Somi-v7 colily - 1 - MA OTT T7 i I ISSUED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS VOL. XXIII, NO. 19 $ 1 PER YEAR. REIDSVILLE, N. C MAY 10, 1910 A Policy Issued by ?c. Equitable Life Assurance Prevents the Ship wreck of the family W. L. Clark, Agt. STUDY Think, plan and work to make our Drugs and ser vice a little better than you'll get in any other drugstore. The drug business is our one business. Concen tration and ability have made it a large and grow ing one and we always make good the statement that we are Fetzer & Tucker The Dependable Druggists P. M P E T T I T Plumbing and Heating Estimates given on Bhort nitice. All work guaranteed. I also make storr, window and porch awnings. Office, show room and warehouse 114 East Market St., Phone 509 Gresnibjro, Nf. C. Smith Seed & Feed Go WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Fertilizers for grain and grass. Cy phers Incubator and Brooders. Garden Seed a Specialty. 224 MIAN, DANVILLE. 'Phone 133 Society 03 Our laundry work is work of merit. It stands up and resists the withering effects of perspiration. There is no get ting around the fact that the Star Laun dry's work wears better. THE STAR LAUNDRY, WILBUR WOMACK, AGT. POLITICS IN THE NATION Hot Political Talk From the Nation- al Capital. : (Special Cor. to The Review.) Washington. May 9. Tim Delia erais. assisted by a handful of fight ing progressive ; Republicans, haw forced the administration to abandon some of the worst of the corpora j lion serving clauses placed in the ; railroad regulation bill by Attorney General Wlckershaui. Wiekersham framed this bill after a conference with six railroad presi dents. Wall street knew long In i advance of the public appearance of the bill that It would be so drawn as to annul the Sherman anti-trust law. Railroad Interests bought and Bold stock on the strength of their advanc information. Had the railroad regulation bill be- I come a law as prepared by Wicker-, sham, It would have practically do. Htrnvnd ull that hnu linen nrromnl(Hh-l ,v.. -.. . ' ed In tho last twenty years to give the government some measure of con- i trol over the railroads of the country, j No attorney general of the United ; States has ever been revealed In just the position Mr. Wiekersham ' now occupies. i Instead of having drawn a bill I that would tend to place greater safe ; guards about the rights of the people of the UnKed States, as might naiur Inlly be expected from a public offl- ccr who Is receiving a salary on the assumption that he Is giving such , pMMvc.ion. l0 me people, nicKer-, I sham has been charged on the floor; ;or tno benate with having attempted j to take from the masses even such In-j adequate safeguards as they now en- joy, while at the same time giving the j corporate Interests the right to mergej and do other thnlgs that the Sherman failure inasmuch as it is not nrodnc law has forbidden them from doing, j g sufficient revenue to meet the ex- At the time of Wickersham's ap-jponsp,, of tnP eovernment. polntment it was asserted that he I President Taft's definition of a had been selected by President Taftj eood Renubllcsn Is a member of Con In deference to the wishes of the ,,rPn wno will! vote for lei?l1nlon in corporations of the country, who had dorsed hv the Pr-sident nhetr snld spent money and coerced working-: pn..mar, hpi(vf.s thp iPsia'ton men to vote the Republican ticket,; would be good for the conntrr or and who demanded as compensation 1 not for this service the privilege of nam-: . . . ... ing the attorney general. The unusual interest of .special privilege in this office may be real ized at full value when It Is under stood that the attorney general Is In charge of the prosecuting machiner of the government. """"" " " " "" iiiomuueni.. really was the result of a pre-election n.i.ii.. ti'i.L.i . . arrangement or not, the trusts have;an,8 for the nIeh ftn(1 honnrnhU n. nad no occasion to be dissatisfied with the President's selection. When-J ever the rights of the people and; rights of the people and special privileges come Into conflict.; himself and honor to the State. And Mr. Wlckersham decides favorably toVet, while this is true, we think that the corporate Interests and against; Democratic usage and. common fair the people. This is what the records nPsa demand the nomination of