i Jjl t t.e -b -rroiR a wM-W Uriftr. "g oJuf '?wefio iri ..noil r ..? -V i y .H . huAmnt,-" wk - w k m xr a 11 - n ft 1 i WW 1 CCii, tier's chap, e all f which erever ' A heinf e all, i'e u away i on li- that "h, you v e cad ba- his us, PSt lyn it, SO in Sh !S- lic 1-if-S, Id e. e 1C f ... .. VOL 8. aaexswrxxxwa Published by Xlicodoro SrJionli. tpiims Two dollars ner annum in ndvance T;o dollars niii a au:trter, half vearly and if not paid before Hie end of the year, l wo uouars ;inu a nan. niose wjjo rci;i;c mw papers hy a carrier or stage drivers employed by the proprie tor, will be charged 37 cents, per year, extra. No papers discontinued until a.11 arrearages arc paid, except at the option of the Editor. iCAdvertisements not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) will le inserted three ucks for one dollar, and tueiily.-hve rents for every subsequent inscnion. The charge for one and three insertions the same. A liberal discount made to yearly advertiseis. H7A11 letters addressed to the Editor rnnst be post-paid. . JOB PRINTING. Having a general assortment of huge, clegnnl, plain and orna mental Type, we arc prepared to execute every description of Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, ETolesj Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL ND OTPIER ' BLANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE JcfcrMiiiau He publican. From the Lewisburg Chronicle. Bradford County. Some two or iliree years !ince, Miss Sedge wick .gave a glowing picture, in one of ihe Mag azines of ihe day, of her native county in Berk-.-ime. May tine who claims not her gifted pen, give a blight sketch of her own county of Brad lord I There is not, indeed, ihe tragic inter est connected nh the history of Bradford, that iiL-luii" to Luzerne, and Miu.e of the other comities of Pennsylvania, yet its early, remin iscences are not devoid of interest. Probably i litre, is no county in the State, or indeed the Union, hut that has some circumstances in its history that would excite interest were ihey iwi recorded. Campbell has rendered the Val Jey of Wyoming almost classic ground, and re cently lis annals have been transferred to the page of history, by one who has passed the most of his days, from early youth far towards Jtle's waning, within the precincts of the Val ley Hon. Charles Miner. There were Tories scattered along the Susr quehanna, during the war of the Revolution, but the first permanent settlement made in Brad lord was in 1778, by emigrants from Wyoming, and mostly by those who had passed through the horrors of savage invasion, and chil strife. . tii . . u . :ti f . i 7 ii .. . j which had swept over that ill-fated Yalley, and , ill i i ti . ihere had learned endurance. J Ills settlement , - . ,. . i- f a was made in what is now the township of A - ens, ihen known as " J mga .Point, and the adiacent valley of Shesheouiti. Col. John . . ... Franklin, who is styled, in " Miner's History." the " Hero of Wyoming." was oneif this balid of emigrants. He resided upon a farm on the eastern side of the Susquehanna, opposite where the village of Athens now stands, where he died some years since, at an advanced age. The prominent part that he took in the strife between the " Penuemites" and the "Yankees" at Wyoming, led 10 his imprisonment, for two jears, in Philadelphia, under the charge of high treason. Where this settlement was made, what is now Bradford, and the adjoining coun t.es, including Luzerne, belonged to the town of Westmoreland a township lhat embraced uearJy if not quite as great an extent of territo ry as the State of Connecticut, of which it was an appendage- Bradford is ono of .of.ihe northern tier of counties iu Pennsylvania, and is bounded on me east by Susquehanna and on the wei by Tioga counties. The Susquehanna enUT it at the New York line, and takes a southerly and nearly a central course through the county. t The Tioga or Chemung unites wnh.,u abou ifour miles Bmlma half below the New ok line. Tioga rises in the mountains west of Bradlord, md after taking its course through Tioga conn ty, it bends around through the Sa'e of New York, receiving on its way the Cowaneqne,' he Cauisteo, and the Conhdcton. On its way ihfpugh Bradford ihe Susquehanna receives a tributaries; on the east ihe Wysox and the Wy alusiug and oil the west the Sugar and Tow,an da, creeks. T.he Tovvanda and thy Lycoming have their sources rery near each other, 111 Canton, the south-west fpvi'nship of the couri y. The Lycoming, winds ayay Uirough ns wild