The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 01, 1887, Image 6

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    A Hammock Story.
My Indy dreams with unshut eyes,
Under the apple boughs I see,
Where, on her breeze-blown couch she lies,
The fairest thong beneath the skies
Al! dare I hope she dreams of me 7
der hair is like the sunbeam’s gold,
Her face an angel's well might be;
Her form is cast in beauty'’s mold,
Her loveliness cannot be told,
E’en by a worshiper like me.
I cannot leave her musing there
And gomy way, when only she
My heart, and life, and love can share—
Ah! lady fair, dear lady fair,
Leome to thee! I come to thee!
She heard his footfall as he came,
Aud suddenly across Lier cheek
{here swept a vivid scarlet lame,
She trembled as he breathed her name,
But not an answer did she speak.
Her Jace-bound hat she lightly drew
Close 10 her brows, and he—0O | he,
Beut nearer to her eyes of blue,
And with a look that thrilled hier through,
He asked her king of dreams to be,
Chere was a tender thrill of bliss
From a brown nest above the two,
Alter the silence of a kiss,
As, with a look love would not miss
For Heaven, she said, *'I dreamed
you!
of
STR RES
WHEN YOU ARE THIRTY.
it
which he
was a closely clipped lawn upon
trod, instead of the divine
heights of Mt. Olympus. Neither were
those gods and goddesses—those four
athletic figures, clad in white
flaneel, disporting themselves upon a
portisn of the lawn marked
lime, and wrangling
heated, James never
scorned As he
wrangled.
it, approached
the
i
i
the ice scarcely tinkled in the pitcher,
dered upon the sublime,
“Set it down there, James,” called
Miss Edith, and James set it down,
line with the tennis net and about three
feet from it,
enware, and the glasses came from
kitchen and were not out, James had
been told by Miss Edith that when
tennis balls came violently in contac
~ith eut glass, broker to
oe the result. Hence the discrepancy
between the elegance of James’ de-
meavor and the 11
character of the burden whicl
To show annoyance, however
neath him; and Jupiter himself,
nothing of Ganymede, could not
bent the upper portion of his body at a
right angle with his legs in a more class-
ical manner than did
posited upon the
the earth-—earthy,
mournf u
and the c
upon high
ways, Jari
the
y
«fF
v
Inga urd «
giass was apt
, was be.
Lo say
ilave
James as he de-
rorost ive
gestive
ishing :
ed briskly
presented it
Editli’s v
tennis cour
ade and gin walf-past 11.”
“Yes, Miss,”’ said James, His vocal
organ did i
with the rest of him.
loubtedly squeaky.
Twice within a week James had
fied his respectful I
ders with **The lemo
The lemons were evid
time, and Ed
sity of a si
of living fo
moment later her ree
gkirt had fluttered ac
the game had 1
Just as James
water, Edith,
net, jur into the air, gave a do
ward 1 with her racket, the
ball into the net, and said “Deuce !”?
“Deuce |” vociferated Eric Allen
with a vicie tug at his mustache,
“Eric always loses his temper when he
plays with me,’ had been Edith's com-
ment before they began “Deuce !
Why you're wild! It’s thirty
They're thirty and we're love,”
ad, unnecessarily.
it
ith wi
egun.,
appeared witl
who was playing at
nped
low sent
nis
love,
he add-
“So it is,” said Edith as she backed
lo a position for receiving the next ball,
‘and much nicer for them if
vere Papa does
win. ”’
3v Jove i’ growled her partner.
“What's the matter with you, Erie?
{ havn't seen you so much in a fiendish
fumor since — yesterday morning,”
the last words were jerked out as Edith
mace a frantic effort to receive a ball
which came flying at her f her
than
80
it
to
deuce, love
from
father’s racket, and sped by her with
the rapidity of light.
“Vantage !""~duet
and Ned Whitney.
ad.
~4is painful the way you miss those
yalls,’’ be said, Miss West looked at
aim with an air peculiar to Miss West,
“Sears himself couldn’t have taken that
from Mr. West
i
han Sears.’’
“Children! Children!”
expostulated
handle of his racket and
uniled, ‘Stop quarreling.
Eric?” The swift ball was returned
ma this occasion, and was volleyed back
oy Ned Whitney over Edith's head.
