OCR Text |
Show J. Address of Jiulze Sutherland. (Continue from Fifth armsthese were always in demand; the farmer seldom went eves to his field without his trusty gun. Smith & White are the only witnesses who have given full testimony The prosecution, it is true, called Pollock. Young and Pierce; but the were only perm tted to describe the trans tctioo as a pantomime; they r not permitted to state what was said in Connection with any act which 'hey uie.itio.ed They were at the Meadow; they tnwall tbat anybedy paw, ii nd bexrd mucu mid that would explain those iiclf: hut they wre compelled to testify K8 ibougtt they had been deaf, and saw .he transaction with the sense of lie u ing ,b )lishe l. Gentlfniiii f the Jury, the charge agniust the defendant named in this in- d.ctiu ut in ih t ib. y, by agreement, and concert of ac iou, ki ld and murJered tt'e i m gran s A before remarked, Paje.) the iua"cent tuffer instead tf yyl Jest lbs gui'ty. Tue crime now under investigation w,s nne of unprecedented wickedness re It will gratify tbe sense of not an tanu which enemy etery justice to discovtr the perpekind, oi h They should trators and hang th.rn. That live! crim- so 10 p, be permitted us ws cotnmi t' d wi b such nho.-kof am c ty. bat no punishBut in P'Oporiinii ment seems ndeqiu'e ciiine c.atg d the of me to tuipitn'ie I it i i. tf iu'. Mm i .linmi.l ti IOt' SririliJ (iu... uuivin, mid en cumepec-m- n g'.o iM be our dttigtnee mil ioiileiuiiig toe in looking thai planned nfl'l enacted I h ell t tceii ' of honor, who have sitine cursed they dil hit all jrn from one place; lliey ibeeriti rti'h i eii buneiul pr Hence for did nut occupy (inoeamp at the Meadows; luc pHrioi tifeiiliteen yeuts they were net c miuuoiiHly together. Have you been fm uielied with ad. q iate They were th-i wo or thr.-days be-- f re the n anncre. Dunn thiit ioteral eviience to .si 14 y vou iiiai you iiavv iinted wim the nion.iy he emigranta be.c made ir.irenotied asd the trallvaCt Jli7 Do iOU think I hii been Indians fire I upon ihem On the f tt tl to fiituiiiBiuiiiul y described and de day. no Imiians were to be seen; they lulled io ou ill it no nth r person exist hd in t ict concealed themselves in the .who could be brought bet'oie you. mid cag brush. Tltey were in ambush, it beeu tr m wnioi they sullied out to the final eoui'i tell you mitre f i.! II to described mat yo i eel ussured it asstut Ou tha' day the emigrants oihe s dj exist who cn testify oh ibe came into o nuimiincaiion with the Mor uij c , that wmtt lliey would my would mom. under a flag of truce, surrendered add n new tact lu wh it yi u ave al- their arms, aomdoned their property, Uuless yr-- hao been and placed themselves under Vormon ready learned? pei tutted to know by e' Hence all that irotectton. to be conducted baok to can I'tt learned frmu witnesses, you cuti C)lar City. The children and wounded a. th correct h I bem p'aced in wagons provided by boi Met Hint ne8 f your j figment that amounts 4n the Mormons, these wagons bad started a mcr.il certainty" of the towards Ced ir. under the lead of John tnat cauuol I). Lee; uext marched ou the women. hve guilt you wnio i is not '.eset with that tm.--g ving lastly the men Tois procession rui relied wnicu according to law, acquis, calei for nearly three juariers of a mile, the a "reasonable doubt." Moria us ttavelm abreast or nearly so lhe tettinony submitted to you dis of tbe men belonging to the emigrant clones that there were at lena twenty; party, when the nines .tre commehced loir eye wi'nesses of tbe tiageJy: P. Lee bad gone with the wagons ever i of ground, and was nut of eight of tiiugeu Smith, John M. Iligbee, Tarl 8inrti, Charles Hopkins, Wm. C S ew tbe men That whs his final departure an, John D. Lee, J.el White), Hubert tiom tbe field He conducted tbe chil imuel ' McMurdy, dren in satety away. Wily, Ira Alien, Tuuimis i art origin. Wui. Bateuicn, Two important and vital question-mube determined first, did the MorCiark, Ezra Cmh, Samuel I'ollix k. Wui. 1'itice, fjumuel KnigM, Uiclinrd llarrt-jii- , mons take part in the matsacre? If so, J oil ii Mongrntu, Siaae. Sweii wm it previously agreed ou when Lee Ja nil- - and