4 - - - er -~/ ork 4's) all 8~NE _KWBERR, .C., C09 8___._ NEWBERRY,__.__ .,THURSDAY, JANUARY 3. 1889. "The State," said the Governor, "being independent of this or any *O other bequest. it is unfortunate that r sha 1the -Clemson devise has been ham pered by certain conditions. which ier.] make the propriety of its acceptance at 'e sun- any time a matter of grave doubt, but .ht glo- to accept it at this time, when the transfer of the real 'estate has been es unte pecially forbidden by one of the highest p to the Courts in the country, would place isChrt- South Carolina in the unenviable posi r Rich- tion of opposing her sovereignty to the e Clem- determination of the possible rights of a citizen by the Courts of the country, overnor when there is no necessity for such ree days haste, even by the ferms of Mr. Clem ake ' a son's will, which allows acceptance to iredat be made by the State within three it aw "You don't consider, then, that de 'in the lay, in this case,:is dangerous?" bearing 'POSTPONEMENT ADVISABLF. a sus- "No,'' said Governor Richardson, ts.could c'the postponement of a determination inter- of the matter cannot result injuriously. ht and It cannot affect hurtfully the cause of "have Miss Lee, the great granddaughter of the illustrious Calhoun, whose whole life was devoted to South Carolina, and. ed the who was one of the towering three who ely, as made the States of Massachusetts,Ken -ng up tucky and South Carolina so noted in tween American history. It could not. de tract from the rights of the State, even course, were there an imperative requirement had to_ that the devise should be accepted im itj d- mediately, since it has become apracti cal impossibility to act under the re id, straining order of the Court. That to order renders it impracticable for the to executor of Mr. Clemson to transfer - the real estate in litigation to the State; and the title to the real estate being in Of litigation, he could not utilize the per pr sonalty in the erection of buildings or making improvements on land * to which .there is no title. The only ef 6t feet of the insignificant appropriation proposed-bythe bill towards the estab ,re. ment'of an institution such as has been it designed would be to make South Caro as lina a party to the suit and thus inter ral pose her sovereignty against Miss Lee. ire- SOME ADDITIONAL REASONS. ?,all "Again, it is a serious question ess whether the bill accepting this bequest eir does not change the conditions of the devise to such a degree as to prevent its n, standing the test of the Courts. Mr. ent Clemson having specifically and per om petually a ratio of seven to six in the -ol- number of trustees representing respec his tively hiniself and the State, this bill ov. has provided that a two-third's vote the 5t important functions of the the That is a very material change frV-06 my the plan which Mr. Clemson's will ac igThen there is another objection r the which the people of the State should A have an opportunity gravely to con- tt re- i sider. It is the propriety of establish -4 ing an institution of this kind under E uei c>nditions which, if sustained by the the Courts, wouid prevenlt its ever being ti - genuinely and thoroughly a State col- i 4lege, as it would be.given over to an ir- 5 n, responsible b seems to be an authoritative contradic- D tion of the reported capture, renders v the history of these men peculiarly I interesting at the present time. The n American public feels more interest in b the fate of Stanley than in that of S Emin, since be has been so intimately t connected with this country and is, S indeed, a citizen of the United States. s There is something of mystery about s Stanley's origin. It is commonly said a that he was born in Denbigh, Wales, I and placed in a poor house at 3 years t old, and that he remained there until I he was 13, and picked up education a enough to enable him to teach school; I that at 15 he sailed as cabin boy to s New Orleans, and was employed there I by a merchant, who gave him his own ' name,~Stanley, in place of his original one of John l owlands. But it is also 8 reported that he was born in New I York, and that his mother was living r in that city a dozen years ago. He was ] in the Confederate army, and being e taken prisoner, entered the Federal I service and became an ensign on an ironclad. After the war he became attached to the New York Herald as C special correspondent and in that ca- 1 pacity 'witnessed the Abyssinian war, E the'Carlist rising in Spain and other I notable campaigns. In 1869 the Herald E co'mmissionedhim to find Livingstone, I who had not been heard from for some 1 years, and he organized an expedition 1 -at Zanzibar, 192 strong, and found the i Scotch explorer at Ujiji in the autum ( of 1871. Having furnished Dr.