Judge of his office show, Manning. President Taft has reached the con-, elusion the progressives are bad, bad ; ir. t i . i . ....... t f jinen ne couipiaiiis iiiey bh mm n j the u nite House ana assure mm oi ! V " r;:i , WlUlU'a, BUU uu:u l.u A.m. vn.t-.'i ,vote against his railroad regulation. bill. "Why do you act this way a pro- gresslve Republican you not respect the United States?" "f rosnect the President, both nersonallv and officially," was the re' ply. "But I nave even more respect j for the welfare of 9u.u0.umi peopie or this country, The President sends the Congress a railroad regulation bill which the best authorities, say absolutely annuls the Sherman anti trust law which is the only safeguard the people now have against the com bining of the big railroads. Along with this bill comes the ultimatum that our vote on the measure will be considered a test of our Republican ism. We are deslrlous of showing all nroner respect for the President, but as between serving our conscience or the PV-esident, we are put Jo painful necessity of forsaking the "I President temporarily and of vtrting against his railroad bill." The recently "reformed" 1 louse Rules In .proving to be Bit secure a catacomb for proposed legislation an tagonized by tho special interests as was the old Rules committee of which bpcaker Cannon was chairman. Not; a single resolution which might ad- versely affect unlawful combinations such as the suga'r trust ha-i been re ; ported favorably by.-the- new commit- tee. Cannon dominates tho re'--'"ed;ty this just Federal judge. His up boIy just aa effectively as Im did the holding of the sacred act of habeas old Ruins coiiimHttee. So far as prae-j corpus when the State courts had tical results are concerned. It Is difficult to see that the common peo-j Dlei gained bv the enlarging of the! committee and the elimination of the'.hnnld know' the stnrr .of that enoch- Speaker. ' Attorney General Wlckersham ..has! given out two more famous opin-J Ions. One holds that the Secretary of War cannot, lawfully refuse to General Ransom's appeal to Judge award a contract for Panama Canal, Brooks and the deciison that follow supplies to the low-est responsible hid-j ed. The facts are so Interesting that der simply because such bidder has' the following extract from Col. Bur been adjudged in court to be a party ; gwyn's speech Is given to The Re to an unlawful trust and monopoly. ! view readers: ; The other opinion holds that Public Printer Donnelly has no rieht to den took the oath of office as Gov abollsh certain branches of the Oov-: ernor, under what is known as the ernment Printlni Office simply be-; "Canby constitution," On March 7, cause he thinks they are unnecessary: 1S70, Governor Holden declared th and that he wishes to economize. county of Alamance in insurrection, The report that Roosevelt had writ- and on July 8 following he likewise ten letters to President Taff. Son-ln- declared the county of Caswell In law Longworth and others, indorsing insurrection. In June, Jul .' the Taft admlnbtratlon. was given ust Governor Holden organized some wide publicity bv all the Republican five hundred soldiers under the com press. Careful inquiry brings out thelmand of George W. Kirk, of Tennes fact that all of the persons mention- isfe. as colonel, and having suspended ed in the storv emnhaticallv denv the writ of "habeas corpus" by his : having received such a letter.. And with Roosevelt declares that he did wrifp anything that could have rPMOn been so construed Tmrine the first three davs of Mv thft government snent. 2.6fl2.0M si morp than It took ln ThIg wnuId indicate that the new tnriff law la AS TO JUDGE MANNING. Reasons Whv H Should be Nomi-i (Burlihgloh) 6 the road to Yancey naUd for Associate Justict. vi"- Kirk'8 reply was. "Tell them . ' . , ,. such things are played out, I have The people of North Caro Una are . , V, , . ... j ... , . my orders from Governor Holden, to be concratnlafed that ttiov hnuo, ' '. ' two sucn W'Orfhv eentlemen Ktannch Democrats and eminent Jurists as jud(fP, Manning and Allen as aspir- j : fPP of associate . Justice of our Su- prPmo Court because either of them' would fill that nositlon with credi to During the forty-two years, since TS68. that our judges have been iiom-UBr ... .... mated by political conventions and