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THE FIFTIETH CONGRESS.
t*rocHilinic of the Legfalature for tl*
Twenty-Ninth Day.
In the senate petitions ami memorials were
presented. Ameng the bills reported was
one to prorkl* for warehousing fruit brandy.
A number of bills were introduved. Mr.
Riddleberger offered a resolution to consider
the pending treaty befcw. the United States
and Great llriteiu iu open session. Plumb’s
resolution iu regard to inefficient mail ser
vice ki the west was debated at length. A
joint resolution was agreed to proposing an
amendment to the constitution fixing April
80 instead of March 4as the day for the ad
journment of congress and the end of the
presidential term. At 4:15 the senate
went into executive session, and at 4:45 p. m.
adjourn si.
In the house, two members were added to
the commit!te on prlntin.% to aid in conduct
ing the investigation Into ho administration
of the government printing office. A bill
was passed authorizing the construction of a
bridge across the Missouri river at Jefferson,
Mo. A resolution requesting the interstate
commerce commission to investigate the
Reading strike was reported from the com
merce committee. A ' bill was reported re
quiring land grant roads to construct inde
pendent telegraph lines. The bills granting
pensions to the widows of Gens. Logan and
Blair were reported and put on the private
calendar. Bills were passed for the erection
of public buildings at Greenville, S. C., and
Portsmouth, ‘O., the latter to cost $60,000.
Wilkins had his banking bill postponed,
as the regular order for two weeks. At 3:20
pi m. the house adjourned.
Thirtieth Day.
In the senate an adverse report was made
on the bill to open an overland route between
the United States, Asiatic Russia and Japan.
Bills were reported for an inspection of
meats for exportation and increasing the
pension of soldiers and sailors who have lost
l>oth hands. Among the bills introduced
was a service pension measure by Mr. Cam
eron, fixing the rate at a cent a day for the
time served, the amount to bo paid monthly.
At 4:140 o’clock an executive session was or
dered, and half an hour after the senate ad
journed.
In the house a memorial was presented
praying that pensions be granted to those
engaged in the life-saving .'■ervice. A joint
resolution was passed ordering 14,000 thou
sand additional copies, of the report on wool
from the bureau of statistics. A bill extend
ing the leave of absence to government
printing office employes to thirty days was
!>assod. The Reading strike resolution was
considered. An investigation by a special
committee of five was ordered, and the
house, at 3:10 p. m., adjourned.
Thirty First Day.
In the senate, unimportant bills were re
ported and others introduced. The special
committee on the Pacific railroad was an
nounced. The resolution in regard to the
insufficiency of postal service in the west and
south was discussed. Mr % Riddleberger tried
to secure consideration of the British treaty
in open sessiou, but failed. At 2 p. m. Mr.
Kenna replied to the tariff speech of Mr.
Hherman. Mr. Sherman answered, and Mr.
Reagan folio wed. The motion to refer the
president’s message went over without action,
Mr. Stewart spoke on the Blair bill, and
Senator Call obtained the floor. At 4:10 p.
m., the senate adjourned until Monday.
In the house bills was passed amending the
Tatutes to provide that no publications that
ure but books or parts of books, in whole or
in part, bound or unbound, shall be admitted
to the mail as second, class matter. Also a
bill regulating the construction of bridges
across the Muskingum river, in Ohio.
Speeches were made by Messrs. Barry, of
Mississippi, and Cooper, of Ohio, on the
White-Lowry contested election case, and
the matter went over until to-morrow. The
house at 4:45 p. m. adjourned.
Tliirty-.Seeond Day.
The senate was not in session.
In the house a bill was reported author
izing the appointment of eleven division su
perintendents of the railway mail service.
Private bills were considered and a dozen
passed. At 4:05 p. in. the house adjourned,
Mr. Crisp giving notice that ho would call
up the Lowry-White contested election case.
DARK LOW GRADE TOBACCO.
jouisville Operators Trying to Get a Cor
ner in it.
Chattanooga, Tenn., Feb. 6.—A number
of tobacco buyers are in the city on their
way south. They are just from the sales on
the tobacco exchange at Clarksville, Ky.,
and are going further south for business as
well as pleasure. They say there is a perfect
furore in Kentucky over tobacco, and the
acreage next year will be unprecedented.
