Indiana Palladium, Volume 9, Number 33, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 31 August 1833 — Page 1
By David V. CwIIey, Terms & PER YEAR 33 PER CENT. DISCOUNT MADE ON ADVANCE, OR 10s pi HALF YEARLY PAYMENTS Wl.. SX.J L.AWKEftTCEBUJHGH, (I A.) SATHJIIBAY, AUGUST 31,
K
7
For fte Indiana Palladium.
EDUCATION. Hhloria Sciential. To what state of intellectual cultivation the anti-deluvians arrived is unknown to us. From the most authentic record, however, we are informed that, in the earliest ages, man discovered the art of working in iron, and from all accounts both sacred and profane, music was early known among men. In the period of ancient history we are informed of Jubal, who is called the father of such as handle the harp
and organ. In the same period Tubal Cain was celebrated for h'13 art in iron. These laid the foundation for the mechanic arts, and were among the earliest civilizers of the world. About 101 years after the deluge we see men employ the arts to erect the Tower of Babel. In the same period, Menes, the first king of Egypt, was engaged in agriculture, lie subdued the wild morass of Egypt,
turned the Nile from its channel and erected the town of Memphis in its bed. In this period Tososthros, an Egyptian, to some extent cultivated the science of medicine and of letters, and introduced the art ci building and writing. So rapid was the progress of art that Sen iramis at one time employed 2,000,00,0 workmen to enlarge and ornament the city of Babylon. In the same period, about 792 years after the deluge, Sesostris the Egvptian hero
carried his arms abroad with 000,000 foot, 24,000 horse and 27,000 armed chariots. In all the subjugated provinces he engraved in triumphal columns the story51 of his conquest, returned home and enriched his country with useful works and magnificent edifices. In the same period, Cecrops leads out a colony into Greece, and lays the foundation of Athens. He taught his subjects to cultivate the olive and raised an altar to Jupeter. In the meantime, Cadmus, a Phcnecian, builds the city Thebes and introduces letters into Greece the Alphabet then consisted of 16 letters. In this period the Phonccians became a manufacturing and commercial people; built the cities of Tyre and Syden, and the Lydeans commenced coining gold 1 o o and silver. The 4th period presents us with the fabulous exploits of Orphius, the father of poetry, in whose hand poetical fictions have placed a harp, the enchanting sound of which stayed the course of the rivers, moved mountains and subdued the ferocity of wild beasts. In the 5th period lived Solomon, endowed with extraordinary wisdom; and Homer, who records the Grecian glory and the
fate of Troy. In this period Lycurgus reforms the ISpartans; Dido lays the foundation of Carthage; and Isaiah, in a flow of hallowed eloquence, proclaims the will of Jehovah. About 650 years before Christ, Thales and Pythagoris with their productions onPhylosophy, Astronomy, &c, illuminate their country and cheer the face of man. In the 7th
period we behold Confucius, a native of
China, and a distinguished heathen moralist, revolutionize the sentiments of his countrymen, by his moral and philosophical maxims. 460 years before Christ, Phidios, the Athenian, and most famous sculpturer of antiquity, made a statue of Jupeter that passed for one of the Seven Wonders of the1 world.
