Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 18, Number 29, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 July 1876 — Page 6
ITSTER. KT U VnUl . HIOM4. Wfemtt hl. Ihit u l ira I U.W So ui.tv toy lur. I t l'Ku iftr f irl L.l. rMill.ng --r- ) I. r i Kb. r ucfi Trir r' r-n to r!uUh 'rtt rv)':i o-.i r Uou'iiuiva L-ry, s-ouu-i,: U-.v UiU cry, Br d;ir:.n i IS MnJnt'i rfcou! VVu .1 urf wrn mate Vutrc' 0 ira lu t rYxtft. too KI I! on. r.,r ? j-u)f i.-ti (tnwsl 'Xi v ' Lvr c :h..i ib Uirir iLirlr.r hoM M:. r ! n nl W-ol? .V, in 1 O-I'l. Am C y fil m I r t r th.Hi I it wo iU'h !. I'.JI iii, ta.-u l.ri-t 1 iw. An I n v.r l.rui.j t-ic i huM In !sfJ.' Vo ir .: -. ef tlw J Iain, TO. U :.: tj c mjnr! II r fv l.rrV lvrt n!t lw.it. Tie r r-r i - k k tur Ir-ul in i r i-r rest Kk-i-i i U. r. .1 i-l : rk.e ttn it. v.r t. I irvstu 'I y r a:. I i- I .f M r r m ' v t.- r : rjr i li ;.:y l a: -t.t ut, 1 ; rj 1 1 u I 1 c j' hwtUi'.h '' rM:m ) ri cr' TVr :iit fry, rirn .ii !. ! ; I'. u". m ' , a -r.tr -.- rn 1 . .irt J r n l.- n- -r :r U art, u. U i:. 1 ..iixji.i., ci. No L. ili t . r r 'i.i"i .ir rvl m
.' i t. I n n I: :.r- r ri T:.y :t--.. .. -n r.; iivoriiri hijh ' An-1 v r.i C .mi u fVy 'i :!. V' B.T.fiwrl tr, ArO :: ti :t i-nnn - v. ) THK MUH: BELLE. Itwa a 'Utrriiav in late July. The of th airthst wi'.ted inipatientJy for the f-i'riiir.cnt of the pr'jm:s', th:it lay broaJiy u-i&Ie a!.n the evtein Loriy?n, of a coriiin tbcnJrtorra. The jM.'.trim and inipatience that ;Hrvai l atniiLtrt'. tlir-tixj for t! ciunj nt of tlectru-.il valley nl a !:! Ii cf ianj" tuou raia, al en aiel t'.te rjentI .i:mpher t a rouj f rar.; men m ho lanrej ujmhi the .iiviy c r: r of a h-.M killing tin:- until the dinner hour. iV.-i. Carr tai the '.le lt ear," .sa.J NtI ;rsenur, anJ we hA!l nt t upoa hr like aaia.'" "The arr-y of W:iuy at present i r.t vl irmir," oSerT-l ani IVnt. "The lfwtl r -ire nice irl; M Kinnin itiir be jii!e tviih; Mii Hf)wird tlioiJvil'v : Jt-ccie MaraniuLd uul b i coital oreatarr, but he i rather rid-ariJ-buttenh' ct; her l.er is a -ch'x.cd ejue:ie- Adele IVrri i- tijtf bi-ile o far." " I nevr j iy court t bciutie.," ?aid Annand lu IV.-L. "When a pirl ejHts ev. ;y raaj who behold her to be nt her f-i t a a matter of coure I prefer t pi Ler, for some time at lea.'it, with ii4d:iTrreni.-e." " There have been several arrivals today," aid (Irosvenor, Miss Monroe anion;; the tiu:uer. Look out for Miss &Inioe, Ia fr'u. She bn't a beauty exactly, but " " Iet us rtvile a l'I!e,,, snrested Arthur Lini'.y. " Let us tak some tiifierate irl aod idolie her, one and all cf m. Not ridkiilouly, but just esi'iuih to turn her head, and have all the other dear creatures dying of "What will you make her of?" aked Sim. V,'h-re"s your material? Irotiuce your . U-aietal, Lindsley." ":ie EUit be a novice," said flrosveir. " And susceptible," aid Sam. L::t not to- uceptible, o there'll ! no fan in it," said Iick Wilhurt. " .She nut rA be a beautv," said Ihi " Nor a stupid," said Lindsley. Wanted a belle. N stooI their agreement, when all miuor tintinabulitions received an obligatory knell froni Tht t.n cf the ou1, the :inner-ll.' Two days later a party arrived at the hotel, who were registered a "Mr. Wolf, Mrs.. Wolf, an J MU Wolf, of C ," and on the fame afternoon L;ndsley annoanred, triumphantly, "I'Tef.'uS'.I therirl. No: don't ask aie what she's like. Nothing startling, I prrraweyoa. -Ju-ta pa-iable sort t.f a lady-like nobody. The raw material, that's ail: and that what we want. A raifhty pretty little foot he had, thonh, peeping from under her rater-pnof cloak. Kit plain, unmistakably plain and unpretending, I aure you. Ju-t the noadescrpt sort if thing we require for our made belie.' A moe inviting drawin-roora no nammer hotel could boa.t. (Jiven the lights and the muic and what volatill creatures cnild deir a better field for thedatt"e Kaily dienrunibercd, too, and convertible for private theatricals, tableaux, and rines, its entertainments were fated. Arr occasional dull day could be endured in anticipation of the unfaihnj ovwltehing qualities of its falling frrae." Ia this inviting drawing-room Miss Irene Wolf made her debut, cjinjring Tither cley to the side of her mother until the mutic struck up. The dance beajx. The Joun and shy stranger found hrrself intrfxinced to a number of arreeableyoonmen. Kvery oneseetoed r leaded w it h her. Kvery thing; she said, every thinj she did, proved to be juat the happy word of the moment or the happr act. "It has been such a delightful evening," she said to her mother, when, after midnight, she lingered to talk over the novel event. I wm a silly jirl to dread the beginning so much. How kind every one is!" Happ.'.y he w not niediuniistic, to