Jamej Wi limisou Six are was pte-cndead lour of the others ate m nt.ouni It there was no agreement, or concert as delen Jams iu this indictuien , leaving of aotien, each man. of course, was only fourteeu that might feeuty. Dime auo responsible fwr bid own acts. Was there Hxight, who are indicted, were Dot at aaythiag said, done, or agreed upon, tbe ecene of the uiasnaere. Juceu, AMair wttcQ should afleot Lee with notice, ku tldeu, who are leo in iicted, bve when be headed the retreating emi- boi been mentioned in the transaction. grmts, tbat such a butchery was to be Ot tuese fourteen who are executed to when they came opposite to eltgibe tesiily, ouly P. Klitgen tfuiim, Joel that masked buttery of Indians? White, Samuel Pollock, Wm Young ml That attack was either made by the James Pierce have been put ou the wit Indians alone, or by Indians and indi and Ten others could h .ve been vidual Mormons that were more savage called and linre not by en cailed. Yuev than Indiu.; or it was initiated by are a l wuLin the jurisdittioo of tLU Mormons,) orgnnize and using the Iu- court. di ns as allies. It was a sudden attack, N"W a, remark as to the cxaminatioa uulooked for alike by Mormons and emiof those who were called to (the t)tn.i grants, and originated in the natural Smith aud U'hne were put unier oath ferocity and treachery of tbe Indians; ly ih prosecutieo, aud direce 1 to st e ot it was procoticerted by Mormons as all taey hexri taid and saw before go individuals or us a party, acting upon ing to the Meadows, all they beard and like impulse of treachery and lerocity. and saw at that plac- -, oa the f the You must decide in your own miBds how slaughter, aud oa all of the proceed a it transpired. You can not convict Lee dnysihey were ibere. The )ro8ecutiou unlees you find from the evidence that alto called Pollock, Young and Pierce hero was euch preconcerted plan, and The dueciiuus to tbetu Mere "Tell al that bo was a party to the damnable . you mw during the earae period; but compact. don't repeat a word you may nave heard As Lee did not participate in tbe no body say." Those witnesses tes'ifi slaughter, and was not present or in j ti acoordingly. The proseoutioa dia view of it, the hypothecs that he and not permit these la ter witnesses, on tbe others pre-ar- i ange l tbe destruction, ero s examination, nor when called a cau not be adopted, uilecs there is evi witutHses tor the de com to transcend lence of it. There must be suob a state those inexorable limle. of faots prcvid, beyond a reasonable Smiin and White have testified, on doubt, a are not only consistent with, to but such facts as prove, that supposition, questions jut by the proeecutit-nto i'he facts proved must be iiicons:stent which to cm?tiHtion, rumors, acta, they sbid h..d occurred at Cedar City, with suy other supposition that can an at other In other places, before the lauh reasonably be propouuded tcr, and prior to going to the Meadowy. word. the conspiracy must te proved;. They likewise testified to conversatio n, and it can only be estab ished, indircot-lyruQiorc, and acts at the Meadows. Nor by proof of auch facts as exclude all "ere they confined to stating eouversa-i'o- probability that be had no notice thut between thota who are indicted, suob an attack was contemplated by r between thoe persons that acted in those who made it, whoever tbey were. concert, or that seemed to be bouoJ toUentlvaen of the jury, arc you pregether by gome combination with each pared to decide that question? You are . ur with Lee Ad eonveiaatioas. informed that fourteen men were there, "o aiatier between whom, or where oo who are now within reach, and could urrinK; all luuiors, no matter how give you information. to you feel sale gue or impersonal; all Mis, no matter in deciding before you have beatd what by wbom done, or bow irrelevant; were they have to say? tified to by them. The defense You cannot infer, beforehand, that objections, but they were una any, of tbeae witnesses aro guilty; such ibng to exclude anything. an inference would inrulve a decision of The trauMaction of consisted the very queation on which their testireally hat all the actors at