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THE ENTERPRISE.
Official Organ of Franklin County.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY.
a. w. McConnell.
Proprietor and Business Manager.
Ei>t«ns1 st tbs Cunnvllk |xr.t-uffic» s» Scsmil-
rlsM Mail Matter.
Dries of Snl)*rri|>tion : One *rsr. <1; «t< month*,
if) rent*; thrsi month*. i r >ifnu ; In rlulis of 10
nr kwru, 76 ornl )>er siuiuiu. I'sHi lb silvsm e.
1 of ailrertilninc fumi.hril on a|ip1lanUun.
Corresimndsnee i* solicited, liut no attention will
Leriren to Comniimiosllon, niileiu, socotllpa¬
sted by Uis resl name of the writer.
JOB SCOTT. - • • Editor. «
Caraesvlllc, Ga., November 27, 1891.
Railroad Meeting.
A railroad meeting will be held at
the court house ill Carnesrille on
Wednesday after the first Tuesday
in December. Everybody come out.
Every man who has the interest of
the town and county at heart should
be present.
A Rotten Government.
The New York Herald of Novem¬
ber 17th exposes one of the most in¬
famous pieces of rascality and cor¬
ruption that ever disgraced a repub¬
lican government and defrauded its
citizens of their social and political
rights. The treasury department
sent five special commissioners to
Europe in the early part of July to
investigate the system of emigration
«.f foreign paupers, imlieciles, and
criminals to the United States. The
commissioners visited every country
from which emigrants come to Amer¬
ica. Mr. Herman J. Schultcis, one
of the commissioners, disguised him-
self so that he could gather facts
without being known to the leaders
and officers of emigration bureaus
and societies. The Herald says:
“In Italy he found a v;ist army of
airents who are wheedling, deluding,
daxzling and Reducing the credulous
populations of the most ignorant -ee-
tions of Italy to the misery of the
’ colonies of
overcrowded Italian
Amcrica, and for what? Simply to
collect a commission on the steam-
ship tickets sold.
••Everywhere he found evidences
that governments, committees, busi¬
ness houses, powerful steamship lines.
railways in Europe an l America,
were all joined together in one
secret combination, driving over the
ocean wh‘4e jiopulations.
of law and decency, or of thc result
to the American republic.”
Our rich transportation companies
and government officials are united
with those of other countries to till
our cities, our country, and our homes
with the most ignorant, debased, de¬
graded and murderous specimens of
humanity that can bo raked from
the putrid sluna *nd sesspools of in
famv and debauchery of other na-
tions. Every daily paper tells of
several murders. If we could get a
paper every hour, it would tell of
murders, and nine-tenths of the mur¬
ders are committed by foreigners.
Mr. Schulteis assumed a false name
aud disguised himself as a beggar in
London, and upon application to one
of thc societies he procured a free
passage to America upon the steam¬
ship Servia, one of tho C’unard line.
The scenes w itnessed by him among
tho 300 emigrants Mho Mere packed
together in the steerage like sardines
in a box, were of the most foul and
degrading character. When the cm-
igrauts became sea-sick they could
not climb the rickety stairs to the
water closets, and for four davs they'
just wallowed in their own filth. The
sailors, stewards, ami cooks had free
access to tho u - omen’s quarters, and
the young emigrant girls were lust¬
fully caressed and debauched while
suffering the tortures of sea-sickness.
There is a surgeon on every emi¬
grant ship whose duty it is to vacci¬
nate every emigrant. After three
or four days the surgeon on board
the Servia went down into the steer¬
age and gave each passenger a ticket
certifying that they had been vacci¬
nated. By this means he vaccinated
thc 300 emigrants in about twenty-
five minutes.
lu the south of France Commis-
sioner Pom derly discovered a system-
atic collection of the most degraded
and abandoned M'omen, for shipment
to the United 8'tates. Mr. *cliultois
has gone to Washington to place all
the facts be gathered before the sec-
retary of the treasury. The matter
will be brought before congress, and
if the members don’t abolish the sys¬
tem of dumping the human filth and
off-scouring of other nations upon
our shores, they ought to be tarred
and feathered and run out of
country.
Remember the railroad meeting at
Carnesville on Wednesday after the
first 1 uesdav in December.
Thanksgiving.
