Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 45, Number 24, Jasper, Dubois County, 20 February 1903 — Page 3
Weekly Courier.
O. Do ami;,
JASPKB,
I
I'abllaher.
INDIANA.
I
TEE HOME SEWING-ROOM. SUoald Hp atlall Furolahed, wlU aa !. to EMWlltMl uul 1 ouilorl. The )iilk of tlie gen ral and individual sewing ut meet families, is dOM t ho nie, Imt many do no! realise thai suitable provision should be made (or Ihfai uk much us. for ot her depart meut of home work, "ii" room la the house hoitld be :.. I a art a - 1 he s c w i ng-room, tlie litter and COnf Uticfl attendant upon Um work oiificed there, and the tewing tools kept there aa esaoredlj as the carpenter ke pi his tools in his shop. Oood lighi end reatUattoa ure necessary, and a nort heust OT north"'I earner room with plenty of in-
dows will furnish excellent light withOUl the glare or heat of t he sun. says i he llou.M keeper. I he walls ibouUI he k also mined in delicate tints, or papered In a soft -toned ingrain or a fuinti figured paper, with barraonione bor !er or celling, that the ccs may he rested even when iiucoiiciously resting upon iL. in The floor shook! be of hard or painted wood matting. M carpets are difficult to keep clean and there should he one or BON ke1 s..cks or footstools, with a small rug to lie under the feet of the worker nrben not at the machine, The windows feliouhl open easily, be icreenei in summer, nnd furnished with opaque hades that are readily drawn, ond the i beerest of muslin used for the lower sash if a curtain i- needed. The furniture should eomisl of 8 good sewing machine, well fitted ui, a cutting talde with ,i d raw er, two coin forteble cane seal chairs, one light
low, easy rocker. little stand or. which rushions. scissors, extra spoob nnd other notions may be 'a'd foi eon ve nie nee ; a w a -1 e basket, bureau or chesj with several roomy drawers and a long mirror. If much dies -making is to ie attempted, ward rohe a long dress hox, and a waist and dress form like those iismI in shops for displacing garment.- will be needed. A ftriki-'ng and shaping are as much a part of dressmaking to-day as sewing a gas or oil stove, with one or tWC 'i ons, and a short and a long pressingboard, win be among the necessities. A sponge, with towels or clothe, and howl for water, should he kept in the closet convenient for use in pressIn?. Order and systematic arrange
meat of work are just as essential in the sewinc department of the home as elsewhere. Exactness and accuracy are necessarv to diipnteh. The sewing machine should be kepi supplied with its own appointments the cutting tahle with h.i.i: and short taps measures, a tracing win el. shears and seissors, a sharp penknife, a piece ..f beeswax, an emery, marking ehelk and fashion books and (harts. The stand drawer should contain spools of
thread and silk in t),- staple colors;
and numbers, rarietlei of common buttons. tape, braid, hooks und eyes snaps, pins, net dies and cord. The drawers f Ike bureau furnish a convenient receptacle for materials to be used in work, cut-out and partly finished garments, pieces of cloth and remnants, hut ach kind should be kept ; v Itself if on - to work quickly aw without confusion, The top of lite drcas-boi should be fitted w Ith spring ami an Inexpensive cushion that the worker w hether the home or hired seamstress, maj lie down for a few minutes at th. noon hour. r hixing mtwles and cloning ,ves. A ten or 15 minutes' nan now i- as useful fmm n
ntllttarian, as from a humanitarian and point . for the n freshmen t gamed causes the worker to eceompllsb move in the ftftcrnoon and w ith greater COOC OYSTER ROLLS. A War f ( ookiug the lllvalvea Tha He a iter a Thrm I-'. erel I I Palatable.
fg the clouu1
Prophetic
And SC-'U
ild dawn
he s unhitai
But saw, thb
And bcnt.b
weigh the
ASHINGTOfi
ack as the tcTppejt rewed, i se overmastcreiTlriikll
is'7 . )J
heart
CONTROLLED BY TRUSTS. ANTI-TRUST BILLS ENDORSED.
