THE CHANGES Alast a and Its Two Sides fZME rS ALASKA a. good place In which to make a stake?" "Do you think could better inyself by. golngr . there?" - , ,'- , ' ''Not once, but scores of times questions similar to these . have ; been asked me since returning from- Alaska," said Sidney D. Clfarles, a former news paper man of Portland, who has boen enraged In that work for the past four years In Fairbanks, the metropolis of the Tanana placer gold fields. , He came out this winter, over the Ail-American Voute to Valdez, bringing 'his two little girls, aged four and five, respectively, and brought, along a number Of . inter esting views. "I have been sought out by entire ptrangers, even," continued Mr. Charles, "eager to hear about the so-called 'golden opportunities' of the far north land. Sometimes, by way of introduc tion, the callers would begin, 'I knew a ' fellow at Nome who made a fortune and bought a farm in eastern Oregon,' or another would, observe, 'An acquaint ance of mine at Salem took out 110,000 from the Tariana last summer.' Alaska Gold. "Indeed, many farms, fruit orchards and considerable town property have been purchased in Oregon wjth gold ex tracted from Alaska. Seattle Is a good example of what the outpouring of wealth from the northland may do, and whole business blocks in Tacoma have been built from money made In Alaskan enterprises. The product of the farm, the factory and the orchard In Oregon lias found a ready market in the north. Oregon woolen goods and shirts, etc., made by the local factories, have almost entirely replaced eastern made goods, and Carnation milk is preferred and used above all other brands. "The fact that many Oregonians are in the front rank of those who have pioneered the way for commercial en terprises In Alaska, has fired the de fires of others to follow their examplea T am acquainted with many former Portlanders In the Tanana. Some of these are doing well, a few have made their stake, but the majority what of them? What about the rank and file of people we hear so little about? Per haps the Mount Tabor sanatorium, where Alaska's insane are cared for, could sound of the . grlevi . written formation about her boy, or. possibly a wife who has had to call on neighbors Tor the support or her utile ones, might sdd h few more somber shadows. While th band is playing stirring martial music and the field is all a-glltter with nay trappings.' and the girls are throw ing roses, war seems fascinating Is one grand symphony. But what of the reverse side? Two Sides of Life. "This, in a measure, illustrates the two sides of Alaskan life. Dr. Matthews of Seattle, while In Portland, remarked that 'Alaska was a boneyard of broken hearts." and the statement is justified to a certain extent for the many family ties broken and the heartaches caused. Fresh in the minds of Portlanders Is the Btorv of the 'Baby Richards' Stock ing Fund,' which would wring tears from a heart of stone. It fell to my lot to write the first news of the father s death and the finding of the trwklno- In his effects, which baby's caiiea forth the generous outpouring of gold for the little one. I have written many obituaries of men killed in the mines, frozen to death on the trail, or meeting death In some of the many forms, the details of some of which, for downright Ki B7I e "W - 1 Nv nil ; w - QgN IfTTV. . ,lulr. . h VTt ViV. nieV.,- r i 8tte and Canada, received from those Lfl7h,M,,? J.P. whn h anxious to come north in the hopes of ng mother, for Instance, who has, K.,,..-t., i,i. ti. and written in vain for In- w.'ri'j. HOW KOOLAU HELD THE PASS-Like T f 11 1 T'fc 1 . field the JDndge THIS Isthe story of how one man, fighting for life and liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and aided only by a woman and a 10-year-old boy, defeated an army, shook his ftst in the face of an outraged government, laughed to scorn the laws and statutes provided, and escaped with Ms life. r jt ri.. Leonidas held the past of Iher mopylae against the Persian hosts, but not alone. He had his 300 Spartans and 700 Thespians--and he and his army lost their lives. Horatlus held the bridge for Rome against Lars Poraena but he was net alone, Spurius Lartius fought at his right hand and Hermlnlus at his left, though Horatlus appears to have cor ralled all the glory. Koolau, the Hawaiian, held a mountain pass In Kalalau. Island of Kauai, Ha waii, against the entire army of the pro visional government, consisting of sev eral hundred men and two mountain Howitzers and he defeated them clean ly and decisively. Rut the name of Koolau has not been enrolled among the heroes of the world, for he was not fighting for his country, or for a great principle, but only for his own life and liberty and the right to live and die with his wife and child. And he was a leper. Today all the lepers of Hawaii, con sisting of some 900. with the exception of the few who are hidden away by tho relatives and friend are kept at the leper settlement on the Island of