Decatur Eagle, Volume 3, Number 2, Decatur, Adams County, 18 February 1859 — Page 1

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VOL. 3.

TII EEAG LE. HIBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, BY PHILLIPS & SPENCER, Offls?, on Miin Street, in the old School House, one Square North of J. & P Crabs' Store. Terms of Subscription : for one year, $1 50, in advance; SI 75, within the year, and $2 00 after the year has expired. ITNo paper will be discontinued until all jrrerasjes are paid, except at the option of the Publishers. Terms of Advertising: One square, (ten lines) three insertions, $1 00 Each subsequent insertion, 25 (LFNo advertisement will be considered less than one square; over oue square will be counand charged as two; over two, as three, etc. JOB PRINTING: We are prepared to do all kinds of job-work, jn a neat and workmanlike manner, on the most reasonable terms. Our material for the completion of Job-Work, being new and of the latest liyles, and we feel coutidet t that satisfaction tan be given. IIOMEWAIiD BOUND. BY ELIZABETH MILLER. Homeward bound! across the ocean, O'er the billows bright and blue! Heaves eaeh heart with warm emotion, As the distant shores we view. Home, sweet home, thou land enchanted! Fairer far than all beside; By a thousand sweet thoughts haunted, Memories of love and pride. Favor, oh, ye winds or vessel! For her crew are homeward bound! Yet, if need be, we can wrestle With the storms that gather round . For the hands work bravely ever, When the heart is busy too; Love gives strength for all endeavor, Love is strong to dare and do. Homeward bound! We have been roving O’er the world; and long away; There were those whose tender loving Would have lured our longer stay. In our hearts awoke the yearning For the old home loved so well; And with joy we are returning, High with hope our bosom swell. If this be, oh, f lien ds so cheering. Think, shall not our joy be more, When our barks of life are nearing Canaan’s fair and lovely shore? For the loved await us yonder, Warm embraces wait us there! Homes from whence we need not wander, Joys unchecked by pain or care!

Come to Hie in Cherry-Time. BY GEORGE P. MORRIS. Come to me in Cherry-time, And as twilight closes, We will have a merry time, Here among the ro.es! When the breezes crisp the tide. And tile lindens quiver, Id our bark we’ll safely glide Down the rocky river! When the stars, with qniet rav. All the hill tops brighten, Cherry-ripe we’ll sing and play. Where the cherry-time. Then come to me in cherry time. And, as twilight closes. We will have a meriy time Here among the roses. Home Papers —Stick to your home newspapers. No matter if you are poor remember that none are so poor as the ignorant, except it be the depraved, and they too often go together. Stick to your own local paper, though it may not be so large and imposing as some city weeklies, out remember it is the advertiser of your neighborhood and daily business, and tells you what is going on around, instead of a thousand miles away. If it is not printed On as nice paper as the city weeklies, and as good as you wish to have it, pay up your subscriptions promptly and get your neighbor to do the same, and rely upon it, the natural pride of the publisher will P'ompt him to improve it as fast as posThe Seven.—Mrs. John Trip was once Wacourtin Hartford as a witness against one of her sons, between whom and old »ohn a fierce quarrel had arisen. Lawyer Chapman, of waggish celebrity, was h>r the defendant. As Mrs Trip was exPUiating at great length on the exceeding 'ilt-ness of her son’s conduct. Chapman suddenly stopped her, an 1 inquired bland'y how many sons she had. After thinkJP? a moment, she answered, ‘Seven.’ — ‘he lawyer started back, as if struck ,ll h great astonishment. ‘A remarkable '’incidence! Just the number that Mary Magdalen had devils cast out of her!’ Morphy is about to play, in Paris twenty games of chess, at the same time, blind billed, H e has challenged Harwitz 'Cain, offering him the odds of pawn and ’’ore, but the latter declined.

