Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 35, Number 121, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 October 1903 — Page 8
tftrticrof- Mwtliig ■us City Cmmiilsslmiers'- —r iKis/.j jiwmwn lAteaw’i VlNfc STREET IMPROVEMENT. ■MOTTO® fS' FGiRItBT Gl't'KN tti&t Commissioners of the Cityo/ Rensselaer, Indian#, D will meet at the council chamber in the court house in said city, at 9 o'clock #. pi., on the 15th day of October, JKJB, toaseess the coat# of cofi«tr»otiou,ofthvV>fH‘ Street improvement in said city. All persons interested in said improvement may appear before said Commissioners at time and place and have a hearing as tn the beuptlf or damages to their rwpeotive lots, tracts of land, or parcels of ground. The following parties have been reportd as benefited by the said improvement, as appears from the report of the City Commiatrionera; on fl le in office of City Clerk . <. . T | _ < ’ UU or OWNKB LOT BLOCK ADDITION TO RENSSELAER "fMI'VfV ( , • . J ~l John W. Paxton -Z— 1 i 24 • •• •• 2 24 .. .. a 24 .. 4 24 .. •• zzzzz:: 5 24 r •• •• . 6 * 4 1 - z z.* ? ’ 24 "ZZZZZ 8 24 t .. .. 5 24 .4 .. •• ~ ZZZZ 10 24 •• •• u 24 ‘I Jesse C. Gwin— - 12 24 “ •• 18 24 ” 14 I * Popkins .1 j 22 ’ ::'' :: '. :: :: •■ =■ t. I > z:izz ? 25 s •* “ .... r^T— "... 8 i Si- . I _ • I .r, David Howel# uiA.' 9’ | » 55 <».. <> -zrz±±z* » * " . » | g Z" • 1 111 3 ~ Tfr* g- 5? - 1 z. ?s I zzzzzz, si® ► ... .1 i X——— - a 4 g . g ——4 tal<lw« i John W. Paxton >5 f ® 1 g I ; >‘ .• MXU.-U— .-—-J <5 I X H xz/n -<*.r z :xcrj.:ai’ |a ® .r.id/iie.i i ' b William Basson Tmstee : * * 'ZZ-t. ftt-ni. •>- -• iZu 3Z3ZZZ 12 ® 44 13 ,» iß’ahey K. nt •■#•■'*• ” -»<• ' « ■ Nkncy K. Porter 'l-‘ ® ~ , u , «o I>l Ms 4 *1 « oi 1..,. ‘ !<!»'• ® |,n«. 10 • « -•> >’MI" -.!• <» , u - eaintc i .. f 4<> ’ S 3 mi n «< ■ dgj_‘ij.<xw4. M &/> ■ 88 •• 38 .HHiJrl/ t . ,4 n • 1 Elisabeth Parker 7 ® ‘ —r-f 11 ® I •• 13 ; 38 . ' , . JesseC. (hrin-......-. ...—. . 14 88 “ * M 15 88 I ’ ' ' '■ ■ ' ' #»!■:'’<■. . "■ 1 "-—rn —n - : —l . —; ; said improvement aa appears from their report fUed nr.::. ■ ■ ' • ; > ■ ■|< * .♦«.<fX* i ■/• Notice «f Meeting of City Commissioners. CEDAR STREET IMPROVEMENT. MfYTTrF TS HEREBY dIVEN that the City Commissioners of the City of as benettted by &> .rid citt ®k“ .port of the City Commissioners on file in my office of City Clerk. — 5— ————————— — BAMB <W OWMKB BLOCK ADDITION TO RENSSELAER -<■ ■■-- William H. War. » g Weeton'e ABnaKJHHaZ.;~izi:.:: 10 42 . Isaac & Mary A. Saidla • 42 Henry O. Harris —-.i-m 11/ Isaac R. Marion, west 45 feet 2 44 BlixaßeedeSofwWoC--.. 2 44 Hiram Day, east 90 feet of._.. 2 44 Hiram Day, west 85 feet of j 44 David T. Halstead, east 95 oSSidKatotf-'ZZZZZ: M # Leopold’s Ix>renz Hildebrand « *§ in ’ Sarah E Greenfield. j 1 2 10 William Smith 1 1® 'J. Chas. Morian Ciftr Cterfcof llpnsselaer, Ind., hereby certify the above and foregoing to be a trite full alid'eomplete copy of the City Commissioners report as to property beuefitted by said improvement as appears from their report filed in my office pn tjie 28th day of *^pt._l9o3. F 1 ■ i. ■ ' CHAS. MORLAN, City Clerk. SuiiZZ J 311TZ3 JA3H t BRSOj .<;// ! :.n /7 Z. '