-Living stone .with supplies he' returned, to t England in July, 1872, and was received with high honors. - In 1874 he started as the agent of the. 1 Herald and the London Telegraph on his cejebrated exploration of Central Africa, in which- he crossed the Dark Continent, following the Congo to the Atlantic. Afterward returning there he spent three years in the employ of King Leopold of Belgium, dotting the course of the great river with commer cial stations for 2,000 miles from the coast, and founding the Free State of the Congo, which succeeded the African International Association, and was re cognized as a sovereignty by the Berlin conference of 1884. Returning, he made isna uo s.i13n, 1o saura uduf -- at his tour here was cut shor a e mherst, just after delivering a lec- der ire g Mr. Stanley spent a short while in n ngland, and then .went to Egypt, Ir Lher he consulted several experienced XSc avelers in Africa, among whom werefr )r. Junker, Schweinlfurth and Joseph w 'homson, all of whom advised him to tact either directly from Zanzibar r Lorth ward or from the Red Sea as far nore likely ways of reaching Emin at adelai, where he had been shut in ince long before the fall of Khartoum, han his own chosen route by way of the Congo. But Stanley regarded the way of the Red Bea-as meaning warfare nd almost certain. capture, and the ountry between the lakes and the ndian Ocean he thought harder to march through and.endangered by the warlike character of certain tribes. t From the Congo he would have the service of steamers for a distance up the the Aruwhimi and a source of supplies. nder the care of Tippoo Tib, his olc1l ieutenant, and the great slave trade~ of the Upper .Congo, who had control s was supposed, of the routes then( to Wadelai. Tippoo Tib met him g Zanzibar and setled the details of expditionl, accepting the salariedp of Governor at Stanley Falls, an engaging to furnish carriers, wh should return to the Congo with t great store of ivoy which Emim w understood to have accumulated- c The expedition, composed of 7 l Zanzibars, reached the mouth of t a f Congo at the end of March, 1887, an i after experiencing great delay in h paration, particularly in gather u supplies, Stanley started from Le s W ville, on .Stanley Pool, April 26, issrwhm Jue . hence he proc a 1- by steamer a short distance on th re miles hat lay between him and n to lai. He had 400 men with him o ry the overlpud march began, ha~ e n-a strong . ar guard at Yambu~ yn last messag~e received from hi~ be camp, and the last authen to from him, was dated July 2. i he making a slow advance, as he supplies sent to him. It was as B m- tation to reach Emit' in Octed al.. Since then there have i~a al - rumors, but no cetant al on- movements or whereabou$ ny bi he der of MjrBarttelot b. -bs gn, the relief expedition earlyoh omr ta eere b.~ tand the various misha inu eihrSpli.o enor er:.Tippoo Tib was prevented a ohn hltedoften in hope of r Lutts'aid that was never sent, t he~l ssi- Ifight with unfriendly tri the~ usslf fforce in November, 1887,tea r the rehed Albert Lake, and >ak 1to 5> men-these are the t to do ing of these rumors, ar?djdId ooth. them (lid not reach 7 -nt to Noveber this year. wa alths igoac hr iv..288r'umors of a mysternounej -Hi"White Pasha" in th inen coutry, wjhom m o ount t to be Stanley, and - ae .reported that he w up'ed n has been ti igfrom jw ae Mahdi and had red raters of the Niger, wI hed the head e expected to reach thr nee he might ueseason. . est coast in e EMIN BE. Emin Bey is an Ai amed Schnitzler, w' rian physician iohammedan faith, , professed the iidhat's advisers v became one of izier had the projie'n that grand .uropean reforms in , of introducing unions, and.on the he Sultan's do- T e fled into Asia. nfall of Midhat rc uakin, made his w ence he reached c: be time of Gen. ( to Khartoum,in D hip of the Souda don's Governor- n torekeeper, and , and was made e urgeon in-chief on erwards became o] as an ardent nat. ordon's staff. He rE ecame famous b3' list, and speedily i ions and his papE is scientifne collec ean societies. G for several Euro- st genius for diploi on found in him a les with whom" y among the peo- P ent him on miss ehad'to deal, and 13 tim Governor a s, and".inally made I ,inces of Egypt :1 the equatorial pro- a His administi th the rank of Bey. 13 ignal ability; . -on was marked by n rom the slave . freed the provinces S eturn revenu e, and made them f >enses. Emin h nstead of eat up ex- W ver since. H remained at his