Zdith struck wildly at it, then turned
0 see Eric do likewise and fail
“Game,” called Mr. West,
“Why eon earth, Edith, didn’t you
sake that ball?’ demanded Eric,
“For the simple reason that it wasn’t
mine, You ought to have taken it
yourself,’
‘fit was yours,
mess Lo miss it,”
““Eric, don’t you speak to me in that
Aone again, If you do, I won't play
with you,”
“Well, I don’t care if you don’t,”
Brie had never before sald anything
juite so outrageous or insincere, Even
#his “‘tennis temper,” for which allow-
noes were always made, was no ex-
suse, Fire flashed from the gray eyes
ander the scarlet cap. ‘‘I wouldn't
forget that I was a gentleman if I were
go.” Edith’s Yoice was Sually
and consequently crushing.
mi TT tw the line! Mr,
West. Edith says 1 m no gentleman,
pon the
You had no busi-
i
i
and I appeal to you, Did I say any-
thing ungentlemanly?"’
“Ned,” observed Mr. West, turning
to his patient partner, ‘‘you’re no lady.”
Then to Edith, *‘go on, my child, it’s
your serve, Anyone would think you
and Eric were two years old,”
Edith began to serve. She played in
wrath and silence, and she played well,
Game after game was won, Erie look-
ed almost meek, but neither he nor
Edith spoke.
“Set!” at last gasped Edith, breath-
lessly triumphant, and the four players
moved toward the water pitcher,
“Miss West,’ her father sald, as he
handed her a glass of water, *‘allow me
to present to you Mr, Allen,” A smile
crept into the gray eyes under the scar-
the sweet red mouth,
“I’m happy to meet you, Mr, Allen.”
A small hand was placed in a
brown one and
while Mr. Allen mentally called him-
self a boor.
said Mr. West,
echoed his
“I've had enough,”
“I've heard enough,”
daughter,
gues me so mu
his temper.”
unutterable t
t
nice—hu
‘h as to have
hings SOIme
were wisely held
tongue,
“There lemonade in the dinlog-
West announced as they
strolled towards house, ‘‘and gin-
gerbread.”’
**1 don't
is
the
care much for lemonade,’
the two young
sat in the and darkened
“It doesn’t quench my thirst"
for the third time,
is bang-up thoug!
from Mis
COOL
ith
Nience
Fis 1Y
, whose mouth was full,
might as well tell him, He'll
till 1 Ned Whitney
rarely did anything so trival as to speak,
bat whe peals of truth fell
ips.
“*He may hunt, Ie
ate every bit
he owes me a pound besides
to order the buckboard,
going bat from our
athing
I'm gi
Is
h ‘11
yo
ino
iE
one 3
Eric
**Every one. They are going to take
Ned's and my things down to the beach.
» drive down with you if
1 Y11 1s
UM I SO BiLO
fis}
mass of
voluminous bathe
Mr. West
ail )
eh
.
friend
Edith
Speeches
0 fre juent,
oy }
irom the
ie yet
ded abjectly
drew up in
we Rockland Beach stretched white
woth for half a mile, A iI
sin i Ciiil
1
i A ong p
te © wnt of
Now the only sound
of
¢
sh red 1 on one si
land on t
to be heard upon it was the boomin
the surf, breaking
foam. The day was perfect, so thought
Erie Allen—the first to come out from
his bath house—as he walked slowly up
and down the warm, shining
he other,
sand and
waiting for the others before taking his
first plunge. The sea, blue as a liquid
sky, flashed and sparkled in the sun-
shine. The waves came bounding
shoreward, crested with
and broke upon the beach,
across the
this,”’ said Eric half aloud,
they come. Heavens! what a noise
they make!”
Eric's four sisters, Mr. West,
came running over the sand--talking,
laughing and screaming, only less nois-
glorious waves,
The girls could all swim well —on
their sides, on their backs, under the
water—-anything the men could do, the
girls did. Bo it was uncalled for in
Eric Allen to swim gently up where
Edith lay dreamily floating, grasp her,
take her in tow in spite of her resist
ance, and strike out for shore, exclaim-
ing: “Thank heaven! I have saved
you!” This proceeding was repeated
twice until Edith stamped and sputter.
ed in her vexation. She actually left
the water before the other girls did,
and sternly refused to let Eric carry
her pail,
She was sitting on a rock when the
others came, clothed in thelr right
minds, from their bath-houses, She
had been drying her red gold hair, Erie
thought it lovely, “I will soon be
driven to despair, golden hair,’’ he sang
softly, and was rewarded with a with-
ering glance,
“Don’t be more of a goose than you
can help,’ advised Miss West,
“Edith,” interrupted Dess Allen,
standing tall and graceful before her,
‘‘when are you going driving with me
in my cart ?"
