Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 25, Number 45, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 September 1883 — Page 7
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wwnx v nnTmTvn JASPER. nrouvA. BUS HURT ALL TUB WAY, flMd-ty, Jennie: the read la lea And the moor ia hard to (nmi M you know thorn Is daneer In the l.ta and the marshy mom. tit ktp In ttofoofrpattVJeaaM; Let nothing tempi you to stray t Then you'll tri safely over ft. For there's snatignVaJl the war Hunliht ulTih way; Ho iwirer you fear. Keep a sood heart, dear. For there s sunlight ail th way." The chnld went off with a blessing f' And a nhwof mother-tore; The daisies vera dowa at her feat, And the lark waa alnaing above. On. on In the narrow foot-path NothMiar eotihl tempt her to atray: 8a the moor wa passed at nurht-tall. And she'd aunlivnt all the war Huallrttf all the way: Aud aha. amillng, aaM. Aa her bad waa apread: " I had sunlight an the way." Ami I. who followed, the maiden. Kept thinking aa I want. Over the perlloua moor of Mfe What unwary feet are heat. If they only could heap the foot-path. And not Id taw marsh atray. Then they woaM reach the end of life . Rre the rufht could ahroud the day. Tnej i have sunlight all the way. Rut the marsh la wide, Ami they turn aside. Aim) the night fail on the day. Far belter Ui keep taa narrow path. Nor turn to the left or right; For If w loiter at moraine. What a bail we do whan the night Fall black on our lonely Journey, And we mourn our vain delay? Then steadily onward, friends, and wa Khali hate sunlight all the wa -Sunlight all the way, Till tia tourney's oer. And we reach the adore Of a never-ending day. MU1T0BM HOSE AMTR1Y. Studies freaa Life. The English C ourt of Chancery would resent incomplete without little Miaa Flite ami the Man from Shropshire. So woo lil the New York Supreme Court without the person and junior of Mr. Adolphus Heinulemann, l hief of the Bar and Advocate-General of the Human Baee. The casual visitor loitering thronzh the corridors of the Count v Court-houe .in City Hall Park U likely to see an under-iized old man, with a strongly marked Teutonic face, surrounded by a tumbled mast of grizzly hair and beard. dreed in a suit of 'resty black, and with a large bundle of uMH'ri under his arm. hurrying with swift, nervou tread in the direction of (Wf or the other court-room. The little man lace i set like a flint, and his dark eys gleam from under -baggy brow- with a strained intentnea that is almot t.uinfu!. He U in dead earne-t. He -iictilly ha on hand Im-inc-M. important buiue.s which brook no delay. The visitor' i mental comment probably i that the man in a lawyer of the tripe f Kampaon Brass, or Mr. Pell. "dar friend of the late. Lord Chancellor," hastening to answer "Ready" to the call of the calendar; and he 'pities the clienta who hare committed their (-ante to such hands, if outward appearances form any criterion by w hich to judge of the measure of eticces attendant upon hi advocacy. But comment and sympathy are alike misplaced. Mr. Heintalemann is not so fortunate at to bear vicariously the burden of litigation, with the ultimate certainty of lees to lighten the load. Ha ia, or rather wa, a suitor himself, and hi errand aow is t forward the interests of hi rait hi his own proper pernio. For he can not grasp the fact that hit one ia no longer bafora the courta, but has hews ret adjudicate theee many years. Hut cause ia sufficiently sad one. Yean ago he waa a clever and suooeasfttl Inventor; and to-day, in all likelihood, the fruits of his genius are in active uac by hundreds who do not know, nor would be Interested m knowing, that the inventive faculty wbJeh is the nteans of aenrinfr their convenience or attgatentiat their wealth hm kwt its powen and that the fsefle brain to whksh they are so mooh indebted is eettuwd forever under the dark shadow of rasauity With the proverbial had fortane of his kind, he sowed and others reaped; he labored and they entered into hfat labors. On one ill-fated day be brought an action to recover possession of a valuable patent, for which he claimed not to have received the stipulated compensation. The equities may have been in his favor. Who knows F Hot the law was against him. His case was tried and an advene verdict rendered. He appealed, and the appeal was decided in Ms oppoaeat'a