Molokal. But 14 years ago the lepers of the Island of Kauai had tneir own leper settlement in the vallev of Kalalau, on the north west coast of the Island. Here the lep ers lived much like other people. They had their own houses and garden patches, caught their own fish and raised their own tare and bananas. Also thev stole those of their neighbors, for on account of being left mostly to them selves and being to a great extent under no law. they had become bold and reck less of the rights of others. About 14 years ago, during the time of the provisional government which ruled the islands for a part of the time -that Intervened between the overturn of the kingdom bv the white residents of Ha waii and the formal annexation or Ha waii by the United States, It was de--rlded that the lepers of Kauai should be collected and sent to the leper settle-: ment on Molokal. The sheriff of Kauai, a man named 8tolts, was instructed to carry out this plan. . ' It Is whispered that there was more animating the actions bf Stolts than ever appeared in the official reports af the newspaper accounts of what took place. BtoKs is said to have wished to get rid of Koolau in order to get posses sion1 of Koolau s wife, an extraordinarily THE of Life as Seen ty Sydney sadness, have fiction. "For the benefit of those who might too li-jhtly count the cost, or be carried at almost any straw In order to escape the 'grind' of a routine life, I shall give the exact facts as I know them based on a four years' residence in the Tanana. Central Alaska. """In speaking of Alaska, so advisedly, since it is one must do such a vast country, for the climatic and; other conditions vary in the different dls- trlcts as much as they do between New York city and Portland. Therefore I speak for the central portion only. While assistant secretary of the Fair banks Chamber of Commerce it was part of my duties to answer letters of ir Is, clerks, school teachers and median ics and professional people. Most of them seemed to be imbued with tho Idea that there were brilliant openings for them and that money would be for warded them for their expenses, when, as a matter of fact, the only demand was for what are termed 'ro'ughnecka' In the parlance of the north: in other words, the laborer, the man with brawn and muscle. Many of those working with a pick and shovel or tot ing a wheelbarrow In the mines of the Tanana are college graduates, expert electricians and first class mechanics, as well as professional men. to find trained Staying Qualities. They went north the work to which and were forced to expecting they were take whatever of- fered. Take a 'soft man' unused to hard, physical labor, and place him in a tunnel where he must work, bent over, for 10 hours, and keep his wheel- oarrow moving witn clockwork regu larity, for he is paced by the steam hoist whicli sends the self-dumping bucket down ever so often, and it Is not hard to realize his finish, unless he has exceptional staying powers and a will of Iron. That's what killed the T T f ! 1 ne Vuontributed beautiful . Hawaiian woman. It appears incredible. In view of the fact that Koolau was a leper, but the woman so far as anybody knew, at least was free from the disease. Anyway, she never showed any outward signs of having it. frt'hatever the animating reason, the sheriff went to Kalalau to arrest Koolau and Koolau shot him dead. The two men who had accompanied the aherlff dropped their guns and fled. Koolau took the captured weapons, in addition to his own, and with his wife and 10-year-old boy, the latter alrendv arrlicted with the dread disease, took to the mountains, where be defied the po lice to capture him. I An Increased force of officers was sent out from Hanalet to take the des perate leper, but Koolau, from a vantage point on the side of the mountain, shot one of them dead and drove the others back. From a strategic standpoint Koolau's position was admirable. The valley of Kalalau is one of the numerous narrow gashes that indent tho coast of Hawaii. Running back from the sea a distance of a little over two nilles, It is shut in on each side by a high pall, or precipice, that it Is practically impossible for man or beast to climb, and it ends abruptly in another precipice almost equally dif ficult of ascent From one of the side precipices, however, juts out a rough shoulder which la less steep than the rest-and which can be climbed with com parative ease. It was on this shoulder that Koolau nad taken refuge. His hid ing place, however, was unknown to the officers, -though It was suspected that he was In one of the many caves that occur in the sides of these volcanic mountains. Most of the rest of the police force of the island of Kauai was sent against Koolsu, but they met with no better suc cess than had the first force. They were utterly unable to reach him. The moun tains are covered with a dense growth of latana and other thorny shrubbery, through which It was almost impossible for them, encumbered with their