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Wingham Times, 1890-07-11, Page 2
iujiaii nuts pial 1pfLV 11, 1$11Q. 'WV* diet y1eDOUald $$QY Again. ' BY MAK Brite, -Vale Qatiade. can boast of men As good and brava as e'er has been, Fair Canada eau brei a at:tame, hoto. , Will burnish bright And Winghani uow does lead this van, For brave letepouflld is the ensu, ,G'atot117We've got eacDeneed bar's t ga ;i, Our worthy Doctor back. Our ga11eL•..t stetesnlau wa 11 sustatd To t-epreeeeit us here again. To Ottawa he ,tnolt his wa3', To see las people beers t,ar play'; A. vliempienr; potato ring, Ile; word did(teuntlet cealleuge ring•; He dealt politee drop and pill Till Grits ani' ''i.'ories,t;ot their All. I ,I know there isn't but one man of that And Toni Nash an ) grandpa and :grandma over so long a o on the footstool whose peoaonce Prl Kate 1' Ah! fo44100 od themArltheieule o, agp QZ ls. We' I,Trale, Bosh tl)atscoiue d what was perhaps best of all, could light alp, your pretty face* like ,jay a � ?s 1 la that, 1 the utasr, a 1 came batik tthe o a e Is d td t ? josh, And \ na?w poop e- f them—fetid they And whit b utie� mer ory o£ the aAnd that ? ilium alone him is. true-hearte i better t i pies. t.p thoee youngeffte4linge. tl 19 Peel t J la to be sure. deserved. t, Ass shone not events the sten of time when ok father and tttttltar `seer A •e sluts right„; i oar. '`pie Uncle their glad Oar «befallen --h to a greet celatetity , t yosh, ( blessed hundreds of others as p wand when the Josh. ,P,nd, Uitcle :) urlili'ast, bravest ! they themselves iuul been blessed. Had befallen rite]'husband Tom the d lied be had given , Tom—the brother young and strollir, FI©W TA R 000D e Mid 'find beet Tont titter ever wee. ? Was this PRQCU p' tio might have .tione. , pie oil the table drew dile; chair alp lex � `(t' JOAN. allow the memory to d\vPl! with him hot coffee and tea . This i;s my U uric Joahtta, ltP re pliod t i keep Tom company, ,the socias old nt<eaLs to tl,roctue to theirs all he hail of Money, wrote. Could it be the \ye've fete; ;,loDoeved back •zgain,eto• .nd how Relaid the :fanners' cause Before the makers of our laws, And olairnee for etb re a duty free and me, Oa goods that•h p So, tempest like, he cleared the coast. same tlza>11 , ;Z ANTING. , might. chem tenderly, ns a ea But he would not the moat who, Then remains of 1 cbicke)a TREES ?^ Old , tt)i 1 d d We've got elcDoneed back again, ,eto, And many other points of worth. When finance figures were brought can �forth, And equal rights for every Should be enrolled 10 common lows; And then he stand more Amity 'Whale voting ou the Oralage ].Dili. 'We've got McDonald brek again, etc. Come, then, ye loyal electors all, ' t pa by oians greab your man inld small, rault complete, Stand by Still firmly atatxl, and scorn defeat, Tho' iuconsisteucy disol,aim, Return him at the poll eatcin. -Vlo've got McDonald back again, etc. titan to attempt lave Ing . r In the Teeple t,rraves, .tile ground is cove.`.'e`rt H t41t i a^ utiles (toiletof young maple seedlings You can pull diem up ensile by mod iii tho full or early spring witch the ground le still damp, without hroakit$ any of the small . roots. Plata than, at utica, in your nnreery, It is very difficult to collect pine and spruce aced• Early in the sprints, when the er,ounti i;: still 'soft and Spoegy,.in the 1. amines, near where those trees grow, yon will see a Hem. bar i f young pines and sp. noes that - you can pull tip very 'easily ; plant them at once, for thee head of tree', you roust bei'er them from the bun yntil they are well rooted, Whenever the ground of a garden as t,e+e l dee up and worked in the young to hitt, child ;and you hove 11diffe este p Alpheus and t is is n Y who itgdor's? It slid not forest trers,worthp},antisng. The ltrees speak of a time when he wee different Rodolpl tsi La ad IF>tod at A'lp' bePil 1 raised iii kite ntrrY,•a•lr�s o .n „ t u what is ;uow, and mother, seem possible, k.ht+t ,that lead . ,:t put in the wife he d and sorrowful, and hrolten Ireatt-- relied upon and hu l ey a, eo dist oat re sold at Apo. th, in lfcer dahusba d'sntuncle ',ed but t'lis man was gay and juld.