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The Baldwin Library
STORY OF THE MURETON FAMILY.
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STORY
OF THE
ed
WioRETON PaAMILyY.
BY
THE AUTHOR OF “THE VILLAGE BOYS.â€
APRN,
THOMAS NELSON AND SONS,
LONDON AND EDINBURGH.
MDCUCLIL
OE Cg hie
Nes caagn
STORY
OF THE
MORETON FAMILY.
BY
THE AUTHOR OF “ THE VILLAGE BOYS.â€
And swect it is the growth to trace
Of worth, of intellect, of grace,
In bosoms where our labours first
Bid the young seed of spring-time burst,
And lead it on from hour to hour,
To ripen into perfect flower.
LONDON:
T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW;
AND EDINBURGH,
MDCCCLIL
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PREFACE.
a
Tne details of domestic life must, to a great extent,
be everywhere the same. The object of the following
story is to combine these with healthful moral instrue-
tion, and to show how a firm reliance upon an over-
ruling Providence, and earnest endeavours to promote
the good of others, will insure our own happiness.
A family in moderate circumstances constitute the
actors in this narrative, and show that the ability
to do good lies not so much in wealth as in well-
directed effort. The sweet ties of family affection and
individual influence are recognised; and our readers
will permit the hope, that, without startling incident,
great exploit, or magnificent undertaking, the simple
history of the Moreton Family may possess an interest
for them, and awaken in their hearts an earnest desire
so to live, and so to use the means God may put in
their power, as to promote the true prosperity of their
own happy land, so peculiarly favoured by the Divine
blessing, and realizing, by their own experience, that
“happy ts that people whose God is the Lord!â€
ths - .
ne oh thee ?
ale © wile tne
ee eee
Ea Oe
: ae al
CONTENTS.
(nap. Page
1. The Family Conclave, oie one eae 1
Il. Preparations for Removal, ... ooo —_— eve 9
11L Notes of Warning, ... a eo eee ein 18
IV. Dr. Newton, ove ooo eee eee ove 25
V. Uncle Alfred’s Gift, ... ont ove eee ens 31
VI. The Departure, eco ese ove eee oie 36
VII. Journeying through the Woods, ose jon oa 40
VIII. Encampment in the Woods, eee eee 46
IX. A Sabbath in the Woods, ov cee one ‘ 50
X. The Rainy Day’s Journey, ... ove eco oe 57
XI. Lakeland, ... ee eee ese eee 63
XII. The Log-Cabin, ete ose eee eee 72
XIII. Patrick's Home, eee eee
XIV. Neighbours,
eee eee eee 82
eee ove eee oce 87
XV. Thomas Revere, eee cee eco 95
XVI. Mary's Letter, eee eve es ; eee 102
XVII. Farming, .. eee ove eos ese ose 108
XVIII. Charles Moreton, ... ove oe . oe “SS
XIX. Letters, ove ° ooo eve eee one 127
XX. The Church and the Minister, eee ese eee 133
XXI. The Steam Saw-Mill and the Distillery, oon _ 141
XXII. Willie Moreton’s Death, ove cee eee ove 147
XXIII. Conclusion,
eae eee ere eee 152
THE MORETON FAMILY.
CHAPTER I.
THE FAMILY CONCLAVE.
“ Now, what do you all say about it?†said Mr. Moreton,
appealing to the members of his cheerful family circle,
in the prospect of an important change. “I want the
opinion of every one of you. But let your mother speak
first.â€
“The change will affect the future life of the children
more than my own, my dear husband; and my feelings
must not unduly influence our decision. Let them tell
us their opinion, and then we will tell them ours.â€
“ Well, Robert, you are the eldest.â€
“T say, father, let us go. I am young, but am strong,
and almost a man; and I know that we can succeed. I
am ready to go.â€
“And so am JI, father,’ said Henry. “I say with
Robert, let us go and take a new farm. Iam willing to
work hard upon it.
Mary came next in order of age, and all eyes were
turned towards her. She sat with her head resting upon
her hand, evidently in serious thought. She paused but
a moment; then, raising her head, she said—
“T am willing to go, father.â€
A
2 THE MORETON FAMILY.
The motner saw a tear glistening in the daughter’s eye,
and kindly said—
“Speak your feelings freely, my child. Remember
that we are all one family, and that the wishes and happi-
ness of each member of our little circle is the wish and
happiness of the whole; and that the opinion of each
will have its due weight in our family conclave.â€
“I am willing to go, mother,†again replied Mary;
“but, for the moment, our home here seemed too plea-
sant to leave; and I thought of our many friends, the
dear old trees, and my beautiful garden. It was only for
a@ moment, though,†she added, with a bright smile.
“We can soon make a home there, and find friends,
while I shall learn to love the wide forests and the beau-
tiful wild flowers.â€
“Father, are there any bears out there?†asked Little
Alice.
“No, my darling,†said the father, smiling with the
others to see the wondering eyes and alarmed counte-
nance of his flaxen-haired pet.
“ Willie says that there are bears and Indians in the
woods.â€
“ Willie does wrong to try to frighten you with such
stories. There are both bears and Indians in some parts
of the world; but where we think of going there are
neither of them now.â€
“Tf there are no bears there, and mother is going, and
Willie, I want to go too. Are you going, Willie?â€
“T rather think I shall, Ally. That is, if father thinks
I am worth taking,†said he, roguishly.
“Perhaps he may not think you are worth leaving,â€
said Robert. “But you are all talking out of your turns.
l’rank ought to have spoken next to Mary.â€
Frank’s opinion was evidently guided by Mary’s, and
Was given guardedly.
“We are very happy here,†said he; “and if we are
THE FAMILY CONCLAVE. 2
poor, we shall be soon old enough to help father and
mother. Robert has almost learned his trade now. If I
am to be a printer, I think I had better stay here. Print-
ing is of no use out in the woods.â€
“It will not always be ‘ the woods’ out there,†replied
his father. “We may want a newspaper started where
we are, and you will be just the one to carry it on. If,
after you are old enough to learn printing as a trade,
you still desire it, whether we live here or there, I pro-
mise you that you shall have the opportunity.â€
«That ought to satisfy you, Frank,†said Charles, who
was a year younger than his brother. “I should like to
go. I read the other day about the wild turkeys and
ducks, the deer and the woodcock. O! I should like to
live in the woods!†and visions of the time when he
should be the happy possessor of a gun and a dog, float-
ing through his mind, made his earnest, expressive couli-
tenance beautiful.
“Charlie shall keep us supplied with game,†said
Henry, entering into the enthusiasm of his brother ;
“and Robert and I will help father to raise the wheat
for bread†—
“ Which I will make,†said Mary
“And J will eat,†said Willie. “Who says I cannot
help?â€
“There is one more to speak. Annie, dear, what do
you say?†asked the father.
Annie, the twin-sister of Charles, was a bashful, timid
child, of ten years of age, and was often overlooked in
the noisy movements of her brothers and sisters. A
naturally thoughtful habit of mind had been increased by
almost constant feeble health and a slight deformity of
person. But her invariable sweetness of disposition and
gentleness of character and manner made her the darling
of the family circle. As they now looked at her little
pale face, and large, beaming, intellectual eyes, and
4 THE MORETON FAMILY.
remembered how dependent she was upon joys that were
brought to her, and how unable she was to seek active
pleasures, there came a hush and silence over the little
group, for they now recollected that to her the change
would be greater than to the others, and be fuller of
privations and hardships. Nor was this silence broken,
until, in gentle tones, she said—
“If we all live together, and God dwell with us there,
we shall be happy.â€
They all understood little Annie’s reference to the
question asked by a child, when moving to a new house
—* Will God live with us there?†And to them, brought
up and taught as they were to love and reverence the
great and blessed truths of revelation, the thought of
God, at this crisis of their family history, was not an
unwelcome one.
“Annie is right,†said the mother, after a moment’s
silence. “If we love each other, and the God of love
dwell with us, it matters not where we are, we must be
happy. I believe, with your father, that it is better for
us, as a family, to move to the West. The majority
agree with me; and,†she added playfully, “under our
government, the majority must rule, Is it not so,
husband?â€
“Yes, my dear, and a large majority we seem to have
this time. We shall all have inconveniences and troubles
connected with the moving, and with the new home.
There will be severe labours to be performed, hardships
to be.endured, and some privations, accompanied with
great fatigue. Buta spirit of love and hopeful cheerful-
ness will enable us to bear these, and not let them
become too burdensome to us. We are all strong, well,
and able to labour, except Annie; and Dr. Newton tells
_â„¢me that the change of climate will, without doubt,
benefit her; so, if we have God’s blessing on our under-
taking, I can see no reason why we should not go. In
THE FAMILY CONCLAVE. 5
all probability we shall gain, as it regards worldly pros-
perity ; and you will have a better and a more independent
start in life than you could have here, where there is
more competition, and the means of living are more
divided. But our own advantage ought not to be the
only motive in going, nor our own prosperity the only
consideration. We were not placed upon this earth to
think ot and labour only for ourselves. Whether we try
to do it or not, we influence those about us. By saying
and doing those things that are right, we can gain a good
influence—one that shall make others better and happier ;
and we may thus fulfil the great end and object of life.
If we do not mean to aim at this, as well as our own
advantage, in removing to another place, it will be better
that we stay where we are; for, to succeed fully in our
enterprise, we must go as a God-fearing family. The
restraints of society will, in a measure, be removed from
us, leaving us to make known by our actions how far we
are governed by love to God, and bya desire to make his
will our law. There must be a unity of purpose with
us, each one, as it were, pulling with the rest, and striving
to help on the welfare and comfort of the whole. We
must go with a determination to be happy— to look,’ as
Jean Paul says, ‘on the sunny side of the events and busi-
ness ot life. Such a disposition will materially lessen our
labours and brighten our hearts. If we have discontented
longings for our old home (as we may have), we may
not let our murmurings and repinings affect the cheerful-
ness or hopefulness of those who do not suffer from
them. Being strangers in a strange land, we must cling
to each other for our support and comfort, and seek our
pleasure in each other’s society, and each of us contribute
to the happiness of the whole. I do not doubt, my dear
children, that you will fulfil my expectations ; but we
shall be placed in new circumstances, and cannot now
tell what traits of character those circumstances may
6 THE MORETON FAMILY.
develop in us all. It is better, then, to speak of these
matters openly and freely, calmly to think of what we
relinquish, and with deliberation to form our plans for
future action; for ‘to forewarn is to forearm ourselves.’
Do you all say that we had better go?â€
These was now a unanimous yote in favour of a new
home, and that home one in the great West. Even the
little Alice, scarcely seven years of age, gave her Opinion
understandingly and seriously ; while to the older mem-
bers of the family the project assumed a more enlarged
aspect and bearing, and their personal responsibilities in
the removal gave to each of them a feeling of deep in-
terest in its success. As they afterwards kneeled about
the family altar, and commended themselves, with all
their plans, to the care and guidance of their heavenly
Father, there was an earnest desire in every heart for
God’s direction and blessing; for they felt that it was
“not in man who walketh to direct his steps.†bai
“Ti cousin Susan would but go with us, mother,†said
Mary, as she sought her room before retiring, “ i should
desire nothing more.â€
“ We can ask her; and perhaps she may be persuaded
to join her fortunes to ours,†replied her mother,
The family circle to which we have so unceremoniously
introduced our readers, was that of Mr. James Moreton.
He was the father ot eight children, five of whom were
boys—the eldest, Robert, being a young man of seventeen.
His school education was completed, and for the last year
he had been engaged in learning the trade of carriage-
building ; his father deeming it best to gratify a natural
taste which he showed fur mechanics.
Henry was a year and a half younger than Robert, with
more taste for books and quiet employment; but he was
practical and persevering, with a ready will and a strong
hand for labour. For several years he had been employed,
THE FAMILY CONCLAVE. 7
during the summer months, working with his father upon
the farm,and spent the winter in school studies and duties.
Mary was fourteen years of age, of a quick apprehen-
sion and tenacious memory. She was like Henry in dis-
position and character ; but she had also inherited t:om
her mother an appreciation and abiding love for the beau-
tiful in nature, which seemed to govern her whole life.
It was not romance or sentiment which actuated her, so
much as love; and her own affectionate impulses, sancti-
fied by the Spirit of God, led her to view those by whom
she was surrounded as objects of loving interest and
tender affection. She was a gay, cheerful, bright-eyed
young girl, with some personal beauty; but her chief
charm was her singular disinterestedness and constant
watchfulness for the comfort and good of others. Happy
as the bird, her voice would be heard like it, sending
forth, now here, now there, sweet notes of joy, as she,
with busy hands, but light untroubled heart, was em-
ployed in the daily pursuits of domestic life—her cheerful
thoughts finding utterance in song so constantly, that her
mother was wont to call her “her bird.â€
Frank was naturally selfish and impatient; yet, over
the infirmities of his temper had Mary thrown the mantle
of her love: often by a gentle, persuasive word, quieting his
ebullitions of passionate anger, and with her sunny smile
winning him back to peace with others and with himself.
He was an object of solicitude to his parents; yet they
could see, year by year, that the domestic influence of
home was rendering him more considerate, softening his
temper, and making him less hasty in his words and
actions.
Charlie was an impetuous, rash little fellow, ten years
of age, full of daring, and with a disposition to think quite
as much ot himself as he ought to think. He was as im-
pulsive in his affections as in his pursuits—often bois-
terously fond of his mother and sisters, and then again
8 THE MORETON FAMILY.
as noisily devoted to something else. Yet he was yield-
ing and easily guided, for his feelings were tender and
quick ; and if he did wrong, no one could be more sorry
and penitent than he was, as soon as he saw that it was
so. Annie was too feeble to enter into his sports or plans;
yet, in her dependence, he found a reason why he should
constitute himself her protector and guide ; and it was into
her ear that he poured forth all the plans which his active
brain formed, and it was her feeble voice which dissuaded
him from undertaking one-tenth part of them; though,
in justice to our young friend Charlie’s firmness, we ought
to state that it was impossible to think twice of most of them
without seeing both their impracticability and useless-
ness,
Willie was roguish and mischievous, fond o° fun to an
alarming degree for a boy of eight years of age. Little
Alice was his chosen playmate and companion, and his
tenderness and love for her had won her heart completely.
The family appellation given to this little one, the youngest
of them all, was “our curly-head,†or “little Miss Curly-
head,†from her flaxen ringlets, which were abundant
and beautiful ; but, from the length of time consumed in
their arrangement, a source o. great annoyance to her.
She was a capricious little being, full of freaks and fan-
cies, but warm-hearted and loving.
Mr. Moreton had married in early life, and for several
years had engaged in mercantile pursuits. Owing to some
unsuccessful speculations in business, and a combination
of adverse circumstances, he lost much of his property, and
decided to gather up the small remainder of what had
originally furnished a handsome income, and purchase a
farm near his native town, a quiet Massachusetts village.
For fourteen years he had lived happily and prosperous! y
there, respected and usetul as a citizen and as a man,
fulfilling all his duties to his family and to society with
faithfulness and success. But his means were limited ;
PREPARATIONS FOR REMOVAL. 9
and while there was an abundance produced from thefarm
for their daily wants, both Mr.and Mrs. Moreton felt that
there was nothing beyond this upon which to rely for
their children.
Their plan of moving to the West was neither a sudden
nor a hasty project. It was the result of much thought
and prayerful deliberation, and together they had decided
to ascertain the feelings of the children on the subject;
and should they find them desirous or willing to go, to
remove early in the coming spring. Calling them to-
gether, as his custom was, when any affair which con-
cerned the family required action or decision, Mr. Moreton
placed it before them; he plainly spoke to them of his
own pecuniary affairs and of his prospects, so far as they
might be interested in knowing them. He then men-
tioned their plan of emigration, set its advantages and
disadvantages before them, and told them of its cares as
well as of its pleasures, trying to bring the whole matter
clearly before their minds.
The result we have laid before our readers, whose in-
terest in the family history, we hope, will lead them to
follow us during our detail of their future course.
—_— >
CHAPTER II.
PREPARATIONS FOR REMOVAL
Letter from Mr. Moreton.
Micnicas, Nov. 9, 18—
My pear WIFE AND CuitprRen,—When I left you
to start upon what Willie called “my voyage of dis-
covery,†that is, my journey, I thought that by this time
I should be able to give you some definite information
as to your future home. But I have not vet seen any7
10 THE MORETON FAMILY.
farm suitable, both to my means and my desires, that I
could purchase. I start to-morrow to examine some
lands lying in Indiana and Illinois, and in a week or two
I shall be able to let you know my decision. I am very
glad that I came to see Sor myself before purchasing, for
I find that much of the land which was highly recom-
mended to me igs hardly worth the « taking up,†as they
say here, when they speak of buying land. I believe the
land-agents think me very particular, and not easy to be
suited; but they do not know how dear to me are the
interests of my wife and children. | must look first for
a healthy location. 1 cannot consent that either they or
I shall live on the banks of a sluggish stream, or in the
neighbourhood of a Swamp. Then, J do not want a farm
Jar from some market-town, though far and near have a
different signification in the West from what they have
in New England. Thirty miles is not Jar here. I must
look for a place where I can get lumber for a house ; and
in order to do this, a saw-mill, within dragging distance,
must be taken into consideration. A grist-mill, too, must
be thought of, where we can get our wheat and corn
ground ; and it is desirable that both of these should be
within a few miles distance of our home, and should
already have passable roads leading to them. A school
and a church, that there may be food for the mind and
the soul, are what you will all desire. Then your mother
will like to havea good doctor within reach, if you should
be sick; and that you may not be likely to get home-sick
for news from Laurelton, there must be a post-office not
very far away. I must be careful, too, not to spend too
great @ proportion of my money for land; for I shal] want
a house and barn, and some stock for the farm. I must
remember that there are taxes to pay, and be careful not to
buy more land than I can make profitable. These are some
of the things which I find every wise and would-be suc
cessful emigrant must look after.
PREPARATIONS FOR REMOVAL. il
My travelling adventures, thus far, have been various—
some pleasant, and some not at all agreeable. At this
season of the year, I cannot look for fine weather, or for
any great beauty of scenery. I have seen many of the
people who dwell in these parts of the world, and have
met with civility and even kindness wherever I have been.
Even in business matters, I have experienced nothing but
what was pleasant, and am indebted to many for valuable
hints and instructions concerning matters of which I had
been ignorant, and which I have set down in my memo-
randum-book as things to be remembered. I should have
been disappointed if I had allowed myself to look for any
great elegance of manner, or for what is called style, in
dress or mode of living. So I should, if I had expected
good roads, or elegant houses, or very magnificent show-
farms. These things I have not found. —
As to the land itself, it answers all my expectations.
There is much poor land—low, damp, and unhealthy ; but
a large proportion of it is rich, fertile, easily worked, and
yielding an abundant reward to the labourer.
On my way to this place, I stopped at the door of a
log-cabin by the roadside, to ask if I could have some
dinner. I was hospitably received, and even welcomed,
when they knew that I was from New England, for that
had been the home of my host and hostess. My wants
were provided for and my horse fed, for which I could
not persuade Mr. Thomas to take pay; for, he said, “ We
would pay anybody who would come from New England
to see us; and do you not think we like to give you a
dinner ?â€
I went with Mr. Thomas about his farm. He had bought
one hundred acres. Eighty of them he had put under
cultivation; or rather, according to the Western fashion,
forty were lying idle this year, and the forty now sown
were, after this year, to change places with them ; thus
alternating with each other. The wheat was promising
12 THE MORETON FAMILY.
finely, and he hoped soon to be able to put himself up a
frame-house. I gathered his story as we went along,
and found that in early life he had been an inmate of the
—— alms-house. Indeed, that was his birth-place; and
there he remained until his mother’s death; which
occurred when he was seven years of age. He wag soon
bound out to a neighbouring farmer ; « And,†said he «[
seem to have had luck ever since. The man I went to
live with was a good man, as well as a good farmer. He
sent me to school in the winter, and took the trouble
Sometimes to see if I understood what I studied. I had
to work pretty hard, but I was taught the best way of
doing everything, and how to save and take care of what
my labour gained. [I stayed with him until my time was
up, and after that he paid me good wages, and gave me
chances to earn money, until I had five hundred dollars
in the savings’ bank. Then, by his advice, I came out
here, bringing my wife with me. I have been here three
years, and you can see how much headway I have made.
I have a good farm. Glorious land! Is it not? You
Saw my wife and baby, and my log-house, and my large
frame-barn. I have a good team of horses, two cows, a
flock of sheep—I wish you could see my sheep !—and
I’ve got a contented heart. I mean to see my old birth-
place again, if I live; but not until my house is finished,
and paid for.â€
When I told him I intended to bring my family out
here to reside, he said he was glad of it; it was a good
country, and it only wanted good people to live in it:
and, with true Western hospitality, invited me to bring
you all to see them. I thanked him, but said that there
were quite too many of ug for their cabin, with its one
sitting-room and itg little bed-room. He laughed, and
said, “that they could make a place for us, I might be
sure.â€
This is one instance, of many that I have met, of pros
PREPARATIONS FOR REMOVAL. 13
perous emigration. Industry, good sense, and judgment,
and good habits, “ do bring good luck ;†or rather, to speak
more truly, they do bring the blessing of Providence.