To whom arc the thanksgiving
proclamations addressed ? To those
wo presume who have something to
be thankful for. Of course such a
proclamation could not be addressed
to all the people of this country.
I.ct us investigate our surround¬
ings and display our stock of bless¬
ings and sources of temporal pros¬
perity. We are poor; we haven’t
enough to eat, nor enough clothes to
keep us cc mfortable; we have worked
hard and are in debt, with no money
or property to pay with; it lias cost
more to make our crops than we can
get for them; the sheriffs and bailiffs
arc chasing us from pillar to post;
wc have to take our families in the
night atid flee into some other coun-
try; we have spent five, ten, twenty,
or fifty years at hard labor and are
in a worse condition than when we
commenced. For this must we de¬
vote a flay to thanksgiving?
We have staked our honor and
our money for goods to supply the
wants and necessities of the people,
and our customers have failed to pay •
us. Some have carried their cotton j
to other places and sold it for cash, j
Some can’t pay, others won’t pay,
and others still have run away ami
left us their poor cattle, sore-baek
mules and horses and unpaid bills,
Is it our duty to devote a whole day
to giving thanks for such a concatc-'
nation of unforeseen and unappreci-
ated circumstanc es as these? Now j
all together, shall we render thanks
that we have been swindled all our
lives by corrupt politicians, cheated
hv dishonest law-makers, and robbed
by combinations of capital? Are we
duty bound to be thankful for a sys-
tern of laws that takes our labor with-
out reward, that keeps our children
in ignorance, and makes our lives a
torture instead of a pleasure? Shall
we lie thankful that our fair land that
should be ours and our children’s
for an inheritance is taken from us
by aliens and enemies to onr fret* in-
.titutioiiK and our prosperity? Shall
^ tbankfll ] that thc ® ^-dof gold h
•'‘ nJ 1US * of l*° w « r . ls hll,,1 S °" r couu -
try with a population of outcasts and
criminals that will debauch our man- -
hood and cause ere long the best
blood of our citizens to be shed in de-
Lnse of liberty, justice, and equal
rights?
We have drawn a gloomv picture,
'
wc a , lnliti Lut it U a reaI 0 n# . VoH
may close your eyes, ami turn a deaf
ears to the apjicals for justice from
U 'e suffering laborers of this country
lor a time if yon wish, but thc dire¬
ful consequences will burst upon you
like a thunder clap, and you Mill re¬
alize the folly of submit ting to cor¬
rupt laws, and the horrible results of
supporting au unscrupulous combina-
011 wealth, C’an the man who
stolen a fortune bow in thankful
devotion for the comforts and plcas-
urs that surround him ? Will the
law-maker who has accumulated
Health by sacrificing his honor and
the rights and liberties of his coun¬
trymen feel like giving thanks for his
possessions to the God of truth and
justice? Well, then, Mho are they
that should spend a day in thanks¬
giving? Perhaps there are a few
who have by honest M’ork and fair
dealing acquired a sufficient amount
of this M orld’s goods to make their
present surroundings comfortable and
banish want and suffering from fut-
ure prospects. Let them be thank-
* u l.
Remrmher thc railroad meeting at
; arne ® vil,e on Wednesday after thc
I uesday in 1 December,
How Does It Look Now?
'Will this pass for good Democratic
doctrine? It is a plauk in the nation¬
al democratic platform of 185(5:
We declare, That congress has no
power to charter national banks, that
we believe such institutons of deadly
hostility to the best interests of the
country, dangerous to our republican
institutions and the liberties of the
people, and calculatod to place the
business of the country within the
control of concentrated money poM er
and above the laws and M ill of the
people; that the separation of the
money of the government from bank-
ing institutions is indispensable for
tho safety of thc funds and rights of
the people.”
This is exactly thc view of the
Alliance men of the present day.
We opine if a Democrat (?) of to-day
should make such an assertion in a
democratic executive committee in
Dallas county he would be asked to
resign instanter. .Sec?—Idnstrial
Educator, Fort Worth Texas.
Remember the railroad meeting in
Carnesvilio on Wednesday after the
first Tuesday in December.
Western Elections.
We clip some election farts from
the Ottawa (ifas.) Journal, of X’ov.
