Newspaper Page Text
Spring Place Jimplecute.
CARTER & HEARTSELL. Ppopbmtobr
VOLUME XL
ANOTHER TRAGEDY.
MiSS RI'HriF. OF PUNTA GORDA.
SHOOTS HER LOVER.
A Girl Loves Xot Wisely but Too Well
A 111 Created a Se.idaYlon—She Shoot, Her
L. .ver aril tried to Kill Herself Tlie
I.it la Village of I’unta Gorda la the
seeue of a Tragic Kndltig of a Bore Al¬
taic
Rautow, July ?<i.—The hour of 1
o'clock yesterday morniug saw the trag
e ending of a tc.ve affair at Punta Gor
da—in which Howard Bivens was fatal
ly wounded by >li-w Ixse Ritchie of that
place. Bivens for some time past has
t**on quite attentive to Mias Ritchie, but
of late his attentions have ceased, he
having told her that he saw that she was
beginning to care too much for him, that
he was already engaged and lutd no seri¬
ous intentions with her and had only
lssen visiting her as a friend. It was here
that the matter ended until the evening
of the 14th, when Bi vens received a note
from Miss Ritchie ashing him to call that
evening, He declined the invitation but
was urged by a second note to come as
she wished to see him very much, Biv
, ns then decided to go.
lie was cordially welcomed by her
and ihe evening pawed off very pleasant¬
ly until 11 o’clock when her mother
came iu to the parlor aud reminded them
of the fact that it whs quite late. Biv¬
ens arope to go but. Miss Ritchie insisted
upon nis remaining longer and turning
to her mother remarked “Molher, Mr.
Bivens and I wish to have our talk out
and I insist upon bis remaining longer,
don’t hurry him off, you won’t tie both¬
ered with him a-zain, this is fhe last time
he wiii ever come here.” Mrs. Ritchie
left the parlor.
Bivens noticed a very pretty 33 calibre
revolver lying upon the table and made
some casual remark alwut it. Bee then
arose picked up the revolver and flour¬
ished it around rather recklessly and
seemed to be trying to nerve lierself for
something. He then ttaliited what her
intention was. He a rose, seiz>vl her, and
tried to take the weapon away, but he
was not strong enough fur she threw one
anivaround his neck and with the other
fired the probably fatal shot. The ball
entered just under the left nipp’e pass¬
ing so near the heart that the doctors
say he cannot recover.
As he fell he said “you have killed
in*-. - ’
She replied “I intended to and now I
will Kill myself.”
This she tried to do but the pistol failed
to fire.
With a master effort Bivens jumped
up and tried to take the pistol from her
and it the struggle it waa again dis¬
charged, but did no damage. Her moth¬
er then rushedinto the room and Biv¬
ens. who was unable to get the pistol,
rushed out and fell just outside the gate
and managed to crawl home. The mar¬
shal then appeared upon the rcene and
as he entered the room,-Miss Ritchie
handed him the weapon remarking, fix
ttiis, “l want to shoot myself.”
The affair is deplored by all, as both
parties are well connected. Bivens has
been employed in Hinckley & Co’s bank
at Punta Gorda and is a quiet and steady
young man.
His parents who live at Bartow left
imtnedUtaly for the scene of the tragedy
upon receipt of the news.
To day’s advises still repoit Bivens
alive.
Fio/.«n in hla.Orave.
San Fra ncisco, July 19.—The tragedy
■of a solitary miner, in a remote part of
Sierra Nevada, was revealed a few days
ago when the sheriff of Fresno county,
searching for two murderers, discover¬
ed the body of a man imbedded in a
grave of ice.
The sheriff’s party found some miners’
tools in an almost inacessible canyon, and
after searching around, suddenly came
upon a dead man lying at the bottom of
a rude grave with six foot of i3e. over
him lie had evidently cut the grave
in solid granite. This done, it seems, he
laid down in the grave, placed a large
rock across his thighs and drowned him¬
self as the grave slowly filled with water
from little streams which the melted
show sent into it,
Although mid-summer, yet the grave
was filled with ice that had not melted
this year. The ice was transparent, and
the dead man in the bottom of the grave
«.’as plainly visible, the body being as
well preserved as if he had died but yes¬
terday, though there can be but little
doutst lie committed suicide last fall.
