y 100 a Year. In Advance. - "FOR COUNTRY, FOR GOD, AND EOR TRUTH." Single Copy, scents.
VOL. XI. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1900. : " NO. 15.
J?
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i
V
NKHKASKA DEUIOClt AT1U PLilTPORllI
Al'PnOVEO MY W. J. HKYAN.
" . The following is the platform adopted
by the Nebraska State Democratic con
vention lust week amid the greatest en
thusiasm :
'We, the Democrats of Nebraska,' in
convention assembled, do hereby reaf
firm and indorse, in who.'e and in part,
in letter and in spirit, the platform
adopted by the .Democratic national
convention held in Chicago in 1806'.
"We favor amendments to the fed
eral conftitution specially authorizing
an income tax and providing for tbe
electiou of United States senators by a
Ijt- direct vote of the people.
"We oppose government by injunc
tion and the blacklist, and favor arbi
tration as a means of settling disputes
between coroorations and their em
ployes.
"We observe with approval the sup
port given by " Democrats throughout
the country to the movement looKiug
toward the municipal ownership of
municipal franchises.
"We favor the priucipalof the initia
tive and referendum wherever it can be
applied.
''We are in favor of liberal pensions
to deserving soldiers and to their de
pendents; we believe that names upon
the pension rolls should not be arbi
tral ily dropped,) and we believe, as
stated in the la6t national platform, that
the fact of enlistment and servicesbould
.ip be deemed conclusive evidence against
' disease and disability before enlistment.
"We are in favor of the immediate
construction and fortification of the
Nicaraguau canal by the United States.
"We condemn the Dingley tariff law
as a trust-breeding and extortion-inviting
measure, skillfully devised for the
purpose of giving to a few favored that
which they do not deserve and of plac
ing upou "the whole people many bur
dens which they should not bear.
"We welcom3 the opportunity of
fered this year to take the federal gov
ernment out of the hands of the Re
publican partv, which has abandoned
American ideas and American ideals,
and at the command of corporate wealth
has plotted against the financial inde
pendence" of the individual, and now
contemplates the nullification of the
declaration of American independence.
"We pledge ourselves to wage an un
ceasing warfare against all the trusts
the money trusts, the industrial trust
and the international land-grabbing
trust.
"Instead of a system which would
chain our nation to the gold standard
and compel it to participjUe i all tbe
disturbances which come to European
nations, we demand an American" finan
cial system, made by the American
people" for themselves, to be secured by
the immediate restoration of the free
and unlimited coinage of gold and sil
ver at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1,
without waiting for the aid or consent
of any other nation.
"The Republican ad mic is 'ration has
admitted thegold standard to be un
satisfactory by appointing a commission
to solicit foreign aid in restorijg the
double standa d, and a Republican con
gress, even while trying to make the
gold standard permanent, has confessed
judgment against the standard by at
tempting to revive the delusive hope of
.international bimetallism.
"Instead of the system favored by
'the Republican party, under which na
tional banks are to be permitted to issue
:and control the yolume of paper money
ifor their own profit, we reiterate our de
" imand for the financial system which
recognizes the government's sovereign
;right to issue all money, whether, coin
or paper, and we demand the retention
of the greenbacks as they now exist and
dhe retirement of national bank notes
as rapidly as greenbacks can be sub
stituted for them.
"We believe that private monopolies
wre indefensible and intolerable, and we
condemn the national' administration
for its failure to enforce the present law
against the trusts or to recommend a
more effective law.
"We f avr a state constitution which
will prohibit the organization of a
monopoly within the State and also pre
vent a monopoly organized elsewhere
from doing business within the State;
but we further believe that congress
should supplement the efforts of the
State by legislation which will require
every corporation, before engaging in
inter-state commerce, to show that it
has no water in its stock, and that it
has neither attempted in the past ncr is
attempting to monopolize any branch
of business or the production of any
article of merchandise.
Tn Ho nlatfnrm of I860 the Repub
lic .n party declared that the mainten
ance of the principles promulgated in
declaration of independence and em
bodied in ihe federal constitution, 'That
all men are created equal; that they are
endowed with inalienable rights; that
governments are instituted to secure
their rights; aDd that governments de
rive their just powers from the consent
of the governed,' is essential to the pre
servation of our republican institutions,
but the Republican party, uoder its
present leadership, is endangering tbe
preservation of republican institution
by placing the dollar above the man
in thee nstruction of government, and
of violating the principles that it ouce
declared to be essential.