Notice of Meeting of City Commissioneas, SUSAN STREET IMPROVEMENTS. Notice is hereby given that City Commissioners of the City of Rensselaer, Indiana will meet at the Council Chamber in the Court House in said City at 9 o'clock a. m. on the 15 day of tht 15th day of October, 1903, to assess the costs of the construction of Susan Street Improvement in said City. All persons interested in said improvement may appear before said Commissioners at such time and place and have a hearing as to the benefit or damages to their respective lots, tracts of land, or parcels of ground. The following parties havebaen reported as benefitted by the said improvement as appears from the report of the City Commissioners on file in office of City Clerk. KAMI OF OWNER LOT BLOCK ADDITION TO RENSSELAER ‘ ~ ~~~~ I | Rush & Warren « 24 Original Plat Albert R. Hopkins. 11 ® “ northerly 1J , ® School of Rensselaer • * •« 6 o Church of Christ » 7 ‘ Carrie fc John C. Porter—.... J ‘ Bruce K White— " I David Nowels 2 i JI Herman J. Alderding - *.— • 18 “ —6 18 J Dwigglns". Marcus A. Hemphill 18 I ,/ •• 15 | ... “ part of 18 . William P. Baker, part of— 10 1 OUT LOT§ No. Part of Sec. Section Tp. Range County Benjamin Harris 22 N.E.ofS.W. 30 6 Jasper Jacob Figelsbach 90 ‘‘ • “ •*1 ~ U <i u “ T« School City of Rens 87 <4 n , r i d (( << n (jJamosT.' Randle 76 “ u t , tl (i Joseph G. Jackson 61 “ t ~ u Evelyn J. J. Porter 63 “ ‘ u „ ■ ■ William P. Baker M .. „ t . „ > L. Willis 23 EjofN.V. . .. I. tfoas. Morlan City Clerk of Rensselaer, Ind. hereby certify the aboveand foregoing, to be a true full and complete copy of tbeCity Commissionersreport as to projarty benefited by said Improvement as appears from their report filed if on Hept/28, 1903. , CHAS.
LIBEL IN ENGLAND.
Wn. ».i 1< 1 1.;.. ji i t • ■ at Hard There to Give Cause For Actiona at Law. w Engfand'n libel law Isa terror to the defendanta A eborT tfme'ago 4 young playwright sold a piece to a London ..XQAi&ger and. drew .a small royalty fmehrWfiek, which was. paid <by check. jQnp, Week when the playwright prestated the check to the bank, for casi> ing ft was returned to him marked ‘‘No funds.” The playwright had the check framed and hung conspicuously in his study. He took pleasure In pointing It out to visitors and making biting comments until one day the manager’s lawyer called and told the young man that he was committing a serious libel on the manager, whereupon the cheek was taken down at once. Over In Englands the railway companies, or at least one of them, put up In the station placards bearing the names of passengers who had violated rules of the road? with addresses, tun nature of the offense and fines imposed. The offenders took the matter info eoUrt. and now* the placards show only the words opposite the offense, passenger.” 'lf frequently happens' that naipes flyen t 6 Villains and ridiculous characters in fiction' wilt duplicate in real life. ‘k‘ ‘certain English fioyfei had scene laid on the west coast of Africa, and ■'the vjilain of the book was a major 'W rae hrmyj supposed to be stationjefi ''ttieije.' 't'q the' iiovelist’p dismay there appeared day out of the unknown a real major, bearing the name of the' irhldip Of the'novel, who also fia.d been ’rtaiifined on the wOst coast pt W 'talfi the' unhappy author protested In the consequent action- that he had never* teen, or heard of the plaintiff. A Verdict for the lattey was given, with substantial damages. A Birmingham lawyer held that one Could libel a man effectually, enough by leaving out his name. He brought ah action against a local paper for persistently omitting his name from its reports of cases in which he professionally was engaged. Presumably he Imagined that the loss of the advertisement he would have obtained by his name repeatedly appearing was damage enough. v He was nonsuited, however. >
THE INDIANS PAID.
