Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 25, Number 50, Jasper, Dubois County, 2 November 1883 — Page 7
WEEKLY COURIER.
JASPER, 1XVUMA, THE (1AY rorxo TOWS." MAX FMOM With fore in hand, ear mwr day. Mkm a lelnt of toasitt- bat , Tin- mt vuuu man wn raine from T.eed with a ma -Jew sa ill and Ixuwa, With hitM l art aid -he-taut hair. And qotH a ai.d m-del tin H'-r ail M' t care ur kM That her oluh waxiiuit-S and totea Pur nwrel to flirt vN.i tin- marli-n low. wax ue alia tr the av uuif inau frumtowa. A i nooning tseit (a y tiny man a Beuca'h an a:letre -miir a that A nil -hl'ed wh (u- t.ch to -r name AUuit 10 - i' Inrji wb'M -e t ca-a. Ita una'. "Me rnu-. b nldttur at. It ease ami luxury unur;aei; h h , with a tatofui a r aid hv. Irmted eara -y-id n-r iu -ye, A l e Su h rddnine; teaittrea brown At oi-vl o! I tf - gay tMjn j man fruin town, i t-'otne da he ha t r-nt in th rural apot. Waer- nce'tb wa jMenty. and tyle aa not: Had ri bl !utiaiw) hl irwnl It 'hind r kit that wa true and tin-nflaed. With a it it he talent unil "rn. W.ih I. mot hi buiit niir-d4ir forWn. And tw"caue of tal dispute be had With Hi "g .i-rmr'" tu lie t-1d hi dad. ,Ail tht hr v plained t the tais-Ieu brown. Wub ;bi k'" ? oiiee man from town, r'irat dart, then wweVa. and whe re Str went j be t-i f t he iray yininv nu w-rv beat. Ami entmint loaowe I tttrtm tb'-n. A chatiewl to nin a nan of men; Kr h futia I but (ul- )ukken an l atir WbTt'cr ( aaw or UKuafct t b-r-Ad -jn"t a:n- to drram u l rh. i ir tnmf r til blnah wb. n h" w nkjb : IV y and btuh of tar roai Irn brm Hal .-ptuir4 t b fa uun- wan truiafow-n. P br told bia Iott and an hf -nt In ht- and fr to afc iumhu. H" t Vii her th mi rnaaon why Hw t a I vatt h hav an I kmr!k by: Hi fataei bd bade fciaa ftt in tite. And had tbuaan tar Uim a proper wife. "Wan did n tand n ar worth akB, With a rich old fatbr. and rah of her own." But belted from hrr ami hi father frowa. Aad found bta taU aar from town. ' T maiden !al wll th wblh. Aad ov rr hr I turwai aaM a mlk. H r ta'brr. b told him. ha-t a plan To taaJtf h r wifn to a ray yun man Who did not atand n bt worth ai n With a rfc-h oM father and raah of hia owa;" Rrputed bt- ru a handaom catHi : But abe -h to rh a mati-h. And. afraid to fan- her father frowa. Had flod to her oM aura hfv fr fn town. H atarvd: hp MaUrd,. Amand her HI arm In lovlai wax he idarad. M la aprte M win wc araat coafeat TV old folk trruataa. ierprthrlea; It aav we ran from low away. , And tiied to lora another day: And. tUtd. jfiiac na-k airala. Our lrra will laarh at a what then? Tia twitter far to fauajra thaa frowa' Wire the wiMrda of the car un- man town. t human Oaaa Jagtai. fa .V. T Ladaar. 1 XIMILIMT ROXAXCE. Not Terr loojr ainoe a briH para p(h in ihr Genera )Kfn tm-ntkmexl. m the guarded lanstMffP which it is the local najre to employ in ueh cms, the tnpk'a) death at a Kuaaiaa revolatkm ift and his wife. He had died at a ptinful and lingering illneia. throturh which hi wile had nnned him with heroic devotion, and within an hour uf hi death -he was fouod lying: 7 hi side, alo dead, and both were cnirered with the same windin-ibeet. Knowins roothing of the wavs of Kuaian rvmjref, it struck me that this event was the denouement of some terrible 'tory of real life, I made inqniries. and a Ruesian gentleman who w inlimatelv atquainted with the unhappy pair was good enough to citnniunoate to me the followinc narrative, which, besides being in itself deeplv interesting, throws a rivid light on the cause of Russian discontent and the character and methods of the entho'at who. whaten-er we may think of the means thev occaaionallT employ, are men of truly heroic mold, ami nerer hesitate to sacrifice U tber hold dear for the adrancetnent of the cane to which they hare devoted theaiselres. Thee the aui-disant Nihilists, are known in Western Europe chiefly as a political party of rxtnordmary' cnergr and resource, engaged in a mortal struggle with a trnculent despotism. They are men whose exploits from time to time thrill the world with horror, aad whose cottrageons deaths extort eren the admiration of their foes. It is only on rare occasion that the reil which shroud the mytterr of what may be called their borne Irre (albeit