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The Atlanta Constitution from Atlanta, Georgia • Page 2

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Atlanta, Georgia
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2
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Episode Suggested by a Prominent Author Serialization by HUGH WEIR and JOE BRANT Produced by the Unhcr Film Manofixiarin Cmyaay tk UIIYS1MI na Maaafaatarix SYNOPSIS. Dudley lArnlran district ittirney. cause of his ftght sn the nee and llanor tuu is killed by an a St a eri society the committee of fifteen. The fight Is continued by his son. Bruce Who la elected district attorney and by aife other son.

Tom. Bruce la In love with Dorothy Maxwell. whose father la head of the Insurance trust. sj 1 jj-i TENTH EPISODE The Harbor Transport tion Trust Suggested by ZANE GREY Author or The Lif ht of Wit em Stars Rainbow Trill. Riders of ther Purple Sue.

tie- BRUCE. LARNIOAN and his brother Torn who had taken up Braces work of exposing the machinations of the members of the graft Unit headed by Stanford Stone after the almost fatal In. Jury to Bruce. felt that it was ern more important to protect the public against the extortion practiced by the great grafters than it was to pursue their own revenge. MI started jut for revenge said Bruce shaking bis head after Tom had told him Of his success' in getting evidence against the coal trust But even it these men killed our father we cant let our hatred of them prevent us from doing our duty.

"They're not above stealing from any one. laid Tom. No of course sot. But their motto is safety first These people did the same thing with wheat that' you rented them from doing with coal. In one way or bother they Ire always striking at the poor.

I know It said Tosa. And Ute next thing get after- S. tile dlstrtbfl: of foodand supplies if an toctt right hire In New York. There's a combination that absolutely- control the moYlment of every pound of freight In the harbor. ta convinced that somebody in WI IDatSoa roe In for smarty too.

Now you're talking abort Otut Fisher Totu0u14 Bruce. OOo4JltaTtDlt Bow did yea knew that Brace For a tick mi yettri mighty up to date. The thing that surprises It that you should know it Torn. I had V1sb. er on my list before they put me out.

But you've entered. so fully Into' the tight that you're finding thing out tot yourself now. Wen this was easy up to a certain point" said Tom. Ben Travers and I hue found out that FUhers out man. But' its not going to be I.

tt get any evidence against him. I know that" said Bruce. Hate you got a pltn at bill" Tea DO laid If not worth being called a plan. really tr. Jut an ideal I want to follow a hunch rye got without tailing you what it is until I know whether ornot Ifs going towork AU tightf Go said Bruce.

If I tan tie ground and he went straight from the he lived withiBructr and their- siotber to the office tmUdinj-Jn which ti Ilaibor TrporatIon corn' pan- of which Grant Fisher was the head tad the. moving upIrft hid Its headouarters vate offie rfcbere yirli an uterooar twh1cbthos who had apo pointment wttk' Fisher waited for a tb jaalBoffle ontslde' this ante- a kdom trivial Queltioni and then wilting for Ms dianceV slipped througb the door wall the attendant" was away. He was l1on vfor a minute and he immediately hid his hat and floret so that any stranger cont la la ialghtwppote that he was 5- pIoJ bout tile office In tome ca. paeiti. la a few moment the dor wU opened tad a man who had all the' ear- So the pluma el an hi en's place.

niarb of a tea captaliof of the old school came in. Just a mlnntAS1 Ctptabvlloflk Sill a Yoke. Mrs Fisher will. wttad hit buer when WI ready fir you to come to. All right an right boomed Monk la a deep voice.

The boner sounded Monk wast la. And right behind him Mont It. was plate- nppolelt that hi was at. Inched to the Office. Haher Dancing it tTom pald ae mote attention to him.

Li Tom had hoped he supposed that Monk had brought some one. with him. Tom realised in a moment that lack bait favored him to an alinort ble degree for M6nk Wlthout pream- We Imunched Into a report of the most confidential sort Wen alright bosr He spoke invwhath rl. identlj to a low. carefully modulated yoke trat ef cry1 word was andlhle In To.

brought In the cargo allright all right And none of them tmart1 Jet of boys was a bit anxious theahip not with' the' lions and- tigers rand tm. of that sort the. hold7 was' fun f. So the opium's all ashore and im Gruen's place. Tom.

had heard all that he seeded to know Sowly and so as te attract suspicion te himself he went ct the' FUner meanwhile lad frowned silently as be saw Torn to. 'Look here said this tort of thing ought to be kept pretty. much to ourselves. The next time you have a confidential report to make don't bring any one with you. Whatr roared Monk.

I dWntr Then who was that fellow who came in with your Him He works for yon don't he He Just followed me In and when you didnt say nothing I supposed he was anrlghtr They stared at oo another a mo ment And then Fisher with a don suspicion. reached Into his desk for a bitch of photographs which he studied. He cried out sharply and then handed Monk a picture of Tom "That's iithr Monk. Yes and he's Tom said Fisher a government special prose! or agent sfsp7 set upon the syn dicats to destroy it A. fine trfck were 1ft him play on usr The said Monk with treat deep sea oath.

Ill pt him or 07 names not Monkr toud better try said Fisher sattr Ut If yoa don't hen got I can promise you that I Ill go. to work too. 00 along now and Tram Groea to. be cartful. That.

wild animal store of hit has been too useful to us for us to let the OTtntmeat ret on to its rale wIetl Willie when Monk hid root telephoned it once to Stanford Stone till. log him what hid happened. All right said Stone after a no meat' 1 suppose I shall hate to pull us out of the hole that yon and Monk in your stupidity My. dug for Hat buslnessr Stoioe set tbe Wheels of tnrnlnj at. Once.

He' sent for Dunn the man who ned him mhl most" critical affairs and brerwhom held as a JcoMtint threat his knowl edge of a certain crimfiial episode In the part that once reTealed to the prop er authorities might hare sent Dunn to the electric MAj a mattes bffact Tm not sorry this hart happened. JSabeIi fool but his folly has ttnsd outlwell talatime liarnlgka win go to Omens Ton can se to It that when he does so he walks Into a trap. Meanwhllev howev. there had been a chan Terns He hid gone immediately to the oMce of the Independent the newspaper which was backing Bruce I flf ht with Jack Steyens Its editor. he had found Bruce and atl a tile.

gram from Washington ordsring hlsa to go at once to Rio de Janeti whera It was said the. consul would be able to gtie him instructions oaeeualQa special mission connected with the Of erations of the graft syndicate "You'll hire to BTM slid. But I'm nearly well now. I'm watt enough. at arty to take hold of this affair.