and rapid course to the Wesi Branch he Towanda make Jts way to lhb Nnh Branch of the Susauehanna. and uufieK vi vu 01 tue .ousquenanua, a u u.ui.us rv It twO miles below the borough of Towandi. There is much scenery alonn 1 Ii l stream which V - Js wildly beautiful. There are ledges f roclis Jilong. its banks which would strike av jiersoti. acctituuied only to the, prajnes of the Weft, with awe and wonder. , , Athens is much ihe oldest village1 in the -county, although it is not a pface: of na,r ihe jiopulaiion or Justness of Towanda, jl'lie fi , canon of the village, and the nceiiey of Jhe 'whtde valley, is very beautiful. This valffy, w'hich dooks when- in'its qmi sunfrntfr itfeautv, as if the angel of peace had eer folde)! it's wings over ii.iwas the rendezvous of tlm a.rriiy sent under the command of Geii. SilliivauViutO ihe heart of ihe Indian counir.y, .dwring, j.he. mmier of 4779, to endeavor, to ensure, Safety toltMir frrmtter.. . , ; SulliVanwith part .of.yheXrray!rlt.i.r)bfjip ijr ihn expedition, was detacb4 &)' 'be way of The wholeart STBfoUDSBukG, the Delaware to Wyoming, whence he ascen ded the river to Tioga Point. Here Ji'o arrived on tht llth of August, and encamped, awaiting a reinforcement which arrived on the 22 under Ihe com'maud of Gen. Clinloru Sullivan now numbered nearly five thousand menquite a formidable army for the object to which it was destined. A fort was erected in what is now the Southern pah of the village of Athens, which was garrisoned frfr the protection of tores for the army on its return, and was de signed also as a rendezvous to send those who were wounded or who sickened by the way. On the 30th of Sentember. the armv rpmrnpil i ' j to Tioga, and on the 3d of October took its de parture down the Su.quehauna to Wyoming, attd thence to Easton. Before the army left Tioga, ihe Susquehanna became so low as to render the boats useless which had conveyed the artillery thither, and as it was impossible for them to remove it further, it was sunk in ;he river. This was done secretly, and per haps the spot where it lies is not now' known to any person living. The successful result of Sullivan's expedition is known to all. Its de vastating policy seems to us hardly consistent with humanity hut it received the sanction of Washington, and was the only .way to preserve the frontier from a recurrence Of ihe horrors of Cherry Valley and Wyomirt" In J789, a treaty was held at Athens, be tween the whiles and several Indian tribes, in relation io ina-acres which had b'eerl commit ted. upon the Weal Branch after 'the declaration of peace. Col. Pickering was the commission er of the whites ; "and the celebrated chief of Senecas, Red Jacket,. was the principal Indian orator. The treaty terminated amicably, but the murderers were.not Brought to justice until a la'er period. As "the settlements increased, ihe Indians drew away to the West, where their hunting grounds might be undisturbed by the foot of ihe while man ; but. they must ha turned with sorrowing memories to that lovely; valley, and their fathers' graves in the grove of oaks'upon the bank of the Tioga; The valley ofSheshequin was the birthplace of the potess, Julia H. Scott, whose early de cease has been so much lamented. Her grave is be.-ide her " native river," in the place lhat was the home of her married life Towarida. Her friencb were looking forward with hope to ' nut iuiuic ineidiy udiuei, vrueu iiui nisi wuiii, ... . i , , ,, . ; andat that time her only child; was suddenly j , . . , , . ' .. . taken from her by death, hver after: lt'seeraed ! , , - , ' , , , , ., 7 1 111 iif wan 1 : if 1 in rpc in ni n a r k np 1 iiprt u she was laid to rest in its darkn'ess. There are many legends from her, pe,n to throw a ro mantic interest around her own loired " river of the hills." Mrs. M. St. Leon Loud has given Jegendary interest 10 ihe valley of ihe Wysox, or Wysau ken. as it was. Called at an early day.. The hut of Fernslaer, the 44 Hermit of the Wysau ken," stood, when the first settler came into the country, upon the spot where afterwards rose her paternal home. The township of Asylum, in ihe lower part of the county, W.as so named from the circumstance of its becoming1 the home of a colony of refugees, who .fled from tlie horrors of Jhe French Revolu tion. Somejof them were nobles of high rank. Most of them returned to France as soon as they could do so with safety. The present Surveyor General of our Commonweath, is the son of one of the. French emigrants who remained in the-township