Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 55, Number 40, Jasper, Dubois County, 25 July 1913 — Page 2
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WEEKLYCOURIER
N ED. DOANE, Publisher. JASPER INDIANA Joy riding under the moon is not so funny unless one survives. Ever notice how many aviators have "the late" before their names? In One is sometimes tempted to think that thefe is too much, weather. Kotation in office in Turkey is materially assisted by the undertaker. Chicago 'feet downTote. women just put tneir i i 1 and they got tho right to Sooner or later every boy hopes to be addressed affectionately as "Old Scout." Why worry about tho thermometer when it shows no such consideration 'for you? ShooH do not Boom much lower in prices even after the heels have beon removed. ! Philadelphia ban that cool, frc uh air school roomi! Just discovered In bonuilolal to Band bathing In a popular pastime with the young people who have now bathing huUh. Bwoot are tho uhoh of bauoball ad YrMlty lo oominunlUou whoßo toama p rollt thereby. Tho fond vaoatlon plan of father are alwayn imboot to revUlon by mother kih! the Irin, Another of tho myHtorlon of lifo 1 why ho many people will k to plenle yar after yeaV, There U nothing Hadder In lifo tlmn to have that vaeatlon foolhiK wmt IwoH tha wherewithal. If a WW nound men 1 oeeunyinK ml lit a Mtroot ear, are you Htandtug from preferoneo? Now that Hummer In at hand It In Hhfe proi)heey that many well moanJnjc folk will oat too much, There aro men who aympnthfso w,Jth the New York mat) who in claimed a a husband by hU' women, The dlfferencft between "apiidn" an "nomme do tomV In usually about m 40 cents on tho bill of fare. Where the horse excels tho automo bile Is in s. show. No automobil cn pranco and arch Its neck. A Pennsylvania professor says the guinea hen is related to the ostrich. We decline to become excited. If every ruler could be given the title of wax lord by common consent perhaps none would try to earn iL New York woman says American girls are overdressed. Well, now, now much more should they take off? A man is no longer considered fussy if he preferes to ride in a steel car rather than in one made of wood. An actor floored a porter for taking a dime tip from his wife. Would ho have killed him if it had been twobits? The English sparrow as a factor In reducing the high cost of living has oeen long and favorably known to cats. A man fell 25 feet when prostrated with tho heat and got only a slight cut. Tho sun must have softened the sidewalk. Life will be just one blamed lonesome after another down at Cape Horn when the Panama canal Is Anally opened. A Si. Paul girl walked seventy-four miles 10 secure employment. Many a man haw walked much farther to dodge it. A Cleveland woman has asked tho courts to force her husband to talk to her. He probably Is waiting for an opportunity. It is stated that the New Jersey cranberry crop will be short this ysar: but there are many other things to worry about for a while yet. The first aerial Baedeker of Germany is bing prepared for the use of aviators and balloouista. Authors will srite on the smallest provocation. There are many of us who will particularly appreciate the sense of the young man who, called upon for a speech at a Missouri banquet, said: "Ladies and gentlemen, I am here to cat. Let's eatM Anybody who has ever had his bait eaten by turtles will agree that Dr Friedman's serum is a good thing In princlxde. These are wonderful times. A messenger boy whs arretted in Philadelphia the other day for spoeding on bicycle. Fact that the wearing cf fflAthera 4n mens hats threatens to become a countrywide fad rshouid tickle considerably the manufacturer of hat trim jninfcH.
I M MQ 50L0N?
