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THE SEM1-WEEKL i vfESSENGEJU: FuIlA Y, JULY 14, mi Catered at the Poatoffice at Wilxnln n. N. C, aa second class mall matter. THE DAILY MESSENGER, by mail, ooe year, $7.00; six months, $$3.50; three xaonths, $1.75; one month, 50 cents. . mi m nimr in n iittt w in r rt tt XT fy. J l I two 8 page papers), by mall, one year, SL00; six months, 50 cents. In advance. WILMINGTON. N. C. j FRIDAY. JULY 1. 1899 QE LIFE OF THE JOUKNAMST. We recall that sometime ago we re X erred to the perishable character and -Xtitillty of Journalistic production. That -cach day demands new contributions -wfrlch those of the day before areMump--ed Into the waste basket and forgotten. Ji. man might write political editorials victualling the unique and powerful "Let ters of Junius," or the most extraordi nary "Peter Plymley" papers of Rev. Kidney Smith, or Dean Swift's, most wcerrosive pamphlets, or Bolllngbrooke's xtwwt masterly political tractates of his generation, and they would not live in the form produced. It is strange, but "true. To have any lease upon life here the products of Journalism must be put Into books and into shapes different from those ot the newspaper. We think of these things as we read what a gtft- d English Journalist has written. Tlev. S. H. Reynolds served on the staff of The Thunderer," as the London Times "lias been called, or twenty-three .years, writing for it J.0OO leading ar ticles. Among his papers found after his death was a paragraph that re minds us what was said in The Mes ienger a year or so since about the ' perishableness and futlity of Journal ismits utter want of staying quali- ties, its absolute transitoriness, each ar ticle perishing with the occasion that called it forth, being forgotten in the liour it 4s read. Unlike other mental productiveness it has no earthly chances Of survival here, but it may come up ; against you in the Great Day the T)ie3 Irae. Mr. Reynolds left at his ' -death this testimony as to the Journal ist: "He must be content to be counted im nothing, as in the present, to be un known or set aside, and never to take rank among the real influences of his time. His labors will be rewarded, but rrot as men ordinarily count reward, lie will have a real power 'his work will be deep and lasting, but his name will be obscure or evanescent. He will affect the tone of the notion for which he writes, and will thus be the iridlrect cause of its most noble after growth. The pillar will not be of his raising, and will certainly not bear his .name inscribed upon it, but he will be Xhe foundation of the whole, the first v necessary condition of the state of pub .Aic sentiment from which it has been raised in seeming independence." Take "The Thunderer?lon which Reynolds so long and so faithfully toiled, and how many of its men of rare learning, ability, range of informa tion and genius for their particular work, are now remembered or so much .as named in any cultured or literary circle? Some of the leading writers of their times have labored most diligent Jly, and with consummate mastery, but their names are forgotten. It is so with the other hundreds of gifted and schol-t-ir -triiT-naiH?ts who have written for Cl 1 J V W A the leading papers of the British King dom. Unless they have taken to other work in other fields with the pen their Iroductivenes,s has perished with the pens they used. In our own land out of scores of accomplished, versatile, su perbly endowed Journalists in the past, liow many are known to the men, or -even the editors, of this generation? Who knows of Joseph Gales, Jr., Oeorge D. Prentice, Henry J. Raymond, 5Torace Greeley, John M. Daniel, Wil Zizaxi Johnston, (brother of General Jo .aepjs. Johnston), the famous literary writer on the old National Intelligencer, .and the "11 Segretario" of the old Itidhmo-d Whig, John Hampden Pleas ints, Henry W. Grady and others of tthe most influential and rarely gifted o southern writers for the press? The other hundreds of men of intellectual jparts were probably neglected, as they labored with such assiduity and were forgotten before the grass had begun to cover their mortal remains. The niv reward of Journalism, however painfully prosecuted, and with What -ever of devotion, is dally bread, a faint echo of praise at rare intervals so as .to break the painful monotony of cen sure and complaints and the opposing .eternal iteration of opinion from men partially informed or ridden by narrow .prejudices. The only comfort that ever comes to the men of the Faber is the consciousness of duty performed with - an eye single to the public welfare, with a sincere desire to bless humanity and to heiron. every good movement start ed for the uplifting of the race for the .amelioration of