of Asylum., . Towanda, the county town of Bradford, is situ ated upon the western side of the Susquehanna, a"hd near the centre of the county. It is a flour ishing town, and a place of much business.' The village of H joy in the western part of the county Is also a place of considerable business. Bradford isla good agricultural county. The valleys of the Susquehanna, and, its tributary streams, are fertile, and the uplands, too, are a vafiable for tillage, and amply remunerate their cultivators. Lutiiber is one of the staples of the county. During a rise of water, especially at the lime of the. spring floods, the Susquehanna is al most literally covered with arks and rafts seeking a market at the lower towns upon the river, or n'nilititc in It t mnro r t 1-5 1 1 o I ol nl i ti fPhocJ come from every navigable stream tributary to the Susquehanna. The lumbering business is one of 'much risk and danger,' and requires and developes much .hardihood of character in those who pursue it. ,Sqme of the townships west of the river, in the northern part of the county, have larce settlements oMrish, who came into the county as laborers on our ill-fated canal. They have purchased small , rrtie 0fi hnvp hponn iri oriibpr arnnh'd tbpm tin the ' -fl r nprmnnfint nnd ihdpripnrtant home I MIIIIUI lij W " " " " I- -- -"- Thb'v are generally destitute 01 education, out seem Jesirous that their children should haye an opportunti;'' of acquiring tin's iilessing which has been denied Jo thdm. Much mineral wealth, has been developed iti the lower part of ihe county, -. . . ' . 1 . 1 1 1 . : and ind. it is supposed that nearly all our mountains contain coal and iron, uur mounmm scenery i& beaitiful--oftengtandly o. These mountain ran ges skirt the river on either side, sometimes bend fhg" arouiid valleys, and ag&in' corning abruptly noon the river, for rams those Narrows which are :ofteri so .alarming to the unaccustomed traveler ; ' i t j overhu.ng as .they generally arepy ledges 01 rocus, and-with a high and precipitous descent to the river. The Nrth Branch Canal, upon w;hich so much half completed work is left to go to destruction, was designed to' terminate at Athens, three miles below the New Y6r lihe. The-dam across the t; .WriTnidtipH sAvp.Fal vears atro. and was 8t-ppo8i o be well built, until one night, becom- ok Government consists in the art being MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JUNE'-15;;1848. ing weary of waiting for the completion of the ca nal, or from some other cause, it moved off down the 'river. I will say no more of rhy favorite, county, ex cept that its name was in honor of an early Attor ney General of this Commonwealth, a gentleman of superior talents and acquirements.and one.who was favored with the personal friendship of Wash ington. R. K. W. Athens, Pa. t k ' From filakeW Family .Encyclopedia. , Fixed Stars. ' The universe,' so far as human observation has extended, consists of infinite or boundless space, in which are numberless fixed stars, of the nature, bulk and properties of the sun but because they afre at such immense distance from the earth, they appear to our eyes only as so many beautiful shining points. They are called fixed stars because they do not change, like ;he. planets, their relative position ; and they are distinguished from the planet's by their twinkling light. ! It is supposed that the fixed stars have pri mary and secondary pjaneis reviving round ihem as ihe planets of our system revolve round the sun. Were5 The sun as far from us as these stars are', it would doubtless appear as they now! do. It is certain that they' do 'not reflect the sun's light as do the planets1, for their distance is so great, thai they would nut, in that case, be Visible. All the fixed stars, with the exception of the polar or north star, notwithstanding they do not change their relative position, appear to have a motion like the sun and moon, rising in the east, increasing in altitude until they approach the meridian, and declining to the western horizon, where they disappear. This apparent motion fs caused bythe revolution of the earth on' its axis from w'fcst to east. The immovable appearance of the polar star is occasioned by the axis of ihe edirih pointing directly to it. lis elevation above the horizon of any place is alwaj's equal to the latitude of .1 i . ir- . 