So there need be change in our plans. ji And another factor. wasabmt to. be introdneed into the case. Dorothy Maxwell and her chum Kitty Rock ford were by.

this time. thnkL tO their more or less accidental taccew in the' past in helping the trntgini convinced of their own powers de tectires. Dorothy had teen tnfttd to Bruce. Stanford Stone wai in lore with her and owing to. his hold upon her father and his threat tribe did not yield to him to ruin him Dorothy WI afraid to come out openly against Stone.

In secret howerer lbs Was his enemy. The two girls saw Dunn tad know tog the part he had played in prslona attempts against the Larnigans diUr- mined to follow him. Dunn hOWTtf neo them. and when they en tered Orpens tor almost on his heels they wets I and thrust into a small storeroom in the cellar. In the next cellar although did not know It were some th lions that had been Imported.

with' the octusj by Monk Meftnwhfle Dunn made all htI rtngementi with Omen. A trip door WI. arranged 10 that It would drop any one who stood upon it into a eel. tar and this cellar was the lie that contained the lions. That 11 be the.

nnish of any one who goes down. said Dunn gloatingly. Mr Tom LdrnlEin- wont dud It easy to argue with or Mends down there. HoweTer Torn nad decided not A History of the Ameri Sfc fe PnblUhedby a special with the presldet through the McClure TVcvrspapcr Syndicate. copyright.

1901. 1502. by U. I Brothers. Copyright.

192 a by tile MeClnre Newspaper Syndicate. Special tlc Th articles are fully protected under the copyright lav which Impose se yere penalty for lfI.8t by use either entire or is start THROTTLED THE BLOCKADE. THEN came the winters pause 01 arms. No man who looked about him could fall to see that. despite Lees victorious movement In the eat against the Army of the Potomac.

the whole aspect or the war had changed A girdle of arms had been drawn about the south. and her means alike of aggression and of defense were slowly choked within her. On the one side or her were armies which grew with every campaign. while' her own diminished on the other Increasing fleets which closed every port from Hampton Roads to Galveston. Though it had taken two years to build and muster ships enough to make the blockade thin of fact.

It was now at last a stern reality. The south knew herself face to face with bankruptcy. Her exports were hr only source of wealth only her cotton could command the money or the world and her cotton was. locked useless within her ports. With closed port.

she was ruined. A successful blockade runner here and there could bring no compensation for her throttled trade. Her levies. too. drew.

not upon an but upon' a diminishing population. The confederate government resorted to draft acts as the government at Washington did. when volunteers Jagged or were not to be had but It had no such population to draw upon. There were but five and a halt million white people in all the seceded tat when the war cams In the north two millions. As the southern armies grew busi.

ness offices. courts. counting houses plantations were emptied. and only women and boyswere left to direct the work-which was to sustain the government and teed the armies. The federal government knowing Its vantage refused to exchange prison.

ere and. for every man lost or taken the south had to find another from Its thinning ranks for the fighting line. It was. a singular and noteworthy thing. the while.

how lull. the quiet labor or the negroes was dlitrubed by the troubles' of the Um. and the' ab acne. of their masters. No rumor of the emancipation proclamation seemed to reach the outhern sides.

No sign of. the revolution that was" at hand showed Itself upon. the surface of southern life. Gentlewomen presided still with un questioned authority upon the' secluded plantations. their husbands broth- ere sonsmen and youths alike.

gone to the front. Y- Great gangs ofcheery negroes worked in thetfleldi planted and reaped and garnered utq. their lonelrmls- tresses' bidding In n. things without restlessness with industry with' show of- faithful affection even. No- distemper.

touched them no i breath of violence or revolt stirred amongst them. There was. it seemed. wrong they fretted under or wished lOW BXUUiUK ueau MWUMD vf the feet orrrnie UU produced their golden haryeiUr of grain judtf th was all that remained of the old Ute of tire south her Dullness offices were empty the flower OX her population was drawn into her armies i her re sources were sapped and could not. be renewed.

The north. oh the contrary increased In wealth and population aUk" the long struggle through. despite the hundreds of millions poured out lb. money and the hundreds of thousands of men pent to the slaughter of the Odd of battle. In the south there was preiently nothing to tax.

and the confederate government was at its wits' ends where to It money. In thenortv taxes yielded whatever congress- demanded. New direct tines were Imposed still heavier duties were laid on Imports and. though many grumbled all paid and most were abundantly able to pay- for trade sad industry were not checked. EASING TIE FINANCIAL STRAIN.

NQREea succeeded at last la devising a banking system which should relieve the strain upon the treasury and at the same time serve the business Interests of the country a system which solved the difficulties which had stood unsolved ever since General Jackson destroyed the Sank of the United States and Mr. Van Buren set up the Independent treasury. Twenty-five years before' New York had erected In Its free banking' set of lilt the model tot. the system which the federal government now. tardily adopted.

By that act' New York had abandon ed the old and vicious practice of pant. In. special charters to Individual banking cotnppfl1e and' had thrown bank- tag privileges open to any group of re sponsible persons who would comply with the requirements set forth in the new law. Chief among these requirements was the deposit of recognised securities with the tau government by every bank of Issue to the full value of its circulating notes. In order that their payment might in any cue be.

made good. In an act of Tebruary It ll eon. gress made provision-for for a similar sys. tern of national banks and by an set of June 4 I perfected the system and put the new law on a permanent tooting by a through revision. The act crested a new tjureau of the treasury under a comptroller of the currency.

to superintend and secure the enforcement of- its provisions. The comptroller was authorized to permit the free establishment for a term of. not more than twenty years. of banking associations consisting of not fewer than five persona and having a capital of not lessthaa nejtundred thousand dollars andin email places associations havlngeven a smaller up- ltal. Such associations wets required to deposit with the- treasury department bonds of the united State of the value of.

it least third. of- their capital In return for whichthere should Issued' to them from' the. treasury circulating notes representing an. amount equal to 0 percent of the market value of their bonds but never exceed- i m. PG per cent of their per value.

The total issue of currency to made under the a was limited to three Hundred mllllona and a that amount. it was provided should ap portioned among the states ID propor Uou to their population 4 trktng capital. The immediate ohject of the act asi government neasura wastosCreate a market for the toads of the United States and quicken- tIIIOCeNeavt of borrowing upon which the government was lit large part obliged to depend for tilt support of the war. It served the convenience of the country however hardly less than It helped the government and what was pri manly Intended as a measure pub. lie finance became the prop of private business.