WOMAN’S WILL. ■■ - The following beautiful story has been published in different forms; but none so good as the original: Sir Hugo had reached his fiftieth year, unmolested by passion, save an ardent one for a flowing goblet. Instead of love passages, bis delight was in tournaments,; whence he always returned victorious — At length he was flung from the saddle of his indifference by the beardless tilter,' love! He saw Angelica, the fairest maiden of the land, forgot his gray hairs and unmindful of the incongruity of an union! between May and December, led her to | the nuptial altar. Fortunately, Angelica! was as modest as she was fair* and her! firm virtue reptltsed the numerous butterflies that swarmed round the opening! flowers of her beauty. Sir Hugo knowed ; the tried virture of his consort, and there- j fore she was to him as dear and precious ! as the apple of his eye. one morning he rode to pay a visit to a neighboring baron in arms, his honest! squire Conrade trotting after him. Scarce-1 ly had they proceed half way when the knight suddenly stopped, and cried: ‘Come here, Conrade; a most tormenting thought has just occurred to me.— This is the very day that father Nicholas comes to the castle to say mass for my dear wife and myself, and I am not at all inclined to have him in my abode during my absence; so gallop back, and desire your lady, in my name, not to admit the priest.’ Conrade paused and shook his head as if in doubt, and replied, ‘Excuse me, no b’.e sir, but perhaps the lady Angelica, if left to her own discretion, will do what you wish.’ ‘A curse on your perhaps!’ exclaimed the night; ‘I make all sure by giving the order.” ‘Do you think so?’ replied the squire; ‘now I in my simplicity believe exactly the contrary. Take the advice of your faithful servant for once in your life; let I tilings take their course, and give no order upon so delicate a point.’ i ‘A fig for your delicacy!’ cried Sir Hu- | go, angrily, 'what obsurd fancies you have got into your head to-day! Do you think an hour’s tide a task so very tedious?’ ‘Oh! if it comes to that, sir,’ rejoiced Conrade, ‘I have no more to say.’ He put spurs to his horse, and rode back to t’ne castle.

Angelica saw him galloping up, and cried in terror from the window, ‘what lias brought you back in such haste? — Has any accident happened to my lord?’ ‘None whatever, gracious lady,’ answered Conrade, ‘but the noble knight was apprenhensive that some accident might happen, if bv any chance you took a fancy to ride Sultan.’ •1 ride —ride the large greyhound!’ exclaimed Angelica, in utter astonishment. I believe you are drunk or mad. It is impossible that your master could have sent us so ridiculous a message.’ ‘Aye, but he did thoug,’ pursued the squire; ‘and my noble master said at the same time, that he knew Sultan would bite terribly, not being accustomed to be made a pony of; and lie therefore begs that you will not attempt to divert yourself in that way * Having said this, he again mounted his horse, and galloped off to rejoin his master. ‘Am I awake, or do I dream?’ ejaculated Angelica. ‘The folly of Sir Hugo is strange that I am aimost tempted to believe It all a wild dream. What does he mean? Is it not enough that I have hitherto tried to read bis every will and wish and when known, obeyed them implicitly; and do 1 deserve that he should stretch his power so far, and play the capricious, haughty tyrant? Now, I see that to be too submissive, too softly compliant, is not the way to treat him; the worm that crawls the dust is trampled upon. But no, Sir Knight, it is not gone quite so far with us yet; in spite of you I will ride Sultan; and vou may thank yourself, as but for vour message such a thing would never have entered my head.’ Her soliloquy was here interrupted by the entrance of a servant, who informed her that Father Nicholas had arrived, and was in the ante chamber. ‘I cannot receive his visit to-day.’ said the consort of Sir Hugo, ‘for my lord is absent Give this as my excuse to the reverend father, and beg of him to return to-morrow.— With all due respect to Father Nicholas,’ continued she, when left to herself, ‘he shall not spoil my pleasant ride. Now if my pony were but here. He must have an'easy gait; and his teeth Ido not fear; he is as quiet as a lamb. Oh. how shall I deli-ht m this two fold pleasure of show-| ing the surlv old fellow that I care neither for him nor' his orders, and of Tying a past time that is at least a novel one! - Through every corner of the hou«e re- . sounded now her erv of ‘Sultan. Here, bov! Sultan! Sultan!’ . . The immense but docile animal sprungi from a bone upon which he was feast, ngand was at her side in an instant . Cares-

“Our Country's Good shall ever be our Aim—Willing to Praise and not afraid to Blame. ’