12th, which may be of interest to our
readers:
The Peoples party has probably
made greater advancement this year
in Wyandotte county, than in any
county in the state. It has in¬
over 300 per cent. Last
it had there but 492 votes; this
ir has 1537. Ilow is that for
dying out?
Last year we polled 207 votes in
this city for governor. This year
Curly Harrison brought Mitchell and
Crouse, two railroad lickspittles, to
influence the shop hands against us.
Result—our rote in this city this
year is 324.
Everything at hand indicates a
most creditable showing for the Peo-
pies party. It now appears wc have
gained sonic 10,000 votes in this
state, and from 20,000 '- 0,000 in
Nebraska. It was a square fight
against both old parties.
All along the line the word was
passed for democrats to join the
republicans, ami defeat the People-
party. The ehieftians of democracy
came to the opinion held by Congrcs -
man Crisp of Georgia. Crisp said:
“The south is full of Alliance men;
and these Alliance men all have their
eyes turned toward Kansas. If the
damned Alliance, or Peoples prrty.
should carry Kansas this year, all
hell can’t hold the Alliance men of
the south; therefore, it is neces-ary
to break up the Peoples party of
Kansas, in order to preserve a solid
south.”
llemembcr the railroad meeting at
on Wednesday after the
first Tuesday in December.
The Vote.
The latest returns, as we gather
them from our Alliance exchanges,
show a fine increase in the labor vote
ali along the line.
The Socialist Labor party in New
York gained 1,270 over the vote of
last year and that in only 12 coun¬
ties, all that have been heard from
definitely.
In Nebraska the People’s party
polled nearly half of all the votes
cast, carrying 89 counties out of 100,
and this in the face of the fact that
the two old parties united as they
did in Kansas, though not as openly.
In Kansas our net gain Mas from
10 to 50 per cent over last year. The
People’s party cast 47 per cent of the
total vote as against 39 per cent last
year. We carried one-third of all
the offices.
In IoM’a onr gain was 300 to 400
per cent over the corresponding vote
of 1889.
Colorado gave us 20 per cent of all
the votes C3st.
In Michigan our increase in the
only congressional district in which
the People’s party held a ticket in
the field M as 900 per cent over last
year.
The returns are meager from South
Dakota, hut they show a fine gain
for the Alliance everyM’hcrc.
Our vote in Ohio is 43,000 for
for governor, and that according
the count of our enemies. The
nopoly press, however, gave us
15,000.
Everywhere we have again given
the lie to the old story that the Alli¬
ance and People’s party are going to
pieces and M ill not again be heard
from in politics.—Fort Worth (Tex.)
Industrial Educator.
Remember the railroad meeting at
Carncsville on Wednesday after the
first Tuesday in December.
The person, or paper, m Iio says
the iicm’ party movement has no
backing in this country either docs
not knoM- thc facts or else they wish
to misrepresent the facts. Three-
fourths of the voters of Gwinnett
county M ill vote the People’s Party
ticket in '92 if it is headed by the
right kind of men M ho stand square
on the Ocala platform. We are on
brink of the greatest political revolu¬
tion this country has ever seen and
the people will win.—J. II. Hawkins
in People’s Party Paper, Atlanta Ga.
The fusion of democrats and re-
publicas in Kansas, Nebraska and
Mississippi is an admission that there
is no louger any principle dividing
them. If they can fuse once they
may do so M-ithout inconvenience any
time or for all time.
We have sM-allowed the democrats.
Now, if they Mill only keep quiet M e
can get along reasonably well, but
there is danger that they Mall act a*
an emetic.—Topeka Journal (Rep.).
Consumption Cured.
Ail old physician, retired from
practice, having had placed in his
hands by an Hast India missionary
the formula of a simple vegetable rem¬
edy for the speedy and permanent
euro of consumption, bronchitis, ca¬
tarrh, asthma and all throat and lung
affections, also a positive and radical
cure for nervous debility and all ner¬
vous complaints, after having tested
its wonderful curative powers in
thousands of cases, has felt it his du¬
ty to make it known to his suffering
fellows. Actuated by this motive
and a desire to relieve human suffer¬
ing, I will send free of charge, to all
who desire it, this recipe, in German,
French or English, with full direc¬
tions tor preparing and using. Sent
by mail by addressing with stamp,
naming this paper, W. A. X'oyes, 820
Powers’ Block, Rochester, X’. Y. 9
Colds and Coughs
croup,
sore throat,
bronchitis, asthma,
and hoarseness
cured by
Ayers Cherry Pectoral
the safest
and most effective
emergency medicine.
