O'IE DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA : Thursday Morning, October 18, 1860. Sclttttb IPottrj. PROPHECIES OF THE SEASON. BY ANTHONY BOXIK. Where late the meadows blushed with bloom And daisy flakes were white as snow. The spectral shades ot autumn gloom Prophetic wander to and fro. The hills, so long encrowned with green, A browner garb begin to wear ; Gay summer half inclines to screen tier beauty from the daylight's glare. The woods fall leaved stand waiting nigh. Their verdure touched with crimson stains, Tet loth to lay their honors by. As age to part with all its gains. A sadder note from grove and glen. Whereto the robin's vonng have flown ; While mournfully the little wren Pipes through the fading trees alone. The brook, that prattled one sweet tone When summer mist was sott and dim. Keeps up a low incessant moan, That times with Nature's graver hymn. The swallows too have left the eaves And flit and form in noisy bands.— The goldtiuch plans among the leaves Her coming flights to southern lands- Above yon mountain's rocky side. The wary hawk swings round and round, A friendless rover, winged with pride. That scorns the touch of kindred ground These, these are hut the first faint signs Of autumn's presence ;--dny by day She draws in bright but fading lines. The picture of her own decay. Written for the Bradford Reporter. The Power of Cougress over Slavery in the Territories. The second paragraph of section third of the fourth article o f the Constitution of the United States, says: "The congress shall have power to dispose of ard make nil needful rules and regulations resjn-oting the Territory and other property of the United States." Does this clause of the Constitution confer on Congress the power to prohibit slavery in tie Territories V Hie Constitution regards " Territory'' as ex -ting in two conditions, first, as land sim r'v ind second as inchoate, or begun, com menced, surveyed, exfnjsed to sale and partly if'.tied In its first condition, it is property, •,-.e property of the parent state : in its second, . > a province, a colony—ill fact a Territory American sense of the word—and tin? I p.-'( attaches until it acquires the legal and P'-)er attributes of sovereignty. What was Ibeproper tv of the Union or Government in ■5 frit condition, has, by occupancy, purchase. I "J cultivation, become the property of iudi rijuals, in fact, of a community,—in the sec i, The rule* and regulations of the first xtnditioo attach, apply, and are continued to tbe second so fur as they go, but they are not - f!i ient for the demands of nn advanced civil ization. Others are needed such as those which [• vide for the administration of justice, the s .Tirity of property, and for public defense No* a community in this ear y stage is entire W incompetent to meet these demands —it is *eak and powerless in the face of a savage foe,—it cannot even punish tbe midnight as fa.y!i or robber except by lynch law, and its oo'y ho;>e and salvation from foreign aggres C'rss.ou and internal broil, is in the arms ami treasure of the parent state. It has scarcely & single attribute of sovereignty, and especial - lIT that important one, the power of sclf-de frose from foes without, and foes within. It ttnnot afford to have, and for these reasons. ' 4 not sovereign within its boundaries, and ability and power to protect and defeud, tiers from Congress. Tie emigrant from the parent state carries *'• "im to his new home the mora! and po •Ml elements which have controlled his *-'■> life. He* surrounds himself with the -Cations he lias learned to love. He is a I -tr'.jr to an idea." His faith is seen in bis *irish:ps and perils, and voluntary toil, —in dangers he encounters, —and still more in •*e tenacity with which he chogs to a.ught of - 4 early home That is his Meal, his example, I M-i he oatbes and spurns the restraint which - 3ders bis imitation. How easy for the par- I t state to impress upon the yoong commoni- I 7 its o*3 law of existence, and imbrue it 1 *ith its r,*n vitality. How naturally it fol- I .ow? that the Utter places itself in commani "atiofl with the former, giving little but rc w:;cg ail, creating nothing but appropriat ing to itself the beuebts of a more perfect wdety. From the regard thus manifested by the I -■* but imperfect community to the stronger i o'ier, from its dependence and inability I • protect itsel', from it* origin from the right I 1,.* 20fnt domain which inheres in tbe par- I *-> >ute antil the new acquires sovereignty. I -2 '.te title which occupancy and ownership I ;•■ tab'y confers, is deduced the right which 1./ "^ ress txer ®ises and is bouud to exercise. -/ -iT - tI2C ' n 4 " 04505 Ofor Territory United States. It is not denied that '■■" 'fa Territory to legislate ;a some cases, but it reserves the jer ot saactkMuog that legislation in its I* 5 creative bead, and may withhold tbe . .sstoo to legislate at ail, if it sees fit. If " ' neglects or refuses to pass a law or a territory, has often done, the i* 1 * "thout law except the law of i.a -- *bich U always binding they are sqaat not ciuieua. 