favor. Then came the end of things for hint. He went mad. Nor was it wonderful that he sftonld do so. As the getita! Autocrat says, somewhere m those mimitahf eeaays of hi: "Insanity ! often the logrie of an accurate mind overtasked. Good mental machinery ought to break its own wheels and levers if anything is thrust among litem suddenly which tends in atop them or reverse their motion. A weak mind does not accumulate force wwmgh to hurt itself; stupidity often aves a man from going matt" At all events, stupidity did not save Mr Heinulemann. His wrongs, real wtautfaatlto enentelwtaaee of his mind, and left IoJum whatoane was coherent and eo-oralaate. The 'ttrkmi amy nam the details of hia ease resorted In the jmbUsawd Law Refracts HIb delusio aansaes no violent or mMtw Itsnav U alaiplr coexists In the belief thfosmtfostm before the wrnru, and m the oonvktioa that even tMtly, can bt but obtain a bearing, the dTerie decision wlft be ravmd or fUtojl fjfcfn fJatefiUfadu m leadnt Miraa aunm asuaannnBunnnmig saaaL amw IWI
and wmtsf. la aeaeoa and on of ML he msit'haa no to thm elawkU
deak, with his iaadratrabie bundle of pnaraand coortaonsly asks in highly "Mr. Clark, haf you put mine case on the oalendar to-day P' "No, Mr. HeiaUlemanB,,, the clerk Invariably replies, "it ia not on today. " Why haf you not?" ha asks, greatly surprised. " We hadn't room for it to-day." "Can I see the Chudge" "No. he's busy." " Then,' he continues, "can 1 my motion make to-day?" "No, it is not motion day." "That makes no different," says Mr. Heinulemann, with a wave of the band. "Until my ease is decided there is no court, no Cnudge, no anything." This formula gone through he turns to the officer in charge, gravely selects a paper from the handle, hands it over with the strict injunction that it be carried Immediately to the Judge, and, ceremoniously saluting all present, departs In the confident assurance that the morrow will find his case on the calendar, and the court in readiness to Droceed with the argument of his long-delayed motion. The court officers deal verv gently with Mr. Hclntx'oniann. He is a privileged; character. Accua tomed as they are to making short work of the army of cranks who periodically disturb the peace or obstruct the wheels of justice with their vagaries, they still have a tender spot in their hearts for him, and an never too busy to answer his inquiries respecting the momentous suit, or to comfort him with the assurance that some day his much-hoped-for modlticatUm" will be granted. To Mr. HeinUlemann's mind, all law, order, liberty and naagress ceased when the obnoxious jtsjgtuent was pronounced, and, pending its reversal, all monarch reign without title, all courts ait without author .ty, and all government is usurpation -in short, that it is Anarchy and Old Night come again. He conceive himself to be the incar nation of outraged justice, and. there fore, the representative head and ad-vocate-jreneral of the human race. He is nnuly convinced that the future history of the world is cloely bound up with the isnes of his controverxy. Kvery passing event has some occult bearing upon it, and every public calamity or crime is a neceaarv corollary to it Accordingly, stray references to contemporaneous occurrences are to be found scattered through his voluminous papers. Nothing comes amis to him. 'Ihe Electoral Commission, the Centennial Exposition, the aasaHsinations of the late Cxar of Kuaaia and of President (Jarfield, the war between IVm and Chili, the Star-Koute trials, the building of the Hrooklvn bridge and the ; erection of the Barthoidi Ktatue are alii in some way or other ormuected with hia ca,ie. and all find mention in his documents. Nothing pleases him so much as to gain the t ar of a Judge to whom be may ho unknown. If he be so fortunate aa to elude the vigilance of the court officer, he immediately pours forth a t rreat of unmeaning broken English, freely interlarded with scraps of iatin and other foreign tongues, fully persuaded that at last he is making head - i way, and tardy restitution ia about to be granted. When the officer quietly checks him, he makes no objection, but instantly leaves the court with his customary rapid stride, contented to postpone the presentation of his cam unm a more iairauie opportunity auau occur, Has the reader any curiosity to s specimen of Mr. Heihtslenuvnn's "Oix-u-ments" Let him run his eye over the subjoined extract and then pronounce upon its value as a legal pleading: Tak NoTica. Upon these procentliurs aa te Hn4erume4 with the Referee i report aeretofore presented to the Courts and the uvrnoracioa teunei ana to tne UMrnet avtomey s as rar as it smm ana herein after rer a as nr aa ii rmm ana aen I to as public reply and this rerreq to as puane reply sua tan leeai eauenttoa dWoMware. for the redress of this rob or public murder and this Incurable public ealamiy and curse of this ptibHc offenae. of me mral pmfesalon'a failure and eeaos stare aeelsM nrbi et orM vox nopan iuaude suum aukiee lex nervns rerum ab Initio la An em tern Veritas pravaeiebtt. For our Waodard of semnd Btind-now leaal settled urbi et orbH terrarum ub fkie lex pro natrta libertatia. In ram Roistered Cittaen Tltle'a Subject to this asodtaeadon, aa set form. Iater on la the same lucid statement of grievances be modestly applies Ftr an order of SSVOJOami tUW for dl. buraements en aeeount, and be held to deliver the Istotaokti Statue of Liberty aad aforeto the arat par ty tor osmraUoa, and this Daclaratton of Independence tendeney pro hano fmblim. He does not confine himself to the higher courta In his efforts to obtain redress. District courts, police coarta, or even an Assembly Investigating Committee are alike acceptable Here is an order presented by him to one of the lower courta, and probably signed by the Judge with a view of giving him a transient taste of the pleasures of impending victory: It appearinv to my satisfaction that Mr. Attolphua IfelnftlcMumt ) ih - Chief of the Bar, and is clothed with all rights, privilege. 1Jtaa Justice of mtft Com is fa fan armnnhr with the said Heinulemann, aad that be has sworn that his oMiantkHi ia ia all respeet toward the said HefoUieawna to mV in am a tu ana aavantnjre rnr MefeiHarb. p. SIS, era unto asjajr Invtolabte rUrhta and only legal i wVaaWMtt whv eMf lVwwWf,Ptf iv 9We l nis last paper, nowever, nears toe Imnrtat of another hand than Mr. Heintxlemana's. It fat too robereat to be his prodttction. It contains sentoncw. Hh papers never do. It ht pathetic to note his reference to the book ia whkih his ease Is it-ported. Litre Xing Charles's bead in Mr. Dick's Memorials, this allusion to til Barb.. 4V8, Is sure to crop up sooner or later hi all his documents. His poor befogged intellect has cuing to mm one
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tact, or penmmbrnl sbndow ef a tort. when aJIeawkas Mine by the koanL He has. yeam ago, forgotten what hit ease was about And yet he knows, and is careful to aaaation where the toport of it hi to ha found. Vigorous aa are the vituperative epithets (whatever they may mean) whiob areas thfekljr basprlnkled over his documents, Mr. Heinulemann takes pains to explain that he is actuated by no motives of resentment or Ill-will, (in the contrary, his arduoua labors are prompted by charity towards hia fellows and intense anxiety fur Uieir welfare. "I haf no bad feeling for the Court, says he. "I spend my time ia working for their gout. I do this not only for me and mine children, but for the Cbudges and the oltiaens and the country, and for the whole world.'' It is impossible to describe the comic sweep of the hands with which he Illustrates the all-embracing character of aw auvocacy. Atlas Is nothing to him. He does not condescend to reason or arguments. Ha Itatea axioms-self-evident truths-conclusions, which from their weight and cogency amount to mathematical demonstrations. "You see dot," be says, emphatically, pointing out some phrases in his last document "You see I say dere -Stare decisis it nervut rerum, in forma pauperis.' " "How can they get ofer dot?" he asks, with a confident smile, and his listeners are bound to admit that it is unanswerable. He Is no pauper. He begs or borrows from no-ene. The shock that laid his mind intuitu left unharmed the skill and cunning of his hands. So be labors at engraving or some other skilled mechanical work, and is chargeable to no man. Mr. Heintxiemaan is not the only one of hia kind to whom the Halls of Justice present irresistible attractions. Other eccentric characters from time to time gravitate toward the same center. For instance, there is. or rather was, Mrs. Maytield, owner in fee simple of the court-house, "with all the appurtenances