rifles, to make their way, and In which the refugee could hide in ambush until his pursuers were almost upon him, take a pot shot at them and disappear. The situation finally became so .seri ous that it was decided to send to Hon olulu for government aid. A message was dispatched to President Dole outlin ing the situation and asking him to send reinforcements. Dole responded by sending- two companies? of men, comprising virtually the entire army of the country, anA with them two small cannon - These troops were embarked in an Inter-Island steamer and sent to Kauai snd taken to the valley of Kalalau, Here, the army practically laid selge to Koolau's stronghold with . the Idea of Starving him out. . . . r But the leper had many friends in. Che Vallcr, relatives and other lepers iqulry from all - parts or the Unltea OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL', PORTLAND, ' SUNDAY OF MAN IN THE FAR NORTH WE; B. CLarles, Former Portland Newspaper Man Tanana, Its Good Features and : - -"v.. .' father of Baby Richards. The work on top. shoveling into the sluice boxes when the water runs, is no less exact ing, but is robbed of many of the. ter rors which accompany underground work, where frozen slabs of gravel have crushed the life out of many a poor devil. "At the present time the demand for laborers even is llmlted The popula tion of the Tanana is placed at 12,000 and that of Fairbanks between 3000 and 4000. There Is a war on between the United Mine Workers of the Tanana, a hratinU nf ii .. W .... .... , u IS.,,. n- j,abor, and the Protective Jllncowners and Operators' association. Last, win- ter. through the efforts of the mine- owners, over 2000 worklngmen were in duced to go over the winter trail. Part of them were under contract to work several months at $5 per day, 10 hours and found, and the others, driven des perate by the hard times prevailing out side and attracted by the big wages of fered, without knowing .the expenses of getting there and the 'cost of living, went in on their own hook. One road house man in the Interior told me that he gave away meals to 300 men. Couldn't See Them Starve. "Why did I do It?' couldn't turn them out starve and freeze, could he repeated. 'I n the cold to I? But what makes me 'sore' is that some of them boasted about landing in Fairbanks with money and told how easy it was to beat the roadhouse men.' "This winter the roadhouse proprie tors had circulars printed and distrib uted warning 'mushers' not to attempt th trip unless they were able to oav their way. The Influx of laborers last winter and last summer supplied the demar.d ajid gave the mine owners s temporary victory ovec-the union forces 80 far ",at tlie most of them were luii- mi iiiatiiiaiu a iv-nuur m:n-uun, although harrassed by the union forces now and again getting away their crews In individual instances. The union Is still fighting for an eight-hour camp snd hopes to organize enough of tho workinRmen to make It effective tho coming summer. How Labor Suffers. "It must be confessed, tial observer, that the by an impar labor laws of T T . to ITistory who had no love for the government that would take- them to Molokai and shut them away forever from all they loved and held dear. These probably aided him with provisions. At other times he crept down the mountain side and foraged for himself. Finding that the starving tactics were without results, an assault was ordered. The army was sent to scale the moun tain side and take Koolau, dead or alive. Clambering heavily up through tho tangle of tropic shrubbery beneath the blazing sun. thev came finally upon the place where Koolau was hidden. It was In a sort, ef a half cave a recess beneath an overhanging ledge before which the fugitive had built up a rude breastwork of rocks. But the soldiers .never reached it. A puff of smoke sprang out from the mouth of the cave and one of the men loosened his hold on the latana and fell backward down the slope. Another shot brought oVwn another, seriously, wound ed. The soldiers responded with a vol ley, but Koolau, hiding behind a rock and with the woman and boy to load the extra rifles for him. poured down upon them so hot a fire that they retired in confusion. From tho valley the howitzers were brought into plav snd the mountain side shelled to dislodge one lone man who had defeated the army of Hawaii. But a reconnolsance showed conclusive ly that he was still there, another man coming bark to camp with a bullet hole In his body. Seeing the apparent futility of win ning the contest by assault the army settled down to the seige sgnin. Mean time letters were sent to Honolulu tell ing of how the outlaw was held at bay but could not be taken. As proof of his marksmanship and desperation the wounded men and the bodies of two dead were Sent on the same steamer. The news caused the greatest excite ment In Honolulu and consternation at the capital. It seemed Incredible that one man could whip the army of the country, but the story told by the wounded men left no room for doubt. President Dole ordered that additional men be sent to Kauai to take Koolau. The reinforcements, under the command of Attorney General W. O. Smith, set out like a conquering armada, accom panied by war correspondents represent ing the Honolulu newspapers. Smith trok charge of the war on arriving at Kalalau, rebuking the officer whonv bs superseded In command for Inefficiency. It seemed to him incredible that one man could successfully defy the entire army. ( Rut the attorney general changed his opinion the first time he ordered an advance yi Koolau's stronghold. Koolau again defeated his opponents as easily ". -t : .;..