1.00 a Year, In Advance.
'FOR COUNTRY, FOR GOD, AND EOR TRUTH."
Single Copy, 6 Cents.
VOL. XI.
PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1900.
NO. 14.
V
BILL A HP'S LETTKK.
It looks like every township and
. county and section has got something
peculiar to itself that is valuable for
human purposes and helps to sustain
the people and makes them prosper
ous. 1 was ruminating about this be
cause I have just visited Canton, a
small retired village of 2,000 people.
I have known Canton for fifty years
and have a good reason for remem
bering it. Soon after I was married
my father-in-law, Judge Hutchins,
asked me to ride over there and de
: ,.' liver some important legal papers to
the clerk of the court. I was to ride
his line saddle horse, "Lee," and he
told me where to stay all night. So
I kissed my pretty young wife goodby
and made an early start for the thirty
five mile journey. I was a good rider
and Lee was a free traveler. Up hill
and down hill and on the level
stretches ho never broke his easy pace
makine about seven miles an hour
and it was Hist twelve o'clock when
reached Canton. While I was feeding
the horse and rubbing him down I
began to think how lonesome it would
be to stay there all night ana now
lonesome my young and pretty wife
would be all solitary and alone by
herself and nobody with her to com
V fort her, I looked at Lee and he
i too. looked like he would rather go
'';? back-to where he came from. So
about 1 o'clock I remounted and set
"5 ,. his ears toward Lawrenceville. lie
'seemed all right for many miles, but
slacked up when a few miles from
home and we eot there just as the
family were sitting down to supper
I saw my wife's smile of pleasure and
I saw. too. the judge's iook oi sur
prise and displeasure. lie rose from
the table and went out to look after
his favorite horse. I then began to
. realize that -seventy miles in a day
,was a long ride for a horse and that I
had done wrong. Next morning
wns nn bv dav break to look after
' Lee. lie was" all right and as game
. as ever. The judge never said any
thinir hard, but he looked grieved
lie. too. went out to look after his
horse and when he came back said
"T reckon I had better give you that
horse or never let you ride him again
for if vou are to kill him I would
rather he would be yours than mine
. That is all he said, and it was enough
Some time after that he did give nim
to me and he was the gamest, proud
est and best horse I ever owned. But
I never rode him seventy miles in a
dav anv more. 1 never think of Can
ton now but what the memory of that
episode conies over me. Well, I
would ride a hundred miles in a day
now to reach my home and my wife
but it would be on a railroad.
Canton is the county seat' of Chero
kee a large county, that was the
home of the Cherokee Indians until
1836. The name came from Chera
which means fire, and the Cherokees
wero, known amonc the tribes as the
prophets of divine fire. There were
several Indian towns in this region
and their chiefs were, known as Stop
and-Chicken and Laughing Gal.
The region around Canton is rich
in minerals. Gold and copper and
iron and marble abound in her hills
Some of these have enriched many
men and the pursuit of them have
ruined many more, but lately new
processes of mining have made the re
sults more certain and now northern
nnd Enclish capital has given fresh
vigor to the work - of digging, crush
ing, quarrying and reducing the ores
and finishing the marble. .JUarbie
work is especially being extended and
now o names being opened. I was
told that only a few. years ago Judge
Gober and a few associates bought -a
marble, quarry not far away for $3,000
and were recently offered $25,000 for
it and refused it. The Georgia Mar
ble Finishing Company have planted
near the depot very extensive works
. that employ over 100 hands, all white
and all Georgians -and most all of
them young men. Mr. Brady, a very
courteous Boston gentleman, is the
mnnflo'er and said he was pleased to
sav that these Georgia boys were just
as ready to learn the art of working
and finishing marble and just as qtuck
and skillful as any he ever controlled.
I watched them at work in the diner
ent departments and was proud to see
their progress. This is a large plant
f the marble was seen in all its
stages from the great blocks just from
Ji,o mian-ips t.n the' most beautuul of
Tnished monuments ana columns ana
-J,--
nildinsr blocks. .There were hun
dreds of them and were all to fill or
ders, principally from the north and
J.st. It takes forty-eight hours to
n the gang saws through one of
Also huere blocks. The saws are of
e hardest steel, but have no teeth.
iiev are moved rapidly by steam
Slower and work through sand and
" ' ' water. Some of the men are working
with mallet and chisel and some turn
ing marble in turning lathes and
some are polishing on the horizontal
planes of immense revolving wheels
that are flooded with water and sand.