3 , c grew possesses the right to legislate for v",:orie* from the nature of the case it the coaalitoticn were silent. : ;n every stage of its torma iv- V** 58, * * "Mtare's own ord'tna :*Bae *•<> 4 die parent state which I'.mtt *.' 2 "is'eare, which ere- IT. w.abl.shwit a power ia the earth, THE BRADFORD REPORTER. and this allegiance is due from the inchoate community until it is entitled to form a Con stitution and erect a sovereign state. Con gress has decreed that this period shall arrive when the Territory shall attain a population of a little over ninety-three thousand. It might it is true, have said a less number, and have been nearer right, but whatever the number, in reasou, its will is sovereign and de cisive. The government of the United States by a treaty with a foreign power, solemnly agreed to " maintain and protect in the free enjoyment of their liberty and property and the religion they profess" all the people and inhabitants of the Louisiana purchase. This obligation is still biuding, and that, too, in reference to those peculiar institutions over which it is claimed ihut Congress has no power—the domestic. What most affects the domicil ? What comes nearer home, the family and social rela tions than the right to iiberty, property and religiou ? And if these are rightful subjects of legislation by Congress, why not others which as nearly pertain to his domestic state? Why not slavery ? The clause we have placed at the head of this article, places the matter on precisely the same ground. It means all legislation which a Territory needs, for a Territory not being sovereign, can have no lelations which are not domestic, hence if Congress legislates at all in reference to it, its legislation must have the character of domestic legislation. But we admonished that this clause of the constitntion. has an application only to the property of the general government in the land of the territory and also that included in navy yards, dock-yards, and the property contained therein. If this be so, the convention which framed it was guilty of an unmeaning tautology, for iu its enumeration of the powers of Congress, Art. 1, Sec. S, this species of legislation is expressly provided for, aud why would the convention provide for the same object twice ? There can be no reasonable question, but that the power to make all " needful, rules and reg ulations respecting the territory" includes the power to legislate upon its domestic condition in all its parts and institutions, slavery in cluded. Nor is this conclusion in the least weakened by the terms used in confirming the power.— To make " needful rules and regulations " is entirely equivalent to enacting laws A rule is a law ; a regulation has the poteucy of a law. Tne terms in this connection are synon- i imoos—meaning the creating an 1 enacting power of Congress expressed in the usual form, and embodying the wisdoui and wiil of the people. There is nothing more true in the political history of the nation, than that unt! a late period, our public men—those whom we have most delighted to hanvT — held to the opi:.i-:i that the convention which framed the consti tution authorized the territorial prohibition of >!avery by Congress. It is vain to deny this. That convention must certainly understood its meaning. It consisted of thirty-nine members. . Sixteen of the thirty-nine fresh from the ue j bates of the convention, voted two years later in the firt Congress held under the constitu tions to confirm the Jeffersonian ordinance prohibiting -'avery in all the territories then held by the United States. Flow d.J the--. men under?'a:.J the coa.-iitaliuii ? As with hold.ng the power to legidule in its broadest serine upon the subject of slavery in the terri tories ? As sanctioning slavery in any other sense than as recognizing it in the states ? Certainly not. But this is not ail. Seven others of the thirty-nine, either before as members n found it, and those which have since come into the anion as slave states, and tho-e which may hereafter be admitted as such, slavery can have no legai existence, not even in the terri tories, for the constitution has made no pro vision for it there, and it conld not-as'in its teller, spirit, tenor, and d-*ign, it recognized an 1 treated it as a s3c.ie institution Old v. . The second_proposit;on that the coustituticu rte slaves as property is only true where state sovereignty has made them so. Inas mn. h as the states at the tfnie of the forma tioa of the constitution bad legalized slavery and made persons property by usage custom ami iaw. no matter how repugnant to the mor al sense of the world, an 1 violative of justice and right,—no matter how far and how much it transgressed every sound principle of politi cal economy ; the convention