"We condemn the Porto Rico tariff
bill recent'y passed by a Republican
house of representatives of a bold and
open violation of the nation's organic
law and a ilagrant breach of good faith.
"We assert that the constitution fol
lows the fl'g and denounce the doctrine
that an executive or a congress, created
and limited by the constitution, can
exercise lawful authority beyond that
constitution, or in violation of it. Be
lieving that a nation cannot long en
dure half republic and half empire, we
oppose wars of conquest and colonial
possessions.
"Tne Filipinos cannot be citizens
without endangering our civilization;
they cannot be subjecte without en
dangering our form of government,
and as we are not willing to surrender
our civilization or to convert a republic
into an empire, we favor an immediate
declaration of the nation's purpose to
give to the Filipinos, first, a stable form
of government; second, independence,
and third, protection from outside in
terference, as it has for nearly a century
given protection to the republics of
Central America.
"We favor tbe expansion of trade by
every legitimate and peaceful means,
but we are opposed to purchasing trade
at the cannon's mouth with human
blood; neiiher do we belieye that trade
secured and held by force is worth the
price that must be paid for it. We are
in favor of extending the nation's in
fluence, but we believe that that influ
ence should be extended, not by force
and violence, but through the persua
sive power of a high and honorable ex
ample. "We oppose mili'arism. It imposes
upon the people an unnecessary burden
and is a constant menace. A small
standing army and a well-equipped State
militia are sufficient in time of peace;
in time of war the citizen soldier should
be a republic's defense.
"We believe with Jefferson, in peace,
commerce and honest friendship with
all nations, and entangling alliances
with none, and we regard with appre
hension the doctrine advocated in some
quarters that this nation should, in its
dealings or diplomacy, show partiality
toward any of the European nations.
"Not because of hostility to England,
but because we believe in the principles
of a republic and reject, as did our fore
fathers, the theory, of monarchy, we
sympathize with the Boers in their
heroic efforts to preserve their national
integrity. The failure of Republican
leaders, who four years ago expressed
sympathy for the Cuban patriots, to
feel an interest in the struggle of the
Dutch in South Africa, shows the para
lyzing influence of the imperial policy
to which to commit thiB country."
The Yankee and the Butter.
Charlotte Observer.
Dr. E. O. Guerrant, who delighted
a large audience on Tuesday night
with his lecture on Morgan's raiders,
is interesting both in public speaking
and in conversation. lie has abroad
knowledge of men and aifairs, and a
happy faculty of being able to tell an
apropos anecdote to illustrate any
point that he wishes to make.
In talking with some of his friends
hereabout the type of the gentleman
gamb'er in Kentucky, Dr. Guerrant
gave an idea of that character by re
lating an episode in the life of Bishop
Kavanaugh, of Kentucky. Years ago
this worthy divine went to New York
on a visit, and one of the first persons
that he saw on the streets was a gam
bler who had formerly lived in the
Blue Grass State. The sight of a face
from home caused the gambler to
drop conventionalities, and, shaking
hands with the Bishop, he asked the
latter to lunch with him. .The Bishop
accepted, and the two men went into
a near-by restaurant.
Now the Bishop belonged to the
old school of gentlemen, but his table
manners were primitive. During the
course of the meal he reached over
and used his knife to cut a piece of
butter from the dish in the centre of
the table. A dapper, fidgety Yankee,
who was sitting at the table, immedi
ately called the waiter and said :
"Take that butter away and bring
a fresh dish." .
The gambler's eves flashed. From
his back-pocket he drew an immense
bowie knife, and cutting off a large
slice of butter, dashed it into the face
of the fastidious man. Then he
turned an drawled out:
"Waitah, remove this Yankee and
bring in a fresh one. Bishop, help
yourself to the butter 1"
Creelman Eiponea JMcKtnley's Plan.
New York, March 15. The New
York Journal publishes the following
from James Creelman at San Juan de
Puerto Rico
"Information has been received here
that the administration Senators at
Washington have privately made the
following extraordinary admissions :
"They have stated that the real pur
pose of tbe Puerto Rican tariff is to
avoid fulfilling 'he fourth article with
Spain, which allows that nation equal
trade rights with tbe United States in
the Philippine Islands.