few of them have homes) is withdrawn; for the yihUiata say little of thetBselrffs. ami it is not in the nature of things that the rwtrr jrorld should know what they do not choose to reveal. One of these orcaaion was the death of Andre FranHi mI hi wife, aad my informant possessed rail knowledge of taw romantic and touchims story uf their lire. This gi-ntiemaa, 1 may add. has himself played an itnportaat part in the Rttaataa rerotatkmarr movement; nobody is better aoqnaintsd than he with -Underground Kaaia,n and his name is not unknown in England. I gie the story, word for word, an be gave it to me? Andre Kmnjolt born in one, of the Black JSe prrtncs---despite hi name, of Knwiaa iarents was one of the old est ana mast respected members of our jriunjr rvo4sdJoaarr nartv. Atthonrh ai ttw time barelv t wentyonc yean old. ke took part in law great propagandist wwwment of 1872-3. whkh opened in Mmnla the ra of reroluUon. It was a tlsne, of rngne ret noble Yearning of m rtaioaary sioctalism--of dreams of nniverani kaitdaeattobe obtained by the ohtloree of teaching and example. Fraaiol1 sceptrd tiw new faith wjth all tlw nidar of yewth. A mistiotiary by Taentfcm and ennrietlon. lnnref4oaabki asmlnasaioaate, eothnviastic to exattntlan, km pttwonifted that religions idea which deaafta their pndeMrd m-; Mrlnl1sm. la the sanding nmtif of the ; imftlM of Rnasiaa retoltttion. His. an the future of humanity seemed to M inspired by revelation rather thaa Mis devotion had ia
i fii bis habits, ww which tf tar Wwt m amrfi
ams(fcJt 4Df aaw mVaawm Firmly hsiawln the lore of Mean, ha attrttmted toa importance to the moral ne rlsct iusj of the laditidaal and too Hut wth reform of inatitatioas which, as political science teaches, am the moat powerful factors in the moral regeneration of mankind. While other diseased the reiaiir value of iaaurreetioaa! attempts and peaceful propagaaila. Aadre was preaching to his young disciples, in ason and out of aon. the nsomaity of personal example and an austere morality as a means of winning convert to sticialistn. In this way he acquired immense ia!!ueace over the youth of St. lleteta'mr. KiefT and U4ea. where be labored !ncewt mtlv. When. a in Kiis-ia. a prupaganda ha to I e condtcel aecretly, ani from man to man. a capacity in 'the miaionary for attracting; ersonal sympathy i f upr mc imMtrtancv It would be difficult to find any here a man who (oMed thi rciti gift in the aroc degree as rranjoa. lte etthuiam which wa Uf principal trait of his character, togadiier w:th a winning manner and natural kindnean of heart, made all ho knew h ru hi devoted friend: and he. on hi arL. loved his c Hnradts. hi pupil- afxl hi fellowworker with all the paion of a I hritian zealot Ljwbo st-es in hi converta lireitiren in the Lord, children of hi Divine Master, and coheirs of a Heaven! inberitame. In 1W74 Kraajpnli. abandrmiaj; his life in the town, took a place a a village tMhoolmnster in the pnivince of Tehernigov, in onler to bein a social propaamla among the peasant. After a few month' activity in hia new sphere of dutr. be was arrested under suspicion of teaching revolutionary doctrine. When be was led away by two gendarme all th- village, men and women, old and voting norwithtandint the terror with which a Ku-ian peasant always rrjrarJ th- fmiaries of the law aocouianied Frnj4i. suVntlyand nwHirnfuily. for several miles ou hi rosni. and. when they left him. looked the bleaitings they dared not utter. And later, when magistral-- and officers went to the village to earrh for proofs against Fraajoli. not a single wttnesa could be induced, either by nrwmises or threats, to testify against him, albeit he had carried on hi propaganda freely, and alanoAt without diguie. in the streets, at village fHea and friendly gatherings, a well a at communal meetings and from house to hou. Three year and a half he was kept in prison without trial, and m the end the Judges, in default of auHcient evidence to convict him, were compelled to pronounce him not guilty. On this be wa exiled, by administrative order, to 4vitcbegodiV. a small town in the far North. On his way thither Franjoli made an attempt to escape, which well nigh cost aim hit life. While his guardians ware sharping he