Every available foot of land is being en
gaged, and people are paying as high as S9O
an acre for rent on good fields. A repre
sentative of the Lorillards, Mr. Jacob Spald
ing, says:
“Spain has recently bought 4.C00 hogs
heads of lugs iu New’ York, which leaves her
1,000 short,of last year’s requirements, with
18,000 hogsheads for the wants of 1888. The
New York warehouses are about empty and
the purchases made at Clarksville were for
immediate shipments.”
Louisville operators are making every
effort to get all the dark low grades in a few
hands and are credited v<th the purchase
within a week of nearly all the stock in Pa
ducah, Hopkinsville and Nashville. Clarks
ville is the great market for this grade of
tobacco, but the supply is getting low.
Double Murder*and b Suicide.
Macon, Ga., Feb. 8. —In Baker county, a
young man went to the house of Amos
Grant, a colored farmer. Finding all quiet
and the house closed, he looked around for
the cause and found tlie'iKxiy of Grant hang
ing from a rope thrown over a projecting
joist in the rear of the house. Inside he found
Mbs. Grant’s body in bed, her head crushed
into jelly as by a club. On the floor was the
wife’s sister. Further over was the body of
Grant’s fifteen-year-old son. The theory is
that as Grant was a hard task master, his
wife was about to leave him, end that Grant,
frenzied by the thought of her departure,
took a club and brained them while they
slept and then committed suicide.
Public Sentiment Saved Her.
Atlanta, Ga., Feb. 3. —Governor Gordon
to-day commuted the sentence of Eliza Ran
dal l, who was to have hanged in Clay county
on Friday, to imprisonment for life. Eliza
Randall murdefed her father, killing him
with an ax. All the details of the crime were
of the bloodiest description, and not one
word of extenuation was urged in her behalf.
Public sentiment against the infliction of
capital puishment is what saved her from
the gallows.
Affray About Hogs and Dogs.
Ashland, Ky., Feb. 6.—News has just
reached here of a probable fatal affray at
Hubbardstown, W. Va., between two young
men named Neal and Strother. Neal was
dogging hogs belonging to Strother.
Strother knocked the dog off, and Neal
struck him with a club. Strother in return
knifed Neal, inflicting severe wounds in the
thigh and hip, from which death will
probably ensue. Strother made good his
escape.
NEW CIVIL SERVICE RULES
APPROVED AND PROMULGATED BY
THE PRESIDENT.
Go Into Effect on the First Day of
March Next —The Most Important Fea
tures of fhe New Rules—Kxtraditlen
Treaty With Great Britain.
Washington, Feb. 4. — Presklent Cleve
land has approved and promulgated the new
civil service rules which are to go into effect
on the first of March next. The recon
structed rules have been carefully considered
by the president and the commission for
nearly a year. The civil service regulations
have aLso been revised to conform to the now
rules. The most important features of the
new rules are as follows; the general rules
ore nine in number, and are applicable ex
cept in one or two particulars, to all parts of
the classified service, and to some parts of
the service not yet classified under the law
or rules.
“By these rules it is made an offense, pun
ishable by dismissal, in any officer of the ex
ecutive civil service, to use his official au
thority or influence for the purpose of inter
fering with an election or controlling the re
sults thereof, or to be dismissed or cause to
be dismissed, or to use influence of any kind
to procure the dismissal of any person from
any place In said service because such' per
son has refused to be concerned in his politi
cal action, or has refused to contribute
money for any political purpose or to render
political service.