Near by they found a note, written
with lead pencil: “My name is Dare
Menear. 1 have lived like a devil, I
will die like a man and be — like a devil.
Nov. 20.”
The theory is that he was driven mad
by disapointment, as the mine where he
-worked waa worththless,
It is said that the shaft of a century
plant maker an excellent razor stre p,
OCEAN MAIL SUBSIDIES
The roitmuter Oenenl Isanes Ills Art
veruimment.
Washington, July 21.—Postmaster
General Wanamaker to day issued the
advertisement of mail letting under the
postal aid bill passed by the last con¬
gress. It invites proposals from tlie
steamship companies for carrying Amer¬
ican mails to foreign countries in vessels
of American build, or the best construe ■
tion and of the highest speed in their re
sj>ective classes, over routes minutely
described. Tlie advertisement is the
product of three months of conference
at the department. The postmaster gen¬
eral has met at frequent intervals dur¬
ing the whole of that time ropresenta
tives of the principal American steam-
8 hip lines, and of the principal coast
citfag, especially ft, tlie south, where it
might he possible to encourage the estab
lishment of new lines, in order both to
give them his views as to the best meth¬
ods under the bill of improving foreign
mail facilities,and of encouraging Am
loan commerce and of receiving their
tentative propositions as to what they,
on their part, might be willing to con¬
tract to do.
A LACK OF POWER.
At presentthe United States has no
power to compel the transportation of
any mails to foreign countries. No ship
owner or ship master is obliged to re¬
ceive or carry American mails. When
the ship owners or ship masters do carry
them they fix their, own time of depar¬
ture and follow whatever sailing course
they choose. Only a very small portion
of tlie American mail is carried in Amer¬
ican bottoms. In many cases the ser¬
vice is slow and irregular, by whatever
vessel it is performed, as the payment
allowed being inconsiderable as an item
ot earnings, shipowners necessarily pay
more regard to inciting up cargoes along
a devious route than to the expeditious
delivery of mails by direc t courses.
TUB ROUTES.
Tliere are fifty-four paragraphs cover¬
ing routes, many of them repetitions of
the same routes for different ports of
call, classifying vessels differently, or
inviting different proposals as to the fre¬
quency of the service, in order to get
offers of service In various forms so that
the best selection may be made. Com¬
pendiously stated, the American ports
from which the service is proposed to
start are: Boston, New York, Philadel¬
phia, Baltimore, Newport News, Nor¬
folk, Port Tampa (with service from Mo
bile), New Orleans, Galveston, San Fran
cisco, Seattle and Tacoma. Absolutely
new servico for American ships is in¬
vited for trans-Atlantic lines from New
York, Boston and Baltimore; a line to
Buenos Ayres from New York, and one
from Philadelphia; a line from Port
Tampa to Venezuela and to the east
coast of South America, a line to the
same ports and from is projected Galveston, from and Now Or
icaus a new
line from New Orleans to Aspinwall,
calling at ports on the north coast of
Central America and ports on the Span¬
ish main; anew line on the Pacific coast
from San Francisco to Chili and to the
west coast of line South America Seattle is proposed, Tacoma
and a new from or
to China and Japan,also anew line from
San Francisco to Melbourne.
Sam Small Again.
Atlanta, Ga., July 21.—Sam Small
figures in another sensation—this time a
sensation journalistic. Two days ago
Sam dropped down in Atlanta. Yester¬
day he was one of the speakers at the
big alliance rally, and gave every indi¬
cation of cropping out as a third part
lecturer of thi strongest order.
To-day the announcement is made
that he has accepted the editorship of
the Evening Herald, a new paper to lie
started on Saturday. It is to be a pro¬
hibition organ editorially, and as there
is no better newspaper man in the coun¬
try than Sam Small, it is sure to be live¬
ly from a news standpoint.
The paper will have plenty of back¬
ing. Small’s contract provides that he
can continue his lectures whenever so
disposed.
Seized by tlie Canzdtznz.
Eastport, Me., July 21.—For the past
month or two there has been excellent
fishing in the Passamaquoddy waters
and many of our citizens have availed
themselves of it. It is difficult to tell
just where the boundry line is, and our
fishermen have been chased and other¬
wise annoyed by the Canadian cruiser
Dream, her officers claiming that Amer
ican boats were fishing in Canadian wa
tors.
