Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 14, Number 8, Jasper, Dubois County, 29 March 1872 — Page 7
I
NEWS SUMMARY. The East. AhotbiR boat of the SUtea Island Ferry Company iled l Vrw York' on Kri' M, for a judgment against the company. The Sheriff will lay the boate up, or collect L passenger fares, uuleas the judgments Shortly paid At Whit Plain., New York, an attempt has been made to poiion , family named Ackeruian, composed ol from rtoremoer, (W.00O, against $17,000,000 the year preui A young man named W. Sowers, nJ a girl named Lonfcuard wer run over and tbel'ormer instantly killed by a train on the Beltimore and Ohio railroad, on Friday ni((ht. They had been sitting on the track talking. Xiab Springfield, Maas., on Saturday, a train was thrown from the track by a broItn rail. The smoking car went down an embankment fifteen feet, and twenty perions in it were more or leaa injured, but probably none fatally. William Tbbvirt accidentally shot his wife at New York on Tuesday, killing her mitantly, and he became a raving maniac jen he discovered what he had done A 'ew York immigrant swindler was on Tuesiy sentenced tc 5ve years' imprisonment. Mrs. E. Sbaushank died in a dentist's fhair at New York on Wednesday, from the administration of laughing gas The rUtUkill Falls Hotel, the New Mountain House, near Saugerties, N. Y., burned on Tuesday. The building was owned by R. E. JVraeroy. Loss25,000; insurance f 19,000. Tbe house pf a farmer named Robert Bowles, near Theresa, N. Y., was burned on Monday sight. The family were obliged to leave the house in their night clothes, and several of them had their limbs badly frozen. Bowles was so badly burned while attempting to save hie children that he died next day A Fonda, N. Y., dispatch of Wednesday evening says : "The train which left here this morning, on the Fonda, Johnstown k Gloversvillo railroad, with three entices, is fsst in a snow bank a mile long and lix to ten feet deep, nearGloversville All trains between St. Lawrence and Prescott, Out., were snow-bound on Wednesday General Sickles states that he has negotiated a ban of $2,000,000 at 5 per cent, for the new Erie Board ou securities rating ss high aa terenty. The new loan can readily be paid off with tbe earnings in a very short time, and is only needed to tide the company rrerthe rugged placea left by live yetrs of Jay Gould. James Brass and Join McAvoy.of rough -keepsie, N. Y., found guilty of highway robbery, h:iv been sentenced to fifteen rears' imprisonment A Watertow, N. V., dispatch of Thursday lays : " A severe storm has prevailed in this region since Tuesday last. Trains are all snow bound. No mails Is two dsya. The weather is intensely cold, with piercing windi. The city Water Works are nearly all frozen up." The Wast. Mrs. Assa C. Rcth was released on a writ cf habeas corpus at Lawrence, Kansas, on Friday. The Prosecuting Attorney announced that since the decision of the Supreme Court agsiiot the admissibility of Ruth's letter, written the evening of his death, as evidence, her conviction under the present development of facts was impossible, and he did not desire to retain her in custody any longer. She was therefore discharged Michael Welch, a farmer residing near Waukesha, Wis., waa kicked by a mule on Friday and instantly killed. The et ire top of his head was taken off. Welch was about 45 years of age, and leaves a family. Tns flouring mill of Zesighonse A Bro., St. Louis, Mo., wss burned aarly on Sunday morning. Loss $60,000 ; insured for $.10.000. Four powder mills of the Austin Pow mi i 1 1 f i ... .1 .. ei der Company, situated about five miles routh of Cleveland, blew up on Saturdsy afternoon with a series of heavy explosions, three hundred kegs, or about four tons, of powder being fired. Two men, named Leonard and Sherman, who were at work in one of the mills, were blown to pieces, fragments of their bodies being thrown hundreds of feet away. Three other men, at work in the v.cinity, were more or less injured. The mills blown up were torn to atoms, tho ground for several acres being strewn with rremenU. Loss between $15,000 and $30,000. The explosion wss heard at Ravenna, a distance of forty miles Mrs. Kane, aged AA years, mother of Thomas lane, of Wenona, whose lega were crushed by the cars in La Salle, 111., and amputated on Friday evnini, came to town to see her unfortunate eon on Saturday morning, and on seeing him immediately swooned and died. Is the matter of the difference between the proprietors of the Missouri Democrat, Judge Madili on Monday appointed Wm. MrK.ee, one of the firm, receiver, and ordered a sale of the establishment George Thompson, night yard-master of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas railroad, at Sedalia, Mo., was killed os Monday morning while witching a train At Mackinac, on the 7th inst., the mercury stood at twenty degrees below zero. The ice in the harbor is twenty-four inches thick, and no conjecture can be formed as to when the straits will open. Mrs. Scbatt, who