“And it is especially provided that any
officer, clerk, or other employe, who shall
violate the section of the civil service act
which prohibits any such officer, clerk or
other employe, from receiving or being in
any manner concerned in soliciting, or re
ceiving any assessment, subscription, or con
tribution, for any political purpose, what
ever, from any officer, or other employ* of
any department, branch or bureau of the
public service, or from any person receiving
any salary or compensation, from moneys
derived from the treasury of the United
States, or who shall violate the section which
provides that any person who shall, in any
room or building by an officer, or employe
of the government, or in any navy yard,
fort, arsenal, solicit in any manner what
ever, or receive any contribution of money,
or other thing of value, for any political
purpose whate rer; or who shall violate the
section which provides that no officer, or em
ploye of the United States, mentioned in the
civil service act, shall discharge or promote,
or in any manner change the official rank of
any officer or employe, or promise or
threaten to do so, for giving, or refusing, or
withholding, or neglecting, to make any con
tribution of money, or other valuable thing,
for any political purpose; or who shall vio
late the section which provides that no offi
cer, clerk, or other person in the service of
the United States shall, directly or indi
rectly, hand over to any other officer,
clerk, or person in said service, or to any
senator, or member of the house of represen
tatives, or to tolerate any money, or other
valuable thing on account of, or to be ap
plied to the promotion of any political pur
purpose whatever, shall be dismissed from
the service.
“It is also provided that no question in
any examination shall be so framed as to
elicit the political or religious opinion of
affiliation of competitors for place, and that
if any appointing or nominating officer shall
make inquiry concerning, or in any other
way, attempt to ascertain the politics or re
ligion of any person who has passed an ex
amination, or who shall discriminate in favor
or against such person, shall be dismissed
from office.”
By the general rules several non-competi
tire examinations are provided for, and
compulsary examinations for promotion are
directed. The compulsory examination pro
vision as suggested by the commission was
amended by the president, who added the
following words: “But persons in the classi
fied service who were honorably discharged
from the military or naval service of the
United States, and the widows and orphans
of deceased soldiers and sailors shall be ex
empt from such examination. ”
Another important feature of the general
rples gives authority to an appointing or
nominating officer to whom the commission
ers may send th-5 names of persons declared
by them, to be eligible to a certain place, to
object in writing to all or any one of the
persons thus certified, stating that for rea
sons to be particularly specified, such per
sons, or any ot them, are not capable of per
forming the duties of the vacant place, and
the commissioners are directed to make
certificates of other names if the objections
*re ascertained to be good and well
founded.
The general rules provide that soldiers and
sailors who have been honorably discharged
because of sickness or wounds, shall be certi
fied for appointment in preference to other
persons of higher grade in the examination,
and that in making any reduction of force
in any branch of the classified service hon
orably discharged soldiers and sailors, and
also the widows and orphans of deceased sol
diers and sailors shall be retained in prefer
ence to pthers.
The department rules authorize the classi
fication of commissions and independent
bureaus, as well as the departments at Wash
ington and prescribes the examination that
must be provided to test fitness for admission
to this branch of the service. The maximum
age limitation of forty-five years is abro
gated and the minimum limitation is raised
from eighteen to twenty years. Soldiers and
Bailors who have a claim of preference in
civil appointments are let in at 65
per centum, but in all other cases the mini
mum grade of eligibility has been raised
from Go to 70 per centum. The number of
names to bo certified to an appointing officer
from which to select for an appointment has
beenTeducod from four to three.
One important addition to the rules now in
force,endorsed by Messrs. Oberly and Lyman,
reads as follows: “Whenever a dismissal
from the executive civil service is made, a
written statement of the cause of the dis
missal must be filed in the department or
office from which the dismissal is made, and
become part of the record in such depart
ment in office.”
Commissioner Edgerton opposed the adop
tion of this rule and in this he was supported
by President Cleveland, and it was therefore
excluded from the new rul&s.’
Extradition Treaty With Great Rritaln.
Washington, Feb. 4.—The features of the
pending extradition treaty with Great
Britain, making persons extraditable for
larceny or embezzlement, as well as for as
saults upon life with dynamite and other ex
plosives, are not new. They were in the
treaty as ft stood before the senate last ses
sion, and that was the great bone of con
tention that, under the dynamite clause, Irish
patriots taking refuge in this country could
be extradited. The embezzlement feature is
the one of importance to the United States,
in order that Canada may no longer be a safe
refuge for embezzlers fleeing from this coun
try. It is understood that the foreign rela
tions’ committee made some change in these
features looking to a clear distinction be
tween political offenses and crime under tbi
dynamite clause, but the provisions are no!
ew.