piPPted by a vote of the people, no. ,T . nnuou nas iuriteu nown I," or refused to nomf- lointee of the Governor.' Jii. , nate, the apnoi i and only four district conventions have refused to nominate the judged was asked. Dol0f a district who had hnen nnnninio,! , ., . . ( ,1.1, .. " "'i'""", " President of the, by. him. So that, according to nem-'thu jocranc usage, judge Mannnig should , be nominated. . Oommon fairness also flpmands his nomination, and the people of North Carolina are fair-minded. Judge Man- ning has made good the Governor's appointment of him. for he has fullv; met the high expectations of his many friends who urged his appoint-; men. He has worn the judicial ermine most worthily, and his opin- ions are ran Red among the best ever;SOn declined to take any further ac deliverer by any judge of our ' Su- tiot. preme Court. No lawyer doubts his. The condition of those in confine fitness for the office! In character, mpnt, the best and most Influential legal learning, party service and Jndi-rcitizens in their respective communl Clal temperament he is worthy of ties, now no hdDC of release by the receiving the endorsement by his party of the Governor's appointment.; Ana wny s noma ne not receive It?, Vene In a few days, was so deplorably auxnormes yieia u e..vmtllo Commissioner. The only Objection suggested is that that a few determined and able men 1 States Judiciary." At the trial in. Mr Br0WIli who has been secre another good Democrat wants ft! ,, jcame to te city of Raleigh to con- Salisbury, Colonel Kirk marches in-j tary to thP Corporation Commissioner Ts this a sufficient reason fori suit as a committee of safety on the' to the court room with his prisoner,.. .htwn years, was summoned to "turning down" Judee Manning and! rebuking -Governor Kitchln "for ap-; ,. . ... Governor Kitchln deserve such a re- buke In his appointment of Jud-re Manning? If Governor Kitchln had appointed Judge Allen Instead of Judge Manning, when both were aspi rants for the appointment, and he had discharged the duties of his of fice as well as. Judge Manning has (and we do not doubt that he would have done 8o) then we would have urged Judge Allen's nomination for the same reasons above given for Judge Manning's nomination. . Tn this connection we may men tion that the Democrats of this State, so far back- as--48S6,- thought Judge Manning worthy of Judicial honors, for at the election that year he was their candidate for Judge of the Fifth Judicial district, and received more votes than any other Demo cratic candidate on the State ticket, although all were defeated by the fusion ticket. Chatham Record. The Review and Ladies' Home Com paalOB-lt.flft-peM'eaft iMtinung mmr wnue, or course, tne Moore, Judge W. H. Battle and hisilne juage. u iruw Democratic paHy has the right and. two sons and others met at Judgej record reads as follows: "No cause power to rebuke a Governor for any j Battle's office tho last of July. Gen-! being shown for the capture and de annointment made bv htm vet does' omt ijancnm 'm tpleirmnhod in t ! tentlon of the prisoner, it is ordered HABEAS CORPUS WRIT Signal Service Rendered at a Critical, Time by Judge Brooks. j The suggestion that the State of,'" t,mpu North Carolina place a bust of thai ja(0 jujKA George W; Rroolra ir. the:' capitol at Raleigh has been general- naocas corpus in noni Carolina, j iy approved, and has acquainted the "" General Ransom asked for a copy: younger generation with the signal0'. the fourteenth ' amendment to-the.j K,.rvir. rendered at a critical time! declared "the tudfciarv is exhausted" ,. never to he forgotten by North Carolinians The comlne eeneration making event. In his address on 'General Ransom, delivered at Ral- elgh on the 10th of May. 1906, Col. iw. H. S. Biirgwyn gave the story of ; On July 1, 18C. Hon. W. W. Hol- proclamations, these soldiers under Colonel Kirk and his subordinates ar rested numerous citizens of the coun ties of Alamance and Caswell, under charges of being members of the Ku-Klux Klan and guilty of the mur der of J. W. Stephens and Wyatt Outlaw, On July 15, 1870, Adolphus G. Moore, of Alamance, -was arrested bv Kirk, and the next day he sued on a writ of "habeas corpus" before Chief Justice Pearson, Captain E. S Parker and Judge " "'"immi. his counsel. The writ was delivered to A. C. McAllister, now of Graham, North Carolina, who oh the follow ing day, which w-as Sunday, July 17, 1S70. served the same on Colonel Kirk as his command rested about nine miles from Company Shops and Shall not. ObCV th Writ. I Wilt the writ. I will . , . Tt u . ' ' 7 , I Holden order8' but not .0,herwl8e- un"; siirrenner mv nrisonera ns novernor, ivbs int-jf ornu a DumiTitMn. luitt? iu whip me.' Poarson on ,he lgth' . Kirk refused to make re turn to the) writ, and asked if Kirk was acting .