The Eastport boats were fishing to¬
day as u tual when the Dream suddenly
appeared, seized seven of the boats, lan¬
ded the occupants on Dog island and
towed the boats to St. Andrews, N. B,,
where they will be confiscated.
Considerable excitement now prevails
over the affair, and when Canipo Bello,
who is alleged to have been acting as an
informer to the Canadian authorities,
appeared in town to-day, he was chased
by a crowd of indignant citizens and
was glad to get away to his boat with¬
out a broken head.
The owners of the seized boats will, of
ourse, lose them and their contents.
“TELL THE TRUTH.”
SPRING PLACE, GA, THURSDAY, JULY
THE VERDICT RENDERED.
THE INVESTIGATION HAS OOME TO
AN END.
Oel’an Id Nut Guilty, but Re U Not an Ex
pert Busmen Man by s l.srKti Majority
—Director DePau Objects to the Third
and Fourth Sections o( the Charge.
TallahaSskk, July 20.—At the last
session of the State I .legislature a com¬
mittee was appointed to visit and exam¬
ine the Agricultural College and Exper¬
imental Station at Lake City. They
made a report of their action on the
4t,li of June, in which appears the fol¬
lowing sentence : “Mncli complaint to
your committee has been made against
the director of the station, and we
therefore recommend to the hoard of
trustees that they make a thorough
investigation of the acts and doings of
the director in the management of the
station and publish to the world the
result of their findings.”
Recognizing the right of the people,
through their representatives in the
Legislature, to inquire into the man¬
ner in which the appropriation by the
United States Government for the pur¬
pose of agricultural experimentation
has been expended, in compliance
with the above recommendations, the
trustees of the Agricultural College,
who have also the government of the
exjierimeutal station, met in Lake City
on the 30th day of June and proceeded
to “make a thorough investigation of
the acts and dokigs of the director in
the management of tins station ” To
facilitate the work of investigation {lie
board deemed it to be right, to call to
their assistance the Hon. B. P. Rogers,
of the State Senate, and the Hon. 1. J.
Brown, of the Assembly, who were
members of the committee who made
the report referred lo and who bad
heard and preserved the evidence upon
which that report waa based. These
gentlemen were requested to conduct
the examination of witnesses and to
bring bofore the board such facts as
may have come to their knowledge,
and to call such witnesses as they had
reason to believe possessed snch infor¬
mal ion, touching the conduct of the
director in his management of the sta¬
tion, and ihe hoard is impressed that
these gentlemen performed thcid'- ty
requested from them free of anyjj'trJJ
mm spirit, aDd with tfie sole purpose
of reaching the truth, intelligently and
thoroughly.
The examination lasted through
four days at Lake City, when the
board adjourned to meet in Tallahas¬
see on the KHh inst. to conclude the
evidence and to receive the statement
of the director in explanation and re¬
buttal of certain charges arising out of
the evidence submitted. The whole
was concluded on the said 10th inst..,
and the hoard proceeded to consider
the same; and after due deliberation
reached the following conclusions :
1. That the evidence, when consid¬
ered as a whole, does not show any
“acts or doings” on the part of the di¬
rector which can be construed into a
criminal intent.
2. That it does not appear that the
management of the farm work and ex¬
periments generally at the station
have been inefficient, or that they have
been without good effect.
3. That the director has shown a
want of business system In keeping
the accounts of the station, in that he
has mixed up his personal accounts “as
to freight bills” with that of his station
accounts, leaving the matter to be ad¬
justed in his annual financial state¬
ment, and that he failed to enter into
his book account with the station
amounts received from the sale of fire
wood and cotton, service of stallion,
and for analysis by the chemist, and
the purpose to which the same was
applied ; though the funds from these
sources appear to have been used for
station purposes.
4. That they find it necessary to en¬
force a more rigid and business-like
system of keeping accounts at the sta¬
tion, and especially so that if anything
should be sold therefrom or any money
received from any source whatsoever,
it should be turned into the treasury
of the station fund, at the time re¬
ceived, and every expenditure shall be
accompanied with a voucher showing
the exact purpose of such expendi¬
ture.
1 certify that the above is a correct
copy of the original finding of the
board of trustees.
L. B. Wombwkll, Secretary,
It Is understood that the report was
unanimously agreed to by the board.