DECATUR, ADAMS COUNTY. INDIANA. FED. 18, 1859,

sing him, till she got him into a room, the door of which was shut: ‘Now, friend Sultan,’ cried his fair mistress, ‘no growl, no bite and all is ’ safe.’ With her snow white hand she I continued stroking and patting his huge | back for some minutes, and then,’u the ! hope that if only through gratitude he • would comply with her fancy, she moun- ■ ted her new steed. He showed his teeth ' a little in some doubt what all that meant, but she soothed him again into a good humor and patient indurance of the novel burthen; but he thought this quite enough and did not stir from the one spot. Angelica was naturally not much pleased at being thus stationary; she therfore gently goaded him wiih 1 lu-iUeg, but no trot would Sultan condescend; he remained motionless as before, while something ' very like a growl escaped from his iin- ! mense and fear-inspiring jaws. Out ol , all patience, she now exclaimed—‘You shall feel the spur, then, you lazy brute,’ and drove her heel into his side. He now growled audibly, bitt stirred not 1 an inch; she repeated her blow. This was too much for canine patience; he made a j spring, and as she fell full length upon ! the floor, he turned and bit her baud.— . The dismounted rider endowed the floor with a tew tears, and then sprang up to I turn out of the room the uncourteous brute i who had thus rudely shown how little he : understood play. Towards evening Sir Hugo returned and inquired with suspicious haste whether Father Nicholas had been there. ‘Oh, yes, he was here,’ answered Angelica, ‘but I ventured to refuse him admittance.’ The knight cast a triumphant glance at hi? squire, and whispered him, 'Now old Wisdom, do vou see the use of my orders?’ Conrade, who as maybe supposed had said nothing of the alteration he made in the substance of his embassy, shrugged his shoulders, with a smile unperceived by his master, who had turned again to his eonsor', and first perceived that she ! wore a bandage upon her soft hand. He I immediately inquired the cause. [ ‘Sultan bit roe,’ said Angelica, ‘and it ■ is all your fall, Sir Hugo,’ added she sobbing.

‘My fault!’ cried the knight. ‘Yes, your fault, and nobody’s but yours,’ retorted his spouse. ‘lf you had not sent me werd by Conrade not to ride the nasty, mischievous brute, such a mud trick would never have entered my head.’ In mute astonishment the knight hur- ’ ried to seek an explanation from his squire I who had slipped away when Angelicabe- ! gan her complaint. ‘What message did you bring your lady?’ demanded he. Conrade now confessed the truth. ‘Were these the orders I gave you, you scoundrel?’ said the enraged Sir Hugo. ‘Certainly not,’ replied the squire; ‘but you will own that I have made my point good. You may new see how it would have been had 1 given your order about the young priest. My noble lady is a model for her sex, and almost an angel; but still she is a daughter of Eve, who meant to have bequeathed to all her lineal female descendants her own spirit of perversnees. And we have only to remember the lady Angelica’s ride upon I Sultan, to be convinced that it had lost none of its vigor in the descent.’ The Right Bird—Odd and good is old Dr. Nicholas, who formerly practiced medicine. As the calls and fees did not I come tast enough to please him, he added jan apothecary’s shop to his business, for lire retail of drugs and medicines. He had a great sign painted to attract the wondering eyes of the villagers, and the doctor loved to stand in front of the shop and explain its beauties to the gaping beholders. One of these was an Irishman, who gazed at it lor a while with a comical look, and then exclaimed, i ‘Och! and by the powers, doctor, if it isn’t fiiw! But'there’s something a little I bit wanting in it.’ ‘And what, pray, is that?’ asked the j doctor. ! -Why, you see,’said Pat. ‘you’ve got a beautiful sheet of water here and not a . bit of a bird swimming in it.’ , -Ay—ves,’ replied the doctor; ‘that’s a ; good thought. I’ll have a couple of swans ■ painted there, wouldn’t they be fine?’ ‘Faith and I don’t know but they would,’ said Pat; ‘but I’m ufiher thinking there’s amther kind o’ bird what would be much more appropriate.’ ‘And what’s that?’ asked the doctor. ‘Why, I can’t exactly think of his name jist now, but he is one of them kind of birds that when he sings he says ‘Quack, queck, quack!’ The last that was seen of Pat and the doctor was, Pat running for dear life and the doctor after him. ‘lllustrated with cuts,’ said a young, urchin, as he drew his jack-knife across j the leaves of his grammar. ‘lllustrated with cuts,’said the master, ashe biougbt" his birch to bear upon the shoulders of j ths witty urchin.