was brained at St. Louis en Monday with a poker by her maniac huband, died on Tuesday night At I "rkland, O., on Sunday last, a negro named Barhyde beat his wife's brains out with an sx, in a fit of jealousy Adam Haines shot and killed John E. Tindall on Monday, rar Cannon City, Col Quite a swindle ls been perpetrated on farmers near Fprt Wayne, lud., by sales of patent hay-forks, o the double-note swindle system. The sggregste amount will reach $5,000. Efforts re being made to arrest the rascals, but thus far have been unsuccessful. Tax spotted fever has been raging at Logansport, Ind., for the past fire week with an average of eight deaths daily. Business is considerably affected A man just returned to Omaha from the Black Hills characterises the recent gold discovery sensation as the worst sell he ever met. It is a bogus excitement, designed to attract the immigration of such persons aa must remain 'We Wood A Campbell's planing mill, Wilkms k Marcellus's bolt factory, and Bsrtlett's flouring mill, at Rockford, were destroyfd by fire on Wednesday night. Loss sbout $40,000 The Ohio Falls Csr Works M Jeffersonville, Ind., covering more than e acres, were burned on Wednesday afternnn. Loss over $300,000; insurance about $240,000.
Vol persons, uy iiupiwu... - ,ith araenical poison The ofBcial report Hhe new Director! of the Erie railroad ..... thftt 'he earnings of the company
A com mittbb of citiseni of New Albany, lud., waited on the officers of the Ohio Falls Car Company on Thursday, and made them a 'ender of $80,000 in cash to locute their works in that city The gronery store of Devoe k White, at Ripley, Ohio, wns destroyed by fire on Thursday morning; also, King A Lcpgett's hardware store adjoining. Loss $100,000 ; insurance $8,600. The South. J. G. BisBorr, keeper of a saloon in the eastern part of Louisville, shot himself on Sunday night with a shot-gun, placing tbe muzzle in his mouth and touching the trig6 er with a cane. The cause is supposed to e temporary insanity, from heart disease. John S. Washington, for thirty-five years marine reportor ol the New Orleans Picayune, is dead. Dr. Goshorn, Postmaster at Dyersburg, Tenn., has abaconded with nearly $4,000 in Government funds... .Sam Russell, son of the proprietor of the hotel at Paris, Tenn., accidentally shot himself on Saturday while hunting, causing death in a few hours. Tbr warehouse of C. Moorman, of Shelbyville, Tenn., was entered on Wednesday night by burglars. Michael Murphy, a clerk, sleeping in the store, was stabbed to death. The safe was subsequently blown open and robbed of $200, and the house burned. Murphy's body was found in the ruins, burned almost to a cinder The steamer Charmer struck a rock while descending tho falls at Louisville on Thursday morning and sunk. Loss $10,000; no insurance Tho large distillery of George If. Dearer, at (umpbell ville, Ky., was destroyed by fire on Monday morning. Loss $45,000 ; insured for $35,000. L. Gallen, of Meade county, Kentucky, was killed on Tuesday by a falling tree, which blew down on him while at work in his clearing Gen. David L. Stanton, Collector of the Fifth Maryland District, has been arrested and deposed from his position, charged with being a defaulter in a sum ranging from $20,000 to $30,000. Gkorok Schwab, aged 65, died while sitting in a chair in a saloon at Louisville on Wednesday. Old age and destitution is supposed to be the cause. Washington. Tbe President on Tuesday signed the act of Congress authorizing the survey and marking of a boundary between the territory of the United States and the possessions of Great Britain, from Lake of the Woods to the summit of the Rocky Mountains. Foreign. The Archbishop of Cologne has formally exj communicated Profs. Hilgcrs,Knoodt,Teggen, and Rush,oi the University of Bonn, for their rejection of the dogma of Papal infallibility. It is reported that the Swiss engineers Naaff, Riggenbach and Zschokke are about to construct a railroad to the summit of Mount Vesuvius, similar to that at Mount Washington. A pension of 1,000 has been granted to Lady Mayo, and 20,000 has beet settled on her children by the British Government The essaasin of the Earl of Mayo has been executed at Calcutta. Us made o confession and declared that the death of the Viceroy was not the result of a conspiracy, as he alone de-igued and carried out the murder. He also said that he intended to kill Gen. Stewsrt, who accompanied the Earl of Mayo on his tour of inspection to Fort Blain, and was only prevented Irom fully executing his purpose by the promptness of his arrest after attacking tbe Viceroy. A Vienna dispatch of Tuesday ssys : The workingmen in the mines of the Rothchilds, at Wittnawitz, in Moravia, enraged at the non-payment of their wages, attacked the offices of the superintendent. Gaining entrance, they burst open the safe and appropriated the contents. They then demolished the building. The soldiers were called out and fired on the rioters. Four were killed, fiftv wounded, and one hundred arrested.