An act of the following year ttaroa I. 1111) put a tax of 15 per cent on the circulation of all state banks and forced th It they' would continue banks or issue to quality under the federal law. THE FORCE OP NUMBERS. THE fourth year of fighting- was the last. The crushing weight of the north told more and more anti the south tottered to collapse.

By the spring of 1864 the. federal armies were ready tot their final movements. the confederate armies freshened recruited posted as but they might be for their last stand and de tense. The final rsllotmetits of federal commanders had been made. General Grant had became commander and had taken personal command or the Army or the Potomac against Lee.

General Bherman. upon whom Grant had learned to depend at Vicksburg and Chattanooga. WI in command in the west. In May. Grant With Meade.

moved torwiri- from the Potomac into the broad Wilderness or wood and thick Undergrowth that Stretched south of rderieksburg and the Rappahannooh to the York river. forcing i to make a Slow retreat before hlnl Tha retreat wag slow indeed. Los operated upon shorter. Ruts than his enemy. and behind lbtrenchment H11 rctljr seventy thousand men lad knew not where to get more Grant had one hundred and twenty thousand.

sad could have as many more ashe By the tflrst of November Grant had lost eighty thousand more than Lee had had to face him with at the outset but his rub were still full Lea outplayed him In the great game of war. but could not stand -be-fore the' ceaseless movement. of his accumulating force. For sixteen days Of almost continuous fighting he held Grant In hand his slew Withdrawal southward like imftu4ttvr lon UI than-like retreat and at the end. when he-found a place' to.

his mine at Cold' Harbor on the Sd of June made a stand and repulsed- the federal attack along tola entire front. Hilt he was too heavily- General Grant. was not like the' other mill who had commanded the Army of the Potomac. No defeat topped him or so much- as. save breathing time.

He filled his ranks and moved forward. whether In the face pf victory or in the. face of de. teat determined to hammer' continuously ntil by met. attrition.

If In no other way the stubborn army at his front should be worn to a weakness that must bring him his triumph. i' It- became a mere question of who could stand the heaviest- losses. Six thousand union' soldiers had fallen at Cold Harbor' in a. single hour but their places wire not long vacant Plank movements. now upon this hand- now upon that rendered each position of Lees army.

in turn untenable and he was obliged. at to concentrate upon Petersburg- and Richmond. There direct- attack availed the federal-commanders little. wer torcedto sit down about Petersburg in nine months' formal siege i Meanwhile General Shirinan had driven Johnston la. nice faahloa.

with like difficulty. and stubborn fighting. ba through northern Georgia upon Atlanta and would have Ja4lnflnlte slow labor to the last had not Mr. Davis displeased that. Johnston did Sot beat be overwhelming army at Is front removed him from the con federate command the one man available who could Interior numbers formidable against uch an opponent and so- made the task of the Invading army easy.

Johnston out of his way Sherman- Cut Atlanta. communications to the southward forced the evacuation of the' place without serious difficulty and- leaving Johnston's successor. General Hood to face Thorns. at the north. whither he' was forced turn himself pushed on to the cities of the coat At Franklin.

Tennessee. November 30. Hood threw. himself. Impetuous faehlon.

on Thomas' advance force of eighteen thousand men and was checked. At' Nashville on the 15th of December. Thomas himself at tacked. and- so utterly routed. him that' his army was never again brought together as an effective force.

Sherman confident that. Thomas' could take care Rood at his rear moved steadily on to Savannah and took It December Before he. left Savannah Wilmington North Carolina and the formidable batteries of PortPIahr had en taken by naval and military forces operating on the coast and when he left Savannah and advanced into Carolina his movement forced the evacuation of I Charleston. Mobile had been taken by' Parrsgut and land forces operating with him early In August. THE CULMINATING TRAGEDY.

NOT a port of consequence remained to the. confederacy and the arjr fields. that had fed the southern people were. wept end bare. Sherman's men had left little enough in their.

track. They haddevoted themselves to destruction and the stripping or the land they crossed with a. thoroughness and' a care for details hardly to tie matched in the annals of modern warfare. The old heats of civil war. dreaded sine the world began.

had. been- blown very hot as year was added to year in the bluer struggle and each soldier played' the marauder very heartily. What the south had not spent or WM" consumed. he stripped her of as he could. What he did not need' or want he By spring.

as Sherman wept slowly northward through the Carolinas for- a final junction with Grant in Virginia. the inevitable had been accepted and the war was over. Lee had not had the strength to prevent. the federal tines tram being drawn completely around him By the tint days of April he had found Richmond untenable and had withdrawn toward Danville hoping. to effect.

a. Junction with. Johnston now once more in commander of the decimated force that was facing Sherman coming north but everywhere he was cut off entangled outnumbered and. on April he surrendered. to General Grant at Appomattox Courthouse.

On the lth Johnston surrendered to Sherman and the end had come. The most honorable terms were Both men and officers were to' be released onparoIe They were to. keep their horses because they would need them for the aprtn. plough leg and farm General Grant said. la his simple fashion.

Thei horses were not. the property of the confederate government the federal commander was surprised and touched to tut ot the maa who rode like almost everything ell they had or. used. The final arrangements were made almost as If by a conference between friends. both commanders Quieted and solernntzed by thoughts of the great matter they were bringing to a close.

Another course had. been pressed upon General Lee. by some of Ma own of. tic. and even suggested bV the vres- ldent of' the confederacy.

had been proposed' that. he should dllperie his army to gather it again 10. small ngnt Inc. squads at every point Of. vintage and make the conquest of the south impossible throulhth quick and.

cuss. less operations of guerrilla tindi moving broadcast over- the wholafaee of the various country. fluthe had refused with a sort of solemn anger. w. You must remember we ire a Chr Uan people.

he said. OT 11 I Christian people there Is now bttton course to pursue. We must thj situation these men must NO horns and planta crop and we must Proceed to build up our country on a new Basis. The way of duty was laln to him. And then.

at the end. when the tsrrl. ble days were over an a' healing tljaj of peace at hand in which pulon might run cool. again and men refflembertheir common' ties or citizenship and Dater' nlty. a deeply tragleal thing happened as If to nil the cup of .0 blf tfrneas to.

the brim jnd mark forever the fatal distemper of evil strife. On the eveplneof the 14th of-April 1865. five days alter General Lee surrender at Appomattox ere Johnston had yielded to Sherman. Mr. Lincoln was shot in his box at Ford' theater in Washington.

and the next day lay dead. The assassin had been John Wilkes Booth. the distinguished. actor half erased blind enthusiasm and poignant ret for the lost southern cause. A PARTY WITHOljT A LEADER.

