 |  |  |  |

 SquareTrade © AP6.0
DON'T FORGET TO CHECK OUR EBAY STORE!!!
NEW (AND OLD) STOCK LISTED OFTEN!!!
Title:
On a Mexican mustang, through Texas, from the Gulf to the Rio Grande
Author: A. E. Sweet
Originally published in Hartford, Conn., 1883
About 687 pages on CD, Acrobat Reader used to view
CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. An Eighteen-Carat Desperado. — The Man from Texas. — An Awful Accident.— Heroic Conduct of the Man from Texas.— His Ranch on the Rio Frio. — Invited to Texas. — Leaving New York. — Arrival in Texas.— Galveston. — Strange and Unique City. — Cosmopolitan Population.— Diversity of Languages. — Magnificent Beach. — Tropical Vegetation.— "Dreams of the Orient." — Board of Health. — Disinfecting Dead Letters. — The Pirate Lafitte. — First Great Fraud in Louisiana. — Jealousy between Galveston and Houston. — Sand-Crabs and Mud-Turtles.— Yellow-Fever Germs. — The Infected Coffee-Bean.— Quarantine.— Two Thousand Dollars' Worth of Strategy CHAPTER II. Sunday in Galveston. — Houses built on the Sand. — Bathing Facilities.— Expostulating with a Policeman. — A Popular Fallacy. — The Beach.— Scanty Costume. — The Man with a Spy-Glass. — The Bar. — A Thousand Per Cent.— Acres of Calico. — At Dinner. — The Doctor CHAPTER III. The Procession. — Extraordinary Outfit. — The Doctor's Arsenal. — He wanted to buy Beads for the Indians. — All Aboard for Houston. — Buffalo Bayou. — The Magnolia. — Spanish Moss. — Ninety-Five Degrees in the Shade. — The Superannuated Old Hen-Coop. — Ten Miles of History.— Dry Seasons. — "Let's Wood Up." — Shooting Alligators. — Devastating the Boat's Commissary. — The Journey of Life. — Born with the Family Plate in his Mouth. — Arrival at Houston. — Houston in 1840. — " Infested with Red Ants and Methodists." — Hotel Chair-Sculptors. — Competitive Lying. — The Rooter Dog. — "Green from the States." — Tropical Welcome.— One Policeman to
Fifteen Saloons CHAPTER IV. "Giving Galveston Hell." — Pluribus Unum, Nox Vomica, Vox Populi.— Anchoring Galveston Island with an Artesian Well. — Houston as a Seaport. — White-Winged Messengers of Commerce. — "Damned Sight of Curiosity for a Stranger." — A Blooded Grade of Mosquitoes. — The Muscogee Indian. — "Wild Unpremeditated Eloquence." — "Semi-Barbaric Pictures of Homer." — Howling Jews-Harp, the Indian Chief.— The Doctor Disgusted. — Another Idol Broken. — The Noble Savage a Fraud. — The Future of Houston CHAPTER V. In Search of Saddle-Horses. — A Caballada. — The Wild Steed of the Prairie. — Yells Unearthly and Language Sulphureous. — The Castilian Caballo. — Alphabetical Vagaries. — A Picturesque Plug. — The Clay-bank Pony. — Our Outfit. — The Texas Saddle. — On Board a Mexican Mustang. — A Corner in Corn. — Phenomenally Productive Soil. — Immense Extent of Texas. — Romance in Figures. — Speaking in Italics. — Swearing in Large Capitals. — Invented History. — "Sure, I'm in Texas Now." — Land of Desperadoes and Long-Horned Cattle. — The London " Spectator, and John Wesley Hardin. — Out on the Prairie. — Bucking Ponies. — A Moving Sight. — No Pomp and Circumstance about Him.— Bucked CHAPTER VI. The Brazos Bottom. — Money growing on Trees. — The Oratorical Bore.— "Louder! Louder! Louder!" — The Old Plantation before the War.— The Negro as a Slave. — The Negro as a Free Man. — " Right Smart o' Distance." — " Skirmishin' 'roun'fur Grub." — "I ain't no Flossifer." — Los Brazos de Dios. — A Depraved Set. — First American Colony in Texas. — Free versus Slave Labor. — The Story told by Judge Schultz.