"These Senators have also admitted
to the Puerto Rican delegates that if the
constitution followed the flag and 5ov
erel Puerto Rico, it, the constitution,
would afro cover the Philippines.
"In that event the whole trade of the
late Spanish possessions would be
thrown over to Spain, wheroas it was
hoped by some future tariff device to
cheat Spain out of her solemnly secured
treaty rights."
OVlt WASHINGTON LETTER,
Special Correspondence.
The act of Senator Beveridge, of
Indiana, in introducing a free trade
amendment to the Porto Rican bill,
with the proviso that the Constitu
tion shall not be understood to be ex
tended to that Island, has stirred up
tresn difficulties among the Republi
cans in Congress. . The worst of the
situation, from a party standport, is
that Mr. Beveridge took his action
after consultation with the President,
and it is understood that the Presi
dent advocates .the measure. If this
ia so, McKinley has flopped again,
leaving the thirty odd Republicans
in the House, whom he induced to
vote for the original bill, out in the
cold. The action of Mr. Beveridge
has not only thrown the entire Indi
ana delegation into the greatest con
fusion, but it has upset the course
of procedure of the "peace" commit
tee of the Senate. However, no ac
tion will be taken for some time yet,
and it is tondly hoped by the G. O. P
that some means out of the tangle
may be found that will still bleed
Porto Rico without wrecking the
party.
The country need not be surprised
if it wakes up some fine morning to
find itself involved in a war in China
ine meaning oi tne mysterious con
centration of the Asiatic squadron in
Chinese waters has at last leaked out,
and shows, as many people imagined
it would, that the United States has
practically engaged to do England's
Oriental work for her while she is sup
pressing liberty in South Africa. It
shows, too, that there was more truth
than poetry in the stories of a Brit
ish-German-American alliance. From
a source that is absolutely accurate,
the facts in the case have been ascer
tained. The maneuvres of the Ameri
can fleet, which is now the largest in
existence at any one place, are di
rected, not towards a lot of miserable
Chinese rioters, as has been intima
ted, but towards our old time friend,
Russia. The Administration and
Great Britain, putting their heads to
gether, have concluded that Russia
meditates directing the powerful ar
maments that she has collected
against China, where, with the con
nivance of the Empress, she will ex
pel the British and other nations and
divide up Chinese territory between
herself and France. The chances are
that the Russian designs are directed
merely against Britain, but this, from
the Administration standpoint, is as
bad as if they were directed against
ourselves. Secretary Hay is there
fore taktng every precaution to pre
vent Brtish interests being injured in
China while she is busy in South Af
rica. He has collected in Chinese
waters, on one pretext or another,
the Oregon, Monadnock,New Orleans,
Castine, Newark and Atlanta. The
British and German fleets have also
been quietly increased and Japan is
working night and day to get her ves
sels in readiness. Altogether it is
evident that the President means to
fight for the Chinese trade if there is
the least need of doing so. Having
declared war against the Filipinos
without any authority from Congress,
he will not find it difficult to repeat
the process with regard to Russia.
Besides it would be a good idea to
fire the American heart just before
election.
The United States troops in the
Philippines are about to be withdrawn
to the seacoast until after the rainy
season. President McKinley objects
to this because of the effect an unhn
ished war in those islands will have
on the coming election, but there is
no way out of it.
The large forces maintained in
mountain districts pursuing Filpinos
soon will have to be withdrawn to
the coast towns, leaving small de
tachments to look after guerilla
bands. General Otis has made no
official report as to his view of the
present situation after five months of
active campaign work, in which Gen.
Lawton, Gen. McArthur and Gen.
Young were the most active and de
termined pursuers of Aguinaldo and
his supporters.
It cannot be forgotten how freely
it was predicted by army experts both
here and at Manila that with an
army of Go, 000, affording an active
field force of 40,000, the uprising
would be crushed before the wet sea
son, Aguinaldo captured and the war
at an end. But dispatches giving ac
counts of fighting are still being re
ceived every day.
.Negroes Told to Keep Oat of Politics.
Raleigh, N. C, March 15. The
commencement of Shaw University,
one of the leading negro colleges in this
country, occurred to-day. There were
four graduates in law, twelve in medi
cine and fix in pharmacy. Tbe Rev.