It may be that I was the more forcibly impressed with
this case, because I had the opportunity to contrast it
with that of a settler with whom I had passed the pre-
vious night.
If I wished to picture discomfort in its perfection, I
would endeavour to represent the interior of that log-
cabin. There was a family—man, woman, and eight chil-
dren (just our number)—all living, sleeping, eating, and
cooking in one room, sixteen by twenty feet in size, and
dimly lighted by its two little windows! There were two
bedsteads, one of which was appropriated to myself ;
and if both bedstead and myself had not been in the
way of the cooking-stove, and the cooking-stove in the
way of both the bedstead and myself, I might, personally,
have been well accommodated. As it was, I passed a
sleepless night, and had full opportunity to watch the
movements of my host’s family.
I ought to have said, that some of them stayed in the
loft above the room during the night; and a trundle-
bed, drawn from bencath mine, was the place where a
poor sick little girl lay, with flushed cheeks, parched lips,
and a burning skin. It was nothing but a neglected
chill-fever, they said; but the little thing tossed and
moaned in her fitful slumbers, awakening my sympathies
and compassion, which were not lessened, you may be
sure, when the mother brought her a dose of calomel,
mixed with water, and held up a piece of a large yellow-
ish pickle, as an inducement to take the unpalatable
medicine !
I should frighten you all out of your desires even to
see this country, if I gave you the details of that night,
or filled up the picture with all its carelessness and want
of cleanlincss. Nor would the morning meal of poorly-
14 THE MORETON FAMILY.
prepared food, have awakened in any of you strong appe-
tites. I was glad to pay my bill, and be off early in the
morning, satisfied that more uncomfortable feelings
could scarcely be crowded into the experience of one
night than I had Supposed possible. If there had been a
necessity for all this suffering, I would have pitied, but
not complained of it ; but it could not escape the eye of
the dullest observer, that it was brought by the union of
sloth with intemperance.
An originally good and productive farm was, year by
year, growing smaller and yielding less, for the want of
a thrifty and industrious owner; while he and his whole
family indulged in continual complaints and murnurings
against their lot, finding fault with everything about
them, and never seeing that the whole blame of their ill
success lay with themselves, and that they were reaping
the result of their own doings.
These two extreme cases I have written about, because
they have come so directly under my notice. There is
every variety of life and circumstance here, and these mus,
be taken by themselves, rather than as samples of Western
life ; and we can easily draw our own lesson from them.
If the strong bonds of poverty do not hold people here in
such homes as the last I have described, the stronger
bonds of intemperance and indolence will assuredly do it.
There is no romance in life here. Itisa plain, straight-
forward, practical character and course, guided by firm
faith in an overruling Providence, which will advance the
best interests of one’s-self and of the community. And
when I think of the vast influence that these new] y-settled
states will eventual] y have upon the welfare of the nation;
of the asylum they off-r to the poorand oppressed of every
clime and country ; of the wealth of lands here lying ready
for tke toil and skill of the agriculturist ; above all, when,
as a Christian, I indulge in far-extending anticipations of
its moral progress, and the part it is yet to act in the
PREPARATIONS FOR REMOVAL. 15
evangelizing of the world—I rejoice in the thought that
I may be permitted to help on the good work; and, as
each drop goes to fill the bucket, so may each good citizen
aid in swelling the tide of its prosperity and civilization.
My letter is a long one, but I have hardly written the
half I purposed. My first feeling of dismay at the new-
ness and coarseness of things has passed away; so has
that of discouragement at the great work to be done
here; and I now view our enterprise as one in which we
may and ought to engage hopefully and happily ; for I fully
believe that, in a great measure, @ man’s prosperity is
here placed in his own keeping; and the heart to labour
and do right will not fail to bring success, both as
regards ourselves and those among whom we may be
placed.
Let us all ask the blessing of our heavenly Father, and
his direction in all our ways !—With love to all,
I am, yours affectionately,
JAMES MORETON.
P.S.—I cannot say with any confidence at what time
you may expect me at home; but a kind Prov:dence will
keep us, I trust, while we are apart, and give us the plea-
sure to meet again in health and peace. J. M.
Letter from Robert to his Fi ather.
LaurgEtton, Nov. —, 18—.
DreaR FatuHerR,—Your very welcome letter has just been
received, and I am appointed by mother to reply to it, in
the name of the family. We were pleased to hear of
your good health, and of your favourable impressions of
Western life. You do not know how much we think
about you, nor how often we talk about you, guess-
ing where you are, and what you are doing: We have
most thoroughly imbibed the spirit of emigration. Even
Alice told Mr, Speare that you had gone to buy us a farm
16 THE MORETON FAMILY.
at the West; and each of us is at work, in some way,
busying ourselves with preparations for moving in the
spring.
As you recommended, I have made an arrangement
with Mr. S——, by which I am released from further
obligation to stay with him, and have transferred myself,
tools and all, to Mr. Redding’s cabinet-shop. I have
learned already the way to put a chair or table together,
and can put up a shelf or fix a drawer quite like a worl:-
man. Mr. Redding told me himself that I was quite a
handy fellow at the trade.
Henry looks after the farm and the family at home,
but has commenced the study of surveying. This occu-
pies most of his leisure.
Mary is at school. Mother says that it is her last
winter here, and that she must devote her time to the
study of those branches in which a teacher is most neces-
sary. Music, as a science, and French, take most of her
attention, although she and Henry are trying in the
evenings to study German with Mr. Perrot. Mary de-
clares that to know how to make bread will be likely to
be of more benefit to her than how to speak German ;
but mother only smiles, and says that there is time and
opportunity for both.
Frank and Charlie are at school; but, in their leisure
hours, earnest in their preparations, though in rather
different lines. Frank is looking up and sorting out all
the books in the house, and has petitioned mother so
earnestly to allow him to take lessons in drawing and
perspective, that she has consented; and he is really
making rapid progress in this accomplishment.
Charlie, true to his native propensity, asked old Captain
Stetson if he would “teach him to fire a gun; and the old
gentleman has undertaken to initiate him in the mysteries
of holding both gun and rifle, and shooting with the
same, At first, mother objected to this, thinking he
PREPARATIONS FOR REMOVAL. 17
might be troublesome ; and, indeed, she felt that he was
too young to be trusted with such dangerous articles ;
but, upon his passing his solemn word never to touch
them without Captain Stetson’s leave, she gave her con-
sent. At her request, I made it a point to be present
during his first and second days’ exercise, that I might
look after him; but I found the responsibility of the em-
ployment had sobered his little wild head, and that if I
continued to be with him (which I was inclined to do), it
would be to take advantage of the instruction of so ex-
perienced a sportsman as Captain Stetson for myself.
He meanwhile says—and I believe he means what he
says—*that it is a pleasure to him to have us come.â€
Annie took me up into her sunny little room yester-
day, that I might see how nicely she had put up and
labelled the garden and flower-seeds. She told me that
she was making some bags to put the larger seeds in.
She really seems better and brighter for the prospect of
the change. She has promised Willie a bag for his mar-
bles, is to make a@ travelling dress for Alice’s doll, has
helped Frank to cover his books; and I heard Charles
tell her that he should want a large flannel bag made,
with a strap to go over the shoulder, for his game.
As for Willie and Alice, their arrangements would be
more apparent, and their success more complete, if they
did not pull to pieces something that they have before
done, to finish what they are now doing. But they are
well, and their bright happy faces and pleasant words
help us all along.
Cousin Susan is with us; and, since she consented to
accompany us, Mary has been as full of anticipation as
the rest of us. She goes about singing all the day, help-
ing first one and then another in their plans. Cousin
Susan said, laughingly, that she must have a trade before
she went, as a resource against a day of want. We told
her that she could teach school there ; but she said, “No,
B
18 THE MORETON FAMILY.
that was Mary’s calling; and she goes now every day to
sew with Mrs. Dearborn, and learns how to make bonnets
and cut dresses; and, when that is over, she says that
she will not say she is ready to go until she has also
learned how to cut and make clothes for us boys. Be-
fore we finish, we are likely to have every trade in the
family. I hope these plans will all meet with your ap-
probation, and that you will soon be at home to tell us so.
All send their best love to you. Mother wishes to add
a postscript for herself.
Your affectionate son,
RoBERT.
My pear Husspanp,—* Mother’s postscript†is only to
say, that a Mr. Glover has made an offer for the farm
here, and for the homestead, which your brother thinks a
very advantageous one for us. I send his letter with
this. We are all well. Robert has given you a very
detailed account of our movements and employments ;
but he has not added what my heart prompts me to say,
that our children are our treasures—good, obedient, and
loving. May we not claim for them the promise which
belongs to those that honour father and mother? And
may it not be to us a token, a providential omen of suc-
cess in our undertaking?
Yours ever.
CHAPTER III.
NOTES OF WARNING.
Tue winter was past and gone, with all its cold storms
and piercing winds, its heavy snows and blustering tem-
pests. The noble Connecticut, for three months “in icy
NOTES OF WARNING. 19
fetters bound,†was released, and its blue waters were
floating calmly on towards the ocean, glistening in the
bright sunshine, or gently rippled by the passing breeze.
The birds, in noisy companies, were returning from their
winter-quarters. By the sides of fences, and about sunny
door-steps, little delicate tufts of grass were starting,
fresh and green; and the garden-borders were gay with
bright pinks and daffodils, mingled with the crocus and
snowdrop.
Spring had come; and an early spring it was. “ It
could not last,’ and “one swallow does not make a
summer.†So the weather-wise ones said, and shook
their heads. But it did last; and if by swallows they
meant beautiful, warm, sunshiny days, there were a dozen
of these, following each other in rapid succession. It
was safe now to prophesy an early season, for it was
already there; and bustle and life it brought with it.
O how much out-of-doors playing had the Laurelton
children to do! How many boys were there, who, under
the influence of that balmy vernal air, were happy in
their sports! How many little groups of schoolfellows
loitered on their way home to exchange the pleasant
words that sprung from their light, merry hearts. Not
less busy were the older people. Merchants had taken
in the red and green flannel hangings about their doors,
and put in their place the bright calicoes and brighter
ribbons. Gardening tools were in demand, and the far-
mers were looking after their ploughs and harrows, won-
dering if it was too early to plant their fields ; while busy
housewives were busily making ready for the summer,
with their white curtains laid out ‘o bleach in the sunshine.
Amidst all this, there was one family who rejoiced
most heartily in the early opening of the season; and
that was Mr. Moreton’s. He had returned early in Janu-
ary from his western journey, having found and pur-
chased a farm in Indiana.
20 THE MORETON FAMILY.
This farm consisted of a section of good land, partly
lying on a small prairie, and partly wooded. The loca-
tion was healthy, the distance from the village of Lake-
land about two miles. Lakeland was a thriving interior
village, containing between three and four hundred in-
habitants, who had been brought there from many coun-
tries, impelled by diverse motives, and governed by various
tastes and habits; so that it was not strange that there
should be exceedingly opposite characters in society, as
it regarded its moral and intellectual state. Some of
those wants and necessities which it had at first seemed
indispensable to provide for, Mr. Moreton found he
should be obliged to give up; for the supply of others he
must wait; and for some of them he was ready to labour
and work with those among whom he was to live; so
that it was with hope for the future, and a strong deter-
mination to help on the “good time coming,†rather than
with the feeling that everything was right already, that
he concluded to settle at Lakeland. But we must leave
the little village, with all its privileges and deficiencies,
for another chapter, and go back to our friends, who were
rejoicing in the early spring that was so auspicious for
their journey.
_By the last of April their preparations for removal were
completed, and they were ready to start. The younger
children were at times impatient at their delay, and
Robert and Henry felt, every fine day, that it was time
lost to remain any longer. But there were still many
last things to be done—articles to be disposed of, friends
to see, good-byes to be spoken. It could not be accom-
plished hastily and well; and, with Mr. Moreton, a thing
that was not done well was not considered well done.
Another reason for delay was, that, having concluded
to travel with their household goods, it became necessary
and desirable to know that the different lines of trans-
portation had completed their summer arrangements
NOTES OF WARNING. 91
before they left their New England home; otherwise,
hindrances that were unpleasant might arise, and pro-
tract the time spent upon the journey.
To Mr. and Mrs. Moreton, every day brought with it
its cares and its labours; and, as they had learned from
actual experience to anticipate less from change than
their children did, they did not regret the delay which
gave them a few more weeks of pleasant intercourse
with tried friends and acquaintances. Not a few would
have persuaded them to remain quietly where they were,
and many sought, by argument and advice, to lead them
to reconsider their determination. “ We cannot spare
you,†said their good pastor, as he and a few of their in-
timate friends were gathered in their little parlour, a few
evenings before theirdeparture. “ We cannot spare you.
I do not become reconciled to your going away. We
need you here, in our village matters, in our social ga-
therings, in our church meetings, in the sanctuary, the
Sabbath-school, and our pleasant prayer-meetings. We
shall miss you in all these. Has not God given you a
work to do here, and why should you seek another? Or
why should you seek for greater blessings than he has
here bestowed upon you?â€
“ ] have no reason to leave my New England home to
seek for blessings or mercies,†replied Mr. Moreton.
“ Our lot has been cast in a pleasant place. Yet, regret
as I may the separation from my friends, I am convinced
that it is better for us to go. If I do but little good at
the West, my children will have been brought up there;
and, as Western men and women, may make amends for
all my deficiencies.â€
There was a brother of Mr. Moreton’s, who, from the
first, had discouraged the idea of the family going west ;
and he, half replying to Mr. Moreton, half soliloquizing,
said—
“But you will all be sick, and either die in that climate,
22 THE MORETON FAMILY.
or else drag on a miserable life, with broken constitutions
and impaired health.â€
“Not quite so bad as that, I hope,†said Dr. Newton,
who had just arrived. “No, indeed!†said he, laying
aside his overcoat, and drawing nearer the fire. “ While
journeying west last summer, I found, to my entire satis-
faction, that there is reason to believe the climate had
been much belied.â€
“ You will hardly assert that it can be called a healthy
country, though,’ observed the pastor.
“ With the exception of fever and ague, I could find no
disease that might be said to belong to the climate ex-
clusively. Congestive fevers and other epidemics will
spread over villages here as well as there, and many will
die.†|
“ But there are notoriously unhealthy regions through-
out the West?â€
“ T know that well,†replied Dr. Newton. “A swamp
that is filled with rank vegetation, or a sluggish stream,
with its green, slimy waters, will cause fevers and other
diseases. But with such localities no wise man will have
anything to do. Rich land, great crops, or abundant
harvests, will never compensate for the loss of bodily
vigour. But all the West is not a low, swampy, marshy
country. There are dry elevated lands; there are clear,
lively streams; there are rich fertile fields, stretching for
miles and hundreds of miles, upon which the sun shines
day by day, and about which no deadly miasma hovers,
and which, if not as healthful as the poorer lands here in
this rocky country, yet offer no hindrances to those who
would settle on them on account of their unhealthiness.â€
“Why is the proportion of deaths greater there than
- here?†asked Mr. Alfred Moreton.
“T can tell you one reason that might make it so,
though I am not sure that it is true. A large proportion
of the emigrants going West are in circumstances of
NOTES OF WARNING, 23
great poverty and want. Many of them have already
become prepared for disease by a long and wearisome
voyage. Their means are barely sufficient to enable them
to reach their destination and purchase their farms ; they
must necessarily suffer from privation and exposure ;
their food is poorly prepared, and they are not guarded
from changes of weather. It is no wonder that they
sickken. Then bad nursing, and the imprudent use of
poverful medicines, prolong their sicknesses, and often
desth kindly ends the struggle; then another class of
emigrants are healthy, stout, young people, from the
Eag¢ern States. They are, through ignorance of sickness,
imprudent as regards exposure, and only desire to make
money fast. If there are facilities for carrying on a mill,
wha do they think about the marsh beyond? Just no-
thing at all! And the richer and blacker the earth, so
mud the more promise of great harvests. They are in
hast to be rich, and will throw their lives, which no
weath could purchase, under that Juggernaut of Chris-
tian lands—the god of money—for the sake of gain. If
they are crushed, must the climate take all the blame?â€
“There must be something to compensate for the giv-
ig up of their homes, and to pay for the loss of luxuries
aid comforts that a man relinquishes when he leaves
evilized life and goes into the woods. What would you
lave this something to be, if not gain in wealth â€
“Freedom from heavy duties imposed by government,
and the blessing of equal rights and privileges, the
poor emigrant from foreign countries would consider an
equivalent for all he has given up. Add to this, the
liberty to worship God in his own way, without molesta-
tion or fear; and, if he has suffered, as many have done,
he will be satisfied. To others, there is the comfort of
finding a little money go far in securing to their families
the necessaries of life, and of feeling that poverty is no
degradation.†|
24 THE MORETON FAMILY.
“ But these are a pvor man’s blessings—and blessings I
acknowledge them to be. Yet, why should a man whose
education has fitted him to move ina large circle, whose
habits are those formed by the usages of good society,
and whose tastes are refined and intellectual—why should
he leave a home such as we enjoy, go far away from all
his social and religious privileges, to a place where his
very acquirements and knowledge will be a hindranceto
him, his tastes and habits only sources of annoyance, de-
cause ungratified, and where a strong back and a stout
arm are the only personal things that can avail for his
help ?â€
“ Why do we need the best corn for seed, and why do
we seek a field to plant it in that has lain fallowand
unused? At the West, every well-regulated family is
like seed sown in good ground. Their example cainot
fail to influence others. Oftentimes, those who couldnot
be driven to industry and sobriety, can be lured to joth
by the sight of the prosperity which follows good hapits,
as evidence in their favour. A Christian family, if :on-
sistent, can do still more. The good they do is upma
sure foundation ; and God has wisely ordered it that sush
families shall be scattered here and there. As to tle
objection, that education and accomplishments are lot
there, I do not agree with you. I believe that theres
no gift of God to the intellect of man, and no acquire
ment or accomplishment, which may not be made @
available there as here for the promotion of happiness
and prosperity ; and, while I may not go there myself, 1
honour those who are wiiling to go, and who have the
courage to enable them to meet the trials and disappoint-
ments that a removal will bring.â€
“T suppose you are right,†replied the pastor; “and,
unwilling as Iam to lose our friends from our circle, I
must be satisfied to see them depart, and bid them God-
speed. But I do not often have a greater trial to my
DR. NEWTON. Qh
own will than that which I felt when writing these for
youâ€â€”and he laid upon the table certificates of church-
membership for Mr. and Mrs. Moreton, Mary, and Henry,
and letters of recommendation to the care and good
offices of any church to which they might be presented,
“especially,†he added, “as you will now be as sheep
without a shepherd.â€
“Shall we not still be under the care of the great
Shepherd, and does he suffer any ill to befall those with
whom he has entered into covenant?†asked Mrs. More-
ton. You will, yourself, implore for us his guidance ;
and, ‘under the covert of his wings,’ we shall be as safe
there as here.â€
It was not without a struggle that the good pastor
yielded up, to what he considered a life of toil and dan-
ger, these precious members of his own flock. As he
departed, it was with great emotion that he clasped the
extended hands of Mr. and Mrs. Moreton within his own,
and, in solemn, earnest tones, tremulous with feeling,
repeated the beautiful scriptural benediction :—
“The Lord bless thee, and keep thee; the Lord make
his face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee ; the
Lord lift up his countenance upon thee, and give theo
peace.â€*
CHAPTER IV.
DR. NEWTON.
“I, roo, came with a parting gift, accompanied with a
dose of advice,†said Dr. Newton, as the door closed
upon their beloved minister. “My work is done as you
desired, Mrs. Moreton.â€
* Numb, vi. 24-26,
26 THE MORETON FAMILY.
And saying this, he placed upon the table a small
square mahogany box, which he opened with a polished
key, and displayed a small, but well-selected stock of
medicines.
“T have added to this,†he continued, “as my gift, this
little manual of medicine; and my advice to you is, to
take as little of the contents of the box as possible ; for,â€
he added playfully, “medicine without a doctor is often
worse than no medicine at all. If you find a good doc-
tor in Lakeland, throw away or burn the book as you
please.†|
“JT cannot burn the recollection of valuable hints that
I have received from you, Dr Newton; and, if we are
really sick, I shall doubtless rely more upon what I have
already learned than upon the book or the new doctor.â€
“ But you are not going to be sick, I hope,†replied Dr.
Newton. “A family of healthy boys and girls like yours,
brought up to love habits of regularity and order, with
little inclination to pamper their appetite, and supplied
with the means to insure a comfortable, wholesome liv-
ing, will not often be visited with any distressing sickness.