post J ieeded, the r his warnings been A vould have b ellion of the Mahdi c crushed at the outset c nd the usele~ sacriliio -- 4 ulminated i r aking of Kh4 on's death at the n Lvoided. Em -um, would have been b vith hostile as been ruler all alone, d Lgainst who ribes on every side, t naintaining he has held his own, C housands o rder and protecting fI ies which pie from the barbari- ji he whole ve been experienced by t, Res. Niothin n outside of his provin. p y of this raver than his occupan he British perate post, deserted by b very way vernment, which was in o een reco ,und to sustain him, has b housand . He had about four o >rganized pops at the outset, and he f. soldiers; hfuxiliary forces of native u arfare iwas constantly engaged in c arrison h surrounding tribes; he t ong dis dozen river stations lying t ion has s apart, but his ammuni- t noney low, and he has-lacked the o irmy. ed for paying his small 1 the coun has nevertheless governed f ives ho well, and taught the na- j tdsco raise cottoi, rice, indigo l Ld and also how to weave cloth o na ke shoes, candles, soap and I a les of commerce. He vacci- s natives by the thousands in C uutesmallpox; he opened ( pital known in that quar- t shed a regular post route, r aoffices; he made important s discoveries in the basin of lake, and in many ways. d his capacity for govern- d 2 . us races by the methods ids of European civilization. I er visited him at-theend of d letters have been received so late as December 2, 1887, at t e he had been to the Albert hope to meet Stanley, but had I disappointed. et Sound Salmon Fishing. portant industry is annually ig in volume. The catch this year, gh not as large as expected on t of the delayed fall rains, will ut 15l,000 cases, four dozen cans ~ase, aere are five factories engaged in business. The largest has a capaci-1 for canning twenty thousand pounds fish per day and employs six seines, ting, with the necessary skiffs and ws, $1,500 each, manned by Indian rews. The packing is done by Chinese, 1 f whom one hundred and fifty are mployed at o17e dollar per day, per ead, boarding themselves. The cost of the fish is ten dollars per nie hundred-tencet -ate.~g is sipounds. Single ecimens are frequently caught ex eding twenty pounds. but the smal- L r sizes are more palatable and more in ~ ~mand for home consumption. They are caught in the bays and irbors of the Sound. After running , into the fresh water streams to$ awn, the fish soon lose their flavor. Trolling for the fish is exciting sport, id munah indulged in. They are imey, and fight to the end, but are d >t as tenacious of life as the bluefish 'the Atlantic coast, and are more sily exhausted. 1 1 Death of Capt. B. H. Massey. o i York County- t4 fi RoCK HILL, December 25.-Captain y enjamin H. Massey, one of the most o: rominent men in York County, died e: his residence in Fort Mill at 3 o'clock is ts afternoon from an affection of the art. Capt. Massey served the people fi this coiunty as their representative in a e Legislature for ten years. He was s< member of the Wallace House, and o ~one time chairman of the board of te rectors of the State Penitentiary. He u as 69 years old. His death was agreat as to our county and State. He was a e ian of sounld judgment and ever ready i aid willing to assist in building up his *, ative State. The WatermeloPI'rust BARNwE cemb ..6.-The sec nd in ig of .tfrM~elor Alliance ,.2eld here to..day and was largely at rded, with a membership of about ir ae hundred of the most prominent owers in the State. The entire busi- k ss of the organization has been en usted to an executive committeJ DINKINS'S DOWNFALL. l Young Lawyer of Manning Commits ] Forgery, Swindles a Widow and Attempts to Burglaaze and Bob the County Treas ury-He Confesses and is Allowed to Es- ] cape. [From the Manning Times.] Our readers were made aware last t eek of the breaking into the County reasurer's office and the attempt to 1 >b the iron safe in that offce. Suspi on even then pointed to Benjamin S. f inkins as the guilty party, but we did e ot have it in shape to give our read- i s. The robbery was one of the most pen-handed and bungling affairs on cord, and Dinkins seems to have gone to it careless of the consequences. l It was generally known, common reet talk, after Tuesday night, yet not a effort was made to arrest him. He t assed along the street freely and open- 1 , conversed freely with, policeman, f itendant, sheriff, and other officers, ad although these officers were moral certain he was the guilty party, yet I ot an effort was made to arrest him. omething is wrong; somebody is at ult; an ordinary every day man ould never have spent the day out of ,i1: But B. S. Dinkins was allowed to alk the streets freely all day Monday; go to Columbia Tuesday, to argue a se before the Supreme Court; to re- t hat night and quietly have that ight an 't day to arrange his F usiness, and to go to ~ Thurs ay morning, as freely as he ever did, a take the train for "parts unknown." 