Order has been restored, but the mines are guarded by the military. A (ERiors conflagration occurred at Düsseldorf, Germany, on Wednesday. Among other buildings, the fam us Academy of Art was burned, and many of the most valuable paintings were deatroyed A Russian Imperial decree renpens Sebastopol as a commercial and military harbor, with the fortifications restored. The London Horning Post of March 0, reminds advisers of President Grant that though the borders of Canada are defenseless, so are these of the United States, and the annexation of Canada would cost the United States a long and bloody war, and after that the Canadians and late southern rebels would combine against the Union. Canada, it says, could at shorter notice, put in motion a greater number of troops than the United States, while at the first signal of war. tbe English fleet would cross the Atlantic and blockade the American ports, while the Union possesses no vessels to raise the blockade or return the compliment by sealing up English ports It has been proved thst Marshal Basaine dined with Prince Frederick Charles of Prussia shortly before the cspitulstion of Mets. Proceedings in Congress. In the Senate on the 15th a bill was passed authorising the President to appoint a Paymaster General in the army The House bill extending the time for the comBletion of the Portage and Lake Superior snal was psssed The remainder of the session was occupied with the discussion of the Tariff bill. In the House on the 15th the Wisconsin Land Grant bill was tsken up. A substitute was adopted by a vote of 93 to 85, providing that all lands granted by Congress in 185(1 and 1804 for lands for t'..e construction of the St. Croix and Lske Superior railroad, such grants having expired by limitation, are declared forfeited to tho United tates, and shall henceforward be subject to homestead entry and settlement under the Hsmestesd art of the 20th of May, 1871. and that no part of such lands shall be selected by or inure to the benefit of sny railroad company under any assumed grant from the United States, and that no land embraced in the grant to the St. Croix Railroad Company shall in any case revert to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, and repealing all acts or parts of sets inconsistent with this provision. The bill as thus amended was passed, and the House adjourned. There was no session of the Senate on the 16th. In the House on the 16th the attendance was slim, and no business was transacted beyond the reading or filing of speeches on miscellaneous subjects. In the Senate on tbe 18th Mr. Cork-
line's resolution calling for tbe number of
applications lor appointments made by certain Senators came up. An amendment to include the Senators from I'd, mm was accepted by Mr. Coukling, and the resolution as amended was adopted 'I he Chicago Relief bill was taken up, hut the Neunte adjourned without reaching a vote. In tbe House on the lsth, after tho introduction of several new bills, the Senate hill to contract with the proprietors of tho Congressional Globe for reporting and publishing the long debutes in Congress for two ytars, was taken up, but the House adjourned without disposing of the bill. In the Senate on the 19th the bill for tho relief of the officers and crew of the Kearsarge was passed. It directs the Secretary of the Treasury to pay them $100,000 in prize money The Chicago Relief bill waa taken up. Various amendments were proposed and rejected Adjourned. In the House on the 19th tbe bilr in relation to the capture of the rebel iron-clad Albermarle was passed The bill providing for reporting and publishing the debates in Congress was taken up. An amendment that no person shall be employed as a reporter ol the proceedings of the House without the approval of the Speaker, was sgreed to. Mr. Ambler offered an amendment, directing the Committee on Printing to publish for three months an advertisement in at least one leading newspaper in each State, inviting proposals for rep rling and printing the debates in Congress; and also to have estimates made of the cost of reporting and publishing the debates by the Congressional printer, and providing that no debates shall be reported and published after the close of the present Congress, except on a written contract entered into therefor by authority of Congress. The amendment was agreed