Do you hear, boys?†he added ; “don’t think that you can
spend your summer evenings out of doors, or go tramp-
ing through the wet swamps and woods before sunrise to
shoot the poor little birds. And you, Miss Mary, must
give up sentimental rambling by moonlight, even if those
old forest-haunts bewitch and entice you. Let the sun
give the air a good cooking before you take too much of
it.â€
“It was you, Dr. Newton, that first taught me that—
* Early to bed, and early to rise,
Is the way to be healthy, wealthy, and wise.’â€
“You are duller than I think, Miss Mary,†answered
Dr. Newton, “if you can see no difference between not
going out of doors and not getting up early. It will do
DR. NEWTON. 27
Robert and Henry good to chop a little wood in the
wood-house, or work in the barn; and I expect that your
talents will be devoted to the preparing a good breakfast
when they come in. Some of these days I will come and
partake of one with you.â€
Exclamations of “ Will you, indeed?†“Oh! will you?’
and “ How happy it will make us!†broke from the lips
of all.
“ Yes, if I live, I will certainly pay you a visit after you
are fairly settled; but mind, Miss Mary, I must have
good light bread. I must have a chamber, too, to sleep
in. I do not like bed-rooms on the ground-floor, espe-
cially in that Western country. They cannot be as airy
or well-ventilated as upper rooms, and there is always a
dampness about them, which comes from the ground.
Let the sun shine into your house a part of every day.
Be regular in your habits of work, as well as of rest. In
eating, drinking, and sleeping, live, as nearly as possible,
as you have been accustomed to; and if the sunshine of
faith and trust in a good Providence warm your hearts
and lighten your path, you will have the best preventives
of sickness that I know of.â€
“Will a contented mind keep off fever and ague?â€
asked Robert.
“It will help you to bear it patiently; and that is a
great gain, if you ever have it. But I am a doctor, not a
preacher, Robert ; and I tell you plainly, that if you are
neither rash nor imprudent, you may live many years,
and never suffer from it at all. Perhaps, if it should
come, you will find that it is not so very hard, after al.,
to bear.â€
“You are an encouraging friend, Dr. Newton,†said
Mr. Moreton; “and, if all our neighbours viewed this
matter of emigration as you do, we might be saved some
ot those fears and anxieties concerning the future that, I
must confess, they sometimes compel me to feel. But
28 TIIE MORETON FAMILY.
we are fairly committed for the change now, and I have
no desire to imitate Lot’s wife, and ‘look back.’ â€
“Nor do I believe you will have anything to regret,
after you are once there. I am no prophet, but I think
I can foresee for you all many happy and prosperous
days. If wishes could bring them to you, they certainly
would be yours. The same hand which has directed you
thus far in making the change, will guide you step by
step, and all you need will He supply from his abun-
dance. We can ask nothing more or better than his
guardianship for you who go, or for ourselves who re-
main. Now for your plans: what are they?â€
“We propose to let Henry and Robert start early
next week, with our boxes and chests, for Albany, by
water. As soon as we hear of their arrival at that place,
we shall join them as expeditiously as possible. Then
we all take the canal, and go to Buffalo. From there,
across Lake Erie, to whichever port we shall decide
to be most desirable—Toledo, Monroe, or Detroit.
There shall we fit ourselves out with what are called
‘emigrant fixings, and travel south-west to our place of
destination.â€
“The last part of your journey will be the most
fatiguing.â€
“Tam aware of that,†said Mrs. Moreton; “and yet I
enter into the feelings and anticipations of the children,
in thinking that it will be the pleasantest of all; for it
will have the charm of novelty, with all its freshness.â€
“There is something so delightful in the thought of
beginning life afresh,†said Dr. Newton; “it wakens up in
my mind an almost childish enthusiasm, and I really
should like to go with you; but my good wife says, nay ;
and, while her aged parents live, we ought not to give it
‘a moment’s thought.â€
Still later in the evening, Mr. and Mrs. Moreton, with
their three elder children, were gathered around the
DR. NEWTON. 29
little blaze that faintly flickered on the hearth. A large
part of the furniture belonging to the room had been
removed, and it contained only such articles as were
absolutely necessary for daily use. Thoughts of the
friends who had just parted from them had taken the
place of anticipations for the future ; and their words of
interest and advice were the subject of their thoughts.
Mary was the first to speak.
“Father,†said she, “why is it that Dr. Newton and
uncle Alfred take such different views of life at the
West? They have both been there, and are both clear-
headed and intelligent men; yet one says we shall
prosper and be happy, while the other prophesies misery
and sickness !â€
«The two men are of different temperaments naturally,
Mary. Dr. Newton is active, hopeful, bound down by
no habits of luxury which have become necessary to his
comfort, and possesses good health. Then he is what is
termed a self-made man, and is accustomed tu meet and
to conquer difficulties. Your uncle is in feeble health,
and his home has, ever since his youth, been supplied
with all that wealth can purchase. Every want has been
met, and every wish gratified ; while his love for us
makes his fears the greater, lest we should suffer. Look
about this room now, and think how differently the two
men would regard it. One would think that it had every-
thing in it that we required, because there were tables,
carpet, and chairs; the other would deem it unfurnished
and comfortless, because the sofa, rocking chairs, and
argand lamp were gone.â€
“ But which thinks rightly about it?†asked Robert.
“] have that confidence in the judgment of each which
leads me to adopt modified views of both opinions, and
endeavour to strike the medium between them. Doubt-
less, we shall find that in many things their estimates of
our pleasures and trials are correct; but it is not neces-
30 THE MORETON FAMILY.
sary that we look through the spectacles of the one or
the other while we have our own honest eyes. There
are few troubles in this world which a habit of looking
upon the bright side will not lighten or disperse; and
there are sunny spots in everybody’s life, if there is not
the disposition to overshadow them with the clouds of
despondency and doubt.â€
“But do not strong hopes and ardent expectations often
become disappointments ?â€
“Certainly they do; for such hopes and expectations
are not ordinarily based upon reason. There is a some-
thing, which we call common sense, implanted in the
mind of man. This is given to us as a guide, and,
through experience and education, is, or ought to be,
daily improving. If, contrary to its teachings, we let our
imaginations run away with our hopes, we ought not to
complain if the realities of life will not keep pace with
them. If we found our hopes upon what we know to be
fixed facts and principles, and hold them (as dependent
creatures should hold all they possess) subject to the
will of an all-wise Dispenser, there is little fear of great
and heart-crushing disappointments.â€
“Then I suppose,†said Mary, “ that when my common
sense, which has been educated by experience, tells me
that if I sit up any later to-night, I shall be tired and
sleepy to-morrow, I had better obey its counsels, and seek
my pillow, notwithstanding my hopes would lead me to
consult my pleasure by talking longer.â€
“ Quite a timely, practical illustration,†said her father ;
“and I, to encourage so laudable an exercise of your
common sense, will light you a candle.â€
And they laughingly bade each other “ Good-night.â€
UNCLE ALFRED’S GIFT. $1
CHAPTER V.
UNCLE ALFRED’S GIFT.
“A girt! a gift!†shouted Frank, as he entered the sit-
ting-room the next day. “A gift to each of us children
from uncle Alfred, of which I am the bearer !â€
“Tt must be a small one,†said Robert, “for you bear
nothing in your hand!†|
«But I do in my pocket, Robert ;†and he took, with
great care, from it a small packet, upon which was
written, “To be equally divided between my nephews
and nieces.â€
It did not take many minutes to undo the fastenings,
which enclosed a sum of money, upon counting which,
it was found to give to each the sum of twenty-one
shillings.
“Where did you get this, Frank?†asked Mr. Moreton.
“Uncle asked me what I would like as a parting gift
from him, and I answered that I could not decide without
thinking a while ; for that you, father, had often told me
never to make up my mind in a hurry. Then he went
to his desk, got this money, and gave it to me; and said
that I must tell you all that he sent it, and wished each
of us to choose for ourselves some present that would
please us, as a remembrancer of him.â€
“We hardly need it for that purpose,†said Mary.
“Uncle Alfred will not be forgotten, I am sure.â€
«J will tell you what I shall buy,†said Frank to Mary ;
“a nice little writing-desk for you and me. My money
will just pay for one.â€
“Then, Frank, if I am to use your writing-desk, my
money shall go as a subscription to some magazine that
we shall both like to read.â€
32 TIE MORETON FAMILY.
“J shall buy a pony,†said Willie, “ with an elegant
bridle and saddle; and, beside†—
There was a burst of merriment from the assembled
children as Willie spoke. It lasted but a moment, for
Mr. Moreton’s voice rose above it.
“Your plan is too magnificent for your money, my son,
and you will have to give it up. Twenty-one shillings is
a great sum for a boy like you to possess ; but it will buy
neither a pony nor a saddle.â€
Discomfited as Willie was, and annoyed by the mis-
chievous glances of his brothers and sisters, his good-
nature did not fail, and laughing with the rest, he only
said—
“ You will all loco many a good ride, then ; that is all.â€
“ Why don’t you buy some candy ?†asked Alice.
Little Alice had not relished the laugh at her brother’s
expense, and unconsciously took the readiest way to
divert attention from him; for they were all in that ex-
cited state of mind, when every incident would furnish
food for gleeful merriment.
“Your plan is no better than Willie’s, my darling,â€
said her father, caressing her. “ While he aims at too
much, you go to the other extreme, and would get too
little for your money.â€
“ What can we buy, then?†asked Alice, impatiently.
“Nothing to-night, Alice; but you can keep your
money until you know what you want. There is no ne-
cessity of spending it for several days, and you can think
about it.â€
«“] have a plan to propose,†said Robert ; “and I think
it will please uncle Alfred as well as ourselves. Let us,
each one, contribute five or ten shillings, as we please, for
a book fund; then let us appoint committees to buy some
books, that are new, for our family library, and to decide
upon a newspaper and magazine, for which to subscribe
for the year.â€
UNCLE ALFRED’S GIFT; 33
‘
“ T like that,†said Frank.
“ We may take one or two periodicals; and they will
come every week, like visits-from uncle Alfred â€â€”
Here Willie and Frank, instigated by Charlie, clapped
their hands, and cried “ Hear, hear!â€
“ With the rest of the money we can each buy some-
thing which pleases us, to keep as tokens of uncle Alfred’s
remembrance of us ; or we can use it as spending-money ;
or, dividing it, can use it for both purposes.â€
There was not a dissenting voice ; and when, in regular
business-like order, the vote was taken, it was declared
unanimous. Robert and Frank were appointed a com-
mittee to select books; and we may mention that faith-
fully did they fulfil their offices, making such a judicious
selection as pleased every one, and, through the long win-
ter evenings, adding to their pleasure as well as to their
knowledge.
There were little after-scenes between the different
members of that family, to which we will be wit-
M@SSES . « « «
“This breaks un my plan, Mary,†said Frank; for I
have not money enough left to get even a plain writing-
desk.â€
“But, together, we have, Frank; and I was just think-
ing how much pleasanter it would be to really buy it
together, so that it might seem equally to belong to
DORM ee hee
“Dear Mary, will you go to the store with me to-
morrow, that I may buy some silks and worsteds, and
other little things? for I must tell you my secret—now I
shall be able to make that pin-cushion for mother against
next New-Year; and, beside, I shall have time to do many
other little pieces of work, while you are all busy with
the new house, and I shall be alone.â€
Mary willingly consented; and Annie’s dark eyes
brightened, and her cheek flushed, with the hope of
c
34 THE MORETON FAMILY.
being able to give pleasure to those she loved by the
use of her needle. . . . .-
“Father,†said William, as he sat contemplating the
pictures upon his bank-note, “ why does the Bible say
that money is the root of all evil? It brings us much
pleasure, and helps us to obtain many good things.â€
“The Bible does not say that money is the root of all
evil, my son. It says the love of money is; and it is an
important distinction. Money (gold, silver, and copper
coin) is our medium of circulation. With it (or with
bank-notes, which, fur convenience, have taken the place
of coins,) we can procure any article which we may desire,
giving it in exchange for such things as we think will add
to our comfort, our pleasure, or our convenience. This
you know very well; and you know as well that money or
riches are unequally divided. From some, God has seen
fit to withhold them ; while to others he has committed an
overflowing abundance. Why he has done this we do not
know, any more than we know why he gives one health
and another sickness, one happiness and another trouble.
A wise man, and a Christian, will believe that God has
some purpose in this, and that these differences do not
come from chance ; and will be contented and happy with
such a portion of this world’s goods as his own honest
efforts will secure to him. There are others to whem a
want of money is a great evil; for it awakens in their
hearts such strong desires for its possession, and such love
for it, that they will be ready to envy or hate those who
possess it ; they become covetous and miserly, from set-
ting an inordinate value upon it; they become grasping
and dishonest, from their determination to be rich; and
some will cheat, lie, steal, or even murder, for the pur-
pose of attaining it. With such consequences resulting
from the love of money, is it strange that it should becalled
“the root of all evil?â€
“ But is it not a good thing to be rich, father!â€
UNCLE ALFRED’S GIFT. 35
“Yes, my son; money is a blessing, and should be
sought after, as we seek after other blessings. But its
possession often leads to evil: for instance, if it makes
its possessor proud or haughty, or hard-hearted and un-
charitable, or if it leads him to be wjse in his own conceit.
It is its abuse that leads to these consequences. It may
also be abused, by scattering it with a heedless, thought-
less hand, or by spending it for that which will do harm
to ourselves or others. If we desire to be rich to gain
the admiration of others, or wish to excite their envy, it
becomes to us a root of evil, which we may well fear to
have increase and grow in our hearts. But, on the other
hand, if we desire it only to gratify our natural wants,
to add to our innocent pleasures, to give us the means to
make others happy, and to extend our power of doing
good, we may seek for it earnestly, and labour for it; and
if God blesses our efforts, we may, and ouglit to enjoy it,
as one of the mercies with which he has crowned our lives,
and which should be used as we think will best please him.â€
“Robert thought of pleasing uncle Alfred in his plan
of spending our money, father. Is it in such a way that
every rich man ought to think of pleasing God ?†:
“ Yes, the principle is the same; and it is a sure test of
gratitude if the donor’s wishes are consulted in our
thoughts and plans, before making use of his gifts. Your
uncle Alfred would not think you very grateful if you
threw away his gift; neither would he think you valued
it properly if you should give it in exchange for what was
not of half its value. He would not be pleased if you
spent it for what would harm you; or even if you should
put it away in your strong boa, and never use it at all. It
would be far more gratifying to him to know that you
made it add to your pleasures, or did good with it insome
way. Do not yon see how you can apply all this to the
case of a rich man’s use of his property, so as to please
and honour God?â€
35 THE MORETON FAMILY.
“J think Ido, father. I should like to be rich, though!
It seems so pleasant to have everything one wants, just
when wanted. I think I should try to spend my money
so as to get a great deal of good from it.â€
“ We can tell abou that better when we see how you
spend your gift.â€
“TI must try to remember to get something which I
think will please uncle Alfred, please myself, be good to
use, or good to keep.†3
So thought and so said Willie Moreton, as he retired.
And as for his brother Charlie, who sat near by and heard
this—what were his thoughts ?
“My mind is made up. I must buy Bob Palmer’s dog!
Bob offered it to Samuel Frink for five shillings. That
is it, exactly. It will please uncle Alfred, who loves
dogs. Itwill please me. It will be a good thing to keep,
and a good thing to use; pleasant to own, and very use-
ful? And, with high hopes of future pleasure, it was
with difficulty he refrained from waking Willie to tell
him all about it. With visions of Carlo dragging Annie
on a little sled, and of Carlo in the woods with him, he
laid his head upon his pillow, feeling as if he had nearly
reached the pinnacle of human happiness.
CHAPTER VI.
THE DEPARTURE.
“Ir really seems as if we were fated never to start *
said Frank, impatiently. “I am tired of thinking and
talking about going, and never getting off!â€
“If you are tired, Frank, who are only a looker on,
think what must father and mother be, who have all the
. THE DEPARTURE. 37
care and so much of thelabour! I thought, last evening,
when I saw how tired they were, that they were trying
every day to do more than they ought.â€
Frank was fretful, and Mary’s reply fell upon his ear
like a reproof, to which he had no heart to listen.
You are all just alike,†said he; “slow, slow—never
ready !â€
But hardly had he given utterance to these words of
impatience before he regretted, and would have recalled
them, for he saw tearsin Mary’s eyes. At first he thought
he would take no notice of them, turn away, and pretend
that he did not see them. He had tried this plan many
times before, but had never found it to answer the pur-
pose of satisfying his own conscience. This he remem-
bered, and his better feelings prevailed.
«“ I did not mean justso, Mary; but I do wish we could
get off! Iam so tired of waiting !â€
“ So are we all, Frank; and the only way to content
ourselves is to keep busy. Suppose, now, you draw a
picture of the old house and place before we go. That
will be better than getting tired of doing nothing, and
then complaining about it.†|
Some of our readers may be of Frank’s opinion, and
think that we are protracting our account of preparation,
without regard to their feelings; and it may be a relief
to them to know that on the second Monday of May, 18—,
there was a final breaking up in the homestead of Mr.
James Moreton. Before the evening of that day they
had said good-bye to all the near neighbours, and taken
a farewell of all the old haunts of their childish sports.
They had gone over the now empty chambers, even into
the garret, and looked out for the last time from the little
dormer-window upon the fair fields and the old orchard
beneath. They had been to the wovd-house; the little
room that they used for a workshop had been visited ;
the old red barn, the scene of many a noisy romping frolic,
388 THE MORETON FAMILY.
had received a last parting visit; they had gazed once
more into the depths of the well, and taken a merry
bumper in honour of the old place, and pledged them-
selves in its cold clear waters to stand by the new home
in Hoosier-land : and now they were ready to go.
Yet there were mingled emotions of pain and sorrow
with all their golden anticipations of the West; strange
feelings, in which hope, wonder, and curiosity, struggled
with the grief at parting from what was dear to them, and
hallowed by the love of childhood. The past was asa plea-
sant reality. What would be the future? Would its
promises be fulfilled? Were its bright shadows to end in
dreams, or would they too become real? Who could
tell ?
Sunset found them all scattered. Henry and Robert
were gone, and, with them, the last of the boxes, the
trunks, the barrels, and the chests. The key had been
delivered to the new owner of the place, and the remain-
ing members of the family were already divided among
friends and relatives, for a visit of the few days that must
intervene before they should hear from Robert.
It matters not that we should follow them through the
detail of leave-taking. They were beloved and honoured;
their destination was far away; they were not to return;
and it was not strange that there should be some sad
hearts, some tears shed, some expressions of regret, as
well as of love, and of kindly-spoken words, accompany-
ing pleasant acts of neighbourly attention and friendly
interest. But all this we must leave untold.
Nor will we dwell upon the incidents of their journey.
It is true that the rapid movements on the railway, the
slow, monotonous progress of the canal-boats, the swift
course of the noble steamer, that, “like a thing of life,â€
bore them quickly over the clear green waters of Lake
Irie, were alike full of novelty and interest to them. It
is true that there was no end to the questions of the chil-
f
THE DEPARTURE. 39
dren—no limit to their desires for information. It is true
that, the very first day, such wonderful events transpired,
and such marvellous objects were seen, that the record of
them, in Willie’s large hand, threatened to fill every leaf
of his journal; and that to tell which was the strangest,
most curious, and most worthy of note, he thought, would
puzzle even his father. It is true that, to Mary, Robert,
and Henry, their way was strewn with pleasures, and that
each day’s experience was crowded with thoughts and
feelings which could not fail to be awakened upon their first
long journey from home. Intelligent and observing, how
could it be otherwise? They were passing through scenes
new to their eyes, but familiar to their minds, places of
which they knew the history, and gazing upon objects
which they had seen pictured forth.
A happy, merry party they were ; the little ones all the
happier for being guided by certain rules, which were
strictly observed. Mrs. Moreton was free from the
anxiety, now that she had directed them to stay away
from dangerous parts of the boats. Mr. Moreton and the
elder brothers were never interrupted in any conversa-
tion to answer their curious questions; for they knew
that, as soon as their conversation was over, they would
find either of them ready to reply patiently to their in-
quiries.
Then they were never wearied in watching the huge
iron shaft of the steam-boat, as it rose and sunk. How
earnestly they gazed, with wondering eyes, at the cuin-
brous machinery, though they could not comprehend its
workings. How they delighted to take a run along the
tow-path of the canal, and almost lose their breath in
their endeavours to keep up with the horses. How full
of mystery was that first passing through a canal-lock,
with its rushing sound of waters, its darkness, and its
peculiar motion. And, when ranged upon their hammock-
beds at night, how merrily their little heads and bright
40 THE MORETON FAMILY.
faces peeped out, finding great delight in their very dis-
comfort.
Their delays, what were they to them all, but so many
opportunities of seeing different towns and villages?