Director DePass is not very well
pleased with the third and fourth sec¬
tions and says they ought not to be
given to the public in that form. Im¬
mediately after the report was given
out he went before the board and used
his persuasive powers and succeeded
in getting them to insert “as to freight
bills” in the third section. A copy of
the report was given to the press with
the request that it be published in full,
also a copy to the director and to Sen¬
ator Rogers.
The board then proceeded to trans¬
act business of the annual session. The
report of the director for the year was
received and appropriations uiade for
the ensuing year. It is not known if
the newly elected members will accept
At 7:30 the board adjourned until 8
o’clock to morrow morning.
After the verdict in the DePasa
the reports of the president of the
lege and of the faculty were read.
Senator Rogers appeared before
board and declared himself as
perfectly satisfied with the verdict.
The matter of investigating
charges against the president of
college was brought up, but
Rogers did not deem the investigation
necessary, as about the only charge
against him was that he was not a man
of broad learning, so nothing was done
in regard to this. When the director
appeared before the board he wished
a number of changes made in sections
3 and 4.
Clarkson Major Russell nominated the W. B.
nation for trustee, Baker but as resig¬
of Judge was not yet re¬
ceived no action was taken.
CONDITION OF THE CROPS.
The Bast Week Cool Nearly All Over the
Country.
Washington, July 21.—The weath¬
er bureau’s weekly bulletin says ; “The
week has been cool in all the districts
east of the Rocky Mountains, except
New England, New York and South¬
ern Texas, where normal temperature
lias prevailed. Over the western and
central portions of the cotton region
the mean temperature of the week was
but slightly below the normal, while
In the South Atlantic States aud over
the wheat and corn regions of the cen¬
tral valley the mean dally tempera¬
ture for the week was about 0“ below
normal. In the spring wheat region
the deficiency iu temperature was less
and amounted to about 3° per day.
The same deficiency in temperature
occurred In Southern California, but
it was slightly warmer In Northern
California, Oregon and Washington.
THU RAINFALL.
“The areas of excessive rainfall (hw
in« the past week are much
tending widely distributed, from Lake Superior the
to Oregon, including the greater^ por¬
tion of the spring wheat region. The
area of excessive rain next in extent
covers the west portion of the cotton
region, while the east portion of the
cotton region was favored with abun¬
dant rains in sections where the seas¬
onal rainfall was deficient. The rain¬
fall was generally less than usual In
that portion of the central valleys
where harvest work is in progress, ex¬
tending from the southern portions of
the lake region to Southern Minnesota.
Light showers occurred on the Pacific
coast as far south as San Francisco and
the central and southern Rocky Mount¬
ain regions.
GENERAL REMARKS.
“Alabama—Fanning interests in ex¬
cellent condition ; crops doing well hi
most sections-, cotton in a few locali
ities is suffering from disease.
“Mississippi—Heavy showers fell at
a few places in the central part of the
State ; elsewhere none or veiy light;
favorable weather for cultivation and
growth of cotton and com.
“Virginia—Low temperature and a
deficiency in the rainfall, injurious to
com.
“Arkansas—General weather condi¬
tions favorable, although the rain was
badly distributed, particularly in the
eastern part of the State. Cotton
somewhat retarded by cool weather.
Corq excellent and a crop assured.
Fruit will he an average crop.
IN THE TARHEEL STATE.
“North Carolina—Heavy rain in
some portions of fhe State; generally
favorable to corn and tobacco, which
show slight improvement, hut the
weather was too cool and cloudy, Cot¬
ton is at a standstill.
“South Carolina—Cool, dry weather,
unfavorable to cotton and corn. The
drought continues in some portions of
the State.
“Louisiana—Rainfall deficient but
beneficial. The corn crop is made and
the yield promising; cotton is fruiting
well; cane growing luxuriantly. The
laying by of stubble cane is nearly
completed; early rice heading; crops
somewhat grassy; all reports favorable.
“Texas—Warm and dry weather
have injured cotton in West and
Southwest Texas; in other portions
good showers have greatly benetitted
the crop, which promises a heavy
yield. The corn crop Is below the av¬
erage. The fruit crop is an average.
“Tennessee—Wheat mostly threshed
in good condition, and a fine yield.
Cotton blooming late ; bad stands and
prospect poor. Corn and tobacco do¬
ing well. Oats hut half a crop. Hay
crop large and fine.”
SIGNS AND SIGN BOARDS.