The Deacon and the Irishman. A few months ago, as Mr. Ingalls, of Swampscot, 11. 1., was traveling through the western part of the State of New York, he fell in with an Irishman who had lately arrived in this country, and was in ■ quest of a brother who came before him and settled in some of the diggings in that vicinity. Pat was a strong, athletic man, a true Catholic, and had never seen the rntet’or of a Portestant. church. It was a pleasant Sunday morning that brother Ingabs metP.it, who inquired the road to the nearest church. Ingalls was a good and pious man. He told Pat.he was going to, himself, and invited bis new-made acquaintance to keep him company thither (his place of destination being a small Methodist meeting house near by.) There was a-great revival there at the | time, and one of the Deacons, (who by the way was very small in stature,) invi ted brother Ingalls to take a seat in his ! pew. He accepted the invitation and J walked in, followed by Pat, who looked ' |in vain to find altar, <Jrc. A ter he was I I seated, he turned to brother Ingalls, an:' jin a whisper which could be heard all ; -round, inquired: ‘Sure, an’ isn’t this a hiritick church?’ | ‘Hush,’said Ingalls, ‘if you speak a loud word they will put you out.’ 'And fath, not a word will I spake, at 4 all,’ replied Pat. The meeting was opened with prayer by the pastor. Pat was eyeing him very i closely, when an old gentleman who was standing in the pew directly in front of; i Pat, shouted ‘Glory . ‘Hist, ye spallpeen,’ rejoined Pat, with his loud whisper, which was plainly heard | by the minister, ‘be dacent, and dont i make a blackguard of yourself.’ Ihe parson grew more and more fervent in his devotions. Presently the Dea- ■ ; con uttered an audible groan. ‘Hint s-t, ye blackguard, have you no ; dacency at all, at all?’ said Pat, at the | same moment giving the Deacon a punch in the ribs which caused him nearly to 'o’e his i quihbriunj. The minister stopped, and extei. -ing his hand in a suppli- , eating manner, said—‘Brethern, we cannot be disturbed in this way. Will some one put that man I out?’

‘Yes, your reverence,’ shouted Pat, ‘I will!’ and suiting the action to the word, he collared the Deacon, and to the utter horror and astonishment of the pastor, j brother Inga,ls, and the whole congregation, he dragged him through the aisle, jand with a tremendous kick, landed him in the vestibule of the church. ■ Mother. | Oh, word of undying beauty, thine echI oes sound along the walls of time till they j crumble al the breath of the Eternal. In 1 all the world there is not a habited spot i where the music ol that holiest word has not sounded. By the golden flow of the river, by the crystal margin of the rock under the leafy shade of the forest tree, in the hut built of the bamboo cane, in the mud-thatched cottage, by the grand peaks sky-kissing mountains, the wide spread valley, on the blue ocean, in the changeless desert where the angel came down to give the parched lips the sweet waters of the wilderness, or the alter where the father stayed the downward stroke of the sacrificial knife, warned by’ the voice of God; between the billows, that like solid walls of ruby threw crimson on the swarthy brows of Israeliiish men, and lighted the eyes of the women; under the tent of the Arab and in the bark covered wigwam of the Indian hunter, wherever the pulses I of the human heart beat quick and warm, ior float feebly along the current of failing life, there is that sweet word spoken like a universal prayer. Momentous if True: The Tennessee, regular steam-packet between New Orleans and Vera Cruz, brings the important intelligence from I Mexico, as we are informed by telegraph, I that the British Admiral commanding in the Gulf had made a forma! demand upon the government of Juarez for the overdue interest on the British bonds—a sum between five and six millions of dollars Now what is to be the action of this government if Great Britain shall proceed io extremites against Mexico? Will it fight for the Monroe doctrine, or will it aid Mexico’ in one way or another, to extricate herself from the emb irrasmtnts in which she finds het self? These are questions to be answered by far seeing statesman —they are ot the very gravest import. They present palpable realities to be acted upon’ ratliar than mere stalking horses to bestride. — Slides. II — IM — A lady neighbor and acquaintance — the doming mother of a waggish lad — having bottled a lot of nice preserves, labelled them, ‘Putzz/> by Mrs. D —’ (her name) Johnnie, her promissing boy, having discovered she ‘goodies,’ soon ate up the contents of the bottle, and then wrote on the bottom of the label, ‘Put down bv Johnny D—.'