in the spirit of compromise forbore to meddle with it, but left it to the states to "vote it up or vote it down," to cherish or discourage, to abolish or estab lish, as state wisdom might decide. And Con gress does not at this day assume any daty connected with it as a question of property ex cept where the constitution provides for the reud.t on of fugitives from labor, and this it joes otdy to discharge an obligation it bad i o'em:.iy covenanted to perform, as a condition of the more perfect union. It is so " nomi nated in the bond," and be.ug so, it stauds out the soie exception to the rule iucukated by that instrument, that freedom is the normal condition of the people of these Totted States and that tnan, under God, iris Irm-elf. The constitution having reference oniy to states, will not, therefore, permit the holding of men as property in the territories. Con trary as this opinion may be to that of the ccurts.it wit! abide the examination of theworld. It is not merely for the day or tfce honr that we are discussing this question, but for all time, and if we err in deciding it it will again and again intrude, — Lite Banquet's ghost it will rise in our places, and " push us from our stools " and " will not down at our biddinsr." And here we may remark, m passant, that the Fugitive Slave Law, in just so much, as it embraces the territories is clearly unconsti tutional. The right which the south claims in the third proposition to have slaves regarded ar.d protected as property in the territories is thus found to be uo nsht at all. The absurdity of the claim is pointed out in the foregoing re marks. The constitution does cot, and can not, carry shvery with it wherever it coes. Its whole p : rit is antagonistic to that institution, and for this reason tha friends to freedom in the territories, may with more justice claim that the constitution forbids its introduction to all places where it is not established by state law The trne constriction will at least be found, that the constitution neither prohib its nor establishes it, bat that Congress in the exercise of its constitutional power to make " all needful rules and regulations," and to *•' provide for the general welfare " taav and should, prohibit it in the territories. Bat there are those among us who contend that Congress has no power either to protect, or prohibit, slavery in the territories, bat that tbu question should be left to the people in habiting them to decide. This m the doctrine of Popalar Severelgnty,—plausible it is true, bat fallacious, and in some respect*, simply ri diculous. It ts pines, ole because ft promise* to sec or* to tha jsttier in soae way not weii understood, the right to ■? gorercxen: m more sxurcded sense. Aud how ? Willpt give him the right to elect his own governor or judges or magis trates ? Not so. Will it allow him to insti tute his own judiciary system, aHd inaugurate any code of public instruction or improvement which is denied him now? Not so. Will it allow him te enact any law in his territorial legislature, which will not be subject to the veto of Congress or the President ? Not so, not so. The territory not being sovereign, ail it does must undergo the inquisition and dicta of the home government at Washington. In fact the sole and only right it contemplates conlering, additional, is that of deciding upon the admission or prohibition of slavery in the territory. And here the privilege will be merely nominal. Slavery, if it goes at all, will go with the first ten or first hundred set tlers nnder sqnatter law. Before a territorial organization can be effected it will be an in stitution coterminous with the boundries of the territory, mocking any effort to expel it. Pre cisely the same if freedom is the order of pro gress,—the first teu cr one hundred will set tle the question before a protecting or prohibi tory code can be brought to bear. What then the need of convulsing the country with this exciting question, but to make some demago gue president ? It is plausible because it promises to trans fer the agitation of the slavery question from halls of Congress to the territorial arena. Bat will it ? Let the settlement of the Missonri question answer. Whichever way the territo ry may decide, the same violence which then shook the union to its centre will be inevitable. Let Kansas answer the question. In fact. Popular Sovereignty proposes two theatres of agitation aod violence instead of one—one theatre is the territory wbere the straggle commences, —the other the Capitol in Wash ington where it ends. In the one, the pioneers and settlers will grapple in the conflict, —in the other, representatives and senators, and judges, aud cabinet officers, and presidents, will mingle in the fight. The first quarrel will be based upon protection and prohibition,— the last upon admission as a state. But if the principle of Popular Sovereignty should he accepted by the people, how long will