- n -j iiuuri uuvn inn uiutriu. vii tiitr next . day Governor Holden replied that, "Colonel Kirk made the-arrests andi now detains the prisoners by my or-J. . Hrrn. The judge thereupon an nounced as his decision that, the Gov-! ernor had n0 poWPr to disobey thei ,vrlt of -habeas corpus," and issued an ordpr that Mr. Moore be brought! "Kl't with him) and 1 win let yon forthwith before him and directed theh,,ar ,ro,n w' e know the re- null A. t t lOTil TiH iYn oomo tn tha mnrshnr, nf hl n,.rt withlS,l,,V n August instructions to exhibit It and a cowjBrnoVs arrived ,n ......... .. :oi nis opinion to tne uovernur wun i tn ctatoment. "Tf h hP1Merrimon sign Governor, orders the petitioner to be1 oin-ro mi,.! wu it' u im irvi iu mr uiui oiinit Anwin omi rhiofi T , liyf , . , ,MJ, n iii i.i tTT v ah in fcsr- wi n wire Tanev in the Merrimon case. ' i hnvo diVaharped mv dntv The' m, nf thn indirlnrv U ehannted nnd the rennonalhilltv must rest on 'tho" executive." Governor Holden ln!at Salisbury on August 18, 1870. reply, under date of July 26, 1870,1 Governor Holden dies game. On dve-s hU reason at length for refus-! August 7 he writes President Grant. ne tn obev the writ and Judee Pear-i process of the law, a court martialiof President Grant and closes his let - organized to try them ordered to con-lr liberties of the people. Governors, under military escort. He is indig - Graham and Bragg, Honorable B. F.jnantly ordered out of the room by I . his home to attend, once. and he came at! The situation was laboriously and prlirag Is due to the debilitating weather of the season, and to the Impure, Impoverished, devitalized condition of the blood caused by too close con flnement, too little outdoor air and exercise, too heavy diet during tho winter. It Is cured by the great constitutional remedy ood's Sarsaparilla which e Heels its wonderful carei, nut simply because it contains sarsaparilla, , but because it combines iheiitmo-t remedial values of more than twenty different Ingredients.' There la no rr.il substitute for Hood's Sarsaparilla. Jl"rsedjgixfluxi'iuatioaJ'tii1.tnl't! :: iiiiit aa 6uoiLlau.ata;be sure lti is inferior, cost Us to tnaka, and yields tlte dealer a larger protil. 100 Doses fUJ carefully gone over. It was thought useless to apply to the United States; civil authorities, aa Governor Holden had called upon President Grant for his aid, the State's representatives- urRlnK UDon lnat M- 10 Da8s 8 Huspenumg ine wru ,tn l'nHe states consuiution. -lately pro ; claimed; aid relying upon Its words.! All persons born or naturalized im j the United States are chlzens of uhiito Biaies, ana no Biaie snail orlTe any P1" of life, .liberty or Property, without due process of law, nor d,nv ,0 any ... person wkhln its: jurisdiction the equal the law," he advised that application be made to the Unked States Dls- trl5t Judge' George W. Brooks, at I""uelu " ,or i "'"B1are convinced that worry over the corpus." His suggestion prevailed, !criical poUtlca, 8tUation which and General Ransom was requeste !confronted hm wlth sieepless nights, to see Judge Brooks in person and; aggravated if It did not cause his make the application, and Josiah, fatal juneS8 Turner. Jr.. was to bo the petitioner.! Tho intell'lgerice that the end of Riding on a locomotive from Raleigh King Edward's reign had come was to save time, General Ransom reach- npt a surprise at the last. The people ed Elizabeth City Saturday afternoon ; been expecting to hear It at any about supper lime, July 30. 