There Socrates administers to the altar of
science, and in the cause of virture offers up
his life. There Hippocrates, the father of
medicine, enrolls his name among the early
philanthropists of the world. There Euripa-
des and Saphocles contend for the honors of
tragic measures, and enrich the intellectu
al world with moral reflections and philosophical aphorisms. 400 years before ; Christ, we see Plato in the grove of AcademU3, surrounded with a crowd of noble and illustrious pupils, casting around him the fruits of the natural and moral sciences, and the lustre of learning and virtue. There Appeles Euclid and Archimedes embellished the scientific world with the most unfading productions of genius and philosophy. In the meantime Aristotle, Theocritus and Zenocast around the trophies of almost every branch of literature, Metaphysics, mechan
ics, grammar, criticism, and politics, occupied and fell profusely from their pens. 70 years B. C. Virgil, (prince of Roman poets,) celebrates the praise of his ancestors and conciliates the Romans in style elegant, sweet, and melodious, calculated to arouse the dullest mind and transport the coldest imagination. There we behold the noble Cato, the learned Varro, the illustrious Cincinnatus and Camellius, who were no less familiar with the implements of husbandry than the shield and javelin. From a retrospect of ancient nations we see that Egypt was the parent of learning and philosophy, geometry, astronomy, alge bra and arithmetic; also architecture, painting, and sculpture were there taught to a considerable extent. The works of antiquity that yet remain in Egypt are magnificent be-
to consult his nature. It is easy to amuse ourselves on imaginary qualities of human nature, but hard to approach and properly understand such a being as man. "How august, how abject, how wonderfully complicate is man." To-day he grovels in ignorance and is blind to the beauties and embellishments that surround him; to-morrow the scales fall from his eyes, he expatiates upon the wonders of nature, he sees the earth produce, he looks into its bowels and sees
what they contain; in the heavens he beholus the wonders of his creator. The sun maintains its place in the skies, the planets roll on in their course, the comet wandereth and returns again to its destined road; the stars dance along the pavement of Heaven; the moon walks in its clouded majesty; and standing upon a lofty eminence in science, he rejoices in the charms that every where around unfold to his enraptured view. In his new being he exults in anticipation of higher attainments in knowledge and excellence, that wait to mature his ever expanding capacities, and to plume them for immor
tal beauties and felicity. 3Ian is a com
pound being of body and soul, and all the
but is derogatory to the principles of republi
canism. Sensible of our wants, where shall we go for relief! The answer is at hand; good schools are cur hope, and to bring into existence and sustain these, depends not upon any one effort, or the efforts of any one class of men. The work of education is a simple one and requires united effort". Every parent, every young gentleman and young lady, every little boy and little girl can do something to spread the dawn of intellectual day, to open the treasures of science, and unfold the glory of religion and truth, not only over all the region from the Atlantic to the Pacific wave, but to envelope the earth
in an atmosphere of moral and intellectual
light and falicity. Parents, you may give your children silver and geld, but these cannot render them happy. Adversity's blast may sweep it all away; but religion and scientific knowledge is a treasure that no villain's hand cr adverse wind can take from them. We regret that parents who are blessed with children of amiable dispositions and strong intellectual capacities, are so backward in their attention to the schools where their children are taught,
benefits that accrue to him must be adapted j but stand aloof and take no interest but in
to the capacity of his mental and physical . blaming the teachers for things of which abilities. The proper tone of his faculties j they have no personal knowledge. The wrirsquire the influence of that which is con-! ter of this number has taught school eight
genial to his nature. Three different species of matter enter into the composition of his physical nature, viz: bone, flesh and medully. These constituted into a variety of simple
elementary, organic tisues, each endowed
years, and never had a complaint from a parent that was in the habit of visiting his school. All dissatisfaction with which teachers are most affected, arises from thoe
who know nothing of the school, only by
From the Nc:d York Evening Pest.
It is emphatically true that in this country the people constitute the government. Keeping this maxim in view, let ussee what is the conduct of the bank of the United States towards the people? That Hank was origiaally chartered by our representatives under peculiar circumstances, and with enormous privileges. They hive had the government deposits, or in other word, the money of the people in their possession ever since they were chartered. By i!ie use of this money they have amassed millions upon millions for their stockholders, a large proportion of whom consists of foreign nobility and gentry. Our intention is nut at present to enter into an examination of the con
duct of the Bank generally, hut enly to allude to that part of itwlrch relates to the
bill of exchange drawn by our government on the French government a short time since. We care not what was the cause of the protest of this bill, whether it was the bad faith of the French Government, an improper delay on their part to provide the necessary funds, or a misunderstanding of the terms cf tho treaty on one side or the other. The hill was protested, and it is understood that this Bank now calls upon the Government, or in other words upon the people of the United
fctatcs, for a large sum, say srCO(tyJOi), over
with a modification of vital energy, peculiar other persons, and that is generally misrepre-
yond conception. Besides the splendor of
of the cities, are Lake 3Iocris, the labyrinths.
the catecombs and pyramids. No nation has ever excelled the Greeks in literary taste and genius. In chaste and beautiful composition, in liveliness of fancy, in sweetness cf periods. In various forms of poetry, oratory, and history, they are unrivaled. In epic poetry we find the sublime Homer, and the rncrai Hesoid. in lyric poetry shine th.3 gay Anacriorj, the sweet Sappho, and the fanciful and the daring Pindar. Oratory was highly cul
tivated among the ureeks. Then Pericles
awed
Thucldidu
by the force of h
ear
morthen
to
voice and argument.