it stand ' As long as the Missouri Com promise line stood think you ? No, not a ionrth of that lime. It came with the tide of agitation, it will go with it and some other quack witll put forth his nostrum, assuring a perfect cure as this does. Since the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, charlatans and ad venturers with the brains of cats have launch ed their scallop shells upon this great sea of political experiment, promising all things with out the power of performing any Tliey have glutted the market with their placebos and talse pretences, anu the people are beginniug to return to the time honored principles of their fathers. The Popular Sovereignty claimed by the colonies before the Revolution, was not the Popular Sovereignty of 18 60. They were crushed, but who will say that the territories of this Union have been deprived of a single right which freemen prize, except in the soli tary ease of Kansas. Twenty territories, or thereabouts, have come in as states since the adoption of the federal constitution, and al though. in the instance of Missouri, there was a struggle, yet its memory had been oblitera ted and and forgotten. The violence and blood sh.d in Kansas, are not to be placed to the fault of oor territorial system,—they arose from the folly and tyranny of the federal exe cutive of the government, —from the reckless ness and rffnbition of those whose threat "we'll crush you '' still lingers in a million hearts, and whose right hands will in November next, play the same crushing game. The colonies had acquired a title, a right to sovereignty. They were three millions, not three hundred, —their arms rested upon the Atlantic on one side and the Alleganies on the other. They looked out npon a long line of sea-coast from the Bay of Pa?samaqaoddy to the Gulf of Mexico, —they had statesmen and warriors ar.d orators and a yeomanry burning for freedom Why should they not be sovereign aod independent ? CATO. WHAT AILED HIM—A late number of the Albion has a good anecdote of a man who rarely failed to go to bed intoxicated, and dis turb his wife the whole night. L'pon his be ing charged by a friend that be never went to bed sober, he indignantly denied the charge, and gave the incidents of one particular Light in proof. " Pretty soon after I got into bed, my wife said, ' Why,husband,what is the mat ter with yon? Yon act strangely !' 'There's nothing the matter with me,'said I ; 'nothing at all' ' I'm sure there is.' said she ; ' you don't act natural at ail. Shan't I get np and cet something for you?' And she got np, lighted a candle, and came to the bedside to look at me, shadiDg the light with her hand. ' I knew there was something strange about you. said she ;' why. won ore s berf Now this ;s a fact, and my wife will swear to it,so don't you slander me any more by sayieg that I haven't been to bed sober in six mouths, be cause I nave CO trwcv STYLE OF PCLPIT TFRBOSTTY. —The other Sunday, an eminent divine was preach ing upon the pirable of Dives and Lazarus, and when he arrived at the point where, in great beat, Pires lifted op his eyes and asked Abraham to allow Lazams to come to hrm with a drop of water, be said, "To this appa rently reasonable, bat, aoder the circumstan ces, totally inadmissible request, a negative answer was returned.'* SCCCESS. —The first and chief element of success Is decision of character. Without tars, and the kindred traits that are always found ia its company, such as resolution, cour age and hope, there is lime ca&ace of taceess. With it " there is no sach word as fail," aad seldom any ioqb a thing as a failure. Tosach a spirit even £3caltJsi aflbrd a stiaahs. and dangers a spar—*' for a resole te arod," it has bcc forcinijr said, " b omnipotent.' (flmtatiunal jßtprtineul. fgy The annaal examinations for Teachers for 1860, will be bolden at the following times and places, viz: October 24, at the Milan School Ilonse, in Ulster. Oct. 25, at the borough house, Athens. Oct. 26, at the center house, Litchfield, Oct. 27. at the Knvkendall house, Windham. Oct. 29, at the Bowen Hollow house, War ren. Oct. 30, at the Orwell Hill house. Oct. 31, at the Academy, Leßaysville. Nov. 1, at the Black house, Tuscarcra. Nov. 2, at the Merryall hoose. Nov. 3, at the Ingham house, Wilmot. Nov. 5, at the McGuyre house, Terry ; also at the FrenchtowD house, Asylum. Nov. 6, at the Brown 6chool house, for Al bany and Overton ; also at the Stevens house, Standing Stone, (at which last named place the examination will commence at II o'clock, a. m. Nov. 7, at the borough honse, Monroe ; al so at the Ilerrickviile school boase. Nov. 8, at the borough house, for the To wandas ; also at the Academy at Rome. Nov. 9, at the Gore house for Shesbequin. Nov. 10, at the Mversbnrg bouse, Wysox. Nov. 12, at the Varuey bouse. Franklin ; also at the borough house for Burlingtons Nor. 13, at the Taylor honse. Granfille ; also at the center house, Sprinnfield. Nov. 