— An Unadulterated Lie CHAPTER VII. Sugar-Cane and Molasses. — "You must furnish your own Barrels." — Mode of Travelling —Camping Out. — Unhorsed on the Prairie. — A Woful Sight. — After-Supper Reflections. — Night in the Woods. — A Chorus of Demons. — The Doctor's Mistake. — A Reservoir of Mirth. — A Ghastly Joke. — The Coyote.— Room to think. — A Place to practise Oratory.— Dinner in Camp CHAPTER VIII. In Search of Shelter. —"Hello, There!" —The Old Ruin. —The Hospitable Southern Planter—The Planter's Residence. — The Colonel. —"The Healthfullest Country in the World.'" — Quinine. — Corn-Bread and Fry.— "When I kern Here in '46." — Game. — Threatened with a Chill.— Fish-Stories by the Doctor. — Piscatorial Lying by the Colonel. — "Chawed up Considerable." — Needing Fresh Air. — "Chills is Noth-in'." — The Absurd Potato-Bug. —Man's Extremity the Mosquito's Opportunity. —" The Vittles sot Out." —The "Sweetnin"' gave Out — Thousands of Cows and no Milk. — The Hired Man's Grace before Meat. — Four Dollars' Worth of Hospitality. — Filing a Counter-Claim CHAPTER IX. A Texas Negro.— Was it a Circus? — Going to Camp-Meeting. — The Great Gun of the Occasion. — Discharging the Gun. — The Camp-Ground.— " A Mightv Movin' Preacher." — " I's Tolerable, Thankv." — The Negroes' Wonderful Power of Memorizing. — The Hymn. — The Prayer. — " Amen! Yes, Lord."— "A Powerful Rattler of Dry Bones." —The Text: "Death in de Pot." — " De Kingdom am a comin'." — The Exhortation. — The Peroration. — Religious Paroxysms. — Getting Religion. — An Effectual Means of Grace. — Improvising. — Lost in the Woods. — Directions as to the Way. — A Blazed Road CHAPTER X. Suffering from Thirst. — In Search of Water. — Deceptive Distances. — A Sabbath Day's Journey. — Mr. O'Lafferty burned the Biscuits. — A Conversational Cyclone. — A Malicious Slander. — Matches that would not Ignite. — "Good Luck to Yez." — Dry Seasons.—The Norther. — A Copious Breeze. — Yesterday and Today in Texas. — The Strangei and the Norther. — Extraordinary Fall of a Thermometer. — The Country-Store.—The Post-Office. —A Position of Alleged Rest. —A Smart Aleck. — Luke Sneed, the Sceptic. — " Thar ain't no Hell." — Pete White's Ghost. — News of the Battle. — A Curious Coincidence CHAPTER XL Absorbing Cattle Statistics. — Easy to get killed in Texas. — Effects of calling Mr.------a Liar. — The Man, Dirks. — He wanted to be hung. — No Malice, No Murder. — An Atrocious Murder. — Difference between the Allegata and the Probata. — Self-Defence. — An Alibi. — A Defective Indictment.— Temporary Insanity. — Sentenced to Death. — Reprieved.— He left Texas to get hung. — The Tarantula. — Association of Ideas.— Three Old Maids. —The Tune that killed the Cow. —On an Irish Mountain. — Tim the Gamekeeper. — The Murderous Old Earl. — The White Hare. — The Ghost of the Neighboring Chief. — Lost in the Mists of the Mountain. — Reflections on my Sinful BaseBall Days. — The Moonshiners CHAPTER XII. A Corn-Bread-and-Coffee Hotel. — Eagle Lake. — An Enterprising Landlord. — Foolinsr with a Mortgage. — The Drummer. — " Mine Got! Vat a Schmall Ped is Dot." —He wanted to " Schmoke a Leetle." — The Remnant.— The Ranch Del Rio. — Trying the Remedies. — He wanted to die in Peace. — " Signs " on the Prairie. — Buzzards as Detectives. — Rounding Up. — Cutting Out. — Branding. — More than the Calf-Skin would hold.— Throwing the Lasso. — No Enterprise about a Cow. — Ear-Marks.— The Doctor Rounded Up CHAPTER XIII. Extent of Texas Cattle Business. — Annual Exports. — Mode of Raising Cattle. — A Cattle-King. — A Gorgeous Wedding-Present. — John Timon of San Patricio. — The Cowboy. — The Texas Cattle-Drive. — Two Ounces of Truth to the Ton. — Sam Grant, Captain of the Drive. — The best Stock-Range on Earth. — Sam Grant's Story. — On the Cattle-Trail.