Then, who could tire while watching the white foamy
track by which they marked their way through the clear
lake, or feel weary of gazing upon the white caps that
adorned each rising wave? Who could think that to be
out of sight of land was nothing wonderful, or that, if
they neared the shore, the little villages or towns, or even
the woods themselves, were not worth looking at? Not
they! And older travellers gazed upon them, and envied
them the possession of their fresh young hearts, which
could find pleasure and interest in all they saw, while they
admired their considerate, quiet attention to each other’s
wishes, and their evident desire that all should enjoy
what gave them so much delight. And, in their hearis,
they blessed them, and wished them all prosperity on their
course, as they witnessed, day by day, the kind actions
that spoke so loudly of the bond of love which united
them as a family, and through which they were happy
themselves, and the diffusers of happiness to others.
Too quickly did the days fly by, and it required all the
eager anticipation of youth, and the expectation of some-
thing still more delightful, to reconcile them to the
thought that their journey was so far accomplished.
CHAPTER VII.
JOURNFYING THROUGH THE WOODS,
Ir was a bright morning in June— leafy June,†the month
of flowers and foliagc—that three large emigrant wag-
gous stood before the hotel door in . The first, to
JOURNEYING THROUGH THE WOODS. 4]
which four horses were attached, was capacious as asmall
room. Arches of ash saplings were bent over its top, and
upon them was stretched an oiled canvass, of a yellow
colour, which contrasted pleasantly with the new green
paint upon its sides and wheels. Upon the floor, sweet,
fresh straw had been scattered like acarpet. In the front,
beneath its covering, seats were arranged, with springs,
and cushioned with folded quilts and blankets. Beneath
these were boxes containing stores necessary for daily
use, such as tea, coffee, sugar, salt, &c., and a basket packed
with tea-cups and saucers, plates, spoons, and knives and
forks. Then, beds were neatly tied up in white coverings,
and stowed snugly away in the far corners, with blankets
folded nicely and laid upon them; thus leaving a semi-
circular opening in the rear, which gave free circulation
of air, and permitted access to articles otherwise out of
reach. This was the travelling carriage of the Moreton
family ; and it was with some pride that Charles, Frank,
and Willie, viewed it, and made known its manifold beau-
ties and conveniences. They gazed upon its strongly- ~
built wheels, with their heavy spokes and firm tires, and
thought they could never break nor wear out. More than
once they opened the boxes which projected on each side
between the wheels, to see if, in the one, had been placed
the preparation for greasing the wheels, and the brush for
using it, and, in the other, if there were nails of all sizes,
the ball of twine, the strips of stout leather, the small coil
of rope, the hammer, saw, and hatchet, with other smaller
tools. Nothing had been forgotten that might be neces-
sary in case of accident ; and the large box on the back of
the vehicle was filled with oats for the horses, while be-
neath it hung a huge water-pail, which swung back and
forth, swayed by every motion of the wuggon. Their
unanimous verdict was, “ that it was a very complete
affair.†:
The second waggon was like the first in size and in
42 THE MORETON FAMILY.
external appearance, but was not new, nor so tidily
arranged. It was filled with furniture, boxes, trunks,
bundles, and chests, closely packed, and securely protected
from the weather, leaving only room for the accommoda-
tion of the driver and his companions. This was a hired
team, and Robert was to drive it. With him, a carpenter,
hired by Mr. Moreton to superintend the building of his
house, was going, and a young man, as his assistant, ac-
companied them. The next vehicle contained such a
variety of miscellaneous articles, that Willie’s patience
failed in enumerating them, and he pronounced them to
be too numerous to mention. A cooking-stove, pots,
kettles, a crate of crockery, barrels of provision and sacks
of grain, were but a part of its contents. This was also
hired for the journey, and was to be drawn by six mules,
guided by their owner, Michael Dorrance, an Irishman by
birth, but for many years a teamster in the Western
country. He had often been over this same route, and
Frank’s choice was to ride with him, for the sake of gather-
ing such information as he might be able to give concern-
ing “life in the woods.â€
Between these two last carriages Henry was to ride on
horseback, and, with the aid of a young man, who went
to drive the second waggon back, he was to guide the
movements of two cows, a yoke of oxen, and half a
dozen sheep—no easy matter to an inexperienced person,
where the road was often but a track through the woods,
and no fences were built to serve as restraints upon them,
if unruly, or disposed to crop the herbage beneath the
trees. And here ought to be introduced to our readers
Carlo, Charlie’s dog, who has been neglected quite too
long by us, considering that, until now, he had made him-
self very troublesome, but important, by his continual
uneasiness and mournful howls, so that “ pleasant to ownâ€
was omitted in his master’s later summing up of the ad-
vantages of his purchase. But time and good usage had
JOURNEYING THROUGH THE WOODS. 43
reconciled him to the idea of emigration, and he now
trotted contentedly along by the side of Henry’s horse,
sometimes barking at or biting the heels of a refractory
animal, and, at others, darting off into the depths of the
forest, and returning in a few minutes panting and weary,
but wagging his tail, and looking quite satisfied with the
result of his search.
Every preparation had been made for starting, yet no
little time was consumed in the getting off, and the satis-
factory settling of themselves in their new quarters.
Even when they did start, they were so occupied with the
novelty of their position, and with their arrangements for
seats, and for a comfortable passing of their time, that
they hardly noticed the country through which they were
travelling.
For the same reason their progress was slow. Only
fifteen miles were accomplished at sunset, and then, in
rude but decent quarters, they passed the night.
But the next morning, the journey was really com-
menced in good earnest, for sunrise found them all up,
dressed, and ready for a start. Breakfast was soon dis-
posed of, but not before they had gathered themselves to-
gether for family prayer. Together they sang their
morning hymn of praise and thanksgiving, and together
they commended themseives to the care of their heavenly
Father. ;
“ We have no right to think God will remember us, and
take care of us, while we forget him. By the way, as well
as within the house, we need his directing hand. He is
the friend we cannot leave—watchful, loving, and power-
ful to protect. Let us thank him for all his goodness to
us !â€
Thus said and thus felt Mr. Moreton, as the morning
sun rose bright and clear, and they were once more upon
their way. The forests lay stretched out about them, as
they proceeded upon their route, dressed in the fresh,
44 THE MORETON FAMILY.
early green of June. Dew-drops, like glistening dia-
monds, sparkled on the sprays of grass, and the sweet
carollings of birds filled the air with melody. No dust
had soiled the fair buds and leaves—no hand had plucked
the gay and brilliant blossoms that covered the ground.
Too quiet were those deep woods for fear, too full of
beauty and pleasure for loneliness; and, under these
gentle ministrations, a calm but determined happiness
rose in the hearts of our travellers.
. There was something so sweet in that fresh vernal air,
loaded with the fragrance of the early flowers, so invi-
gorating in its influences, that sadness was dispelled and
weariness forgotten. And the gushes of melody from
the busy birds, in the leafy branches of the forest-trees,
now trilling, now whistling, now flowing on in soft, con-
tinued notes, or interrupted with the cheerful chatter of
the blackbird, or the discordant cawing of the crow, as
the gentle breezes bore to the ear more distant sounds ;
who could listen to these, and not feel that the world
about them was indeed a “treasure-house of pleasure,â€
an up-springing fountain of delight?
And the small streams that danced joyously along
between their green banks—were they not emblems of
quiet happiness? Or if, in their course, they spread them-
selves into little lakes, did they not shine like burnished
silver in the sunlight, and reflect the beauty and bright-
ness of the blue heavens above? Did they not tempt the
flying birds to bathe in the clear waters? Did they not
give back to the gorgeous dragon-fly the image of his
own beautiful form, as he played above the waves, or
rested for the moment upon the ripples?
And the little swarms of yellow butterflies—were they
not happy in their social companies? The speckled
quails, that, in loving pairs, rustled among the dry leaves
—was there no sympathy for them, as they sought to find,
_ or make for themselves, a new home? Was there no
JOURNEYING THROUGH THE WOODS. 45
bounding of heart, as that fleet deer was seen for the
moment, and then vanished in the covert of the woods?
In the early summer, imagination can hardly picture
more beautiful scenes than those presented by the West-
ern “oak-openings,’ through which, for many miles,
the path of our travellers lay. The level surface of the
country, permitting the eye to range to a great distance ;
the picturesque grouping or planting of the trees; the
spreading formation of their branches; their graceful
but light foliage, that admits at once the warm sunlight
and gentle zephyrs, yet forms an agreeable shade; the
absence of undergrowth; the winding tracks, extending
in many directions; the profuse sprinkling of flowers,
with brilliant petals—all tend to awaken emotions of
pleasure in any breast not callous or dead to a sense
of the beautiful. It is as if you entered a vast park
or pleasure-ground, fresh from the hand of its Maker,
where man had neither destroyed nor marred the first
impress of God’s manifest care for the happiness of his
creatures; and, in its little daisy-tufts, that spring by the
roadside as well as in its loftiest trees, the lesson of His
existence, and care, and protection, may be read.
There was not a heart but was quick to feel this among
the company of emigrants whose fortunes we are follow-
ing; nor one in whose mind were not gratitude and
thankfulness to Him who had brought them thus far on
their way safely, and was opening to them prospects of
life, so full of joy and hope, ‘n the wide woods of the
West.
Nor did these feelings vanish when an occasional house
or cabin was passed. Even when the rumbling of their
wheels brought to the door swarms of children, and men
unshaven and roughly clad, their eyes were quick to de-
tect tokens of success in the newly-planted apple-tree,
the extent of the clearing, the potato-patch, the feeble
effort at a barn, and in them all they read a lesson of
46 THE MORETON FAMILY.
hope for the future; for, from these small beginnings—
these struggles of labour with poverty—were to come,
they knew well, the competence and independence that
distinguish the lot of their hard-working but free coun-
trymen.
CHAPTER VIII.
ENCAMPMENT IN THE WOODS.
RounpD and round move the heavy wheels of the large
emigrant waggons. Round and round they go, through
wood and swamp, over log-bridges, and through “ tim-
bered lands;†now rumbling, now creaking; now con-
tending with stump or projecting root, now moving at
a brisker pace over a smooth, level spot; and then,
again, toiling along, half buried in a deep rut, left by the
spring frosts and rains. Slowly they move, but surely.
The stout driver of the first waggon has kept the reckon-
ing of the section-trees, and proclaims that twenty miles
have been accomplished before the mid-day rest. Yet,
as the shades of evening draw on, our travellers are
weary and wayworn, and disappointed too. They had
hoped to reach the settlement of Lupine Prairie before
nightfall, for the next day was the Sabbath.
But Lupine Prairie was still ten miles distant when the
dusk of evening was drawing near; and the fatigue, both
of travellers and horses, made it desirable to stop fur the
night. It was not their first experience of camping-out,
for they had been five nights upon the road, and only two
of these had they been able to find comfortable quarters
beneath the shelter of a roof. Every possible arrange-
ment had been made, before starting, for the passing of
.the nights by the wayside; and it was almost incompre-
ENCAMPMENT IN THE WOODS. 47
hensible, even to them, how easily they could accommodate
themselves, and be rendered comfortable under these new
circumstances. But our readers shall judge for them-
selves.
The setting sun, with its gorgeous array of golden
clouds, had sunk below the western horizon, before they
had reached a dry, elevated place, suitable for an encamp-
ment. Then, after a few words of consultation with Mr.
Moreton, the stout driver (whose good sense and practi-
cal knowledge of the country had placed him in the capa-
city of guide and adviser) turned the heads of his horses,
and drew carefully up beneath the green trees, standing
back some distance from the road. The horses were then
taken out, relieved of the weight of their harness, and
placed in a safe position to rest and cool themselves,
before being allowed to eat.
Then slowly came on the second “team,†guided by
the careful hand of Robert. This also drew up, and was
placed at a right angle with the first, and the horses care-
fully looked after.
Before a half hour passed, there was heard, echoing
through the woods, the sharp voice of Michael Dorrance,
crying, “Whoa! whoa!†in tones that even the slow-
witted animals he was master of could not mistake.
They too drew up, and placed themselves opposite to
Robert’s waggon—thus forming three sides of a hollow
square, opening to the south. Henry and his aid soon
gathered their charge, and made them fast not far from
this opening. taking particular care that they should be
comfortable this night ; for the rest of the Sabbath was
approaching, and Mr. Moreton desired that its hours
might be spent in peace and quietness, so far as their
situation would allow.
But these arrangements were not all. Scarcely had
they stopped, before Charles, Willie, and Alice, were
scattered, picking up dry bits of wood and dead branches,
48 THE MORETON FAMILY.
that would burn quickly and easily. Mr. Moreton, leaving
the care of the horses to the driver, had taken his hatchet
from the box at the side of the waggon, and soon finding
a windfall, (a tree that had fallen some time previous, and
was now dead and dry), hehad easily chopped some of its
branches into lengths suitable for burning. Just without
the enclosure he then placed two large green logs, form-
ing two sides of a triangle with them. These were to
hold up the wood, and to protect the blaze while it was
kindling. Then came Alice, with a basket full of small
chips and light sticks, which were carefully and loosely
placed upon each other, between the logs. They were
then lighted from a match, and soon blazed up, crackling
merrily. When fairly burning, Willie cast on his trea-
sures ; but even he was cautious lest he put out the little
blue flame that, in darting tongues, was climbing here
and there over the wood. As it gained in power and
strength, Charlie laid ‘sticks of wood upon it, until the
united strength of the children hardly sufficed to lift the
logs that it was desirable to place over the coals, in order
to insure their continuance until morning. By the time
that Michael reached there with his mules, there was a
good roaring fire, brightening up with its light the in-
creasing shades of evening, and offering a bed of live
coals to any one who would use them to cook their
evening meal.
But where was Robert? Away with the water-pails,
looking for a stream or spring, from which they might
be filled; and not long was he gone! As for Susan and
Mary, they were busy enough! Out of the back of
Michael’s waggon, they had had a table lifted ; upon it
they had briskly mixed the bread, which was to be baked
for the morning’s use. Frank was there, too, placing the
little tin reflector just far enough from the fire; while
one of the girls speedily washed the potatoes, and hung
them over the fire to boil. The little square gridiron,
ENCAMPMENT IN THE WOODS. 49
with its shining black bars, was spread with slices of
meat; and, over those glowing embers, how nicely it
cooked! Then there was the coffee to be made; and then
wiping off the little table, a clean white cloth was spread
upon it, and it was covered with dishes, ready for their
evening meal; the cake of butter, the pile of slices of
wheaten bread, and the full sugar-dish, were not forgotten.
And Susan! She it was who slipped away with her milk-
pail, but found that Henry had been quicker than she,
and already sat by the side of one of the cows, with a
pail nearly full of foaming, creamy milk? By the time
that supper was ready, there was not one who was not
ready too, to eat the simple, but to them delicious
repast, with a good appetite and a keen relish. ... .
The round moon rose red and clear, and glided high
into the heavens, casting upon the sleeping emigrants a
mellowed light, which was heightened or obscured as. the
watch-fire burned high or low. At intervals might be
heard the restless horses, terrified at imaginary sounds,
or disturbed by the movements of their companions} or
the strokes of the axe, plied by the watchman of the hour
as a help to wakefulness. But peacefully they slumbered,
while “He who never slumbereth nor sleepeth†was a
“ouard upon their right hand, and upon their left, to pre-
serve them from evil.†And when, at the previously-
arranged hours, one after another, the young men took
their places quietly, to guard the encampment from
intrusion, the pleasant words of “ All’s well!†was their
only greeting. At the foot of each new-comer would
Carlo wag his tail, look up in his face for a word or sign
of recognition, and then again compose himself to his
little naps.
50 THE MORETON FAMILY.
CHAPTER IX.
A SABBATH IN THE WOODSs.
Ir we allowed our readers to suppose that all those per-
sons employed by Mr. Moreton in the prosecution of his
journey were pleased with his plan of stopping upon the
Sabbath, we should give a wrong impression. Although
it had been agreed upon before starting, the fine weather,
and their having been delayed upon the road beyond
their expectation, had awakened a strong desire to go on.
Michael Dorrance, particularly, remonstrated against the
delay, and expressed his opinion that “it was all non-
sense to stop ;†to which Mr. Moreton calmly replied—
“But, Michael, last Friday, when you said that your
religion permitted you to eat no meat, I did not say that
that was all nonsense. We both profess to be guided by
the precepts of the Bible. You cannot read it, and take,
upon the authority of your priest, what he tells you are
words of command and promise. He tells you to eat no
meat on Fridays, and we tried, at some inconvenience
to ourselves, to accommodate you with food that you
thought it right to eat, although we knew that there
was no command in God’s Word concerning it. This is
the Bible,†said Mr. Moreton, holding one in his hand ;
“and I read it for myself, and find it says—‘Six days
shalt thou labour and do all thy work; but the seventh
day. is the Sabbath of the Lord. thy God: in it thou
shalt not do any work; thou, nor thy son, nor thy
daughter, thy man-servant, nor thy maid-servant, northy |
cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates: for in
six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and
all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: where-
fore the Lord blessed the Sabbath-day, and hallowed it.’
A SABBATH IN THE WOODS. 51
This is very plain; and I should not do what I consider
right, if, in obedience to this command, I did not allow
each one of us a day of rest, and an opportunity to honour
God by observing his Sabbath.â€
“If you could go to church,†said Michael, “and see
the praist, and get absolution, it would be worth yer while.â€
“ My priest is Jesus Christ,†said Mr. Moreton, “ who
lives with God in heaven, and he is everywhere present ;
as near me here in these woods as if I were in any church.
To himI shall go in prayer this day, and confess my sins ;
and I know that he will forgive them and grant me
pardon ; for the Bible says, ‘ If we confess our sins, he is
faithful and just to forgive us oursins, and to cleanse us
from all unrighteousness ; and, ‘If any man sin, we have
an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.’
And asa family we shall gather together and ask God’s par-
don for our sins, and his blessing upon us. We shall hope
that you will unite with us in thanking Him who has
made our journey thus far pleasant and prosperous.â€
There was another person as much dissatisfied as
Michael with the proposed delay, and this was the stout
driver. He was a Western man, in middle-life, of good
natural abilities, but uneducated and without religious
principle. He made no complaint to Mr. Moreton, but to
Robert he said—
“J don’t myself see the use of stopping thirty-six
hours here in this place, just because it happens to be
Sunday instead of Monday. I should think that folks
might be just as good and pious going along. Besides,
it is my opinion that God is good and merciful, and if
we die, will take us all to heaven whether we bother
ourselves with keeping Sunday or not.â€
“Do you think there are two heavens?†asked Robert ;
“one for those who love God, and endeavour to serve
him, and another for those who do not care for him or
his commandments ?â€
52 THE MORETON FAMILY
“ Why, no! I guess they'll all share pretty much
alike!â€
“Then, according to your own showing, should they
even be taken to the same place, one class must be happy
and the other miserable. You would not be happy in a
heaven where the worship of God was the sole employment,
and every day a Sabbath ; and my father could never enjoy
any place where God was forgotten and never praised.
Now, I leave it to you to say whether you think that a
God who should reward those who have never even re-
membered him, and punish those who have tried to serve
him and to do his will, is a good God, or such a one as
you think rules this universe. But people do not all go
to the same place when they die. The Bible says that
‘ the wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations
that forgetGod ? ‘ Be not deceived ; God is not mocked ;
whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap: ‘ God
will render to every man according to his deeds: to them
who, by patient continuance in well-doing, seek for glory,
and honour, and immortality, eternal life ; but unto them
that are contentious, and obey not the truth, but obey
unrighteousness, indignation and wrath, tribulation and
anguish, upon every soul of man that doeth evil ; but glory,
honour, and peace to every man that worketh good.’â€
As Robert read these texts, the eye of his companion
was fixed upon him. When he had finished, he said—
“Death will change us, and make heaven pleasant to
us, by making us fit to enter it.â€
“T cannot say that it will,†said Robert. “I know
nothing about it but what tne Bible says. I read there,
‘ And if the tree fall toward the south, or toward the north,
in the place where the tree falleth there it shall lie.â€
‘ He that is unjust, let him be unjust still, and he that is
filthy, let him be filthy still; he that is righteous, let him
be righteous still, and he that is holy, let him be holy
* Eccles, xi. 3. .
A SABBATH IN THE WOODS. §3
still†And, behold, I come quickly, and my reward is
with me, to give to every man according as his work shall
be.’ These texts don’t sound much as if wé could hope
that dying was to make us fit to go to heaven.â€
The necessary arrangements for the day were few and
easily made; and none but Mr. Moreton and Robert knew
of these discussions, as, in a spirit of gladness, they assem-
bled about the little table spread with the morning meal.
“How shall we spend the day?’ was the natural in-
quiry. It was soon settled, that at ten o’clock they should
come together to hear a sermon read by Mr. Moreton,
accompanied with the other services of public worship ;
that in the afternoon there should be a kind of Sunday-
school, and in the evening a meeting should be held for
reading, after family prayers; the intervening hours to
be employed in that way which to each one seemed most
desirable.