It should be in every
family.
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co
Lowell, Mass.
LEOAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
FRANKLIN SHERIFF SALES.
ILL he sold on the first the Tuesday
in December next, at court
house in said county, within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest bidder
for cash, the following described
property, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land ly¬
ing and being in the county of Frank¬
lin, and said state, and known and
distinguished as the Solomon Thom¬
ason place, creek lying and on Middle the waters river, be¬ of
Hunters
ing at the junction of the same, join¬
ing lands of David Watkins, L. D.
Bolding, Stanford Payne, and W. S.
Fricks home place, containing seventy
acres, more or less; also the tract of
land in said county and state, and
known as the said W. S. Fricks
home place, which joins the above
described place, and also joins the
lands of above named parties, and
contains fifteen acres, more or less,
ami being the place on which said
W. S. Fricks now lives. Levied on
as the property of W. S. Fricks to
satisfy a mortgage fi fa. issued from
Franklin superior administrator court in of favor II. W. of
II. M. Pavnc,
Jones, deceased, against W. S. Fricks;
written notice given tenant in pos¬
session as law directs. Property
pointed out by plaintiff’s attorney.
J. C. McCarter, Sheriff.
FRANKUN’S SHERIFF SALES.
YU ILL be sold on the first Tuesday
in December next, at the court
house in said county, within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest bidder
for cash, thc following described
property, to-wit:
One undivided half interest in two
hundred acres of land, more or less,
adjaining lands of Marion Banks,
Jesse Ayers, and others, and being
the lot of land willed by Thomas J.
Langston, dec’d, to Will. F. Lang¬
ston, and is part of the tract of land
whereon Thomas J. Langston lived
at the time of his death, said land
lying in Stranges (812) district, G.
M. Said described land levied on as
the property of John P. Means, de¬
ceased, in favor of J. M. Hunt, ad¬
ministrator of George B. Langston,
dec’d, vs. Mrs. Runny Means, adm’r
of J. P. Means, dec’d. Notice given
tenant in possession as required by
lau\ Property pointed out by plain¬
tiff’s attorney.
J. U. McCarter, Sheriff.
FRANKLIN’S SHERIFF SALES.
’yyiLL be sold on the first Tuesday
in December next, at the court
house door in said county, within the
legal hours of sale, to the highest bid¬
der for cash, the following described
property, to-wit:
One tract or parcel of land lying
and being in the county of Franklin,
and said state, in the 213th district,
G. M., containing fifty acres, more or
less, adjoining lands of J. W. Mc-
Crackin, J. L. Vickery, G. S. Whit¬
worth and others, u’hereon Bill Wood
now resides. This tract of land is
known as a part of the Madison
Bruce homestead, has good outbuildings, dwelling
house and necessary
and is a very desirable piece of prop¬
erty. Said described land levied on
as thc property of W. (.’. and Eliza
Wood, to satisfy a fi. fa. in favor of
J. S. Chambers vs. W. C. and Eliza
Wood. Notice given Bill Wood,
tenant in possession, by of W.F. the law. Chap-
pelcar, L. C’., in terms
J. C. McCarter, .sheriff.
0 YOU "WANT TO SAVE FROM
j 25 to 50 Cents on Every Dollar
S you spend? If so, write for our
illustrated catalogue, containing
illustrations and prices of everything
manufactured in the United States.
it manufacturers’ prices. 10,000 il¬
lustrations, aliiucs represented; cata¬
logue mailed free on application.
Address, Ohicaco Gk.vjcral Srrn.r
Co., 178 west Van Huron street.
Chicago. III. i.
Say, I want 200 dozen eggs, and 1
will pay II cents per dozen for them.
I want them right now. Shake up
yonr hens and make ’em lay while
eggs are high. Remember, 14 cents
a dozen. L. J. Greene.
A LAKY, *25 PER WEEK.-
Wmited: Good 'Agents to sell
our general line of merchandise.