• n odern�te pito spoke a vulva' of tier husband's �wtaut of easy cnrlrruuiticutious,�de�ais p ale one shudder, and ):ant, cried `Can,, after *that h ought to little 1 that the trees, which ought have rattled the speak- Xl•a, my •I•.ate ! 1 ht for platttui Pr's tongue to eleavo to the root off taenh 1 ad move prophet ck front nnthezbooard, know Iter mouth forever' was' twanged that what I was doing when I told you After Josha time at you say 'Uncle might have a bed in the that 000tii � telii ltwlla,t not oaethat Cltal#1bPC over the woodshed for the spare Mrs. EloiGy Toity 4 say.that a night; and Raudriphua vent out to .tell Why, I could almost Dial ; hut the old man bed, gone, He little c 7Nrub, aittiu� oil your shoal- ttetd not waited for th in forwarding and delivering (wine i 1 u ...I fall, if there are any male or mit are uftPt, the are planting) growing in the neighborhood,; it WI11 when t received, tlhej untit i, be noticed that the ground in the said to the cost, it,we f r moderate, a ting is more or less covered with , is very seldoan that farmers have re- p' to the nnrserytnan for the maple and rill seedlings, grown from course n the seeds fallen from tho:c trues. It notallude, trees they it() fruit flared) ([ do talfes a very littlee tilue to pull up and • not yde, terell to totrees.) 1e lent hundreds of then, and bc�tieely They geirP?•ally r4 to the \rooel.a for replent them, often a dlstane,s of lover, l mites. talo t not in' of them wpill fait of r y haos(1, who hove tried, it es asow how it may damage. the delicate roots ; if hard it is to find. 'suph trees as they the ground is too Bard, use a roots ;trowel. yak s, hod nt11c1a' up,a ads tri •le it ..s much as practicable they out ht tc) takes to dig Alicia: with and how impoe, be pulled uirw11(';a the; Have only got sib'e it i�, EevF'rl \vitll the greatest rare, their two first. Leri"yes; which are easily roots, its. 1 wounding and tearing off tr ling roots. They _know, too, how, little known by their �nPcaliar sllapo, longi ancl'`tiarrow, from one inch alts a lf edfrou alt that i work. Tully, taken to two Thebes lottg, and about a quarter ed from all that. work. Trees taken of an inch wide. out of the forest andt`traneplanted on Forwide. splst I have been the open, are placed at a great dised• seeking several tar years earst and, at the same vantage ; they fail so often that people slei most eeheepe oa reetsame get discouraged and many give tip tree the woods; whirr they !love been Com planting,ets too difficult au undertak ptetely denuded Of trees; and T can, ing• recommend this simple mode as the Nothi�tg is easier; in the proper Prsonal ex erience, best, from my p F season, with soil tit, to grew the kind Let those who suffer from the \vttrtt of of tree 600 wish to h plant, if the tree feel, of thither for building.of trees for is 4n t succ, with a tittle cares you shelter and o1uament and those who ought to succeed. But the trees you *Mild look to have a eager maple dig out of the woode are seldom in good order, find they .cost you e, high groveoa t their nurseries two hem start wish in tnot in money• of you `it vvitl entail no expenditure of money, wish fur good trees, in Brest number without trouble or ex- take but very little. time and repay sure to grow, diem bountift}jly It will bo it pleas pense, procure thea) from a nursery, are for sue to gtvttany furtliebi infar but let tfii%t nursery ho your mot. Ovation and ndvi a to all those wile Any farther can start, in a corner of apply fold s .. his garden n nursery of forest trees,by plyclercvi}le, F.:Q., 'May, 1890. sowign the seetitt of the trees he wishes Y to plant With. a little obser'.ation a- ,g: e kick. der, Tom, lead whispered *to your, In alt part art of the village, upon ear, I and near to t'was finally explained to Uncle the gri ofthemill pond, this same Josh that an old emu, who