*Why, I don’t know, dear—to-mor-
row, if you want me to.’
Edith,’ said Eric, **when am I go-
ing driving with you in your dog cart?
take me and you have not done it yet,
What's more, I don’t believe you ever
intend to take me.”
“Mr. Allen, will you go driving with
me this afternoon?”
““Miss West, it will give me the greal-
est pleasure,”
“I will call for you at 4 o’clock.
*Oh, I say—"!
“Come, Edith. Good-bye, girls,”
and whatever it was
ney and the girls, ’
“To-morrow, then,” shrieked
the retreating buckboard,
Edith waved a towel in reply.
Mrs, Allen’s afternoon nap in the ver-
anda hammock was disturbed
Edith's fresh, young voice saying,
|
and
opened her eyes she saw that damsel,
dressed in white, looking as dainty as
just
while the fault-
head,
’
less Peter stood at Countess’
“How sweet you look, dear,” said
Mrs, Allen as Edith stooped to kiss the
gon'le fuce, ‘‘Eric will be down
now,’ came from the
owner of the
and cane
Keep us, mother, ’ i
“I'm Mrs, Allen, 1d
4
+ 11 ’ 3 ia wy »
talk to you than have
nd the
hat “Don't
a hu
ry.”
not,
y listen to Eric
for the next three hours.’
“Fib,” was Eric's
tion as he helped her into the ¢
“*Where are you
asked his mother
“*We're going t
Ee
Allen,
and
i “5 Y * } .
MACONIC OUSeIrva~
$
ars.
going, children ?
0 have Eric's hair
All
gathered
admiration
warmer still
were turned
Countess trotted briskly on
“Ds Jove !
} 1 I
(rood-bye,
Edith
Laughter,
aryrniet hi
something
if you
a
saw !
ever
Calmly spoken, but there wai a faint
added the color in
«1 a trifle hurriedly:
you suppose the Captain of
her face,
‘Wha !
the Life Saving
“I don’t know,"
his moustache,
“Why, he's ordered |
all stray dogs that come about
“*Perlectly pro er.”
“*Perlectly heathenish, I d«
OW they can do it. Could
ig, beautiful dog-—shoot him dead ¥"
“*If it were Sir Galahad and he had
been toying with my legs, 1 could.
Humbly and thankfully I say it.”
“Go on, Countess,” Conntess jump-
ed as the lash of a whip struck her.
Yet it would probably have struck
much more sharply could Countess and
Mr. Allen have changed places, Coun-
tess resented the cut, slight as it was,
and forthwith dropped her tall over one
rein and clinched it tightly, Erie lean-
ed forward and grasped the tall, re-
r Station has done ?°
said Eric, gnawing
1% ment
mL ses
1 you shoot a
“Thank heaven !’’ he exclaimed with
fervor.
the humble instrument of saving your
precious life,”
If he expected gratitude he was dis-
appointed, Miss West sat very straight
indeed, and looked directly in front of
her. Mr, Allen surveyed her with a
critie’s eye,
“How stunning you look to-day! I
like that gown.”
Perceptible increase in the severity
of Miss West’s expression,
“Won't you give me a sweet pea for
my button-hole? Do, and we'll call it
square,’’
Miss West's thoughts are apparently
a mile away,
“See here, Edith, it makes the cold
chills run up and down my spine when
you look that way. I'll take it all back
about Sir Galahad, Who is that you're
bowing to? He looks like a regular
tou ht
**It would be very much better form
for you not to call my friends toughs,
He's as nice as you are and much more
polite,”
“I don’t believe he's a friend of
yours, He's probably only an acquaint.
ance, 1 know all your friends, Dut
A ———————————
RY
more of this anon, I tell you I take
back what 1 sald about Sir Galahad,
And to-night, when we are walking on
your veranda he may chew my coat-
tails into shreds, Now, what more can
I say? Look at me, Edith, Think
how long I have known and
“Very well,” sald Edith, tarning
the full glory of her smile upon him,
“I'll forgive you this time. Here's the
barber shop, Get out, Eric.”