'omment is unnecessary. This is but a tir sample of South Carolina law and 1 istice, and the reason lynch law re- a ins such a strong hold on the peo le. Early Sunday night,while the churh ells were calling people to the house f worship, Dinkins went to the court ouse (as we believe, alone and with at confederates or abettors), and, after ailing to break directly into the treas rer's office, forced open the clerk of ourt's office, and. then cut a hole hrough the back of the chimney into be treasurer's office. He then crawled brough this hole, and endeavored to pen the large irofr safe by manipula iting the combination lock, but he ailed in this project and gave up the >b. Thence he went to Henry Wein erg's bar-room, between 9 and 10 'clock, and bought a pint of whiskey. fr. Jesse Hurst, the clerk of the bar, eeing his dirty condition, said: "Great od, man, what's the matter? You are lirty from the' crown of your head to he soles of your feet." Mr. Hurst says ke.was full of soot and ashes, and one ide of his face was all blacked up. Dinkins coolly and deliberately lanced at his condition, carelessly lusted off some of the dirt, and re died: "My chimney fell down this eve .ing, and I have been trying to put it ip." Two-or three negroes were present, nd one immediately went out and no ified a policeman. The policeman and, everal other negroes Eaw Dinkins in iis dirty condition as he went .towards iis home. Mr. Hurst did not conceal he matter at all,but talked freely with number of citizens about it. The following day Mr. Dinkins was o have gone to Columbia to argue a ~ase before the Supreme Court but he lid not go up till Tuesday. Tuesday ue freely walked the streets of Colum ia, and unmolested returned to Man iing that night. Wednesday, at the Ldvice of his friends, he concluded to cave for parts unkown, and took the rain for Columbia Thursday morning, pendiny the day in that city till near y six o'clock, when he left on the tugusta train. After he left it was also discovered bat he had forged a draft on the Si nonds (sumter) Bank for $4.50, signing 11s law partner's uame, W. F. B. {aynsworth, and had got Treasurer ok place as far back as the first of the ionth. Mr. Dinkins was a cotton buyer herei ist fall, and on two occasions got Mr. Wolkoviskie to cash drafts for him. hese drafts were never paid, and now [r. Wolkoviskie holds in lieu of his ioney two notes for the amount, 160.10 Nor is this Mr. Dinkins' first offense. Lbout two years ago'he worked into [rs. Edwards' confidence, and swin led her out of about a thousand dol irs. She recovered three or four hun red dollars, but the balance was clear >ss. Mrs. Edwards gave him the mo ey to pay her mercantile bills 2 Charleston, and he forged receipts give her. Through the influence of 'iends he was not prosecuted. Mrs. Ed rards talked about it a good deal, and nues he wvent into her store and threat nued to kill her if she did not stop talk ug about the forgery. Before Dinkins left town he con-1 xased to some of his'friends his attempt t robbery, and asked their advice, seming loth to leave. He was advised f three courses: to kill himself, to go a the penitentiary, or to leave for" nknown. mno x Mr. Dinkins was aye'r maand e ellent parents and .a stad ag, pleasing -' popular in hi rays, sue ful in business, and ha ie vandered from the path of recti e, would have made a success in fe. It is said that gambiing and whis ey were the rocks that wrecked him The Lord Mayv From the Gui1^ >y the votes of the Livery ; that is, of he members of the guilds of the city. 3e is elected at the Guildhall, on the east of St. Michael, the Archangel. Few more interesting ceremonies are tc e seen in England. - A wooden screen s erected outside the Guildhall, with nany doorways in it. At each is sta ioned the beadle of a guild, who is ex *cted to know all the liverymen of is company, and. so to prevent un iuthorized persons from entering. The loor of the Guildhall is strewn with weet herbs, perhaps the last surviving nstance of the medieval method -of arpeting a hall. The twenty-six al lermen come in, all in scarlet gowns. [he recorder, or law-officer of the city, ises, bows to the Lord Mayor and the Lssembled liverymen, and makes a ittle speech, declaring how from the ime of King John they have iad grants - of certain -rights of lection. -The Lord Mayor and al lermen then go out ; another law-offi er, the common sergeant, repeats vhat the recorder has already said, snd tells the liverymen that they nust name two for the office of Lord 1ayor, of whom the Lord Mayor and LIdermen will select one. Two names Lre then chosen, and are carried to the idermen by the heads of some of the :hief guilds. One is selected, and hereupon the Lord Mayor and the idermen return to the Guildhall and it down, the chosen future Lord May. r sitting on the left'of the actual Lord The recorder again rises and reads the twr' ,t and the one selected, and asks the liver ? if it is their free election. 