to. The bill as amended was then passed without di ision Mr. Cox offered a resolution instructing the Committee on Rules to report a rule restricting the publication of debates to debates which actually occurred. Agreed to The House then went into Committee of the Whole on the Pacific Mail Subsidy bill, but adjourned before reaching a vote. In the Senate on the 20th the Chicago Relief bill, as reported from the Finance Committee, was passed by a vote of 20 to 17. Bills were, introduced authorising the construction of bridges across the Misaissippi river at Quincy, III., and Red Wing, Minn. The Tarilf bill was discussed until adjournment. In the House on the 20th the bill authorizing the construction of bridges across the Ohio river and prescribing their dimensions was passed The amended bill was passed authorizing the construction of a bridge across the Mississippi river at Clinton, Iowa, for the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy railroad A n solution calling on tho Secretary of State for information as to tbe amounts paid to newspapers for publishing the laws of the United States, waa adopted The Postoffice Appropriation bill was passed, and the House adjourned. In the Senate on tho 21st Mr. Logan, from the Committee on Pensions, reported adversely the House bill making all pensions payable from date of discharge or death of persons on whose account the pensions are granted, and on his motion it was indefinitely Sostponed The Vice President announced lessrs. Anthony, Hamlin and Casserly as a Committee of Conference on the bill providing for reprrtin? and publishing debates. The Senate went into Executive Session, and soon after adjourned. Tue House on the 21st took up the Senate amendments to the Chicago Relief bill. After discussion by Messrs. Ilaselton (Wis.), King, and Conger against the bill, and by Messrs. Burchard and Dawes in favor of its immediate passage, tbe bill was referred to the Committee of Wsys snd Means, with leave to report at any time after Monday, the 25th The Army Appropriation bill, appropriating $29,548,799, was discussed in Committee of the Whole until adjournment. The Survivor of the Celebrated Diamond Wedding-. William C. Bryant's party received, while in Havana, many courtesies from Madame Oviedo, the heroine of the diamond wedding in New York in 1858. The Rev. J. H. Bryant writes thus to the Princeton (111.) Republican: She was a New York girl, named Bartlett, who married, some years since, a rich old Cuban, with a tinge of African blood, I am told. I remember there was a great noise about it at the time in the New York papers, and the vast sums of money that were spent at the wedding. Mr. Oviedo did not live long, and his young widow now lives in his spacious and splendid palace, in all the luxury of a princess. We called upon her Sun'.ay night, to thank her for kind attention, and found her alone with another widow, a sister-in-law, younger than she is. Mrs. Oviedo is an intelligent woman, " talks like a book, ' and seems to understand all about the politics of the island. I am told she manages or oversees her business. She has a large sugar plantation near Mantanzas, where she spends the summer. The income from it is $800,0)0 yearly. She is strongly in favor of the annexation of Cuba to the United States, but says she does not talk about it except to Americans. An Absurd Law. The English are talking of amending their burial laws, and apropos of this the Pall Mall Gazette thinks that it would not be amiss to revise marriage laws also. At present no one can be married after 12 o'clock in the day, and this absurd regulation imposes upon the relatives and friends of a happy pair the necessity of eating cold ch cken and drinking champagne almost immediately after breakfast. After doing so, of course no one is fit for business during the day, indigestion and waking nightmare set in, and these terrible results are brought about by holding to a "vestige of barbarism." A man whose eyesight was not good was recommended to try glasses. Ho says he went and tried four at the nearest drinking saloon, and the result was that he was so much improved that he could see double. Jams F. CoNovia, who retired from the editorial management of the Detroit Tribune a year since, to prepare for the ministry of the Episcopal church, will be ordnined in Detroit on Sunday next.