— Indians. — Frontier Dick. — The Whiskey all gone. CHAPTER XIV. The Seedy-Looking Man. — The Real-Estate Agent. — Elastic Tales. — The Immigration Agent. — Eloquent Mendacity. — The Old Veteran. — Extraordinary Mortuary Statistics. — Battle-Scarred Heroes. — Frontier Eloquence.— Shaking him off. — A Drug in the Market. — Health Legend.— A Shadow of Antiquity. — Don Jose Ignacio Fuerte Vejez. — Suffering for a Funeral. — Back from the Valley of the Shadow. — Was it the Padre, or the
Devil ? CHAPTER XV. We went Fishing. — The Profane General. — A Mexican Panther. — "Dat ar Painter Nine Feet High." — A Joke on the General. — Death of Mose Patterson's Work-Ox. — English Immigrants. — Letters to the Times.— A Briton's Grievance. — Powerful Imagination. — Rainfall in Texas.— New Philadelphia. — Raising a Disturbance with a Plough. — "A Blawst-ed Country." — Advice to Immigrants. — Riding in a Circle. — He "Got Hungry." — Interviewing an Immigrant. — The English Yeoman. — " Ich Verstehe Sie Nicht." — The Man in Lynn, Mass. — The Doctor tampers with the Immigrant Business. — The Texas Navy CHAPTER XVI. Some Scraps of History. — A.D. 1582. — Slow in Settling Up. — Missions of St. Francis of Assisi. — The Monk and the Soldier. — Indios Reduci-dos. — Converting Indians with a Thumb-screw. — The Backsliding Indian Che-qua-que-ko. — The Spanish Plan of Salvation. — Religious Zeal and Enterprise. — A.D. 1690-1715. — Founding of Missions in Texas. — Robert Cavalier de La Salle. — The French Colony. — Our Lady of Guadaloupe.—A.D. 1800. — Scientific Explorations. — Philip Nolan.— An Empresario. — Flush Times. — He didn't have the Boots. — Yearling Bulls the Circulating-Medium. — Ancient Spanish Document. — The Marquis de Casa Fuerte CHAPTER XVII. A.D. 1822. —A High Official. —Calling out the Militia. —The Political Chief. — Curtailing Civil Liberty. — The First Carpet-Bagger. — Tampering with Mexican Soldiers. — The Germ of Texas Liberty, Fifteen Buckshot.— Declaration of Texas Independence. — Cultivating the Germ.— Military Events. — The Napoleon of the West. — A.D. 1836. — The Republic of Texas. — Texas Keeping House. — A Strain on the Imagination. — A Bad Settlement. — A Preaching. — He didn't Swear. — The Wrong Bottle. — Poisoned. — The Snake-Bite Remedy. — Crossing the Navidad. — A Ludicrous Act. — A Variety of Fences. — Fencing an Acre with a Toothpick CHAPTER XVIII. Greyhounds. — Coursing Jack-Rabbits. — "Give the Dogs a Start." — Lawlessness in Texas. — A Vendetta. — The Reign of Terror. — John Wesley Hardin. — Apologizing to the Widow. — "Didn't know the Stranger." — The Suttons Corralled. — Drawing up a Treaty. — Wes' Hardin interrupts the Court. — Some Sacred Spots. — The Affluent Editor. — Blurring an Editor. — The Archimedean Lever. — The Texas Rangers. — Wanted to be a Ranger. — The "Cavortin' Cataclysm of the Calaveras Canyon."— Strategy. — On the Trail. — The Long-Range Roarer of the Sierra Mojada. — More Strategy CHAPTER XIX. A Big Bore. — "Hold up your Hands." — Arrested for Horse-Stealing.— About to be Hung. — The Bug from under the Wrong Chip. — Saved.— Jim McSnifter. — Luling. — A Railroad Terminus. — A "Hoorah Town."— Characteristic of American Civilization. — Mellowing Effects of Time.— Irresistible Pioneers. — Monte Joe, the Gambler. — Wore Crape on his Hat —Little May. —The Child and the Birds. — Fairy-Tales. — Death of Little May CHAPTER XX. Leaving Luling. — The "Dry Year." — Couldn't raise even an Umbrella.