DISCOVERED BY ACCIDENT.
ne Nest of a Gxxg of Juvenile ChieM®
Robbers Unearthed.
Chicago, Fbd. 4.—A large number of re
cent polity robberies in the vicinity of Went
worth arm*** and Twenty-ninth street was
xplained on Monday night by the unex
pected discoverv of the headquarters of a
£ang of bey thieeee located uikier a side
walk by two officers from the Thirty-liith
?treet station. On going to investigate a
mysterious light under the sidewalk they
found a small entrance to a cave in the
ground, and on pursuing the search catne to
a spacious room guarded by a thirteen-year
old Jack Sheppard named Jimmie Dynes.
“Who goes thoref” followed by the sharp
clicking of a revolver, greeted the officers as
they were about to enter the cavern, and
their quickness probably saved their lives,
for on getting inside they found young Dynes
with a revolver in hand and ready to uphold
the dignity of the gang of which he Mas an
officer.
Inside a curious spectacle was presented to
the officers. Revolvers in great profusion
hung about the papered walls, backed by a
huge musket, whiet glistened brightly in the
light thrown out from an old “Salamander”
stove in the corner. The walls wore pictur
esquely decorated with sensational prints,
and a notice signed in red ink related the fact
that “Tough Jimmie” was captain of the
crowd, and that ‘‘Billy the Kid” officiated as
lieutenant.
To the threats"of summary vengeance to
traitors was signed the hair raising names of
“Lightning Eddie,” “Peanuts,” “Jumbo,”
“Oysters,” “Ohurnpy,” and “Dyng Do.” The
The youthful oava-dvreller iu charge told the
officer he was awaititg the arrival of some
of his comrades, but they failed to put in
appearance.
At tko station the boy finally confassed to
a complicity in several robberies perpetrated
by the gang, of which he was a member.
ASA GRAY DEAD.
TH Eminent UotunUt Dies at Rmtoa of
Paralyftis.
Boston, Feb. 1. —Professor Asa Gray, for
many yoars professor ef botany of Harvard
k college, and author
of many works on
fir / wlhj A botany and kindred
L | subjects, died of
W g&TfVfl paralysis last night.
[/'* ”* fr Professor Gray was
a,., w. born in Paris, N.Y.,
(igp“£s November 18, 1810.
k He was among the
wi * b Dr ’ To, ‘
wY4 i e y to attempt the
/ classification of sy'e
/ r F cies W 1 natural
ASA ORAY. basis of affinity, and
in 1844 they together published the first part
of the “Flora of North America.”
Profeasor Gray’s herbarium, numbering
over two hundred thousand specimens, and
his library of 2,200 botanical works were
presented to Harvard college in 1864, for pres
ervation in a fire proof building erected for
their reception. He was a member of most of
the scientific societies in America. Iu 1874
he was appointed regent of the Smithsonian
institution, succeeding Louis Agassiz. He
was an honorary member of the principal
scientific societies abroad, including the
Royal society of London, and the academies
of sciences in Berlin, Paris, Munich, St,
Petersburg and Stockholm. *
SAYS THE LAW IS CRUEL.
Maxwell’s fia to the Anxerieau People
f*r Fair Play and Juetioe.
St. Louis, Feb. 3.— Hugh M. Brooks, alias
MaxwM, the slayer of G. Arthur Preller,
has written a plea to the American people
calling for fair play and justice. He re
echoes tko ringing cry of his sturdy old
father, and says that the law is oruel; that
justice should be tempered with mercy, and
that he is a fit subject for clemency. He
asks: Were my rights respected? Did I have
a fair and impartial trial? And he answers
himself by saying that the jurerg had formed
an opinion; that his attorneys wore not al
lowed to define the terms of the law, while
the prosecuting attorney was permitted to
do so; and rants at testimony hf the alleged
detective, Dingenfelder-whe who entered the
jail as a criminal to wring out a confession.
This was a horrible breach of faith, he says,
and the little chloroformer works out an af
fecting story of the infamous practice and
the false confession.
