necessary that ev
ery man l>e always ready to assert his
rights and defend his person. Yet the
nods on travelers which have made the
name of Bedaween el mo* synonymous
with brigand are comparatively rare,
and are regarded by them as a kind ot
customs dues levied on those who will
not pay for protection. In Asia most of
tbe Reiiawcea pay liule attention u> the
precepts of the Koran, and their religi
ous belief 1* confined merely In a pro-
Lieesioa of faith ia the natty <4 God In
Africa ihe tribe* which wander along
the non here border of the Houdaa and
the Algerian Baharm ere mixed with oth
ere which ere nnk el genuine Arab
Success With turnips.
* ' -v
Turnips or rutn bagas need n rich,
well-drained, mellow soil, U can hard
ly be too rich with well-rotted barfi-yard
manure, and if then some phosphate or
bone duet is added it will Tike 1
ly increase the crop. The condition
of the soil, as regards moisture at the
time of sowing has much to do with
success. A large yield will depend very
much on paving an even stand all over
the Held. The soil must not be too wet
nor dry. In eithqr case there will be
many vacant places. If rather dry,
k the land with the cultivator, roll
Ik# f ii#k#y
Ml
b4nn4 ( Ikumfh \b*J Ufmmk Um Armb
bmgwn end ■ eW thsemeivei Arab* like
the gwneiwe Aceh*, they danrty h**e
their huvses and ee bweeh* k they nr*
Usd#erigwhl*
>—*ed. wmA th
famed them. R* hmnf
. th* (tedsweew ae h* «
•nmvhwM dkgeey s* e mru
la AT've ih*y eve m we *w
m iMw na*s*e i**4. endwsi
e*4ev ih* ee-**** am *4 em*.
mm
mg sw*
uk m mm
* 4U
m f mm
^ m*** mm Ml fktoM 1
SK# bmm Ik# kk»|p mmf pi
l#4 k» Vkk IttMaM Y M Ml
4 k.
my mmu
a. - al _ MHkMI mm mm
My %s*e
w - flBMh .
■emmavv »-*m<
AAmused m he ee mwaammeri]
•4 If*
ewm *4 an osn%
wetah h* is
•Seri he em
As hke
V-*U kffefet
** ho* » • «
m RMRk## t
m • .Mi
P#nHmL
«# 9k k#»k#
Wm
r*
>nna*m
m <A* A see
m ax
*a
VW «m
«m* e hw Am4
•g •»>
'wm m e
wm he us i
pwRpBmrn
•ki# 9k M9k #k ^|B tfck
m 99k
9 #«
f
-» **h-**»*
Mkh mm mmm Lmtmmm
Ik f9n
mp4 Ik 99# km*
eripft «9 4Mk f^'fRuRPI
^■**4 —ryt ng V tMkf M# 99k Mt i
I II M «# kke#h k#4 IMk I
Ik % mm Im •mm <4 kto
k* kkhk # %HMki 9# ki#**4k Um ikkp#ik
(Hkkkk l<M >4 #kk 4rip»A«Hih kill 0 4P%4k|
9kkkk49 mp 999# k 99 #9 9kkPkk k# kk##
ki>4 Irik# #*•##• mm kk# mmmm m k#
kkp m# «§ kvkk M k9k> kkk k tmmm
9m k m m Ikk9kl I# 9kk kl 99# fk#*
mm*, kk4 •# 9# in timy % m m* mmm t# p*m
••A* f h« ** reAsd m rm a mwe —
Me pAewm aemg •**• mnm*Ae*eri m K*
ftem4 he m wm I W-> Am wr.s*>*
* emwamm wai aam*wen*wA h* mmatna m*
rnaawm
Shi mm w* twhm mam es Wi h* m*«wa *
Am. Twwi foe* wai*
* PakW • IP9 ksMRRpHMh >u*ri f RR |t*m> dPRurtt ML
Tv rm e mm* amt < w *s eh I mi ■ a *
Th* Mwi/ •« Ra4Ur lAww (M H'h4>
The ewth « of ih«s yriTmi kt k k m* Hrpppf
aw awcmM pnwt whmw *—t~g was hwt
drew a (rom •*» A • It was given ie the
hwt nr* at an ad tu> >n > I k>w to hw brut her.
to prefer a friewdly *ii nmmodsliim to e
liUguus lew suit, sim! haa lied a par*
doxlcel setrinw often applaaL
Ani f' lRiMUll*lll Gwrrajg Qaad
Manner*. -This line farms pert «4 the
S3d veree at tbe 15th chapter of 1st Cor
inthians. It wss borrowed by St. Haul,
from MfWSniter, the Grecian poet, and
is found in a fragment of one of his
comic productions for which he was
noted.