Everything there is up to date and is
a great improvement on the old
methods. "Up to date" is now an
expression that is heard everywhere
concerning machinery. I heard it at
Ensley at the iron and stell plants
and I heard it in the cotton mills of
South Carolina. All machinery now
must be up to date or it will be re-
jected. The pay roll to the workmen
in this one marble plant is $500 a
week, and most of this is spent
in Canton. Just so it is with the gold
mines not far away. The gold min
ing companies are making money by
up to date processes and Canton gets
a good share of that. It is now cer
tain that a cotton mill is to be built
right away, for an order has been
given for the looms and spindles, all
up to date, and as soon as the spring
opens the work of building the mill
will begin.
- Mining for gold and silver is,
reckon, the oldest industry in the
world outside of agriculture. Moses
tells us that in the Garden of Eden
there was gold, and it was good. Gold
and silver very soon began to be a hi
metallic currency. Abraham bought
a burying ground with 400 shekels of
silver that was current money with
the merchant and it is remarkable
that a silver shekel was worth 50 cents
and a gold shekel1 was worth. $10
That isent very far from 16 to 1. May
be we had better fall back on those
ancient scriptural relations of the
metals and make ours 20 to 1. They
bad both silver and gold in great
abundance, for Zachanah saith
"They heaped up silver as the dust
and gold as the mire in-the streets
And Moses saith Abraham was rich in
silver and gold.
In the long ago I used to know the
good people of Canton, but they hav
all passed over the river. The Mo
Afees, McConnells, Wheelers Gris
hams, Tates, Brooks, Rusks, Mullina-
and Dyers. Some of their sons and
daughters are there still and gave me
generous welcome, and I was pleased
to pat their little ones on the head
and say be a good boy and mind your
mamma.
I saw the old time-honored Canton
home of Joe Brown, the place where
he lived when, like Cincinnatus, he
was called on by a committee and in
formed that he had been nominated
for governor.
Old Joe made his start right her
in Canton teaching school. Years
ago I met General Ira Foster and he
said : "Yes, I knew Joe's parents be
tore he was born. They were very
poor. His Aunt Sidney did my wash
ing when I was a young man living
in Dahlonega. Joe cultivated a little
patch of hillside land with a pair of
bull calves and every Saturday hauled
something to town to sell and take
back something to the family. In
1839 I was riding to Canton in
buggy and overtook a young man
walking in a very muddy lane. He
had a striped bag hanging over his
shoulder and looked tired, l asked
him if he would not get-up and ride
with me." He looked down , at his
shoes and said he was too muddy
But I insisted and he broke on
splinter from a rail and cleaned the
worst ot the mud oft and got in.
learned from him that he was the
same Joe Brown " and was going to
Canton to get something to do. And
he did. They made him up a school
and he taught it. I have kept my eye
on him for forty years and he is still
a wonder to me.
As I eurveyed the time-worn premises
I ruminated on his eventful life. How
he rose and rose and rose again and
never fell. Everything that Midas
touched turned into gold and juet so
every political eilort that Joe urown
made was a Success.
I recalled his" long controversy with
Bob Toombs and how finally he de
nounced Toombs in the press as a liar
and a scoundrel and Toombs sent
friend to ask him if his church relations
would prevent him from accepting
challenge, and old Joe replied: "Go
tell him to try me," and Toombs never
sent it.' I recalled the time when Hen
ry Grady was discussing with Toombs
the advantage or disadvantage of
a young man having a collegiate edu
cation and said: "There were some very
great and successful men who never
had .any education to speak of. There
was Patrick Henry and Henry Clay and
Tom Benton and there was Joe Brown,
who was so poor in his youth he had to
plow a bull." "
"Plowed a bull, you say," said
Toombs. "I never heard that of him,
but if it was bo you may set that down
to his credit, Henry, but it was a dis
grace to the bull."
But I am pleased to remember that
these two great and notable men made
friends before they died. Old Father
Time is a good doctor and mellows ua
all down. Bill Arp,
liev. J. W. Lee Seek to Withdraw.