The affidavits of his previous character are
grasped at convulsively; they should have
been of avail, he thinks, but they were not,
because they were unjustly impeached with
out a hearing. He refers to how Preiler’s
body was exhumed and examined without
the knowledge of his counsel or his dissecting
skill to point out the causes of the unsuccess
ful operation, and closes by saying that the
case went before the state supreme court;
said he never had a case before him with
such flagrant violations of the common prac
tice.
A DRUNKEN BOY’S DEED.
Two Children Roiled Alive and Another’s
Rrains Heat Out.
Eastman, Ga., Feb. 6.— Hubbard Harrell,
a colored boy ten years old, was ma<fe drunk
near here, and going to the home of his
brother-in-law, James Pope, killed three
children. Filling a large kettle used for
washing hogs with boiling water, Harrell
commenced by inducing one of the children
to entirely undress, after which he suddenly
tripped the little fellow up and landed him in
the kettle, where ha was boiled alive.
The next child resisted, but Harrell felled
her to the ground with an iron bar, and
while she was still insensible threw her into
the caldron with the boiled corpse of her
brothei*. The remaining child was the
youngest of the trio, and picking it up by
the ankles, Harrell was beating its head
against a tree, when, attracted by its cries,
the parents appeared and the young murderer
fled. The little one’s skull was so badly frac
tured, however, that death resulted last
night. At last accounts young Marrell was
still at large.
County Officials in Trouble.
Harrison, Ark., Feb. 4.— The grand jury
has just adjourned after finding fifty odd in
dictments against many of the prominent
citizens of the county. The county officials
are nearly all included in the presentments.
The Hon. W. W. Watkins, county clerk,
pleaded guilty to malfeasance and was re
moved from office. The county judge, sheriff
and treasurer, it is claimt i, will be removed.
The action of the grand jury has created a
vacancy in nearly #very county office. Large
discrepancies in finances ai*e the alleged
grounds for the sweeping accusations.
Navigation Resumed at St. Louis.
St.*Louis, Mo., Feb. (}. —No arrivals or
departures. The river has risen four inches,
and the gauge now marks 12.2 feet. Thera
is considerable ice ceming out of the Lower
Missouri and there is also a good deal between
here and Cairo, but navigation will be re
sumed south to-morrow by the departure of
the City of Vicksburg and the City of St.
Louis. The City of Monroe was pulled off
the bank and will be put in running order at
once. She is somewhat strained, and one of
her wheelhouses is broken. Cold and wet.
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SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR
See that yoh got ths gsnsiso with red 1 Z”
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SI HEIMKE.. gS
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In explanation of the remedial power of these
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| >wnnmo
by the manufactur-
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ty 4 i Boniedy, for a case of
Pml Chronic Nasal Catarrh which
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SIMPTOITIS OT CATARRH.—DuII,
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Sold by druggists everywhere; 50 cents.
“Untold Agony from Catarrh.”
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“Constantly Hawking and Spitting.”
Thomas J. Rushing, Esq., 2002 Pine Street,
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THE LIVERY STABLE
CRAWFORD & FIELD
Always Keacly with tlie Handsomest Turnouts,
Polite
Treatment
Horses and Mules kept on liand for gale, and our accommodations for drovers can- j
not be surpassed ai ywhere. *
r I hanktul for the past liberal patronage and asking a continuance of the same, which j
we hope to merit by careful and prompt attention to business we are,
. Respectfully, CRAWFORD & FIELD,
ap!2l-df near Court House.
''l '' '' * < 'i' ' I 1 "' • >IV if■' ''' '' 'l • il' 1 . o
i nrougbout its various scenes. Who use the Sindh's Bile Beans.
~ BSLE BEA?J3 purify tlie blood, by acting r~ —a
asrectly and promptly m tlae ILlver, Skiu and Bid- Tim original Photograph. 1
tueyw. lacy constat of a. vegetable combination that Panel size, of this pictura| i
has no equal in medical science. They cure Constina- * ent on receipt of loc.u
J a . , 1 a j la a*d dyspepsia, and are a safeguard
?* Severs, chills and fever, gall stones, X st. houMo.
and 9iri_hi s disease* Sena 4 cents postage for a sum. 1
and ‘est the TTRUITW of what we say. Price, 25 cents per bo'le,l
BWUed 4o any address, postpaid. I>OSE ONE BEAN. Sold by druggist,
JTn ©asxi’ia: £> co. 7 ritoriiibioKs, st, x=ouis, naco.
r.* -iMnx l I WVfrTMV I ,*'! ~ grwi>wr. —rn- *———***
fcyi |i Ad’ if* ■% Is fie Best" 1
Ail„if hP WaterproofCoafJ
U brks® winiWl% fe a1 E?er Made.