No peddling. Above salary will
be paid to “live” agents. For further
ii formation, address, Chicago Gen¬
eral St pit. v Co., 178 west Van
lliiren st., Chicago, III. 9
The Carpenter and Crown
Organs are the two leaders
on the market. Sold only
by A. IV. M.•Connell.
“A penny saved is a penny made,”
and you can save several pennies by
having your envelopes, letter heads,
note heads, bill heads, hand bills, cir¬
culars, cards, etc., printed at this of¬
fice. Send for prices.
Large kitchen safes for sale at A.
W. McConnell’s.
USE
CRAWFORD’S ECZEMA WASH
—(SKIN CURA.)—
For All Skin Diseases,
—fo 11-
Heat in All Its Stages,
_ a x d —
All Affections of the Scalp.
For sale by Dr. S. F. Rami* ley.
Rioumond and Danville Railroad Company.
ATLANTA & ('31AIILOTTE DIVISION.
Condensed Sekedale of Passenger Trains
In Effect March 8,1891.
North Jim no. nuis: no. i->. no. as.
Kastvm 'l ime. Daily. Daily. Daily.
Lv. Atlanta (E. T.) 1 • 11111 C«;SS8!sS*8SSS*tSSgB£:tS8SS«8tSaSft£iSSSSS mmmmmnmnnnmm fC
“ t'liamblee......; I -
“ Norcross....... I *
** 1 rnluth........ I -
“ Birnranee.......5 CO
r*ii ford........ 1 >: 111
“ Flow* v I;ranch « :
Gaiiieavil!^ .... j » *0X7 H
“ Lula...........‘ « 11113 B
“ Co libltOll.........j ruiiti* 55 :
•• ...... M
“ Mt. Airy...... S <5
* k Toccoa........ C
•* WestmiiiKtcr... | ^ sll
“ Central......... r: n 8 s
** Easleys........ Greenville..... Is* 1 111 . « • ;s :
** - S
“ Greers......... « • ; ■■
•* Wwllfertl....... « IlMIMiM! • :
“ Spartanburg... lilton........ K* M t* |
“ t
“ Cowmens...... Gaffneys....... tc
“ Blacksburg.... K
“ M
“ Grover ........ W
“ Gastonia...... Kings Mount’ll M *.
4i
“ Lowell......... 4* «!"V: ; 11;:
“ lielimoi it....... ifc ?H;K:
Ar. Charlotte...... ti
.SOUTHWARD. A o | jT> ■i ■?
Charlotte...... 886!!S8fe82Sgg$Sg8SSSgass«:S:;8«5L*S mnjnnmmmmnmim - §gglsigs3S3§gsBBSslI§lissilllls 11 40 pm
Bellioont,...... -
“ i .owe 11......... -
“ Gastonia...... -
“ Kings Mount’ll r,
“ Grover........ 'v
“ Blacksburg.... ro u
“ Gaffneys....... Cowpciis...... u
“
“ Clifton........ w
'* Spartanburg... ci 1 50 pm
“ Welllorti....... ^
“ Greers.........
“ Greenville...... s. 2 43 am
“ Easley......... Central........ ut 71 S 50
“ am
“ Seneca......... m
“ Westminster... a
“ Toccoa ........ -i
“ Mt. Cornelia....... Airy....... yi on
“
“ Belton......... t:
“ Lula........... o» 5 29 am
“ GAinesvillo .... t 5 50 am
“ Flow v Branch o
“ Buford........ c
“ Suwanee....... o
“ Duluth........ io
“ Norcross....... o
“ Chamblec...... o
Ar. Atlanta (IS. T.). 3 7 20 am
Additional trains Nos. 17 and 18— Lula accom¬
modation, daily except Sunday, leaves Atlanta
5 30 p. m., arrives Lula 812 p. m. Returning
leaves Lula C 15 a. m., arrives Atlanta 8 50 a. m.
Between Lula and daily, Athens—No. leave Lula 11. daily except and
Sunday, a! and arrive No. 9 Athens 12 15 10 and Oo 12 p. 30 m. f
10 -!9 m., a. in. p. in.
Returning leave daily, Athens, No. 10 daily, except Sun-
nay, and So. 12 G 50 p. m. and 6 10 a. m., ar-
Lula 9 00 p. m. and '8 20 a. m.