Greensboro, March 16. It is learn
ed that West Market Street Methodist
church has taken no official action in
regard to Rev. J. W. Lee, the Irish
evangelist, who was reported to have
recently fell from grace in Washington
City. The matter will hardly be taken
up until the next meeting of the Quar
terly Conference, which has jurisdiction
in the case. The pastor ha on file a
letter from Mr. Lee asking for a with
drawal from" the church and ministry.
This letter was written when the story
first leaked out in Washington and
reached Greensboro a day ahead of the
eport.
She What is the correct, translation
of the motto of that lovely ring you
gave me? He Faithful to the last.
She The last! How horrid. And
you've always told me before that I was
the very fir it.
PROPOSED CIIANGK IN TUB AMEND
MENT DISCUSSED IN CONVKKSA
TION BETWEEN FARMER
AND BUSINESS MAN.
Farmer. "1 see from the newspa
pers there is some ta'k about the Leg
lslature at its adjourned, session in
June amending the 4th and 5th sec
tions so that even a Republican Court
by a partisan decision could not so
construe them as to declare one sec
tion unconstitutional without strik
ing out the other section."
Business Man. "Yes, that has
been practically agreed upon, and
when the Legislature meets it is cer
tain it will amend these sections. It
is perfectly clear from the Amend
ment itself that the Legislature would
not have passed one of these sections
without the other and that thepeopl
would not ratify either without the
other, and the courts cannot fail to
see in the Amendment itself this in
tent of the Legislature and the peo
rple. Under these circumstances any
lawyer would tell you it would be the
bounden duty of the courts to carry
out this clear intent of the people and
either uphold both sections or strike
both down. For the courts not to do
this would destroy government by the
people and set up in its place govern
ment by the courts. But the Rep.ub
licans are trying to scaro the unedu
cated whites by threatening that their
courts will either not see this intent
of the people or, seeing it, for parti
san reasons, will overlook it and so
construe the Amendment as to take
from them their votes.
"To remove all fears and doubts or
the suspicion of a doubt in the mind
of any white man, the Democrats
when the Legislature meets, will write
this intent of the Legislature and the
people in the Amendment itself, and
thereby make , it impossible for the
most partisan Republican court to
strike out one of these sections with
out striking: out both of them. It is
understood that the Legislature will
do this by putting the 4th and 5th
sections in one section and then add
a provision to that section providing
that if any part of the Amendment
shall become or be declared uncon
stitutional or void the whole of
it
shall at once become null and void
and of no effect.
"With that plain expression of the
will and intent of the Legislature and
the people,, no court can possibly up
hold a part of the Amendment with
out upholding the whole, or strike
out a part without striking out the
whole. As I said before, the Demo
crats are going to do this, not because
the Amendment as it now stands
does not fully protect every unedu
cated white man in his vote, but to
prevent and remove any possible
doubts caused by the Republican
threat to disfranchise uneducated
white people through a partisan de
cision of a Republican court."
Farmer. "I see Butler and his
Caucasian say that this change would
not do any good, because it would be
merely an instruction to the court
Business Man. "O, well, nothing
will satisfy Butler and the Caucasian
For a long time they said the Amend
ment would have been all right if the
Legislature had put the two sections
together, and they pretended the
Democrats had purposely separated
them to disfranchise whites. Now,
when it is proposed to put them to
gether, they say that won't do any
good. The truth is, Butler and the
Caucasian were simply trying to get
up a scare-crow, and they thought
they had one. No one knows better
than Butler and the Caucasian that
their talk about instructing the court
is simply nonsense. Any body of or
dinary sense, though not a lawyer,
can see that there is no attempt to
instruct the court, but simply to de
clare and express the intent or the
Legislature and the people. But
aside from that there . is nothing in
Butler's point, for everybody under
stands that in making a deed or a
will, while the maker cannot instruct
the court how it shall construe it, yet
he can express his intent clearly in
words and the court must construe it
according to his intent so expressed
Nothing is more common than for a
deed or will to contain a condition,
upon the happening of which the
whole or any part thereof shall become
void, as for instance, if a widow mar
ries, etc.
"Now, suppose with this proviso in
the Amendment the court should say
we will strike out ithe grandfather
clause and stop right there; then in
stantly the balance of the Amend
ment would become void and inoper
ative, because the proviso, which is a
part of the educational clause as well
as the grandfather clause, all the bal
ance of the Amendment shall instant
ly become void and of no effect."