Easter Eggs. First, then, you select your dyes vegetable or wood dyes they should be, blue, crimson, yellow, according to fancy and, procuring a small portion of euch from adruggi-t, you place, tin in in separate vessels. Then dropping tin eggs into hot water for a few moment , you draw on the shell with a bit of tallow any design you plea e names, date., leaver, crosses. The tallow prevents any discoloration in tbe spot it coveis, ho when the egg has been submitted to the boiling dye, the pattern appears in white on a tinted ground with very pretty effect. Another method, more laborious but infinitely more artistic, is to dye the whola egg, and afterward scrape out tbe pattern with a sharp pen-knife. This way admits of a greater range of taste and skill than the other. The egg may be divided into compartments, each holding some tiny vignette, a landscape, perhaps, or an angel, or cupid, or a line of verse, with the date, all framed in solid, bright color. In old days, eggs treated alter this fashion did duty as valentines, and were frequently preserved in the after homes of the happy pairs, each egtr carefully enshrined in a deep, long-stemmed wineglass, through which the inscription
could be read without removing it. "Golden"' eggs, which are covered with gold foil, are beautiful things when mixed with others. A cheap way of making them is to use the dye of the furze-blossom, which is .-aid t communicate a fine yellow color. Any boy or girl clever at drawing can produce with little trouble a variety of designs, which shall have the added merit of originality. What could be prettier than a knot of Easter-flowers, snow-drops, violets, or lilies of the valley, painted in water colors on the white shell, or sketched gracefully and lightly in sepia or India-ink. Pencil drawings are singularly soft and pretty on the same pure background, and, set with boiling water, are not easily defaced. A monogram in bright, illuminated tints and gold is also effective. In short, there are a dozen charming fancies which will at once suggest themselves to the mind of any young artist who begins to think upon the subject, and we advise such by all means to try. "Home and Society" in Scribners for April. The Perils of the Sea. The Iobs of the coasting schooner White Swan, on the rocky shore of Martha's Vineyard last Monday, furnishes a tale of suffering and heroism which ought not to pass unnoticed. The vessel was a small one, of only 141 tons, and was on its way from Calais to New York. The gule of Monday night drove her on the reef which makes out from Cape Poge, and early in the morning she struck about a third of a mile from shore. Six men were on board of her,nd, unable to make any effort to save themselves, they clung to the rigging, while the freezing water continually broke over them. The wreck was seen at dawn from the shore, and a boat was brought from a town some miles distant with which to attempt their rescue. The sea, however, ran so high that it was madness to think of launching the boat. All day Tuesday, and through the long night that followed, the shipwrecked men were exposed to the cold, the fierce wind, and the icy water that swept over them. On Wednesday, a steamer v.ts got under way from Vineyard Haven, and started through the heavy ice of tbe Sound to make an effort to save them. A whaleboat was carried on the steamer's deck, and on nearing the wreck it was launched and manned by six stout men, who, at the imminent hazard of their lives, and after suffering severely from the cold, succeeded in saving the entire crew of the wrecked schooner. The rescued men were all badly frozen, and had been for twenty-eight hours exposed to the bitterest cold and the apGrent certainty of death ; while the at's crew that rescued them was also frostbitten, none of its members escaping without frozen fingers or ears. Bryant on Darwin. Mr. William C. Bryant, at a recent meeting of tbe Alumni of Williams College, opposed to the Darwinian theory a very ingenious reverse proposition, which may hereafter be known as the Bryantian theory at least it would become known as such if some wiseacre would only write a three-volume book in support of it. He said : It is not more likely that the easy road downward has been taken, that the lower animals are derived from some degenerate branch of the human race, and that, if we do not labor to keep the rank we hold, our race may be frittered away into the meaner tribes of animals, and finally into animalcula? Then may our Tweeds become the progenitors of those skulking thieves of the Western wilds, the prairie-wolves, or may swim stagnant pools in the shape of horseleeches; our astute lawyers may be represented by foxes ; our great architects by colonies of beavers ; our poets by clouds of mo: qui toes, famished and musical ; our doctors of divinity I say it with all respect to the cloth by swarms of the mantis or praying insect, always in tho attitude of devotion. I f we hold to Darwin's theory as I do not how are we to know that the vast multitudes of men and women on the earth are not the ruins, so to speak, of some nobler species, with moo elevated and perfect faculties, mental, physical, and moral, but not extinct f The property on which the Western Union Telegraph Company proposes to build a new edifice in New York was originally purchased for Louis Napoleon, through Dr. Evans, for $480,000. The ex-Emperor now sells it for $840,000.