the Meadows saia mony is teceteary Ail the ey ad did while woo have been produced have testified. together, byway before going; ot all they said A witness is always pi ivileged to decline ad did whio going thither; and all to teatify. when to do so would, in his l"y aaid and dii after thsy arrived. own opinion, have a tendency to support Alter kome evidence of combination for any crimiml charge that might be Soiog there, the acts and declarations of brought against Liin; but. so far, none inJ:i,utis belonging to the party, in of these witnesses have asserted any ot absence of the others, within the! such privilege. If the transaction, reof time tnd scope place, relating presented correetly, would not inculpate the Cunmon purpose and in the ex- -' the witnesses who were then on the Nation of it, would also be included in ground, they would not only be obliged technical rttgettct would form part to testify, but tbey would feel most will-i"this transaction which is tbe subject a and eager to do so for the ehke of f this inquiry. Smith & White ranged justice to the innocent no less than the Tr this field wiihout the check. guilty. waa lean in jime a cue in which you combination, fhown, however, Jo wyond this "hat the persons whose wuld be justified is judging of the aies have been .neniiontd were called transaction from the testimony of part toK to tbe Meadows to Save tbo eaii of the witnesses, withcut feeling any Ert'ta that had turvived tbe protrncted hesitation from the absence ef the others. lleks of the Indiana end to the If the witDetse. who Actually testified, dd. Oo this ostenaiiiy humanebury trr..td eUted what was in iUelf credible; if ea ent sitnttltaneous'y from Cedar thty agreed tI aeh other, and so "Jf Uarmouy rnd lbs cae lHat, believ'mg It ss Tfcty 'fvied iniDlejcente Washicjoo. uiti.bl for inter- - stated did not involve the conclusion a.H Ra ibe deaa. L.v carried re ihbt the witueKt wtrt deitUute. cf Tuf fe.-la- . c . i L. I - fr I re ai-q- e wt-r- deu-udaul'- e s as-unn- iie st . tl VS ne.-s- s dy , 'h-r- ofprs-Piraiia- n n le-i- j at the qualities that entitle witnesses to re Si est and confidence, a few of ibe many nrgtii pioduce a conviction of the truth not less strjng and abiding than if the number testifying were multiplied a hundred times. Are Smith and White euch witnesses? They are not likely' to be better nor better men, than they reLet us contemplate present themselves. them for a moment as tbey exhibited First. Philip Klingtu themselves. Sn.ith. He iuforms you ilut in ISo? be was a of the Mortu.n Jhurch at Cedar, having no local superior, except Isnaa C llaight, who was prevalent of As bishop be was not (,aly that Slake. a spiritual teacher, hut a patriarchal adviser of the people in all their ten. pot a! atlairs. (Ie states hear.-a-y respecting opinions of other parsons luati Lee. expressed at Cedar, to the (fleet itiut these emigrants ought lo be destroyed; that he opposed the proposition o n ake war on them, but ouly becxuwe it would be His view prevti ed for a bid policy time, but he was finally overruled, aud the doom of the emrauts whs bi-uo- p d. Heacquie-ot- d liegivesyou understand Ihut before he went to the Meadoaahewasinforutrd by the ominous to aordsol Ira Allen, spoken to him aud Wniie, on their return from Piulo, that he era grams Wire to bs sUugnterrd His hetirt revdiid agmtirl it, but ou the ummous to go, he iitadf no opposiiiou. He went, knowing ibe purpose of the journey, lie tua.le no protest against it, either before he telt Ce lar, ou tue w.y, or during the time the buuhery was being planned aud executed on lae fieid. And heu tbe fatal moment cmc, wbeu. as he says, the emigrauts were abreast of the soldiers, sepamttd trout theui only by a few feet; alter he had walked with them long enough io read theirsad countenances, in the I'gut of tbor im I ending ftte; after he bud had time to glance nis eye forward, to the helpless children and the anxious mothers never to be aud to reflect What an atrocity was about lo be perpetrated; alter be bad had time to remember that he had raised bis feeble voice against the damnable Makiug off ' an1 w now an unwil'ing witness