jumped front the window of a railway rwnage. but he was so badly hurt that he could not rise, and the 'next morning the gendarmes, when they returned to the spot, found him lying where be had fallen, lie was then taken to the hospital of Solvitcbegodiv. and after being discharged took up his quarters In the town. There he met Mile, Eugenie Zadadray. wbe acquaintance he bad made when she was one of the accused ia the trial of the H1. It is sometime said that contrasts are mutually attractive, Ferhap this may be true." yet it b much more natural that coenmoa sympathies should be a bond of onion and a cause of love, and there are nature that can never sympathise with their opp aite natureto, whoe contrast irritate and repel. Those are the natures that Heiarieh Heine would have called Hebraic, whose peculiarity is to attach themselves not to the conventionally beautiful aad charming, but to an abstract ideal which dominates and absorbs them to the point of fanaticism and intolerance. Whether hr possessed one of those natures or not h was similarity of character and community of ideas toat kindled the intens sympathy itself between of Us the same a aimself, like aim she had semVred bonds and inmrtsonment, and like him aba was still ready to spend and be spent in the can to which noth had cuus-rated their lives, tiooa the mutual sympathy grew into an overaaaMering fore aad became one of those areat passion that absorb the entire being all the loree of the soul. Attachments of this arsVnt sort are much snore common among Nihil sts than might be aupposed. Men and women meet as companioa-at-anu. they combat in the same rank, share the same view; gain the same reward. The complete equality that pn vafls be tween the sexes, and the sen ot everi present dancer to which ail alike, are eirpoard. render that lofty and rmantklove song try poet mnen more ireonsnt ia the wild and mfammable. world of Xihilism thaa in the world of restraint aad cmvesjtioa. Of this sort were the lores of Andre and Eugenie. The first months of their union were the happiest they had ever known or exdred- orwere destined to know seemed to both rather the realixatioa of a romantk dream thaa an episode of real life. A tosjtmou friend, Mlto. A. It. who wtoSted them at. this time, remnrked to another coawnoa friend, little thinklnf; how soon and how terribly her prevision wld be verified, that the ateitioa of the FraaMw was greater life itself, and that aeither live the other. But love ksw 1 neither their rendutKmnrj
which Quk-klr developed i
Andre aad the fair comnaaton
eadto: for Entente belonjctd to
exalte I aad enthuidaatic t vne
fiasllienm; htjiMr sweafcr to 'fmt 0Ntw
lrrss. ! a m ta to take nart hi the wkh ; one ' despotism which had of acta as wu as of They eon- 1 trived a plaa of escape. In Febrnary. 1(179. tksy toft KoWchstidhr. aad altera Jong and nervous ceeded la reackiug St. jooraev s- ! lterourg. ' w. where thev were at amiiated t to the organisation known a the Sar- , odnaio oiiau . The difficulties and dangers which always beet the path of coaspirators. eapeciaOy in Kussta, were greatly in(Teaaed in the case of Uie Fraals by the state of Andre s health. His naturally not robust constitution, after suffering from the fatigues and privatioas ine parable from the life of an active proagandyt, had become still further enfeebled by bis long imprisonment, and he sever fullr recovered from the effects of bi terrible leap from the railway carriage. He wa affected with chruuic anemm aad a disease of the I n-, and the physician whom be cott-dted at St Petersburg were able to adoni him but little present relief, and od much hope of ultimate recovery. 1 be life of a revolutionist who had to lie perpetually on the move, and U h'xie ber he ctni'd. was more v-r altogether incompatible with the car', attention and regimen which his case inieratively demanded, and Andrv grew wore and worse. A friend one of the editors of the Xarvlwtto l'Aia relate that in December. 