To apply a remedy to any evil, whether moral or physical, we must" explore its nature, ascertain its cause and ccntemnlate its consequences. Laudable efforts often fail because these who make them are unacouaintwith the peculiar nature of the object they ' wish to effect, and because they have no practical knowledga of the system cf means they employ. An effort to promote the moral and tellectud improvements of man requires us
to itself, each lives, feels, moves in its own
way, yet they do concur in one endeavour and operate to one common end. Each and all of this immense assemblage of ao-eiicies will perform its proper function, only when under the influence oF a principle justly appropriated to its wants. The food that nourishes and sustains our corporal existence is
related to our organs by a natural effinity, and as our bodies will soon languish and die
without fresh supplies of food, adapted to their digesting organs, so the mind expands and developes its powers only when supplied with and cultivated under the influence of intellectual principles, peculiar to its capacities. Does it unfold its strength and beauty under the influence of science? Scientific culture is called for, to elevate it to its proper dignity. Does it delight in moral excellence and religious devotions! Religious instruction is the most certain effort to ennoble and
exalt it to its highest state of blessedness.
The formation of bone in the animal econo
my depends upon the presence of phosphate
of lime, magnesia, soda, carbonic acid, &:c.
wnile tne muscles, members and other tisues, require for their developement carbon,
oxygen, hydrogen, azote, fibirin, alburrin,
Sec. Inl like manner the different endowments of the mind require the application of
different subjects in order to the perfect developement of all its powers. The mind of man is a living, intelligent and immortal principle, mysteriously associated with the body, of the essence of which we know but little. It has been a fruitful subject of disquisition among philosophers in all ages. Thales, Pythagoris, Plato, Aristotle, Epecurius, Democritus, Lock, and Boyle, are among the earliest writers upon the doctrine cf the mind, and have as much failed to present to our view man's real moral and intellectual character, and the peculiar modus operandi of the mind as Anaximincs, Anaxft 11 mi . - r
agoris, Arcneiaus, ineocritus, ana Z-eno, fa iled to determine the cause of all things by the illustrations of the nature of water, the properties of fire, infinite air, matter and spirit, the tendency of atoms, unity, Sec. To be successful in teaching, we must so address our subject to the mind, so as to insoire its
efforts. The mind should be early taught to reflect, compare, and infer for itself. Much of the labor of teaching is lost by not eliciting the exercise of the judgment in presenting more of the exact sciences with those that are arbitrary, in common school instructions. One truth produced by the efforts of the pupil is of more value than a hundred told to him by his teacher. In every district the several branches of general knowledge should be
taught in so animated and engaging a manner as to invite the intimations of the mind, to seme favorite subject. Every mind has its own way to investigate truth, and the earlier this tendency is discovered to the pupil, and its parents, the more likely it will be to arrive at eminence. Young men often mistake their calling by net coming in contact at a proper time, with the subject in which their
peculiar talent might have rendered them proficient. But such has been and still is the
state of education in our country, and especially in the west, that our youth do not come in contact with those branches that inspire reflection and an effort of the judgment, until the favorable opportunity to form habits of accurate thinking, and the only season to choose a calling that determines their destiny is forever past. Were then an equation in the efforts that are made in the cause of education, and a part of the energies that arc
now employed in raising and sustaining col
nations of the game. It w.is observed tint if any one copied Irsplan of playing he immcdijtf ly lose arid quitted tho labia in great ill-humonr, and Jo was not known tu frequent the snraa house for many days after. He was found stitfand cold cn tho pavement, in a blind obscure nook, by the Salle Vcntadour, close to tho Passaic Choiseul. Cries had been heard in that neighborhood in tlu dead of night, and it is supporcd that thosii shrieks scared the ariasJn from his plunder, as notes to a largo amount wcro fjund on the, person of the deceased; yet there Etill is no clue whereby his identity can he traced. He is supposed to have ledged in the most jopulous quarter in Paris: tut as vast sunu are doubtless in his place of abode, thoso who know the secret of his ''whereabouts"' keen it well, and tako silent poesjiou of the rich spoils they have thus inherited. His death-wound had been with a poniard stab in tho side. It U conjectured that his assassin was one of the players at the gaminsr house he had just quitted, who had dodged his steps till ho entered tho dartsomo alley v. hero hiscoipjc wasaltcrwardi found.