1 . . ...i mat piace, or its nearest utsiance to tne equa tor. ' The number of fixed stars visible to the na ked eye, iti either hemisphere, ismoi more than a thousand. They seem indeed to be innumet' able, when, iu a clear winter's evening, we turn our eyes towards the heavens. But by looking attentively, we shall find thai most df those bright spots, which appeared 10 lie star. vanish from our view. This illusion is owing 10 the twinkling light with which the fixed siars are seen ; and, to our viewirm them "con- fusedly, and not reducing them-io any order; By the the aid of a telescope we are enabled discover myriads of stars, which were before invisible to the unassisted eye; and, as we in crease the power df ihe instrument, more aiid more sliars are brought into viewj so thaC the number may be considered infinite. Dr. Her- schel was enabled, in one quarter of an hour, to count one hundred and sixteen thousand. which passed through" the space' embraced by hii powerful glass. Many stars, which 10 an observer unaided by instruments appear single, are found, on be ing examined by a telescope, 10 consist of two, and sometimes of three or more stars. Dr. Herschel discovered four hundred of ihis de- scripfion. lther asirjiiomers have discovered a much greater number. Upon viewing the heavens on a clar night we discover a pale irregular light, au'd'a num- bef of stars whose mingled rays form the lu minous tract called th'etiilky way. The stars themselves are at too great a distance 10 be perceived by the naked eye ; and among those which are visible with a good telescope there are spaces apparently filled with others in immense numbers. Many whitish spots or tracts, called nebulas, are visible iu different parts of the heavens, which are supposed to be milky way at an inconceivable distauc'e. The magnitudes of 'the fixrAl siars appear to be different from one another, which differeh'ce may arise either from a diversity m their real magnitudes, or distances ; or from birth these causes acting together. The difference fn the apparent magnitude 'of the stars is such as' to admit of their being divided jnio six classes, The largest are called stars of ijie first magni tude, and the least which are visible to the na ked eye, stars of the sixth magnitude! Stars that cannot beseeh without the help of glasses are called telescopic siars. Somesrars are subject to periodical variations in apparent magnitude ; at one time being at ihe second or third, and at another, nf the fifth o.r. sixth. Some have alternately been noticed to appear and disappear ; being visible for sev eral mouths, and again invisible. Several stars mentioned by ancient astronomers, are not flow to be found; and some are now observed,, which are not mentioned in the ajtcieut catalogues. It is conjectured that ihe fixed stars are at such ail immense distance, that light, uhich moves at the rale of IOQ.000 miles per -second, would-be nearly, one ygarj&urjja quarter 'in pas sing from J he nearest, fixed star to.ijip eariji ; and a cannon ball discharged frnjna- 24 pouri der with a velocity of' j 9 mi)es,aminuu would, be 760,000 year pacing, fouuta pearesi.siar V at be fate of 13 tinlc. .a Sound,, wjitch move t 1 ! HoNESTjJefTersoii. ' f . . - - minute, would bo ahtiut 1,128,000 years in pas sing ibrotigh ihe same space. Dr Herschel has calculated that tlie distance of the, remotest nebulae, exceeds that of the nearest fixed star at-least three hundred thousand times. Upon this fact, the ihus remarks : that from facts well known, it might be proved, the rays of light, which enter the eye from. the star! Sinus, cannot have been less than six years and four months and a half in treir passage to iho observer. Hence, he says,:"it follows lhat when we see art object at a calculated distance, ai which one of these very remote nebulae may ftlll be perceived; the rays of light which con veys its imago to the eye, rfiust have been alT most two millions of year oh their way; and that consequently no many years ago this ob ject must already have had an existence in the sidereal heavens, inr order to send out those rays by which wet now perceive it.1 But when we have reached the utmost dis tance to which the power or our instrument can penetrate' who will say, that, we are approach ing any limits of the. creation 1 Who will say that if the disembodied spirit should travel for ward through eternity, nurbberle.ss systems would not be continually spreading b.efqre it? We cannot conte'mplate ihe fixed .Mara with out exclaiming, How inconceivably great and wise and good is the being who made, governs and sustains ihem ! We behold not me world only, but a system of worlds, regulated and kept 111 motion by the stin ; not- otle sun and otic system only, hut millions of stinsand systems; multiplied withmiLefid. perpetually submissive . . ,-. 