thereto belonging." She was a parc old lady, noatly drexd in black, carrying always an old-fashioned reticule. &ne uhi at Interval to visit the court-bouM for the purpose of collectins: lir rents. Marching with slow and stately mte into one of the ruonu she would approach the railing in front of the bench, if her advent pat-sed unnoticed, she dived into the depths of ber reticule, and. producing therefrom an enormous brass key, presumably the insignia of ownership, rapped with great xolemnity upon the railing until the attention of Mime official was attracted. Thin accomplished, she would pay: "Good morning. I have cnlfed - for my rent, if it is quite convenient." " ertaittty, Mrs. Maytield, the officer ) would renlv: "I ciuito forgot to send it. l m verv Horrvyouhad the trouble of coming for it.'' Mrs. May Held had no stated periods I at whkh she collect'tl her rent, sometimes calling twice in a fortnight, at others letting it accumulate for months. Nor had she any fixed rental valuationa quarter, a dime, or even a nickel would suffice. Indeed, the old Isdv must have regarded the Hum paid more aa an acknowledgment of ownership than anything, so little relation did it bear to the value of her property. She ignored altogether the formality of receipts, justly deeming, no doubt, that the jity might safelv rely on her sense of honor not to demand the same rent ower again, Before leaving she would go round the room on a tour of inspection to satisfy I herself that the premises were being j kept in ten an table repair, and would gravely suggest any little alteration in ar rangementa that would occur to her as being likely to impair the value of the realty. These wise precautions taken against the necessity of a suit for dilapidations at the oke of the tenancy, she would pocket her rent and depart. Then, again, there is Praying Pataey. Sfe comes occasionally, just as the ndgesare out taking their noonday recess, and, stationing himself la the doorway of the court-room, mutters a short prayer. Whether it be ritual or exteamnnre. and who mv tot tk aMn.f nhu. rj ki. Mtud,, v-k P1 objects of hia petitions-bench. mm, iuihi ur wiisMia-Mv auite matters of mystery, inasmuch aa his utterances are so rapid and muffled aa to be totally unintelligible. His act of devotion accomplished, he swiftly mores toward another part of the court there again to perform his self-imposed duty. He Is strict Iv impartial, conferring the benefits of his intercessory offering on every room in the building, not omitting even the Comptroller s office and the Bureau for the Collection of Arrears. What ideal he nay have respecting the necessity or value of his services no one knows, for he speaks to no one. He is convinced, no doubt, that his presence and prayers are absolutely essential to the Welfare, If not, indeed, the existence of the building and its inmates. One thing, at least, is certain. If he does no good, he does no harm, and his lunacy might easily assume a more objectionable form. Yet aa other demented mmitm mnm is a man who has once or twice made his appearance, claiming the credit of and compensation for the invention of the submarine telegraph, the elaboration of the entire postal system of the United States, and the establishment of QrlWtorvlee reform, Considering the important character of these achievement, sad their great national value, this publlu benefactor la Tory moderate In hh demands. He usually presents hhrelahn in a luHHtwrMng rery unlike what one would expected oommg from such a gifted individual. It begual: " 1 claim an order front the Suptonte Court for one hundred thousand dollars." It them esMffea the vfthjahto
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with a on aooeuBn wW ho wry aeosutahle, Ha kaaeutimaMata eaoaurh to inaMnana ahadr , 'sausBsu'nnwpmnaawf wenawnmnimken Owe snnnnannnnnmnav aaaamnanj U It he aot mmmSm to v9bmdi. ats atseatanoj to hia aNaaataal ha wfoa eaU MMpaawaaw I( sYtConfavtt 3MaMK 4afboa JaWJ alwwywwtMtoeaalagaaa. aaaaypasajF navflwji aaava) aO(aamavaM sfcaaam been honored by the visits of a Mloala aged woman with a Cattle foot, a detornUaed exprossioo, and a strong tfleent, saw has auaered euredataom of charaoter" at too hands of some nerooa or through waieh she has boon deprived e wamv oo)ns(ftsVMt Po onwwJssesj sV s(pJiofea3Wja She aaaouBoei nor iatentionef attend lag