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THE TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. AT BEAUFORT, SOOTH CAROLINA BYW.M. FRENCH, A PAPER FOR THK rEOPLE. Independent in Politics. TERMS: One Year, ?1 50 f Ix Month*, 1 Oo ADVERTISING RATES: ? r Square, first Insertion . , . VI 5(1 I er nquare, second Insertion, . 1 OC Special contract* mode with yearly advertiser*. Address all communications to THE TRIBUNE BEAUFORT. 8.C. BUNCOMBE. A very interesting correspondence ii lieing carried on between Stnte Trensurei Cardozo and Comptroller General Dunn 3Ir Cordozo is anxious to know what the assets of Bardy's bank ore and what like lihood there is of the State receiving any thing from the wreck. Mr Dunn accusei "Mr Cardozo .of being indebted to tin bank in the sum of $700., and Cardozi retaliates by charging Dunn with beta; a debtor in the rum of $7000., for mon ?y borrowed just previous to the electioi of Dnnn to his present office. This charge seems to have raised the ire of Dunn nnc he says: "Your annoyance at being showr to be a debtor of the bank finds expres juxm in a manner which Ibilieve to he i>e culiar to yourself. You denounce my reference to your personal relations whh the hank as "gratuitous and impertinent' ?and then make a similar reference tc mine! The difference between us is, that my statement was absolutely true, and your statement absolutely false. You say you have heard from a reliable source mai one or my euier onjections to ycor investigation is the fact that T was a debtor to the bank when it suspended in the sum ot $7,000, borrowed at the time of my election by the Legislature a* . comptroller-general; and you add that yon do not have any information that the loan has since been paid. You will bear in mind that, even if this statement wore absolutely true, it would not place me in the unfortunate position yon happen tc occupy; for I have not alleged myself tc be a creditor of the bank, as you liav< and it I should be proved to be a dcbtoi of the bank, as you are, I would not 1m proved to be guilty ot a false pretence Hut, as I have already said, your state ment is absolutely false. You know,as I know, that the $70C you mention is not your only debt to tin bank; that you arc indebted to th< bank on more than half a score of oblig* .Hons which you have never made ar effort to discharge; and that, at the verj time you were denouncing the bank a: iusolvent, you obtained from its president A transfer of his shnre in the UnionHerald, for your personal advantage -without paying him any pecuniary' consideration whatever. This is rather plain language, or i would be among fighting men, but tin people of this State have become accus tomcd to these childish quarrels and look upon them only as a blind to covei up some great fraud. If the people could only believe th< quarrel not a sham (be; would have som< hope ofthe.afiairaoffiolomona bank being ventilated, but the thing is just getting in good shape for the appointment oi investigating committees who arc desperately in need of money and who will find it a rich deposit well worth working, and it may be the assets can lie converted into inonev by the time of the next eloction and the whole of it pat where it will do thi most good. Bat Mr. Cardozo pats in a rejoinder to the last letter of Mr. Dnnn in which he accuses Dtk'nn of wriggling out of auswerjpg his questions, and adds; "Yon charged me laat winter w ith funding hypothecated bends, while you had the evidence in your possession disproving that statement; you suppressed the evidence and brought a false charge, and w lun I obtained the evidence to disprove your charge, you secured the passage of resolution by the Legislature to prevent me from introducing evidence to disprove it, 1 he man chat can do that is unworthy of belief. You state that you did l of borrow $7.CC0 from the bank. Your friend, the preeidtnt, is the author i f the statement. I hs\ e since been i? formed, Lowevfr, that jou borrowed it in ncomer person 