Nemesis.—“Grecian mythology” tells
us that Nemesis was •' a female divin
ity who was regarded its the personifl-
cation of the righteous anger of the
Rode.” Rho is represented as inflexibly
severe to the proud ami Insolent. Ac
cording to lies oil, idle was the daugh
ter of Night, though she is sometimes
called a daughter of FIrebus or of
Oeeamts. The Greeks believe! that
the gods .were enemies of excessive
human hupp.ness, ami that there was
a power that preserved a proper com
pensator! in human affairs from which
it .vas impossible for the jdnner to es
cape. This 'power was embodied in
Nemesis, an t she was in an especial
manner the avenger of family crimes
and the*Tiumbler of the overbearing.
There was a celebrated temple sacred
to her at Rhaumus, one of the bor
oughs of Attica, about sixty stadia from
Mamkon. Thu inhabitants of that
pbee considered Tier the daughter of
Oeeanus. Accor ting to a myth pm-
. N'emesia was tbe
•> i
■IMm mm
•kr
I i -•••
■ • » mm
mmm m
ik# te# IbAm
WWW* TV* owwmw hse ss
•b* •*
• a • p »
a smwwi <
Hwvi
m rim»
iei UM
(SOWS
ana •wwwMty #4 l
n»»al master, aad who a—n juentlr
wa« always glad to sew hint, was oa
th • uci-asioa ushered into the aviary,
where be found his lord amusing him
self with hie bird*, burners happened
to admire the plumage t4 a kingflsher.
■7
the ww. ihwc*by Id Rad wwl ih*
loM ovev wKwa taey are
uf th* earth.** ll was a i
lair, bwt <iu(te tafeawwis.
how IllUe the law* of gravRation, and
many other thlnge connected with the
art *4 flying, were then nnderslood , yet
no such obieet ha* been men makiar tts
way the.ugh the air, and a lying ship
would be very apt to Had itself on the
served by Pnumnias,
by Jup ter. ami Le in. *
am ad UaUm mmm only, • *#
i nium
“ By my lady." said Surrey,
prince.o£-wits, I will give it you.”
Will skipped about with delight, and
swore by the great Harry he was a most
noble gentleman. Away went Will
with his kingfisher, telling all his ac
quaintances whom he met that his
friend Surrey had just presented him
with it.
Now, it so happened that Loni North
ampton, who bad seen this bird the
day previous, arrived at Lord Surrey’s
just as Will Somers had left, 'with
the intention of asking it of Surrey for
a present to a lady friend. Great was
his chagrin on finding the bird gone.
Surrey, however, consoled him with say
ing that he knew Somers Would restore
it him if he (Surrey) promised him two
another day.
Away went a messenger to the prince
of wits, whom he founrtin raptures with
his bird, and to whonLhe delivered his
Lord’s message. Grew was Will’s sur-
{ rise, but he was not to be bamboozled*-
y even the Monarch himself.
“Sirrah,” mM hu, “tell your ma#M
that 1 am obliged for his liberal offer of
two lor one. but that I prefer oae bird
rery i
ground or in
ioung PtnfJc.
water.—Warper’s
I ta two ia
itt'
Ballooning.
We are now within a single year of
the centenary of the firs) baliooa. which
was sent up on the r,th uf June, 1788,
by the brothers Montgolfier. Their bal
loon was inflated with heated air, but in
the following August M. Charles em
ployed hydrogen gas for the same pur
pose. In September the Montgolfiers
attached a card to a fire-balloon, and
placed in it the first aerial travelers—a
sheep, a cock and duck. The eoeb’s
leg was broken by a kick from the
sheep, but otherwise the strangely-as-
sorted trio sustained no injury’. In Oc
tober the first human aeronaut, M.
Francois Pilatre de Rozier, who was
afterward killed in an attempt to cross
from Fnuicc to England, made his first
ascent in a “captive” fire balloon teth
ered to the ground by ropes. In the
following months, ac'-ompanied by the
Marquis d’ Artandes, Le Rozier ascended
in a free fire balloon; and ten days later
MM. Charles and Robert ascended in a
free baUAun inflated with hydrogen gas.
‘ alioou was vent up from En-
the
the
uplr
, and
in Feb-
the
the i
M
Tyrier.
ssr»
wor*
and sow immediately—all in the same
dav—giving no opportunity for. dryii
before the seed is in the ground.