scnted. Let parents do their part and children will not be backward. Let parents make their school a subjeet cf solicitous inquiry, and critical examination, and let all our school districts be supplied with enlightened and zealous teachers, who make it their highest ambition to please and benefit their pupils. Upon the teachers, says (Dr. Beecher,) "hangs the salvation of our country and the hope of the world." "We would say upon legislative enactments, the co-operation of our general and state governments, the co-operatiol of parents, and upon the teachers hang our country's hope and the
prospects of the world. In the school-room, however the labor must be done, and to this important truth let teachers awake. In vain may we employ agents to travel our country and solicit the aid of more enlightened districts in vain may they declare
to a listening audience their fine spun theories in vain may we employ a press to shower around us plans and speculative systems. The pratical effort is required and that in the profession of teaching. Men never learn to discard ignorance and to shun error until they come in contact with knowledge and truth. In vain may they be told the beauties of science and the pleasures of intellectual cultivation. Like idle specu
lations they will only play around his head and leave his heart untouched and ecld. Z.C. Lawrenceburrrh.
Extract of a Litter fro sr. Xarport, to llio editor of tho Providenea City Gazette, dated A2. (: a.Mr. llohn t Fianldin wife, and hisuifcVi sistefs child, were both struck
and above the face of the bill, interest arid with I'phtning, and killed, yesterday afterother charges, and this too when it is aho noon, about 7 o'clock, during o:m of tho
heaviest thunderstorms 1 ever knew. Mr.
ti's dog was aUo killed with tho samo
strotio tbat killed Ins wile. J hero wcro
understood that the money for which the h' av hill was drawn, was never taken from the l'rai
uhn
1
hV tfii r111PtV of "hie; Ovn-ncciA -
- i u v. A, 'ties are estaDiisnea, enao.veu ana 3 arrested the tnouerhts or others i. , . , ,
;-, t i w, w wmc ia iew 01 eue voung 1SOV, n. I'inrrritf s. soothed tho i . .
J "'M v- A XI IO IJ a. iUU . I a... . 1 .1 1 1
s (i.,ua l ii i l 01 tae vcuia, uau very limited
irtlvn hi .,-4. i ' i. puriuiuijes ci insiruciion. it rc action by tne united euenrv 01 lesture. 1 .1 . , .
,, " uc ,ia oi uiouijiit iu t-o;j maL in a
lees and seminaries, exerted in elementary
schools, it would be better for our country and for the world. We regret that the benevolent efforts of tho day are fraught with so much inedicient speculation. The ablest efforts seem to be elevated above the object they wish to effect. Colleges and universi-
fostered,
men of our
ae great majori-
or no op-
quires no
government
like ours, the intelligence of a few cannot give tone to our institutions. No, the majority sways the destinies cf our country and that majority must be enlightened, or ignorance will exalt itself over our nation's glory, and our virtue and liberty fall at the desolating touch of bigotry, superstition and intolerance. Too long have a few been the objects of favor and charity, while the many have called in vain for redress. This practice accords with the tha spirit of despotism,
The following anecdote from the Norfolk Herald, will be read with interest by every
one. 1 hero are lew Lacoste in the world and, abs! for the honor of humanity, still fewer such men as the poor tar. Anecdote of a sailor. During ihe prevalence of the Cholera last year in this borough, a sailor of decent appearance called at Mr. W. S. Lacoste's boarding house, and frankly told him he was adrift at the mercy of the element, without a harbor ahead, or a shot in the locker, and if perchance he should be hoarded by the Cholera, why he
must loundcr in the streets, he supposed. Lacoste, who was never known to be backward in extending relief to a fellow creature in distress, and who perceived a warrant for the poor fellow's honesty in his countenance, readily tendered hirn a bed and a seat at his table, until it should he better times with hirn, which friendly offer Jack accepted with much joy. Not readily meeting with a
vessel to sliipon board of, however, our hero became impatient, and after making a suitable acknowledgment of gratitude to his kind and generous host, and promising to quiet the score as soon as it was in his power, he left his house and embarked for New York. Twelve months had now rolled on, and the sailor had entirely escaped from Mr. L's
memory, when one day last week a seaman
very neatly clad arid of prepossessing countenance, called at his house, and without preface, thus accosted him: "Hero are $'200; I wish you to take as much of it as you want to pay yourself for your generosity to me, and keep the balance till I call for it. I am just off to sea, and if I go to Old Davy, why you see, I had rather you should have it than any body 1 know. ''Why, who are you, and what claim have I to your money ?' ''Ob, then you have forgot the poor sailor you took out of the streets last year and treated so kindly but he has not forgot you.