and participant; when it might be expected that he would shrink from such an uunatural crim it he evtr hud a throb f humane feeling; when, us we must suppose, there was iu the spectacle before hiui much to excite pity lor these devoted people, and heroism to ave them, or, at least, kumuuity enough not to take any part iu their destiuctinn- in this predicament, wbht did friuith do? Does he confess tnal he was appalled by the thought of such inhumanity? loes be indeate tbat bill phlegmatic nature wasstiriedup by aey Wueu the order to ems ion wbatev. i? fite wastgiveu,acoordingtohis lest.meny, why did he not discbarge his gun in tue 4t was- not a mo air or in the oir.UT rarut ot cuurcb rurveillaocr; every man present, if Smith's lostimouy m true, must have been too much occupied with bis owu desperate thoughts lo ave be n watching to see if every oihr per orued an equal part in this fearful' work. If he was shocked at the thought oi killing the emigrant party, when be says it was mentioned at Cedar City, when it was but a tuture possibility, bws arm would have been paralyzed when it was a present reality, and tbe deluded vie tiins were arrayed before him. He has described a soeoe wbtob sog gests these inquiries Now remember, gentlemen, what be Bays be did. lie shot to kill one of the emigrant parly Then he did so voluntarily; on no com Would pulsion; with no rrpugnanee not a jury be obliged to conviot him ot murde , an aggravated murder in th first drgree. if he bad be. n put upon trial, on a plea of net guilty, and what he has said of himself toad been proved by other witnesses against him? He would have been convicted without a1 doubt, and everybody would say amen! He is tbarelore a self conferscd murder er. According to ine laws or toe wooie oirilixed world, there is no good in him; be sbeald b hanged or confined til) he dies, not sutfrred to mix with his fellow men, uot suffered to enjy any bleating of l.fc Murder is sucn crime as im plies all other criminal iulent, such perfect tnsensibili'y to all moral obliga lions, and tuch atseose of all humane instineis thai he is uot safe to be trusted, lie is a is unworthy ot any confidents, cumberer of the ground. The law sys, Cut him dwuM; pople everywhere, ut tering their abhorrence of bie eriroe and their sense of his maUgnUy, wl'h one bias, let him be utterly blott d ou. ' What crime is Job a V. Let tried for? for aidibg iu tb desiruoion of these tmigrnuttf. not with his own hands, but for o naemior to the staug ter deoe by others, in pirt by this eery witness. .a Will you feel wana anted io ao i trn cepticg tu te timony oi t tkiiagco Smith, loaded, as be coaf ssee be is with crime? Can you fetl any assurance that be is telling the truth? Will his state ment ao afleot you that,' wnboU ether testimony, you will entertain no reason able djuU of their verity? tan yon have any conviction, derived (rem Lis dignity of tetirrony which rises to lUje can moral certainty! If you your -- - , - accord,-ay,'Remov- tlcg t- credulity is pitinble. Wbeotver there it r exposure in Smith's luliroony, and he touches a subject on whica anybody else has ao? knewleUje, tc i cntroio'a. and fabricate io reipsct to the diapoaiiioa of the propny altar the w ils as in LugUer, aa hlunds reaij children. He did not lake the enildren to Cedar City, as be aid he did; he did go witti the wagons of the emigrants, as he said be did not do. He did not have eharge of the children, and he did as sum eontrol of the wagons. John Wil lis took tbe children, and Pollock went with 8rui b and the wagons Other more material contradic ioos will prea ently be pointed out He hue made his own record of crime (laving shed innocent blood by emulat ing ibe lerocious example of saVNges, he could not return to the duties ot a Christian teacher. He resigned his of fice of bishop, and he has been a fugitif on the earth ever since, ilia band-wer- e covitmI with blood, his eonscieuoe was burdened with ciime, too boitio'is to be expiated His perturbe i spirit cou'd not rest. Iu his desperation he has undertaken lo drag others into blown infamy by perjury Now what should be said of Yhit? This witness 'akrs 'be stand