Whst the White Men Charged Them -j/ For Killing One Donkey. In “Reminiscences of Old Times In Tennessee” a story la told of the good faith and honor of a party of Chickasaw Indians. While hunting one fall they shot a donkey, mistaking the creature for a wild animat They sold the hide, and it finally came to the hands of John Barnes in Lipton. When the Chlckasaws returned to the region of Lipton for their annual hunt the next fall, Barnes Invited them to a shooting match, the prize to be the skin of a very rare anltnaL Thirty braves appeared at the contest, and one of them won thb prize. When he saw the skin, he turned It over and said: “Ha, ha, me kin him! Me shoot him! See!” And he pointed to the fatal bullet hole. Then Barnes told them that they had killed a donkey, a very useful animal, but he was sure that they had done it by mistake, believing it to be a wild animal.' 7
1 The Indians listened attentively to the white man’s words and then consulted together a few minutes. Finally they separated, each brave going to his pony, unhitching him and leading him to the spot where a gang of White men stood, Barnes in the midst of them. Then one of the Indians spoke: , ,( We sorry we kill donkey. We think he belong to the woods. We find him in cane. We think him wild. We sorry; now we pay. We take no white man’s boss, pony, nothing of white man. W T e honest. We have ponies, that’s all. Take pay.” And he motioned to the long line of ponies, held by their owners. “How many?” asked Barnes. “White man say,” returned the Indian, “take plenty.” The honor of the red men was not equaled by the white men, for,' be It recorded to their shame, they took from the Chlckasaws 35 ponies to pay for the accidental killing of one donkey. •’
Your Canary.
Don’t forget to give your canary- the best of water and seed every day. See that ,he has a good fish bone. Clean his cage every day. Keep him out of the hot sun and the glare of night lights and yet let him have sunshine. Talk to him; talk to him with a kind voice. Let him out of the cage occasionally. We give crumbs of bread soaked in milk, lettuce, cliickweed, a little piece of egg, a little fruit, a nut and lots of good things and let him cat or reject as he pleases. Remember he is a prisoner in confinement, dependent on you every day for health and life, and constantly strive to make him happy. A little 10 cent looking glass will add greatly to his Take care that neither sun nor other light reflected shall dazzle him.
The Height of Clouds.
- To determine the height of clouds an observer at bach of two stations a mile or more apart measures the angle and altltudb of some point of a cloud, the identity of which is ascertained from conversation by telephone, while synchronism in the observation is secured by the beating of electric pendulums. This Is the method used at the celebrated observatories at Upsala, in Sweden. * - •*
Why He Growled.
Hoax -I saw you at the theater last night You were, Id the dog seat Xoax—Sir, what do you mean? Hoar—Weren't you sitting la K—•! -PhHrMphW Record. , z / ~. . *
* ths side aisles of the chapel, leaving the -center., alstos Jor the officers andrtiieir famines, <eays •Dr. djww Townsend Brady Ju fUndpr Tops'ls and TertCa.” / When the offering was. the two,, boys, charged with the duty :of passing, the plates.,did not make the al|ghtest efforttocinculatethemamotog. the cadets, for we. never had sny tndney. They would walk rapidly down the aisle and then come deliberately up the middle, gathering thence what they could. One Sunday the chaplain announced that he would preach a missionary sermon the next Sunday. It did not have the ordinary effect in emptying the church, for we were obliged to go as usual. During the week it occurred to the bright, mind of a senior, or first class man, who is now a prominent New York financier, that it would be well for the cadets to make an offering. So be sent out to the bank on Saturday morning and succeeded" In smuggling in over 300 copper cents, which he distributed 1 cent per boy to the Episcopal battalion. We stationed a strong, long armed man on the, outside seat Of the first pew in each aisle. . nt<,. . The chaplain made a, piteous, appeal for pennies even, and when the ajstoaIsbed cadets who passed the plates started on,their perfunctory promenade the strong, one armed meq aforesaid .promptly relieved them of the; xnetal, plates, and .each one dropped. In .one copper 1 cent,.witjb .an ominous crash, and- then defiberately.ihanded the ptete tp the,, next zboy.i who, did the same thing, ,Ik rained copper cents,for ,about ten minutes. The chaplain, was.drepdifully. disconcerted, the officers fidgeted and looked I aghast.. Borne>!of: them laughed,., and the cadets 1 preserved i • deadly,, solemnity. The affair waa a striking.success.,> . ~ ,n < < .i
A Pigeon as Valet to a Crow.