To this plan they cheerfully consented; and, before long,
Mrs. Moreton produced a basket of books, tracts, and
papers, which the children soon scattered about, as they
seated themselves beneath the overspreading branches of
some gnarled oak, or were overshadowed by the hanging
vines of a climbing wild-grape ; and either singly, or in
clusters of two or three, sought to commit to memory a
self-imposed lesson for the afternoon, or read aloud for
the gratification of others, or silently perused the Word
of God for themselves. Who could doubt, as they gazed
upon the seriously happy faces of these little groups, that
God was with them, leading their young hearts by the
influence of his good Spirit “ to remember the day, to keep
it holy?’ Or, as they looked upon them gathered to-
gether for united worship, who could feel that it was a
vain thing to serve tlie Lord, when each beaming coun-
tenance told of hope, and joy, and peace?
In the little church of Laurelton, the good pastor re-
membered them, and besought the blessing of Jehovah
54 THE MORETON FAMILY.
to rest upon any servants of his, who that day might be
far from the ordinances of the sanctuary ; and asked that
his presence might be with them, whether in the house or
by the way. Even then was that prayer answered, and
that petition granted, as—
“In the darkling wood,
Amidst the cool and silence, they knelt down,
And offered to the Mightiest, solemn thanks
And supplication.â€
Those prayers were no tedious ceremony, no wearisome
service, or one in which the heart had no part, but “ the
offering of their sincere desire unto God for things agree-
able to his will, in the name of Christ, with confession of
sin, and thankful acknowledgment of his mercy.†Then
upon the air, borne by the soft winds in tuneful notes,
rose the voice of praise :
“Through all the changing scenes of life,
In trouble or in joy,
~ The praises of our God shall still
Our hearts and tongues employ.
**O! make but trial of his love:
Experience will decide
How blest are they, and only they,
Who in his truth confide.
“ Fear him, ye saints; and you will then
Have nothing else to fear;
Come, make his service your delight,
He'll make your wants his care.â€
A portion of God’s Word was listened to, another song
of praise was sung, and then the discourse selected by Mr.
Moreton was read. Its subject was the “Keeping of the
Sabbath.†It spoke of its advantages as a day of rest,
and of its adaptation to the wants of man, both as a mor-
tal and an immortal being, and of its meeting his neces-
A SABBATH IN THE WOODS. 55
sities, physical and moral. Its observance was urged for
the reasons :-—
That it was the command of God that it should be kept
holy, as a commemoration of the creation, and a token of
our entire dependence on him as our Creator:
That it tended, by giving stated seasons of rest and
change of occupation, to keep clear and unimpaired the
intellectual and reasoning faculties as well as the bodily
health of man:
That its observance as a day of worship awakened
proper emotions of love and gratitude to Him who gives
us all our time, and through whose death and resurrec-
tion we have hope of eternal life :
And finally, because, by giving us an opportunity to
study and contemplate the character of Jehovah and his
perfections, we might learn to love him and seek his
friendship; so that at the great day of judgment we
might be accepted through the Saviour, and be made
welcome by him as good and faithful servants.
It was aplain, practical sermon, written in simple lan-
guage. Its subject was illustrated both by Scripture aptly
applied, and by anecdotes showing the value of the Sab-
bath in a physical point of view. There were the written
or expressed opinions of eminent men, such as Wilber-
force, who says, “ 0! what a blessing is Sunday ! inter-
posed between the waves of worldly business, like the
divine path of the Israelites through Jordan! I can
truly say that to me the Sabbath is invaluable.†There
was the opinion of Dr. Sewall, whose observation led him
to write: “I have remarked that those to whom the
Sabbath brings the most entire rest from their habitual
labours performed the secular duties of the weck more
vigorously and successfully than those who continued
them without intermission.†And that of Dr. Warren,
who says, “I have a firm belief that persons who observe
the Sabbath are able to do more work, and do it in a more
55 THE MORETON FAMILY.
perfect manner in six days, than if they worked the whole
seven. A change of thought seems to give afresh spring
to the mental operations, as a change of food does te the
body. The breathing of the pure and sublime atmo-
sphere of the religious Sabbath refreshes and invigorates
the spirit ; it forms an epoch in our existence, from which
we receive a new impulse, and thus constitutes the best
preparation for the labours of the coming week.â€
These truths and facts fell upon the ears of an attentive
and interested audience, for all had drawn near to listen,
either from lack of occupation, or from respect to Mr.
Moreton. There was an unaffected seriousness and an
apparent pleasure in contemplating the truths of God’s
Word, which gave to Mr. Moreton’s tones a power to arrest
and enchain the attention; and the fitness of the subject
to the circumstances in which they were placed could not
fail to be felt even by those to whom the delay had been
at first unwelcome.
None sat there listlessly or with wandering minds; and
as, in devout gratitude, Mr. Moreton offered the closing
prayer to Him who in wisdom had set apart the Sabbath,
and hallowed it, and asked him to incline their hearts to
keep it holily unto the end, even the heart of Michael
Dorrance was touched. Unconsciously to himself, the
strongholds of superstition were loosened in his mind;
and though, after the custom of his church, he raised his
hat, and made the sign of the cross upon his forehead and
breast, yet, in his soul, he acknowledged that true worship
was not confined to temples made with hands, or to forms
devised by the hearts of men.
Thus passed the hours of that Sabbath morning ; and
thus, from beneath the green trees, went up to the throne
of God the incense of devotion and love. It was a fit
temple for the worship of the Most High—far from the
cares and tumults of the busy world—far from the throng
_ Of thoughtless mortals, pressing on in their worldly pur-
THE RAINY DAY’S JOURNEY. o7~
suits: And there, surrounded by the manifestations of
Almighty goodness, warmed by the light of that sun which
he guides, and refreshed by the cool breezes of his be-
stowing, fed from his bounty, and sustained by his pro-
tecting hand, can we doubt but his pure eye looked upon
these, his worshippers, with love, and that upon them
should be fulfilled the promise, “Them that honour me,
will I honour?†*
CHAPTER X.
THE RAINY DAY’S JOURNEY.
Ratny, stormy days there are in everybody’s experience ;
days when employment is hindered, when progress is
delayed, when anticipated pleasures are marred, and the
spirits will flag and sink, unless sustained by active em-
ployment or governed by principle. These often happen
to dwellers at home; and to them, surrounded with every
‘n-door comfort that wealth or thrift can procure, they
bring little temptation to complain or murmur. But to
the poor, whose dwellings are not proof against the
storm, whose habitations are dark and disconsolate, un-
less cheered by the light of the sun, whose out-door labour
it is that puts bread into their mouths, such days come as
seasons of discipline, and bring with them discomfort and
trial, that must be realized to be known.
To emigrants of every class a rainy day is a disappoint-
ment. To see the blue sky overcast with threatening
clouds, and a settled gloom spread over the whole hori-
zon; to hear the breezes rustle fitfully in the tree-tops ;
to see the birds move off with rapid wing, and hear the:r
+ 1 Sam. ii, 39.
58 THE MORETON FAMILY
short, quick notes, telling of a coming storm; to fvel the
pattering rain-drops, as they fall upon the green leaves ;
and to know that, with the exception of an occasional cabin,
the road stretches for miles through paths unfrequented,
save by travellers like themselves ; and to know that their
only resources for comfort, warmth, and dryness, are
comprised within the narrow limits of their own waggon;
it is all this which makes arainy day so much dreaded by
an emigrant. Such a day was the one preceding the ar-
rival of Mr. Moreton’s family at their new home.
The early morning had come with a bright dawning,
yet there were tokens of coming rain that caused them
hurriedly to despatch their breakfast, and to gather them-
selves together for starting as soon as possible. To do
this there must be some hurry and bustle, some anxiety
and care, lest anything should be forgotten or misplaced.
Cloaks and shawls must be found for Mrs. Moreton and
the girls, and the waterproof coats and leggings, with “ the
sou’-wester hats,†must be taken out for Mr. Moreton and
his sons. The mid-day meal must be arranged, so that it
could be easily reached, and taken without exposure to
the weather. Little Annie must have the warmest, driest
place, and the best cushion must be placed for the mother.
All this done, and cheerfully done, and everything fina'ly
arranged, the horses started at a brisk trot, while our
travellers, forgetful of the past inconvenience attending
so hasty a transit, were considering the causes they had
for congratulation in their present circumstances. Frank
was the first to say—
“ How fortunate that it did not begin to rain until all
our goods were under cover, and we almost ready for the
start !â€
“Yes,†said Annie; “ and how fortunate, too, that the
clouds came as messengers, to let us know that we must
hurry !â€
“ We shall not be troubled with the dust to-day, dear
THE RAINY DAY’S JOURNEY. 59
Annie,†whispered Mary; “and that will be better for
your cough.â€
“ It really seems quite like home,†said Mrs. Moreton,
“to get so many of us together again. When one of you
were in Michael’s waggon, and another with Henry, and
some of you walking by the roadside, I was almost lonely,
and had to take my knitting-work for company. To-day
we are are quite a family-party.â€
« How beautifully the rain-drops lie on the fresh green
leaves!†exclaimed Mary. “A bright sun would make
them glisten like jewels!â€
“ And a longer withholding of his beams will make the
fresh green leaves fresher and greener,†replied Mr.
Moreton. “This rain falls opportunely for the wheat-
fields, and probably reaches ours.â€
“ Our wheat-fields!â€â€ How pleasantly that sound fell
upon their ears, telling of a resting-place for the weary,
the end of their fatiguing journey, their home, and that,
too, near at hand. The natural hopefulness of youth
painted that home in bright colours to the fancies of our
youthful friends ; and, in guessing how it would look, in
hearing how it did look, and in telling how they meant it
should look, the hours sped on. When weary of this,
there was Willie, with his never-ending fund of riddles
for them to guess; there was Susan, who could narrate
such beautiful tales and stories; there was the mother,
with her memory stored with beautiful ballads and curi-
ous verses ; there was Mary, ever ready to give them a
song; and Frank and Charlie, with strong lungs, always
good atachorus. Then Robert called out to them, with
his genial laugh and merry tones, proposing hard ques-
tions in arithmetic and history—questions that puzzled
even Susan and Mary; and, above all, there was the
father, without whom no enjoyment was quite complete,
entering into each and every endeavour to make the
rainy day pass pleasantly. Then, when Henry, attracted
60 THE MORETON FAMILY.
by the merriment, looked in upon them, with his coat-
collar turned up above his ears, and his glazed hat covered
with rain-drops, and made believe that he was a stray
traveller, and asked for charity, O how merrily they
laughed, and how curiously they questioned him concern-
ing his family, his home, and his prospects! But he did
not laugh; not he! Who ever saw a beggar-man laugh
while asking for help? But steadily and soberly he be-
sought :
‘- Pity the sorrows of a hungry man,
Whose stont young legs have borne him to your cart ;
Who, out of breath, hath hither quickly ran,
To—to—"â€
But, alas! no rhyming line could he think of, and it was
Mary who supplied his need, by adding—
“To get a bit to eat, before you start.â€
Then, no famous ode of famous poet was ever received
with more rapturous applause than Henry’s extempore
attempt at a parody, and no performance ever so entirely
satisfied an audience as his personation of a beggar.
With liberal hands they filled his pockets, showering upon
him crackers and cakes, and, with more liberal tongues,
bestowed their praise and words of admiration.
It was towards the close of this day that our travellers
suddenly halted in their course, and drew up together.
There, in the road, was a cart, loaded to its utmost capa-
city, with one wheel fast in a deep hole, or, in Western
phrase, slewed. The strength of the two miserable and
worn-looking horses attached to the vehicle was insuffi-
cient to start it from its position, and the master, Patrick
M‘Coney, had put his shoulder to the wheel, in the hope
of adding his strength to theirs, while his wife had placed
her three children on the grass by the roadside, and, with
whip in hand, was vainly striving to prompt the wearied
animals to greater effort.
THE RAINY DAY’S JOURNEY. 61
To take two of the best horses from Mr. Moreton’s
waggon, and yoke them before those belonging to M‘Coney,
was the work of but a few moments. To lift f.om the
waggon the heavy chest and box, and then to give “ the
long pull, the strong pull, and the pull altogether,†that
would release them from their unwilling durance, to aid
in tying up the broken and strained harness, to fasten
and make sure the unfortunate wheel, and to replace chil-
dren and goods in the waggon, occupied not many more.
And then, falling in the rear of the company, Patrick
M‘Coney strove to keep his place with them, that he might
have the benefit of their guidance, their company, and
their assistance, if he again fell into trouble.
Now, Patrick was a sample of emigration that was not
very inviting. He was an Irishman, who had landed, two
years before, with his wife and fumily, at Quebec. Those
two years he had struggled with great poverty and want.
Discouraged with his condition, and feeling that there was
no prospect of bettering it there, he had availed himself
of the first opportunity to change it. With the money
raised by the sale of such household goods as he possessed,
they had passed up the St. Lawrence and through the
lakes, as steerage or deck passengers, and finally landed
in Sandusky. This had been in the fall; and although, on
first arriving, they had, from their destitute condition, been
objects of public charity, yet, by dint of hard labour and
hard fare, and a willingness to ask for and accept aid,
they had been enabled to get together, by the next sum-
mer, the miserable outfit of an old waggon and two bro-
ken-down horses. A bundle of straw served for a bed,
a tattered quilt or two answered for covering and protec-
tion. Two stools, an iron kettle, a painted chest, tied up
with a rope, a cask of pork, and a sack of potatoes, com-
pleted their assortment of what Willie called, not “goods,â€
but “bads.†They were, indeed, objects of compassion, not
so much for their destitute condition, as for their ignorance.
62 THE MORETON FAMILY.
Patrick’s plan, so far as he had any, was to go on until he
found a spot where he could stop ; and after that, his only
idea seemed to be to plant some wheat! Where this
place was to be, he knew not. That he had little or no
money to buy land, he deemed of slight consequence; for,
“gure, and wasn’t their land enough for him and the cra-
thurs anywhere?†And, as for getting a living out of it,
“ and couldn’t he work?â€
That he had health, strength, and good-nature, was
plainly to be seen; but that he was ignorant, and, from his
want of judgment, unable to provide for himself and
family, there could be little doubt. Mr. Moreton tried in
vain to convince him, that when he found the place to
stop, which it seemed that he would do soon, from his
horses “giving out,†he had no right to any land; and that,
even if allowed to live and work upon it for a time, as he
might be, he was liable at any moment to be forced by
its owner to leave it, and give up any little improvements
he had made upon it, thus losing the benefit of his own
hard labour. Patrick could not, or would not, understand.
His only reply was, “ And, sure, if I wouldn’t go, and why
couldn’t I stay?â€
«J will help him, even against his will,†thought Mr.
Moreton. After a while he called him to him, and said—
« Patrick, I am going to be a farmer, and have bought
some land, which my sons and I intend to work. But
there will be a great deal of digging, and ditching, and
cutting down of trees, that I chall have to get done for
us. Now, you are strong and well, and able to work, if
you are willing, and can be a great help tous. So I am
going to propose that you shall stop where we do, put up
a shanty on one corner of my land, for this year, and
live there. You shall promise to do what work I ask
you to do, and I will promise to give you employment
and pay you fair wages for all that you do. What do
you say?â€
LAKELAND. 63
Patrick’s heart was more easily reached than his com-
prehension; but when he understood Mr. Moreton’s
proposal, with true Irish eloquence of tongue, he poured
forth a torrent of thanks and praise, in which his wife
Winne joined, with less noise, but more true feeling.
Poor woman! A home would be to her a blessing ; and
she knew it; for, worn and weary with her many cares
and labours, she had looked, day by day, for a time of
rest, which had never yet come. Thriftless and ignorant
as she was, she knew better than Patrick the value of
Mr. Moreton’s offer to them, for she had experienced
too many disappointments to place much dependence
upon her husband’s plans, and knew well the delusive
nature of those hopes with which he had been buoyed up.
From this time, Patrick M‘Coney was a part of Mr.
Moreton’s family; and our readers will pardon this
digression, as it serves to introduce to them one who,
with his strong arm and willing mind, became an aid and
a helper to our emigrant family.
CHAPTER XI.
LAKELAND.
“ Now we see the lights! There! Look! look! Don’t
you see them twinkle? There! Between the trees, Ally.
Now, don’t you see them?â€
Ally’s eyes were-heavy with sleep, and so were Willie’s ;
but his expectation being stronger, he roused himseli to
look in the direction that Charles pointed out. And
there they were!
“One, two, three, four, five, six, and seven, †he
counted ; and then, after a pause, “ eight, nine, ten ; and
fit THE MORETON FAMILY.
a very pale one ten is,†said he. “Is it really Lakeland,
father?â€
“ Yes, my son.â€
“It don’t look as Buffalo did at night, father,†said
Willie, in a disappointed tone.
“ Not much, to be sure, my son. Did you think that
it would?â€
“J don’t know; but it is not much to see.â€
“Had you not better wait until you really see it,
Willie, before you decide about it?â€
The nightfall had just set in, and, still riding in the
woods, it was hardly fair to judge of the appearance of
the little Western settlement, when the shadows of trees
and houses could hardly be distinguished from each
other. Yet, as they approached nearer, and more lights
threw their twinkling beams across the dim prospect,
they found the houses nearer and nearer together, and
the trees fewer and farther between. The approach to
the village was nearly straight for a mile or two, so that
they had been able to discern the first glimmerings of light
while at a distance. It would be difficult to analyze or
describe the various feclings that were awakened in those
different minds, as these first met their view. Although
every settlemeat through which they had passed had
been compared with Lakeland, as to its situation, its size,
its houses, its stores, and its farms, and Mr. Moreton
had aimed at giving a correct impression of the place,
there was an undefinable feeling that it must be rather
a wonderful place, or it never would have been selected
by their father as a residence. And the children were
disappointed; for it was far from being a remarkably
attractive-looking village. But the disappointments of
early youth are not lasting, and this bade fair to pass away,
even before the place was reached. The older ones had
judged more rationally. Every object was to them full
of interest. Their curiosity was powerfully excited, and
LAKELAND. 65
they were too thoughtful to be talkative or very merry,
as they neared their new home.
That night they were to go to the village inn, where
Mr. Moreton had made arrangements for their staying for
a few days, until they were rested from their fatigue, and
had time to make the necessary preparations for removal
to their own dwelling.
As Mrs. Moreton alighted upon the rude platform at
the hotel door, and saw herself surrounded by the faces
of those whom curiosity had drawn from the bar-room to
gaze upon the néw-comers, there was some sinking of
heart ; for she felt that they were strangers in a strange
land. When she looked around upon the room into
which she was ushered, and saw indubitable marks of
poverty and labour, with little of that neatness or tidiness
which a careful husbanding of small means will produce,
she felt almost discouraged by the annoyances and incon-
veniences which she felt would soon surround her. The
responsibility of the happiness and interests of her chil-
dren fell heavily upon her heart, and for the moment she
almost regretted having left New England. It was but for
a moment. Like a wise woman, she had counted the cost
before starting ; and, like a Christian, she now cast aside
every personal feeling, and subdued every selfish emo-
tion—summoning up all her powers of resolution, while
again she silently committed her way unto Him who
alone could lighten her path.
The cheerful voice of the landlady, Mrs. Blake, aroused
her from her reverie, as she entered the room and cor-
dially bade her “ welcome to Lakeland !†Then, bustling
about, she took the bonnets and outer garments off the
little ones, giving each a pleasant word, and telling them
that she had been looking for them every day for a week.
Who can tell the power of a cheerful smile ? of an encour-
aging, hopeful word? How they come to the oppressed
heart as balm to a wound! How they awaken confidence
E
66 THE MORETON FAMILY.
and pleasant expectation, dispelling sadness and distrust !
« A word spoken in due season, how good is it!†was the
saying of the wise man ; and who has not experienced
its truth?
Food and places of rest were soon provided for our
travellers. It mattered little to them that the one was
plain and simple, the other rude and coarse. Sound and
refreshing sleep visits no more readily the luxurious
couch than the humblest ; and they were too tired and
weary to care, save for quiet and cleanliness. This they
found in the home of Mrs. Blake ; and she herself was
ready, with true-hearted kindliness, to do whatever was
in her power to assist them, or to add to their comfort
or pleasure. ;
But what kind of a place was Lakeland? do any of .
my readers ask. Was there anything peculiar in it or
about it?
No; nothing at all. It differed so little from other
Western villages, that it might be taken as a sample of
the whole. It had every advantage of position that an
inland Western town can have, save that of water-power ;
and that is not always a desirable one in a new country.
It was situated on the travelled road between two of the
jarger towns in Indiana. The village (for so they called
the cluster of houses which stood together) was upon the
edge of a small prairie, but was itself in an opening, from
which all the original growth of forest-trees had been
cleared, and the fields on every side, for the distance of
one or two miles, had been fenced in and cultivated.
The village streets and lots had been regularly laid out ;
the houses were mostly frame buildings, painted with a
thin coat of white, and placed directly upen tie street.