the sufferers in socie ty, and for 'the advancement of true ed ucation, sound morality, high ideals of service, the responsibilities and duties of civil life and the Christian Religion in its purity and simplicity. Then dy ing, it is dust to dust and speedy obliv ion. If the peace with God is neglected and preparation for Heaven, then sor .row forever. Greensboro Telegram: The Peer less (Machine Shop under the manage ment of Messrs. W. D. Burgess and 'Samuel Coffin at this point is the lat st acquisition to our many manufac turing industries. IIOTIB FOLKS Mrs. Holiiday's death at her home at Raleigh will be sincerely regretted by many friends and acquaintances of her and her sadly bereaved husband, Col onel A. Q. Holliday. She was a lady of many attractions and was -held in very high esteem by those who knew her. he waa the ibeloved mother of Mrs. P. i. Hoge, of our city. We are grieved to learn of the death of Dr. William R. Wood, of Scotland Neck, Halifax county. We suppose he was about 60 years of age. He was a capital physician and will be a great loss to humanity In his section, one of the foremost in the state. He married Miss Henrietta Anthony, a singularly attractive and handsome lady and daughter of the late Whitenuli An thony, one of the leading citizens and extensive farmers of Halifax. There is a contention among the stockholders of the Atlantic and North Carolina as to making a dividend. It is understoood that the president-elect, Mr. James A. Bryan, opposed upon the ground that first equip the road proper ly before dividing supposed profits. That looks practical and sensible. Professor C. L. Raper, a young North Carolinian, and reported scholarly, for his years, is about to undertake to write "A History of the Royal Govern ment in North Carolina from 1728 to 1776." The late Rev. Dr. Francis L. Hanks in his two volume history treats largely of Colonial history, and if he had 'been favored with a knowledge of the Colonial Records, then hid away in the office of the secretary of state at Raleigh, he would have made a more accurate and valuable history that would have stood the test of time. There is room for another work no doubt, and if it is properly prepared with ref erence to style as well as to the gath ering of facts and incidents it will long be the book to consult. An article in The Raleigh News-and Observer, prob ably by Professor Raper, says this: "It is true that there have been sev eral general histories of North Carolina, all of which merely sketch over this period. After one has carefully read all the histories dealing with this period, he will have a very poor idea of what English provincial government really was; he will have no definite notion of the political, constitutional and legal development of early iNorth Carolina. To be sure this period of royal rule was about the most important in our whole history. It was then that most of your ideas of local and state government had their birth and partical growth. With these ideas in view, Professor Raper is attempting to make a careful study of English government in North Caro lina. He is also conforming his inves tigation to the Colonial Records." lukuaiu ;os.su. Mrs. Gaskell is to have a memorial at Knutsford, England, the village im mortalized as "Cranford," and in "Wives and Daughters" as Holling ford. Cranford is one of the best short novels in the vorld. It is a simple, rural story of uncommon purity and faithfulness to local color and charac ter. That novel and the best of all short novels we ever read, George Eliot's "Silas Marner" deserve to live down the ages. There is a history of the United States in French not long ago pub- ished. It is by Professor Cohn, of Harvard University. Mr. Swinbourne, the greatest living English poet. is in better health than he has been blessed with for many years. Me is very deaf. Even Stevenson felt discouraged some times when he took a reflective view of literature as a pursuit. Au thorship did not promise great re wards. And yet he secured an en viable name in letters, as essayist and novelist. In one of his letters Just printed he says: Seriously, from the dearth of infor mation and thoughtful interest In the art of literature those who try to practice it with any deliberate purpose run the risk of finding no fit audience. People suppose it is 'the stuff that in terests them; they think, for instance, that the prodigious fine thoughts and sentiments in Shakespeare impress by their own weight, not understanding that the unpolished diamond is but a stone. Harold Fredecric is an American nov elist who deserved well of his country. His death some months ago, a victim of misplaced confidence in so-called "Christian Science," in the great Lon- j don, in the midst of his years and with growing fame