-.' 'ikA:- :'T :'' ',' t;;uui. .... . ., , !'. .4. v Alaska are very crude. For instance, the merchant, the machinery man, the bunks and every ' firm supplying the mine owner, takes precedence over tiie laborer in mortgaging tho dump or out put. After the dumps are sluiced all of these bills must be paid before the laborer la paid, and if there is not enough to- go around the latter has nothing save a worthless time check to show for several months' hard labor. For instance, 'John Doe' has a promis ing piece of ground. He deems that t'.ie pay found justifies him in putting on a $SO00 plant, and secures the. machinery and gives n mortgage. He then gets his supplies and gives a second mortgage. Then he arranges for his crews and is sues time checks good when the dumps Horatio Wko as ho had before and added another scalp, figura'tively, to his belt. The situation appeared almost ridicu lous but there was nothing ridiculous about the dead men who fell under the fire of the leper, nothing ridiculous about the men with shattered limbs and bullet holes through their lungs, who were sent to the hospital In Hono lulu. Koolau was fighting now for his life as well as his liberty and he know how to shoot. A flanking movement was Impossible on account of the steepness of Uie pall. There was only one way to reach the place where Koolaii ami his wife and boy lay hidden, and that was straight up the mountain side. And any attempt to climb up was met with the unerring shots of the leper outlaw. For two weeks the army lav en camped In the valley of Kalalau at tempting to capture or kill this one lone man. And for two weeks Koolau from the mouth of his cave laughed at them and answered their cannon fire with his rifle. And then the attorney general for Hawaii gave it up. He took back all he had said about Inefficiency on the part of the former commanding officer and announced that In his opinion Koo lau's position was impregnable. And once more In history an armv. having marched up a hill, marched down again. Ahe attorney general gave up the fight and ordered the troops to pack up and go home. And so thev marched back to the steamer, got aboard, and sailed for Honolulu, leav ing Koolau, the leper, holding the fort. Koolau was never captured. Bv a sort of tacit consent he was allowed to go his way. No further effort was made to capture him, and he came down from his cave on the mountain side and lived in the valley of Kalalau for awhile Later he went back Into the interior of the Island and lived In a small village there. Everybody knew who he was and the government was well enough aware that he was living there. But he was never again molested. Only four years ago he died in his bed of the incurable malady that made life a hor ror to him. But he died a free man the only man who ever whipped an en tire army and lived to tell of it. His wife is still living In Hawaii. BagandA Manners. From the Strand . Neither manners nor 'Clothes make the man. Nevertheless, manners are so .vital a part of the conduct that by them one can form some idea of character. The Baganda. natives of Uganda. . In East Africa, are, so far as courtesy is con cerned, the ptnk of , perfection. Sir Harry Johnston has called them :the Japanese of Africa." If you say good morning to a stran ger on an English road, it Is as like as not that his surprise wilt throw him Into a posture of self-defense; but when two Baganda meet they begin to sa- MORNING, JANUARY 24, v aaBBB-aBBS- r- ? K TYPICAlx KOAD HOUcSEIN" are sluiced. If the ground Is rich, he makes good all his obligations and has a neat balance to his credit. Other wise the laborer sufers. I do not want to convey the Impression that this Is the rule, for many of the operators pay cash for all they get, but the practice has been common enough to force to the wall more than one business miin be cause rf a too liberal credit extended, srtd the union claims that there Is owing to laborers at the present time the sum of $150,000 In worthless time checks. Demanded New Laws. "Former Judge Wickcrsha m. who was elected delegate from Alaska last fall, pledged himself, if elected, that one of lute each other as thev come within earshot. "How arc you?" cries the one. "Who am I that you should care to know?" replies the other. "Humble though I be, yet I have dared." rejoins the first. "But say tlrst how you are," contin ued the second. "The bettor for the honor you have done me." is the answer By this time they have already passed each other, and there is only tlmo for Parthian affability. "The honor is mine, and I shall treas ure It. Then follows a quavering of delicately modulated, long drawn "A -a a s' of contentment and good will, which gradually die away In the dis tance, leaving neither of them the worse circumstanced or the better Informed. 