— Climatic Reveries. — The Weather-Sharp. — Grapes. — Fort Bend County Claret. — The Marine Editor of the Houston " Age." — Effects of the Claret. — "Run for Whiskey or a Doctor." — A Consumptive Cured.— " Old Sangerfest." — Dead as vun Door-Knob." — Pickling the Remains.— " Cured, py Schingo !" CHAPTER XXI. Approaching San Antonio. — Mexican Teamsters, English Expletives. — Mexican and Donkey. — Buenos Dias. — Michael Sullivan's Spanish Lesson.— "No Entiendo, Senor." —The Haythen. —The "Quaint Old City." —Foreign Aspect of San Antonio. — The Man with a Title. — Royal Order, A.D. 1730. — City of -the Alamo. — The Alamo. — The Aged Gentleman. The Spot where Crockett fell. — Heroic Deeds CHAPTER XXII. Old Spanish Record. — A Proclamation. — The Old and the New. — Licensed to Marry. — The San Antonio River. — "Walk your Horses." — Commerce Street. — Via Dolorosa. — Streets built by an Earthquake. — I Sat down. — The Legend. — The Padre making Fast Time. — Two Hundred Years Ago. — Carrying off a Hole in the Ground CHAPTER XXIII. The Dust. — Spanish Profanity. — Cursing a Steeple on a Church. — The San Antonio River again. — The Abbe Domenech. — 0 Temporal 0 Mores! 0 Moses! — A Mexican Jacal. — Purple-haired Saints. — The Tortilla.— The Tamale. — Evil Association. — Frijoles. — The National Berry. — Chastising the Earth with a Hoe CHAPTER XXIV. Cultivating Revolutions. — They take any Thing.— Small-Pox. — Whistling to their Corpse. — A Donkey. —On the Jury that tried his own Case. — The Irrigating-Ditches. — " Ought to be Dammed." — St. Anthony. — Jealousy among the Saints. — A Military Saint. — Naming a River CHAPTER XXV. A Pre-adamite Reptile. — Ben Milam. — Military Headquarters. — Gen. Ord.— Gen. Trevino. — Col. Moca. — "I am a whole Hospital." — Ripe for a Lunatic-Asylum. — The War-Department. — Red Tape.—"Respectfully Referred." —The San Antonio Boy. —A Wicked Sell CHAPTER XXVI. The Bull-Fight. — Heroic Matador. — Gored by a Splinter. — Suffering to see a Bull-Fight — Pelon. —" I had it when I was a Child." —"Another Stranger fooled on Pelon." — Secret of Commercial Success. — Sunday in San Antonio. — The "Garten Laube " on Puritan Intolerance. — A Horse of Another Color. — Liver Encourager CHAPTER XXVII. Taking the Town. — The Hilarious Cowboy. — He dined from Twelve till Three. —Dogs. — The No-hair Dog.—Rats. — A Mexican Mendicant.— Speech on Finance. — Receiving a Blessing. — The Judge. — He "came with the Cholera." —The Candidate for Coroner. — "Call him a Liar." — A Grand Concert. — The Poorhouse. — Progress. — Carretas CHAPTER XXVIII. A Device of the Early Missionaries. — Wild Riding. — A Stranger named McGinnis.— " No Shooting Aloud." — City Ordinances in 1823.— The Chanting Priests. —The Wicked Parrot. —"Ora Pro Nobis."—Jake Mullins. — Texas Strawberries. — An Undutiful Son. — Searching for his Shotgun CHAPTER XXIX. Adels Verein. — Curious Colonization Scheme. — Painfully Exclusive. — Afflicted with a Pedigree. — Lord Palmerston's Wiles. — English Policy.— German Emigration. — Prince Solms Braunfels in Texas.— Evidences of Business Ability. — Large Operation in Real Estate. — A Man of Low Degree. — The Prince's Body-Guard. — " Herr Von Wrede, is that my Army ?" — A Business Man. — Baron von Meusebach. — Three Thousand Destitute Immigrants. — Fritznoodle's Mismanagement. — Only Fifteen Hundred Survivors CHAPTER XXX. The Stage-Driver. — Stage-Robbery. — The Reporter. — Extremes. — New Braunfels. — Phlegmatic Teutons. — Songs of Fatherland. — "Dot Fellow talks about Schneider."