HOW SOME FAMILIAR ONES HAP
THEIR ORIGIN.
Qnnlnt and IncongrasM Specimens
Cued In tlie Olden Time*—Even Now
Some queer Once May Be Seen In Old
London Town — Their Peculiarities
Kxplnlned by ■ Student ot Old
Things.
„ Nowadays the great ^ commercial , ,
com.
munity pays but little attention to the
trading legend which, like the noble
man s armonal bearings, was once upon
striped Edition pole and the th^wWch three golden s^l balls; hoTd
and in to
their own on this side of the Atlantic, the
Zri7d™? monly drstmguish tt ° e? r tire t £ deVi pubhc wl houses biCbCOm and *
gin palaces m England are familiar to
every visitor to that country. But these
are scattered remnants of a custom
which, not so very long ago, was almost
universal. In the good old days, when
few people could read or write, and when
the modern system of numbering thd
houses in the sheet was a conveniences*
yet undreamed of by our uninventive
Tfijrssa J? b ° h ” uae ,{ or ^ doon —«*. hwlrf* 0 *.
wn which are interretmg . bmmsethey re
tein so much of the old world flavor,
Everyone who has amused himself by
making even a cursory examination o*
these stranded anachronisms during *
“ ’iT 8 80 ® 0 °* the old t *\ orough *
If thing 8 of °*^. their nd , character l n ’ or J“f In . l( ± the meA pagre 80mo of ;
Dickens or Thackeray, must have beep
struck again and agate by the extraordi
P?ry an d often entirely meaningless com?
lunations of ideas which are presented by
S’ gemtors f in r the tradesmen’s S *“*5? tokens of the
past we find thosameanise for amuse.
ment and surprise. Wteit, for instance,
can lie the possible dgmficance of “The
Iamb apd Anchor? Why should a bull
be associated with a gate, in tiie common
sign of fhe Bull and Gate? Where is
there any conceivable connection between
an elephant and » castle, which yet
nourish together over oh® of the most
famous taverns to the English metropo
lisr—between a nun and three hares?—
between a goat and compasses? What '
law craild have governed the introduction,
Of such anomalous inscriptions as “The
S Man? 60 ^ or an JlS Iho a Iron ? , “■£"* DeriL H Thopuzzlesr 10 Green
presented to us to these quaint and curi¬
ous versifier compounds of struck an observant
the last century, who thus
gives vent to his astonishment:
I’m amazed at the signs
Ah I pass through the town;
I see the odd mutt tore,
A magpie and crown;
The whale add the crow;
The razor and hen;
' The leg and seven stare; ^
The axe and the bottle;
The ton and the lute;
The eagle and child; I
The shovel and boot.
Truly, such “odd mixtures™ must at
first sight seem devoid of any sort of
meaning; and It la only as we delve
back into the past that we become aware
that their apparent absurdity and ex¬
travagance may be very easily explained.
There ate, indeed, several ways in
which these strange associations have
been brought about. For example, when
a young tradesman decided to start busi¬
ness on his own account he frequently
followed the common practice of adding
(as a kind of recommendation) his late
master’s sign to that which he himself
adopted—just as to-day it is not unusual
for Jones, opening a store, to mention
under his own name the fact that ha
was “late with Brown & Co." In this
way wo may account for such complex
tokens as the “Three Nuns and a Hare, *
above referred to, and others of equal
incongruity.
Again, a similar result was brought
about when a tradesman, removing from
one place of business to another, adopted,
os Ire very often did, the sign of the new
establishment to addition to that which
he had chosen for his own. Thus we
read that one Anthony Wilton, who had
formerly traded under the sign of the
“Green Cross, ” removed to a house al¬
ready known by the motto of the “Cross
Keys,” and thenceforth carried on bus¬
iness under the double sign of “Tire
Green Cross and Cross Keys." In the
Daily Cwrant tor November 17, 1718,
there Is an advertisement reading;
Thomas Blackail and Francis Ives,
mercers are removed from the‘Seven
Stars in Ludgate Hill, to the ‘Black Lion
an ,p,® lnuasownd evcn ana °J er senseless the way. an associa
tion as a Lon and seven stars becomes ex
rLmbln Hl n T °L ber C ° Ure ^ ?’ ^ w °* ? tU ?°
A . „ third ?H a ons and very produced. frequent of
source
tot C ^i In Z »mistakes andiwrup- to “
tions of tee Ignorant populace of former
“X under the ,, Aa various °\ ere w signs f* “» to inscriptions show what
*7""“ rcaUy in „ tended I to rep™.