Mr. J. R. Holland, a former cashier
of the Merchants' and Farmers' Na
tional Bank of Charlotte, is again a
free man, and is now probably on his
way home. His term, lees the reduc
tion allowed for good behavior, expired
Thursday, 15th, having been five years,
less three months. Mr.. Holland's
friends expect him to-morrow night.
Remember that nothing is ever done
beautifully which is done in rival-
ship, nor nobly which is done in
pride.
CARING FOR SMALLPOX.
Judge W. H. Kller Give Ilia Experi
ence With a Case at IIU House.
Greensboro Record.
On the 18th day of January just past,
One of the inmates of my bouse was
taken with a high fever, with great
aching in his bones, and some cough,
with constipation, a coated tongue, a
bad breath, weak sight and sore throat.
The physician who was called pro
nounced the case lagrippe and the suf
ferer proceeded to bear his fever and
pain with fortitude until the night of
the 22nd, when counseling physician
pronounced the eruption, now two days
old and profusa, the smallpox, and the
health authorities proceeded to impound
the well with the sick and tacked up a
yellow pasteboard card on the side of
the house on which was printed the
word, Smallpox, and vaccinated all
other members of the family.
This gave the enemy five or six days
the start on the remaining members of
the family with the choice of ground
and an army of germs to begin the fray
Our first question was what shall we do?
You want the answers.
1. This is a real case of smallpox as
it ordinarily appeamn town cr country,
2. None of the steps taken are to be
deemed unimportant, least of all is this
article to be deemed an advertisement
or mere personal news item.
3. The patient was at once isolated,
put in a confortable room by himself
ani provided with all the remedies used
by the family and with further remedies
as follows: Vaseline, about one gill;
glycerine, one pint; pure olive oil, one
pint. His nurse was not with him at
all. Kindness is wasted by exposure
The patient is to burn his underclothes
at every change, and does so regardless
of cost, and at the end must burn his
bed and boil his sheets and thoroughly
fumigate every other thing in his room.
Sulphur willdo. Weused formaldehyde
.gas. The patient when peeled off and
clean changes in. an unoccupied room
and then disinfects that rooni-.v .
4. The family, to begin the straggle,
are all vaccinated, old and young. The
children haye remained with the father
five days alreadyj both day and night.
Separate and keep them apart. This is
real affection. Put your fumigating
pan, with your sulphur, by the patient 8
door. Wet clothes with carbolic acid
and bang by patient's door. Hang wet
clothes all over the bouse and in th
kitchen. ' Putin plenty of carbolic acid,
and have patient do the same in his
room. Keep this up all the time. Three
pints of carbolic at id ougbt to run
through the full sixteen days.
5. Take cream of tartar by the pound
and mix one ounce to one pint of boil
ing water, haye all the house uee it free
ly. They will relish it as long as the
poison stays with them.
6. 'The assafoetida 5 grain pill taken
three times a day, we found quite useful
7. Darby's Prophylactic iuid is a
very useful assistant and germ kider
Wash hands and feet in water, to which
vou may add a teaspoouful or more of
this antiseptic.
8. Formolid Wampole's Antiseptic
Solution is within itself and alone re
garded by physicians as a sufficient
protection to themselves, it is an ex
cellent gargle for the patient to be
used one part Formalid and five or ten
parts water. It is the best possible
disisfectant for hair, whiskers and
woolen garments on the person of
nurses and attendants.
Let me put further stress on the use
of sulphur. I would use a tumbler full
in a day at each fumigating psn right
in the hall or dining room. The doctor
smiles and says, "not necessary, make
you cough," but none of these things
are unnecessary if you are fighting the
monster for your own wife and loved
ones, von i lei anyooay iooi you.
The smallpox is the rattle snake among
the germ diseases but the first case in
your home is always the copperhead
and mother of the former. When on
the praries this writer has run on the
rattlesnake without club or wepon and
was obliged to run or fight. In that
case he has distinct memory of the
latter alternative, and jumping on the
beast with hightopped boots crushed the
life out of the monster. We southern
people ninst fight smallpox the same
way stamp it out.
The sixteenth day will release all the
household on the above terms only
comply with the terms.