Cai
real Orurd by Mo uwpt I tat a kli w til Uu Jitl aa Thes Mewe
jjmywi the
d heart eTv iwed
rfsMt, crunson-IWtSHlj,1) )) J)
mmd, that
TTI
bTJfcyond the dXQk 'J
v -mi m i
1
,.Aärt:i..r.....i .L. VIZ A
i! mmu, mat ihhsuii""' .! ' TV BPf
i .--. . -.iv. . . t,M
Wplrr&MHt ynd iAiHi 't good. , wy
V - --"s. f L M f i s, UCu
I - WHY
LWktKM hc'tHlarc, uestioiTj.tc,
I I r S Xt A
K1MU sure JjMTy, dikpclhrtg base conceit, W
rQi)y seeks ruii(jwnb pathways WV!p.
u hen, lull-orb
.They scarce c
uld but th
Tru-t ksgtalatiesj i possible, Lut bartll piubahle, at this session of aenaillS A coiitpromikc hill will pttsa the bouse of i peCM ntat.ves, khoru of all l bat will rt-all iui h the trust. Th. bills prepared kj Attorney üeuerui Kuox uuü mtrodueeti in the house
of rtjpreaeatntltsje kj tfcsj ehsraana of the jud.i.ary BisnamittOCi were found, after coasultatiou with the republican muuagers of the .tuate, to be too drast.c to comma ud a majority of the votes uuii u couiproinise bbi is the result wkieh is us ImrWStaM usasuck;Ug dove. i'lesidtut Booaweejttt his attorney general, the judiciary t uniniltees of aengreai nwd ti kstnera of the repubUana pertj have all had a hand in Us cubuting this Innoosnt bid. a proui.ous am. iii lit of w oi k has , u .xnt-liU-id on it; foi it i.- qui;, oiilicul to toui-lo.-e a bill that vv .11 read like a trustbuster and yet be a trust shelter.
That the bill is to be harmless to the
Traval tiMn lrra4 la af Jtat crtata K I aal
WHEN HEAT WAS A LUXURY.
'Haraath ta Ike lluawr Oaee Hrtar4rS I That LIsM Nihrr Tfcsaa 4ft Vrr.MM).
Whictr-st
Dorn February 22, 1732.
Died December 14, 1799.
SAID BY WASHINGTON. Be courteous to all. but intimate With few, and let those few be well tried before you give them your confidence. Tin- company on srhlch you itnprove most Will be least expensive to V OIL It i-. easy to make acquaintances, bat difficult to shake off, however irksome and DO profitable they are foUU '. after we have once committed ourselves to them.
It i u mal aim with me not to ask what, under similar circumstances, 1 Would not grant. 1 expressly forbid the sale or transportation out of the said commonwealth, of any slave 1 may die posesaed of, tukder anv pretense whatfcoev er. In mf estimation, more permanent nnd genuine happiness is to be found in the sequestered walks of connubial life than in the giddy rounds of promiscuou.s pleasure or the more tumultuous and imposing scenes of successful ambition. Without virtue and without in
tegrity, Ute finest talents ami the most brilliant Bccompllahroents can never gain the ic-p.et ami conciliatethe esteem Of the truly valuable part of mankind. I shall never attempt to palliate my own foibles by exposing the error of another. Kolbing would give me more real sat i-faction than to know the settti incnta which are entertained of men . . ass a 0
by the public, whether tliey ne niviirble or other e.
SAID OF WASHINGTON. Just honor to Washington c;n only be rendered by observing bis precepts and imitating his example. Robert t'. Winthrop. However his military fame mat excite the woinh r of mankind, it il Chiefly by his civil magistracy that Washingtons example will instruct them. Fisher Ames. A great and venerated ehuiac e: like tint of Washington . ' not an Isolated fact In history to be regarded with barren admiration it is H dispensation Of Providence for good. E. Everett. He illustrated and adorned the civilization of Christianity and famished an example of the wisdom sind pcrf....ii.oi of its teach intra which the
snbtlest srgumi nts, of it enemies cannot impeach. Zebuion B. Vance t eorge Washington, the brave, the Wise, the good- Supreme in war, in council and in pca'-e. Washington reliant, without ambition; discreet uithout fear; confident, without pre sumption. Dr. Andrew Lee. To add brightness to the Min 01 "lory to the name of Washington 1?
alike Impossible, bet none attempt it. In solemn awe pronounce the name, and in its naked, deathles Splendor have it shining on. Abraham U iln. I,et htm who looks for a monument to Washington look niound the United States. Your freedom, yout independence, your national power your prosperity and yowr prodlglone erowtii arc a monument to bim.-
Kossuth.