ran na lithe the grit and sawmill, on grist mill had wanted to hire cottage—the chilly November :evening, in a cgt'rtfor• o ., tat'le, .cheery room of a mall, poor corder room of their cotta„ wtenetll at a table engag- only room which they were not ol:liged edtia a sat a to occupy—and acid Kate for the seer) of ed in sewing by the light c)f a lamp• py— . t 4,, w)t:s a woman yet young—net pecuniary help, would let it, but Tom,. g•r''"'thirty—and though ii t thinking how cheap. be}ts would feelwwith motet etl o pcssessad of that color oti shin and could room put a'f friend, put his foot down e and forth which the 'No.' contras of f; - e yet ,emphatically said world calls .raoeyeiful iu woman Never mind the talk for the next upon ade the eye glad that rested her ` l,Pr:nu.'e of rho goodness, hour, Bate kissed the old titan night, and said to him : d lineament, that large I,�rr in everyDear Uncle Josh, if the thought icer large blue eyes, her dimpled cheeks, the pert and unique nose,, the that you agave: at last found a borne,. fall mouth with its fresh lips,. Red where you coat rest in peace while the teeth,taxi, attaint, sapeyohin lainp of life holds out, can give you xis poorlysweet sleep, then sleep soundly,. and wish nn•y one dimple to prevent it from being really liotnely---ail :these may m y GThLto8 bhives s you the whil Tont, who thugh fru• from the ideal lines Pi -had overheard artist, were nevertheless, beautiful, OLD UNCLE JO ..1:1+6 Another silence, and then the host said, every look, and every movement showing how ill at case he With : There, Uncle Joslt, you can eat, and I will go and confer with niy. wife, enc] see what she will do with you for the. nigltt. . Alpheus Langdon event away, and —the made up a #ao 'when half an hour later, he returned i e, ;, way y to the kitchen, old Uuelaa Joh had `tractive.. end winsome, awl .:wholly ;one. • lov-abIA. She had once been Irate gdnn's usual<custnm „don,but now she wee Keep Nash. was Mr. L 11,, L n„ lesh. it Before retiring to read .a short prayer She had targe' children—abed, ng in presence of his wife and elder chili- ago, for it is eleven o'clon'elc And why service Book, but 1 does she sit and seat' s ren, frons' the 1 d l 1 to e at- And the old man did not try to hide the great teal'£; that streamed down his furrowed ,cheeks. \Vas it fats,lity—or what wits it f On the following morning, wheal Jncle Joshua carte nut from tae little corner ate ? It eau,- at- au- bed -root., be found a mini pleading f the with Tom for money., It was a land- eord, whoheld..'9bin's note for a thousand dollars, secured by he rort- gagt, on the cottage and the shop ; and Ire lntd come for his Interest, which ought to have been paid weeks 1e - .Where's the note 7 asked Uncle JO1i Of course# yeti expected to endorse the paytueut of the inter- est. l The man showed t the note. 1 \ }in `W•hy,—bless nae this. note is over, due 1 Certainly. Sakes .alive ! that wont do. And Uncle Joehue, threw open his \vailit ceat, aid his dialer fBonnet frock, and teak from hie liths a buckskin belt ; and fioen oneend ther?of }1e took a roll of United States Treasury notes, rue of which„ bore upon its filed the mystic el and 1000 I Then from a pocket of his vest he took a rbll of bills, of mall der.onlination and lone iiig therefrom made, np the interest due, he passed the whole over to the landlord, and took .the note. Here Kato,—P11 give it to you, and do you eioliect In an hour Ental that tine a won- derful story was Yiaahing through the village. Old Seth Robbins, the land. lord, had seen Old Joshua ,feangdnn's money Welt, nnd;;he could swear that there was a full P,housand one -thousand dollar Treasury notes it—It the oldfeln.of motley at hula. Why, low had pullets 'oat a thousand -dollar note, and tossdd it over: as though it bad been but 'tt worthlesss piece of paper, and he Bad given the redeemed note to Xatte /4.f sh as though Buell things were his daily habit. Three days later Alpheus,Langdon had learned that t;incle Josh lied