"fi
S iuile dry plow again and roll just be-
ore sowing. If sown on level ground
always roll before sowing: One to two
pounds of seed for an acre. Some pre
fer to ridge the land. This is done with
a shovel or common plow, then put on
a roller and the ridges will be flattened
So ns to allow the drill to he Used. It
ia easier hoeing the first time ’ when
ridges are mode, ami when thus fiat
ten*<I they will not airy out more thaa
level laml. —
A ht-h *n«l and moist seed bad I* ll
brat protect!<•• against the fly. ns s quick
growth wdl soon get (ha plant* hevu<
•tamag* tr m it* attach Th* first M
lag •EnaM X* attended U» with prompt-
ne** In tht* •-aae “a surah m t<m#
*a*> • aiv** *’ Thrt# are t*o cwhlvalrd
Reids <a this Mat* *u foe )rv*m w***d*
oa •*» a Red the teralp gruoev twy
roofnt* (non hdam a rower A* naan i
thr tarot ea or* wvR aa tW or*A* a
rash *a
Roan
yAaoSt
i w
i •WafR m*
1 9## 99k9h • * 9
Berrewing Teal*.
The needs of modem farming demand
great variety of tools; indeed the
greatest difference between the farming
of to-day and of twenty yearn ago is to
be found in the great improvement in
all kh>da.of tools, and the great saving
of labor that their use accomplishes.
Many of these tools are expensive and
require considerable skill in their u»e
and care to keep them in g<KX#R > P a ‘ r ’
•r who ran only
PC- Jr
afford to own them, is placed in the di
sc that the
fanner
onl
occasional use for them, and can
place
lemma of not bein^able to do without
them nor to buy them either, in his strait
he is fain to borrow.
Now, if he will but be careful to ob
serve two or throe rules in borrowing,
he will have little trouble in any goo I
Christian neighborhood, in getting any
tools ha needs at any time the owner*
are not using them: but by nag led of
them he willbetome an annoyance to
the neighborhood, and unable to supply
his needi without buying.
First of nil no tool should ever be bor
rowed with out the knowledge aad coo-
ken t of the owner, n-w without aa na-
der*leading aa to when U. Is to be rs-
turnevL tvo ood. aav tMvowml tool
* boo Id be
R k* wo
No eom
stem aeo
ram of the writev,
publication, bat an a
faKh.
AJdiern, TJE PEOPLE,
> > Bamwetl OL H.. 8 0.
WIT AND WISDOM.
—Every man is occasionally I
ought to be perpetually. '
—Foud wife: “How strange! E
time Peter comes home from his
he com*s to bed with his hat on. I
suppose it is some more of those M
ic cfoings.” • ■■
—An exchange says that oi
still hi its infancy, which would jti
the assertion that the vessels are sel
seen out of their slips.—TtmAer*
what he
But
. our navy -
vould justil
—When the roan averred that!
seen a trotting match they didn't
it much, but when he amd
neighed ” they threw i
c&r.^Chieaoo Time*.
—Whenwt^H
by laying on of ]
he either quits business «
woods with a crowd
an* sonic *windl«* Mu
—/V/r..»< Fr,, I'rn.
sus* and Effe
on.-' Y .ur
immudiauly wi
hmgor wantod. or when
loreis. and ia raasof any A
rw'v# are.
*■ R
> oV otllal
9 Imr kk f
■ no ■ #w# ■ h
JjjWMIjM
eflooev Ih a* tareero
Iwah.
>Sma a *aas U
• too im.ro I Rm.
I As
wm*
Tam sho ro*
- h ~fc
to •
jfL I CTrw wRa
i m ib##l
9l it ki
\ •Ilk *
#99 k #%»
m k## 4T fk# <
•at «a*
to flro ! — *«
foro
f a
MB 9
R a i
*ao4R Rw
*o n rotori
M9kkf 9k^
«###t 9
98 * WRIMS'MR 9h»4t«HNhs« #M
1-* Ran
#p# mmmtmy ###
#99
mmm*
• t
#■#19 Mm fik#
0§ «4i
» % 09# I
•*•#• m
49 P#
s T
ms
0 #9i '
~ oro rom
MB #RBOy
rose Wfiros
aeroa# TV*
wbsm. vVtorR mm sfoeR# Rw
# rosaRro
b rod
• way ns ro
I 04
hmao4
■■mmwro*»rod ro 9b ummro
*4 Vm
h m a
MmSRsRg
li
sa Boas- A ou*#
4M
ro r
■ M
saro
pad *f i
|^R M m»
t Vase
R VspR I
R, RM
rartod
TMb
.cr«.T
^amTwier'Msy ai^aa
age ofcaa UwR brethors are pmH ahoel
•nlpring oa a eoRege enurw. la m her
words they have from three to (oer
(ewer years (or study, aad a nee warily
are compelled to study muck herder.
This involves prolonged indoor ooefine-
meat at a critical period ot their exist
ence, and an almost total neglect of cal
isthenics. The growing girl, just bud
ding into perfect womanhood, needs
light; air and cieoeHc. What wonder,
if she does not get them, that she emerg
es from her college or her convent school
a weak, muscleless creature, with a
mind stored at the expense of her body,
and a painful consciousness that if she
has learned much, one thing at least has
been more indelibly impressed upon ber
than any other, and thaX thing the fact
that her back is too weak to hold her
body erect without the aid of corsets.