fresh fn m a conference with Stui h. He says ilmi he was sent from Cedar to Pinto by Height to carry a letter to Robinson dirtctmg hiin to endeavor lo pacity tbe Indian, to facilitate the safe exit of the eta m rains Irom the Territory Smith volunteered to accompany him; tbey say ihey went together, and delivered the letter They returned together. Th"i concur in staging that, wbm going out. i bey met Lee. and he said just enough to express bis dissent lo allowing tne emigrants to pss without further from the Indians They are Hie sole witue-seW'bie does nut remember uiettng Ira Allen He thinks he would, if the act had eccuire l. and Alien has solemnly proclaimed that the As '.he emigrants were to be killed witnesses did not bear each other's les timony, he evidently was uot aware that Smith bad mencoaed that meeting But it was noesaary io stale journey to sbiw their solicitude to save the mi grants.tbe opper unity, apart from other n witnesses, to meet Lee, to put Ms in marked Contrast lo their But Kobmson ooutrad cts humanity. bo h. They brought no such letter His testimony warrants us iu ying no such journey wan made. Smith apd While But i hey met neither Lee nor Allen have associated themselves before the sluiigkur. at the slaughter, and now. in their testimony, aimed at the 1 fe ot SO o'her, they try not lo be divided. Whit-i- s careful to say be carried no gun when summoned to the Meadows. Thouyh Ibis was known lo the commander, he was directed to go lo tbe uiaesncre, to (ake nne in the ranks, and he did so. How fortunate for his conscience! Smith had seen ibe Mormons at their camp, marshalled into columns, arranged in a hollow square under command of Lee, to re eie directions for action on the emi grants, to fire when commanded to halt. White, not having soffolent'y compered notes with Smihs contradicted Smith in regard to Ibis occurrence, but be affirms that the Mormons were marched io file from their otnp to ijiis bloody work, Who brought White into court? DM Hickman sub oenaed him with an juts have heard the co'itt say was issued under no misapprehension B 11 Hkkotao bad charge of him, kepi him in actual custody ami) be had given his tftstitaony, he retnsed to talk with us wii boat Hickman's consent, until th court ordered his discharge, W'h ie has confessed to you thitt Hitkman refused t allow him any interview with the t's attorneys. Here yen can see the peculiar fi'ttess of things. , If White is to be brought lo ihe point of corrobor Sling Smith, anJ to bt kept in lb mood lo do so, nntil his testimony is Unlabe l, ? who is a better keeper than Bill The prosecution has consummate tact in adapdng mtaoa to ends White says he was not informed ef the purpose of going to tbe Meadows, nntil on the march from the Mormon camp towards the emigrants. He don't know from what source the rossor came, bat br heard ibe rumor. It was lo kill ibm He went with the rest, and etood ly while the slaughter was being acoom plishrd. He has not confessed himself an immediate aetor in ibst slaughter; but bt Confesses he was there, aiding, countenancing, and abetting it. He is therefore bv hie confession an accost pliee; he consented to thai deed of br-ro- r which has been excrrattd by every holy as the foulest and most demon-likmataacre tf the age He rvmonstrated with- nobody; le did nol raise bis voice er bis band ones to stay the wieksdorss which he ays was Ibere committed He. like Smith, Is idemnV fieil. aud doubtless he look some part at Meadows, Lhe Smith; that has preyed on him ever since, and now be too lo.ebarc his guilt with the iuncccnt. Now, fcnilemeo. 