know the comment made upon her by lu r gentle fcUUtlnl vl the lnue. She came in mennou iiuite difparapnsly in eiLtra.t to Mt.- io:irte, likewise a debutante of the evening a )iun lady jut returned from a tour in KurojH-, who had brought the 'loveliest costume" frm rinV.'s and Worth's; iu one of which purple aud pale blue, w ith nvtH'o jewt lsand a wonderful fringe, he ha l appeared that nij;ht. Vau'i it amiable," Baid Mis Fannlr.jr, "in Ned Urosvenor and the other filUws of our M t t take up that bewildered little Hack wood? l'oor thin,;!
I hope thiy will not drop hi r tl.it all tit ! once." j Drop her? Tin w a the last thought like!y to occur t the kind vomer men, thev had no uch ir.teut. On the con trary, they congratulated fhem-elves J upii tiie tact that Irene Wolf was li"t ' only jui the thin they wauted f.r tl: ir 1 made belle, but a nice sort of irl and j a pood dancer thrown in. ' A time rolled on, isterlv solicitude j for the ultimate fate of "l!.vkoids" i became extinct, Propitious circum- ! stances elevated " the ptor thinp" to I "that Miss Wolf." Favorite partner j of the dance, abettor of jjauies receiv- , er of the prettiet bonlo!;tiieres and the 1 loveliest i)wer, the urst-thouirht-of 1 invitation for the ride, drive, and walk, , the ijUien of the picnic, and the lel!e of the ball. " I a.kil Sam Dent," said : the t-eautifal Mi Ferris, "what was; the charm of that Miss NV.f. He .vii 1 ; it wa. simply the 4jene sais quoi which : always attracts men, but that women j invariably fail to perceive." " j "i always Knew," pondered liie de-1 votit heart of Mamn a Wolf, who, with j her beaat-of-prey cognomen, rejected ' uicn the vexed question of what's in a name" the most irient poible i liht "I always knew that our Irene j had the dipoition of an anpel ; but I ; never realized before that my child was the raving beauty I find she'is." As the season advanced, the triumphs of the made leue lct none of their brilliancy Her success bepran to reflect credit upon her makers. Kverv day she seemed more lovely, every day j mere wot thy of prefTene. For i there t a cosmetic like praise ? Is there a tonic like smiles? It Is worth while to a woman to have a credulous heart, if only for the beautifying effect of flattery upon her prace and complexion. Irene Wolf, in her Midsummer experience, thought that watering-place life was an episode of paradise. But th? serpent always crawls into Eden. Aud m Irene s paradise the intruder I had, as in Iliphael picture, a woman's j face. Mis Hammond thought it her duty to collide to Mis Wolf a secnt that l had been intrusted by Dick Wilhurst a something which he con-:iered "too jrood to keep." Imagine the delicacv of the self-imposed act; for the secret 1 wa no other than the f act that the belle i of the eaon was the creature of a joke, ! the envied idol of the summer literally I nothing more than "a block of wood or j 6tone," at whose efficacy the priests of I its worship mocked. MLss Hammond performed her self-impoi-ed duty without trepidation. If in the rivalry of the season she had allowed her-elf to feel bitterness, and if malice lay in her motive, she was not rewarded by the effect upon her victim of her astounding revelation. In listening to the humiliating tale, given in strict confidence and without suppression of any stinging detail, Irene remained calm, offering no interruption or exclamation. Her heart, indeed, beat violently, her color went and came. When the whole story was ended, he j pondered a minute, and said : 'Dj you believe thi-, Mi Hammond? I hardly can. I think thte j gentlemen thee friends of your are loo well-bred to have pi v d a girl, an j unoffending stranger, in sjch a ig- , nominiou xition. No! Do nt 1 trouble yourself about thi story. I feel sure these joung men have better I heart." i But, oh, the storm th it swept over; that bared bit of palpitating nieehanism, the woman s heart, in tae darkness ' I of the night! Th pain, the tantalizing torment, the bewildering doubt. Could i it he