ET , TRAna MARK ‘ AsKfor the “FISH BRAND” SLicKEttand takeno other. If your storekeeper^*
Kfriot have the “fish brand”, send for descriptive catalogue to A. J. TOWF.it 20 Simmon* St Boston.
R:^iT?!^y:^^^sasiafl^aEiTO} | n I
k. A void the imposition of pretentious
pfjr ■ >-*V-vSA( Packages mailo-t to pa- vw+y dies for these troubles, and all
si
uLa. i-fanPir® r>.7?Sv Take a SURE Remedy t.j*
Contend wero restored to health by use of XIJCURE# thousands, does noi Inf' *
..PROF. Cw&'lf ftl Ra 0V 93 4 Pft wT,\ with attention to business, or can* P §
I.ARRlo*OLiliieUfiL g VrlV r-in or inconvenience in any way F
A ItadicalCurofor Kerrocsl>ebilit7 scientific medical principles. By ■■ ■:
\ roaknorgr'rtdrjirsl on; Docs yin Young or Mi <1 application to the sent of disease iu ? i'": I
dlo Aged Men, Tested for Eight Yearn in xnany'*‘s^^^aj3'\2srinfluencei a felt without delay. The
thousand cases they absolutely restore premavarely' 4 i?*~i* :e ’D functions of the human organism restore! H|
aged and broken dovm men to the full onjoymonfcof 3*®**®“ ■“Mating elements of life are given back, thef*- :.*
perfect and fuU Manly Strength and Vigorous Health, cheerful and rapidly gains both strength on-i
T2EATHEHT.-OaoHo.th,3. m Sats. OM*
\iork, or too free Indulgence, we ask that yon Bend us uimmonruimv aa .. „ .
ronr name with statement of yonr trouble, and secure ARS?SS> REfivBEDT CO.. MFIJ
h, * llust ’ and X'amph] et.Jc. 300)* 17. Tenth Street, ST. LOUIS, 2ffo. 1
RIIPTUREQ PEBSO..O can Eiaifo FREE Trial o?our Appliance. Ask for
• *MX *i* *%" "a* *l* *i" *a* *l**l*
The man who has invested from three ff&yj offer the man who wants service
to five dollars in a Rubber Coat, and (not style) a garment that will keep
at his first halt hour s experience in f I ■aH |M him dry in the hardest storm. It is
a storm finds to his sorrow that it is yikf,® S| called TOWER'S FISH BRAND
hardly a better protection than a mos- YjW ■ “ SLICKER,” a name familiar to every
quito netting, n>>t oniy feels chagrined * ■ Cow-boy all over the land. With them
at being so badly taken in, but also ■ ■ EJk H the only perfect Wind and Waterproof
feels if he does not look exactly like Lps|| Ssst Coat is'“ Tower's Fish Brand Slicker.”
lor the ** FiSIL BRAND” Slicker R I feti .1 and take no other. If your storekeeper
does not have the fisii hrand, sc and for descriptive catalogue, A. J. Tower, 20Simmons St., Boston. Mass.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors
GEORGIA —B art o w County.
All persons having demands against the estate
of Ishani Alley, defc’d, are hereby notified to pre
sent the same properly made out and verified ac
cording to law. And all persons indebted to said
lsham Alley are hereby notified to come forward
and make payment in full. This January 9, 1889,
lsham W. Alley and Elizabeth A1 ey as Adm’r
and AdmTx of lsham Alley, dee’d. janl
D. W. K. me OG&i
REAL ESTATE, J
CARTERSYILLE, GEOftO l l
MINERALS A SPECIAL!* I
Real* Estate bought and sold. Inform' I '*
cheerfully given.
Careful
Drivers