1870. moment since the evening's bulletin .At once seeking the judge at his,was at Buckingham palace home, he opened the subject of his and nasned throughout tne kngdom. visit. From then till late at night The Capllal recelved It without ex the matter was discussed, but with-1 citement, but sadly, for the King with out avail. After breakfast the nexthi8 own people was unquestionably morning General Ransom again call-jone of the most popular rulers In ed upon his honor, and remained to the world. They regarded him as dinner, and in the afternoon they one of the-strongest forces making took a walk along the shore of that for theVstabllity of the peace of the beautiful sheet of water, on which Empilre. Elizabeth City is located. We can, a summons to the nrlw well imagine General Ransom never; ceased to plead his cause. At dinner the Reverend Thomas P. t-rowaer, tne .Metnodist minister, now. James palace at 2 o'clock this after living near Suffolk, Virginia, joined ; noon when the counsellors will "with the party, and with his inimitable! one voice and the consent of tongue grace and unsurpassed diplomacy,) and heart publish and proclaim that General Ransom proceeded to enlist) the high and mighty Prince George Mrs. Brooks and the divine on hlsils now, by the death of our late sov slde. That he succeeded goes with-j erelgn of happy memory, become; our out saving. ""Iy lawful and rightful liege Lord, During the dinner thl took nlneo i Bowing to Mrs. Brooks and the cler-iof the ;Tf fd f"m f reat Brlt" gyman. General Ransom remarks, "I: " d Irelnad; Tde,fder ' the faith Mr. Crowder to Join me ln my peti tion, as we now stand one to one. The Judge on one side and I on the other." Mr. Crowder is the first to respond, and turning to the good1, lady he says. "Sister Brooks, I al-l w-ays believe in Joining the weaker! side; we will have to help the gen-i tleman here and petition tlomon ttam on,t natltinn tho turlo-a I .. ....... ... .... .v. ..... titu Anu i. t.i ' " ""-" woman say but. "Brother Crowder, I agree Witn you After all the general's aguments, eloquenc. and tact his honor Is not tuny persuauea ana uues 1101 men Issue, the writ, but when General Ransom left early the next morning rV c for his home, he carried this from Judge Brooks: "If I w-ere satisfied I had the power to issue the writ I would do so. ' These men ought to have a fair and impartial hearing somewhere. Leave with me your copy of the fourteenth amendment, (which hannllv General Ransom had 6. 1870. Judge Raleigh. Messrs. Moore. Battle Graham. Bragg and a petition ort behalf 01 l08,an ln Jr- Praymgror me writ, the same Is sworn to by James tlttMalllt" tint lainuui t- i - H. Moore before Jude Brooks himl ,. u,ftB nincv,aA ctnto. . so,f an1 thfi 1s8es he wrIt commanding Kirk, In the name of 'be President of the United States, ! n nroduce his prisoners before him denying Judge Brooks' right to in terfere, and says, "It is my pur pose to detain the prisoners unless the army of the United States under your orders shall demand them." The attorney general of the United States replies next day by direction as follows: I advise that the ... . WL.f ml Ay.r.Jn l a by his honor mat ne De aiscnargea and allowed to go without day, and hat George W. Kirk pay the cost ebSDufty KING EDWARD IS DEAD Is Succeeded to the Throne of Great BriUinby George V. London, May 7.-King Edward VII, who returned to Englaud from a ya- cai iorl ,,, davs in .,, h,i8f of UPai,hi (1jed al i;ist nignt in ,Ue preselu.e of uls famiiy iftep an illness :of -less .than -a' week, whicn was 8(,rjous hardly more than tftreo days. I mic i iiiiw or vnies succeeueu loi 11... I?-!.. . m ' , . 1 the throne. Im medial el v aerordinir toi oe-jthe Ian... nf h Unborn r I ficlal ceremony. His first official act! was to despatch, to the Lord Mavor' he announcement of hia father's! protection ofideath in nursuanee of niBtom ! Pneumonia, following bronchitis, is I believed to have bene the cause of. death. Some of the King's friends has been issued bv Sir AWrtn vt9J roy clerk ,of the council, convening! the council in the throne room of St, j Gporge V- the race f God. Klngj emu uuiifi-iin- ui mum 1.0 wnom we uo acknowledge all faith and constant oedience with all hearty and humble affection, beseeching God bv whom Kings and Queens do reign, to bless the royal Prlne, George V., with long and happy years to reign over us." The new King, after this proclama tion, will address the council and promise to reign as constitutional sov- 1 '." v , . ,ni11l- mf : v. in mn i- ing King George will issue his first proclamation requiring all officials to proceed with their duties. The aldermen of the