14, at the center house, Leßoy ; also at the Burnham house, Ridgbury. Nov. 15, at the Corners house, for Canton and Armenia ; also at the Gillett house, Sooth Creek. Nov. 16, at the borough house, Troy ; also at the Rowley bouse, Wells. Nov. 17, at the Academy, Smithfield ; also at the Morgan Hollow house, Columbia. The examinations will commence precisely at 10 o'clock, A M. No candidates will be examined who do not come in before 11, un less the tardiness be unavoidable. No person will be inspected who does not intend to teach in the couuty doring-tbe year, neither will any be examined that have attended inspections in other townships. Private examio&tioos wiil in no case be granted, except in accordance with the provisions of the school law, as found on page 51. Each teacher will bring a Read er, one sheet of Foolscap Paper, pen aod ink. Directors and parent 3 are earnestly invited to be present at the examinations in their re spective townships. C. R. COB URN, Co. Sup't Towar.da, September 4, 1860. tax"* We clip the following from the School Journal for the benefit of those who do cot have an opportunity of seeing it : QUESTION: Should a certificate be granted to an old man wbois a sufficient scholar.bat whose energies are too greatly impaired to be a suc cessful teacher ? ANSWER : Certain] Y not. It is learned feathers, and not mere scholars thai are requir ed, both by the .school-law and the youth of the land. A scholar is one aho knaics lor bis own information and satisfaction. A teacher is one who not oniy knows, bat is "compet ent " to impart instruction in all the branches required to be taoght in his school ; and thi3 competency consists not more in the necessary scholarly acquirements, than in professional skill and physical and mental energy. If he lack either of the latter, be is not a " compet ent " teacher, and should not receive a certi ficate. QIESTIOX : Is " Laborer*' an occupation ? Same District. ANSWER : It is : and is to be taxed $l, un less its Taiuation in the adjosted valuation, is more than will yield $1 by the District rate In the latter case, the whole amount of its valuation is to be taxed by the rate, without the $1 tax being added. QCESTTOX : If a Connty Superintendent receives a foor months certificate, duly made oat and sworn to, and yot knows positively that Teachers have been employed in the District doriDg the year, without a certificate. —what must be do?— County Superintendent. ANSWER; It is bis duty, as it is that of any other public officer, -to guard the trust confid ed to him. In this case, he should ascertain whether the act of apparent perjary was know ingly and fradalently committed. If not, as is barely possible, he may return the document to the President of the District, leaving the difficulty growing out of the illegal employ ment of teachers, in the hands of the proper Board and District for solution. If the act was wilfnl and designed, then it is his duty to transmit the fraudulent certificate to this De partment, with his statement of the facts of the case ; whence it will be transmitted to the hands of the District Attorney of the proper county for investigation. Qr ESTION : If nothing is said in the con tract between 'a Teacher and the Board of Directors, about holidays and vacations, can the teacher grant holidays without making op for the time thus lost?— Teacher tn Bucks Ceunty. ANSWER : He cannot, unless be have the consent of the Board to the granting of the holiday. He most, if required, make up the lost time, —except, perhaps in the case of " thanksgiving day " which is now set apart by public authority, and. certainly in that of the 4th of July, if it occur in the school time, which is set apart by common consent. QCKSTIOS : I hare refused a number of ap plications for Private Examinations. Hare I been right iu so doing ? County Smperinun ami. Axswxa : Perfectly right, at present — While the public examinations of a coaoty are in progress, DO private examination sbooid be allowed .All persons demroosof being examin ed can attend one or the other of the poblic examination# Thie will sot only fulfil th* law bat avoid unnecessary occupation of the Coaoty Superintendent's time. Beeide*. it is a so* picioos circumstance for any one to ash a pr vate examioauon. wbvc a pot!:: cos TCsf % '*Z * ' ~ VOL. XXI. NO. 20 Private examinations are to be granted only in extreme cases, and only after all the public examinations of the county have taken place. The only cases, now thought of, that seem to justify what is called a private exam ination, are those of a District having failed to secure teachers for all its schools, by means of the public examination, and of a school ren dered Tacant by the death, resignation, or dis missal of the teacher In these cases, private, or more properly, rptaal examinations should granted, bat only at the written request of the proper Board, and with full opportunity for them to be present if they desire it. QCESTTOK : Is a provisional certificate, for one year, granted by an outgoing County Sup erintendent,binding on his successor?