Occasionally, one would have green blinds; while a log-
house here and there served to make all the others
inviting, by way of contrast. Every Western village has
sume advantage—such as a grist-mill, a saw-mill, a
LAKELAND. 67
tannery, a foundry, or a court-house. Lakeland was not
deficient in its share of such conveniences ; it had the
court-house ; and besides, there was a dilapidated grist-
mill and a tannery. Among the inhabitants there were
some doctors, some lawyers, some farmers, some mer-
chants; a shoemaker, a tailor, a carpenter,. a wheel-
wright; some people who lived by letting out their
land upon shares; some whose business it was to buy
and sell land; some who spent their time in bartering ;
and some whose employment, or enjoyment (for it
seemed to partake of both), was trading in horses.
Among the men there appeared little of the hurry and
bustle of going about their occupation and business
that characterizes Eastern communities; for either the
climate or the manner of life had tended to give a
lassitude of motion, that left a doubt in the minds of
our friends as to whether those about them were lazy or
sick, or whether any one meant to work at all that day.
The arrival of a family is quite an event in a quiet
Western village. It interests the principal men, because
they are often the landholders, and are desirous of seeing
their town growing and flourishing ; so that the success
of the settlers is of importance to them. It interests the
mechanics; for they look for work, and its consequent
remuneration. It interests the benevolent and public-
spirited ; for they hope to have their hands sustained and
their hearts cheered by congenial minds. It interests the
poor and the needy; for they think another source of
help will be opened to them.
The women are interested; for the prospect of com-
panionship and extended social intercourse is ever plea-
sant to those whose active minds and triendly feelings
do not find full scope in the quietly monotonous life
they lead. The young people, too, are pleased with
every arrival; for change and variety ever interests
them. All these causes conspired to make the arrival of
68 THE MORETON FAMILY.
Mr. Moreton’s family the news of the day. There was
hardly a family who did not know, before breaktast on
the day following, that they had come; and many stopped
to gaze upon them, as they stood near the doorway, or
sauntered in the village street.
he farm which Mr. Moreton had purchased was out
from the village, and was an improved one; that is, it
had been lived upon and worked by a previous owner, and
was sold with all its improvements and its planted fields.
It was considered avery desirable location, having several
acres of prairic-land, which were now fenced in with a
rude Virginia fence, and planted with wheat, which was
growing and promising finely. Part of this farm was also
heavily timbered with maple, basswood, beech, and walnut
trees, growing thickly together in the dark, rich soil, to a
great height.
That part of the land lying towards the village had an
irregular surface, and the field nearest the road presented
a fine slope, stretching up from the residence of the pre-
sent occupant. A poor forlorn habitation did the house
of Mr. Hinckley seem to the party who visited it from
among our friends, the morning after their arrival. It
‘vas a double cabin, built of half-hewn logs, 7.¢. logs
rough upon the outside, but hewn within; there was no
connection between the two parts, though they stood at
the distance of but a few feet from each other. One of
these rooms or houses had a chimney, built of mud and
stones. This was upon the outside of the house, and
presented there rather an uncouth appearance, but
left the inner “wall smooth, with only a cut for the
fire-place. The windows were small and few. The door
opened with a latch, which was. raised by a leathern
string on the outside, and secured by drawing the
string in.
The family to whom it had belonged had remained until
Mr. Moreton came to claim possession, according to agrec-
LAKELAND. 69
ment, and were still living in one part of the cabin. A
troop of white-haired, sun-burnt children, scattered at the
approach of our friends, as if frightened, leaving behind
them only one boy, who was milking a cow just in front
of the closed door. He was about twelve years of age,
well-grown, bright-eyed, and intelligent-looking ; but his
face had an expression of impudent boldness that was un-
pleasant. To Mr. Moreton’s “Good morning,†his only
reply was, “ What?â€
“Good morning!†repeated Mr. Moreton. “Is your
father at home?â€
“He ain’t anywhere else,†answered the boy.
“Can I see him?†asked Mr. Moreton.
To which the response was made by the lad rising sud-
denly from his sitting posture, lifting his pail, and giving
the poor cow a kick on the leg, which sent her hurriedly
away ; he then opened the door, and walked in first, leav-
ing the others to follow, if they pleased.
This was a specimen of manners that was new to the
children, and from which they revolted, as contrary to
their ideas of politeness, of respect, and almost of decency.
Neither did it pave the way for a pleasant impression
when they were admitted within the house. Mrs. Hinck-
ley had seen the strangers coming, and had hurriedly put
on a clean cap, and pinned a little bright-coloured shawl
about her neck. She now came forward to speak with
Mr. Moreton, and, wiping the seats of two chairs, she
handed one to him and another to Mary, who had accom-
panied him. While doing this, the quick eyes of our
f:iends had wandered hither and thither about the room,
taking in at a glance its present uninviting appearance,
and its capabilities for comfort as their own summer resi-
dence. The room was about eighteen feet square, but
clean and in decent order, though the walls and floor
were dilapidated and out of repair. The fire-place was
opposite the door. The hearth, of hard-dried clay mortar,
70 THE MORETON FAMILY.
was cracked and sunken. The floor was roughly-planed
and uneven; the walls about eight feet high. The sleepers
of the chamber floor were small sticks, like rails, and the
boards above rough and full of knots. By the window
there hung a number of small bottles, or phials, some
filled and others empty, fastened to nails, with strings
passed around their necks. Upon the window-seat there
was a picce of chalk, and, on the logs above, a rude kind
of scoring, the only business memorial of Mr. Hinckley,
who thus kept an account of the bushels of wheat and
corn he had taken to market. A cheap looking-glass was
hung upon the wall, but it was upside down, and a picture
meant to ornament its top did not answer that purpose,
because the houses and trees were scen in an inverted
position. Under the glass there was a little table or
stand, covered with a white cloth, and upon it there stood
a candlestick ; a brush and comb lay there too, and a
large piece of bees-wax, in whose sides stout threads had,
in passing, cut large dents and gashes. Besides, there
were some horn buttons, some coarse knitting-work, a reel
of black thread, and a pair of large shears. The chairs
that Mrs. Hinckley had offered to her visiters were all that
the house afforded, except a low one, on the seat of which
lay a pillow, and, upon the pillow, a little baby. That it
might be quiet, an older girl rocked it to and fro, with hard,
irregular movements ; and, while doing this, it was kept
safely in its position by a shawl, which passed over it and
under the seat of the chair, holding both baby and pillow
tightly in their places. Another child, just able to go
alone, was amusing itself upon the bed with a large green
glass bottle and a dry ear of corn, in the husk, as play-
things, considering first one, then the other, as dolls, and
tending them with the utmost care. There were two beds,
but it was early yet, and they were not put in order for
the day; and the breakfast-table was still standing, with
the remains of the morning repast upon it, proving that
LAKELAND. 71
that repast had been one at which no luxury had appeared
to tempt or please the appetite.
Whatever their thoughts or fancies, Mr. Moreton and
Mary were too considerate of Mrs. Hinckley’s feelings to
express either surprise or pity. It was plainly to be seen
that poverty and hard labour had wrought in her mind
discouragement and sadness; and, while she strove to
speak cheerfully of their coming there to live, and praised
the melon-patch and the young peach-trees and currant-
bushes, that she had herself taken care of, as well as
planted, there were tears in her eyes, and her tones told
of disappointment and sorrow.
It was from no sudden freak of fancy, or desire to move,
that Mr. Hinckley had disposed of his farm in Lakeland.
He knew its value and appreciated its advantages. But
his course had been deficient in good judgment, and he
was obliged to sell. Having taken up too much land at
first, he had become embarrassed for means to pay his
yearly taxes. Every year he became more and more in-
volved, and seeing that there was no apparent means of
escape from his liabilities, he had become desperately
careless, and, with a rash indiscretion, made his condi-
tion worse than it need have been, appealing to the old
proverb, that “one might as well be hung for stealing a
sheep asalamb.†This is an old maxim, but an untrue
and an unsafe one to act upon. So Mr. Hinckley found
it; for this course had made it unavoidable that his farm
should pass from his hands, and, with it, he had lost his
reputation as a good farmer, besides contracting habits of
indolence and thriftlessness, that were sure barriers to his
future prosperity. The first tool that he left to pass the
winter in the field where it was used, and the first door that
he allowed to remain off its hinges, were greater losses to
him than money could repay, for they were the beginnings
of carelessness—the openings to that sloth and heedless-
ness that were now prominent traits in his character.
72 THE MORETON FAMILY.
After chatting a few moments with Mrs. Hinckley, Mr.
Moreton left the house to seek her husband. Mary, mean-
while, tried to talk with the children, and, with the aid of
kind words and pleasant smiles, had, before his return, so
far progressed in acquaintance with them, that she had the
little one in her lap, and another, shyly sidling up to her,
was feeling the trimming on her dress with as much care
and caution as if it were some new species of animal that
must be approached by stratagem.
Robert and Henry were still exploring the fields and
woods when Mr. Moreton, Mary, and Frank, returned to
the inn, carrying the pleasant intelligence that the log-
cabin was to be given up to them on the following day,
and that, as soon as they pleased after that, they could
take possession.
CHAPTER XII.
THE LOG-CABIN.
To make a good and pleasant home may seem, to some of
my readers, a very easy matter. They may think that
a family like Mr. Moreton’s would have only to place their
furniture within their house, move in, and the work was
done. Others may think that it was impossible to make
a comfortable home in such a house as Mr. Hinckley’s log-
cabin, and that, as the necessary lumber for the new house
was already upon the ground, it would be better to wait
until it was finished before taking possession of the pre-
mises.
But with neither of these opinions would Mr. and Mrs.
Moreton have agreed. To keep together and be by them-
selves were, with them, desirable objects; and to attain
THE LOG-CABIN. ° 73
them, they were willing to subject themselves to addi-
tional futigue and care. As they were, the habits of re-
gularity and family order (already broken in upon during
their journey) might be forgotten. Idleness was en-
couraged, too, by the desultory modes of life that are
unavoidably seen about a public-house. Charlie already
stood by the bar-room door, with his hands thrust into his
pockets, eagerly listening to such chance stories or con-
versation as he could gather from passers-by or from tra-
vellers. He,as wellas the others, must have employment,
and something which would interest them and occupy
their hands and thoughts. And, above all, Mr. Moreton
dreaded their becoming famil‘arized, and consequently
indifferent, to the sad sights and sounds that are always
to be seen and heard in those places where intoxicating
liquors are bought and sold. For all these reasons, as
well as for the sake of freedom from observation, they
decided to remove to their new home as soon as possible.
And now did the strong-bodied and willing Winne
M‘Coney serve them well; for scrubbing and cleaning
were just what she could do, and here there was plenty
of it to be done.
A thin partition was run across the cabin in which
was the fire-place, making a small bed-room and pantry
on one side, and still leaving the larger room of suffi-
cient size to answer as the family gathering-place—par-
lour, sitting-room, and kitchen, all in one. Two more
windows were cut; and, with the fresh air, came in the
bright sunshine, giving to the apartment a new and cheer-
ful aspect. The loft above was to be used as a store-
house for such boxes and trunks, chests and provisions,
as needed a dry and warm place.
The other cabin was also cleaned thoroughly, and
divided into rooms. One of these was appropriated to
Susan, Mary, and the little girls; while the other and the
room above were to be divided between the boys. No
74 THE MORETON FAMILY.
little loving strife was there before the younger lads
would consent to occupy the lower room, which was by
far the best and most pleasant. They declared that
“ they were of little use, and deserved the worst ;â€â€ while
Henry and Robert as loudly averred that they intended
“to work so hard every day, and to be so tired every
night, that they should consider any bed a luxury ;†and,
besides, “they were always sound sleepers.†So, finally,
it was settled as the older ones desired.
It seemed as if every difficulty vanished the moment
they fairly considered it. The little shelf here and the
row of stout nails there, the hanging of a curtain, the
placing of a trunk in one spot and of a table in another,
appeared wonderfully to suit every one, and to accommo-
date every want.. Ah! it was not that, but the spirit of
disinterestedness, that smoothed their way and made little
sacrifices of personal feeling easy. It was love that
lightened their burdens and warmed their hearts—each
seeking to please the others rather than themselves, and
cheerfully yielding their own will to the desire of another!
A busy and cheerful scene did they present on the
morning of the day when they, as a family, took posses-
sion of the log-house. The carpenter’s work had been
accomplished, and Winne’s severer labours in cleaning
finished the day previous; but now she stood leaning
over a wash-tub that was placed under the shade of the
only tree near the house, busy at her work, while her
children were playing within sight of her maternal eye,
and within hearing of her voice, as, in rather harsh notes,
she sang some Irish melody—wild, but not without har-
mony, as it sounded in the open air. Pat, meanwhile,
was going round, outside of the building, with Mr. More-
ton, carrying a pail full of clay-mortar and a wooden
trowel manufactured for the occasion; and, under his
- direction and superintendence, filling up the chinks be-
tween the logs. Within, Henry and Frank took turns in
THE LOG-CABIN. 75
using a whitewash-brush, laying the thick white liquid in
smooth, straight stripes upon the discoloured logs, and
calling every minute to the others to come and admire
their work.
Robert, meanwhile, with saw and rule in hand, was
measuring and fitting up an emptied box with shelves,
and fastening it in a corner near the fire-place. This
was to be their cupboard ; and Susan’s nimble fingers had
a chintz curtain hemmed and drawn, ready to hang before
it long before it was finished. Then, with Annie’s help,
she hung clean white curtains at the little windows; and
upon the little shelf which had been placed between
them for the clock, she found room for the Bible and
almanac, and fora thermometer. These she called their
emigrant fortune—indispensable to their comfort and
success.
Mary and Frank had unpacked and washed the crockery,
and carefully placed it upon the cupboard-shelves, long
before noon; and Mrs. Moreton had her daughter’s aid in
arranging their beds and sleeping apartments — seeing
that each one was lodged comfortably, and that they had
such conveniences about them as should insure health,
and, so far as circumstances permitted, comfort.
But where were Willie and Alice? Not idle, I can
assure you. There were errands to be done from one to
another, that kept their little feet running and their
tongues busy; there were needles to be threaded, nails
and hammers to be held until the moment they were
wanted. Then the dinner was to be brought from the
village inn, and Charles and Willie were its bearers.
After that, they scoured the knives, and made themselves
generally useful about the premises—looking up little
things to do which would help the older ones in their
work.
Before sundown, everything was arranged in their new
quarters, and they began to feel at home as the sight of
76 TIIE MORETON FAMILY.
familiar household articles gave a home-look to the place.
_... The excitement of the day was over, and they were
fairly fixed in their Western home. The little flickering
blaze from the deep chimney cast its fitful light upon the
whitened walls, and the lengthened twilight from without
streamed in at the open door, showing the family group
—father, mother, and children—gathered together in the
cool of the day, resting from its fatigues—weary, but
satisfied with the result of their labours, and contented
with their present condition, while the future was to
them full of hope.
“How comfortable this is!†said Mary. “I should
never have thought that, in so short a time, such a change
could have been made as there has been here. When I
came out here to see Mrs. Hinckley, and knew that, in a
week’s time, her house was to be our home, I felt dis-
couraged. It seemed impossible to make it decent; and,
as for comfort, I thought that, as uncle Alfred said, ‘ We
must dispense with that, and make up for the want of it
by boasting about the West being a great country.â€
“ Many hands have made light and quick work here,â€
was Mrs. Moreton’s reply, “ and willing hearts have made
it easy !â€
“If any one is to have a compliment, where all have
done well,†said Mr. Moreton, “it must be given to your
mother, my children ; to whose forethought and labour,
before we left Laurelton, we have been, to-day, so much
indebted. To have selected and packed together the very
articles we should be likely to need first, and then to re-
inember just what they were, was to us a great matter,
and involved much thought and judgment upon her part.
Perhaps you think it happened that there were just dishes
enough for us to use, put up in one box, and all the rest
put away in another; and that this square piece of car-
_ pet that covers all the middle of this room, and makes it
look and feel so comfortable, was a piece that we have
THE LOG-CABIN. "7
always had in just this form, and that it came first in the
package of carpets as a matter of chance; but I know
who arranged both of these things, and many others, of
which we have experienced the benefit, both on our jour-
ney and to-day. It took time and made some delay, but
she judged rightly that it would help us in the end.â€
Mary cast a knowing look at Frank, to see if he remem-
bered his impatience; but, though he saw it not, he felt
that he had been wrong, and said—
“Tam glad that you have told us this, father; for it didâ€
seem a great while to wait; but it is not the first time I
have thought that nothing was doing because I was not
at work, and have afterwards found out that I was mis-
taken.â€
“ We should have had less to do, if we had not had se
many boxes and chests to stow away,†said Henry. “ We
have more things than we need. Half we brought is all
we can use here.â€
“ We shall need it all in the new house; shall we not,
father?â€
“Yes; and much more, I think.â€
“ But shall we need the new house?†asked Susan.
“That remains to be proved,†replied Mr. Moreton. “As
Mary says, we are comfortably fixed ; but as time passes,
we shall be cramped for room; and the novelty of our
position passing away, we shall be more disposed to see
and feel inconveniences than at present. It will be more
healthful, as well as agreeable, to live in a better house,
and a larger. By the time the new home is ready, I think
we shall be ready too.â€
“ Home is not a house, is it?†asked Willie.
“No, my son. Home has to us a deeper, tuller signifi-
cation than a mere dwelling-house—a shelter from the
weather. We consider it a refuge from the business and
cares of life; a place where we are surrounded by others
who are bound to us, and we to them, by the ties of kin-
78 THE MORETON FAMILY.
dred and affection; where the objects that surround us
are those with which we are pleasantly familiar ; and
with whose inmates we can have that happy freedom in
speaking and acting, which springs from a loving heart 2
and good principles.â€
“ T remember an old saying,†said Robert, “Give an
Indian a fire, and you give him a home y
“ Yes, that is true. His wants, in the savage state, are
but few. A kind of stoical pride prevents him from exer-
cising any domestic virtues, or acknowledging that his
happiness depends upon any external comfort. His wife,
or squaw, is acknowledged as an inferior, and agrees to it.
His children are of little account to him; and to be warm
and to have food, are all that he cares for. Anywhere,
if these are furnished, he has his home.â€
«“ T wonder what Patrick’s idea of a home is!†said Mary..
“We shall soon see, for our first duty must be to have
a house furnised for him. The village is too far from us
for them to stay there long.â€
«“ Shall you take the carpenters from their work upon
the frame of our house to build one for him ?â€
“No, Henry. For a few weeks Mr. Hinckley stays to
superintend the farm ; and there is little for you and
Robert to do. I intend to have you and Patrick put up
a house for him; and you can exercise your skill and
judgment in the matter as if you yourselves were young,
poor emigrants out here alone; and upon your own re-
sponsibility. I will stay to direct about affairs here.â€
«“ First, father, let us put up a passage-way between the
two cabins, so that we can pass from one to the other
without going out of doors.â€
«That is a good idea, Robert ; and you can have some
of the rough lumber purchased for the barn, to use.â€
« If we build that,†said Henry, “ why not make it wide
enough to put the cooking-stove in, and then in the hot
weather we can keep this room cool for our parlour!â€
THE LOG-CABIN. 79
“ That will be nice,†said Mary. “ It will be so much plea-
santer and easier; and then,†she added, turning to Susan,
“we can pull the carpet over that rough hearth that we
agreed was so very ugly.â€
“TJ shall like the arrangement very much,†said Mrs.
Moreton; “and I thank you, Robert, for planning it for
my convenience and comfort.â€
“Then it shall be done, and that right speedily ; for
what it pleases you to have, mother, it pleases me to
do!â€
“That is the true spirit, Robert,†returned his mother.
“Without that feeling on the part of every member of
the family, there is little home-felt joy in the domestic
circle. Cross words or discontented hearts break up the
pleasure of any family for the time ; and an habitual dis-
regard for the comfort of others, by indulging in these
faults, will destroy family peace and harmony ; while a
spirit of disinterestedness will create happiness in the
heart of its possessor, even while dispensing its gifts.â€
“ Are kind actions gifts ?†asked Mary.
“Yes, my dear, they are truly gifts, and more valuable
in diffusing happiness than the most costly presents. No
actual gift could give me so much gratification as the
knowledge that your brothers think of my comfort, and
are willing to do something to promote it.â€
“TI suppose it is the good-will manifested that always
makes a present acceptable.â€
“I think it is, even to those whose wants are actually
supplied by such gifts. A needy or poor person will
value a kind word or sympathising look which accom-
panies the aid bestowed, quite as much as the charity it-
self, and will gratefully remember it much longer. To
those who are the recipients of what are usually called
prcsents, there is nothing which awakens more uncom-
fortable feeling than an appearance of superiority.â€
“We can all bestow beautiful gifts upon each other,
§) THE MORETON FAMILY.
then, every day,†said Annie, “ by loving and trying to
help one another.â€
« And when we get acquainted we can give such spendid
presents to everybody about us! Why, Frank, you did
not tell of that elegant one you and Charles made to the
old woman that lives by the roadside, between us and
Mrs. Blake’s; I mean the one that the children call aunt
Rachel.â€
«To tell of such gifts would spoil them, Willie,†an-
swered Frank.