The follow ins: letter, found on a tree in Washington after the recent high wind storm, is of interest to the public: PEBBQNA1V AN NHM .v I I AL. My Dear Litllefield: "We have examined carefully your last anti-truat bill and have no fault to find with it. Not only do we think it harudeas to the great trusts, in which we are interested, but it safeguards and strengthen them. As only corporation hereafter organized are required to publish fact in regard to their financial conditions, our prcteat corporations will enjoy a great advantaee over these new corporation.
by being able to obtain these published flc-i. Your bill, if it accnplihes
snx thing IssjsJdoW heaujng off otner legislation, will fortify the preent trttat. As I told ;, ". however, we sre not afraid of publicity so long aa we are not deprived of the monopoly priri!pres. which enable us to control pro-
I
r,--v.- s m l ..- :- v prevent dlacussion of the tariff and railroad question Our right and j i'wlege in these directions mutt not be disturbed. We strongly approve of the Elkin's bill, wkieh bss pnsed the setate. and tj-ust yon will speed it passage through the house. We think it will prevent rate cutting in certain quarters and thu greatly increase railroad earnings. It also abolishes the crim
inal clause of the Sherman law, wcicn
trust was acknowledged by the per- i duction and nx prices of sriteies
sonal organ of 1 lie administration, the Washington Star of January In, when it said: "Two imioi taut f..cts app nr to-day iu the situation eoneerning poeatble anti-trust legislation; first, the legislation proposed by the house will not be drastic. Second, that there is disposition on the part of the trust interests to accept the legislation and permit it to go through the senate, if it is not of a drast ic character. Privnt information conies to the
tapitol to dav from trust sources that lhas made some of us fee', very n neonit may be possible to reach an agree- j forteble when we thought what might
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE.
AS A YOUTH.
nut mii Hennsao! Mark spot al Uakeflrli! Inrni on thr 1'nl oiiiMc.
the
YVnlilimn Did Many Thlna WlifB m. Ilov Thai Wave Worthy f m I. row n Man.
TEDDY AND THE OCTOPUS ELEPHANT.
Mount Vernon hs become great rn.cca for the American tourist: .v. Vorktow ami Valley Forge s,anl rtatety reminders of the First Gentleman of America, while la ererj iiart of the land the smallest inemen-
ire reli-
lli s
ru
nhsUM some well rises light brand dough into small round forms and put them into well greased mufti ii pans. It them rise until verv light, then bake them in a quick oven, decreasing ; . heat when they ate brown, and let th-m remain until verv thoroughly Wliu sold cut u s Iii 1 1 slice from the top ami "p or pun out the
ide. beiiur careful not to iireuKtn-'
t. lon t th'-ow away the inside,
bat put it iu a moderate oven and let it dry and brown slight Ij and me it a. yoSI do pulled bread or roll it foi crumbs, snyoDetroH Free Pfmn. Pick over a pint Of outers, strain the liquor, pat it with the oysters, nnd parboil until the edges curl. Skim out the oysters, remove the MtUsb ai d t the hot liquor an ecjnal amount o cream, and pour it gradual!, otet a white roiix made b cooking one tablespoon fnl "f kot butter until n ell blended. Add a few grains of n.aee. ,ae kail nl a leapoonful of celery -alt. a dash of cavetme and a few , ropa of i. men Jnke Cut the oysters in bits, put them in the same and When hot till the bread shell-, put on 1he crust cover, and if there be any sauce left, r,,ni ',r,,"n,, ol,', Serve very hot. I'otato Friller. Aft, r meshing potatoes through u
;..,,.. r. add tin e. rgg, ce.. n
.ful of Hour, tlie -am. I oiu
t of milk. Beat wei
f his life and net ions
tiously preserved; but in magnificent decay OH the lower Potomac Una Wakefield Farm, whicb was ,ism, inted with his early life. A simple ! granite shaft marks the spot wjiere Ueorge Washington was born, and n , few bricks and stones are all that j r- main of hi- early home. The oM country mansion wa.i burned early in the la-t century, but the brick chimney, within whose arch f.nir People could sit, and the corner stone-. With a portion of the foundation, were saved. Shortly before the civil war the historic farm passed Into the hands of a family which at first showed some appreciation for its associations. A succeeding generation, however. t"re down Ihe chimney 'ml the remnant of the walls In order to secure the bricks. A marble slab bearing an Inscription givintr the dale of Washington' birth nnd other Information, which ha.l lieen set into the great nreh. SSM removed to the old family grewvard: but In placing it beneath tWO an. i. nt fig trees planted by the mother of Washington, it wns broken, nnd
its fragments lie mere io-u.iy.