1. when he went to warn Franjoli that his whereabouts had become known to the police, ami that he mud iuitaatlv remove to fresh quarters, he could hardlv walk, aad it was only by a sort of miracle that they contrive! to evade the spv by whom' they were tracked. Yet. de-pite hi suffering, aggravated by the danger to which he was exposed, and the entreaties of his fellow -worker, he refused to retire front the content. In the courage of this young man. stricken with a mortal inalady, as weak as a child, and with the look of a corpse, there was something superhuman and almost subvine. Not being able to move about. Franjoli took always the position of house master ia the Conspiration- Koaniry that i to say. in the room 'to which the terrorist met toreeeive their order and discuss their plaa. Holder of this position are invariably exposed to great danger by reason of the coming and going of the conspirator, and the risk thereby incurred of attracting the notice of the police or their spies. Xow that both are gone there is no reason why H should not be known that ia the house of Fraajolis was made the dynamite d-tined to blow up the mine on March 1 . and that Andre and his wife snperiatended the making of the bombs wkioft were used with such fatal effect on the Katarina Canal. IXemenk-o Guerrani. an Italian writer, desrribes a battle between Corelcan patriots and a French force much -jpertor in a umbers, in which the wounded Corsicaa formed with their bleeding bodies a barricade to protect their eonunbVs from the ballets of the foe and enable the survivors to continue the struggle. No less herote was the coadart of the two Fraajoli. He hardly able to move from his bed. the house full of deadly explosive, not knowing what a day might bring forth, liable at any moment to a visit from the ptdke. and neither able to esnaj himself nor destroy the damning evidence which would have inured his death on the scaffold. She watching over her husband day after day. hardly ever daring to venture from his side: listening even in the watches of the night for the footfall of the enemy aad the summons to admit the emissaries of the Csar: lhr NraW in mtexiwsn of death, for both carried poison, and were thy resolved. if the summon should come, to din rather thaa be taken. Bat neat as was their love for other, their devotion to that which they believed to br their duty was even greater. Ejaie. with the full conamtof 1; at the disposal of the Executive Comnuttee. and cdlered to go whfehcrsosver her sorvices might be most nsefnl tothe canse Bnt none had the heart no require from them so terrible a sacrifice, and they remained tosther to the leawf. After the death of Atoxaader IL they left St. rVterHburgb which bad btone mire dangerous than everfor the south of Russia, and from that time forth, owing to Andre's increasing weakness, they were aaable to take any farther part ia the rerolutiouary movement. Early in the present year it was demed expedient for them to leave Koftida. aad ia Mar last they arrived in (Wnera. where thev received a warm welcome from many old awl faithful friend. But death was written ia Andre face, and none who saw hint could doubt that the end was near. Eugenie never left hi s'.de: her devotion was heroic, and the calmnes of her meaner aad the ferenity of her spirit wt prised all who were admitted to her intimacy. We knew afterward that h was thessrenitv of iiTevocable resolvsL a neither ia life aor in death tobe rated from him she loved. At nine o'clock on the jaorndug of August 7, Andre, after cruel snffcrfam. lus eves torever. "it m nav feeV said Eugenie, taming to a friend i with her: "his trounsesart Imansa juiuaaJhnnanaV wnsa aka ajn. ranejou tae CTiamoer mimuuy, an a saw exacted a solemn 'visit, sad Ihwfrlend with the wmatfc ti ' ..i mm m m ..ll. MltffcA. Bh Sttk SaMk , so many savepieas awaw, ami an m 1 .- ...3 mmmmmi n'tan tall mm La " neeav mj rai. ? ava ma w aCTaww sst meWB ami wreta a
awortal alnHEKhr
swallowed a large doss that she