, “Ton) was the name given to,a lordly young crpw t ”, says Florence M. Kingsley, in, The Ladles’ (Home JnurnaL “Beauty was a snow white pigeon ,of about the crow’s age, with whom /h# was reared. Just how It came about we never knew, but we soon discovered that Beauty regularly acted as maid of all work to Tom., She fetched and carried morsels of food at bis imperious command, and one of her unvarying duties was the preening of her master’s feathers. Tom was very much of a dandy. « His coal black plumage always appeared perfectly dressed and shining, but the arduous labor of his toilet was performed for him twice every day by the humble and affectionate pigeon. “Our fine gentleman would come In from a roll in the dust or a dip In tha fountain and, seating himself upon a certain railing, utter a short, sharp calL Instantly Beauty would descend to his side and begin her task, fluttering anxiously from side, to side as she worked, drawing each shining black feather carefully out to Its full length in her pink bill, Tom megnwhlle dozing luxuriously, with closed eyes ( aftefr the manner of the complacent patron of a skillful barber. If Beauty unfortunately pulled a feather too hard, a squawk and a sudden peck Informed her of her mistake.” . 1
His Spelling System.
Dobbq met his friend Turner Jn the tram. They were bqth going to Birmingham and stopped at the same hotel. Turner registered his name “E. K. Phtbolognyrrb.” ; Dobbs, noticing IL exclaimed, “Here, what are yon .using such a foreign, outlandish namefor?” f • . M “j. am not, assuming any foreign name,” replied Turner. “What kind of a name is it, then?” “That is my identical old name, and; It is English too—pronounced ‘Turner.’ ” “I can’t see how you make ‘Turner* out of those 13 letters; besides, what la your object in spelling that way?” asked Dobbs. “Well, you see, nobody ever noticed my name on the register when I wrote it since I commenced writing it ‘Phthologynrrh’ I set them all guessing. It is, as I said before, English spelling. ‘Phth’ Is the sound of *t* in ‘phthisis,’ ‘olo’ is the sound of *uF In ‘colonel,’ ‘gn’ there is the “n’ in ‘gnat,’ ‘yrrh’ is the sound of ‘er* In ‘myrrh.’ Now, if that doesn’t spell ‘Turner* what does It spell?”—London Standard.
Optimism.
When the optimist was dispossessed and thrown, along with bis household impedimenta, into the cold streeL he chuckled furiously. “Why do you laugh, my friend?” inquired a passerby. “Because I have just now been emancipated from toil,” replied the optimist. “For years my life has been one long struggle to keep the wolf from the door. But now that I have been deprived of the door I no longer am compelled to toil. Sweet, Indeed, are the uses of adversity!” Then the optimist walked off, whistling gayly, into the sunshlhe.—New Yot£ Sun. •
A Task.
To be boucsL.to be kind, to earn a little and to spend less, to make, upon the whole, a family happier by bls presence, to renounce where that shall be necessary and not to be Imblttered, to keep a few friends, but these without capitulation; above ail, on the sadbe grim, conditions to keep, friends with | himself—here Is a task for all that a man has of fortitude and delicacy.— .Robert Louis Stevenson.
Most Curious Thing.
Mrs. Qplzzer (who want* to knew everything)—Now, what do you conto >e tht most curious thing you ever saw, professor? ( „ 7; , , ; z , f , ;i j i Professor Trotter—A woman, madam. I jiu oa wa «'»/rc t ‘ Jaatfia s<h art a>ji- ;. • - ■ ■
Wom en and Their Troubles.
Once upon a time two women wert ,»nd "One was felling her tale pf woe the other was very impatient to tell hers. !? Finally; after several unsuccessful attempts, the managed to tell her story, amflaa She himjtoa last say she much ph ■the tale of the first consequence of which the first jmpakes w^s, made quite unhappy. ■/ j® i ' IH/j Moral. Some women we more bthers beciww the others have rnoretronbles thaiMbey have -New Yorkßeril&T IT; < v . .
Mark Twain on Lying.