TV R. LINCOLN had out a short IWI month before his assassination ivi entered upon his uecond terra a. president- The election had been held While General Grant was drawing his lines closer and closer about Petersburg and Richmond. while Sherman was weep Ing southward from Atlanta to the coast of Georgia while the struggle culminated which the wt election had brought on. Passion hadStirred in it as in the contest of arms Itself- not.

the ordinary ardor' parties arrayed against one another by sharp differences of principle. but the deeply excited passion which days revolution and supreme crisis must always breed. The war' had not run its extriordi- nary- course without- touching the very government itself with revolution. The constitution had' been trained with no thought to. provide.

for such days as these when states were break. lag away the union and the government was struggling for life itself. and with the unlooked for exigency had come unlocked for- and- arbitrary aCTne ole authority of. the nation had teemed of a sudden to cu sn- trated in the executive. without re of law i.

j'-- Citizens suspect4 of sympathy with th southern confederacy. had beenar rested and thrown into prison- deported even upon orders which- were no better than lettres de ratchet Many an undoubted principle of the constitution had seemed a. if for. the UmlUlJenled1D in that the executive and military. power might move supreme to meet.

a- supreme necessity. Otri Lincoln had acted oftentimes with the. authority of almost dictator and had permitted hit csstarlea I f. 0 sJi- Li S. S- ifata i ji iJiL l' Jigaj Jff to Gruens He wasImpatient for the time bf hisdeparture forSouth Amert- cato catt and i and Ben Traters hls eld friend went down to the docks to see about h1 passage.

Monk with someot hia erew spied them. and Monk saw" th chance for his. Tsp. At wonljfrbm him' the two were setoed and dragged oaboard skip ware ronghly handled uI. wee.

They Were Reughly Manned VIe left tlttDDeoDaeiouI. And Monk ly went to the telephone and reported Is Fisher who happened at the time to be with Good enoughr tald Stone. South America They'll be gone for jnontiu and by the time they return wellbe in- Ttflclble. Iii different from whit had' be plinnedbutttwlllao. TeUMonk we wont forget reward him A ltttl.

liter ltoM heard from Dunn' St the capture the two glue. ma rare ilcd his astonishment wheD iii saw Dorothy. U. realized then that hi had no chance tt win her and his love for her turned to hate. He was able to see them without being seen by them and When he went upstairs.

from the cellar a sschme of typical fe- rtdtr had taken form In his mind. the secretary of war a liCense or poWer greater even than he would hive himself used. individual rlauu had seemed for a tlmt suspended The me" who knew. the president and wire near him saw no- permanent danir In au. this.

for till' khsw th ur nature of th man atUoted not a movement of perionai tDition taeMiie of power Yeltwith what sober motives of public isrtlos he act' ed and looked oonDl2lnUr to see all things restored as of courts to their old poise and balance when thsatona of war had passed. Hut men who win not mar him could not so see him. lvei politicians of his own patty thought him unsafe. Many plain people everywhere. thought him mor thoutnt him" capable of hopiUialy marring th gavirnment and permttneatly weakening the foundations of Individual Irberty In- the.

very. act of saving the union from over- tuniteiy rink and nil had Claudt the spirit of the war and ih spirit of the man. Moreover In. his own tfomclr phrase was no- time Ii cry thoughtful man perceived to risk swapping horses in the rnlditof tat trcamrand he received U. eUetsral votllof every stats that took partfa the election except Mew Jersey tets.

ware and Kentucky. iV' There- had seemed for brief while nevertheless. not a Uttls canrer of hl defeat. and he had been nominated for his second term. toy a convention not gathered from the republican rank merely.

made up to reprtlent' all men 01 whatever party allegiance hUh erto. who. deemed him- the nations Indispensable Instrument of' the compos. it. up of the convention.

Mr. Andrew Johnson a. union man but a democrat. of Tennessee-had been nom. flitted for the vice presidency as to mark and.

emphasize the operation of groups and sections which the time hadTcalled forth. Mr. Lincoln's death maids Mr. Johnson The first tasks of peace were to be hardly less difficult and perplexing thanths tasks of war had been and the party which had triumphed was left- without- executive leadership at their vpry threshold. THE TERRIBLE COST.

THE nation. shaken by those four to forgotten year. fui war. could not return to the thought or to the llf that had one before them. An old are had passed awar a new ale had come In.

with. the. sweep of that stupendous storm. Everything was touched with the change it had wrought. The national cOnsciOusness disguli.

ed uncertain. latent until that day of sudden rally and call to um. had ieen cried wide awake toy the. voices of bat. tie like a passion.

now la the conduct of affairs. All things- took their hue and subtle transformation from It the raotlvea of politics the whole theory Of. political action the character of- the. government. the- sentiment of dnty very ethics of jrIYIte conduct wire altered La no halt of slow peace could hay.

altered them. The sheer cost unspeakable' sacrl- of th thodesperateatruggle mad ln- eCaeeabl record of themselree ia Use Is Mc4lv pl stlli in asked Gruen. MoUysYpIac was a dive or a alaga- larly notorious. sort- It was faHrsort' tfth rst tree. tewli tnt women of the struts sank when they were nearly at.

the end of the' ttter NoWoma who mr wtmdit wae end of the ro ne tertIM it WM to this teat Btoae teed the I've girl to be tak v' Tb girl. bad sot been Idle daring titiroaptiTity ia Oraeicellar They wad a pkk and a crowbar fethttr Mil Ht could mike no tmPtlAiOI1f upon the heavy door. Si taer turned taetratUntloa to the padlock. This WM not the door by which they lad been' thMt ta but on saAllie' door which might lead they thought to the cellar of tt at fcws a Mtter of fact toofb they dM at of ne IV ta lly led totke cellar I kb the were eoafiaed. It wu Bnet and Jack Sttrtu wb MOM Ornefl1 iwteU ef To and Travtn.