1 pause to repert tbe inquiry I propounded before, Ate Smith and Whi'a such witnesses, out ef four-te-ibat you won'd be willing is son vict a man of a capital offence oo their testimony, without knowine; what the, others woo'd aay? You know the j roie cut ion could have brought beforo you all the others. Tbey have brought three of them befoie ton. One was a bey at the liire, cf only fourteen years, and sick. Trie ether two bod good cf porta aities to know very much tbat ii is important you iboul'd know. Tbey both went t the M adowi 10 asaist the emi-- g anfs, and not to hurt Ibcm. The proof out Ion. io examining them, did net permit main to tel all ihey kuew; e'id not permit them it depo-- e lit respect to the itcte which xnosl p. t or d.sjrve iu-ju- ry e tht n murderous combination. They wtr not permitted to state what wal said bsv tween the Mormons, nor between tbo Mormons and the ladians. They wero not exsmioed on tbe part of the fople, as Smith and W bi e bad been. Thy di i nol take part in the slaughter, aai tiny do not testify that the Moraoos were n fite or under any common I, nor did th-- v testify that any Mormon d in ibo alaughter They saw the to, slaughter, and their testimony ten-iexonerate the Mormons They contra-diet both Smith and White as to lu tiiw rsliMliupt of the Mornw ns at the Ctusp, and as to their march in fl e or by common I to lhe place ot the in inacre.. Bo h Young and Pollock testify that Ihe were not addressed in camp or au where, to their knowledge, by Lee or any otner leader, and tbe part Ihey ere io lake timed; they b in deny i hat ihe Motoions were plaenl in file; they boh dkpy lhat any order wa given to marsh down lownrls the etnW grauts Aucording to lueir luc Mornn.iis wrre nol at the Meadows under ni'liiary te. Wben step were in hr ii to with I ho em grmd camp it Ibe character ef friends with a fl ig of Hue, a part of lhe Moiiiuiiis tuliowed al a ui.tsrCe, walking promiscuously, aa people go to church, io usatoe espri ssioii of ihe A part remained in camp an t did not go al all. The Indiana were swai iu ng over the emigrant when they firt si lhe ainiike and fire of ibn slaitgluer, aud Ihey saw n Mormons panic p'w. The Iu liaus were all warriors, urui d wiib guns and bows an I bows an I arrows; ihey numbered four l one of ihe white men, t f lhe Monaon ait I emigrant parly; arrows in gre! pmfus t,u were found next ' ay on the, it n.uu'l " er. er tbe dead bodies were tukeu for bnili . To bt e ntinueJ partl-cipate- Mo-unti- s ny ii-i- pl wit-tirss- ea iieci-ratio- ofacA-whic- h de-fen- Uick-man- The New Improved SINGER, Hld ' 187. Im m nnn Mr inn XUU.vUUaMuaJaciar4ia ba br bM taeuao, Stsiea, Thaao Hi aits show tb aolrieai pirsitarlty of last Kluior. laa foMowiag U Ua . CERTIFICATE tha estimation la watch It it hei& by, aar wuoottiiuauliyt i K tba utxUrsliciMMl waw) tka t tatar- baeiug VV rewlnc alarhia In aae famOtee eaa eKcae roll rroufuiarDO II u ail pan rehii 10 pas durable sad bghi roasilitg-MChiaa- . ra.a a Sist-cU- Will show IvadiM families la ' tvr, . I al. Ktnart. . Of ton -Ue. II. Trtba -Iboa. BUdla , L J. Ilsrrkk r.A. Cf-4-a Ins low P. II. HirriuM aaaa" Mr.,F. Msa We. i. ralno " 4aLanatta, tliatsfe. Browa Mra.? Nlrin r.wUluon Mm. Mra. Ura.ft.Alkw, Mn.rde.lo AMD -- Met K W aisrtorit M 00. B. Ka-o- WiitarsV , nouira Of OrHSM. Thoronsh InstiTai'tiona if at 61 Experienced Lady, Operator t: These Machines can be obtained on EA8Y MONTHLY PAYMENTS or s disceant of 0 per cent, for cash. For Particulars call at OFFICE, EIAIX OppcsvU OLD TTTIlI.ta TAtD, KV.v ADDlies OR, o. h mason,. AOkVNT, it4m Oydeu, Vtak. NOTICE 18 IllJBECY OHES THAT THP.roun-- I ly and Trnltoiial taxes for 1876 are now due, sad taxpayers are rquefd at my oflee at the to settle with County Court Uobis without dtloy. e Joh. A. MKf, - Assessor OfSoc tad Collector far Wtbf r Co, hovs from J0 a tn until 4 p.m. L9 3w en-d-a- n, LEUALjjOTICE. Tar'try ofefliaiok Oassoa, Uablj ft. B, PARI ajot Is Jnoilra'i Cart. I . roai.a L. C. Xfoeham JusUos SO!f, PUkb. Ii al Mia Pvooa., f )y JAM a8 MOUP.B, Defeolattl) Too p ojls of tbe b'ulil Sutes ef Oi TAsnitorv of I alto, t Jama iloore, trsili'r; You are tfanv awmmonesl to ts and affswr - nns, at sv o(!lc. It Iraiiilin 'rri(t, Iavl rarrliry, au tbe Oitt.dai'mut). A.D , UTS, at IK honrv fin AU ftpfmUr, la the lorenooa ofsata W te aawf the saw op ?,l a bij ot tha pleJatiff cla rulur of 1" tLe som of (oiJU, &n ta asiu auataaad dntte Airnt JiOt t. A. b. 1ST, at franklin. Oueidht Ccmot, I Jtiho Terrlfnrt; waws rKitiKT.i will ha raooered aaalwet yeatsr tb. a yo aut U ajf via of 106.00 air Cliar wiU ba'ora !h tu-ila- fce-- psae aixl iarws". UWaa nrWae toy A.b, ir.x aCUiw oo4 this tb in vf-ft- ra aayeAafW , ia.vcniK, JaaUoo of the. hat.. |