Why will yau humbuiffourselves with that foolish notion tbathf> lie is a He except a spoken one? What is she difference between lying with your eyes and lying with your mouth? There Is none, and if you would reflect a moment you would see so. .There Isn’t a human being that doesn’t t*jl>gross of lies every dav - Twain in Harper’s. %
Calculating.
Elderly Adorer—l am slxty-nlne and have $300,000. ' r 9 Fair Young Thing—l’ll give yoq,£li answer the day after' tomorrow. I' wSF have to figure it all out in the mortuary tables; 'i /us. to r-i vfil ) r
Costly Transaction.
“De mule I stoled wuz, pajyi wptb j $20,” said the Georgia darky, “en, bless me, es de lawyer didn’t charge SSQ tpr prove me Innercent!” —Atlanta ConstlfnHrtn
A STRANGE LAKE.
Tke PecrollaritlM of *-Bed> of’VFatee' In Australia. Lake George is situated about four miles from th'e railway statioa at Bungendore, Australia, and has for many years engaged the attention, of scientific men by reason of the singular and Inexplicable phenomena connected with It The estimates of its size vary considerably according to circumstances, but when moderately full about 20 by 7 miles will be, foupd tolerably correct’ At either end the land Is fully 100 feet 1 above the highest recorded surface of the lake, which possesses no known outlet although It is fed by numerous mountain creeks. , ( The lake was discovered by a bushman in 1820 and was known to ths blacks as the “big water.” It was then supposed <0 form the source of a river having Its mouth on the south coast but subsequent visitors were much perplexed at the manner In which the blacks avoided the lake, of which they appeared to entertain a superstitious dread, one aged aboriginal stating she had seen it all covered with trees, another explaining that the whole of the water sunk through the bottom and disappeared, while others remembered the lake only as a series of small ponds. During the following 20 years considerable variations were noted In the depth and extent of the lake. In 1841 the lake became partially dried up, the moist portions being simply grassy swamps. A few months later large numbers of sheep were pastured ip the bed of the lake, but fresh water had td be carted for the use of the shepherds, that of the lake being too gait fpr human consumption. The place remained more or less dry until 1852, the year of the great floods in that part of the colony, when it agjdn became filled, with an average depth of nine feet. Since then the surface level of the lake has varied considerably, but the bed has never been so dry as in former years. There are indications that many hnhdreds of years ago the lake covered a far larger area than any yet recorded, remains of trees over 100 years old being found in spots formerly under water. The saline character of the lake 1? the more remarkable by reason of its being fed by pure and sparkling fresh water streams.
ENGLISH MONARCHS.
Death Often Unkind In tlje Manner of Their Takln* Off. Of the monarchs who have reigned over England since the days of the Norman conquest nearly one-quarter of the number have met violent death. William I was killed by a fall from his horse, William II was shot while hunting, whether by accident or design Is still one of the unsolved problems of history; Richard I. was killed by a shaft from a crossbow while besieging the city of Cbaluz, in France; Richard II was murdered in Pontefract castle, Edward II was murdered in Berkley castle, and Edward V In Ithe Tower of London, Richard 111 was kiled on the battlefield of Bosworth and Charles I had his head cut off In London. Elizabeth’s death was hastened by remorse that she had ordered the execution of Essex, and her sister Mary sickened and died soon after the loss of Calais, declaring that the name of the city would be found after death written on her heart. The death of Edward Ill’s son, the Black Prince, caused the aged monarch to die of grief. So, after the loss of his son in the White Shifi, Henry I was never seen to smile again and lived only a short time. Henry VI and George 111 were insane during the latter yeots of their reigns and finally died from what in these days would be called paresis. Charles 11, Henry mt, Ed-i ward IV arid ddofce tv hastened their deaths by the dissipated and sensual •lives they lived. Only two monarchs died of that great national scourge, consumption; they were Edward VJ and Henry VIL Queen Anne’s death waj due as much an r anything; elbf to overfeeding. Only two monafeM
MOVING PICTURES.