Lo small difficulty to decide upon their
actual meaning. Hence arose num^ua
errors. Moreover, in the course of time
f Jke Doi^ab a Year.
NO 26.
?nm«Z pnblfeZu^Sf ta^gl^d
are to be explained by reference to such
corruptions. Thus the “Bull and Gate”
is really the Boulogne Gate; the “Goat
and Compasses™ is only a corruption of
the pious words, “God enoompasseth us "
while the “Iron Devil™ la as resolvable
Into L Hirondelle (French for swallow)
and the “George and Cannon” into
George Canning, the statesman.
The “ three golden balls" still employed
by pawnbrokers have had a airi™*
history. They seem to NIcholaTwbo have
with a legend of St Tn
ono ^ ^
™ hTt St Nl « holaa w f patron
. i
^ d ™ tiie^iS^L ofthe°Lth FL FT
aristocratic bankers and Ty*
abused pawnbrokers of modern TTri™ y
The three nurses irftothr^ldmS , :
saint transformed th“
became the trading ^ token of
bard nlon cliang from w hom thw
wero in a „ A T by
f pawnbrokers histor^ of the nre«ent a th£
the £ and meaning of
familiar - thr w balls," though
, .
^ gsussriss a
hair or draw your teeth with operation” absolute
impartiality. Among other phle^
he commonly performed that of
botomy or blood lotting, during bTthe whteh a
IK) i e waa ^ped mi^t tightly patient
that the Wood flow more freely.
As this polo was liable to be stained by
the blood, it was painted red that the
discoloration might not be observable.
When not |n usa itwaa genoraI1 8U8
pended outside the shop door, with the
white linen swathing 2nd bands twisted
artistically around it; this in time
save rise to the red and white sign which
fa 8t m so familiar to us all, though our
b arber8 (or hair dressers, as many ^ now
prefor to be have , over
the practice of surgery.
The early fashion of exposing shop
signs was by hanging them out across
the sidewalk, and very frequently they
were large enough and heavy enough—
one tradesman vying with another in
making them striking and attractive—to
obstruct the thoroughfare and even to
cause serious accidents. little by little
public attention was called to this public
nuisance, and in course of time project
teg street signs either fell into disuse ««
or assumed the less objectionable
proportions which they pretjerve at the
present day.
RIFTS FROM THIS RAM'S HORN.
Nothing keeps a stingy man from steal¬
ing but the risk of the thing.
It costs more to be proud than it does
tor everything else put together.
If head religion could take people to
heaven, somebody would find how to get
there in a balloon.
The thing to do is to get salvation be¬
fore you wear out your brains in trying
to understand it.
Unless a man has a character that
won’t show dirt, he had better not have
much to do with politics.
If tombstones were always reliable, the
devil would soon be willing to put out
his fire and quit.
If the earth were covered with flowers
all the year round, the bees would get
lazy.
Nine women out of ten would rather
have you praise their judgment than
their beauty.
If you are ashamed of your religion,
you can write it down for a fact that you
ought to be, for you’ve got the wrong
kind.
It looks as though there are some
things that the devil could learn a
hypocrite.
There are too many people in the
church who always look as though they
had been baptized in cold water.
Some people can trust God as long a s
they have plenty of money, but when
the bank breaks their religion all goes
with it.
Every man has in himself a continent
of undiscovered character. Happy is he
who acts the Columbus of his own soul.
________ IT MS og iwt krest.
A Portland, Ore., Chinaman who died
recently left property valued at over
$200,000.
Artificial eyre are supplied to all the
world from Thuringia, Germany. Nearly
all the grown inhabitants of some of the
Tillages are engaged in their rnanu
faeture.
There are a class of people to Japan
hire the poor to beg clothes from the
charity association, and, dyeing them,
sell them at higher rates for new clothes.
The aqueduct has cost the city of
New York $24,707,477.28. A detailed
8tatement 0 f the expense has just been
made u The Uig*, itom fa $ 12 , 849 ,-.
181.58 to contractom,
The camera show, that
northern
J TrSL douhte 2?* FF’ ^
,*7 , J
em-