was very sad. He has two novels much above the ordinary product of thi3 time. He left a novel called "The Market Place." It is by no means equal to some others of his own but it is selling well, nearly 20,000 copies having been sold. There is no truth in the report that Mr. Henry M. Alden, the very able ed itor of Harper's Magazine, Is to re tire." He is the author of two very striking books, one of which we read twice, "Cod in His World," written with rare finish and excellence as to style and containing many striking and' original veins. It had a large sale for such a book. The finely equipped literary critic of The New York Tribune says of him: "Pre-eminent at once for his conser vative judgment and for his quick perception of whatever is freshest and best in contemporary letters, Mr. Al den is an indispensable pillar of peri odical literature In this country. His flexible taste and inflexible standard have been invaluable to American au thors and readers and the gentleman from the west would be the first to realize the serious loss to both which would ensue from a cessation of Mr. Alden's wise ministrations." Among some of the novels praised by literary journals and large news papers we may name "Children of the Mist" by Eden Phillips. "A Hungarian Nabob," by Maurus Jokal; "Richard Carvel," by Winston Churchill; "Pris oners of Hope," by Mary Johnston; "I, Thou and the Other One," , by Amelia E. Barr; and "The Great Inclination," by Edith Wharton. The New - York Bookman has two notices of this last named. The editor. Professor H. T Peck, of Columbia university, writes enthusiastically and says: "In the way of fiction we have seen nothing this year that has impressed us so much as Mrs. Wharton's book. There is a finish, an assurance, and a tenacity of grasp about her work that show her to be already an accom plished literary artist." It is conceded that her English is re markably fine. Mrs. Wharton has made a success we may suppose. Rev. Dr. Henry Van Dyke's "The Gospel for an Age of Doubt" is in its sixth edition. He is a great favorite with us and always writes with ela gance and ability that are rare. Barton H. Wise's biography of his distinguished and erratic uncle, Henry A. Wise, of Virginia, is praised highly In the north. The New York Saturday Review lauds much and says: "The book has much in it to com mend. From a literary point of view it is the work of a master. Its pages are clear, crips, and abuond with life and movement. We have no hesitation in saying that it is the best written and most readable biography of the heroes of the great civil war that has yet ap peared." BREVITIES Memphis has received 773,171 bales of cotton since the 1st of September, 1898. It breaks the record by 14,000 bales. The Canadians are not without en terprise worthy of Americans. They propose to cut a canal from Georgian Bay eastward to Montreal. The esti mated cost is nearly $25,000,000. That beats the old Erie. If built it saves 725 miles. A negro in Kansas murders two men. He is dead and the lynchers did it. He was strung up for murder. Down south the great crime that provokes crime Is rape upon a white woman. Up north they will lynch for murder or any of the smaller crimes such as preaching holiness. Fact. A Pennsylvania manufacturer, Mr. Aaron French, has given $6,000 to help maintain' a school technology in At lanta. Come this way. The senatorial contest in Mississippi is now between Governor McLaurin and Representative ("Private") John Allen. Hurrah for Allen. , There was a negro riot In Pittsburg, Penn., in which several persons were injured. Fifty negroes attacked a po liceman to rescue a negro prisoner. They next stoned a passing street car, striking sevey passengers, injuring them. The north' is having good oppor tunities of studying negro civilization. Senator Depew, just from France, says all parties fear the army. The time may come not far hence when this will be said of all parties in the United States. Senator Hanna is perfectly serene and undisturbed when he is scored by men of honor. "The republican leader," as the gay New York Tribune fondly calls him, has a rhine so thick it is impervious. He has no conscience to disturb him and no feelinsrs to be wounded. LA 3 K C. ICTO'. The papers are full of cartoons illus trative of the times. Some are clever and show forth the trend and follies of the day in this country. The Houston Post of the 4th of July had a, double bicycle on which rode Alger, in front, and Pingree behind. The forward wheel was marked on its tire "Corrupt politics," and behind was "Pure poli tics." It was a wheel "built for two." Alger had a flag above him with the motto: "For the United States Sen ate." McKinley supports his incom petent and blundering secretary of war who was proved a