true? Let the cartful memory,! : the calm jud merit, take up the facts. ' ! Ala, the story wa not without it oorj rolKiraiing proofs! J he hrt niht of anguwh that sweep aero the pihow of a )oung girl robs it forever of all the white ros of which girl pillows are made. Thenceforth the softest i but ruffled linen in which the head rests. In the morning Irene awoke) for at iawj she caught one miserable halfhour's sleep awoke, for the first morning of her life upon a flat, stale, unprofitable world. W hat pleasure was there to a ma4e belle in fixing her blonde hair at the glass? The first thought of the child had been this: "Oh, how I wish I could tell mother!" But she reasoned with herself, " No; it is better I should bear it myself. And father, dear father, how he would recent this cruelty! how much he loves his poor little girl ! He mnst never, never, never know." The evening after Mi-s Hammond's dntiful act Irene wa beautiful really beautiful for the first and, )erhaps, for the lait time in her life. She came down into the drawing-room arrayed in an excellent I'arL dress ; for her mother, whose maternal instinct had been aroused to the perception that Irene's costumes were not in the style of thoc worn by her companions had purchased for her darling at an iramodera'e ct from one of thoe fashionable modistes who follow in the wake of the mmuier-faring gay world the very last importation of draperied grace.
Irene came down into the drawingroom attired like a little princes; but it was not that which made every eje discover that idie wa a U-auty at last. It was the hectic roso-leaf on her cheek, the scarlet on her hp, the violet bhadow about her e es, me mystical shadow upon ,ounj eyelids that ;ricf ha at la.t kUsed; il was the kindled excitemciit of conflict ins pain and pride, the quick tl ante that made her gentle, fawncolored exes shine steel and gold, gold and steel, and that illumined into posi. live, potent brilliancy her modest, softly tinted, pleasantly featured, but never before startling face. She was really beautiful, and every one said soth.it nig fit. The belle, without possibility t loi-take. But to those who knew her, and were with her frequently, or watched her closely from that time forth, there was somtthii: niis-ed in Ireno that had hitherto Occn part in herself the joyous confidence, the innocent abandon, the quiet but genuine umter-toiiu of real happiness, hud tied. With all her pr.de, she wa too ingenuous to conceal from those who cared for her that her perfect peace wa lot. Our friendly young men held a eonsulfation upon thi point. "Mark nie," said Sam D.nt, "I know something of irirl-, and that j;irl has fallen iu love. Mark nie, in love with one of us! I only hope, since I am aa engaged man, that it's not me." Du Boi looktd infinitely self-conscious, but did not speak. Don't trouble yourself, Sam," said Dick Wilhurst with insinuating self-u-scrlioii. I iuippru l kiiovv sue li. isn't been such a fol as that." 44 We've played too dH'p,"aid(irosver.ir. " l m n my word it hasn't U n right. We've had our futi, but, by dove, it has been hard upon the girl." . 44 Well," said graceless Dick, 44 it isnt a wrong that can be made right. If it's me she's in love with and but well n'imjhtrte. If it's me, 1 don't care if I do eoort;e A victim. 'Ti a cool three hundred thousand. It might be worse.." 44 Wilhurst !" exclaimed Lindsley, with flashing eyes, "tnk care. Miss Wolf i too truo and pood a rirl to K lightly spoken of, in my my presence at least. A girl that any man may be proud to m ike his wife." 44 Hear! hear!" cried Dick. "Excuse me, friends. I meant to praise, not to scoff. What greater compliment can le paid to a made belle than to ring the change out of her ring the changes, I mean. Lindsley, my dear fellow, I pass. Take her: aul a thousand blessings go with you, my boy!" 44 Lindsley is right," said Sam Dent. 44 The girl ha metal in her." "Whoever heard of a Ix'lle that hadn't metal in her?" asked D'.ck. "Nonsense! but I tell you there's a genuine ring to her." "Of course." "And a smart tongue, as I can testify, when she's put to it," said Crosvenor. "I like a woman who can hold her own." "Her own tongue? So do I,' raid B-ick. "Oh, I'm sincere. Irene Wolf is all right. Hurrah for our made belle! She's a trump. Lindsley, you're a success. Well, good night, boys; I'm oi". By-by, Lindsley. King the belle dingdon;;!" The feminine pottion of the house had not been so sensitively aware of the change in Irene. The truth i, they were too thoroughly engrossed in a wonderful event to condescend to trifles. The event was no other than the unexpected arrival at thi delightful seaside hotel of an Englih lord, a bachelor, crossed in love abroad, it was rumored, and come to America expressly to marry. A live lord ! ( ne ami all of tho feminine portion of the house fixed heart and soul upon him at once. There was no turning bai-k from the phjw; there w as no dairy ing with time to be "well off with the old loves," or loss of haste