So saying, he forced the money upon his
benefactor, adding "1 know if I get h ick safe, I shall find tho niony safe, and if I dont why, keep it in welcome. And here (culling a lottery ticket from his pocket) take this, and if it draws a prize keep that too. Then giving Mr. L. a cordial shake of the hand, he
left him and went on board his vessel, which in an hour after was under way for a foreign port. In less than 21 houra afrer hi3 departure, Mr. L. called at a lottery c fTicc to enquire the fate of Jack's ticket, when he had the satisfaction to learn that Vs numbers hid drawn the handsome sum of 1000 Jack's share of tho prize money 1 icing 230.
vaults of the Bank. And into whose pockets is this sum to go? V'hy into the
j pockets of the nobility and gentry of Eng
land, out ot the hard earnings ot the common people of the United States. We do not hesitate to say that it is the bounden duty of the Government, as the faithful agent of the people, to refuse to pay these damages. Under these circumstances the myrmidons of the Bank and its President, and its hosts offoreign stockholders have tho hardihood to assert that tho Government dare not
withdraw the money of the people fiom the vaults of the Bank. We can tell these gentlemen, that they are strangers to Andrew Jackson and his character; that if he thinkj
it his duty as the faithful agent of the people to withdraw tho deposits, and proper arrangements can he mado with other sound banks to receive them, ho will withdraw them, though the act should draw down upon his venerable head the anathemas of all the pampered nobility of Europe, whom he no more fears now, than he feared the bayonets, of their soldiers at New Oilcans. In doin? this he would not act rashly, but coolly, deliberately and fnmly. Tho last presidential election was a question between the President and the people on one side, and the 15 ink nnd its stockholders on the other. Tho first named parties achieved a decisive victory, and the ballot bones have shown that
the people approve tho conduct of tho president towards the h:.nk. It is now pretty generally conceded that the hard; cannot he
rc-charlcrcd, though they are openly in the field, as they were at 1 he last election, threatening to buy their charter by two thirds of both houses. This they cannot do, though they have made some considerable purchases within tho last year, for the President, at least is not and will not be for sale at any price.
three houses struck in town, and cocsidcra ble damage done. 'lt alio struck in Middictown on this island, and burnt up one grain and one hay stack. Mrs. Muraford's house, near tho stone mill, was considerably damaged; and had the folks in the room not been on a bed, it is probable they would have been killed, as tho lightning broke evc-ry thing in thu room. One thing is rcmaikublc, it took a glass out of a picture frame, and handed it on tho floor without even breaking it. Tho lightning ran irp and down the Court Houso lightning rod, like a steady stream of fire, a. ad our front room, and all the other3 v ro
flooded with water that .came, down the chimney. Hailstorm. A severe hail storm wri experienced at Quebec, on the !27th tilt., by which from 8 to 12,000 panes of glara wcro broken, two barns wcro burnt, nnd twenty-two sheep were killed by lightning. During the same rtorm nt St. John Port Joli, and at St. Gcrvais, the whole of tho grain which wra in car, to the extent cf a lcujjuo and a half, was ruined.
Ciiahlittox, July 27. Storm. After a continuation of warm and dry weather for several we( ks, we wcro visited yesterday afw r:u on about o'clock, with a cxy severe storm of rain, accompan'cd with ivid lightmng and heavy thunder. Tt c lightning ctruck tho main rcyai masts of the ships Sar.ih and Caroline, tnd Martha, loth lying at Edmondjtoifs whaif, but on t pposite sides, passing down to iho head of tho mainmast of the latter, whcio it left the mast, and ran down the topsail sheet chains and entered the held, doing no other injury than shivering tho royal mast and injuring the topmort head. The latter ship had her chain conductor up at the time, fastened several feet b low the herd of tho sky sail in; st. Above the chain ;ho mast was split in pieces, hut is Fcon as the fluid came in contnet with the chain it ran down if, and parsed ojharmlely, thus satisfac
torily proving the efdeacy of tho apparatus, in protecting vessels from ths dangerous eileets of lightning. Tho schooner Samuel, 1 vinir in the stream, was al.-o struck, and.