But that nude dlfw nc to DUMIi nea aid Grew. Tbey were attacked at oflce tad Brace was knocked le tth beflaalat of tie ifht Jwt ittpptof oa to the trip tell into UI cellar among th none. In horror hi backed agalasttael door and It opMt4 behind hia. the two IIrta removed th. padlock Ju la' tM tad dnjtid bin rout.

ta door before the 11051 osuld taw Bet now the meawho re to take the gitie to Molly pUct came ta and Mattaa fwupfal odd pit up Qt hi oc1d. The aolse kought tba polke lad- MerMt bad the glrtwers rescued just' in The polio. cleared out tie itore above welland saved Brace. But no one. could save Fisher.

Coming' to see the. necen at his plan he fell the. trip and there was no one toOpIa the to tot him. The lions ude him' tbiir prey instead of Iteveai. Out at tea Tom Wntgtn cams to hft muefl to se Mo i nil eyaj big down at him-Wen you're ur at back on this lhl said Monk.

0 I pol Mid Tom coolly. Wbere art you d. eaptaln- Rio de lanelrd. Good Look at UiU etptiflM Tm showed his ttletram from Wash lnjtoa aad tbe ottcW pa tri that gara hla autaorltyv Well go with' you paUenpri. said ToaI imagine you know enough St tTaele iBam te understand that Its time tee- yen' to turn tile lIen yettTa wtr tier- JV NtJrt Wish 11 thoughts end purptiM of people and' ntriuTclaiiialike What had een pet to fight the ntht out passed calculation.

it had cost the country snore than seven hundred men tsr SvePy oayof all the four. Lana yean of campaign and battle tour hundred klllid or mortally wounded Oft the odd the. nit dead of dts- lat. saposiars accident or the slow pains spent dollars OtlrnprlsonmshL The federal gev rnrani hu. tour hundred million- i upon the nearly two and.

a halt millions for every day has lasted. and" less than elfat hundred millions of. that vast sum bad come into its corers from the taxes. More thin twenty. lUfnttndred millions had been added de bt.

to the national debt. Theeonl dred millions and hid spent iBidea loftftetPIb had tlai of nsarli furtn hunr I I no man say how tnaaht for the scant yield or the taxis had. tlU supplemented by direct rIuIsiLions on the farmers for the toad supplies or the artnleii states had undertaken. so tar they could to support thttr own volunteers in the ntldt private purses had IL PIDe4 to pay for the equipment of sons and brothers sent to the front- very public' and every private inure. had Olin drained.

Ia the north four a out every 14 of tie military population ad been. enlisted for service of three years In the nerd in all 1700000 out of a military. population' of 4600000. of- those three hundred and sixty thousand had lost their lives one bun- dud and ten thousand by the actual casualties of the Held. But the sacrifices of the south had been greater yet imxneasureably greater.

The north had spent out of' Its abundance the son tli had spent all. that it had. and was stripped naked of- Its resources. While the war lasted It had been stripped naked also of Us men. Nine men out of every ten of age had on from those who enlisted for at- least three out of the.

tour years of thestruggle. Before the war ended' mere. half i grown boys and men grown old were included In the muster. The total military population of the south' was tout 1055000. Nine hundred thousand of these she drew into her.

armies for at least three years of service. The lives of clo upon three hundred thousand gave as her tCJU of Alood than one-fifth of all fit to tile Ninety-four thousand lost their lives in actual battle. South Carolina lost one-fourth of liar military population by the casualties of the fields The armed hosts and power of the north Increasedas the strength. and resources- of th south diminished. In till.

the south had had 91000 men In the field the north 157000 lo March ISO though their levies tad risen at th culmination of their effort but a 4 little more than a year before to 417009 the southern commanders had'- only 178000 men to surrender to armies which aggregated 150050 against them. This mutter of federal forces la creased even while the' last scenes of war before being enacted and its tasks drawn to a doe W1ien the surrender of the armies came they had grown toy than ten thousand sad there were' 1000511 men awaiting their flail Ks 4'-- i ili 7i-- 1 01 .7 1l ct. l'- t. ii yjo 1" la' Ie. flU i.

I 4 A I' 1 o. j7 4 tt' 1 7i O. G. 1 i 1 1 OOOi GHO. ta Episo nt' 8001 JO Pt UniTcraal tCopz4ti tM a rbW ht tat 11 eat HarborTraDsporta Light otWe.t- em tbe1moat prot ag tnst tba 1 bl thec 1 No CO IBeDot fttl thl thtrDitrom do1nwWacoa1.

at. U. tl et Ind bt I of Potmdot eom bo i2p toctate. Ttath1I11tbat It 1a 4 II theypnt soiutIi our th1I1P tt Fillae It' ln tJ17 a I1dBru at nd bl41Om. ftli unt1ll 1111 golDato work.

Md I dOwaC Ickl gif i 4 7tIe DcUaewmt tratghtfi tw ei beI1Te4. 1ctr04 om bn11 4D the lhlbOrTri 1SP rt t1 DCoD otrIdcI OrantnSher tl IpIrtih dIb1 BebrifJ1 at1 ata1d Pitftt8 Dwbk1 wbtdwl' lDtiiasit F1aherw 4tor1 sm ft" tII Gm e' a Jii ukec iOmj thriwasttD tor l1 Pe4throUli bU. tbette 1. forra' mJDUt aDc1helmmediatel1b1dhllhat IO thatini m1 tRpPoiethatbe IOmeea'- thedtor. acta mQwbo an.

alprlMo uta QDk willlOGAd If anlt tl' er8Ot ta himWIITnI. wuat. tacl ecft eiiiin TomPaldD ll 0. d. AaTOm np Monk b4br gpta Oneiir1Udwli Uuek taToredJaSm Iialmcct bleid rY T1rtth ut 0.

I theniost coddeDt1a1aortt sria11 ttbc IH brlwb th teclyoSeeb woidas teT ani1btaJI bhi ne' ofrmt wuab1fW1ou to tdi the. i iWttb' fthat orttbe. oL sotJte D' df enP1 kDowS101r7ud I ettbtwat. door zd hctfrowlle4 ht7 beuTom Uonk he ICIrtof tl1ngouM keptprettJ' much. ne 1 aconCdental rep rtt D7OD trroarec1Mont.