— County Superintendent. ASSWF.R : It is ; and it can only be annulled for misconduct or incompetency, known by or proved to the successor. A provisional cer tificate is as valid as a professional one, daring the term for which it is issued. This decision —which should render County Superintendents very cautious in the granting of provisional certificates, —is based on the principle, that though the person who holds the office of County Superintendent may change every three years or oftener, the office always re mains the same in ibe eye of the law ; and its acts, legally performed, are binding on all who hold it. MY WIFE'S PlANO. —Thedeed is accomplish ed. My wife has got a piano. It came on a dray. Six men carried it into the parlor, and it grunted awfully. It weighs a ton, shines like a mirror, and has carved Cupids climbing np on its limbs. And sncb lungs— whew I My wife has commenced to practice, and the first time she touched the machine, I thought we were in the midst of a thunder storm, and the lightning had struck the crock ery chest. The cat, with tail erect, took • bee line for a particular friend opon the back fence, demolishing a six-shilling pane of glass. The baby awoke, and the little fellow tried hi* best to beat the instrument, but be couldn't do it. It beat bios. A teacher bas been introdaced into the boose. He says he the last of Napoleon'i grand army. He wears a huge moustache, looks at ice fiercely, smells of gartic, and goes by the name of Count Run a-way never-come back-again-by. He played an extractdexoper* the other night. He ran his fingers through his hair twice, then grinned, then cocked his eve np to the ceiling, like a monkey hunting hies, and then came down one of bis fingers, and I heard a delightful sound, similar to that produced by a cockroach dancing npon the tenor string of a fiddle. D:wn came another finger,and I was reminded of the wind whistl ing through the knot hole of a hen coop He touched his thumb, and I thought I was in an orchard listening to the distant braying of a jackass Now he ran his fingers along the keys, and I thought of a boy rattling a stick upon a store box or a picket fence. All of a sudden he stopped, ana I thought Bometbing had happened. Then he came down with fists, and. oh, Lord ! such a noise was Dever beard before I thought a hurricane had struck the house and the walls were cavirg in. I imagined I was in the cellar, and a ton of ccal was falling about my head. w&- About ten years ago, there lived near Cincinnati a family by the Dame of Stringer The eldest son, Jake, was a most eccentric genius. One day his mother said : " Jake, I want yon to go to the store " half & mile distant—" and get me a quarter's worth of sugar and a quarter's worth of soap." Jake roused himself up, brushed the whit lings from his lap, and started forward on his errand. He did not return. Ten years pass ed by. and no tidiDg- were heard of the errand. Yesterday, as the family were sitting down to their Thanksgiving dinner, the door opened and in came a tall, moustachoed, good-looking mac, with some bundles in his band. It was Jake Stringer. AI! the family sprang to their feet in astonishment, but the mother and Jake were perfectly cool. " Mother," said Jake, " here's your sugar and soap." " Lay them on the table and eat your din ner." said Mrs Stringer ; " you ont to be whipped for staying so long r — Excharge. START FOR HSAVES —The follow ing " business view" of religious values will not be amiss in statistics :—" A pew is for 6ale in the meeting house of the first parish in Am herst. The man that owns the pew owns the right of space just as long as the pew is, from the bottom of the meeting house to the top or roof, and he can go as much higher as he can get. If a man buy my pew, and sit in it on Sundays, and repent and be a good man. he will go to heaven, if God leu him go. Let a man start from the right place, let him go right, keep right, do right, and he will go to heaven at last ; and my pew is as good a place to start from as any pew in the meeting boose r A PHTSICUX, who lived iu London, visited a ladr who resided in Chelsea After contin uing "his visits for some tine, the lady express ed an apprehension that it might be inconve nient for him to come so far on her account. " Oh, by no means," replied the doctor ; " I have'another patient in the neighborhood, and I always set oat hoping to kill two birds with one stone." MTV® WHIRR Toe LAT TBS EMVHARS.— Sir Fletcher Norton was noted for his want of courtesy. When pleading before Lord Mansfield, on some question of manorial rlzbt, he chanced unfortunately to say. "My lord, I can ill as* rata the poiat in an nasaoca ia y own pr*w ; { have *** frtt'a xs. r -r " 7~- e ;xr ; i* > w-Ut oq eof - r. * ~ z,—e ts x . ---■ -* si v