—He knew the Mule. — Texas Stockmen. The Comal River. — Fritz Schimmelpfenig. — A Man of Influence.— Going back to Fatherland. — Incredulity of the Burgomaster. — Paralyzing the Aristocracy.— He brought his Bones back with him CHAPTER XXXI. The Red-faced Man.—Down on Style. — "For Heaven's Sake, explain Yourself." — Back to San Antonio. — Wool Exchange. — The Sentimental Tourist. — Dropping a Tear at the Local Thermopylae. — Raining Employees and Tin Dinner-Pails. — The Grand Jury ought to be indicted.— The Mission San Jose. — The Sword and the Crozier CHAPTER XXXII. A Prominent Desperado. — Offering up a Victim. — Murder. — A Mere Formality. — Brown Bowen. — Off to the Hanging. — Gonzales. — The Lexington of Texas. — The Bald-headed Man. — He wanted a Brandy Peach.— Interviewing a Murderer. — An Excited Lawyer. — "Bring your Children around to see me hung." — Narrow Escape of the Clergyman.— Around the Scaffold. — The Execution CHAPTER XXXIII. A Barbecue. — The Ancient Briton. — The Modern American. — The Sierra Mojada Mines. — Gen. Baylor's Silver-Mountain. — "A Good Thing."— Chopping out Silver with an Axe. — No Capital needed. — A Sierra Mojada Sufferer. — Unrecognizable. — Discovery of the Mines. — The True Version.— Pursued by Indians.— Silver Bullets. — Assaying Mrs. Parker's Aged Mother. — Lost Mines. — Vague Traditions. — His Imperial Majesty, Iturbide. — Anastasio Bustamente. — For the Public Good.— The Spanish Plan. — The American Plan CHAPTER XXXIV. West of San Antonio. — Cooking a Biscuit.—Awaiting the Result. — Talk about Indians. — The Doctor's Threats. — Discretion. — Talking Ollen-dorf's Spanish Exercises. — A Disappointment. — Only a Greaser. — An Early Settler. — "Wasn't raised Civilized." — "Want to buy a Coon?"— " Owin'to how You was Raised." — "Whiskey? I Should Say So."— "Stand off Twenty Yards." — Sheep-Raising. — Texas Shepherd.—A Sheep Camp. — Sheep Statistics. — A Goose-Ranch CHAPTER XXXV. The Sewing-Machine Agent. — Th.e_ Mesquite-Tree. — Animated Nature. — The Doctor's Deadly Aim. — The Doctor attempts a Witticism. — The Late Fratricidal Struggle. — Texas during the War. — The Reporter's War-Experience. —An Inhuman Order. — The Hireling Foe. — Not Much of a Patriot. — Battle of Norris's Bridge. — The Sanguinary Field.— No Subject to joke about. — " Freezing his Damned Rebel Legs off."— Scouting around the Truth. — Precipitating the Conflict. — Confederate Rations. — Federal Relations. — Weeping over an Empty Sardine-Box CHAPTER XXXVI. Picket-Duty. — He had No Friends. — "It's Worse than a Coyote." — An Historic Plug of Tobacco. — The Carnage at Norris's Bridge. — Shelling.— A Surprise. — "Deploy to the Right." — "Disperse,you Blamed Fool."— "Hurrah for the Southern Confederacy!" — He kept the Bridge.— Bad Old Men CHAPTER XXXVII. The Indian Country. — Big-Foot Wallace.— "Injuns is Injuns." — The Untutored Savage. — Commercial Relations. — Wicked Partners. — Travelling at Night. — Dividing the Responsibility. — The Aboriginal Tramp.—Satisfied with Half a Loaf. — Friendship of Jonathan and Pythias.— Unprofitable Neighbors. — Terra Desconocido.— Falling Back. — Violent Horseback Exercise. — The Heretic Gringo. — Riding a Thousand Miles in Ten Days. — Orders in Advance. — A Business-Card. — Not like an Indian. — Policy of the United States. — Indian Agents. — Beef and Blankets. — A Bare Margin. — Misdirected Compassion CHAPTER XXXVIII. Indian Deviltries. — Guilt of Reservation Indians. — Raids. — No Sympathy.