I Wne1r Wt Hlml He JcnIdont he D' 7eU djDcthmCI laeWU rtahtl" ODe mo thenPisher1t1th ct iit d1ednecr1edouth pI1ed a. b1 Yea an4b theQD. d1cateto tdtt" Itthtm onUJ hlmorm7 O114. trrl" 1t7CM doBtbeJ1t u4 yOLtht toWOtt DOWD4 wvGruen hubieQ toouefUl thllOftnuaeDt real I' IberwbeDMODt hon 4 ItaDt rd Iblmhat 1 d. AUi1 ht moo mot.

uluppoie topuU 1ZIOGt the thatioa GdHoak 7onrtupidtti ba SltDeal" I tonea ttli oth1Sor orga1za don I DDthe' mm r1t1caC I nr I e1d' t. tn wy aleplsode1ri ttbit i cn. theprop- I era thor1t1sm1IhthaT totllee1eetrteeJaar. Aa. of tatt rml ot 1otr7- Cohai- i umus tithe rmIO toGnienLT01l ce.

iee wheab. eslObe uwllne athanIe tD UlI i aeJmmed1tebt InclePendenttbenenpapet waibact1n mtIDftIht 1dthJa St8vwul hehad uli4 Ya' top OocetoJU cel td U1hc14 to. I1Tebm1na uetSoU conne ted. w1 tM rattJ1Z d1eat. You11hTeto go ne rlJwellnow.

raWIU at. tati aof ed 1111 In ftf Introdu morn accldentaltue tA ofthetr. own tD 4 withhet bol4apon fathered hlIthr at it she htmto I b01reTethlWU IwDaan bad IApllnoal Larnlgul4lttt. to the1ID Or t6" alm st the It werellOme the' ttoDlJbt hidbn tamb1 JlKD" ne' A. trl It1f01lld4rop mtea tat aaldDun aat Ltm1iaamt 4 arcuewith Bow et' adceddec w' oun ry- ur ireSlenJ ist ry ofthe American People' 0 0 WOOD ROWW TLON 0 I iaI.

to. lbllh arra. troulflatll 181' otl IIe eo law. Imp. a Me ptnalt7fol tlle BY moementln th tacewlth to' actsal There were and.

i Ina1l mUll on. i Duaofncescoult mplled onl 1ft work which wastoluata1n rederallronrnmentkDowlnl' dyantagel or manlolt thtnnlngranks I1ft notworUl ClUlet I thenegroe. WUdltrubed of. I thelr-maater. rocla- ofthe wasat handlhowe4 theBUrfaC un- their hua nd" outhaaUk to fronL.

nelTOwork the neld plantecS aDdrea ed. anddJ4theltlonelm1. an 1t ahowottalthfuV tfeoUonao I I orll1olt l1 amongitthem ItmecL jnOWlong theYfre ed r. or 2 The mU1nK1iI trodden by I c. th teetotrmtea tUlpI04Dee4 coldanhaelu rt1DiUDde th'j i I ha otc the.

willing a th. armies were fed. jfi ilJut thequlet se of. her 111141 i gJ9 1' 1. c' IS ii fif ffi ii.

i r. al te tt ha otfc. hiI PUlUOI 11. arleu i IUIC pe4 aeS rnewd ot eontral In tb po ulaton on trUite thloub 4. lte te miion a poure 01' huneSrdl thouun4 lnt thelubta batll.

th thea 1 IU notlnl ta aleS ti cnfldea" at It wlt' Dd. whee mon. the" norh. tde YlleSI4 conreldmande dlrot t. Imposd et1 duUe Im ort Irumhec al' ple Ilt abund ad no ecxd EASINGTHE STRIN.

CONRES luece6td 11 YIln banklnl Itl tran upnt treulT andt aae tme bualnel litret te OUU Ite te 41feult whch toodunolYI4 II Geeal 4tro14 Ba Btat. Va up In4pndlnttUur1. fn fer. beore' N. ha I.

bnr 11 ml 11111 whl tedlal tlr adopte ac bl abu4n. ad prctee carer. bk- complea pIITU. opento IUp r- coml reurementa forh Cie anathue raulret rcpld aelUu wih te Cnret I el tl alu.of ellaUnl not. eI4" tat teir Jmlnt mllt I an Je 00 ebrul 211.

cn. 111" natonal aa anet 1. er8tld tbe7tm ut ne on prll tootnl tbIUbIYllon. ert4 1nueU trUry under. eomitrU.

Oftl toauplntl a IOUII It ptoMonL ToptrUewu autome rpntt fll" utblhmqt to ter no tn 1aa bankh. eDItfl I. Wr 1. I. 01.

ih. Inn plalof fotlu. on. n4r thoiln4 40111 an4 Iaam pl. al latoDlallntaaI eho ioniWr 4uir to depolwUt treul" 4epent th ttN8ttoftha.

atleut ethll ter uplt 1f rm ble traoul Iue tem fm or eulaUnnot rpIUnl aoont 0 to' peet. thmMket Tlue Oftber. bO4. tDIIeea lpeCtt llr IU I tot c1nC li le undtafut I1lt te huc mlt tt i was 1tTde ahotd b' ap I pIOIODC te pr. twttllSl qpltL I imm ci Iaie ofthUt 7.

to dreate forth. I ot aD4qutckea port 1e1thal11t marU ameuullot top pri ata th f0l10llIf I ut 1 them th. HI1Uourllb iear. tl1htln. WClI ht a 10Ited1 the de.

had rln chlef the learndto thwt Gran l1dern. pahannoc1c riItcUclng Leo 10wret1 at him. 1 10111. IndeedL He ha4 carcl nty oul4 haveaa any be first had I more came atandbe- nUn- the maftuYenot long- battle nther a theend he- found OD ltan4 atattaek entirettoJiL bwal notlIke oppedhamor muclr1 bnathlll1rtimtI. hlaranka mOTI4tord orin ofde- oUII-1Intll 9therwa stubborn-army- ftontaboi 14.

thatmat hlJAhls qg lonOr placeaerebot uponthla DOW UPQ3thtrendered poa1 on. aI14hwuobUge4at71ut attaekamfled IIttl 1h7 wlre forced to dOWDabout JIIten D1Demontha lie IrtnnJohnIton c. cE. throuahnorther AU ht Ihave olow laDor10 ut thatJohDlton pot at the arm his frontremove4 hlmtromtbe.con- tederr the tnd thotaak heln.Jl.dlncum to. tOlcedthe WlthoutlllloUi ancSleavIDK 800dto tacenoml to him.

uheeS hlm alt In' hia tuhlonoD elghteen1houand on De ember Thomahlmlell at. tackedando brought couldtAke care. Ved and it. De ber No h. Ca al Fort FIhtr bn Iand Savannah Iment I.