O. E. Winship, editor of the New Eng
land Journal of Education, delivered
the address. President Meserve, in de
livering diplomas, advised the negroes
to keep out of politics, though he urged
them to exercise the right to vote.
"The negro has accomplished two
things in politics," be declared; "one
is the passage of the Jim Crow car act,
the other his disfranchisement."
There .arc heroes and heroes, but
the Ohio man who recently eloped
with his mother-in-law is in a class
all bv himself.
INDIA'S AWFUL FAMINE.
Rev. Justin E. Abbott. In Leslie's Weekly.
India has been called a land of
dreams. It is now a land of horrors,
as her people fight with plague and
famine. It is no nightmare, but a
terrible reality. Thousands of once
strong men are now skin and bones,
with a terrible knawing of- hunger
within. It is a pitiable sight to see
tall, manly men so terribly reduced
as to be hardly able to walk, yet
somehow making their way some
where to find food. More pitiable are
tbe women who, with a keen sense of
modesty,are fighting womanfully with
their fast-rottening rags, and their
children emaciated, fretful, crying, or
too weak to cry, adding to their terri
ble' personal suffering from days of in
sufficient food. - The bodies, finding
no nourishment, turn into the those
little skeletons that one can hold in
one's hand.
Thousands of families like these,
having exhausted every possible re
source, sold and pawned the last ar
ticle of their possession, having lived
somehow for a time on coarsest of wild
fruits, or roots, or -weeds anything
to satisfy that awful craving that
comes from days of starvation tramp
many a long, weary mile to find some
government or other relief. There is
the scorching sun by day unusually
scorching this year the pangs of
thirst as well as hunger, for every
stream is dry; and when the sun goes
down, out in the open fields, with
nothing to cover them, they shiver all
through the chilly night.
Other missionareis describe finding
abandoned children in dying condi
tion, whom they have been able to
save, or failed to save, because too
far gone. The familiar famine scenes
are witnessed of famishing people fol
lowing grain carts and struggling
among themselves for the stpay ker
nels that fall by the way. Aband
oned children are found subsisting on
clods of earth and every possible
thing that has nourishment in it,
filling up with water to drown the
gnawings of hunger, and producing
those painful monstrosities bodies
swollen out of all proportion, but
with sticks of legs and arms, and a
head that is but a skin-covered skull.
And the babies grow weaker and
weaker in their hungry cry, or si
lenced by opium, rapidly turn to
pitiable little skeletons that move
with emotion the strongest hearts
that look upon them. What wonder
that a despairing mother, unable to
endure the sight and tempted by her
own famishing body, sells her little
one for a few handfuls of grain; and
when the famine is over beats her
breast in anguish for her little one,
gone she knows not where.
The vast camps are being filled.
The anxiety and concern of govern
ment and officials are greatly on the
strain.. All departments of the ad
ministration, native and otherwise,
are called upon to exercise the wisest
caution and the utmost vigilance to
to see that none worthy are neglected
and those not actually reduced to
suffering take not the place of the
needy. And it should be borne in
mind that the prospect . must grow
gloomier for months to come, up to
at least the beginning of the rains in
the month of June next. The gravity
of the situation needs to be recog
nized. The Viceroy personally and
the government of India are giving
their undivided attention to this.
Contributions for the relief fund
should be sent to Treasurer F. II.
Wiggin, care of American Board of
Foreign Missions, 14 Beacon street,
Boston, who cables at short intervals
the amout available, thereby attord
ing immediate relief to the sufferers
in India.
Sew Ilamiiahle's Governor Pleads
for
Fast Day.
The Fast Day proclamation of Gov.
Rollins, of New Hampshire, is as
follows:
"I hereby appoint Thursday, April
19, as Fast Day and call upon the
people of our State to observe it in
its true and best sense.
"When the country was in its in
fancy and dangers surrounded it on
every hand, our ancestors felt the
need of a protecting and guiding
power, and sought it prayerfully,
leaving us this annual rite as a sacred
inheritance. Now that we have at
tained a strong and lusty manhood,
now that we are a vigorous, wealthy
people, having safely passed the per
ils of our youth, we are apt to forget
the strong arm upon which our fore
fathers leaned. Instead of abolishing
Fast Day as a worn out and useless
custom I would call our people to a
renewed observance and a better ap
preciation of the real significance of
the day.