city of London will attend the council and swear al legiance. A proclamation has already been issued by the home office, re quiring theaters to close today. The court will go into mourning for six months, and the Lord Mayor has ordered that the great bell of St. Paul's shall be tolled throughout the day. of the proceedings to be taxed by the clerk of this court." Judge Brooks died in January 1881. and his remains repose under a mon ument In Hollywood cemetery, Eliza beth City, erected by his wife. This innrisrht tudee. this able Christian , , ,f fh Dotitioner and ,, ... . !,,, ....., the pil 1 1 ill M niriU)t I , t... win in "in t7i. ' " man, orator and diplomat, have gone in tholr rownrds but "lest we for- f ., I get," "These are deeds which should not pass away And names that must not wither tho' the earth, Forgets her empires with a Just de cay The enslavers and enslaved; their death and birth." Brown Gets the Appointment. Henrv Clav Brown received a com , mlssiorl from Governor Kitchln to sue cpp( 4hft lftte n p Ayf0ok as CorporJ(.' ; Governor's office shout noon on pid v nd' soon thereafter. Hie an- nouncement was made that he had been named for the commissionership for which there were several appli cants. .. This appointment will vacate the secretaryship of the commission, a place to be filled by the commission later. , The Charlotte Observer states that the postal department Is considering two slight changes ln the schedule of trains atLynchburg andDanville whero by New York mail will be delivered 12 hours earlier than now. The changoj would make train between Charlottes ville and Lj'nchburg leave Lynchburg 38 minutes later than now, and make No. 7 leave leave Danville 15 minutes later thna at present. These changes would prevent the delay of mail at Lynchburg, where the mail at present muct lie from 9:10 a. m. until 4 p. m., v:he;v No. 43 gets it and brings it on. 'ouch of rheumatism, or a twinge n uiralgia, whateer the ' trouble1! Chamberlain's Liniment drivesl way the pain at once and cures thei conlalnUulcklxta gives relief. Sold by Brittalm LIFE INSURANCE I t I have represented the ? MUTUAL BENEFIT 7 ? ( LIFE INS. CO. for 20 yrs. simply because it is the jj BEST COMPANY I for my people. Let me " Show you the figvres. FRANCIS WOMACK, The Insurance Man ? t ? I Jpuus Johnston, Aujh ll. lvis, Yanceyville. Leaksville. Wiu.iAM Rkid Dalton, Reidsville. Johnston, Ivie & Dalton, Attorneys at Law. Office in rear of Bank of Roldsvllle. Same as formerly occupied by John ston & Ivle. Julius Johnston and A. D. Ivle will continue their usual visits to Reidsville, the latter on every Thursday. Practice In State and Federal Courts. f HAS. O. M'MICHAEL Wentworth. J. E. SA1NTS1NO Reidsville. McMlchacl & Saintsing, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS Practices in Stat and Federal Courts. All business given prompt attention. Chas. O. McMicheal will be in Madison on Saturday, office over poatoffice. , A. L. BROOKS ,.,,,..,.w. H. P. LANS BROOKS & LANE, Reidsville, N. C. . ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Practice in Stt te and Federal Courts. Careful attention to all business en trusted to us. EDGAR H. WRENN, JR., LAWYER. Office in Felt Building. All business intrusted to him will be looked after promptly and carefully. JUSTICE & GLIDEWELL ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Practice In State and Federal Courts. Offices in Reidsville and Greensboro. DR. S.Q, JETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office in new Ware & Somer's Building Residence at Hotel Rockingham. Phone 4. DR. J. W. McOEHEE, Office same as formerly occupied by Williams & McGehee, in Rank oi Iteiiis ville building. 'Phone 0, Residence Phone 60-1. Ex-Ray and Massage Treatment DR. J. R. MEADOR, ,;v: "' DENTIST. Office formerly occupied by Dr. Rom inger over Citizens Bank. Phone 63J DR. M. 13. ABERNETHY, PHYSICICAN AND SURGEON Office in Fels Biiilding. Rcs'dencs next to Eplsc'jfial church DON'T GET RUN DOWN Weak ami misoreble. If yon hvo Khlnry or Ulait der (rouble. Dull head miiis, Diminen', Nervou,"C", lsinsin tlie back, and ftl tired allovpr.irrt a (un k- aee of Mother Uray Alusi K i.JU -i.Eiii , lue peasant herbeure. ltnoverfuil. Weliuvenianjf tint wonilrrfnlh-nutly. As a n-nni.itor it has no FKiLt idare,Tii JtoOwiCirjCouiioj1.N.x1i