grown and vine-covered. It -n- in is-, that the
BMnaaBiMrf needed at Wakctied
mlnmture ropy of the Washington monument, wHh the inscription "Washington's r.irthplare." nnd In Himll letters at the base the WOrd Trected bv the 1'nited States. A. j) ins." Waldon Fnwcett, In Wornman's Home ronipnnlon.
Prbrnarr Tnf1-Vrn. A- when a frnvsler down the widening vnbs I.onk bark, and nntrs some noble mounts'" P"e . - Ti-,t term to tower nearer, grander Ptül, Al on he hastens o"er each fleet ins mile;
r her niKK4
The early age at which Washington developed the tender passion has been noticed. In fact, it was despair at the uncompromising attitude of n certain -bow land Beauty'1 that be hVd to the domain of Lord Fairfax, afterwards his patron. The noble gentleman had left England and buried himself in the wilderness on account Of I disappointed passion; perbaps George, who was then coming 1", felt there might be a bond between two such "wounded hiarts;" at any rate, before lie had been many months under Fairfax's eye, just as he -vas coniplct i ng his sixteenth vrar. he set out on a surveying expedition. The Fnglishman's ground included thousands of acres of the
most fertile country in the world, exlending in n wide strip from the sea to the AUeghanies. It was no small llgn of confidence to allow a youth to lay out such u country. This position is merely a snmple of the many Important places lie held. At 19 he was major of th Virginia militia; at 91 he commanded an important expedition to Du Qnssne. small wonder is it that his first love came an young. -Cincinnati F.nquirer. In Modera Tlinea. j If the cherry tree episode had not occurred before the days of the forestry comnswsion no doubt George would have heard from thst body.
COMPLAIvr KR0M A TESIST.
The more ou csn pas of such sntl-
trust hüls as these the better wnl 11 be for us and for our party. Verv sincerely. MOMOAK. gfX K V FFI.LFR.
"!".?. anouiu vririii.iu.s i.'sri.... reliarion it orcon?res.naen be n.a.i vublic. during JJJ
il... T.vt ffw davs in wi.ien we are
represented as being opposed to any
antitrust legislation gem will uncer-
stand the situation, it wou.il teagreai mistake to let the public believe that Wall street favors these bill. We hope it will not observe the fact that stocks have leen on the rise ince dio cusslon of thee hills began.
national
CO
ertspo.
or aalt and a pin
ami drop from a Inrge spoon into
. ' -I.. f. itl! -I ooi.l "'.
iai "r
,' nnd taken out as
surfe
ing
Immerse.
t, . v i ie to the
-ib.ston Budget. gftee me ! Cbollj i r '
to die? iui -ih not tt
awsy niiis rmmtion,! know-
boil well m at
i. of thf kettle leelfiosX. , pwepntw
all. Mi
valet wa
Jude.
looklna backward
venrf. America, hrr f r. erfom bravely won With t.rondentnn vision pauset to admire loommi r.atness of her Wanlnjrlun. , -AU.ert H earner, In S fl Time
Hl real- Aeh leveaseal. .. 1 . L . I . . .
tell me. sam i ue i rn m .
Washington did ttiat
nt. 1 see vour hand
, ......... . . , . .. t.U II .
I ii-i.i, vriiiio. ,.mu - t Iroaaed the Delaware standin up ,nd didn't rock the boat.M-Chicgo llecord Uerald.