'Yea or No? 3hout 'Yea,' and the sword-beare thereupon takes off the far tippet o the Lord Mayor to be, and puts 1 :hain around his neck. On the 8th f November there is another meeting in the Guildhal. The old Lord May )r rises and gives the new one his seat phe chamberlain of the city then ap proaches with three solemn bows, an< bands to the new Lord Mayor a jeweled icepter, the common seal of the city snd an aicient purse. The sword bearer next advances, and bowing threE times, each time with increasing rever ence, gives the Lord Mayor elect th< great two-handed sword of state, whicl symbolizes justice and legal supremacy The crier, with bows equal in numbe snd prosundity to those of the sword bearer, next approaches, and present the mace. The aldermen and sheriff then congratulate their new chief, wh proceeds to sign certain documente and among them a receipt for the cit; plate. Last of all, he is presented wit] the keys of the standard weights an measures, deposited in his custody The meeting then breaks up, and th old Lord Mayor goes back to the Man sion House, his official residence, fo the last time. "The next day, the 9th of Novem ber, is known in London as Lor Mayor's Day, because on that morn ing the new Lord Mayor takes office i3 the Guildhall. He drives thenc through the ward of which he is alde, man, and proceeds in gaudy processio: to the courts of law within the bound of Westministerr Before his coach ar running footmen, and there is a Ion, procession of the carriages of the aldei men and of the heads of the severs guilds, and of the main body of hi own guild, all in their best officis gowns. The banners of the guild: their beadles, and pageants, which var according to each Lord Mayor's tast make up a wonderful show, which, a it winds in and out the narrow street of the city enlivens them with brillian color. Though often decried becaus it obstructs business for one da3 should the progress of modern time abolish the custom it would be rt gretted by all who have witnessed it. "The Lord Mayor is presented to tb mn oath of fidelity, and calls on th< udges of the several divisions of thi Eigh Court of Justice and invites therr odinner. The judges always reply somewhat haughtily that some of therr w'ill attend, and the Lord Mayor ther eturns to the city, in which for a yeas de is to be the greatest person, obligec o give place only when the Queen her self comes." Union with Canada. ToRoNrO, December 27.-The follow, ng petition has been in circulation ai Windsor with indiff'erent success: To the Mayor and Councillors o: Windsor: We, your petitioners, citi lens of the town of Windsor, desire ti state that the question of political unior with the United States, is at the pras mnt time engrossing the most serious ,onsideration of the people of Windy' mud country -adjoining, antd~~i tin or ehance of an expression ofins of the or against the measuidand we there ballot is urgentlyfr body will order fore pray tygn of mayor and council VOtes olle following question: "'Is po "fal union with the Unmted States de ira ble ?' " KILLED BY HIS OWN HOES. 'he F'ate of a Substantial Citizen of Abbe vime County. 'swoon, December 26.-The sad 'reached us of thesudden uews has otMr. ~John W. mnd violent d 'na.Ls F'ooshe, who lived near na. r t but 10 o'cl A PAIE OF DRAWE& - Supreme Court J _ages .convrsed a Laughter--Lively PateCa The New York Heraldcorrespen , writes the following from Wshng ton: If the Supreme-Court had been trans ferred to the stage of a theatre and-to day's proceedings advertised, the sign "standing room only" would have beei visible before the curtainNent up, and when the. last act of the drama had been concluded it is fair to assume that the entire company would ilavebad ti respond-to the enthusiastic i lsof the audience. Hilarity reigned -supreme in the court room. The:usbally. sdate and solemn Justices gave way befy the wit and humor of counsel and were 1 convulsed with laughter,-and the*ans of .the court room