1 must add, for the reader's caution, that this dialogue Is not an invariable ritual. The phrases may be varied ad infinitum to suit the occasion; but It will suffice as an illustration of these roadside courtesies. If you wish to make a Bagaflda per fectly happy, all you need to do is to say "Way wally!" which means a sort of supremely earnest "Well done!" The moment" this talismanic expres sion hajs left you lips the native to whom it Is addressed will probably fall on Ids knees, and. clasping his two hands together, will sway them from side to side, as if he were playing a concertina, while all the time his face beams with a most benignant and com pulsive smile, and he purrs, "A o! a o a! a o" as much as to say, "My cup of Joy is overflowing." This action, as performed bv the Ba ganda. Involves no servility. Once you are used to it they, do not seem to lose at all in dignity. Only they win your heart. Prospectus. Oh. 1 rha!l write a rural play, I'll name the village "Squash," Ami tesct. the characters to sav "I swan!" likewise "By gosh'!'' And next a novel I shall write My zeal shall know1 no bounds Of heroes old who as thev fight Say "Sdeath!" "Gadsooks:1 and "Zounds!" And after that a western tale In Its due turn shall come; My local color cannot, fall . If I say "thar" and "plumb:" . Washington Star. . As the Twfe Is Bent. From Harper's Weekly. "I hope you were a good little boy while at your aunt's and ' didn't tell' any stories." said his toother. L "Only the one you put me up to, ma," replied her young hopeful. ."W'hy,! what do you man, child?" Hf.haM .h. . 1 1 . ... hi,. t nave a second piece, of etAe I said, 'No, thank you; I've had enough. " . .... - . Mit" '' - 1909. Its Endless Litigations Country Varying in Resources TVLZ INTERIOR. the first things ho would do upon as suming his duties In congress would be to have enacted a Hen law. with a view of protecting the rights of labor, and se cuve the appointment nf a mining In spector to sea that underground works were timbered, when necessary. "To reach the interior of Alaska at any time of the year costs money and no one should go north without at least $500. In tho deep ground directly trib utary to Fairbanks it costs from 1500 to $1000 to sink one hole to bedrock. Seldom is pay found in the .first hole. The creek valleys are wide and as many as 30 and 40 holes have been sunk to crosscut some of them. Usually it requires an expenditure of from $3000 to $5000 before pay is found, and IF DEATH WERE SLEEP By $Iaurice Maeterlinck. 0NK foremost truth, pending others which the future will no doubt reveal, is that, In questions of life and death, our Imagination has remained very childish. Al most everywhere else it precedes rea son, but here it still loiters over the games of the earliest ages. It sur rounds Itself with the dreams and the barbarous longings wherewith, it lulled the hopes and fears of cave dwelling man. It asks for things that are impossible because they are too small. It claims privileges which. If obtained, were more to be y'readed than the most enormous disasters with which nihility threat ens us. Can we think without shuddering of an eternity contained wholly within our infinitesimal actual consciousness? And behold how in all this we obey the Il logical whims of what used to be called "la foils du logis!" Which of us. If he Went to sleep tonight In the scientific certainty of awaking in 100 hundred years as he Is today, with his body in tact, even on condition that he lost all memory of his previous life would those memories not be useless? which of us would not welcome that secular sleep with the same confidence as the brief gentle slumbers of his every night? Far from dreading it. would not many hasten to make the trial with eager curiosity? Should we not see numbers of men assail the dispenser of the; fairy sleep with their prayers and Implore as a favor what they deem a miraculous prolongation of their life? And yet. during that sleep, how much would remain and how much of them selves would they find again on awak ing? What link, at the moment they closed their eyes, would connect them with the being that was to awake with out memories, unknown In a new world? Nevertheless their consent and all their hopes at the beginning of that long night would depend upon that non-existing link. There is. In fact, between real death and this - sleep only the difference of thit awakening deferred for a century, an awakening here as alien to him who had gone to sleep as the birth would ba of a posthumous child. On the other hand, what answer do we make to the question when , It has to do not with us. but with the things that breathe with us pa earth? Are we concerned, for Instance, about the after life of the animals? The most faithful, affectionate and intelligent dog. nee dead, becomes but a repulsive csrrnss. which we hasten to get rid of. It does not even seem possible to ask ourselves if any part of the already spiritual life wnicn we toveo in mm subBlt elsewhere in our memory, or If there be another world for .dogs. manv Instances are known wher 19. 