visit ed the National Bank in their village, and when be entered the banking• r00111 he found. his 'brother E,odolphus there ahead of ihitu. What do you think Alf 1 Old Uncle Yoh has deposited fdnr hundred thous• and dollars here 1 And he has whither bank account in San Francisco Aainfttl ,iilcnce, and then said Alpbene •Uolf, we missed it dread fusty 1 Who'd tt thottght it? it's too late now, Alf. At oil events it is for tate. I- cut the nld mets too severely for him to over l000k it ? So did I, Ilot it tenni:Mecd for the two , wives omitted it on that evening. t U5langdon, at the ago of. Itandoll very was living fashionably, and moving inline best not be necessity. 'The J oo c snrrcnndtugs tell of look of wealth, if not of poverty, but not, thank Heaven 1 of want.; and thou her face clues not look like the face of one circlets of society. Ile \vas 1 t:h free [toils thanklessly. leio. Ilarit • liver, nor did he love to spend money, . Through the. ;crisp November hemmer hut his wit' could speed it t ,r laiut comes the clang of a is and for the sake of peace he avowed 1 upoLi a blacksmith's until. heavy There her her to do so. Ile had sit: children. 110 mistaking the knnnd, t111 1 p dout Tota lgasb, has been and they were ...expensive also• fret nuabau, stout byan unfortra)„Lte treed - Unlike did not live quite up to his inconiu coiled up, g, s broken down e'r he was a driver er whose Carriage ha dill,' lily brother, � ! earl ill basinesc, shrewd and grasping, and (and \who avoulcl be on tllh xr:ad Y could it}tit IlimsnIf for the sake of in. ie.anornflig ; anti Tom is at work patriot: his bank account bala10e ou 1 with might nod main to help the roan e tight side, jou Ins way; and Bate w}ll .not retire. t.h On this cold November hieetwife while her..husband workse Sher has ndolpbts Lancclon arta wife, the coffee-pot oil the stoye,,stud i iatlin It.a f huh Lydia, with their eldest d'•aariiter were. Duan is a daintymess for tti hungry rust far the night, man'slunch, * , Ttiritrg.to their 1\`1 t The dock has -.struck clewed ---it lou ten minutes past--wl+Pn. a knock ul the door arouses Rate from a mood of meditation. Without hesitation she takes up the lump and goes to the door, At first she is startled, but ellen she can throw they light upon tltn face of the than who stands 'upon tfiazing Them Together, it is easy to tat>1 out when the seed is ripe for inetanse, toward the end of Many of tho first settlers of Illinois. June,. beginninning of July, the seed were rude in sl? o t in of the cl):l end of the ,eft maple (acrr ineunsr, , Money was scarce with rubrun)) is ripe ; by sowing it at oi7(ie, them, and sciage was paid for in pro - ,it will sprout and the little creel.; grow duce. General o illustlife bytah0. nearly one foot in height this sura- these inc.idu following anecdote: titer. The maple, oak, ash, Kirch, butter- One day . ewhetlnrhe i� i n41ice of, nut} plc., ripnu their seed in autumn ; the peace there �� . •ut t u) ied by a n better sow it �ti ul)Ge than winter it young teals aucoe 1 an J in the han.e, ;;;ow 111 i11 straight rows, woman. with 11 gttrcleu fine, leaviug a picket at Ile yob the squire? allied the manly each cud, t6'g,otde you whel. weeding. vgntli . Solt au inch deep tor the maple seed, ' Ye*, sir. land for other liiu le i)1 prepure)on to Can yeti tie the knot for us right the size of the' sed; arid two or throe away ? i inches deep, for butternut and waluut, Yee, ?tr. Thin in after thetiirst year, if uneded,and llov, much do yon charge ? transplant further 011 the little trees, One 'toiler is tun legal fee, six, removed in thinning. After three or . Will you take your .fee Tri beese four years, more or less (the time will wax 'depend on the rate of growth of each Yes; if you ceta'tprty citsh. kind of tree) plant your young trees Well go ahead and tie the knot, and whore they are ` destined to stay. I'll itch in the wax.. Choose a ejaudy for rainy day a1 the No, said the squire, th}a11ii11ryfntril sp a, ring and, witl(ont leaving