0 name, mat 1 ne amount was not quite $7,000. and that you have obtained a receipt lor its paymint; perhaps without reiideilr.g any equivalent in cash. Of two thinga you may rest assured: you will never find that I have (nod to jiide myself behind another prison'* uuiue in uny of my obligations, nor have I borrowed money to briho public officers to do for aie that which they would not do without money We fear that utiles* Mi. Dunn quita this 1-ind of ctmspondtncc the Beaufort dele gation will cease to olanror for his cite tion as Governor. What tliey want is plenty of division and ailenc1; ihey Uont . $.1 -wrapt any fightipg over ?ueh a hit goose as Kr. Dur.11 ni w has coLtral of, and rath* r than have any unpleasantness they would take the job of plucking the goose then selves, and give bonds to pluck it cL-an, with not a pin feather left. But Mr, C&rdoza has sneeeeded in forcing a statement of the aff.ilrs of the hank, although it is given to the Charleston A~iu'?. I'rem tl is up rt it seems the MM is 11 ri-9 z\i.OtiU.i, and the liabilities "Ding, don-{ bell l'ie "The cat*u in the well." inj> The cook has just come in(6.45 d.m.) to say that tliere is a cat in the street j well, auil she must go elsewhere for wa- pU] tor. Good excuse for a late breakfast. or. Capital plea lor lying abed to await it! Rut we must be up doing all we cani' n;i pen in band, to prevent the recurrence of | fet such sad calamities. Accidents to cats I no associations with cats. Indeed, all inter' pe course with the domestic felines should p,, be deemed portentious. I must be up at once, and enter on early pretest against _( this now nrp.vnlpnt. fi'lioido Tho loin In r ?...., OI mented is not the fiist of the felines which has found a watery, though not , i "wandering grave" in our imblic wells. O, that it might possi^y be the last. Grimalkin's untimely end now culls ^ , forth some reflections, long harbored, but i in hitherto, unexpressed. The water ques- tc lion has troubled other cnimnunitcs as sc well as this; but with them I have notli- . ing to do. A Greek Poet (was it Piudar Mr. Editor f I have forgotten,) has given . his unqualified prais ; ot water in ihe well ^ known words, "Ariston men /iu<for,"-"wn ^ ter is verily the best thing." O, lortun' ate poet, not to have lived in Beaufort i in these latter days. O, fortunate "Temr plars," thus furnished with your choicest text,-"aristor men hudor,"-because the s poet was permitted to live in times and ^ - places of water 1 But, to the point: Without arrogating to myself the func9 tions of a public censor; without scruti- jc B nizing the annual accounts rent of our , J Town Treasurer; without questioning the .j > necessity of the high taxes imposed; and ' especially without asking why a revenue 1 of $7000.00 cannot, now, keep our Towu -1 in the like clean and healtlity condition ac ' in which it was formerly kept on $"000.00. 1 I puss directly to the subject of the public 8,, | pumps, Pumps, did I say 7 Why, of them jj . we have none* Until .the close of 1861 ^ : there were thirteen. 8o excellent was ' the water in five of these, so good in Cfl 1 'three others, that the first cistern In the I . Wvjl I town, it is believed, was constructed in | 1857; not because purer water was need- (|, ed, but because it was desirable to a(j have it conveuicnt.-moro convenient nt) than the public pumps in the western wj part of the town, whence the best table. n? water had to be brought. The first j cisterns, therefore, were constructed on n( the "Point." * rg Now; these wcUs,-all furnished with pumps,-were cleaned out and kept in order, and the pumps in repair, by a sal n, aried officer, called tlie "pump contrac- jn tor," whose bonds, with sureties, to the n town council, secured the faithful dis- st charge of his engagements. 