"
swear I'll come in to-morrow afternoon
hair cut at my own ex-
pense, Just drive on to Lowler’s, and
I'll get you two pounds of candy,”
“I never refuse a bribe,” laughed
Edith, “but 1 thought you had no
money,’
“I've just discovered some
den recess of my raiment,
are an angel. By Jove!
have three pounds.” And
them,
The sun had gone down, leaving
clouds of splendor behind him when
od upon the veranda watching
Edith drive away. In the crimson
glow of the
in a hid-
Edith you
You shall
she had
An infinite calm descended upon
earth, Eric caught the words of a
int love song that Dess was singing
in the twilight of the library.
A passion of longing rose in
*This very night,’ he said through his
“1 shall
$ LO be i ble
sel teeth, learn
sing or a curse Lo me,’
* » % * - *
(iE, ' wes 11 ' 3 } 5
Erici Really! I thought the
Ww you made this afternoon
were going to let
3 . ’ 1 » 5
ith your coat-talis wou
nt to give you
rash
. ’ tha
Aas 10 Lif
Sir Galas
id be
such a headache
bly come down.’
and come out.
ining
3 W
several davs
way
time vou've
Reever i]
you warm enough 7’
“Quite, mama.’
“Don't step off
It's very damp.”
“Ind Eric
asked Mrs, West of her
went into the
YOu see evenings
100K] 80
hh a rest.
afraid he's
FASHION NOTES.
centre.
tern for a brooch.
gold flying toward it,
an etched band beneath,
makes an elaborate tool.
~{zraln-worked Initials on
silver mateh-boxes
the latest novelties in silverware,
handsome ornamental designs
leaves, flowers, fruits and gras:es,
—A large opal sun, the rays
diamonds, makes a handsome pin.
casionally set with garnets,
dresses, Young ladies wear
tiny jeweled pin,
well with the open jacket-bhodice,
bows of often extremely wide ribbon.
and are no real
sun; while others are
Wear, he
diminutive toe, covered with an em-
broldery of gay cashmere beads, some
designs showing little palms in bril-
liant colors. The Roman sandal is
strapped ever Lhe instep and fastened
by 8 buckle of real sliver, with a Ro-
man medallion in the centre.
“Clevedand’ sandal is made of black
satin, with jet embroidery on the toe,
and | with scarlet silk. The Chi-
nese sandal has a shapely pointed toe
and a *‘common seuse’’ heel, The
“Dieppe’ sandal is of black undressed
kid, to be worn with dark-red silk
hose, and the I
i83 a street foot-covering
with 4d
’
ned
to be worn
ark golden-brown silk hose,
~— New hats for the seaside are made
of coarse fancy straw, with the brim
very narrow, almost straight
aight at
back, hroad turned up at
le, By way
’
mming, the
sd ras silk kerchief
twisted round
the crown and knotted the side, A
very successful model is the Comtesse
sarah hat in multi-colored straw,
crown is low and its bnm ve
shading the face. We n
of yellow siraw chined
shades, lined with
vel, and luster
ers by way of trimming.
Leghorn hats are once more
A great many are made with
f shirred black or straw-colored
the
in fromt and
the si uf t
& *
al
1¢ brim
a hands f
¥ f $
ane { OF i€aLil
1 sha
ail Ls
anh iat
fashi i.
a brim
WA LEE,
An
yvelty of the
1s
irs, It is a pretlly plaid bal
with spiked patterns in open-work all
over it. Prettier still Is resean, a new
open work thread tissue-like lace-work
in all shades of gray, blue, Havana,
beige and bnff, and also in black, It
requires a silk underskirt and lining for
the bodice, this forming most elegant
summer toilets for the seaside,
There are also a variety of buff and
ecru thread etamines In lace-work in-
sertion patterns, some plain and some
brocaded with streaks of red, blue or
hellotrope satin, looking as though a
narrow ribbon had been passed in and
out of the lace-work, his also re-
quires to be worn over silk.
is just slightly draped over faille or
SEASON 18 ie +
fat
iste,
Ah
“When you are thirty
said Erie.