"I would ask that large body ol
men who seldom, if ever, cross the
the threshold of a church, to kneel
once more where they knelt as chil
dren, and see if the church has not
believe l
some message ior mem. i
off the blindinsr and depressing in it 1
ences of doubt and materialism I
to look at life once more through I
- ? w I
clear, earnest eyes of youth an . y
the light of the faith of our fat f
would bring a solace and satisfa
like the benediction that to ?
after prayer.' "
NUS. ARP IN FLORIPA.
Going, goiDg, gone! For two weeks
it had been the family talk will the
maternal ancestor go to Florida or not.
Her posterity down there had been
calling her long and frequently and
finally sent her a liberal check where
with to provide a suitable paraphernalia
and pay her way to Jacksonville. It
was an awful struggle. The girls hinted
that if she was not going she ought to
send the check back, and when at last
she bought ihe beautiful silk mohair
Henrietta Maria Vendetta, or woids to
that effect, and turned it over to the
dressmaker, it looked like she was
certainly going, but I had my doubts.
She wanted me to decide the moment
ous question, but I looked solemn and
maintained a dignified neutrality. "If
you are going," said I, "of course I will
go with you, for where thou goest I will
go, but you must start next Tuesday
eve and stay a week only, for I have
got to go to Carolina again the last of
next week." Still she hesitated and
gave no certain sign. Ihere were
posterity at home that she feared would
fall into a well or get bitten by a mad
dog, or get run over on the street, or
catch the measles or something else,
and every time they came to greet her,
her eyes would get watery at the thought
of leaving them. Neighbors and kin
dred urged her to go for she h; d not
been an far as Atlanta in five years, and
needed a change of air and water and
scenery. And so we escorted her to
the tbe depot and there were so many
to kiss and so many parting injunctions
about the children that she had liked
to have been left after all. - For ten
miles she never said a word, but looked
out of the window and ruminated.
An acquaintance on the car came
forward and that relieved the monotony
and we got to Atlanta in due time and
after a short stay left fur Florida.
Now we are both glad that we came,
for we made our kindred happy and
will make some more happy when we
get back. This evening we visited the
ostrich farm, the Florida zoo, which of
itself it worth a trip to Jacksonville.
I wish that all the children could visit
it for it is a bigger thing than a circus
or menagerie; it is muci larger man u
was two years ago, for now, besides
over a hundred ostriches the proprietors
have many varieties of the most beau
tiful birds in the world. They are of
exqtiiBile plumage pheasants, ducks,
parrots, pelicans, cranes and there are
deer, monkeys, crocodiles, otters and
many other creatures that are never
seen traveling around and are things of
beauty that would dehgnt the little foiks.
Mv wife savs that it is the best show
for a quarter that she ever witnessed.
It is worth that to see tbe otters playing
in the water. Tbis zoo is an established
success and a specialty for Jacksonville.
Crowds visit it every day and the tour
ists buy feathers and eggs most liberally.
The street car takes you there for a
nickel and they are always full. We
are going to Pablo Beach tomorow and
to St. Augustine next day, and keep
on the go all the time as long as the
letters from home tell us that all are
well.
What a wonderful change has come
over the city since I first knew it, when
there were about 10.0GO people and it
was under the ban a suspect a home
for pestilence, and the tourists' hurried
through it to safe havens. Now there
are 35,000 people, and during the winter
half as many more. The city has been
thoroughly sewered and drained and is
supplied with the purest water and the
streets and walk ways are all paved and
everything looks clean as a parlor. -
The pestilence that walketh at noon
day will not walk here any more. And
then what a change of diet has come
over us. E irly vegetables, early oysters
and shad and pompano, and straw
berries for (Ie8nert every day. I sent
some orange blossoms home yeeterday
but requested tbe girls not to get
married until we return. My wife and
I are being rejuvenated. Fine clother,
fine diet, and nothing to do but receive
attention, will regenerate maternal an
cestors. And it helps th? Vetera is, too. I
thie morning like I can jump over a
two-rail fence and cut the pigeon wing
a small pigeon.
But I never said anything about our
brief stay in Savannah, that grand old
city that Georgia is proud cf, and it is
still the most beautiful and interesting
city in the South. It3 parks alone are
a monument to Oglethorpe. Its broad
streets and sVade trees and flowers are
things of beauty. Its churches and
public buildings are time-honored and
impressive.