home, was a good °hencetfor a little , with no trouble, without breakiu;; any. bring in thelbposw�t first, . -stud then roots you will tak op and plaint at I'll marry you. once, without al owing the )'cots time 1.te1t etlttntly tbct youth went out to oung trees were, where was hitcher) the .horse upon dry) one h11 11C1 y ,, , to aryl tltiu to groW iii lease toile that. it would wtiicil, Darby aud9oan (athlete, the taste .you to go into the woods, and digair lied ridden, and brought the wax up ten trees, wall et poor chance of ill a sack. On being wei'f;bed ices value l n• their tacking root and living, •was found to be• only worth half These young trees wili cost yen doltar._ nothing, our children will soon learn Wall, slid the anxious groom, tie sow to o tweed. them and take care of the knot, and III fetch more wax hex them especially if you set them the week: hat's against example. Our own children when No, sir 1 I don't trust, t g quite'yOu11g, took pleasure in sowing the rules of this off'ic'e. acorns aid watching the growth of Slowly the dissappoitited youth turn. the young oaks, as they cisme up. By rd to go out, saving t sowing, you 000 produeet with no ex Cottle, Sal ; let's go. pense, any number of young trees and 1 sayi mister,einsweredn i, with r re=wood by degrees, all the land wiliell woman s wit, call t+'you Marry as is not tit for oilfivatiedtl and otig lit to as the wax will gel have been kept for wood land, Yes, I can, and will, replied the But do not -forget . to efattcc care- squire, laughing,"alta he did, fully your nUrseryout alta your e.plantations ere n aro nlorttxnsi•-•Are you disturbed at night w 'tn try ala p h[ cattle will destroy everything. the trouble of sowing whore the ground gni rsateabtS*t 1otaarh and llocvola�cur+swindCole, is favorable, in July anis Augttateiloe setteutestheuaitl reeluere InHnrnmnt[0n, and a i}es the ditalaes, road% the fences, oil the tin Inc a ch;mt 6yrojy ,forscf i dram tc, �hintirSsts lalf)se or barrels patches, \VilerP,t Or 10nsant to ho taat0 and is alae prc.5criptiOn of 01{11 Of tale eldest and best fe,n:d'e pitystcums SCI nor,,.: in there is n little dalrptlPr s, in the tr,r ttnite,i Stato rami Is for easy by rill dnlgit;sts )teighborhood tlf the gaits ttnd soft b to e`.h a siir'eWand aexzlfert+' htty.0.veaTeV11 a twpl)tdx, you will find Managed$ of f10QT l50 51001 tit exhibit tats climax of chagrin and t; young elms acid maples, just sprung: suffering. Thenceforth there watt' VIP from the Sethed dil inn. poltrotil those he a regret mingling with every hour trees, plant felt ill try it this summer, thll 10eul of the elm when the door -bell was lune. 10. could it be at that hour ? Past ten o'clock. An old man sit the door wants to see you. Ile halted SO ro;;gh enol poor 'at 1 wouldn't let shim 1n. So salts the servant who hal been on her way to • bed when the alarm eennded Bandolphus Langdon went to the the door stone, elle feets'iho sense o , tear door—and was gone a fear. It is an aged face sad and worn along --the , furrow. Ione Bute Ills wife knew that, he 1 'n every 1}I1P and on bad bronellt some one titito the kitchen i the ti 101(1 she heard a strange voice touch lt',SCI hrOkert --111 MeoiLVcirSa ttoii with her Iusbntul. By and by 'when her patience had become 'well stitch exhausted. and Che la:acl arisen : for the purpnee ofgping to tiee,�ltattdul•. • faits returned. Father—who is it ? 1,nn�t(lon sank into a chair and groaned aloud. ft is—that old reprobate, Uncle geldl.lnttyl And she steps back guarding the f3linte of the lamp with her .and, and asks the wayfarer to conte i11. And lie fo)lpws her to the little living- rooul--the room which is l:itcheg, sitting root. said parlor all in one. Bate, you don'tknow um 1 ca h ata,nstltc She starts --a gstsp . barge of etuot1011'0N/00N in ttpou her heart --rand then elle bounds for ward and throes% her ai-t»s around the old man's .,eek and his furrowed cheek. ,l Josh 1 uncle Joshua' 0, thank bIOS Lnlc ' What on earth! ejaculated the wife, for this 