poltroon in the great war between the states in or der to get rid of him. Another cartoon, in the Denver (Col oradoX Post, represents Uncle Sam sit ting against a fence post with horror on his face, his hat on the ground, his legs stretched out, hair erect and beard standing out "like quills upon the fret ful porcupine." And what has thrown, the United States into such a pitiable fright? In front is a jug branded "Ex pansion Gin." The old fellow has been, inbibing of it until he has the jim jams. He sees an awful spectre be fore him. A huge monster of a snake with tart in the mouth of the jug and standing up in serpentile fashion with an awful man's head close to him. grinning with savage teeth and staring eyeballs glaring upon him. It is the head of a Philippino with the admin istration's conception expressed that of a brutal, cruel, savage with coarse hair in full erection. Upon the huge snake Is written "Philippines." Such a debauch is quite enough to give Un cle Sam the most terrible manuporter. The expansion newspapers are fond of appealing to great men of the past to sustain their latter-day contention that imperialism is all right. The greatest of all polfticaj geniuses in this country was Thomas Jefferson. He was a democrat at a time when it cost something to be one, and he believed firmly in the people at large. In order to boast a bad cause it has become the vogue in the circles of the conspirators who are seeking to change ithe form of our government, and to make its ex penditures far greater than -liey have ever been, and greatly surpassing those of any European monarchy, to appeal to Jefferson as an authority, as well as to other famous men. But was Jef ferson really an expansionist of the present type like McKinley and his idolatrous worshippers? We wrll give a little from what "he wrote. In his first inaugural address he said: "Peace, commerce and honest friend- ship wifh All nations, entangling 1U j ances -with none." And in the third annual message he wrote: "Separated by a wide ocean from the . nations of Europe and from the politl- . cal nterests that entangle them to- ! gather It cannot be the In- terest of any to assail us, nor ours to . disturb them. We should be most un- , wise, indeed, were we to cast away . the singular blessings of the position In which nature has placed us." In 1S20, he wrote to the Corren: j "Nothing is so important as that America shall separate herself from the -systems of Europe and establish one of her own. Can circumstances, our pursuits, our interests distinct; the principles of our policy Should be also. All entanglements with that quarter' of the globe should be avoid ed, if we mean that peace and Justice shall be the polar star of American society." One more quotation from this great est of political geniuses of this conti nent: "I have ever deemed it fundamental for the United States never to take ac tive part in the quarrels of Europe; their political interests are entirely distinct from ours. They are nations of eternal war. On our part, never had a people so favorable a chance of trying the opposite sys tem of peace and fraternity wiTh man kind and the direction of all our means and facilities to the. purposes of im proving instead of destruction. Peace and neutrality seem to be our duty and interest." Wise, grand old man, if he were liv ing, he would lash the demagogues who are seeking foreign conquests and to gradually change the American sys tem the very government itself, found ed by the patriots and statesmen of the last century. The awful deluge in Texas has not been exaggerated in any particulars, it appears, in the reports sent out daily. The official reports sent to the govern or show that over 20,000 people are ut terly destitute. This should prompt the people of Texas and adjoining states to come up to the help of the helpless at once. The cases are most pressing anI most distressing. The loss of life has been considerable, but the number is not yet ascertained. The losses In property aggregate millions of dollars. NORTH CAROLINA The Winston-Salem postoffices were consolidated last Saturday. Plans are maturing for the erection of a $12,000 opera house in Winston, A $10,000 factory to make sash, doors, blinds, etc., has been organized at Newbern. Murphy Scout: We learn that the wheat harvest on Peachtree is over, and that it was the smallest for many years. This is perhaps also true of nearly the entire county. Two occurrences happening in differ ent parts of the country Wednesday are worthy of notice. In Wilmington a negro who had by his conduct made himself obnoxious to the community was given a guard to escort him out of the city and afford him protection. In New York state three inoffensive negroes were beaten and chased by a mob and were