Now just ponder it for a moment
when I say that I saw Savannah for the
first time sixty-seven years ago, and I
do not suppose there are a hundred
people living who saw it before then.
My parents and brother and myself
sailed from there to Boston in 1833.
We returned to Georgia by land ia a
carriage. It took us two months to
make the long journey, and we never
crossft"t'aikoad for there was nor-!
- pro88e8 ma that for flMiquity? aujoc
Xboy ehl-
uca b.r
r
s
first gallussf g. But I verily believe I
can chop more wood in a day than
Marks can and I could outrun him but
for my corporosity. Bill Aep.
Ton-Cent Cotton and Silver.
Baltimore Sun.
It is not meant for an unkindness to
say that 10-cent cotton demolishes the
best argument Mr. Bryan ever had for
silver inflation. Planters of cotton can
now see' that cheap silver does not nec
essarily mean low-priced cotton, but
that cotton, like grain and other things,
rises and falls under the law of Bupply
and demand. Popocrats told us that
we should never again get above 5-cent
cotton so long as we had the gold stand
ard. The hand that "struck down"
silver struck down the honest farmer,
and the only hope of the latter was to
remonetize silver. Yet here is cotton
going skyward, while silver still lies
prostrate and tbe Gold Standard bill
has been passed by Congress. The
goldbugs seem to be having their way,
but, nevertheless, cotton goes up.
The fact is that cotton, grain and
silver go high or low according to sup
ply and demand. Now that the cotton
supply is small and the prospective de
mand is large, prices naturally advance.
When grain was scarce, not long ago,
it went above a dollar a bushel, not
withstanding tbe low price of silver.
Experience since 1896 has shown clear
ly that there is absolutely no connec
tion between the price of commodities
and the price of silver. Oceans of
rhetoric have been prured out by the
tilverite oratore to proye such a connec
tion, but facts refuted them. Some
apology ia now due from the orators to
the voters whom they misled in 1896.
A Family murdered and Burned.
Raleigh, N. C, March 22. Among
the m6st horrible crimes in the history
of North Carolina, ranks that of early
this mornine at Garner's, five mitea
east of this city, when a negro, Tom
Jones, commonly known in the county
as "Preacher" Jones, murdered Ella
Jones and her oldest daughter, Ida
Jones, and then set fire to the beds in
which were bodies of the murdered vic
tims and four others, all children, rang
ing in years from a baby one month
old to the largest boy, who was not
more than 5 years of age. The work
was done with an axe, tbe murderer,
according to little 7-year-old Laura
Jones, who escaped with her younger
sister, deliberately and coolly striking
tbe mother four times and then making
two heavy strokes into the body of the
oldest child.
The house was completely destroyed
by fire and the bones of the foui youne-
est children are now distributed among
the ashes, which a'.one remain to tell
the story of the , conflagration. The
body of Ella Jones and that of Ida, the
13.year-old child, were burned beyond
recognition, and are lying on the
ground charred to a crisp and with the
whole bodies cut open and displayed to
view.
As Capt. ICttld Would Hun ,
Baltimore American.
. Newimper
From the Bowersville Clarion: "Next
week we will begin running this paper
as Capt. Kidl would have run it. De
linquent subscribers may expect a call
from us with their accounts stuck in
the muzzle of a six-shooter. Otherwise
this papor will be running as the sheriff
would run it."
Rev. O. C. Horton, a Baptist minister
of We:t Durham, in charge of three
churches, dropped dead Saturday even
ing in Pinty Grove church at the close
of his sermon.
"Sweet Bells Jangled
Out of Tune and Harsh."
Shakespeare's description fits thou
sands of women. They are cross, des
pondent, sickly, nervous a burden to
themselves and their families. Their
sweet disposition are gone, and they, like
the bells, seem sadly out of tune. Bat
tiiere is a remedy. They cajb use
McELREE'S
Wine of Cardui
It brin
organisTv ay all terrors by strenV
well r ital organs. Itfitaamo, '
it T( y 3 coming, ay revit&ijrit,
UrU.
It ve centtfi y,Xns hrou"-,.
in owlng.ry,;' v.
-,cood." f
.4