1 his was fr the system until the year '49 or '50 when ?; 1 a Yankee contrivance, called, a "chain pump,'' was introduced; and an admirable contrivancc'it was. This did away p with the necessity of r "pump contractor," aud the expensjs i .cideat to such an officer. The "committee on pumps," ^ t thenceforward, audited bills for actual i rc repairs, and the annual water expeuse ^ , was thus reduced to a nominal tigurc. jc Some fastidious palates thought that the aj t galvanized iion chain communicated a . 2 metallic taste to the water. Suppose |(i tlicy did. What ot it ? Cha'ybeates are | [ wholesome,-arc sought after. r Let those wells, known to have yielded ^ good water, be thoroughly cleansed, j8 > and again equipped with substantial rfi > lift-pumps: and the others, subjected to r a like purification, with the cheaper ^ r chain pumps. We should thus obtain-, f trom the former, all the supply demanded ^ i for our sideboarri; and from the latter, ' w< i quite as much as would be needed for Jn culinary and other household pur m poses. The wells, partially covered, are ... open, (through a small trap,) to all conurs. All manner of dirty slops; all the dust borne ou the wind, or adhering fn ilio foot r?r IKa ti'nfnt* Ant>i>ioi>a> Ilia ?v vuv ivf Ul iUV "ttltl WUIUUP, ?#! ? straggling doge, cats and poultry: and gQ( what ever other adventitious matter on may find its way into the neighborhood;- t0 all-nil descend into the common recep- a | tacle, from which the water for daily au consumption is drawn. Little or no ti,( option is left us, especially in seasons m< when like the present the "Heavens are ga shut up." m< Is there any thing which the comfort, is the decency, the well-being.?al>ove all, ev the health of our citizens more loudly m: demands of council, than pure, clean, A wholesome watct? Is there any comniodity, within its gift, which, the people have a better right to expect? Who, since the days of the Samaritan Woman, has ever heard of wells for the accommodation of the public,, without appliances pa fnr /tr-iivinfr flio mutef V.nt ,t. ? I ?""""ft ' "vv"' 1 ' -p^ be, from IkeiT noisome dtpthsV Tills nc cessitates the introduction into the wells ** of other offensive water, not yet referred to: Old w astebuckets, rusty vcssc's of tin, Q empty puitit-kegs, and whatever else will servo the purpose, suspended to atriitg* improvstd from the liorders of cast-off garment*, bed clothes, or other rags are let down, through the never-washed j hands of the porters, into the common | reservoir* where all must draw! A ven- C( I table "olla podrida" indeed, is the botl torn of a street well. Of what avail are rivirsof Carbolic Acid;?tons of Cop pcrus and Chloride of lime? "These ought ye to have d?>ne, and not to leave the other undone." i Thus fur, noting has bec i said of the fire-demand: The wells arc nearly filled up! some oi t'u-m plank .-<i over, an 1 np ! pirentiy abandoned! ill t'lit w , PBQBfiHBCIOI3RirilBBBSDnDaB6SllBMUMB3DC*El!l main expense, (digging and brick.) has been, leng since incurred and charged. ?or tire purposes, beside? the street mps, every occupant was required, by iinance, to have a well on his premises Whether the enforcement of this ordince. under the present regime, would be isible, or even, expedient, I undertake t to say! but, certaiu I am that no cxnditure of the public funds is more icmptorily demanded, or would be ore generally npproved than that which mild restore to us the long lost blessing ' water. Aquarius vVc mentioned in our last issue the case afore Judge Gilbert in Brooklyn when ev. W. F. Johnson applied for a mandaus to compel the Board of Education > admit his son to a certain public hool. The Judge has refused the manEimus. The 8tate, he holds, is not controlled ) its regulation of the subject -by the ourtcenth Amendment of the Federal onstitution. ' Common schools are a Liblic charity;" their benefits are not a ght but a "free gift." They are "no irt of that body of political and civil ghts which are protected and secured y the fundamental law." The Fouren th Amendment "has no application i the case." As free education is a gift the State, the State may attach such rms and conditions to the gift as it cases. The Judge decides that the civrights law of that State, which was n-sed in 1873, and which secures the 'ull and equal enjoyment" of school ivileges, and forbids "discrimination ;ainst any citizen on account of color,' >es not prohibit the maintenance of parate colored schools, because such a scrimination does not interfere with e privileges of the colored people or scriminatc against them. Tha Indiana so, which attracted much attention me month ago, cliff .