Let me insist that there is smallpox
in North Carolina, and plenty of it. To
deny it is to encourage delay in vaccin
ation and final dullness in trade. Best
own it and stamp it out. It will remain
in the country several years unless
people agree upon it.
The writer has briefly recited his own
course in a real old-fashioned case of
smallpox, horns and all if you please,
and his pen cannot describe the abject
misery of the patient he refers to while
under duress. Patient is now well and
at his usual place of bubiness. House
has been cleaned, overhauled and fu
migated; family has been spared further
disturbance from the enemy, and this
article is written simply to Bhow others
how to succeed in the same way under
similar circumstances.
W. H. Eller'. .
Greensboro, N. C.
.What we like determines what we
are, and to teach taste ia lnevuaoiy to
form character.
Beware of the man with half-eht
eyes, lie s not dreaming.
LORD ROBERTS ENTERS.
Urftlah. Flajj Now Waves Over Free
Stale Capitol.
Baltimore Sun, lGth
Lord Roberts has occupied Bloemfon
tein, and when the news reached Lon
don last night there was great reioicing
The occupation of the Orange Free State
capitol is considered there to make an
epoch in the campaign, though it is felt
that the severest test of the British
troops is yet to come, when the rugged
iransvaal border is reached.
The entry of Lord Roberts into the
town was opposed but slightly. There
was firing for a short time by a small
body of Boers, who soon retired. The
main body of them, including the army
of about 12,000 which was recently at
Abraham's kraal, northwest of Bloem
fontem, is believed to . have retired
further north.
It is Btated that the Orange Free State
seat of government has been removed
to Kroonstadt, 125 miles north of
Bloemfontein and 145 miles south of
Pretoria. Kroonstadt is described as
well situated for defense, an advantage
m which Bloemfontein is particularly
lacking.
Lord Roberts in his dispatch an
nouncing the occupation says it was ac
complished "by the help of God and by
the bravery of her Maiesty'8 soldiers.'
He also says that a number of the local
officials met him two miles from the
town and presented to him the keys of
the public orhces. The British flag was
raised over the capit jl. Lord Roberts
refers to "Mr. Steyn, late President."
This is regarned as significant of an in
tention to set up a British government
for the Free State. It is again reported
that there are serious dissensions among
the htee Staters.
The Boers along the north bank of
the Grange river are now caught be
tween two British forces. It is believed
that an effort will be made to capture
them.
London, March 15. At precisely
1:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, a Un
ion Jack, espeoailly made for this pur
pose by Lady Roberts, was hoisted over
the Presidency at Bloemfontein amidst
the acclamation of the commander-in-chief's
battalions, in which curiously
enough, the Orange Free State burghers
appear to have joined with remarkable
heartiness. The opposition to the en-
tiy of the British troops into the capital
was insignificant. Boers were found
occupying a few hills south of the place,
but a few shells drove them off and at
10 in the morning some newspaper cor
respondents entering the town, found
Mr. Frazer and other officials and
guided them to where Lord Roberts
stood on top of a hill, waiting fir them.
As spokesman, Air. razer asked pro
tection for life and property and sur
rendered the keys. Lord Rot erts, ac
companied by his staff, rode at the head
of a cavalcade a mile long to the Presi
dency, receiving an ovation throughout
the route, culminating in a remarkable
demonstration at the market square.
Reaching the gevernmeut buildings,
Lord Roberts took possession of the city
in the name of the t2ueen and then re
paired to the Presidency, where the
ceremony of hoisting the Union Jack
ended foreyer, according to universal
opinion here, the Boer government of
the Free S ate During his progress
through the town Lord Roberts stopped
and ordered the instant replacement of
goods which were being looted from the
artillery barracks by Kaffirs, thus giving
the populace an earnest assurance of
the treatment they might expect from
the victors.
President Steyn fled to Kroonstadt
without replying to Lord Roberts' de
mand for his surrender, and the com
mander-in-chief remarked afterwards,
during the course of a conversation
while breakfasting at the farm of Presi
dent Steyn's brother, that the ex-Preei-dent
had become a nonenity. The
British troops, with the exception of
thoee necessary to police the town, re
main outside.