— Iniquitous Management. — Abstract G. — List of Killed. — A Cry for Help. — Murder of Gen. Byrne. — Our Paternal Government. — New Posts needed. — The Soldier who lost his Indians. — Apache John.— "Heap Hungry, Heap Die."—Gen. Sheridan's Report. — Heroic but Hopeless Defence. — Document E. — Houses filled with Sorrow. — Thieves and Cut-Throats. — Desolated Homes. — "Marauding Villains."— Crying for Justice CHAPTER XXXIX. Overworked Mexican Soldiers. — Duck-Hunting. — Old Colorado. — Two Hundred Thousand Cattle Stolen. — Congressional Investigations. — Notes on Stock-Raising. — Helplessness of the Mexican Government.— National Pride. — Talk about War. — Dropping the Subject. — Action of the United States. —What caused " Great Irritation."—United-States Diplomacy. — Mild Language by Hamilton Fish. — English Diplomacy.— Strong Language by Earl Russell CHAPTER XL. Rip Ford and the Goat-Claim. — Goats multiplying Unreasonably. — " Texas won't hold her Goats."—Figuring on Mules. — The Rio Grande. — A Crooked Story. — Involuntary Ablutions. — Full of Whiskey and Party Pride. — A Citizen of Two Countries. — Tying Volunteers with a Rope. Pronunciamentos.— Levying Prestimas. — How Revolutions are started. Mexican Bravado. — The Reporter's Fanfaronade. — A Revolutionary Editor. — The Reporter interviews Himself CHAPTER XLI. Illiterate Officers. — Mexican Vouchers. — Satisfactory Evidence of Death. — The Santa Fe Expedition. — Cutting off his own Ears. — The Reporter in Arms again. — Real Hard Services. — A Military Necessity. — Grim-visaged War. — Luxury of Sleep. — Wild Horses. — Mustangers. — Buffalo-Hunting.— The Mexican Pastor. — An Aristocratic Bull-Whacker.— The Tramp CHAPTER XLII. The Reporter again to the Front. — A Hog-Story.— A Suspicious Farmer.— Insulting a Sacred Cause. — Assuming an Offensive Position. — Insult added to Injury. — The Distinguished Lawyer's Story. — The Colonel of the 33d. — Spare-Ribs. — An Old Patriarch. — Smoot, the Ex Stage-Driver. — Operations in Pork. — Pursued. — Arrested. — Released. — A Base Insinuation CHAPTER XLIII. Mineral Resources of Texas. — The Journalist. — " He tried his Editorials on Me." — Profoundly Exasperating. — Wishing for Death. — Cutting off a Dog's Tail by Inches. — Novel Mode of disseminating Intelligence.— A Heavy Editorial. — An Excited Patron. — "Stop my Paper." — A Campaign Document. — The Post-Trader. — A Change of Administration.— The Farmer and the Watermelon. — An Agricultural Address. — A Bankrupt Newspaper. — The Daily Bugle CHAPTER XLIV. The Old Hunter. — The Llano Estacado. — The Cruel Mexican Maiden.— At the Presidio. — Bracing up the Old Hunter. — An Absurdity. — The Flask. — The Mustang Spring. — A Very Clever Gentleman. — A Temporary Loan. — A Permanent Investment. — Purchasing-Power of $2.50 CHAPTER XLV. Shaping our Course for Austin. — A Camel Ranch. — The Cactus. — End of our Ride. — Arrival in Austin. — Parting with our Ponies. — An Affecting Scene. — The Capital of the State of Texas. — A Miracle of Architectural Absurdity. — The Alamo Monument. — The Legislative Halls. — Oil-Paintings. — George Washington. — Sam Houston. — Davy Crockett CHAPTER XLVI. A Sweet Singer. — A Good Grammarian. — Meteoric Genius. — Gems of Fancy. — Measuring Poetry by the Bushel. — Shakspeare Discounted.— Fifteen-cents-on-the-Dollar Residences. — Victoria R. — Treaty of Annexation. — Legislative Dignity. — Parliamentary Tactics
CHAPTER XLVII. The Imported Dog. — Thrall's History of Texas. — Immigration. — Kind of Immigrant Texas needs. — What Texas offers the Immigrant. — Solid Facts. — Useful Truths. — The Future of the State. — Leaving Texas. — Finis
Thanks for looking!
|
|  |
| |
|