-red from the Brookn ease in that there was no school which e colored cliiIdrcn, who were refused mission to a white school, could tend. If the Boar! of Education, lile shutting t he doors of white schools ninst colored children, had maintain no colored schools, a different set of cts would have been b. fore Judge ilbert. It lias been undeistood that the corn issiom-rs of the Fre-sdmenV Bank had bank enough, lucking $75,000, to pay dividend of twenty per cent. It is now ated that tlicy lack $-J5.000, and if the a ll was known the sum nee led is quite ke y still larger. North and South.-V No iBurner was in to believe that the hate of a Southncr had more sides to it than tho hate any other neonle. and he. was vi>rx- n?t i speak of it with a certain amount of spect; while the Southerner wasmclin-. 1 to look upon Northern hate as a frigid eberg of attempt, never to be melted, ways to remain just so high. It has only begun to appear that there is been no hate worthy the name for at ast five years. But it is the most cornon of all suspicions among Northerners int this present good will of the South an impulse thnt is in a constant dan sr of being displaced by another ipulse from the other side of the >use; that were Massachusetts to scowl ion Louisiana, or Grant to criticise i.er's ?od qualities, the whole cotton-country ould fire up and begin to hate once ore. This is about the estimate that is. arl/t r>f flio of? Wl{*?? ^ ? - ?Al ... ...v oiouuuj ui ouuiu'.t n con ctions. Never was one more imschievis or with less foundation. The Southa desire for deep and thorough amity th all other sections of the ciuntry its upon grounds as enduring as any cial and political ground can be, and e comprehends this when he is enabled walK in ond out of Southerif homes, friend permitted to hear all and to see 1 without restraint. The editorals that e papers print and tiro speeches that in mako upon platforms fall t before the spoken evidence of the jn and women of any settlement, and it just this that.Northern people rarely if er, hear of. And per contra, for that itter.-ALBEnT Webster, in October tlantic. * if. BEAOFORT MACHINE SHOP. Having opened a Shop heye, I am prered with the latent IMPROVED 30L8 to Build and repair all kinds of ACH1NEHY, both Wood and Iron. Particular attention given to esigning and Pattern Making For New Work. 8TEAM PIPE aud FITTINGS, Constantly on hand At Norton Prices, jmmon Sizss of Iron Nuts AND STEEL. Personal attention given to SETTING and CONSTRUCTING Steam Boii.ru Fuhnackh FOR SAVING FUEL. Shop nc *t to Post OOice ( J. A. Whitman, Mechanical Engineer. JAMES E. BOYCE, Wholesale and Retail Grocer. LIQUOR DEALER. UAY 8T., Beaufort, S. C. In store from New York, 15 Barrels Heckera S. R. Fi,oci?, 8 and 6 pounds. ou uoxes rso. 1 scaled Herrings. 10 Boxes J. S. Waters Laundry Starch. 10 " Philip Clark's XXXX Soap 10 cases of assorted Calked goods, at panic prices. 2 Barrels of the celebrated Boston GINGER ALE, A delicious summer beverage. 4 Barrels Bass & Co. and E. O. tfibbcrts ale <Sc porter, at $2.25 a dozen. 