Boys are more fortunate. They are not
expected tt> acquire so much insd short a
time, and they have far more leisure
for exercise.
If it is necessary that women should
acquire all that men do, for charity’s
sake let them have an,equal time in
which to do so. If, however, they are
to leave school at seventeen or eighteen,
a proper consideration for their future
and for the welfare of the generation of
which they will be the mothers should
prompt such a curtailment of their
studies as will leave them ample time
for indulgence In bealthfiving exercise.
—Chtcnoo Herald^
-It
the
IroMf <
>«Rb} arenasi
victis
The bon
with saliva 1
ilton, which V
Ur. R R he a
of bonanza goods anoints tbe Uumb*
with soft soap before he sheen them,
and frequently give* them a fresh ap
plication thereafter to prevent taking
cold. The lobbyist carries it about him
in large quantities, and we should say a
cent a pound would be dear for it at such
a lavish rate as be bestows it upon the
representatives <4 the people, though
he not unfrequently mixes it with
“soap” of a more substantial character,
an t when he makes advances with such
double action he is an almost invincibly
Attractive fellow. We tree Nation of
60,000.000, and from the tramp upon
the street—who used all his soft soap
upon others—to the President in bis un
easy chair, there is a daily expenditure
of soft soap by almost every individual,
and no census official need tell ns t hat
any thirty odd million pounds ayear will
answer the purpose. We may find
some of this evident deficiency ac
counted for under the head of “Taffy,”
but that will argue a defective system
of classification. Taffy is milder in its
effects, and U. or should be, used In less
urgent situations That it H indis
pensable we will allow, but it cannot be
dnprodnd rnpoa for extraordinary ser
vice, where a quick and powerful agrot
is required.
we have r
a* the stimulus
sal een
ten tal
be exctWi
what u-vful,
at tends the prodootiou* If etc
titioua, the tree •bouid be
drawing It off- But, ro Du Vrire re
marks, aad ro the pwaew of the tree*
very well know, the process is iniuriona,
nd if followed up ia destructive. It
almost without saying nowadays
that the turpentine ia of real good to the
tree, else turpentine bearing trees would
not exist ^ lie Vries has made out a real
use, which he thinks is the true function
of the rcsiniferous matters in I’ooifer*
and in other resin producing plants.
Resinous juice is stored in tha tree aa a
balm for wound*. It i* stored up under
tendon, so that it is imroediaiely poured
out over an abraded or wounded sur
face; for these wounds it makes tbe best
of dressing, promptly oxidating as it
does into a resinous coating, which ex
cludes the air and wet and other injuri
ous influences, especially tbe germs or
spores which instigate decay: and so the
process <4 healing, where there ia true
healing or reparation, or of healthy sep
aration of the dead from the living tis
sues, ia favored in tbe highest degthe.
The saturation of the woody layers with
min. in the vicinity of wounds andfract-
ur*» (as is seen in t^e light wood *4Bur
hard nines) ia referred to as effectively
an e-ting the deesy which ps'asJjn
fungi set up. Ibis “int" wood U in/im-
( «-»WW«
Rw Rwre
ro
MAmM
*4 ham*
hears liatars
•4 iks proparo
AoWfwod. a a* • fWMff
4 ik**, whoa Ra rod
• ,
saonwt sf •xparw ’Ra ro ro*T]rMf ht*
RABSMsTOlro Ms on* talstomA
by those whnro aacaa|l ha ORg^l Hag
to hero ‘ - ~
so intrusive "la to ha to aay i
intolerable; or visa, a laxity so
tire of evil as almost tot
He was shnwn that be might to have
built a series of small bouse*, each with
R matron or housekeoper of Ra own,
and ea> h to contain a doxan girl*, at
mdst, where the eurvqUIanoe could have
been 00*1**“* With mil being obtrusive,
and where Something like domesticity
would have mode a home in name a
home In fact. But Mr. Siewxrtbelieved'
supremely in Mr. Stewart. Successful
men generally believe in themselves. He
showed this in his architecture, which
was hideous, where it might as easily
have been graceful and pleasing. lie
showed it in his charitable plans, to
which he gave bat little thonght, and in
which he chose to be sufficient to him
self. ‘And so his groat wealth has re
sulted in no service to his fellow-towns-
|ieople and iq scanty honor to his memo-.
ry. It is a dory which may profitably .
be read by Other rich men.—Century
Maun me.'
Latex
1 b> royro
or Bulk]
is R more
I (he
■wwM.
MeTroA R
• >
a rosRnro *4
ai
MRRdal so horrible that it
1 iinpoasibl* to believe Renme
The report ia that a
ty, who had
and
*7.
is aL
R