“ Not for me to tell of yours ; would it, father? Atany
rate I must tell of this, if only for the sake of the com-
pliment the old woman gave you. When we were coming
here yesterday, we saw aunt Rachel out in front of the
house splitting wood. She was at work on a green
knotty stick, and the hatchet that she was using did not
cut very well. Frank walked up straight to the wood-
pile, and asked her if she wouldn’t like to have him chop
it for her. At first she looked pretty sharply at him
through her spectacles, I can tell you, to see if he was
making fun of her ; but when she saw that he was in
earnest, she said, ‘Yes, and thank you, too! Her little
grandson, who +3 about as old as Alice, ran in and brought
out an axe, which, she said, ‘was too heavy for her to use,
now she was so old; and in a few minutes the boys had
her a couple of armfuls of wood cut, which they carried in
and put down on the hearth beside the stove. I don’t
know exactly what she thought about it, for it seemed to
surprise her; but she said, once or twice, ‘Ah! I see
your young blood ain’t poppy-juice â€
Mr. Moreton smiled at the compliment the boys had
won, and commended the action. |
“Iam glad you had it in your power to confer even
this small favour; for it was to her, no doubt, a favour.
By this one little action you have probably gained a
friend ; and if she sees nothing in you hereafter to coun-
THE LOG-CABIN. Sl
teract its influence, her friendship is yours and ours for
life ; for in the public estimation we are associated as a
family, and for good or evil the acts of each will affect the
whole. Ihave seen aunt Rachel, and Mrs. Blake told me of
her, as our nearest neighbour. God, who has liberally be-
stowed blessings upon us, has made her lot to differ from
ours. She is alone and poor. With that little grandson
clinging to her, as his only friend, she has laid upon her
the heavy burden of her past bereavements and sorrows,
and the care of hisand her own support. Perhaps neither
you nor I can estimate the value to her of a kind action
or word; for we know nothing of the discouragement
and anxiety that extreme poverty brings, nor of the heart-
sinkings that must come with its perplexities in the time
of old age and failing strength. But Frank was right in
thinking that such actions are spoiled by boasting of them
—spoiled in the sight of God, who looks upon the heart,
and judgesits motives. Our little Annie might have seen
the old woman’s trouble with the wood, and not have
been able to help her, as your brothers did; yet the de-
sire to do so might have been as strong and as free from
selfishness as theirs; and both would have pleased God,
because the heart was right, and the spirit such as Christ
manifested in his intercourse with men.
“Let the heart, then, be right; let it be kept with all
diligence ; let it be purified from selfishness by the inspi-
ration of the Holy Ghost, and our eyes will be opened to
a sense of others’ wants and desires: then good actions
will follow naturally. We all know where and how to
seek for this purification of our souls. By earnest prayer
to God for the gift of his Spirit, and an earnest effort to
follow its guidance, we shall not fail to become free from
the dominion of selfishness; for the love of Jesus, our
Saviour, is pledged, and his intercession promised, for
our help and our aid. Our own hearts will first be
made peaceful and happy, then our home will be bright
F
82 THE MORETON FAMILY.
through the manifestation of our own joy, and the circle
of our influence will be extended, and those who observe
us will gradually be led to feel that peace, happiness, and
prosperity, are alone to be found in a calm, quiet, but
steady performance of every duty towards God and man,
while the heart rests for comfort and support in this life,
and for salvation in that which is to come, solely upon
the merits of a crucified Redeemer.â€
CHAPTER XIII.
PATRICK’S HOME.
“No Patrick! Not a shanty! I don’t like them; but a
good log-cabin, such as becomes the country, built as
well and as substantially as we can do it. That is my idea
of a house for you; and now, where shall it be?â€
Thus said Robert, as he, with Henry and Patrick, stood
together in the woods, with their working frocks on, and
spades over their shoulders. Through the land that Mr.
Moreton owned there was running a little brook, which,
though in the summer months it dwindled away to a mere
tiny streamlet, yet, after a rain, it rapidly filled, and ran
its course over its pebbly bed merrily enough. Near its
bank Patrick chose to have his residence, and there they
decided it should be.
The first thing undertaken was the digging of a cellar.
This, to Patrick, seemed totally unnecessary, for “a
potato-heap†was as good as any cellar in his estimation ;
‘but neither Robert nor Henry would consent to such an
arrangement. Two days’ work, and the cellar was dug ;
another day, and it was logged with good white-oak logs,
so that it looked tidy, and the danger of its sides caving
in was obviated. Then they cut forty logs of the same
PATRICK’S HOME. 83
length, roughly hewed them on two sides, stripped the
bark from them, that there might be fewer harbours for
the insects (which are often so troublesome in a new
country), notched their ends, and piled them up, one
above another, fitting them at the corners, until they
formed a square enclosure, ten fect high. Then a ride to
a neighbouring swamp and a day’s work were necessary,
to yet some tamarac poles, to lay across as supporters for
the chamber-floor. Two more logs gave the requisite
height to the back and front of the building. Poles
were joined together in the middle, and, with a gentle
slope, met opposite corners of the building, leaving the
height of the centre of the room nearly eight fect. The
gable ends were boarded in with split stuff, leaving a
window on each side. Split boards were laid on the
rafters, their lower edges overlapping each other. These,
at regular intervals, were fastened by slender poles laid
across, and nailed at the ends, forming what is called a
“ shaky roof.â€
A door was cut in the centre of the front side of the
cabin, and another just opposite to it, on the back. Two
windows were made, having each twelve lights. The
floor was of sawed lumber, laid on hewn sleepers, with a
trap-door in one corner to go into the cellar, and a ladder,
or steps, to the loft above, near it. The establishment
began now to look quite like a house; but it was not yet
done. There was still the chinking, or filling up oi the
openings between the logs (which must necessarily be
left, because of their irregularities) with bits of split stuff,
or chips, or small rails, and then covering it smoothly
over with clay-mortar. A greater task for them was to
build a chimney. This was to be made on the outside of
the house; and, as they had but little stone, and bricks
were expensive, they were obliged to make it of logs,
covered with thick coatings of clay. A frame, the size of
the fire-place desired, was made of boards ; another frame,
84 THE MORETON FAMILY.
the same shape, but smaller in size, was temporarily fixed
within it, leaving a space between the two. This was
filled with moist clay and such bits of stone or brick as
they could gather together, pressed tightly down, and
forming one solid compact mass. A hearth of the same
material, and the ends of the cut logs well plastered over,
made this, when dry, a safe and neat-looking fire-place.
Above, out of the reach of the fire, the chimney was of
sticks, covered with clay. A little shanty was built over
the back-door, with a shelf, and a piece of plank was fas-
tened against the side of the house to answer as a table.
This finished the work of the young men, and it was with
no little pleasure that they viewed it. Counting their
own labour as nothing, it had cost them but little. The
logs were taken from a field which Mr. Hinckley had be-
gun to clear. The digging, splitting, and sawing, they
themselves had accomplished. With some aid in drawing
and raising the logs, and some little expense for nails,
window-frames, and glass, and the lumber for the
floors, it was the work of their own hands—the crea-
tion of their own industry ; and no workmen on a royal
palace were ever more delighted than they with their
success.
Winne’s admiration equalled theirs, and fully repaid
them for their labour. It is true that the poor woman
had little or nothing to put in the house, save her husband |
and children, yet there was a comfortable feeling asso-
ciated with the having a habitation of her own, and it
seemed to give her new life and energy to see the change
that a little encouragement and a few words of kindness
had wrought upon her husband. When Mr. Moreton
came to see them, after they were fairly established, he
found Patrick and Winne, with the children, seated out-
side of the door, apparently as happy as earthly prosperity
can make mortals—contented to work, if work could be
provided, but with no thrift nor judgment, either in seck-
4
PATRICK’S HOME. 85
ing labour, or making the bodily vigour and strength they
possessed available for their own comfort.
And thus it is with many a poor emigrant, whose wants
have driven him into the Western world, whose means
are all consumed in the mere getting there, and whose
want of education and habits of life have totally unfitted
him to act for himself. Alas! that even his religion,
superstitious and cruel to his own soul, should, in so many
instances, have been used further to degrade the man ;
and, instead of exalting and purifying the spirit, should
have been, in the hands of a crafty priesthood, subser-
vient only to the deepening and darkening of the be-
nighted, sinful heart, and to the stupifying of every sensi-
bility, so that he can be led, like a beast, hither and
thither, at the will of those who stand between God and
his soul!
How easily such can fall into the hands of the wicked
and designing, it is not difficult to see. But, thanks be to
God! better influences may also be successfully exerted
upon them. A well-disposed, honest, benevolent em-
ployer,—one who gives work, not charity; who, by @
timely word, encourages habits of industry, and gradually
lays the foundation for increase of knowledge and the
yrowth of good principles; and who, by his example, is
constantly making known the benefits of well-directed
labour, integrity, and uprightness,—such a man is doing
a missionary work; a work in which the hearts of all
lovers of their country must bid him God-speed ; a work
which is laying deep and sure the foundations of national
prosperity. And his influence is felt, not only over the
few with whom he personally comes in contact, but over
all who are witnesses of the rapid and sure improvements
that usually follow his endeavours to do good as God
gives him opportunity.
Nor is “the bread thus cast upon the waters†never
found. In a country where progress is speedy, where
S6 THE MORETON FAMILY,
change follows change in quick succession, the “ many
days†dwindle to a few; and already had Mr. Moreton
begun, not only to feel repaid for his trouble and the risk
he had run in engaging to employ one who seemed so
ignorant, so poor, and so needy, but he was also receiving
the first fruits of the promise, “ He that watereth shall be
watered also himself,†in the earnest and successful en-
deavours of Patrick and Winne to make themselves use-
ful to their employers, and to please their benefactors.
Though their first object was now to testify their grati-
tude, yet, under its influence, there were springing up
pleasant manifestations of neatness and steady applica-
tion. They began to think more of each other’s comfort,
and to feel as if their children were of more consequence.
A praiseworthy ambition was aroused, and they were
willing to seek for information and advice from those who
had proved themselves friendly. Patrick was bound by
no promise to Mr. Moreton ; nor was Mr. Moreton obliged
to retain him longer than he was willing to work. The
rent of his house and his family’s support from the farm
were his wages for the first year, with the understanding
that either the house or its worth in money should be
given him at its close, if he was faithful to his employer.
After that, he was to be paid, with a regular yearly in-
crease of wages, in such way as they might, at the time,
agree upon. But it was not in wages alone that Mr.
Moreton’s family helped Patrick M‘Coney. Susan showed
Winne how to fit neat dresses for herself and the chil-
dren, and, out of her own wardrobe, helped their defi-
ciencies. Mary’s voice directed about the scanty furni-
ture of the cabin, showing how it could be cleansed and
made more available for comfort. Robert helped to put
the fence in order in front of the house, and promised
little Pat a penny a week to keep the pigs out of the
yard. Henry sold the old horses and waggon, and some-
how made the money received for them go far enough to
NEIGHBOURS. 87
buy a cow and two young steers, that, in a few years,
would be of great value to Patrick. Annie would look
after the toddling little one, when Winne came to the
house to work, and taught it and little Patrick their let-
ters from one of her own story-books ; while Mrs. Moreton
patiently drilled the mother into the best way of doing
hhouse-work, and taught her how to prepare food—accom-
plishments in which, like too many of her country women,
she was strangely deficient.
Thus it was that they sought to insure their confidence
and gain their respect, hoping that, these being secured,
they might be instrumental in leading them in the way
of life; and that, while they trusted them as friends who
were solicitous for their earthly welfare, they would also
learn to view with favour any efforts which they might
make for their personal conversion. Ignorance and
superstition have ever gone hand in hand, and he is wise
who seeks Almighty aid before attacking its strongholds
in the heart of one who has been trained in the papal
faith. Daily were these benighted ones remembered
before God, as the Moreton family assembled for domestic
worship; and strength and wisdom were asked for them-
selves, that they might each of them so live as to recom-
mend the religion oi Jesus, the religion of the Bible, to
those around them.
CHAPTER XIV.
NEIGHBOURS.
In this century of the world, and in our own beloved
country, it is difficult to find, and more difficult to retain,
a home without neighbours. Very few are there to whom
companionship and social intercourse are undesirable.
8s THE MORETON FAMILY.
Man is (as has been often said) “a gregarious animal,â€
drawn to his fellow-man by ties of sympathy and interest.
He needs his assistance—he craves his friendship. A
life of seclusion has few charms for a healthy, vigorous
mind: it has no attractions for a man who is intent on
bettering his condition, and on risinginthe world. Thus
we see, in the great West, that a farm near a settlement
is always sought for. If that settlement is likely to in-
crease and become of importance, so much the better.
As farmers, men are there necessarily scattered and
hidden from the sight of travellers, as well as from each
other; but an election-day, a court-week, or a national
celebration, will draw together, inany county, many men,
women, and children, who, living a little on one side or
the other of the highway, are seldom seen save on such
occasions. It was the number drawn together on a
national holiday that first gave our friends any idea of
those by whom they were surrounded. Without any ar-
rangement for their entertainment, there was a general
feeling among the people that it should be a day of
recreation, and a resort to the village was as natural as it
was certain. Here they loitered about, lingering at the
tavern, strolling up and down, chatting with each other,
until a party of young people arriving, who had a violin-
player with them, they had a dance in the court-house!
The grocery-store was a place of attraction to the men ;
and Mr. Blake’s bar-room had many in it who went away
less sober than they came. But there was no quarrelling.
What of evil appeared was from want of something good
or useful to do; and Mr. Moreton’s eye was quick to
discern this, and his heart as quick to resolve that another
year, if life and health were granted him, it should be
otherwise, and that they who came together should, at
least, have the choice between evil and good.
But, this time, he could do little but obtain an intro-
duction to some of the people ; and then, going home, he,
NEIGHBOURS. 89
with his family, sought a pleasant place in the adjoining
woods, and played gipsy-life, by boiling their tea-kettle
and spreading their table beneath the green trees ; while
Charles, Willie, and Alice, wandered of, and soon brought
back a plentiful supply of field-strawberries. Before they
partook of their repast, they were all crowned with gar-
lands of bright flowers, mate by Mary’s skilful hands, and
fantastic wreaths were about the shoulders of the little
girls; while Frank, with a huge bouquet in his button-
hole, made an extempore address on Liberty ; and, join-
ing hands, they all, with great energy and zeal, sang to
their mother, who was their only auditor, and who after-
wards returned her thanks for the great honour they had
done her, and invited them, one and all, to partake of the
feast spread for them. Before they were through, who
should come but Patrick and Winne, who had heard the
voices, and were drawn towards them by their desire
both to see what was going on and to help if they could ;
and they were just in time to have their share of the
supper, and to gather up for them the things brought from
the house.
Thus passed their first holiday in Indiana. But it was
not of this we designed only to tell. Their pleasures this
day had been shared by none but themselves, but thus
they did not desire that it should always be.
Their immediate neighbours on one side were few, for
their farm was a large one; but between them and the
village there were several families, and the village people
themselves were not far away. For the first few weeks
all advances made towards acquaintance were on their
part. They showed themselves to be friendly by a plea-
sant recognition of those whom they had ever met, and
by a manifest desire to extend their knowledge of those
around them; and in due time this course had the effect
to draw out the good feeling and hospitality of others.
Mrs. Blake, the landlady of the village inn, has already
90 THE MORETON FAMILY.
been introduced to our readers; but we may here speak
of her steady, constant friendliness, and of that value and
esteem that grew as they knew her better. Her husband
was an intemperate man, idle in his habits, and little to
be depended on; but she, with energy and self-denial,
laboured on, hoping almost against hope for him, and
doing what she could to remedy the evils of his example
upon his children. Hers was no easy life. To maintain
the reputation of their house (upon which their support
depended), to restrain and guide the restless minds of
her children, and with ingenuity and ceaseless care to
watch over her hushand’s course, oftentimes preventing
those drunken carousals which he called frolics,—this was
her task, and who shall say that it was easy, or the burden
light?
Directly across the street from her lived a lawyer—
“ Squire Thomas,†as he was styled—a man of talents and
well educated, but dissatisfied with his home in the West.
His property had become so involved with the place in
which he lived, that he could not without sacrifice leave
Lakeland. He had health, a good profession, and was
steadily acquiring riches ; but the poison of discontent
mingled with his cup of mercies, and he knew not that
that poison was placed there by his own hand, that its
fountain was in his own heart, and that, go whither he
would, the stream would still flow. Mrs. Thomas scarcely
knew her neighbours, and her children associated but
little with others of their age ; while the reputation of
the whole family was that of proud, overbearing people,
who felt as if they were of more consequence than their
neighbours. 7
_ Mr.and Mrs. Stetson were plain, straightforward, honest,
industrious people, originally from Pennsylvania, but resi-
dents of Lakeland since it became a town. They began
with only a small capital ; but, as a merchant or trader,
Le had realized a comfortable competency. There was
NEIGHBOURS. d1
Mr. Trufant, another merchant, and Mr. Black, still another
—both of whom had families, and were prosperous in
their worldly concerns. There was Dr. Mason, a man of
limited education, but of strong good sense—kind-hearted,
and in earnest to relieve suffering ; and Mrs. Mason, who
warmly seconded his endeavours to make both sick people
well, and well happy. There was Mr. John Dudley, a
young lawyer, who boarded with Mrs. Blake—a man of
education and intelligence, seeking his fortune far away
from his home. There was Mr. Stahler, a German
house-builder, who called his workmen from their em-
ployment, when dinner was ready, with the sweetest notes
upon a French horn. There was the little German shoe-
maker, whose wife was a native of the State, and who
counted the ages of her children by the running of the
sap of the sugar-maple, saying that little “ Dora was nine
years old last sap-run, and Herman would be three come
thenext.†There was Mr. Blagden, the school-teacher for
the time, but intending soon to return to his farm, which
he had left only on account of ill health. There was
aunt Rachel, of whom we have spoken before; and just
beyond her a French family lived, miserably poor and
destitute. These were but a part of the neighbours by
whom Mr. Moreton’s family was surrounded, but sufficient
to show the variety of life that they would mect with.
Among them all there were, doubtless, those whom
they should learn to love and respect, and the disposition
to do so was not wanting in our friends. That some of
the homes of these people were neither neat nor tidy, and
that in most of them there was evidently little ambition
to have a well-furnished house, istrue. One or two rooms
were made to accommodate a whole family; but, living
in the same way themselves, neither Mr. nor Mrs. More-
ton could find fault with it. One thing they did observe
and notice, namely, that there was lacking neither capabili-
tics nor the ambition to improve; but that beneath the
a2 THE MORETON FAMIILY.
eumbrous load of labour and care thrown upon them, the
people were seen to great disadvantage ; and that, year
by year, the increased advantages of their condition, and
the possession of conveniences for performing labour,
would give them more freedom from fatigue, and leisure
to develop those tastes which were not dead, but hidden
by the necessity that now existed to supply actual physi-
cal wants.
“There is nothing here to discourage us,†said Mrs.
Morcton, “ or to disappoint our expectations in regard to
social intercourse with those about us. Neither for our-
selves nor our children need we fear that we shall be
lonely, or without the advantages of others’ friendship.
If we hear of village factions and quarrels, they need not
be ours; and if home is pleasant to the boys, they will
hardly run to the grocery or pall-room for society.â€
«] own that I have some fears that the monotony of
life may be tedious to Robert and Henry, and that Mary,
with her fastidious tastes, will see many things to disgust
her with so rude a life as that about us,†said Mr. Moreton.
“J have little fear for our sons until the house and
farm are in good order. Employment, full employment,
:s the best safeguard against the evil tendency of youth-
ful restlessness ; and work is abundant with us now, and
will be for two years to come. Besides, under the influ-
ence of Christian principle, as we hope they are, they are
learning to look upon those about them as creatures of
God, whom, on no account, may they neglect or despise.
Will not this keep them from being weary of their daily
life ?â€
« But Mary and you? Will you be satisfied here?â€
«Do not fear for us. Susan supplies the need of a com-
panion to both of us, and she is happy always. Mary
came with an aggravated idea of the loneliness and misery
she might find here. It was, to her, like leaving a para-
dise for a desert. Everything is far better and more
NEIGHBOURS. 93
agreeable than she looked for, and the reaction is fuvour-
able for her. So far she is perfectly satisfied—more than
that—pleased with the change. For myself, I need no-
thing more fur my happiness than to see you all happy.