MULHALL CHARGES J. E. WATSON OF INDIANA DREW SALARY FROM ASSOCIATION. PROMISED $10,000 AS BONUS Return, Witness Testifies Senate Board, Recipient Before Agreed to Work for Passage of Law Cr cat ing Tariff Commission. Washington, July 22. Testimony given ueioro me senate iuuuy wmmuI l X" A. 1 1 T . ! U v VW V tee on Monday by Col. Martin M. Mulhall charged that James E. Watson of Indiana, when he was a member of congress, accepted money in payment for his services in behalf of a tariff commission bill. Mulhall said that Representative Walon was on tho secret pay roll of the National Manufactuers associa tion and drew $250 a week, in addition to a lump sum of $500 paid him as a retainer. The association, Mulhall testified, aiso promisee waison iu,uuu m höh . I... "......... A n ftf ...... 1 . 1 whon tho tariff commission bill wuh pttMHUd. Says Watson Kept Blacklist. Tho wltnosM Informed tho senatoru tlmt It wii a blackllHt of members of eouKroHi prepared by Jemen IS. Wathoii and one nilldu, a elork of the house eotmnlttuo on war claims. Anions olhun In tho list wem Ihu
natnoM of llopmiontatlvuo NielioUuind ,nnoothlnK th wjiy for ,u,,)Umt,on un IM'oiildont Wlluon'H poi'Honal roproHonW. 11. WIlMon of Ponimylvanla, Victor (ior ihü Nowlandii act of tho wage tutlvo In Mexico City, kIvIiik I innre-
AlurdocK or ivnnmiM, moimo, enroot ami JNeiMon or wineonnin, iiauKimn oi 1 . a t . i . a II... .1 R Iowa, iiarrifi Aiaynaro or wem vir Klnla and CMuunp Clark of. Mlmmurl. "When did you Kut thai. lint?" nuked Senator lUmd. "Uoforn election, replied Mulhall. . .. .. "That'H a Hut reprenentlnK the men Iho National Anoolatlon of Manufae I turuni wuh oppoHod to and wanltul to bout. mudo ivry offort (o drive thorn hack to nrlvatu life." In anothor Hid. wae the nemo of JamoH T. MaDnrmotl of tho Fourth 11llnola dthtrlet, hut It had boon crowned out with pencil marlH. Urp,B 8pnklng for Deverldge, In a letter written to Mulhall In Oc tober, Hehwedtman In quoted an nayIng: "I do hopo that when .Tamen 15, WatHon ROtH in tno ßovornor' enair no will lay a half dozen of hin good
Munds (?) ovor hla knee and spank roads, in Insisting upon arbitration ninR through thorn all. Allegation aro first pronouncement of a general polthem to boat tho band, including your of their own griovancso at this time, f.,tJfilv mldn th lt tho f!rlgiB r(iConny icy on tho part of the administration
nnnlnl Mmwl. Snnntn Tlnvnridiro. I hate false frlonda moro than 1 do tho worst enomles." Mulhall was apparently much re freshed by a two days' rest, as ho began tho serial explanation of tho mass of correspondtneo In the hands of tho committee. Tho late Representative Henry C. Loudenslacer of New Jersey, secre tary of the Republican congressional committee in 1908, seemed to have in curred the enmity of Mulhall in Octo ber of that year. Mulhall wrote to Secretary Schwedtman: "I told this gentleman that the manufacturers of this country are Ured of pinheax! politicians. When I was through Mr. Loudenslager offered an apology, claiming that he would be good from this time on, but I plainly gave him to understand that when he comes up for renomination he would hear from our people." Mulhall did not fully explain why he had fallen out wifh Loudenslager. TAKE MILITANT AFTER RIOT Mrs. Emmelinc Pankhurst Arrested Followers Use Hatpins on Detectives. Loudon. July 22.- -In one of the fiercest riots which has marked the suffragette propaganda in Great Britain, Mrs. Emmelinc Pankhurst, leader of the militants, was arrested hero with six of her followers. The fight with the detectives came when the officers tried to arrest Mrs. Pankhurst as she was entering tho Pavilion Music hall where her daughter Sylvia and other prominent suffragettes were holding a meeting. Mrs. Pankhurst was seized after a violent struggle and when the frenzied women saw their leader in the hands of the officers they charged upon thorn, using hatpins and all sorts of weapons to wrest their leader away. Mrs. Pankhurst was taken to Holloway jail. FIREBUG ON JOHN D.'S ESTATE Two Attempts Made to Burn Home of His Sculptor at Tarrytown, N. Y. Tarrtown, N. Y., July 22. That a firebug is at work on John D. Rockefeller's estate is the belief of his neighbors. Two attempts have been made to burn the home of his sculptor, Emll Seiburn, and the residents now believe that the Rockefeller stables were set on fire by an incendiary three weeks ago, and the fire was not due to spontaneous combustion in the hay loft. lt is peculiar coincidence that while Mr.'Rockefeller has deputies and detectives guarding his estate, he had no fires. As soon as he allowed the last deputy to go, the fire began. Ex-Financier Dies in Prison. Boston, July 22. Cardenio F. King, the former financier, who is serving a fifteen-year sentence for embezzlement, died at the Bridgewater State hccpital. His pardon was to be granted thli week. Death waa due to fttrangulatlon of a hernia.