r———————
Some Delicacies,
ing
the
are
Chinese and Japanese eat
that come out of the season.
evervth
All
and
skill, Seaweeds
several sorts are sent far into the in-
terior to be used in thickening soups,
a
luxury be-
prized because they give
which iz a
ants, The use of sea-weed is almost
by Americans in making
toothsome dishes, Dut, indeed, fishes
and sea-weed are eaten the world over;
flat animals swallowed by the natives of
Yesso, For example, the most simply
which *‘shells’ belong are called asci-
dians, They grow sometimes singly,
sometimes in clusters, and are rooted
immovably to the sandy bottom, sub-
sisting on what the currents may bring
to them, In Japan there is an ascidiac
which is as large as one's fist, It has
no shell whatever, and is a gray, flabby,
tulip-shaped sac, supported on a short
stalk. Bat in spite of its forbidding
appearance the Japs pickle it in vinegar
and use it as food,
A diamond dragonfly makes a
handsome ornament for ladles’ neck
wear.
—A minature turtle, enameled in
colors true to nature, with diamond
eyes, is a pleasing novelty in brooches
- Bouncer, the once famous mare,
by Leami n—dam Elastic, by Ken-
tucky, a at the Belle Mead Stud,
Nashville, Ky., on July 3.
Humility, sweet as it may be a trait
ot character, may Suftutrate into
vice, if not upheld by
It 1s sometimes put on to a turned-up
colored silk, A preity model has this
piece cut out in the shape of a star and
embroidered with beads. The sleeves
are finished with cuffs to match.
Another style of bodice which is
fasmonable 18 cut quite low,
crossed over the chest and deeply
finely-plaited chemisette of glace surah.
a little fullness just above the
—The fine lawn called fil-a-fil, as soft
shades of color—sslmon-pink, Etna-
indigo, reddish-purple, maroon,
Havana, and iron gray.
This In self-coiors, while in
fantaisie we have quite a variety of
ers, honeysuckles and anemones in ex-
quisite natural tints, and the same in
grisaille over pale rose color; straw or
cream. Begonia leaves, tullips, irises
and jessamine softly shaded over the
dark grounds, and the everlasting dots
of which one seems never to tire in bine,
pink, red or purple over white grounds,
These will make up charming sum-
mer toilets with the plain batiste by
way of underskirt.
Very pretty, two, and more rustic, is
toile d'Irlande, in fanciful patterns, a
perfect idyl on a dress; Watteau shep-
herds and shepherdesses, Louis XV
lords and ladies in wigs and panniers,
cherubs in clouds, cupids among flow-
ers, birds, butterflies and bouquets, all
in soft, unobtrusive tints, These make
up into pretty dresses for the country.
The long polonalse, open and caught
up at the side, 1s a favorite model for
such dresses. stripes and plaids
also appear in tole d' Irlande, generally
combined with the same material in
self-colora,
HORSE NOTES.
~The pacers MeClincock and Cy.
| clone were burned in a stable fire out
| West recently,
~The 2.18 pacing race at Hampden
Park did not fill. There are 98 entries
| to the other races,
~The 2.18 class pacing race at Utica
was another “skin.” Argyle or Jennie
{| Lind should have won,
Flora Huff and Cora Bell, 8. N.
| Dickinson’s double team, trotted a
| mile In 2.82} at New York a few days
| ago.
~—Fhere is talk of a race between
| Clingstone and Patron at Cleveland
{ during the breeders’ meeting at that
place,
—The Monmouth Park Association
| contemplates erecting stables with
| some twenly or thirty boxes adjoining
| the paddock.
~The once fleet-footed Blily Gll-
more, the hero of not a few sensational
| races, has been sold to Johnston, the
| jockey, for $500,
—The great racing meeting at Kan-
{ sas City, Mo,, will be held from No-
{ vember 5 to 17, instead of October, as
| originally announced,
{ =—J. H. McCarthy, owner of C, H.
Todd, the Cuicago Derby winner, owns
a 2.year-old stallion by Wilkes,
2.154, dam Lucy, 2 14,
LF iy
AVY
Lt was an easy thing for Hanover
in the Champion stakes . bi 1
3 the hamplon stakes, McLaughlin
says he never feit in doubt about the
race, notwithstanding Firenzi's stro: g
bid at the flais!
| -—The mut
permitted
meetings, :
4
i
g | CAUSE IMany
be *‘dropped,’”’ and the horses thus
waged frequently lose their races,
—Dr. J. W. Day's yearling
tholdi Patchen trotted in 3.(
hester recently, which is th "
record by 4} seconds for a yearling out-
side of California and Kentucky.