the ssaatoat of tbeeourts until one or other of the Judges renaoves this disability. It Is to ho hoped that sooner or later anoae war will be found to ae oomplisk this good lady's wishes, for she is an unfortunate soul staying power of Coleridge's Perfaaps the most ' unintelligible rep resentauvo of the arenas hi aa Israelite who haunts the corridors and favors all comers with a long and rambling ethaologicoJ disquisition on two khans of Jews whom he calls Reuben Jews and 8usan Jews, for which latter class, it may be said, be entertains the most supreme contempt. He kindlv volun teers the Insinuation that Susan is not only in Jerusalem, but In New York and all over the world, it is poesible he may be right. misan u a tolerably ubiquitous personage. u nen questtoaed as to the Menu ty of the particular Susan to whom he has reference, he waves his hand impatiently and informs his, questioner that be can find out all about it in the Book of Esther. He generally closes his discourse with the following pua xiing oonuuurum: " Can they take away mine property on a six-days' summons, without name. without date ana without amountf ' Naturally, the person ouestioned usually comfort our friend with a prompt and decided answer in the negative, but is met immediately by the perfectly crushing query: " t nen wny don t Uiey pay me my rent?" ' Why, indeed? Perhaps, though, it Is that tnev haven t got the money. All these lesser lights, however, pale before Mr. Heintxlemattn. They lack the element of permanence. Their visits are intermittent, and they soon tire. Not so, he. Their orbit "are erratic. uncertain, cometary. He alone is diurnal and eternal. J m ors, suitors and witnesses come and go; lawyers are admitted, practice aud depart for new tieldsjof usefulness: Judges are elected. serve and retire; but he goes on for ever. Poor Mr. Heintxlenmnn! He will nc doubt keep on filing his tbicuments with the clerk, and seeking an opportunity to argue hia motion, until the day comes" when be ahall present his case to the highest court of last resort, and the long-wbhed-for "modification" denied him on earth lie at last granted. Then perhaps, the arrested faculties shull be set free to find exercise ia a larger sphere of beneficent activities, and the dim and troubled years of his mental bondage shall seem "as when one awaketh in the morning, and behold, it i- - i i 5 i. ri in... in The MmMttan. fUMiag the Ha tier. A famous aad favorite kind of sport. especially when we had been lying in camp for some time fa summer, or were established in winter quarters, was what was known as "raiding the sutler1 The sutler's establishment was a largt wall teat, which was usually pitched on the side " of the camp farthest away from the Colonel s quarters, it was. therefore, iaa somewhat exposed and tempting position. Whenever It was thought well to raid him, the men of his own rasrimeat would make to the of some neighboring regiment i propoaitfosi ta scum such terms as this "Yoa fallows come over here boom nurht and raid our sutler, and we'll come over to jrour camp some night and raid yours. Will you do Kf This courteous ofer of friendly ofoee waa usually agreed to, and great was the snort which often resulted. For. when all was dufar arranged and ready, on a. dark sight when the sutler was sleeping soundly in his teat, a skirmish line from the amigbboring regi ment woum oauuousiy pteK its way dowa the hill and throusji the brash. and silently surround the tent. One party, creeping close in by the wail of the tent, would soeeeu the ropes aad remove them f row the stakes el side, while another aartv on the side, at a given signal, would pull the whole coBcern ow the sutler's head. And thee woaM arise yells aad cheers i or a few momenta, followed by immediate silence, as the raiding party would steal quietly away. Did they steal his goods? Very sol dom. For soldiers were not thieves, and plunder was not the object, only fun. Whw did not the officers punish tho men for doing thief Well, sometimes they did. But sometimes the officers believed the sutler to be exorbttaat In hia ehacges and oppressive to tho men, and oared Bttle how soon ho cleared out and aeat aHMckins: merefore tlsey eatoyed the supn quite as well si the men, and often Imitotod Nelson's example when he put lust blind eve to the telescope and declared ho did not tee the signal to oease fring. They wmkod at tho frolic, aad came on the scene uaually fat ample ume to condole with the sutler, hut quite too late to do him any senrtoe. Aferri if, JGa&tr, at mlMMm,