in ging first to bury one's dead. The affair demanded, or commanded rath-r, a religious zeal and dispatch. "L'pand strike!" wa the motto of every Amazonian ambition whose bewitching archery suddenly fixed upon thi hin:ng buir-ey. If the thought of 44 Mrs." had to anyone been sweet, the thought of "My lady," "My Lady LindenuM," was incomparably a treat. Il was, of course, necc.rr to be f 'resented to 44 my lord" first. And xrd Lindi hurt, who had been throwu by accident of foreign travel into intimate relations with (rosvenr and Du Bois, came f penally introduced. lie wa legitimately a prize of the bet. Not until n fortnight had elapsed did it become faintly rumored that Lord Lindehurst, whose attentions had so far been generously general, had 44 taken particularly" to Irene Wolf. A torrent of. indignation swept through the house. Miss Hammond felt loer plane of duty so broadened that he actually cnritemplated confiding Dick Wilhurst's secret, 4,tx good to keep," to the young Englishman to illumine his note-book as a characteristic episode of American manners nod life. She was delayed somewhat in her lenevolent intent, for the reason thnt the live lord was not easily approached. As for Irene, when she felt that the illustrious stranger wa unfeignedly attracted by herself, she experienced some Womanly tumults of Batiifiu tion. He, at least, was ninoere. This lover, at least, wa unaffected in hi marked preference by any latent relish for a joke. 4 44 He ilid not mnkt tir," she very naturally, and with some grateful sense of restored dignity, naid. The young nobler.; an, an unassuming youth, whoacRuied hardly to appreciate
the furor he had created, was ruber an exception to hi countrymen in hi personal history. But of that history it is only necessary to nay that the rumor of hi having been crossed in love was not correct. He had been crossed in marriage, not in love. Hi own temper far from a bane sort had made the crofs by decidedly refusing a match proposed for him upon worldly principle alone. lVrsonally, Ird Lindehurst wa a man who, without a title, would not have been popularly remarked. He was a trawled, but not a 44 society," man; observantly, not experimentally, educated; nor wa ho particularly intellectual. But he possessed an agreeable presence, refined manners, an ample fortune, and an excellent heart. lie had :i presentiment that he should find hi wife in the New World, and hi presentiment was fulfilled. lie fell in love at first sight with Irene Wolf. The night of his arrival w as the night of Irene's beauty. In whatever degree she faded from her perfect brilliancy after that, hi kindled imagination supplied the defect. He saw her first in the apotheosis wrought iu her by the one cruel moment of her life, lie never altered from hi faith in her bright supremacy fri i.i that time forth. For a fortnight he studied I or unobserved and 44 afar oil';" then lie asked to be presented, and from that time lie devoted himself to her with an increasing devotion. . At the close of the season their engagement was announced. 1 ho i'i hi.ed prtjudicis of tlic y.vang lord were not disturbed even by a prolonged visit in tho Western home of l'apa and Mamma Wolf. He found there what he esteemed most, the aristocracy of a heart. It was 1 long wedding journey that Irene took, and for many month and even year she had no visible part in her tirst-loved Western life. But her image was idolized in that home. 44 My little girl " was the theme of incessant delight ; and dearly as her affection clung to those who had filled completely her childish faith and trust, she never repented her choice. She loved her husband as truly a he loved her. 44 1 u ix made for him," she said, both first and last.