Farm and Garden. To Remove Wartt on Horses. Procure an ounce of concentrated muriatic acid (spirit of sal') and apply to the top of tbe wart with a thin, pine stick, morning and Right, The acid forms f crust which is easily taken of! each day until the wart is gone. It causes no pain, and in due time the hair will appear on the spot. Keep the acid mt II corked and out of reach of the children. Interferinj Horses. It is very seldom that a horse interfer s when barefoot ; and it should be the aim of the horsesheer to have the horse's foot, nfter the shoe is on it, as it was before it whs shod; so instead of a heavy shoe make one as light as possible a shoe the same as running horses have. Shoe them close and there will bo no trouble Rye for Hog Pasture. A correspond entof one of our Western agricultural papers says : I have sown fall rye for a hog pasture with the best results. It makes an excellent feed, may be pastured as soon as it is large enough to furnish ''a good bite," and besides being excellent for the growth and health of the hogs, it furnishes a vast amount of feed at small cost. When grain is high-priced there is great economy in a rye pasture. If it is not eaten too close it will mature a part of the grain, and this may be gathered by the hogs, or it may be used for seeding by being plowed under. Clover will grow very well with rye ; better, perhaps, than with any other grain, aa the shade is less upon the growing plants. But your correspondents who propose to pasture rye and young clover with hogs, must take them separately. The hogs will pick out the tender clover and scarcely a single plant will escape them, even though a large share of the rye should be left to mature. I have no experience with spring rye, but presume it would be later in starting, and less valuable on that account. Growing rye is, I believe, the most nutritious of all green food, and though especially adapted to feeding swine, I have no hesitation in recommending it as a most valuable and economic food for cattle. Beautify Your Homes. A correspondent of the Prairie Fa-nner makes the following sensible suggestions : A word to my brother farmers a little out of the line of agricultural discussion : I wish to make you believe that it will pay to take a little more pains to add to the personal appearance of your home surroundings. Have you ever thought how desolate and uninviting a majority of them now appear, and now much more attractive, pleasant and home-like a little judicious care and labor would make them? That there may appear a show of reason in what I my, take a survey of your neighborhood, or ride ten miles in any direction, and observe if more than half our country homes do not present a general slovenla appearance. A country usually ge much of its
reputation from the reports of strangers passing over it, or from transient visitors. The general untidy appearance of a neighborhood, would, in a measure, indicate to them a lack of thrift or enterprise, with a corresponding influence on the reputation of our otherwise more than average community. Suppose the reverse to be the case, and our passing friends comment with enthusiasm upon the thrifty appearance of our beautiful homes ; would not this tell upon the value of our farms? and I am glad to present this important question with a little pecuniary advantage, and I am of the opinion that if we wished to sell our farms, that it would be a profitable investment to put ten per cent, of their value into what many would call fancy improvements, meaning a good fence around the house, a well-kept orchard with a good and abundant list of small fruits, a kitchen Erden well tilled and fenced, a neat s-n, with shrubs and flower beds in abundance, and many things else that the fancy of self or family may dictate. Only keep this in view while attending to the useful. Don't forget the ornamental, and try and so combine them that one lends to the beauty of the other. It always seemed strange to me that men who cultivate their fields well, who are successful in growing good crops, and make the farm pay, will persist in allowing their house-yards and gardens to grow up the most foul and uninviting spots on the whole form, and we all know of many farms where this is exactly the case. This will not apply to all, but to altogether too many, and most particularly to men who I know have lived on the prairies of the West a dosen years, and not a tree or shrub of their planting marks the spot! for men who have turned down and trodden upon thousands of prairie flowers, and not planted er cultivated a single one ; or who have cleared p acres of forest and not planted a single tree in atonement ; who have lived on for years, taking no note of the progress of the age toward the belief that the world was not made simply that we might live in it to mar its beauty, but with a little of our time and labor, help to make it more beautiful. U.S.H. Edgefield Faem, Delavan, Wis. A Singular Case. Dr. Hibbard, a lecturer on physiolcaty stopped in the middle ol a lecture he was delivering in Montreal, last wek, utterly unable to remember what he was about to say. He was taken to his room, but did not recognize his friends, not even his wife, who was immediately sent for. He seems to have lost his memory entirely, does not know where he is, does not know his own "nae, and is supposed to have softening of the brain. CaaaMOMis, lika flags, are beat waived.