MOblle b. ttn Pnagut I earl 01 ap rem. lneeS aneSthe vry Shermanamen had' c1notl4 TheoleS warc1readed the. orld yearwad4e4. gle.

lieutJl theouth berof he. hedetloyed I Carounul Oranttn thelnevltble warWa Bythe dofAprll behad thatwaafaclDC D11ne buteT11TWhll wuntoff oatnu re4 Iheaurren4en4toOeDeralGrD1 CourthottaOn the. aurreoderedto8hermao. and ottlcwere be. releaae4011 parole.

Theere horaebecaUJe IDgand OeDera1Qrant ThboraelWernot1he confederatCOTenamenti raloommancSrwu ueh eamrbntcftUmeD A rodethem-Ike If the clo' I td IOmeof Wii' f. tg lIfft he. Ip'r" 1. ta 114 e. 1.o elaUoDi uerrUI But' he I Ifo U.

bu one the ftL dot plain an' time ra1nand remember their terness and mark It rUe. eve lngof of A rll Lees 4a laydead. 41at1n lahed. I pol ant ca. Wle.

WITHO MR. il beenhe14 hlllA Petersburg ofGlOrgia elec on It. ofanna ot hlchdara. prfmcl1sl. alwa warhad Darycone the government WutruggUnctol IIfeltaell Wttllthe forex1Kno acts of pewer I.

The wholutholltJ ottlle 11adteemed ofaudde ecu n- theexecottTeWttb01lt re- CltluDaWlJectlif the hen u- PrlacD4l rt- enliupo. nerdenwhlch werno bettelthDlettrea MaD AlhuD4oulte4 ns. ord at mlpLmoTe j1 Llneolnha4 Uclofu nttmM au 11t7 toJ4IZ14 pen e4. nontl1 i to' nJei a WasImPa eD thJ 4 tbADie cm an4Bt Traer went riJo the i l1on W1U i GtJrl eW' pedtheiDand MOiikth baJi torbll Word' trOiD tJiet1foweni edaMGra t4oIibOie T1aIJWtratouPl7 Tha WINKaM Haft aft gliatIng. ljet totbetaiepbone w.hoba peAe4t thettme wI lI.

QoOdID01IIhr 180 th r1ht711 fouDont thrtRnawe11beba nn fta4Urtret beeaptaue but will do. Tell Monk te. ptV etthetwoatriL Iqualt4 lahmentheD DO tin brthem hta. par1ioiiarly a l1 en. than.

1111111YII1I1I rlhlaha4. uemttol tnlu fn4ed. 14nt IAWiDO kftl the singular- the de ted mOYlfnentet per. IUOD fUI1t sqber-mottvu 01. edt toaee th Dr'l ofeour.

to 0 I' obalanowbln mlnwhoWUI 0. Hn lID tO le thOUght thought eapableot thtonment etMAlllnU wta enlllW' t21evu1 fromover th 1tuna l. ftk ftllh 0 nlwarjuld tU frlt In twal tlh er manJllrolv Iwa ln In. miost 0 tIUIJU aft4 tOOItartG cUon tIOl eW' ftr. dangerof een hi tI convenUonnot but made whatever-party a1Jeclanethltla- I.

eom ma It to on. ume. 4 I called fortb 1IrJoh. The efpiacerto than thetutc fwal' beenftd esecutinleadul1alpat thelrv lYthrelholcL T. HE.

JJatiollhLkeu fo D. of fulwar. notrltutDt tiaatba an. oldale pI4aI17n. had.

ep wa.toudiacS/"Jth hadwrouIbL eonacloulnutdJlUI latentunUIthat4aof caUto bdll UeaDdacted Dowln thln tookthelh ci nb thCharacter offheIOYef1l. mentth. enttmentofdlltT th1 eth1cof condueterealur8ld entu of- 10 uve1terec1them ah elcotunapelLJi ces ofthdeaperateeUuclemc1eJD lfaceabl 1D. t1I1 IH f' sa1iGt gr1. 1 U1' pIa a d1 yl tor1oQS BOrtIt of tb 1rOnt aJl1ace w1rlch tJ1 mea ts enJh fi rift lt Its IOr ty oftHroaelMtIOrtU4 ttj 91 wuteW dIt8 DI t1rC.

4 bHD. 1411. thtrupdttrb1OIlJ rL ey' tnatn.4 tb Ir' 9U 1Zl4 ji thI400rb7 hleb. it MIithmttBb tolfaIUU 1. 4it t' oq 1 nuottUDHt ttaet.

Otvsei PtCt1tttctH11J tMOtUai Ia' tMtOduL i wuBrue u4ll lttftllWh. II ttI4et1o Iand Blttkt G1br 1' lnlttWu tuekt4lat th. lattut Itar Ii' p141 ek Jut dINad 14bIa tUUtO nth wtiOwtfit gtdstD KolDII i J. IM4J Oft14Thaotse aatUpOUet ualtft iJi4 tbI111twmntC1ItdtattD. tUedoutUlt rtibo leciBruefBut ld hfioti11 tbrqUcathe thereu noon tb btmTh Jia dt tnateadof Stdt at.

tto IH I 1f1lar m40walt wen roufit1I thn' no onWt IMp So II14To litOOUi 0 JtU t. lll 1qt61u4. oel1tII. lIhtala1tlaOllt1 wt Jft upuieri I1IUItn. ifV eltlo thlIt mfW' i 4 EI H.

1t 1 tbo 1at u41fpt1t IltoPtanci pOliticlins hike been Itot Aa1atO Nt4m. frYdiY otal1 lb. I oq 11 kltltd motttrwbund fit Of1m rllonmht fb M.t\ th1rt OIU' IIJidr ahal 10111111. tbllUlnh dptlft. I I rom hundred 4 htnaUonaidIlt hi JII4 debt bt.

oa ltapatt alul fOiattfthun tnIUIOl1 besides. ma 1 QQhstor 0 UIttWU 41rtUreQUIUl6nl. tor. atmlUltatttbl4 Ultdttlaktn10 UtblcoultOluppoft Ite topa hequlp 114 front andnprlvat l1I4elll14II14. athnorLhfCJu fberr BUl6lIf'- tMm1Uw id 111100000 a' Ot thtthnhun41e4 Ixt b4lolt onebUD ncStenthoWlan4 tlrtD.