rang merriy. The I fun began when the clerk announced case No. 135-Robert H. Anderson, ap pellant, vs. Henry T. Millee & Co. and John H. Wise, the er-Congres man from Virginia, arose tostat th' case in behalf of the appellant.; =;;. It involves the validity for a paten%t for a patch intended.to reinforce draw ers in the crotch. Mr. Wise is a baght witty young lawyer, -bubbling -ovei with goodgpirits, and with a nobilty' of countenance rivalling that of the best of comedians. He seized atonce upon the opportunity: for adisplay of his talents as a fun maker, and with anecdote, sarcasm and rallery kept the court, Justices, lawyers, specnaom ag'd all in a: roar. Mr. Wise opened :by reading from his b '+ aopfnion of u , of the Un iI Circuit Court for the Eastern Districi of Virginia, in the case. This opinion is remarkable for its levity. Judge Hughes said that it was= patent for a patch upon drawers,ex tending from the back. of the waist band down under the crotch'and p in a split form to the waistband infrant: Of course it is a patch upon new draw ers before worn. One ofits merisisthat it strengthens or, to use theeuphemisi of the Patent Office, "reinforces" the drawers at the crotch, where a catas. trophe is most likely to occur. Then as a statement of his reasons why hE did not believe a patent should: bE granted for this- improvement, JudgE Hughes said A PATENT INADMISSIBLE. "It strikes me' that a patent fori patch upon drawers; designed to rem edy the .evils of rip .and.tear toawhic] they are liable in-the crotchti ough never to have been granted, interferiai as it must -necessarily do with'thi prerogative of the house-wives of thi civilized world to patch the driwers.o their husbands, fathers and sons freel3 in their own way with no patentee t< r molest or make them afraid. - "It is impossible that the,patch cai be novel as to the simple mattef~3 strengthening';the seems and thema terial of drawers in- the immediati 'region .of the crotch ; for if drawers di Scontinually give way there it would b a reflection upon the housewives o civilized society not to.admit-that fo hundreds of years they have been i the habit o'patching the garment 'an< Sthe forks thereof' by lapping the seam and 'reinforcing' the rents in that.eg ion. As to the disorders of men' Sdrawers in and near the crotch, whici have troubled housewives for centuries I .do not think any person in our da; and generation can employ a patch fo the purpose of preventing or curini 'them that can have any real novelty.2 Mr. Wise dilated upon this opinio2 at length, and with inimitable gestur B and expression warned' the justices c the importance of the case to the femi nine portion of the community, and c the wrath that was impending ove them. Concluding, h -'There is this difference, however," said the speaker. "In faro the dealer gets all the splits and in this the splits are all against the dealer." At this sally the Court lost all likeness toits usually serious and dignified self. The langhter became boisterous and every one gave way freely to his feelings. Chief Justice Fuller could not restrain himself and almost fell out of bis chair. Justice Harlan's huge form and big, rosy, round face became convulsed with laughter until it became almost apoplectic. Justice.Graymade astrone effort to perserve the dignity Court, but he, too, was maierri succumb and join in the ment. FTc- - 1.unie stevenson and-Hms Ro-sce Bot - S&s FRAsCISCo, Cal., Dec. 27.-The New York World correspondent sends the following: Robert Louis Stevenson, the nove list, who is soon expected back here' from his unsuccessful cruise for health among the South Sea Islads, has been discussed a good deal by the critics, but many facts in regard to his personal history have never been published. Stevenson first camne here about eight years ago to get married. His bride he bad met in France when she was thti wife of a Califprnia. When Stevenson was taking that trip that bore-fruit in his book, "An Inland Vo ' Ahemet in Paris Mrs. Samuel Francisco. She cam tage, her maiden -but she e,w as rvRt rd and so millio stod ras aoV whue ern a - -two. He. ars:- - ' gth -t bor hde at ni - Ori - ia. Timhe uVte_ s6f eeledti-, ya sn w :=e book abeipn - exedspu dropedIon myt y - bof::e e eigs pd iyseteicty - dahy aeiter o hi onehever oebyz.. L -siir& - Watlfe th cou -y t xx:'fh r. wom tweye fseveralmonIa whlfenn she te hins hean on day eThe es th orad The b rwean thfe ~ethie viiin hsiin ys aked one ofteher.dom - bo twan.r The lmband capal mochrextosbed aote appetited toeisy tsmet set- fo -jkr remainedefor over htfeneigh tseventyg s hi hlg alorn - tragot Willi is rdaso the Natiov