New York, March 14 A dispatch
fmm President Kruger to the New York
Evening Journal dated Pretoria, March
13. 8 p. m., via Berlin, says :
The burghers will only cease fight
ing with Heath. Oar forces are return
ing in good order to our first line of de
fense on our own soil. The Natal cam
paign was longer in our favor than we
expected. The British will never reach
Pretoria. The burghers, Steyn, Joubert
and myself, as well as all the others,
are united. There are no differences
God help us."
100-Foot Whale at Carolina Beach.
Wilmington Messenger.
Captain McGee, who is in charge of
the property on Carolina Beach, report
ed to Captain Harper, of the steamer
Wilmington yesterday that on last Fri
day he saw a monster whale playing
along the beach. He watched it for
several hours while it swam about the
water froT""'L '" ' vht:i time between
the ol "-.'irrl the
c'uV
r
STATU NEAVS.
Pres. J. C. Kilgo, of Trinity College,
is still in Texas lecturing on the Twen
tieth Century Educational Movement.
He expects to return about March 20.
A Wake county jury has awarded one
citizen $100 damages against another
citizen who had charged him with steal
ing a half bushel of corn.
A Barke county farmer recently sold
20 walnut trees for $800 and the trees
were shipped to Germany. One of them
was 6 feet acroes the trunk and 70 feet
to the first limb.
The Y. M. C. A. State convention
meets in Greensboro, April 5-8. Sunday,
April 1st, will be observed as a special
day of prayer for the youDg men of the
State.
A special from Raleigh to the Wash
ington Post says: "The odds are Aycock
will be nominated on first ballot and
Cunningham nominated for lieutenant
governor." The Huntersville high school closed
on the 8th on account of an epidemic
of la grippe, which had broken out
among the pupils. The session will be
resumed in about two weeks' time.
Mr. Tom Talbyrd, of Montgomery
county, is reported, by the Salisbury
Sun, to have committed Buicide recently
by hanging. A mortgage on his prop
erty had just been foreclosed, and it is
thought that this so depressed him that
he took his life.
Jim Byers, colored, who en Sunday
afternoon, August 20th, 1899, shot and
killed Fannie Gillespie colored at the
house of his father, George Byers, near
Davidson College, was captured on the
13ih at 3 o'clock at the house of his
mother-in-law, in the same neighbor
hood and taken to Charlotte and jailed.
The Salisbury Sun learns that' the
grand jury of Stanty Superior Court
went to inspect the county home last
week according to the custom in such
eaes made and provided and while
they were inspecting a building it fell
down on them and one of the jurors
narrowly escaped being killed.
The Albemarle correspondent to the
Charlotte Observer says: "Two Mor
mon elders have been roaming around
over the couuty for the past two weeks.
Thursday morning as they were passing
down Btreet a full grown shower of
rotten eggs and potatoes met their aston
ished vision and they proceeded to forth
with and immediately shake the dust.
or mud rather, of this wicked town from
their feet, never again to return."
Many Starve In Porto Rico.
Washington. March 15. Gen. Davis
reports an appalling condition in Porto
Rico. Workmen from the rural dis
tricts are flockicg into towns with their
families because of want of means of
subsistence. Thousands of natives are
bordering on starvation. The worst
condition exists in the central part of
the island, where there is no food. Sub
ordinate officers have informed General
Davis that unless assistance is triven
brigandage will result. Sickness also
threatens to increase the suffering of
the unfortunate natives. Coffee nlant-
ers are B.id to be without money, and
nave been obliged tclay off their hands
who drift to the towns and increase th.'
crowds of destitute.
General Davis has asked for 500 tnna
of rice, codfish and bacon, in addition
to a like amount asked for a few weeks
ago. Orders have been issued to lr
commissary department to supply the
fooJ. General Davis also suggests that
if men could be immediately emnloved
on public improvements the acuteneBS
oi tne situation would be relieved.
V !
1
if
Vr
A Woman
' Only Knows
what Buffering from falHnar of the
-womb, whites, painful or Irregular
menses, or any disease of the distinctly
feminine organs is. A tnah may sympa
thize or pity but he caa not know the
agronies she goes through the terrible
Buffering, so patiently borne, which
robs her of beauty, hope and happi
ness. Yet this suffering- really U
needless. ,
McELREE'S
f
will banish it. This r '
cures all " female disease!!
ly and permanently. It f
with humiliating phy?'-?'
nations. The trear
at home. T!
-reuse p "
t-. - s...irx: t AT?
I