"And now
what tieorge ,, : e him gn
ment which will permit the enactment happen to us should some future ad-
' a sin va 'l h" o av tru.-t-. and that if assuraiiees can be given that the perfected bill will be of a character so coi.m rv .t ive as to merely satisfy the president's demand for 'some kind of netiow, no nhatavclw will b. placed in the way of the bill in the senate." These nrc extraordinary admissions for the Star to make: Fit' t, that the trusts will permit mild legislation; second, that President Roosevelt will be sati-fied vv ith some kind of action. What fie you think Of that? The trusts w.U kindly permit c r.ress to pa-s a law nominally against themselves. So here we have the flat-foot ed assertion h the newspaper organ of the republican administration that the tinetS own coagresi and dictate anv and all laws thtv thinl. desirable
or exped ent. Denwerntlc newspapers and orators hav, claimed this for SOWS v.ars. but it 1 Bs always be n indignantlv denied until at last the dis-
grncefnl truth is admitted. Put what i- the matter wilh frdent stoosevolt that be should also come to be satisfied with any legislation the trust msy dictate? Is the trust-buster so anxious to be again nominated for president thai ".some kind of action" apainsl the trusts will now mttefy him? lvmiocrntic newe pap. i s and speakers have alw ays given the president credit for I anlsfijf of purpose, whatever 1 is I ortcomings; but here we have his parsoual organ, which is lasnired tram the whilehonse.
scknowledglag that the president has joined the other lenders f his party in tryinrr to fool the people with fake legislation sgainst the trus' An other iminent republican, at a , ri-i- in the history of the country. sn'.': "Yoi can fool all the people some of the time and SOUM .f the oeonle nM the time, but von cannot
fool nil of the people all Of the t litif " It Is to be hoped that the people will not he fooled more easily to-dny than they were in Lincoln's time. POLITICAL DRIFT. Mark Hntina has given f.0 to a librsry. Mow heavily the town is to bond itself is not stnted. Albsny Ar-
lüe st. iigency of the coal aituatioa earn. uuy lotuut, out it U ddbmtt for :hr present generation M profit by any of tbnu that cannot ba interpr. t t by preaent alaudard of liv.ng. venerable vi izen of ,.ringliel.I, in the Ib p u.bcun of that tity, makes inteeoathsg empsrious of wh:ii are now regarded as aecessities with the conditions that made the ople f the ao's and 40' not eml ...nteuted but even gratefuL then fwnmUM were almost unknown, am among the prosjK-rous. The hails of houaea were sjhami c.ld, even in mnston and New York. Familie in w li ter hod a fire in one room "School room were miserably cold, und relays of children, with chilblains on their feet and colds in their head-, went fas the atove" to relieve their ,..mfr'" Perhaps Dav.d Ha: um expressed the boy 'a life in the country in as apt a way as it has ev n leen put: "The only seasons 1 can remember was two; them of chilblsin and 'tun' bruiae." "but ." sava tbia saorrt -sponden?. were a fine, hardy race. The famil.ei in our beautiful valley averaged ...s
or eight children each; sometimes ten or twelve in one family, like the fine Clary family of this town, where eleven of the twelve grew to UChsU : !. r. ml 1'tig life with a splendid vigor. Mut 1 think we never were warm long at one time in the winter in the 30' and 40. In those dav people went to bed in unhealed rooms, where the temperature was a low that no water could be left in a pitcher during the Bight lest it should freeze an 1 Mberat" its receptacle. Instead then was a tin pail with a gourd in i which srveel the double purpose of breakintr the ice and dipping out tin water for lavatory purposes. The moral whicb he draws from the - reminiscences is that "comfort and abundance are good. The present distress is real and terrible. But it is perhaps a well to be aon.e times reminded of the livea of our immediate a eesf.rs, of how the comparative new s f the country made our luxuries unattainable to them made
them a hard working, economical pa p!e eas !v satisfied anil helpful t each other; and to consi.b-r whothcr, if aeti 1SSI J. we eannot do without many of the present comfort." mirrlit have carried his compari Scam or contrast still further. In Hove days whose conditions made the "survival of the fittest" a stock to be proud of. wlvever beard of "no session siguals" at the public schools Hclthy boys and girls would have twen laughed to scorn had they shrunk from buff, ting the heaviest storms r declined to endure the v.re-t cold in climbing the step- of knowledge. Now the portal are
closed sometimea when there is mim m re than a Scotch mist to obscure the greM source f beat and light. Still, it is hardly to be expected that such retrospecions w 11 c nvince the present generation that thl ..Id way was the better one. The diripline was s ere, and no doubt eonsiderai.le mrJkwiehJ was caused by It though the people of that day atoleally accepted it as a matter of se. It is not good philosophy fr-mi a latter day viewpoint to accept suffering voluntarily, however good
mieht have been P. n Tor-
The mre comfort'.. ie con-
Squirrel There's that Washington kid getting; busy aeain.