THE SIN a IXO FL MJ. * 4 Ken>aik< of the Hun IS i i '> lT liAUEK*, a Senator for tl>9 Con;.ties of Adams, Wells ami Jay, unr-rnl ?;« the Senate Friday, January •• a. i ( The question b“ing on the adoption of his substitute lor Mr. Bobbs' hili (S. 2.5) to provide for the redenriun or of the bank bonds and Indiana and other State Stocks; providing r the i.i inner of doing the same and defining l:.e duli.-s ol certain officers in connection (herewith, Mr. STUDABAKER saiilj Mil. President: — With the permission of lhe Senate 1 will say that the subject now under consideration is one of gre-.i intciest, both present and prospeeuve, to the people of Indiana. No institution of our country i- so well calculated to exercise a favorable controiing influence upon our destinies ns that of our common school system, and none have a more abiding and permanent hold upon the effections of the people, the defects that may exist in the system to the ! contrary notwithstanding. The great de-, feet in our school system, as now organ-i i*ed, is the want of motive power—the want ol ‘material aid.’ You may remoddle your school system every year—you may enact statute upon statute, and call each successive one the new r- I school law, yet without you increase the means —the ‘material aid’—your new school law will be as insufficient as the old. To make the system efficient we must increase the means for its support. The funds employed at the present time in (lie ; support of schools onlv sustain them an average of two months and a half in the I year in each district in the Slate; whereias it ought to be at least doubl 'hat time to make the system answer the d<. re aud - expectations of lhe whole.

This proposition is perhaps generally admitted But the question is, how is this lobe done—shall it be done by direct taxation? Senators will say no, I say no too; because our taxes are now grievously heavy. Shall we then wait until we get rich and in the mean ime let our schools drag a miserable, sickly, existence? I say no, the plainest principles lof humanity say no. Let us use the I means within our power and that at, the ! earliest convenient opportunity and give the releif to our schools that their importance requires. The amendment that I have !iad the honor to introduce looks to that releif. It proposes to distribute the sinking Fund, or so much of it as may be necessary to pay the bank bonds, among the different counties and there loan it upon real estate security and appropriates the interest immediately to the support of schools. It will have the effect to increase the means n> xt year and so on with each succeeding year until the Bonds shrill have been paid and the Fund all distributed among the different, counties. When done, couch.g the Fnu Is after paying off the Bonds at §2,560,000 which, it will perhaps amount to, it will produce §275,000 per annum, which will materially increase the means of common school education without increasing the burthens of taxation. The proposition of the Senator from Marion, [Mr. Bobbs] is a very different thing. It proposes to set up a brokers office at the citv of Indianopo'.is, for the purpose of buying and selling stocks, and getting rich generally, and whin the persons that this General Assembly have chosen as commissioners shall have exhibited their financial skill, and made the State rich, then the Senator proposes to give the schools the benefit of this fund.

That is some time hence, during this or the next generation, or in other words, the proposition is, that the children of; the State who now ought to go to school — who live in the towns, villagesand coun'ry —who are now growing into womanhood and manhood — who are soon to fill the places in society made blank by . the great God who rules the universe, unto go without these advantages. They are to be reserved for more favored mortals, until our financial commissioners elected bv the General Assembly, through the smiles of Providence and the fortunes of trade shall have .amassed a fortune for the state. lam here, Mr. President, on behalf of my constituents, ns an humble Senator, to protest against this procrastination. Let the money be loaned on real csta'e security in small amounts, under such 1 regulations that it. will be next to impossible to loan the Fund. Besides, if there is any advantage in borrowing the fund, let all have a chance nt it, put it among the people to whom it belongs. The proposition of distribution is based upon tin great Democratic Republican idea h it to the masses belong the advantages of government; and is opposed to the Federal idea of concentration—that the c. nti ■! point of Indianapolis, is the place where all things lovely must be dispensed. \\ hy. Mr. President, I have been informed that persons of the city of In liananolis have large amounts of this fund loaned and bank uoon it; make from twelve to twenty fire p»r c»nt while they