Between Toccoa and Elberton—Nos. 61 and 63
daily, except Sunday, leafe Toccoa 11 45 a. m. and
4 00"a. in., arrived Klberton 3 35 p. m. ar.d 8 45 a.
m. Returning:, Nos. 60 and 62 daily, except Sun-
day, leavo Klberton 2 45 p. in.. and *3 30 a. m., ar-
rive Toccoa 7 10 p. in. and 7 00 a. m.
Nob. 11 and 12 carry Pullman Sleepers between
Washington and Atlanta, and No*. 9 and 10 Pull¬
man Sleeper between Atlanta and New York.
Yestibided Nos. 37 and Limifced, 38—Washington between Atlanta and Southwestern and Waah-
ishton. < m this train an extra fare is charged on
ftrat-ciass ticket* only.
For detailed information as to local and through
time table*, rate* with and Pullman local Sloeping-car address, res¬
ervations, confer agents or Y.
,JAS. L. TAY/.OR, L. L. MC< LESK
Gen. Pass. Agent. Div. 1‘ass. Agent.
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga.
C. I\ HAMMOND,
Superintendent, Atlanta,
Ga.
NY. II. GREEN, SOL- HAAS,
General Manager, Traffic Manager,
Washington, J>. C. Richmond, Va.
THE POLICE GAZETTE
Is the only illustrated paper in the
world containing ail the latest sensa¬
tional and sporting news. No saloon
keeper, barber, or club room can af¬
ford to be without it. It always
makes friends wherever it goes.
Mailed to any address in the United
States, securely wrapped, 13 weeks
for *1. Send 5 cents for one copy.
BTClIAlil) lv. FOX,
Franklin Square. X. Y. City.
l>o you need any job work done?
If so, get our prices before placing
yonr orders. We do as Deat work
as can be done elsewhere, and at
prices that are astonishingly low.
The Extkrrrise office is fitted up
with new job press and material.
All kinds o£ work done promptly and
neatly.
AN UNPARALELLED OFFER.
A Farm and Stock Paper Free
To Every Subscriber of
THE ENTERPRISE!
Wo are pleased to announce that we have made arrangement! with
the publishers of The Breeders’ Guide and Practical Farmer where¬
by we can give that excellent Stock, Farm and Household Journal FRtE
to every subscriber of TIIE ENTERPRISE upon condition! named be¬
low. The arrangement is
FOR A IMITED TIME ONLY.
And will be offered by no other paper in this section.
To all who pay all arrearages and one year in advance from the date
of payment in this month we will give The Breeder's Guide aid
Practical Farmer free for one year.
To all new subscribers who pay one year in advance from date of pay¬
ment, and 10 cents to pay postage, we will give Tub Breeder's
Guide and Practical Farmer free for one year.
To all whose subscription is paid a part of the year in advance who
will pay enongh to make it a year in advance from expiration of sub¬
scription, we will give The Breeder's Guide and Practical Farmir
free for one year.
WHAT IS THE GUIDE AND FARMER?
The Guide and Farmer is a 40-eoluran, eight-page, stock and fajm
paper issued twice each month, and is chuck full of practical, valuable in¬
formation for the farmer and stock raiser.
Come in and subscribe now. Get yonr friends to come with too and
get the best paper published in Franklin county and an excellent farm
paper with it. Send in your name at once.
“Seeing \ is Believing.”
j Hy And a good Limp
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^ “The Rochester.”
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All druggists and dealers have it
\
YEARS ■l OF SUCCESSFUL VARIES EXPERIENCE m
'
In the CSo of CURA. Tftt METHODS,
we Alone ownV V*nd Control.
for all \ \ order* of
e o e # • • •
I I Who • have MEN weak • ee JESsSfjlK&q
I dUcaacd or UH-
■ DEYCUOPCO, who <* sufler- TBfcUosas and the aae-
organa, are | tempt of friends tad
| I ing trornttfOMfOrrO any Eioesses. or o f gomne nlCTM. leada goto
ana uHiTiaTintas*
ruaranteo to^ rut a fait psUcota,] i
:v if they can WMKMMII K»c1ub70 |
SSMK own
illancea win f
• • ' • • •
•mnA, OPE~YOUl"fw?
2 POO References. Name tWe paper whc» you wG*