CARDINAL GIBBONS
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Cardinal Gibbons, seventy-nine years old on July 23, says he does not expect to live much longer and pre dicts that his death will be sudden. opTH I (1W IN ATTFMPT - 111 w I 1 II TO END RAIL QUARREL President of tho National Civic Fed eration Attempts to Sottle Differences In Arbitration. New York, July 10. Seth Low, prealdent of tho National civio I ouoration, which1 wa instrumental in llimuto between tho oitHtorn rallroad . 1 un( niolr trainmen and conduotorH, Uamo forward aaaln In nn endeavor o fitralahten out the lunula arlnhnt from tho madii' demanda that their urlnvanooH be arbitrated along with I thone of tho men. m r. Low, who Iuib Hided with the urilotiti In their contention (hat the mllroadH could not properly Inject - - -' tiintr troubloH Into the nltuatlon nt i)Ih mIhko. mot tho eonforenoe com I w m . - f mtttoo of railroad manaBorn in the hopo that nomo agreement might be reached, Tho ntand of the trainmen and eonuuetorn, m voicou uy uioir iuhum orn, lOHfirß, Im and Oarrotnou, I that tho roadn acted In had faith, domandlnR HomothlnR not "ovon debat able." Thin eauHon a deadlock In tho procoeauiRB. The trainmen deelaro that the rail COUld iaVO SelOCtOCl IIO Hliror Way Ql . . . . driving tho men from tho sorvlco, The slncority of tho roads is questioned by the employee, who pofnt out that prior to tho modiatlon conference with tho president, last Monday no intimation waa given by tho roada that they purposed to air their demands before the federal arbitration body. The present attitude of the roads is characterized as a "flagrant violation of faith." CHINESE MENACED BY REVOLT Kwangtung Announces Secession, Governor Saying He Will Lead the Southern Armies. Washington, July 21. Conditions In China are becoming very alarming, - . nofnrdinp tn rfTQl'tS tO partment A secession movement in southern ' China is the cause. The American legation at Peking reported that Shanghai has declared Its independence of the Peking government. At Peking it is said that four of the central provinces are believed to have declared their independence of Yuan Shi Kai's government and efforts are being made, it is reported, to organize an independent govern-.v-vw rnont at Kankinc Hongkong, July 21. The secession of the Province of Kyangtung from the ernor general of Kwangtung. The capital of the province is Canton, the home city of Yuan Shi Kai, against whe i government the revolt is directed. GRANT WED SECRETLY WEEK Mrs. America Will Made His Bride Residence of Justice of the Peace. at San Diego. Cal., July 21. U. S. Grant, Jr. son of the famous Civil war general and president", and Mrs. America Will, twice before a hride, havo been married Just a week. The announcement was mado Saturday night, the time publicly set for the wedding at a farewell dinner at the TJ. S. Grant hotel for a few friends. They were married by a justice of the peace at his residence. JAPAN DISLIKES U. S. REPLY Nation Disappointed Because America Accept None of Tokyo's Contentions. Tokyo. July 21. Deep disappointment is felt in Japan over the American reply to the last two Japanese notes on the California alien land ownershio law. because it does not accept any of tho Japanese contentions that the law violates the Japanese-American treaty and because It does not offer any suggestion for a solution of the difficulty. Insurance Man Suicides. Beaumont, Tex., July 19. James TTnrHsnn. fifty, insurance man. eu3-nid-d by shooting himself through the heart in his office here. He leaves a widow and several children. Cause for act U aot known.