R.yl ut seven. There are many poor men ■in the 1 Slate who are now compelled <o , m ike loans and submit to shaves of twenty and twenty-five per e nt., in order’(o meet their liabilities, who would be verv glsd to barrow some of this inonev, and ought to have it. But tlß* Senator num Marion rt«presenls a rich constituency who •ive had over three hundred and fiftv ilmusand dollars of this money. His cons 'fU'-t. for many veai-. have enjoyed he ber.t tit of this fund, wl lie ether citizens of lhe Slate, just as worthy aud just as deserving, have had none at ail. The ciiiz-. ns of my county never have hr. 1 any -f this money until within the last yea.*, and now onlv a few hundred Cellars.— i And 1 make this remark not for the pur- ; pose of casting any reflection upon the present Board, because 1 believe they ! have done their duty honestly i faithfully. This inequality arises from lhe ■system of keeping and loaning if at Indii anapolis, where it is so difficult of access |to the more remote counties, making it j almost equivalent to denying them thq, lad vantanges of the fund But the Sena- ' tor, like a true sentinel upon the watchI tower, ever cn the alert for the interest of his constituents, now endeavors to perpetrate their superior advantages. In doing so, however, the Senator, unintentionally I have no doubt, < xposee the Fnnd jto great temptations and a liability to be squandered In the first place, fifty thouI sand dollars of the Fund must accumulate before the Senator proposes to advertise by public proposals for the purchase |of stocks. This, Mr. President, might be made a very nice thing by a shrewd I financier. Why, sir, he might manege Iso that it would be a long time before , fifty thousand dollars would accummulate ■ and thereby lea' e lhe Fund unproductive

and a nice thing for the commisioners. But, the Senator seeing the advantage that would be likely taken of the Fund, in his original bill, endeavors to provide against it by incorporating a provision that the commissioner shall, as often aj ■ once a month, deposit the amount accumnlated in the preceding month, and ii thereby prevent the temptations which "otherwise might be presented to the Cumi missioners to manage the Fund so that it j would not accumulate to that amount.— I But, the Sena' >r finding that this system lot deposits and personal security has only 1 ! become another name for larceny upon the I , Treasury, permitted that provision to be Istriki n OU' of the bill, so that as the pro ' position n< w stands, the commissioners i are permitted or requited to h l the money J accumula'e until it amounts to fifty thouI I sand dollars, without any direction being I made as to what shall be done with it • while so accumulating. They may use it g in their business transactions; may deposit it in some bank, and take the interest , mi it, and in the mean time leave the fund 'unproductive. There is one objection '" with me to the bill, that is higher, deeper and blunder than all others, and that is I the general principle upon which the bill i is founded, of investing this Fund in the ; I indebtedness of the Slate. In my opinion lit will be equivalent to loosing the Fund 'to the educational interest of the Stale, and, so believing, it is my duly, as a fi lend g of education, to oppose the measure. The report of the Cotnmissoner of the ! Sinking Fund .show., that the State is now j indebted to this fund over one million g dollars and this General Assembly, al its l special session, made but one move toward its payment. We promised over again g that we would pay it. But the important step is yet to be taken, and that is

I the one which provides the means —the ' tax to do it. That imp< tt; nt anti •■esponsible step is deferred for the consideration of another Legislature which may be , more willing to tax their constituents ' than the present. I sincerely hope, Mr. President, that when the lime comes the ! Legislature maybe found competent and , willing for the duly, yet I have my fears on the subject. In my opinion the result will ever be, that whenever there is a deficiency in the State revenue, the School Fund will go unpaid. Why, sir, during the last two years the State officers, ; through bare necessity, have been com- ’ pelled to use 8186,000 of the Sclu el Fund 1 that was collected from the people, by direct taxation, for the laudable purposes ofeducation, in order that they might carry on the State Government—entirely diverted it from the original intention and , purpose of the Fund. Senators see and know all this; yet we have been in session nearly sixty days and as yet have made . no provission for its ri imbur-ement, I can never consent to continue the Fund in a i position where it will be. so much imperiled. But lie Senator from M ashrngton, (Mr. Heffren) objects and says that in the dis- • trib'Jtmn of the Surplus Revenue Fund it was lost and squandered. 1 have to say i in relation Io that matter, that, while that j may be partially so in some counties, it is i entirely incorrect as to others. The old | system of loaning on personal security is not to be compared with a system like ti e pre-rnt, which requires th. Fund to b

NO. 2.