hsoasmt with Irinr dssrn. skew over hermrf th same cloth with which she had veitod thsfaeeof hT dssd htuband. An hour later, when n member of the household ta which taey aaa awen eaterva ine chamber of ttoath, Eugenie, thougu naeoascioas. stiU Uved, but it was impossibie to mve her. ana at tnree o cioca ... a a a a tn the aJteraoon see oreacneq aer tas. Husband and wife were laid side by side in the communal eetnetery. and followed to the inrave bv nmaar mourn ers who knew the touching story of their lives. In the Fraajolis the party ha lost two of its most devoted member but their deaths will not have been in vain, aad their friend will never forget them. "They were noble representative," said one of their mo-t intimate friends in his funeral oration. of the Noradaaio Volia partr. Let us think of them as often as possible, let the recollection of their beroim and devotion encourage and strengthen n. To those who are not of it their lives and their death w.ll not only show how Nihilists love one .mother, but bow they love their cause. 'Vtr Cox, tn Lomdvn XHtiy AVics. m Aatama aad Wlater Beaseta. ., ! Openings of autumn and winter bonnets at the leading millin'rv houses ' show the small shapes and simple trim mings announced aereral wee its ago. These small bonnets will prevail to the - exclusion of pokes, though there are always larger sizes for elderly women and for those who need greater warmth and protection for the bead, ine nov elties in millinery are therefore not found ia new shapes, but in the var'ety and richness of the fabrics used, tiltherto winter bonnets were limited to those of felt, velvet or plush, bat now there is aa endless variety of wool iik ami metal braids used, with rich embroideries, cords and cberdrJe: and dress fabrics of all kind, from dtotk to velvet, are fashioned into stylish boa net tha. match the costume with which they are worn. There are .also many bonnets imported without trimming, but so neariv complete in themselves that it is a very easy matter to add the mtle earnlture needed One of the novelties u the entire bon net of soutache braid made with after row of the narrowest wool braid. befinBiaa; in the enter of the aad extending ia circles to the edge of the brim. This eamtm in the dark doth colors-dahlia, goldea brown, myrtle ereen, or saopuire and mar have Fittle silver or silt mixed with it. It It aa excellent bonnet to wear with ctoth costumes that are trim rued with soutache, and there is also another fancy for making it to wear with an India shawl by trimming it with the new earner s-hair torn that shows all the rich colors that are wrought in India eantelVhair shawls: thus on a sober brown soutache bostnet is a jabot of this , riehlv colored Isce across the brim, with a duster of pompon of red and tinsel hir on the left side, aad a roll of bias velvet on the edge of the brim. Another novel tv I the worsted bon net, made of the embroidery worsteds laid closely on a frame in single threads to make stnpes, soil pattern, cneexs. or blocks of two or three hade of one , color. The crown has usually a design ' of its own, sometime of dot, while the ohm may be plain or striped, and these i unique bonnets are also especially approoriate for wool dresses. Birds. wines, tinsel or fenther pompons, and ! velvet ribbon ior rosettes and strings. are the trinsmiar. ' Silver braid bonnets are preferred to those of gold braid worn last year. The fancv for gray bring these silver braids iato 'favor, aad they are made yoothfal- . , . , . . . :n: . S""1?. JZ !tZl acar the crown, with s pntf of velvet on iae Bsnm. aata a mmiier ox Erven auwtiaingbirds on las left side, the chenille varied of the mtort wined with cords of aasor with spiked jetswrotght lathe srwtthscrowa otcnentue e else tlhisb reversed. thebrma kearerW with a braW of Tahet. with chenille. lows of tinsel cord in ciron the crown. The made of strips of plaited with chenille wore mtrodaced kid crowns aad of kid were also worn alUsrstfrar-aldns of varied making are used in their natural colors, and in darker brown and green. la Yasoo Comity, Mian,, a patty of punters killed a deer that had a human skull imnaled on a prong of his horn, suppossa to he that of a negro The prong bad entered the cavity oeenplid klato kw hg-ri1 ttemnS IksdnMbeen put on rwceatly. Taera am various eoajetmrf as to how H got there, but the most pmvsdent onenton to that the animal was wouaded and. bt to bay by a negro, and bad the latter in the eounlct which ra the nrong trntoriag the eye twain. The body of other wot as tone m a two: Ms (fenw.) i -A clerk In Ian War Pepaitaseat at Washington dad a tow days ago, toavbw ISvlaW fa Govenmsnts Zn . ! enat
f awaaR amraj IPOBF'cal IU
I a felt-like amawriai.