1 Uncle Josi11 hnldio)g Irian will Y(41. da$ and +azino through her }larrnr ah•icl,, n �ti lint 1 from her a €, • We must keep'him ttrttrl morning nth then bundle hitn off, 1 leave told'. him as much. Batelle lle dirt. t think of fastening ,llitnee'l'elinrt no, did be? I ctbn't know, Ile tool; the trouhlc tell me that the had reformed. Ile tt54 save be hasn't drank a alt op for inure ;Ili 1,1 ten 'years. Dia you believe him / Ne. 1 wouldn't trust him tis fat as 1 conItl swing art ns by,, the tail, and ,told him.ea. 1,-v( got eneu:s en my shoulders nod'�,�vitbont taking any more. What ieite tome1 `1e tette he' was nay` tatter a brother, 3tf�-- Aft t,l,,r, plait the aatiglttsr gttietly tyvnkp 10 Pena, Ittvin't 1 be•a d vin; rent• tl)Y t Ta 1Si*Itt t c 'r 1 wr' tears of joyuponthe well•reuhelnberc d face -15m4 Josh 1 this is joy indeed. Dear old snot 1 Ah l hark I Tom is doming. Wont't he be glad ? And presently Tonl Nash camein ile 'WAS a splen13d looking follow,1 handadnle ns picture—that is in all that, goes to 'maitre up the strong, rigorous, true1iearted man. Ile arn was not polished but good; and thoee who had objedt1ed to. Iiate's matr'yiner with hien 1racl aid their worst they bad 1101 been able to say one word against Tom ash's moral character. Torn t—q. TOW t you. cannot guess who this 18 t • So as to keep out the cattle, o use and oken of your r, at by a sickehild sulYering and planting trees \vltlloitt fence$, the t (th i 04 (Ilium 'r nth1 i4 s0 rletld at once and get n bottle of "�ire.wlnelotw's !Soot nq Syrup" for Children Teething. Itavalue is incnl;Ul• In, many Oases naturo will spare you nt,lo. It will realest the peer little arltfe1 I iturnediately. Depend utx*l it, mothora; thero'is no Yes I can. of bar that weuic) msl•e rige,_ (: 'Pion My pnrttstlista'ti told you, t *Avow halal Volt t t riniil*. 1t ee ltliiattte ectal delleat that it is ()My Watt trtttl hallo Fuwt;1 1y.ad". ." and take. no ether Rind. Cheerful looks rake every dish a fetist. • Without ti Motu this tvoild is bbt ij 4R NCF ob:rn •TRn DX. wtnatt+t MISS. MB,R fir ftn,atsusp YMMMNC: (cmgoLu i S'otne of you. have 11 ego,t)ever so, many £t. lover, too --ere' nobles bright and protnietu pure a' d was,sted rieht nu 1e where 1 first Imes hint. we .were all in all to frlendsiip was sweet;. sure,—life lo')tted 1, with of us, and tt; stretched before us dared path across tial .one path not two,—fo .not walk to ether through tile, neithei lie-. My fiends were pie -leis prospects were We loved Pah}I oti elso• was needed. 1 were 1 How full of,, all the time 1 1 w )f any of you; awl Happier in your lav, Alicia looked d -rang on her tioger C A smile of synipathi Nos. Ai'icia and h engagement were u3 just then. Mis:' ed ; We were to spring—in May -1 theevalley would. .lasses to our gen World would he f,t'i lnede us it betrc mistorn was then e one we knew ws wee tilled with lif the reoma rang .06 music of light v )ice's 1 was only a g! _--and perhaps power over the Im at my side. Yes that or I would 1 did that night. r was served and ' reOf•course there ' our honor and it I thought, if It I knew of his re caned them, ,sill power of inliu eight at least, would decline tc eves stanch its 11 never chose the young.. men 1 power for the e that you have, T"• temper with .e l girlish i;nor:tte didthat night, He refused; with 11 first wt then earnestly) sion in his eye surprised at 01' not bear defea' .our friends wli (wrested in tin ruined that - dine—that I. presence of 11 friends and a, influence shotll yeti. At last and to put at yielded. .lei had his ginss kiss he left a Whom could I deed not, Daily the poi developed In vain 1 1, cried for fc mercy that' realized hie' to alter it. pitifully wet give it up, ]inti, loved never shrat caused him life, blighte with him, a Dressed int recompense was ever pr to break c not hear of in May wh sorn just a haps.1 trig ( how rnar wrecked o then 1 cot him; woo called a d' flee anytb for what were pow+ detert'nini ate up as Weif nee s� 4trOnf;i cOtt.tlaa i