Surplus Watermelon. Mr. George K. McKee, of Georgia, w rite as follows : 44 We do not market more than onethird of the melons that we can produce, the balance being virtually wasted. It i with a view to utilizing thi wasted crop that I request the subject continued." To this the Maryland 'irrncrrepiiri : 44 There ha been so little done iu thi direction, and so little experience had, that we can only give our own oieration. We peeled off the rind, took out the seeds, and then crushed the melons in a cider press, squeezing out the juice; then boiled and evaporated it, in the same way a we do the sap of maple or tho juice of the sorghum, and each operator will know when he ha boiled it to the consistence or thickness desired; and then it should b; stirred in shallow pans like milk pan over a :cntle heat, until it becomes granuated, or 4 sugared off,' as they say in the maple sugar works, when sirup i converted to sugar. We can give our readers another useful hint for utilizing their surplus watermelon. It i thi: Last year we saw some Virginia farmer feed watermelon to their milch cows, when theycameup at night, with very good effect, by increasing the quantity and improving the quality of their imlk. In other instance we have seen the good result of feeding cows sound watermelon; after standing in the stall or yard over night, they eat melon with avidity in the morning." (ien. Custer's Birthplace. Gen. Custer was born in Dpringen, near I'forzheiin in Baden, Germany, and emigrated when a child with hi parents, who settled in New Burnley, l!arrion County, Ohio. The talented boy obtained a place in West l'oint by the influence of Mr. -Bingham, M. C, and graduated shortly after the beginning of the war of rebellion. He served first on Gen. Bhil. Kearney's stall" and distinguished himse'f rcoeateilly by hi dishing bravery. He executed the first successful cavalry nttackin McClellan's nrmy and conqueied the first rebel standard. At the end of the war, the young warrior, w ho thon was only twenty-five year of age, had gained the rrputation of being one of tho most brilliant leaders of cavalry Formerly hi name was written 44Custar;" since his return from a trip to Germany, however, he appears to have written 44 Custer ;" hi original family name, however, was Kuester. S. I). Gross, M. I)., writing in the Juurruil of Medicine about the American progress in surgery since 177n, says that, iieginning with the Involution, the surpcon and the physician have been more or less cubined in one person, contrary to custom in the old World. The surgery of tho Revolution showed little skill, hut later many difficult and dangerous operations, new to the 'profession, were first performed in this country. Ho thinks that our surgeons treat fractures and dislocations more scientifically than in other countries, and In makes substantially tho same claim as to general nllections of the joint4! and amputations. Tiik geographers say that Montana is a sterile country, although the Inhabitants raise great quantities of hair.