ASKS
0 FACTS WILSON ORDERS STATE DEPARTMENT TO FURNISH INFORMATION ON TROUBLES THEREBRYAN ATTENDS CONFERENCE Chfef Executive Will "Stand Pat" Until Arrival of Ambassador Recent Crisis Dubbed "Bondholders' Conspiracy" Fathered In Paris. Washington, July 13. In preparation for the arrival of Ambassador Henry Lane "Wilson, now on his way northward from Mexico, President Wilson requested the state department to furnish him with a full and complete file of all the information relative to the troubles in Mexico from the beginning of the Madero revolt to tho present time. Tho vast mass of material, covering moro than two years, will be sent to tho White House and tho president intends to read It thoroughly so that he will bo informed as to all tho developments of tho Mexican situation before tho arrival of Ambassador Wlluon. Brvan Calls on President. Secretary Dryan, who returned from tho first lap of his Chautauqua lecture tour, was tho president's llrut caller. The secretary of state brought with hlm a largo bundlo of telegrams and correspondence relative to conditions jn Mexico, Including a number of din imtohow from William lhmtrd Male. ulonti of nromint enndlllonn nouth of the Ulo Grande, particularly with re , meet to the Htabllltv of the lluerta novernmenl. Mr. Hale doon not eon idur thai, (ho proMent regime will lant inmr and hnn lulvlnnrl ihn lulmlnlHtra '"'I" ' ---- lion agalmit Immediate recognition, No deehdon will be made In thin matter, however, until afto tho conferiiiiiiii with A iiilmiifimint Wtlnnti. Tho Mexican oorrwipomlonoo Mho formed (ho nrlneltml tonle nt Die eabtnot iiotuilon, hut it vaH dooldod to "mnnl- Hmn" 1111HI llwt nrniilflant. hüM reoolved flrnt luvnd Information from Mexico City, ao Hund of Hlah Flnanc. SunprnlcmB of tho nlnoorlty of tho roj)rQMonuitonH made to tho United gtatee by wovoral IHuropean naUonn on (jl0 j(exloan situation have noon nilHod in WnnhinKton by the trail of nnnnee that haa beon found run- ... , nrnAlnllnlnrl la nnHilny miirn nnr InHfl tlmn a "bondholders' consmracy en gineorod from Paris. President Wilson himself ie responsible for the statement that bu much artificiality exists in the Mexican situation, so much information is adulterated and perverted by Interested persons that he will take no further stops until he has reliable Information to go by. This he hopes to get from Ambassador Henry Lane Wilson. Wilson Criticises Ambassador. The president does nor. hesitate to criticise Ambassador WllEon, however, for failing to sustain any fixed or definite conclusions In his dispatches to the stata department. Other consular and spcia.l agents of the United States in. Mexico have been I 1 1 ! i . ..i j.f equauy maennue in me lniormauon I ... . ... .... ment indicating that authentic news of the progress of the revolution in the interior districts is extremely hard to obtain. The proposed trip of Felix Diaz Is the cause of much speculation at the state department As an envoy of the Huerta regime to the Yamamoto cabinet during the period of tho alien land law, negotiations his presence In Japan would serve to renew the efforts l me jingoes 10 create a sirong anuAmerican feeling In Japan and also serve to renew reports that Japan is egotiatine for a naval base on the
western coast of Mexico. Many officials believe that Huerta is sending Bulgarian Cabinet Sends Word of Its
Diaz out of Mexico at a timo whon his administration is in danger and when Diaz might be an aspirant for the presidency. JIGGS DONAHUE IS DEAD Great Formsr White Sox First Baseman Succumbs to Paresis 'at Columbus Hospital. 1 T r T 1 Ol "Tl rrr" Donahue, Btar first baseman for tho Chicago White Sox in 190G, whon they defeated tho Chicago Cubs in the world Beries, died at tho Columbus Stato hospital. Tho direct cause of his death was paresis. Burial will be at Springfield. 0., his homo town. Donahue was sent to the state hosltl in this Mtv a vear aco. Domestic trouble Is said to have undermined his health. Donahue had been reported dead several tlme3 since he fined to tho asylum here. was conPanic on Ship In Mutiny. New Orleans, July 22. Mutiny of twenty-five Chinese on the steamship Comus, arriving from New York, resulted in a panic among the passengers, the probable fatal shooting of one of the mutineers, the wounding of three others and slight injuries to First Officer M. L. Proctor of the Comus. The general fight occurred on the forward deck of the steamer. Fined $25 for Flag Insult. Chicago, July 22. "Any man who would insult the American flag deserves a beating," was the comment of Judge Sullivan, silting in the South Chicago court, when he fined George Michaels of Sturgeon Bay, Wis., $25. Michaels grabbed an American flag and tore it derlng a fight.