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-TaaNaawoUaanwTdf Bs 000aw owna marinnnj mmmnnF nnpmnnmpn ammpwmmm'Ssmas' swea mw aTOfld itohallsiaed as aon e ntsane whan hnj npj ui Hleg westem isjnjsjsn so n mow zoni Firsjo, the aaa started a Isonry Clay Thi fVssant. Tom., the Ansartoa. awrea half ifaanafl WUL SMVMI ffaUmBasI WesmnnaV&al flmsUsT wKWe snumanji wUampUaMP eanaav iss to send aim ixpense of Brosston Boward tho ftiitfi1tft. who to llwbsg ontoya in EagltsmTat the possssiDr of a dKit irfevcIeoB whJekhe and tad whatever supadies they foal hko wdaWset tlo fVTiPjr. daata?w VfafFyt& toQIMfatSi SwtrWO sx the novels of the day took i ntereet. oe synonvasous wnh a nmwkish hi eJ ai(B yanwlwasjaa! (ratiaWJmet jjpPaa9aJg try wnat snuces aerasaary nrotjiai. which takes the vktim fa the akUb of dl his feet In the air. iT. Will Carletoa. the jpopular Terse writer, is thus described by a leporter MnSrtt'uSS afi lfoat0tmVof lender build, with a bright, rather youthful face, blue ores, aoilme nose and abort wlJskera, which cover only his chin. His hair, which k sttghny Uttgea with gray, is combea smoothly necK, anil taia, eomninea wtu i what clerical out of his plothes. gives him rather the appearance of a welMoio young minister on a vacation.'' One of the most ratoreeting subjeeht diM'uaaed by the American Lffirary Association at Buffalo was the practice of changing the original title of a book, or at giving a lmok more than one title. Sometimes the change is effected by fraud, often by thoughtlessness, but ia either case It causes annoyance. Aa examples, John Habberton,s "Just One Day' became, with a change of publishers. "Mrs. Mayburn's Twins; with Her Trials la the Morning, Afternoon and Evening of Just One Iay.M Mrs. Ft therstonhaugh's storv. 4'lil(rraii,'' Is enlarged to "Lil. Fair. Fair, with Golden Hair; or. JUteon-an.1' Adeto Ye your poena, "He loves me very dearie, is a mmnrksblo proiluction; but it yoa want thorn pleasant relations to oonunoe, don't 1st Una we it As for the copy sent hither, it will be carefully placed fat a litam bsuutet, not necessary for puhltoataoa but as a guarantee of good faith. Mwekmmj. I feel so worried about Clntrloif signed Mrs. Wisihusbaad. "If a 'aate. ti lookitur at the 4MS lag unusual has happenarl," naat ia what frets aae, reraed Mrs. Wudbusband, "I aaa afrntu ifsmMkiagjaaaal has happened to Quotee." Testes Past. Last weesr the Governor of attooa bland pa)oked his State hi a hand sag and took It dowa to Cane May far a holiday. Tide waa kind of the Gover nor, and nhakes tho Governor of Ihaaa hide hfodbndaueMd headvrtomhe elHsbness. Catch him takiag Ms aaywaere. wess you,ira asi eww Bemam ama ana sfclssVWpv aw oaao easasaslahas'S "J Insnotaating uhotosanyber (after earefutiv poatag utue vtoto): -Aaa aow you ara going to beaverrgesd little airL aad aitai still as a aKmoi for a few adnal but a mtto, amm maana'tfMhBUnr own. omeair ftsflnta i(Jm T(Tawaaj jawaa9agjna hafanthj jsffloite most ilitiiialail stproannn)t 0,1 deed. Mr. Msm! That's aB yon kaj about H! rgomg to be no aaeahty aa posaibier-iv: rratm Camar's mlstski: "Beaa, will yen teU nhrw toamrosJtBeerf, aehai a ootored nsaa of a eforh kiow store, a day or two ago. "Tea. I wfllt Take a hickory suck, three gill am of water, aa oM hat, a eeart of atnlaaiis, a paper of tacks and a pounsi of eajreaao pepper, and boil and skim aad aot iaa coot place," "Saydat aaaeoa,a I can 4ireaaeaber." The oMk re inrntedldf directions and the eaasfoaser Mouarht aav fan down on the soonsaaT with the exclamation: "I seas wlvon I spued my hull batohl I left earn do tacks!"-! Honors wore easy: A1 ahatna enojaejaasuaHnhasmm atsshat -Jm ejataa aanmnte oaHPmBBeennnmnnj unnnnj wwnnnnnajemn a tvap dot's aae,'' ho nodilod reaosaningJy. hi aaswor to the toller's took of bidTiiirT. "But I don't know that you are Mr. echweJtawlusaat. Tou muat ret wearPwnrnn wawwwa amwwa ea preo emuoampw jnmp x warn self identinod.'' aaht the toller. "Hew vass dot' asked tho GerMon eitte, with a pusslod took. "Ton must got hank omeer. "Ah, Jar exied Joh raueh rabevod; "dot's aU right. I donM know rou aelwOT. avaktaat
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