10 Barrels assorted Sugars. Anb a choice assortment of Liquors and Cigars. J AS. E. BOYCE. WHOLESALE and RE TAIL GROCER Doaler in Ales, Wines, Lienors, Segars, - und | TOZB^AOOO. NO HONS, DRY GOODS, boots and enoES IvnncH Neck, main land, BEAUFORT COUNTY. Goods sold at Beaufort prices. UlC'l-3-1vr. Richard P. Rundle, SHIPPING And COMMISSION MERCHANT, Port Royal, S. C. Cotton. Naval Stores, Lniler, &c/.oent for the NEW YORK A PORT ROYAL STEAMSHIP LINE KwRiflsirm A Dominion, West India A Pacific, and ' Liverpool it Galveston Steamship Companies to Liverpool. ^ACON D. S. MEATS, &C., AC. Clioico Smoked nnd Dry STDES, Slionlders anO j Bellies, 8. C. Hams, Breakfast Bacon Strip*, Lard, Cheese, Batter, Mackerel, Beef Tongues, Flour, i Molasses, Sujfar, Ac F. Barili's celcbrnte<l (Cincin- I nail) Smoked Ham Snusagc. * I Also, No. 2 MEATS of diQercnt quality, on hand and fqr sale by P TER MACt^USEN, cb-lTtf. Vendue Haiuij. COLOMBIA HOTEL. COIiOlHlA. H. c\ Wm. Gokman Proprietor. e. m. comnvb i ?i -.~t a^jviuoi. Jao.lS-lyr. Magnolia Passenger Route. l'ORT ItOYAIi K AII.IIOAD. Augusta Qa. Jult 10th. 1875 TIIE FOLLOWING PASSENGER SCHEDULE will bo operated on and after this date:' GOING SOUTU-TKAIN No. 1. Leave Augusta 8.00 a. m. Arrive atYemnsaee 1.0? p. m. Leave Ycinaasec 1 30 p. m. Arrive at Port Royal 8.25 p. m. Arrive at Savannnh 4.45 p. m. Arrive at Charleston 4.15 p. tn. GOING NORTH-TRAIN No. 2. Leave Charleston 8.10 a m. Leave Savannah.l 9.05 a. m. Leave Port Royal 8.45 a. tn. Arrive at Yemassee..? 11.50 a. m. i^eavc xcmamt.MS l.OC p. m. Arrive at Augusta 6.45 p. m. Through Ticket* sold and baggages checked to till pnnclpal po'nte. Passongors from Augusta and stations between Augusts and Yemossee, can only make connection through to gavatnnah by taking Train No. 1, on Moxdats, Wednesdays, and Kiudats. To Charlcaton daily counoctlon is made as herettofore. Passengers from Port Royal and stations bewcet Port Royal and Yemassce make dally connection 10 Charleston and Savannah. U. O. Fleming, T. S. I)want. Superintendent. General Passenger Agent. AMERICAN UNDERWRITER'S Association, Of l?liIlaaoli>1iin. Head Otftce of So. Csi. Agency, No. 1 Itroiid Street, CHARLESTON. CAPITAL, $200,000. I will rctclvo applications for Insurance In this reliable Company, on all insurable property. This Company is not in connection with th Board of underwriters, and will take risks at rea-a souablo rates. J. APFLK, Sub Agent. A. M. Lee, General Agent, Charleston, H. C. A. MARK. L'" B00T AND -fe. SHOE MAKER, PurtienlMr Attention given to First CImks W ork. A perfect (It and satisfaction guarantee f-IIIOl* opposite Watcrhonseand Kiekur'a Cotton House. Beaufort, 8. C. Mr U SCHOONER BERTHA, CAPT. M, B. TRE7ETT, Will ply between Savannah and Beaufort, in con- 1 ncctlon with all Steams hips bet wen fn Northern Ports AND Savaunab. ~ Ft eights Carried as LOW w As by any other route with Quick despatch. A1 Orders Entrusted to me will be punctually attended to. H. B. TREVETT. nov25-41. Bounty and Claim Agent. I have associated myself with a prominent Arm In Washington for the purpose of securing JlountleH nnd PonnlonM For colored soldiers, and prosccotlcg Claims for Losses Daring the war, and all other clnims against the United State Government. JOHN B. IIlfnilARD, Bean for', 8. C.. Feb* S4, cb24-lyr " SHEPARD D. GILBERT. ' " NOTA11Y PUBLIC'. Attention given to Marine Protests. OFFICE In the club house. fnn.6-67. Viniar Bite? Oil Draugflit, W. KRESSEL'S. S TIIE'sK UlTTEBS, which have for years posses. ? scd a nigh reputation as a i cmcdial agent, but from the high price at which they are sold ,have been beyond tnc reach of some, can now be had in any qnantitv desired,by the DRINK or ME A S UR E The Vinegar Hit tern render the Liver, the ftomach, tho bowels, nad the kidneys proof a gal"et disease. Try it, and you \\il be convinced* j Sold on draught, only by W. KRESSEL. BAY ST.. BKAUKOGT, 8. C\ Hay! Hay! 03ST HAND, 4 1 Bales Prime Eastern HAY Fon Sai.e Cheap, 8. M. WALLACE, mch.17-tf Beaufort, 8. C. Mansion hodss PORT ROYAL, S. C. SITUATKD AT THE TERMINUS OF THi Port Royal Railroad, where connection in made with the fast sailing, Art cl as steamers MONTUOHSIiY aud 1IUKT?VUXE. sailing to New York every Friday. f j| Round trip from Augusta $30. This is nn entirely new and elegantly furnished house. Sitnatiou unsurpassed, surrounded with magnificent live onks, commanding n spleudid O prospect of the surrounding country, the Benofor and Port Royal Rivers, and oflTors unusnnl attruc '>ro tions to travelers or to parties who desiro Board th< or to spoud a fow days near the salt water. Tabic supplied with everything the market alf ords. Fresh milk, batter, llth, vegetables (tnd, mm a in their ssasou. Beet of Cooke and Attendants. Terme liberal. C. E, WAnntN. jull-t-tf Proprietor. 