DUCED UPON THE FILMS. Tke Amo*>t oJ^Moveme JT Be b*|o fWfw tures,” Bald an expert operator in that lifie to a New Orleans Times-Democrat reporter.,.“is .the generally prodmreMa to the time they occupy iwhlleKoffi nejackeen. ,Wiat fsAfowo aMTW mlm** is Qo stet long. It Is used almost entirely f o|r domic scenes, trick pictures ’ and other effects, that are got up in the studios of the experts who make them a' specialty, i isteri thefitei* goer hta ■den them, and I will venture the assertion that the averafefe’man will declare they take at least three or four xuinutes in passing before the eye. Aji B<#eUff less than xtjejnuftwe. *Tou can easily figure it .out folTrourself.. The qrdlgary 50 foot-film of the kind to VMM I 1 J ft the reprowMg nMcMnrWrthe rate of 16 pkM tures to the second. Each picture ia| makes the 16 measure exactly one. fort, to.edgejt Jp btherkvortis/ the fllm Wi®*!*/*** *• feet, sOi Sdcorias. l What gites it the effect of; taking up, so much more time is the! Immense lot of action that Is usually' crowded into the brief period it is in, view. # fitil the moving picture was inrentea < 'I don’t think anybody haxC the least Idea how much could be done' ■in -SO -secetids. <-Tt enough to turn around in, yet when the experts began to study its possibilities they found it was ample for hundreds of little pictorial comedies that have sine? delighted all over the worlds <l'- I 1 i “It is entirely a iqattef cjf Rehearsal. A subject is 'selected, generally calling for from three to four people, and svery detall of the ‘business* or action is carefully worked but ip advance. Suppose, for that a comic burglary- is the topic. The business, in skeleton, might run something like this: 'Old gentleman dozing in parlor; enter burglar; old gentleman awakes; burglar hides; enter policeman, searches the room, collars old gent; they fight and roll on the floor while burglar tuddenly and jleaps out of the window That doesn’t sound particularly side splitting, but in the hands of intelligent comedians it can be made really very funy. The all essential thing is to crowd it into 50 seconds, and to that end each bit of action is carefully timed and made to fit into each other bit like so many well geared cogwheels. The old gentleman’s startled yawn, the burglar’s glance around the room and every step, movement and gesture from beginning to end is calculated with the utmost nicety, and at last after dozens 1 of rehearsals the actols attempted befdrelbe recording machine. If everybody is lucky, it goes through on schedule time, but the slightest hitch Is fatal, and if one occurs the film is spoiled,* add they must try all over again. JNo wonder it seems Impossible to future spectators that so much could transpire in 50 seconds. “But some of 4be- most telling effects in composition pictures.” continued the operator, “have been the result of accident and were entirely unpremeditated. That was the case with a film that I had a hand in preparing and that afterward made a tremendous hit and proved to be one of the best sellers ever put on tbq market. In getting up the picture our principal purpose was to introduce a large and very intelligent bulldog I owned at the time, and we sketched out a simple little scene in which a tramp steals a pie from a kitchen window, is pursued by the dog and Is last seen trying to scale the back fence with the animal hanging to his coattails. “The training of the dog was the main trouble, but I finally taught him to lay hold of anything red, and we sowed a big piece of flannel as a mark to the back of our tramp’s coat Red photographs black, so it couldn’t be seen in the pictures, and after a good many rehearsals the dog learned to dash out at exactly the right moment and nail the marauder, whose cue was then to rush for the fence and consume the remaining time in making an apparently desperate effort to scramble over the top. At last we got everything all ready, gave the word and started the record machine to tak4 the picture.’ “Immediately the little comedy began. The tramp appeared, around stealthily, saw thevple, hooked ♦ It and was having a feast when out sprang the bulldog and seized him by the coattails. He thereupon sprinted to the fence and was about to carry out the rest of the programme when, to pur consternation, the boards gave way, - and be came down bang on top of the dog.. The fllm bad abput ten seconds to. run,, ami It was occupied in recording Otoe of the liveliest that ever happened. There was no hippodrome about IL Both parties were out for ! blood. When the fence fell, the bull- , dog bad promptly transferred himself from the tramp’s coattail to the tramp’s calf, while that unfortunate person snatched up a broomstick apd tried to nrt >inl lotaa over and pot about 50 times as much action and , animation in the last ten seconds as 4 had been crowded into the preceding ’ 40. We finally pulled them apart, and ’ it was nob until the negative was * that we realized what la prize we < had accidentally secured. That ear- 4 nest and Impromptu wind ,up basxffii- 1 vuised audiences all ovef CCrfintadma 1 and made fully av l ™ 4 * * hit in Eo- | rope as ltdld at home?*