E asamVa wV'eamkvmB JamaS!VBt
whole honusti
ffpf.f fJICmmmal II fwfHaV Losrso. Oct. a
Pierre fsas an tUUostarr feres ta Part, rum wtofsllswmg tha fall of Has: The TWnal rnada til aamaaO Id W thS Uyuadarthe smasofms fsrt. whtoh tilled wimsallomsrawSdwtthKfsii iilmiTi rv sTtodaamaoa. aTasnssstom ef ma rifles wars duly leeaee. Tae msa iseaea sm waitinv natil a Sank moveaasat ef the snh er troops aad the arias; of I should drhra aas aaaaaa at them. Wesswtham aatttanat ths the vithsgSi with amgadhalr i thaa. avftae a raw anaaaats a np their nowise robes as high as atop could aad trvtac to with plaaas against tas im of ballaCa. thev raahed oa. A i are than i isaimsarsd Two Tolieva fired. It was emanatveat 's'etan 3 tmileta wa&ias: aawra oa the fugJdvse. They were poured la twice ta oas attests an toe word of wommsas in a ewa.miinuaw.am Ta wat Hka ia mt frnaa a beam laals thilr r ia a ml ninaasr. menr long.aaur, mmA .! dnww tawb-mvefem. look like wosaeu. Others trtsd to snaps bjK laflooa, trymg. ss reach the teaks, ia the water. good when they cams ap to breath, like seals. With moss kIDsd ia the 8outhsra forta. aboat or 1,000 maat hsure been empssssf of. The aaUor amde bets as to me auaa hers ilMBrevsd. Aboat niae ia the math lag all was oyer aad ttoroat of the, and the mflora, m a imsd by ttoawa the a, aad eaiverlas; rertac wxta saoamn oat of tas fort after the drthrhhnem tost smsa, , wera, awweTJ&dwm rmmAbrnm lurtl Our them wtth hayoaeas or braiasd ttouutt mdieftlwaVnmsketa. T were abwalatetv sawaassa. The tempted ta ratralsthem. and ss ly, dfaytrovk.'Tlwey replied: TaeAaa:aaa aaaeaaas. Thsy carried m hiaf eg Capt. Hinisis on the asp of a sole, aad ft they carrssd the day assy woaM eat the! Preach to ajseas er saw them wtthia ws ax-x. . . a re. a . plana." Taera was as rapiy not nosTOV, Mass., Oat. W. aad Labor this T. Chaaes. of ids, was tonirytag. Ha had a irtiai UaicB, and wa that ha has sines naduwork. Hat: aoms aahwaSwmatas as by Bsastor Biair if he bad my: Wen. av.' 1ramMBas imrmm f.eaj hrtmraawaw, asjai m Blair. 'ftWUuShae been tfoae m aay rtMte Tea. atr. I do." was the recdr. ef atlwjor atx eteaeeea years aawwao haatM l lateiv. Tktwwawawawejss ped N Blan. WaataroBwaa . Iwaresa wtteess. feet aas msaea as aacarai as me. Sewatier Blatr. Where u. Wftateas. Ieoalmowas: mleht rajwre i atea them at Mater's tsaasn ta Th mat ewe aneut a iienatar BbUr. 70r kbte tsanedT I Do mka awanea Wttateaa Teat Dan neOerussM rtlle. saw one: aha a aaa aamaM SomerrSle. HclWimoaei aad carried n m hat axaet renator aUaar. Is tan I where M wnateas. Tas: tt is dees m Senator Matr. DM taaatas one of these w Kites, no, sir. Senator Bwatr. M this wa rotaw eaT eVMNa awDaaa HMft tAaawl efc JPwj!? Wct smjlWMfc jltf the WCwfst MMflM lw wnmjmmw OBpi jyifc , amfrtNfr taWt riNW fj(awen eWan eman marry awra Dukes was fsuad ia kbita. up la a rag, sad mhf aow to asvtbwrtia. atoanW aM CwWlJf aw0C aW awisfwMas w9 mVwaf w0 mwamMMfeaW HawoawfnettoB whsts he vatoa lef aay nntfl Twseaay. alaaamgh he asmalSrlw sdsttattowmm Bto save np two Istflsn frsm lm jfa aawwayt what he amst amst her at JMeota by Oetoasr H, aad seensu lmnef hyy. mg to a baca sa tor. atotamaaM tobmw ton was ssgctohnta hsntwet Mhw rrear taa ytwmgW' ms? Dwsna Jant saaad to to Ksswaaau, last, saatTlmi leht 17 that he was ha tri nth eat to llaalihi. tot wamtoimt toM hsr whsgn mm arsaa?wa aetman a Jfc wa aVn ah aaamasnl Ly .at Iul7Ip1 fh fSSShaTaTivt JJlJdtllteU
atvers
laal WBtUL atfJlBS llddttWl. ItarmacesOai.a, A Drill Wm sma! 1 1 m i m mitoatifn view with Tem Dakea, whs was ssamnsd as
Ms had hfs