1 . c; 1 in the aws which govern ihem. Such a view guvi of the material creation may well induce us to adopt, as our owp, the language of the royal Psmalist .of Israel, and say " When ! consider the heavens, the work, of thy fingers, the moon and the stars -which thou hast ordained ; what is man, that thou aft mindful of him? or the son of man, that thou visitest him V T3ic IHormdiis. 1 We have conversed.wiih a .genilomah, who has recently returned from, the far, West, who was an eye-witness to, the distress and suffer ings of these misguided and nifserable people. The description he gives of ihe hardhsips "and privations' they endured, since their lawless ex pulsion from their homes in Missouri and Illi nois, is almost enough lo make -the-4)lood freeze in ijie'hearts of a Christian people. . Famine and disease haye tnade frightful ravages iu iheii hiimhers. Strewn along the pa'h. theyj have iravelfed, tt the ftuermeduite plains, lymg j between the ilississioi and the Great Salt Lake!i the graves.of a ijiousand men, women and chil-1 dren, are to be seen. by the traveller' who pas ses that routj ipajking wilh unerring certainty the road they hdve taken,, and ihe suffernig- they must have endured. Their numbers havei suffered repeated decimation, since they com menced iheir journey towards the shores of the P,c i r i. . i . i v.y"- iiuu uecii ocui 111 lur me purpose acific. I ood lading, roots, grass, and cveniv ... . . ' r r a: v k i I r 1 i r i- j , i oi getting assistance from the Government as ii unclean reptiles have been used for food, and I :h e . . . T. . ,. "vi.cuimeMi. ns u hence '.his frightful loss of life. Ctnt.ot s.ome-1 thing be done to alleviate iheir sufferings, and i snatch a few .from the insatiate jaws ol famine ! .and of death. ? Many of these' deluded neonle formerly resided in Plujadelpuia, and bore thej character of reputable and ihdusiriou citizens. Some were members df various Christian Churches iu ih;s city, but from weakness of intellect or from a high state of nervous excite ment, they were led 10 embrace the absurdities of i his new doctrine, and seek a home midway between "ihe Aijantic and Pacific, where they could follow its rites in peace. This should not exclud6 them from the pale of civilizaiion and humanity. Tons of provisions and thous ands of dollars) ,have been sent to foreign coun tries to alleviate the miseries of suffering hu manity. Cannot some little be done for our own people, upon our own soil? Our informant has spent, largely of his own means, 10 assist ihe.se starving people ; but a single person can affect, but liule. PhiVa. Bulletin. frlie Horse. I will state a' few things that 1 have learned, and they may be of benefit to your readers. A horse that is driven on hard roads is liable to get stiff in the joints. In 1833 I had an animal which after .driving 3 or 4 days. got-quite Jarne. An old Bal timore teqmster told me to' wash the mare s legs in a tolerably salt brine,twhich was done, accordingly, three times a day for the balance of the journey. The stfffness disappeared in a few days, and I drovd the mare' 1,400 miles afterwards, and there was no? more trouble on" that account. What pleased 'me irpost was", the mare had a' very poor-foot to hold a shoe, when Istarted. It was very brittle. and .hard. It would break out when a. nail was put in. But it grew together at every shoeing. A blacksmith In New-England remarked to me that her foot-had a singular appearance ; where he pared it was soft and tough. 1 account for it in this way : salt will at tract moisture from the atmosphere; which keeps' the foot moist all the time ; and salt has nearly the same effect that grease Jias on a foot or a piece of timber. The drippings from salt on a floor, if con tinued long, cannot be got oil" ; the wood becomes moist and tough, and so with a horse's foot After. vasliipg the legs.turn tip the horse's foot, clean the bVitom. pour the hollow full of brine and hold for a (ev rrtrhntes to soak the bottom. , The'practice of jasping the, font all overdo toughen f t is abomina ble. Fanner and Gardener, . Jt -. IVeiv. York & Erie JMsill B5ad. The President of the Company has recently .published a statement of its. affairs, 'from which'we gather the following interesting items : ' - ' ' The loan of $500,000 advertised for, haa'aU'Qen taken at par. 1 ' The Board state that all trie legislation