gus. 1;, .b.bn T). Rockefeller not reslte that he is slready thoroughly detested by the Americsn people, or did be hso a strange desire to make himself more so? Indianapolis Journal (Rep). llnnna's bill to pension ex-laves i about us ridic ulous a piece of legis-
Intlon as has been proposed in a blue man, And it ieeaat help Hsnna sny totilend that he int roduced the bill "by
rf,P!. w ithout examining it. Utic
Cbeervet
The caaetalou. hla Tral. The bslkei'y scsndal in the national lo nee of representatives ha been hushed up by the committee of investigation reporting a whitewash for all the reputed participants except loblln. the perjurer. Hon. L. E. Quigg. ex-mcml r of the ttOfrse, and r. the memler who was said to have been bribed, seem anxious to dr..p any further Investigations, which the report of the democratic minority of the eommittee demanded. The two reports have not been acted upon, and it is hardly likely they will be. for a further investigation might develop stune uncomfortable matters alont other statesmen. There is always a strong eent e.f scandal around when the trusts are interested, and the shipbuilding trnst has an especially unsavory record. The naehefrller Fawraa.lr. John D. Rockefeller's attempt to Intimidate or coerce senator regarding anti trust legislation i the boldest
thing of Ihe kind ever attempted la this country. Ry his cifts to religions, educational ami charitable purposea Mr loekefeller has staon n that he can
be liberal in some good directions, but
in money and boslMtee matter? he seem to be devoid of moral sense. By sending such s dipateh as he did to several senators he showed hi.nself several kir.d e.f s fool. Re w as a fool to imagine the dispatch vrould accomplish it purpose, a fool to think It would not tieeome public, and a fool not to know that it would react strongly In favor of the legislation he wanted to defeat. lndianapo'.U Journal (rep.).
Renator Hanns ex slave bounty
diti.ms of the present have justitiell themselves in raisdng very pprechv
bly the average of life. Indifference to" hardahip is eenerally coincident with a ewer standard of charity ant humanity. There are no better men snd women now. perhaps, than ther. were in the old days, but there is a elevated social spirit, whack In benefiting humanity in ways that would have been thought unnecessary "in the brave days of old."
bill Is a very simple little tf:ur wnose first year's requirements would be $:K..(cio.OOn. It would make ihe exslave pe.pnlatiem the recipients of as heavy a bonus es the 1'nited States government ne.w gets from tariff customs. It certainly honld capture the enlored vole for Ihe senator for the 1IH owmnllaa st Panintobe.
APPEARANCES DECEITFUL.
nu Rak'i Talk ta Ihe Cat!
Tu ok HI Hook While Re Wm taleeav. fnele Kphraim bad fished in the lit tie river from boyhood, lnbiaoldaue the habit ..v. rmastered him. and l e ftsbrd on dai.y. notwithstanding there were, by popular consent, no more fish left "in the stream, relates the New York Times. i-j.h would bait 1 -is 1 eoi ond throw it iu. attend to the business in hand for a little while, and then go to sleep. He would sleep hours at a time, and sometimes all day. holding on to bia fishing pole frcui mere force of muscular habit. One iiay. while he was sitting thus, eetieettj unconscious of what was impending. big catfish swam down the stream from some mysterious hiding place, grabbed the hook with ravenous vigor, and started to sweep on down with the whole .1 1 fit. Rut the jerk, the swish, the oommotb.n. an. 11"'! Kph' muscles to a kind .f automatic action, before he awnk- . ned from his siumber. The muscles gave a jerk and landed the tfMieM
way back, 25 or 30 feet from the bank. Eph awoke, looked s round, ssw it struggling and flopping toward the river, got up, rubbed his eye in sleepy lewilderment. grablved the fish, sad while securing him by slipping a little willow through his gill. gave him s bit
of salutary arivice"tool heah. you nie varmint, von niu-sen' fink dts yefjb nigger's sllns aleep ef you does oome ei long and fin im wid 'i eyes shet monstus tight " Haw Triaiaal ( bollie -Aw. doneherno; trifles always seem to worry me. Ren 1 Vou always were an egotist
and thinVi'ig al-out yours. f.aaoia Iter fc Id
1 I