lVrll of Indian Flhtin. The Chicago 7iifs' correpondent with (Jen. C'rook gives the following thrilling ;i count of the danger attending a lecounois, unco in the Indian country : I Jist Thursday, duly ('., Lieut. Sible--of Company 11, -,'d cavalry, with ;i detail of 'go picked men, wa ordered to escort Frank Gruurd and Baptist v Fourier, tho scouts, along th, base of the mountain, to discover, if possible, the camp of Sitting-bull. Desirous of viewsng the northern section of the mountain country, your correypoudent accompanied tho command. Wo left camp at noon, and marched until I o'clock in the afternoon, when we halted until night and pushed on by moonlight. The march was continued f r f ' noles, until we reached a point ne.ir the Little Big Horn Bivcr, when w went into bivouac. At J o'clock in the morning wo started again, and proceeded aOoiit three miles, w lien Gruard sigraled us from a forward bluff to halt. We did so, and he came riding back to say that multitude of Indians, ail on the warpath, were within a mile of us. He led us into the side rock to seewl-a tb. r we would escape observation. Hardly had we taken position when th y i aine swarming over the hilU, and s- eined to cover the country. Jn J" iiiiioites t;,.v struck our trail, and Gru ird h d us up the mountain side, horse and ail. The Indian saw u at once, and a strong party started in pursuit. Wo cros-id the mountains to the northwest, an 1 when about 1'.' mile from the dge, wit!:::: vir-.v cf the rr.tr.vy range. ?. even: attacked from all sides but the east. Gruard led us into tb timU-r. We t;.d our horses and fought the savages fop two hours; until they began to close in on im by hundreds from ev ry point. Your correspondent's horse and those of some other were wounded badly by the first volley within '.'"m yards range, but not a man wa hurt. Seeing that if we remained longer we must all be butchered, Gruard decided to abandon the horses and retreat on foot. We took all our ammunition and left every thing else. The Indians kept firing on our horse-, supposing we were there, until we put two mile between us, rocks and trees b ing our protectors. The Indian could not well follow u on horseback. We had a march orffoo4. of 6o miles, over canyon and precipice. We were well up in Montana. We marched almost iM'Css.lntlv, without rations, from 2 o'clock on the afternoon of Friday until tho .same hour on Saturday, when we were again in sight of Indians on thi si ie of the slope. We lay back until dark, marched all night, having to cross several rive rs, aad reached i-auip w ithout losing a man, although some were delirious from hunger and fatigue a most miraeulous escape, seeing that an innumerable band of Cheyennes and Sioux, fully arnieel, were after us. Ojr escape i eluc to the skill of Gruurd, an unequaled scout, and to the soldierly eodnes of Lieut. Sibley, an officer only '23 year old. He is a son of Col. Sibley, who recently died in Chicago, .fudging by the number of redskins, we must have seen Sitting-Bull'. whole force. White Antelope1, a Cheyenne chif, was the man who nearly captured u.
.Snimmlnjc in Salt Lake. There are no lish in the Great Salt Lake. The ouly living thing beneath its water i a worm altoiit a quarter of an inch long. This worm show up beautifully under the lens of a microscope. When a storm arises, the worm are driven ashore by thousands, and devoured by the black pills. We found a pure stream pouring into the lake. It wa tilled with little chub and shiners. The fish became frightened and were driven down to the brook into the briny lake. The instant they touched its waters they came to tho urfuce U-lly upward and died without a gap. The water is remarkably buoyant. Egg and potatoes float upon it like corks. Mr4 Hood and mysell stripped and went in swimming. 1 dove into the lake from a long pier, which had been built for the use of a small steainlmat that formerly plied upon the waters. The sensation wa novel. The water wa so salty that my ces and ear l-gan to smart, but so tnioy ant that I found no difficulty in floating eveu when the air wa (exhausted in my lungs. As 1st nick out for the heat h I h it a a feather. In spite of all that I could do, my head would fly out of the water. The lightness of the water and the surgingof the wave forced my feet fnun under me. A person who could not swim might be easily drowned in five feet of water. Hi head would go down like a lump of lead, while hi feet would fly up like a pair of ducks. The water i as clear a that of SeiH'cu Lake so clear that the bottom could be se'on at the depth of twenty feet. When we reached the shore and crawled out upon the sand in the light of the sun our bodies were quickly coated with salt. We were compelled to go to the little stream from which we had driven the chubs and shiners, and wash ctl in fresh Vater before we put on our clothes. Our hair was filled with grain of salt which could not be washed out. The Mormons occasionally visit the lakes in droves for the purpose of bathing. Many of them say their health is imtiroveel by leaving the salt ujHin their hoilics and dressing without wiping themselves with napkins. Atu lorfc Sun. - Pkoh AHI.T few people know that Indon, England, has quadrupled its opulation in sixty y ear. In 1MU itwa less than 1,00(!,0mi, in iM'd some 3,fX oxi, and now 4,jU,0t,J people live in i),W) houses.