that H necessary has been obtained, both from New Yurie and Pennsylvania, to enable the Company to avail' themselves of all the benefits of their charter.. ' About one drid a half millions of dolldrs have been expended on that part of the Road between Port Jervis and Bhighampton, a distance of about .127 miles. The Corripnhy will commence laying the superstructure in a few veeks, and are confi dent that they will be aide to open the road to Bingamptoh(luring the present year. The Board have contracted for the grading" df the Road from Binghamptori to Elmirar, a distance of CO miles : that- portion1 of the road between Bingamplbh and Owego lb be finished within six , ty da.ys after the road hiill'liare been cb'mjilcterJ to Binghamptortiand from Owego to Elmira with' in six months thereafter.. V 1 A short road to extend from the head of Serieca Lake, to cdnnect with die New York iind Frie Rail Road at Elmira, a distance of some ll or 18 miles, has been chartered. The rdutejs nowber' ing located." ? : 1 The net earnings of that portion of the road now in use: during trip nrfcsnnf vnr will nfiili'-ifiii Ai' 1 an , eirn nnn ,, . , . .. ' ; '-,: ceed 5150,000; the gross earnings wi Lundoubt; 1 . euiy exceen juu.uiiu. . . The cost of completing the road to Lake 'Erie is estimated at S2,00q,0Q0 to 3,000.000, When completed the road will cost the Stockholders )esa. per mile than any oilier road in the country. The Board entertain no doubts ai to their ability t raise the funds necessary to cbmplete the road at an early date. More iudiaii Enormities- -ai tarR upou Iho iUomious at llici City of liic Sait Lake Men, Woiiien, and Children killed; From' itie St. Louis' Republican,- May 29. The steamer Mustang arrived yesterday' morn ing from the Missouria RiveV. Wc are indebted to tlie officers for a St. Joseph Gazette of Tuesday last, which contain some exciting information from theMorman colony at the Cily of the Salt Lake. his stated that Mr Shrader passed thrmigh that ttntn bn tlfti previous day, on his way from For Kearney, with information that an express had jdst reached there from the Mormon Colony, bring ing intelligence that the Indians" had murdered a! number of the nien, women, and children at . trie City of .the Salt Lake No cause was assigned for this outbreak. Tlio i'nrDc c li.'1 ViAa.. pnrij .2. T .1. . ' ' ' v dS IBare-a luai U,B ,ina,ans woua 8ather "? Iarger numbers, and murder all the emigrants at l.hat Place- If would see?1 om the intelligence from Oregon and 'the City 6f the Salt Lake, that j the. Indians have determined upon a regular war upon the colonies, though widely separated from each other ; and there is too much reason to ap prehend that many of them will be cut off before aid can reach them. A military force of several thousand men will be absolutely necessary to pro tect our citizens; jn that quarter, and, great as trie coast may be, it is the duty of the Government to give them this protection. We learn from the officers of the Mustatig,-fhat GOO wagons, containing Mormon emigrants, were to leave Camp Israel, sixty-five miles above the Council Bluffs, to-day, for the City of the Great Sali Lake. But.afierthe events ,which are stated in the preceding part of this article, we think it doubtful whether they will move forward without some promise of protection from the Government'. It is stated, that 2,000 Pawnee. Indians had come intd Belle view, for the purpose of obtaining provision of which they were in great want. A report is also brought to us, that the first Uni ted States train which left FW Leavehworth'thls this" Spring; was attacked by Indiags at Walnut 'Creefr, and in the attacktwehty persons were kil led. The' names bf Sisson and two Lerbys are mentioned among tne nutnbef. We arenot informed how this repdit was brought to the seu demerits', bat we are inclined to belfeve that it is muclf'exaggerated, if not altogether lncorrert The. Mexicans who came ,in" fiorn 'S'aut.a Fe, the latter part of last, weejf , left there or. tlie22d Apjil, made, no mention of this affair, although, ofaufli cient interest to have attracted their attention. . Danish, wriier speaks of a, hut o. piuetn blejhal it did no! know which wnyt'i fall, aj;l so liept on (-landing. Th(s ls 'lika iji'iaiiiai had such a. compljcatidu 'of disease, hat lt lid not know which ip die of, and, lived on. A lady in this vicinity?" on coiiofiing'a hwah- bdr on the hiss- of her'sbn, wa"iw-idB.in f.it!if' .tf if r0;,V 'Lvj' ...uLyi.! miim T knowhe wpu t see Billy abused: i 1 r