fortunate in escaping with their lives. Durham Herald. Salisbury Sun: A citizen who has recently been in Atlanta, Ga., tells us that a wholesale merchant of that city said he was doing a bigger business in Xorth Carolina than in any other southern state. Tie also stated, what is a fact wrorthy of note, that collections were better in North Carolina than in any other state in the south, and that he had not lost a cent from sales he had made to her business citizens. On Tuesday of last week Dr. L. J. Picot, of Littleton, amputated a leg for Major Mills, who fell under a Seaboard Air Line train. Mr. Mills' mother lives at Summit, some six miles away. Sat urday when Dr. Picot passed her house he stopped in the road and called to the children In the yard to tell their mother to come to the road that he might tell her that her eon was getting well. She started and got about 15 yaTds from the road and fell dead. Statesville Mascot: Captain J. M. Patterson of Troutman's and G. M. Austin made a deal Wednesday that was rather unusual in its nature. They went down to Sloop & Miller's store and, for a compensation became joint owners of a pair of shoes. Captain Paterson and Mr. Austin have each had misfortunes which dovetail into each other curiously, the former having lost his right, and the later his left leg and each wearing a number eight shoe. Elk Park Correspondent1 Mitchell Mirror: For the second time inside 12 months our town has been visited by fire. Wednesday night about 12 o'clock the Elk Park inn was discoveredi on fire, and on account of the lateness ot the hour and the fire having such head way before discovered, it was impossi ble to save the building, and it was a total loss, together with a valuable pi ano and a large amount of furniture and carpets. The whole house had just been newly carpeted and great pre pa- rat ons had been made to provide for thi3 seasons guests. Down in Cabarrus county, right in the village of. Concord, last Sunday a "rrob" would, have lynched a negro on mere suspicion of crime if they could ha?e caught him. Yet the courts of Cabarrus were elected on the white supremacy issue. Asheville Gazette. Tte negro organ in its blind parti- zaoship refused to tell all the facts in this case. The negro was tried Satur day afternoon and sufficient evidence was found aginst him to justify his being held upon a charge of rape of a vhite woman. He was put in Jail, but as there was some talk of violence the sheriff (we venture he was a democrat) sext a deputy to the woods with the nesro for cafe keeping. The deputy hearing some one coming, and not knowing who it was, tied his negro prisoner to a tree and went to meet the party. When he returned the negro hai made good his escape. The sheriff thias protected tbe life of Ms prisoner by j taking extraordinary precautions. Th Gazette is cot willing to do Justice to a white man in its zeal for the gra Ashevttto Citizen. iDTrsrini cr Military OXFORD, O. FACULTY FOR 1899-1900. J. C. HORNER, A. M., Principal. Latin, Mathematics, H. G.SHIRLEY, C. E., (Virginia Military Institute), Commandant. Mathematics, Natural ScUnce. BURTON CRAIG, A B., (University North Carolina). EnglUh, Mathematics. J. M. OLDHAM, A, M., University North Carolina. Grte. History. Latin. 1 T. H. FOWLER, A. M., Washington College, Johns Hopkins.- Greek, German, French. Miss NINA HORNER, Pupil of Warren A. Locke. Harvard Univ. Piano, Organ. S. D. BOOTH, M. D., S. H. CANNAE, M. Surgeons. Miss JENNIE FAULCON, Mat ron. Our faculty was eminently successful the past year. The new teacher, Mr. Fowler, Is schlarly and has had ample experience. Mr. T. Howard Fowler was graduated in 1S97 by Washington College, ranking at the head of his class. His studies in college comprised four years of Greek, five years of Latin, three years each of German and Frenchr ana the other studies of a regular college curriculum, in additton to summer courses in German and French. He is now employed by the college a an In structor in the Preparatory department, and is pursuing, under my Instruc tion, a post graduate course In Germanics and French, lnclullng Gothic,. Ola High German and French literature, modern German historical grammar ana philology and Teachers courses in German and French. During this-present year he has taught, averaging twice a week, classes in beginning and advanc ed German and French under my direction,, and his work has been in every resxect excellent. He is an earnest, able, energetic teacher. His pronuncia tion of both German and French is accurate, and he speaks those languages entirely in the class room. He Is thoroughly Qualified to teach any of the branches studied by him here, and I especially recommend him aa a teacher of German and French. C. T. STEWART, Prof, of Modern Languages. Washington College; Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, April 3rd. 1S39. iu w. TT-awiPr whn, hnldn a. seholaj-sflin in the deDartment of German. In this University, is desirous of securing a. situation for teaching German, Philology and Literature, and the German language. The distinction Mr. Fowler has already won in this institution was gained by his exceptional: abilitv. careful Dreliminarv training before coming here, and marked ability and industry in the prosecution of graduate studies in this University. Mr. Fowler is entirely capable of undertaking college work in German with every prospect of gratifying success. His work in my German Seminary has proved his ability as teacher, and I feel certain that this ability can be put to suc cessful practice. Mr. Fowler's character Is excellent, and his manner Is- pleasing and engaging. rror. or FOUNDED IN 1845. LIMESTONE COLLEGE, GAFFNEY. S. C . This- institution, famous in the history of education in South Carolina, haa recently been thoroughly reorganized Faculty, is prepared to do college work of the very highest grade. Nearly twenty thousand dollars have been appropriated for Improvements. A splen did new building is being erected which wilt contain a large Auditorium. Library, a Reading Room, a Museum of Natural Science, a beautiful hall for the Literary Society, and some needed offioM. The building will be furnLsh- ed with new heating apparatus throughout, all the rooms will be supplied with new furniture, new pianos will be purchased, new physical, chemical and minerakrgical laboratories will be equipped in short, everything that is necessary in the work of a first-class site is unequaled in South Carolina for stone College makes its appeal to the people strictly on Its own merits. Lit erary, Scientific and Commercial Courses. The regular college degrees are given by the authority of the State of South Carolina. An especially line Course in Pedagogy is offered to those desiring to become teachers. There are three departments, the College, the Seminary, and the Primary. Lot Limestone's friends and former studentB tell the news all over the South. The revered Captain H. P. Griffith is the R. Brown,, recently of WInthrop College, july 1T, eo-d, 3m. BIMMAI SGHGftL (Established 1703.) Offers Eastern Carolina boys a beautiful and healthful country home on the Southern Railway, and plenty of shade, pure water and fresh air. Ath letica encouraged and healthful sports enjoyed. Scholarships, prices- and medals. Wholesome and abundant food. Every class and course for one tui tion fee Bible, classical, scientific and business courses. Seven thorough teachers. For handsomely Illustrated catalogue, sent free, address PRESTO LEWIS GRAY, B. L., Principal, Bingham School, Mebane, N. C. Sea WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, N. C. GEORGE CAMPBELL, Prop. THE SEA SHORE HOTEL OPENS JNE 1st, SEASON OF 1399.' THB HOTEL. IS HANDSOMELY FURNISHED AND FITTED WITH ALL THE CONVENIENCES AND IMPROVEMENTS OF MODERN TIMES. ONLY HALF HOUR'S RIDE FROM WILMINGTON, N. C WRIGHTSVTLLE BEACH IS NOT ONLY NOTED FOR ITS COOLING SUMMER BREEZES AND MATCHLESS VIEW OFJTHE GRAND OLD ATLANTIC OCEAN. BUT IS IS THE MOST FAMOUS SUMMER RESORT ON THE CONTINENT. NOTHING WILL BE LEFT UNDONE BY THE MANAGEMENT OF THE SEA SHORE TO PROMOTE THE COMFORT OF ITS GUESTS. THE CUISINE IS UP TO THE HIGHEST STANDARD OF EXCEL LENCE. DRINKING WATER FURNISHED BY ARTESIAN WELL. SPECIAL RAILROAD RATES PROM CHARLOTTE. OUKKN.SUOUO . RALEIGH, GOLDSBOKO AND OTHKR POINTS. SURF BATHING SI -gAHi6w6RADE Institution Fok YounoLaoi 11, II J I L. llTUM e bT?, fnoflfrn convenience . HUMUiVIJ DuuaiM i nanaaome ani . . i ure-prooL cost a Kflwi uiuk pjuuuMa in wmca every icacner is ciuvcrmy vr&j ;or iroca ot - j brated American, German or English conaerotocy. Yon may elect degree course, groan orbr&ncb - ATTXJiO TBZU OWJ CHURCH. In Western N. CL. famoas for fta fine climate. In the fuburba c( a charming nd healthful Htr altitude 7G0 f L A beatl ful iit of 20 acre. Exte from tZA to 1100. roMItatra catalog address REV. C B. KINO, President, Charlotte, North Carolina. ciiou fUl The rreat remedy for nervous umiv:. School llEiSKr wuuu, German, jonns nopKins university. and now, with a large and able woman's college will be provided. The beauty and for healthfulness. Lime Senior Professor. Professor Wado is; the new Professor of Music. LEE DAVIS LODGE, A. M.. Ph. IV Orange County, near Mebane, W. C. hbre Hotel R. r. CRAWFORD, Manager ILL WATER BATHING. MUM WW tlMJU V Wk CM J UU for your greatest comfort. Oct ciejrantiy furnisbed. More, oi pixnt, nao.ow.oa proc trail on and all dlaeaaaa ot aha seoeraUv 9 K II II I f r I M (COLS .Ill I ul Errors. lieatalY torry, eel msuottcA ao4 Insautj. With JejrSoW aft il.COM