A Goon Nrw Ncsi:. A medical gentleman yesterday came into our ollice with an acquaintance whom he introduced as having just been furnished with a nose. Upon a second look we perceived that the nose had . , 1. 1 f rn i
a suoiiii sear upon r;:cu :iuu 01 a. 10 oe i short, it was mad) of a thin plate of silver,!
! painted to correspond with the countenance, j
and fastened in its pk.ee by two claws, one j of which rests unon each of tho real iios:ril:. !
' 1.1.1 !!
the top being held fastbv a pair of spectacles. 1 WJ understand, tno mainmast wr.s UnvtreU The fastenings, ihmigh serin what uneorn fur-1 ncar,y lo lho h ck. Providentially, there table for a while, have been found in other ! U'2S lVJ oss U 0:1 Lcn,d cit,u r Q? cases at least, to become easv. It is the Vfysc,sJ several of tho seamen were, howwork of our ingenious citizen, Reuben ever, somewhat rtunnc d. IVale, whose museum is so justly celebrated. ln addition to tho above, wo learn that tho The individual who wore this nose, was so '.ho school room of Mr. (any in Wcniwonh entirely changed by it in Lis appcar:inc0j I street, war, also struek, and ihe galle end of that his acquaintance sat by him as usual at lhe ,,IJidn3 completely torn out; enc of his
the boarding house breakfast table without , VUV'A was suue-cuown by me SnOCK,ar.u re-
knowing him. There is one advantage which a silver nose has over one of grist L- h is not so liable to turn red. In every respect it is better than no nose atai!, by adiiLre:;ce not to he sneezed at.
rnained insensible for a considerable time, but finally recovered. Courier.
. V f ?c"
N. Y. Journal of Ccm.r.crcc.
JI::r.lcr of ftc Nmicriotss P:ri; Gaml::, -All lovers of th-;r mvs-orious ni;d nr.md-
Euiii.eis. A correspondent of
a London paper states tl at there ii a fellow going alr.ut the iliag s near London, who cortiives to make a voiy profitable livelihood by Ivn jin ' him.-elf. His mctl.e-d i.J, f. to sob ct roinu tree, near tho foot of which he strews :i il-w r ieccs of nr.iir-r.
!jus in Paris have been put on tho qui rive j which appear to be figments of a letter r.dby a most extraordinary mtm!.-r 1 itely :r- dressed l(, h's wife. " lie next suspends petrated near the pass-ago Choiseul. Tho !,;fI)5tlf uith a rotten cord, which, breaking, person of the murdered man was wi 11 known I leaves him prolate breath it; in ties sitin nil the Parisian gambling houses, hut I Olio:i he remains till tome prs ngcr m name no one ever heard, neithor was h:s i,Cos h:3 apparently awful conditidi. Ho abode at any time- found out. In tho pub- ,!lCll cr.unt, ifoits icturnding animation ro
Commodore Baixsridce of the United States Navy, died recently at Philadelphia, in the sixtieth year cf his age.
lie places no ircqocntcd lie went by the ji.ck- naturally that ihe Fympthy rf tho s'rang. r name of the Advocate, cr ho acknowlrdj'.-d jd wukei:cd; to wi.u:o menhirs he replies that ho had fermeily belonged to tho h-gal whh a t j j of d'etre:, tills a k.n;r story of profe?s.on,andh:sro;ivcmitionr.nJm'jiner.; wif; and children, nnd ssrs Liia a rrdu.
were 1 iwy erlike. Properly to the r mount ci
oQOjOOO livres Irs been sjen in his posjssion nnd !i3 tfeldoiii hid cn his pirsonUss than 15130 francs in note?. At the gambling- tables he was noted rs a cool, li.citfnn, and pertinacious flayer, proceeding cn a very complicated svs-
urn, Wiiieii demanded great attention nnd
self command. Ho passed awry every dwy seated at some trcr.ts-ct-un table, silently
j immersed in his calculations in the combi
ned cL-ik urt hi vhy home. A deception
( UU'.a d. script ic ii Of5 pneiised Ltely; tho impost; r s::ec tiled mi getting hiir.rclt rr-n
vc'wd fu o to Pinr.h i;li. m, with or tS
m tr.3 packet, ru: berd;ed by thu httmuno
genlry u tho tu ?g! Ivihrod.
Mhy -vr-i:. -.Mr. Lien, fiii r.d rf the .drr.-riistratto:!, t lecw-d to Cotx fa m
. v.". .ill. III I Ul Ji:. 1!'t ! ii-
. 1 - - I
member.