0 Butthalr1A of Uat utLlud Ifet tit' lrnmeaaur abIY Jaa4pentout. I thatlth4an4w. ed reoarceWh1letlJe warJalted beenatIlP1leduakedaloofltl outoCeTerJtenof ehtha lbd tromlboeho torleut otthe foueeal ettb. tlu a1e warenelect menrroWI1 014w IDcluc2edio totalmtUtUy OUthwutlut thoulandOfth. bedrew mtlforatlettheere rao efouJj athl' ahel" all NID.tT-fourthOUl&Dd loa.

tourth l1eJmtUtal1 n. blhU8ual tleae ftl ofJ the. hdhaeS thAe14 thnorthIl7OGO InMarchJt Inteabad the' thlleUoILbuta lItttmor thanteartetore mman4erahad onl uOeoaplDat thezn. enwho thelaat acneot tOIbIDe nactedan4J drato en thelUlTeDd southern- f. emetheYhadcrowDbYlDOr i thereI I OP1JIi1menawa1Ung 11Da1dJa.

1z i ii 5 t. CcmUnuadJlutsWi4q. I A 4 IIU 7 ttrta cr4a3 7 ght o. 3 fl ItUCE i Ii 4A om I fl I Tc theirmotto ou do1ngw1th wz IW7 To st food I onnd 4 yon re sber ow on tnIjht7uptodkts. srnthesaela 7 a jab dndin th aYezi ha ItrflOt OIn eas 1 planet uaiLT 7t.

1t I 7 dowc ad ICr. S. 1 TsL-kad sirrady zp1eI out I fatwhere with Brnce I lbs 1abzs pvatsoeetherewtI wb waltedfor his rmm nfl 1i pntsldthis roomhjukdsom chance doorwblJ. alone for coining p1 aAn kadIi tbUf tnadeepioice. hfonkwset P1aILsnppoed ff 1sher Isndng rqinPa1dnornoraUent1on Monkbad onwith himtozni1moit1nredI bIeIaunchedInt 4 1Ii afl right bo flasokeInwhAth rnoduIated- biiteYer I sot Aiseki ship- tsort boIdwufufl of upot ti at ent' t.

igb th nwhile bt ha aa nthithyonr yo donthe7 in whenjon dMntiajnoth1ngI os- spy 1thlmplayonual" F' gotbim ormy Toudbtter lean ii hub tans ototta oo U. a-- I ETrTm hi aervofbtm in bi hiik wl. edeoeceitIncrImtna1 epis inIghtha th aieetrIehtr 4a. Mati. rythI1Ibaaippsei Out We11 thu rLrn1 w1fl bewalkslntoa httben chante1n Toms1i1ii ne.

thoIeOtths ith tou 4 onceto Itiid tbconsnl oiIdbsab1 rnlu1ancnneet era bttObS Cb Ui 1tty blaheld notyleld toruin him h1 Duanind kno tofoflow en. teadorueAs storealniOst someef lnm ringsinwtth trapdoor the 6 tage I i k---- 1 Pr 1 II- Out Cduntryby Our Presidentj ii theArnericanPeople4TBy WOODROWWILSON I by arragewt The. i 1 I I I a thlhg 1 1 ws I I 1 I I- boys were whichwas t. t. 1.

i ab- i of 1 was 1 I er sons. men f- of cheery the11eldIPlfltSd and did their lonely mis- quiet industry. I I----- no tO see righted. smiling fields not yet I otarmiesstill harvesta under the bands of the slaves and ths- But the quiet tWg. 1 3 1j' 4.

thehundreds north- notchecked. oNOnEsa the it a tthat rant. I 155. 4-- i5 I I Etba I a than ittepersona aa iustbuons hUndred andln-amitl 3tatssot value which 1tbers tssusd-tetMmfrom per cent oftbe1r- bond ng oftisir tob. IMt to hDdThdtiniU1U heap.

sttse1npropor. aaabankl ohiie ofthi u' was the processes 1 than-It pri- of 155 TBEFRCE ibtr nchments. soarosly Le set- mantaver of a a ntlre to nu- atla a CrlnJoi1nstinuksfthio kT bark andwould infinite the.con- Wa Im- iIn en aportof de- a detalhsbardly 4i war' needor inevitablehad o1 bereleased wo id prlagplotgh- toltarnbntcfthi 1 an werebringingtO li the it In50tlI throngh the whoi. tide thevarious Chris- or 115 iS but ona aiil. ne he1II11 nit by LtNCO had sUrred 1tse1fnot.

ardor Of as whole no rbl4 wlththe 5- r' crneiis win miia ent foe hI8-ep rosoth-Arner1 to Traers tothe toieabonthI sa o- ottla ehaneefor. i ordjfthmhIm thetwo wer on bWsIip w' I TI.b lIivgM3HaiidI.diiW Unswiso nneou bO tobewithStois. Go Iit gOformonths th the7rStrn beet planned It himi" Ito bo sthe by ir tudlYidual It re seeet In nie tell Wltfl ylce the storm OlC the Ii flu its can eP It wac 5 peroeIv6to of lh reeeIvs4the votes of part in a afittle ranks repreeentalI hits1 ofths aunion had wereto tHE I to badgon awnya. toucbew1th of theeonductofaffairs. thing ttth.

ot ofdnty the century cos made-In- effcablTtOOidOfthUflIalV5lfl th 310117i r1nnlng2" a' ukedGruen I YelsaId Oruen with i MolIyap1aeewuadDIOfa1U a resort ofthewornttypeapIICet WhiCbtht. thetts WCX at I No woai i came ilt ally. ceetomert were ncf tberougbse-t-eOrt. AMit was placetMtStose labial The their ciptl1t7In Greses liu. tounda in thair beAvydoor.

th ytnrned their attention on byh1chtk71iad' Inbut 1sedthy the thi zthOese. Aiaitter though ths7dd otoIeeIrue. leLtth iutf Tm Dnuarnse ree. aa seMlsse atthebglnMig 3ckstipp1 th. th.

baeksdau1ttb4 intlropsed k1 hs tw rno thepdloek ei1nE fore werta Mol1jplaecarn.In a1t tie- oise the. tSti wslFandsared ButbOone CO1dSiTi incc li onetoOpea Ad4 ttiIrpr7 itsea hisi Moik1sr11iMglax WIfl7ONhSrSI thit1no ieposi" RI Look pts1n. andtbe PiSfl 1 To I acli am en Epliids pis1 peoplsan tilie tne.rest--aeaa government vu--neatly da thaaelgnt sly tothe The a upoft It. Dart man soiuid hat is they Oesacpened an SSP Iii mis of had a ou abundancethe south cloie abe he more than of Increased as i 099515 csrgs. I i cc tthned Nxt I.

I 1 1. LL.

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