DR. LUTHER H. GULICK
A a rncmocr or tnc program commlttoc, Dr. Gullck of New York wilt vo much to do with the fourth Intornntlonal congres on school hyulcne which opens In Buffalo, N. Y., on August do. BRYAN ASKS PROTECTORATE FOR NICARAGUA REPUBLIC Secretary of State Offeru n Rovlr.ed Treaty Making United Hinten IU Ruler. WaHhlngton, July a 1 A now American policy toward Nicaragua, Involving virtual control of thu affalra of that republic by tho Unltod Stuten tlit'ouKh u trust iirotuelontto nlmllnr to tnni. exereinou over iniun, wuh oui Hnocl by Butii'otnry Hrynn, lit a nrlviito QOnrOrti 100 Willi 1110111001' ÜI UlU neu ate foreign rolatlonn eommlttoo. At tho namo eonforonoo Mr. Iiryan urROd ronowal of arbitration troatlon with Franco, (Jroat Hritaln and other eountrloo. Air. llryan'H Nlcnrußunn proponal, coming aH a complete nurprlno to moat er uie mumuurH 01 mu wmuui-wuu, wvn tnkon by many senatora later aa tho I . . . , it.. tO OXtOlHl AmoriCail COIUrOl OVCr UIO countrios surrounding tho Panama canal and domination by tho United States of their relations with great powors. "Under the proposed plan Nicaragua would agree in substance: That war should not be declared without the consent of the united btates. That no treaties should be made with foreign governments that would tend to destroy its independence or that would give those governments a foothold in the republic. That no public debt would be contracted beyond the ordinary resources of the government, as indicated by the ordinary revenues. That the United States should have l . . . l . II I 11 v 4- it minn n nr nnir ri m o in me ngut tu micncuc uuj I . . . ... A .. to protect me or property, That the United States should have the exclusive right to build a canal across Nicaragua, and Bhould have a 99-year lease to a naval base in the bay of Fonseca and to the Great Corn and LiKle Corn islands in the Caribbean sea, with the privilege of renewing the lease. The United States in return would pay Nicaragua $3,000,000 to be used in public works and education. END OF WAR BELIEVED NEAR Willlnnness to End War Wltn Roumania, Servians and Greeks. Servia, July 22. The Bulgarian government has officially notified Roumania and the powers that it is willing to conclude peace with the other Balkan states. The Bulgarian delegates have arrived at Nish and it is probable that peaco negotiations wil bo begun. I 1 liC iwuuuiu J outside the Bu garian cap ta), ready to begin an assault if the Bulgarians fall to live up to the oflic.a announcement made of their determination to conelude peace negotiations with the other Balkan states, London', July 22-Turkey reoccupled Adrianople with the consent of Austria, according to a Vienna dlspatch to the Central News WISCONSIN MAN GETS POST Senate Confirmt Nomination of A. E. Schmedemann to Be U. S. Minister to Norway. Washington, July 22. The senate confirmed the nomination of Albert v Rnhmedemann of Wisconsin 'to be -rj'nlte(i states minister to Norway, and Jeremiah Neterer of Washington to be United States district judge for the western district of Washington. Polo Player's Hurts Fatal. London, England, July 22. Although polo is popularly regarded as a dangerous game to play, the first fatality in connection with the game here. Lieutenant Harmon died from injuries suffered when his pony threw him in a match Thursday at Ran lagh.