~The J year-old stallion Arthur
| Symms, by General Knox, dam Lady
| Arthur by Bourbon Chief, has been
sold by R. P, Todhunter, Lexington,
Ky., to T. E. Elkin, Lancaster, Ky.
H. Shults, of Brooklyn, has
bought of J. H. Batchelor the yearling
filly Sally Graham, by Nutwood. dam
Mattie Graham, and a lay suckling
colt by Pancost, dam Mattie Graham,
Three pac
ords of 2.18:
e)
“
@
| Bar
Roce
ing stallions have rec-
-Brown Hal, Cohannet
and L. C, Lee. Duplex holds the pac-
ing stallion record, he having obtained
a mark of 2.1 at the Detroit meet.
“*}ypz 3
UTAK&8
wanted
the
1 Lhe
‘Knap’
1d went
} 4
--'t
Ww
~John Madden
48 4
ewe Wo
says tha
|
n
den t
iS quarter was wr
is all rigut BG Will st
Leader had cut ug.
The he
St. Paul.
~The stallions Maxey (
Mambrino Hasson
Jofeph C. Beyer,
up for the fall
1 showing
th in ors
wiings
He
nase
‘= F arnt van lr wr Ty
-The Kentucky Trott
Association has
e of $1000, free f
Wilkes, DPatr
Breede
vr
offer
be
day
— A. W. Harbison, New Cast!
Pa., has had the misfortune 86
death the young mare Theta Quay, b)
Beaumont, by Allen Sontag.
Theta was entered in the 4.vear-old
stakes of the Pennsylvania Association
of Trotting Horse Breeders,
-—A. A. Kitzmiller, of Lexington,
| Ky., purchased recently from H. L.,
Fieet, of Cutchogue, L. l., the ch, 8s.
Hylas, 2.2 by Alcalde dam Santa
Maria, by lot, Jr., for £230. Hylas
was foaled
in 1876
of
$4 1
20 i
dam
— Patron is located at the Cleveland
track, and is In fighting trim. If there
be anybody who thinks Harry Wilkes
can beat Patron, Mr. Emery says
that he will make a match and place no
limit on the amount. He is willing to
| trot over any good mike track. Patron
will start in the $10,000 race at Hart-
| ford,
~The dam Rosaline Wilkes, 2.18},
is Cigarette, by Zilcad: Golddust. Ci-
| garetle was bred on shares with Mrs,
| Harbison, of Shelby county, Ky.. and
| was sold when 3 years oid to Dr, R, H,
| Pearce, of Louisville, Ky., who used
her in his practice. She is the only
| mare by Zileadi Golddust whose pro-
i duce nas ever been handled for speed.
\ ~— Andy Welch and James H., Gold-
smith have purchased the black horse
Atlantic (2 24}), foaled 1878, by Al-
mont, dam Isabelle Clay, by Kentucky
| Clay, for 85000, Andy Welch has also
| bought of William Wilkin, of Cam-
bridge, O., the br, m. Lady Wilkins
(2.27), foaled 1881, by Ambafsador,
dam Sleepy Jane by Invincible, for
$2500,
—E. J. Baldwin, the owner of Los
Angeles, has had the following pub-
lished over his own siguature: “While
I am not disposed to grumble at the re-
sult of the Junior Champion stakes,
although I have my doubts about the
best animal having won, 1 hereby make
a proposition which, 1 think, ought to
lead 10 a great race, as well as a satis.
factory test of a 2-year-old supiemacy.
1 suggest a grand 2-year-old sweep.
stakes, for either the Sheepshead ay
or Prospect lark autumn meeting,
$2500 entrance, half forfeit, six fur.
longs, entries to close on say the lst of
September. I assume the club on
whose course the race will be run
would give a handsome gum of added
The amount of the entrance
money 18 50 large as to naturally pre.
clude 4 Jigs 44d wiwisidy fleid, and
thus contribute to an equitable decis-
I think I ha
fon.