1 PRATT'S ASTRAL OIL j v Aleolutely HAFE poj Porfeetly Otlorlof*** ,,2 ? Always UnIfobm. Illuminating Quautiks k Superior to Gas, "j Barns in any lamp without danger of exploding or taking Ore. Msnufacturered expressly to displace the ^ use of highly Volatile and dangerous OILS. ITS SAFETY under EVERY possible TEST, and Its perfect burning qualities are proved by its continued use In over 500,000 Families! While no accidcut directly, or indirectly has ever occurred from burning, storing, or haudli. g it. The many imitations and counterfeit* of the ASTRAL OIL that have been thrown unsuccessfully on the market is fui titer Proof of its Superior MeritTHE AHTltAl, Has now a World-wide reputation as the SAFEST and REST. Tie Insorance Companies and Fire Com- i missioners TiinouonouT the coi-ntry ilecomniend I'rutt'n A.STK AL Oil. \yj: Aa the boat Safeguard when Lamp* ate nred. pot ?=?w Leu For Solo in Beatrfort, at the Store of nov. 2o-ljrr. * W. M F KCIt. Thomas R. Harris. p MAXUXACTUHRft OK ALL KINDH OP Biscuit and Crackers. ? 110, Hit, 114 Jk 110 BMkmatt St. till] Betwoon wator Petri Str ict t, hnv Braheli, :)4fl Washington St., / | invl Bet. Fm kMn |nd Harrison St- ( >c,v *l,r ' t 11 J C. RICHMOND. 'X'rlul JuKtlve* U1 business intrusted to blrn will receivecnra* 1 and prompt attention OFFICE LAW BlTiLDINQ. R. P. BARRY, HOLE8ALE and RETAIL DKAI.KIt IX Bit Mi, I ttiNG, BOOTS AND SHOES, HATS AND CAPS, NOTIONS, &c. &C. ?lec2 54, W.H.CILVEUT TIN SMITH. DEALER IN .PANNED PLANISI1ED and PLAIN TIN WARE. Conatantlj on hnnd a fall Stock of Heating, Cooking and Box STOVES and PIPE. ['articular attention given to putting on and ro lrinK Tin Roofs, Leaders and Gutters. Terms Cash. loping for a continuance of the patronage hire ore bestowed on me. I will warrant all work to done in the most workroar like nini.uer VlS-lti. StefFens L Werner, Wholesale Grocers., PROVISION DEALERS, Cor. Kust Hay & Vendue Range, CHARLESTON, S. C. 22 48 PORT ROYAIi Saw & Planing Mill BEAUFORT, 8. C D. C. WILSON & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALER* III Yellow Pine Timber and Lamier AND Cipretw HhlnKlcH, ALSO Guilders and Contractors Plaster, Lathes, All klnda of .TOD SAWINQ promptly done. joriin & Ceiling: Board always on baud rders for Lumber anil Timber by^tlic cargo mptly flllcd. Lumber delivered in any part of s Town free of charge. Torroe Cash D. C. WILSON CO. IMPROVED ACMCCI.TURAL Implements. low Law Cotton PUutcra, without Covcrcr, $1G: h Covcrcr. $ltt. , best's Uuano Distributor!", the moat simple nnd mlar, price $3.50. 'he " Farmers Friend " PlouKbs, all sizes. The itest draft Plough made. Cannot he choked, [hly endorsed by all who have used them. otary Harrow, Thomas' Smoothing Harrows, Jug of the South" Corn Mills, Collins' Steel ughs, Sweeps and Agricultural Steels of nil lea and Sizes. >lso, a large assortment of other Agriculture plomcnis. J. E. ADOER & CO., porters of Hardware, Bar Iron, Steel, '&c. Charleston, S.C. J. A. TORRENT, General Stevedore. Port Royal S. C. BEAUFORT & SAVANNAH ilTRAMROAT i tivm _ _ ? ...mui/il M. M J 111 111 THE STEAMER O- Ts/L. PETTIT, II make weekly trips between the above named ntH ?-< follows: ivc Hcaufort Wednesday mornings at 9 O'cloe!;, and returning, leave nt 10 A. M. Friday Savannah topping each way at SEAUHOOK'S LANH1NG, SPANISH WELLS and BLUFFT >V or Freight or Passage apply on board. Bounty aul Claims Ageasy. clng assoelntcd with a lawyer In Washing- v whose energy lud pro:n;?tnes? In. prnseeu; the Claim* uro well known, and attending ?ely to the business myself; all persona who e any elaims against tl?eU S. Government ire lied to bring tliem to inn nt my ottl o hj 11 i'i,?,a *1 it e. .t iv Hf. |i > vifort *??. 'J i.