000. $20,000 and $30,000 hava been ex pended and the pay Is not always located even then. After the pay Is found it ln necessary to do the 'deadwork' drive a working shaft, run tunnels and drifts and block out the pay preparatory to taking out a dump or for summer sluic ing, whichever tho case may be. . This costs from $10,000 to $20,000. Too Much Litigation. "The curse of litigation also hangs over the camp like a dark cloud, and after a man secures ground he Is often forced to fight for It through the courts. In the mora shallow diggings of the Ilotsprings district, the Chandalar, the Koyukuk, the Innoko, tho Birch creek section and the upper Sushltna. there are better opportunities for poor men, but it requires money to outfit and m man must be possessed of more than the average determination and grit or he will be a sure failure,- for Alaska is no place for weaklings. "After having observed the way Port land anil- adjacent districts have de veloped in the past six years, I am confident that it the average young man would work as hard here and at tend strictly to business and be alive to the opportunities expanding and open ing on every hand, as he would have to work in Alaska to make a stake, he would be much farther ahead of the game in a stated number of years. It is seldom that the 'chschaco' or new- comer strikes ft rich in Alaska. He usually has his eye-teeth cut first Country Right. "I wish to add, however, that the Tanana itself is a splendid country. It is practically self-supporting. In all kinds of home grown vegetables and berries. The drawbacks are fierce fac tional fights, the curse of litigation, and high transportation rates. There are thousands of square miles of mineral bearing ground which cannot be worked at a profit under the present adverse conditions, but which, under more fa vorable ones, will add millions to the output yearly. Those looking for easy money will do well to give the plaee a wiue Derm, ji uiwai mt.i vl an mrii of the pioneer stock, the kind that' opened Oregon to civilization. I have often heard newcomers envying old tim ers the wealth they -now enjoy front donation claims and landed property, but I dare say if they had to go through and endure what the pioneers endured to hold this land, they would not take it on audi terms. The same holds trus of the 'sourdoughs' of Alaska.- They are a generous, fine people, and to have known tnem or been associated with them is an honor I shall treasure all my life." It would appear rather ridiculous to us that time and space should preserve preciously, for all eternity, among;. the stars and the boundless mansions of the sky, the soul of a poor beast, made up of five or six touching-but vary un sophisticated habits and of the longing to eat and drink, to sleep warm and to greet his -kind In the manner which we know. .';.. Besides, what could remain- of that sul, composed etfrelr of the few needs of a rudimentary body, when that body had ceased to exist? . Yet by what right do we Imagine be tween ourselves and the animal an "abyss that does not exist even between the mineral and the vegetable, the veg etable and the animal? This right to believe ourselves so far. so different from all that lives upon earth, this pre tension to place ourselves in a cate gory and a kingdom to which the very Sods whom we have created would not always have access, has never been auf flclently explained. . , . Cheer Up J ft' What If you should break your leg, '-' . , Cheer up! You can get a wooden peg, v. . . :. .ch ttpf I i'"" i w uuinui ii yours oroae,' Treat the matter as a Joke You can put your watch In soak- " Cheer p! ! 1 Should you get into a fight, - , - . . Cheer up! Perhaps the licking served vou right .. . Cheer up! t se your heart and use your head; What's A week or two in bed. When you'd have to work Instead - 1 Cheer up! I t Should an autqi knock you far. i , . . . . . Cheer Up! It might have been a trolley ear, . . - .Cheer up! ! If a fire destroys your flat. Please coasider where you're at. ' Paying rent is worse than that Cheer up! J ! If you're married to a wife, 1 " Cheer n' Remember, there's another I! fe lt you find yoorself In jalu''CCr ' And the Judge refuses ball. Uon't look, dismal.-don't lo..k rtI ' : t i .-. r . , ' I - v - Sevr lork - Anx i n - Just ihf Tiling. Krnfrl ftji.-en,. i ' Vrotnl triottier A r;1 . rr..' f -what do you think t.f nn ii. , exeeuti'.n? Great n'i:!"'nti I I,:ik t j a DlOet n .t i ., j.