PAINFUL, TRYING TIMES
Housework is hard enough for a healthy woman. Tho wife who has a bad back, who Is weak or tired all the time, finds her duties a heavy burden. Thousands of nervous, d i s -couraged, sickly women havo traced their "Every Vidvrc Tells troubles to ßick a Story" moneys found quick and thorough relief through using Doan's Kidney Pills. The painful, trying times of woman's lifo are much easier to bear if the kidneys are well. An Iowa Case Mr. J. Hunt, 106 S. 6th Su. FalrflfM. Ia.. vj-ßi 'For thirty years I suffered from kidney truublc I had severe backache, headaches and oUty noils, ind my limbs swelled o 1 oouldn t wnlx. lWiJ'a Ktdnejr Pills cured mo when everything cIskj fulled. I cannot prnlso them too hlßhly Get Doftn'i nt Ar Ster. 50c a Box DOAN'S WJIV FOSTER.MILHUUN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. SSSWaSP'Taaaai DAISY FLY KILLER tTiZ' ".ll AIm ein. or ltfthtMWtl eM VHllM)li ilienp lifctli I MftftOM. Mad Of utUI, oMt'lMOilHr Ul ovnr will um tili nt t nj'irrt any lttlnir UtirAittPett frlTU All 4lnlerM irft urn nitria iit for MA HOLD M0M1.KM, IM )Kat At , XlMitklfH, X, Y, OOISSLER'S PILE OAPSÜLES llvortdltff. II, JttW IMInotn Avenue, HU ioul Wo. 4NTKI UenrtenlaUvMi. Hither r. PermauNIl, imjfinK imnltifiM. TiHplin or IIikIi HoikkiI Kratfu ninn nrforteu. 1h HHMMiNuikUwM,iJUMMWi l U AVIQuoino if lh eholfhii farm tut fruit IriuIk in (JiMtHIItt, Nowailü Hint Mlihketfiiii (totiiitleh. htf itmrnd ami unliiiiuovml for nhIoimi it lrinn Wni for f uli liforiiHUuiii l rlouiio 1 1 uwm.iuiiHH.Hlf . AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS RNuuroil lmfit rortiillM. PrwHophifr7 lo I So unr roll. PrliilHiltoftc. JCnlnrtflnKfrnmnenrttiven. wtiny nmii n 1'uMlMK, I MUD U DAMHYi UaniVlll, IfV MINNESOTA FARM FOR SALE nfYrrvwu"5f"iln. Very vnur lerm lo net mil homn-mnVer. se lo town, bH,Sh)M MUUbMN, Owner, Utnpbol n. J Minn. MAKE MONEY '"rX"'!; ComplelolnStnU'tlon. Kuenj Uml Co., burSU,H, lUisik W. N. U Indianapolis, No, 30-1913. Wild Beastio. "Have you over owend a liorp.o?" "Not for long. I had a nlgbtmaro once." Boston Evening Transcript, Her Varying Preference. Until a girl is eighteen any sort of uniform supplies a man with tho necessary credentials. But after that her Interest does not respond to anything Bhort of a pair of shoulder straps. Stung. "I want my money back for theso hero socks," said the man as he handed the clerk a package. "The sign you had up said the socks waa guaranteed fer three months." "Well, what's the matter with the socks?" asked the clerk. 'T only wore them three weeks, and had to take them off and buy another pair because this pair had holes in the toes," replied the man. How Simple. "My dear," said Mrs. Snaggs to h&r husband, "what is a canard?" "Don't you know what a canard Is-' queried Snaggs, rather sneeringly. "Why, the word itself conveys its own meaning." "Does it? Well, really, I can't seo It. What does it mean, dear?" "Why, a canard is something ono canardly believe, of course." "Oh, to bo sure! Why Gouldn't I think of that?" CLOUDED BRAIN Clears Up on Change to Proper Food. The brain cannot work with clearness and accuracy, if the food takGn la not fully digested, but is retained in the stomach to ferment and form poisonous gases, etc. A dull, clouded brain Is likely to bo the result. A Mich, lady relates her experience In changing her food habits, and results aro very interesting: "A steady diet of rich, greasy fooda such as sausage, buckwheat cakes and so on, finally broke down a stomach, and nerves that, by inheritance, wero sound and strong, and medicine did no apparent good in the way of relief. "My brain was clouded and dull and I was suffering from a case of constipation that defied all remedies used. "The 'Road to Wellville,' in some providential way, fell into my hands, and may Heaven's richest blessing fall on the man who was inspired to write it. "I followed directioni carefully, the physical culture and all, using GrapeNuts with sugar and cream, leaving meat, pastry and hot biscuit entirely out of my bill of fare. The result I am In perfect health once more. "I never realize I have nerves, and my stomach and bowels are in finecondition. My brain is perfectly clear and I am enjoying that state of health, which God intended his creatures, should enjoy and which all might have, by giving proper attention to their food." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Reaii "The Road to Wellville," In pkgs. "There" a reason. Ever read the bve letter f A ew e apaeara from time tm tint. Titer re sreaalMc, true, mad full f hums Uteres t.