A wife and a mother need look no farther than her own
fireside for society ; yet there are resources open for me
beyond this. Already instances of good-feeling, of amia-
bility, and of native refinement, have come under my
notice among our acquaintances here. I have seen energy
and hope exhibited, and powers of self-denial and endur-
ance manifested, which have compelled my admiration,
even while I owned that I was not equal to them.â€
“It was my strong desire fur your happiness that has
made me anxious,†replied Mr. Moreton. “Iam neither
discouraged nor disheartened myself; but I feared for
you.â€
“Then fear no longer, I beg of you. The good time
coming will be as powerful a motive with us as with our
neighbours; and Iam thankful that we are here now,
when Lakeland is in its transition state. A few years
more, and our influence would have been lost, for its
character will then be fixed. As there is
‘4 tide in the affairs of men,
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune,’
so there is with places and towns. Now is the time to
work for Lakeland, and now is the time that working will
do us good—prove our patience, awaken our powers of
judgment, and impress upon our children a sense of
responsibility to man and God.â€
“You are right in your judgment; and if it is blessed
to be permitted to labour, how thankful should we be for
the gracious gospel, in which is our only sure hope of
success! Never, until I came here, have I realized its
full tendency to reform and elevate society, or the en-
nobling influence of a cordial belief in Christianity. To
94 THE MORETON FAMILY.
each indiviauat the message it brings is one of love. It
tells him that, as the possessor of an immortal soul, he is
of the highest importance ; that for that soul Christ died
—for its salvation he now intercedes. Why should he
despise himself, or debase the spirit for which God cares ?
Why should he despair, when eternal life is offered on
terms so simple—so sure? How can he be thoughtless,
when his way is watched by Jesus himself, and that with
eyes of divine love? How can he be careless of his
words or actions, when he realizes that they are to in-
fluence his eternal state? Only once impress upon his
mind the great truth of his immortality, and fix it there,
with the knowledge of Jesus as his Saviour, and personal
thought, personal responsibility, personal hope, and per-
sonal effort, will be aroused. O the blessed gospel of
Christ, that can awaken attention, that can sustain under
trying effort, that can comfort in tribulation and sorrow,
and assure of ultimate success and eternal salvation !
«Under its influence, how small appear the outward
circumstances with which a gracious God has seen fit to
snvest each soul! I hope that we shall all be enabled to
see this, and that the value of each immortal spirit will
be manifest to us. We may help it in its struggle, we
may guide it in its efforts, we may win its confidence ;
our example may be a co-worker with the Spirit of God ;
our words may fix or dissipate serious impressions ; our
actions may lead into temptation. Together made in the
image of God—together sinners in his sight—together we
may be heirs of a blessed immortality! With what a
vast interest does this thought invest our own personal
eftort—our every-day intercourse with our neighbours!
May God grant us the desire and the strength to be
faithful!â€
THOMAS REVERE. 95
CHAPTER XV.
THOMAS REVERE.
Ir was under the influence of sentiments such as those
- expressed in-the last chapter, that Mr. Moreton looked
around him for opportunities to do good. To combat
existing plans of operation was not, in his opinion, wise
or desirable. He deemed it better to fall in with those
already in progress, and help in the carrying out of
schemes that had been arranged by others, whose longer
residence in the country, and greater knowledge of the
prevailing modes of thought and action, made them better
judges of what was likely to be successful. When fairly
initiated himself, he could propose changes, if he then
thought such changes would add any value to projects
already started, or invest them with increased attractions.
Nor was he willing to awaken envy or ill-will, or to excite
comment, by assuming any prominent place in the com-
munity, unless it was sure to add to his usefulness.
The Sabbath, as a day of worship, must have its due
observance by his family, or they would not be satisfied.
There was no church, no religious service, no gathering
of the people for prayer and praise, the Sabbath after
their arrival. Why was this?) Had Mr. Moreton forgot-
ten it, when deciding upon Lakeland as a residence, or
had he deemed it a secondary consideration? Neither.
At the time he purchased his farm there was a missionary
labouring there, and a little church of seven members had
gathered themselves under his ministrations. It was with
great regret that our triends tound, on their arrival, that
he had left the little flock, discouraged and disheartened
himseli, because he seemed to make so little progress,
and had left the little band of Christians hardly less de-
S THE MORETON FAMILY.
pressed and dejected than he himself. The variety of
denominational feeling had prevented unity of action,
and the few whose feelings were in harmony had been
too poor to build a church or support a minister. A
Sabbath-school had been organized, and was again re-
opened with the returning spring ; but it was feebly sus-
tained, for want of interest in the people.
To become members of this, in whatever capacity they
might, was the determination of our friends ; and accord-
ingly, the first Sabbath after their arrival, Mr. Moreton,
with all his children, were there.
It was held at five o’elock in the afternoon, and their
party was too large to escape notice as they entered the
room and found their seats. A Mr. Johnson was the
superintendent, and the cordial “I am glad to see you \â€
with which he welcomed them was from the heart. He
soon placed Susan with a little class about her, Annie and
Alice among the number. Mary found a seat among the
older girls under Mrs. Stetson’s care; but they were, with
one exception, much younger than herself. Robert and
Henry entered themselves, as the nucleus about which a
Bible class might gather, under the instructions of their
father; and right glad were they when John Dudley, the
young lawyer, having seen them go into the school-house,
followed and took his place by them. Places for the
younger lads were found, which suited them ; and such
an accession to their numbers and strength could not fail
to give new life and vigour to the whole school. At the
commencement of the school, Mr. Moreton was requested
to offer prayer; and when the simple hymn was read,
and in uncertain, faint, and tremulous tones, the children
- began to sing, Mary’s sweet, clear voice, accustomed to
guiding the notes of younger and feebler voices, joined
with them, giving character and correctness to the har-
mony.
As Robert lingered at the close of the school, waiting
THOMAS REVERE. ‘97
for his father’s company home, Mr. Johnson expressed
the hope that they might be able to give him a class
soon.
“{ would rather stay where I am,†was Robert’s reply.
“JT am not too old to be a learner; and we may be able
to gather a Bible class together.â€
That fvolish pride that makes one ashamed to acknow-
ledge his best feelings, and leads to the concealment of
his purest affections and most valuable impulses, had no
place in Robert’s mind. His was true independence of
heart—true manliness. He loved his home—he loved his
family circle. The restraints that parental watchfulness
imposed he felt to be safeguards to his prosperity, and
would on no account have shaken off as impediments in
the path of pleasure. Nor did the spirit of worldliness
or vanity prevent his making the interests of his home
his objects of attraction, or the fear of criticism or ill-
natured remark hinder his associating with those who
were younger or more ignorant than himself.
Straightforward, and with honesty of purpose, he pur-
sued his way, seeking no distinction, and asking for no
notoriety ; yet, when called upon by circumstances, he
could openly defend the right, and, with what ability he
possessed, maintain his cause. They had been in Lake-
land several months, when, one evening, Robert went to
the village grocery-store to procure some family neces-
saries, and found himself thrown into a new, and, to him,
strange scene.
Drunkenness still prevails too widely over our fair land,
and, year by year, lays low the fortunes and prospects of
many to whom life opened with the brightest expectations
and the highest hopes.
Such could be found in Lakeland. Among others, there
was one, scarcely thirty years of age, who, by great and
continued indulgence, had earned for himself the nickname
of “Whisky Tom.†He was a native of New England.
G
98 THE MORETON FAMILY.
His early life, family, or friends, were unknown to tho
Lakeland people. It was evident that he had received a |
complete collegiate education, and equally evident that
his dissipated habits had rendered that education of no
avail to him. He came to the West with money to pur-
chase a small farm, and to build upon it a frame-house.
This farm lay some miles out of the village, and was
rented to a family with whom he resided, and who were
his assistants about the farm. At first he pursued his
business diligently, and Thomas Revere was known only
as a moderate drinker. An occasional glass at the tavern
or grocery counter, a drink with a friend, or at a harvest
rejoicing, betrayed no strong habits of intemperance ; but
soon, longer tarryings where it could be found, and more
frequent visits, were noticeable. Then, the bottle was
brought in his pocket, that it might be filled to carry
home. The bottle became too small, and a jug was now
openly carried in his hand. Two years passed, and he
entered upon the third with few friends, except his boon
companions ; with little ability and less intention of la-
bouring da‘ly for his bread ; and with “the chains of the
monster†firmly rivetted on his neck! One more year,
and he lost all control over his property ; for the farm,
nominally his own, was so covered by mortgages and en-
cumbrances, that it was actually in the possession of those
who had supplied his craving thirst and fed the flames
that were now consuming him. Yet he was suffered to
live there unmolested; for his personal effects were of
some value, and the money-making seller of ardent spirits
would fain have all! Such was the state of Thomas Re-
vere’s affairs on the arrival of Mr. Moreton’s family in
Lakeland. Prematurely infirm and broken-down in phy-
sical strength, his mind shattered, but revealing, in mo-
ments of partial inebriation, its former brilliancy, he
needed only the stimulus of one or two glasses to call
torth his powers of argumentation, and the quick re-
THOMAS REVERE. 99
partee, and bright sallies of wit, that showed the man of
talent.
Under such an influence was it that Robert Moreton first
encountered him. The village store was quiet ; though
within it, as he entered, he found several men, with
“Whisky Tom,†each holding their glasses, and drinking,
more or less eagerly, their contents. Behind the counter
stood the store-keeper, marking the new score against
Revere, who, with his accustomed liberality, was treating
them all. He started upon Robert’s entrance, and, with
mock obsequiousness, bowed twice or thrice nearly to the
floor. The salutation was coolly but civilly returned, and
Robert passed on to do his errand. But he was inter-
rupted. With his own unsteady hand did the half-drunken
man fill an empty glass, and, in high-flown phrase, loudly
invited Robert to participate in their carousal, and honour
him by taking a glass of whisky !
“JT never drink whisky,†was Robert’s laconic reply ;
for he sought quickly to terminate this (to him) disgusting
scene.
“Not whisky! Then what may it please your honour-
able worship to have? Rum, brandy, gin, wine, cordial â€
and he ran through the list of liquors displayed upon the
shelf.
“ Neither,†said Robert, politely ; “7 am a@ cold-water
man!â€
Revere was not so easily to be set aside; and, tossing
off the contents of the glass, its heating fires running
through his veins, he still persisted in offering him a glass,
until, from invitation, it began to assume the character of
entreaty, and afterwards that of threats, if he would not
drink with him.
In this crisis, what could our young friend do? To
turn and go without accomplishing his purposed errand,
would only add to the ridicule and ill-suppressed merri-
ment of the lookers-on. To pretend to drink, and thus
100 THE MORETON FAMILY.
relieve himself, he would not. To contend with an in»
toxicated man was, he well knew, worse than folly. His
temper was beginning to be aroused; and—as Revere
stood by his side, holding the amber-coloured draught,
his face flushed and purple with drunken eagerness, his
tottering limbs almost refusing to support. him, his trem-
bling hands and bloodshot eye revealing his own bondage,
and his thick and husky tones, half-articulate, pressing
again and again upon him the poisoned cup—from the
impulse of the moment, Robert exclaimed, with energy,
as he pushed aside the glass—
“No,no! Would you make me like yourself, sir?â€
There is left to almost every one, however abandoned,
some power to appreciate what “is lovely and of good
report.†When the power to rule one’s self is admitted
to be gone, and even the wish to do so is all but extin-
guished, there will still lurk a perception of goodness
when it is seen; and thus was it that the contrast thrust
upon Revere by Robert’s question produced this effect.
How could it be otherwise? In the strength of his young
manhood, with the energy of a determined mind, his fi.ce
beaming with health and intelligence, strong in the con-
sciousness of rectitude, and with bright and steadfast trust
in the future, as a future of good—what a contrast did he
present to him who would tempt him! It was too palp-
able, too evident for even the half-closed eye and dimmed
-perceptions of Revere!
“JT will not! I will not!†he muttered, as he sank into
a seat; and he groaned a bitter groan, as there flashed
upon him a remembrance of the past: how, even to him,
it had once been true that life was hopeful, and death and
eternity not to be dreaded ; how he had started buoyant
and strong in expectation, his life crowned with blessings,
his path strewn with mercies, and his course watched
with eyes of anxious, yearning love. Ah yes! and the
recollection of that first glass came now to him !—that
THOMAS REVERE. 101
' first indulgence in what had proved his ruin! And was
he one to foreé upon another the like destruction? To
that first yielding to temptation could he now look as
the beginning of his downward course; to it could he
now attach that weakened strength of principle, and its
consequent prostration, which had Icft him powerless
in the hand of the tempter. It was an hour of bitter
thought. The same draught which had impelled him to
use all his powers to persuade Robert, now awakened in
him new remorse. No future dawned upon him, as he
sat and thought. It was all dark—all night! His own
course had been madness—its end was ruin. He himself
was but the wreck of a man—the broken remains of a
goodly temple, whereof the polished shafts and chiselled
stones lay scattered and half-buried, like his own youth-
ful hopes and expectations!
Would that this truth could be impressed upon the
heart and mind of every youth :—What you are doing
to-day, you are doing for eternity! A simple act, small
and insignificant as you may regard it, may stain for ever
the purity of your soul. You may deem it trifling, but
its performance may commit you for a lifetime; it may
seem to be of no account, but it may rest for ever in the
scale of dishonest purposes; foolish, but it may endanger
your reputation through a long course of years ; hardly
sinful, but it may lead to consequences fearful and last-
ing beyond life—yes, even beyond death itself!
That first proffered glass made Thomas Revere a drunk-
ard, because he yielded to its temptation ; that first glass,
resisted, made Robert Moreton firm as a temperate man ;
and, from this time, he was known and respected as one
whose appetite was not to be overcome when tempted,
nor his principles successfully assailed.
102 THE MORETON FAMILY.
CHAPTER XVI.
MARY’S LETTER.
“Time, in passing, takes us along with it.†Uncon-
sciously, the spring glides into summer, the autumn into
winter, until it is only by looking far back that we can
realize the rapidity with which life is passing away.
It is not our intention to dwell minutely upon every-
day occurrences in the Moreton family. The summer’s
work and pleasures, the winter’s plans and entertain-
ments, are more concisely narrated in the following letter
of Mary’s to her friend Lucy Leighton, which we lay
before our readers :—
LAKELAND, January 2, 18—.
Dear Lucy,—0O! that rough leather mail-bag that
rides past our house on horseback, once every week!
What good things it sometimes brings! When it was
slowly moving along last week, I had a presentiment that
it held something more precious than our weekly supply
of papers and pamphlets; and I was not disappointed.
Hardly one of us but received some token of remem-
brance from absent friends, telling us that we were not
forgotten. Yours, dear Lucy, with its promise of good
for our Sunday-school library, was not the least welcome.
You have accomplished much for us, in getting so choice
a supply of books, and they cannot fail to help us in our
work. We thank you for your efforts, and we thank all
who have aided you.
And our letters! How we listened as we heard parts
or the whole first of one, then of another. Every item
of news was discussed—every expression of affection
treasured. Were this not our home, there might have
MARY’S LETTER. 103
been some longings, some wishes. Dear old Laurelton,
with its beautiful homes and pleasant friends! No home
will efface the remembrance of that from our memories—
no friends ever be dearer than those we left there.
But here we are truly happy—even at the West, and
wintering in a log-cabin with whitewashed walls. The
barn was finished, and the horses, cows, and crops pro-
vided for; but by no possible effort was father able to get
the house into a habitable state for the winter. He was
disappointed, and says that the only trouble he has had
here has been the little dependence to be placed upon the
word of others, many of whom like to work only when
there is nothing else to do.
Even in the log-house, as I said, we are happy. We are
well, and a fresh chinking outside made the walls all
tight; while the abundance of fire-wood, which would
delight poor people at the East, keeps us warm. The
climate is more mild than that of New England, and only
a few days have been too cold to be pleasant. Charles,
Willie, and Alice, go to school to Mr. Blagden. Susan
accompanies them three afternoons in the week, having
been engaged by Mr. Blagden to give instruction in
needlework to the girls. This plan pleases all. The
mothers like it, for they have many a nice piece of mend-
ing or making accomplished without their oversight.
The girls like it, as a variation from their school studies ;
and Susan, far from being weary of the monotony of
“ stitch, stitch, stitching,†seems more and more pleased
as: she sees the improvement and ambition of her
scholars.
Our domestic labours are not great or heavy, yet
mother, Susan, and I, find sufficient occupation for every
morning. Winne stands ready to aid us whenever we
need her help, and we call upon her often, considering
that we live in a small house, and dispense with all but
absolute wants. Besides this, I hear Annie recite every
~ 4104 THE MORETON FAMILY.
day, and on Saturday of each week I have a singing-school
for the Sunday-school children. This was brought about
by accident. Annie, in her rambles soon after we came
here, followed tor some distance the little brook near
which Patrick’s dwelling stands. Its course was not re-
markably interesting at first, for it was straight and
sunny; but suddenly it took a turn, and came back into
the woodland owned by father, making a bend which left
some rods of ground covered with green, soft grass, and
shaded by large black walnut-trees. It was a pleasant
surprise to Annie. The soft western sunlight spread
cheerfully over it, the little stream flowed so quietly on,
and the trees were so alive with birds, that she was
charmed. On her return, she told us of it with delight,
and dwelt so long upon the multitude of birds she saw
there, that Willie, always ready with a word, declared it
must be “the birds’ parlour.†The name pleased us; and
when we visited it in a company the next day, we voted
unanimously that it was well named, and from that time
it should be our chosen gathering-place.
Frank and Charles entered immediately upon the work
of clearing out the undergrowth and trimming the trees.
This done, Charlie, who admires great undertakings,
thought some stones judiciously placed where there was
a slight fall of water, would make its course more melo-
dious; for it was evident that, in the matter of noise, the
birds had the pre-eminence. Stones are not very plenty
hereabouts, and the old rocky hills of Laurelton had the
honour of a sigh to their memory; but, by dint of per-
severance, enough were gathered, and it was a great im-
provement. Robert made some rough seats for the
place ; and, when all was finished, mother gave permission
for the children to have a rural party there.
It was quite a gathering of the village boys and girls,
and a merry time they made of it. An attempt to have |
some music seemed to please; and one song that I sang:
MARY’S LETTER. 105
suited so well, that I offered to teach it to one or two.
So many pressed forward to try their skill at learning it,
that we frightened the birds out of their home ; and after
practising some time, we parted, with the promise to meet
ayain. From that time Saturday has been the day, and I
have been regularly installed as leader, with the under-
standing that my efforts shall be mainly directed for the
benefiting of the Sabbath-school.
We had no hymn-books, and it was rather dull at first
to learn verses ; but they have persevered ; and now that
their memories are stored with enough hymns and tunes
to make a varicty for the school, I have begun to try and
drill them in “ the rudiments.†My success is not remark-
able, but it is enough to keep off discouragement.
For several weeks after we came we had no public
worship on the Sabbath. Father proposed to Mr. Johnson
to have our Sabbath-school earlier, and thus leave time
for a sermon to be read afterwards. Together they asked
Mr. Blagden to be the reader; he consented, and our
congregation has every week been becoming larger ; and,
if we can only have a missionary sent, we shall try hard
to find a better place than’ the school-house for him to
preach in. Beside this service, we have occasional
preaching from clergymen from the neighbouring settle-
ments.
Did you know that Richard Gray was coming out to us
in the spring! This arrangement has made us’ very
happy, as it makes Susan’s stay with us, or near us, almost
certain. A shop is to be rented in the village, and over
its door is to be a sign, bearing upon it the names of
“Gray & Moreton,†and in it there is to be all kinds of
furniture for which there may be any market.
Frank has decided to accept father’s ofier of a college
education, but will not leave home for s year. He studies
with Mr. Blagden, and has found a Mr. Van Weichten
who is willing to assist him in his German. These
106 THE MORBSON FAMILY.
lessons he repeats to me, so that I am able to make some
progress.
You ask how we amuse ourselves these long winter
evenings. Our newspapers and books are invaluable ;
but just now we have had the holidays, and have kept
them too as holidays. Christmas evening, the Van Weich-
tens invited us there; for, like all Germans, it was to be
their great family festival. The old gentleman, at whose
house the gathering was to be held, is the father of
Frank’s teacher, and lives some miles from us. We went
as it began to be evening, all packed in the great waggon,
and covered with buffalo robes—for the air was cold and
sharp. The moonlight struggled with scattered clouds,
and revealed, indistinetly at times, the great bare trunks
and branches of the old forest-trees, glittering with their
covering of frost; and the snow upon the ground creaked
beneath our vehicle. My letter is too long for me to
describe it all: from the huge bonfire outside the door,
to the hearty welcome and boisterous greetings within ;
from the social conversation, to the merry games; from
the bountiful feast, to the Christmas-tree, laden with the
simple offerings of love for each and all. Nor can I tell
you of the warm affection that prevailed amongst them,
and made them all so charming. Grandfather and grand-
mother, parents, children, and all, seemed actually to live
for each other, and, as father said, were truly an exem-
plification of the beauty of dwelling together in unity.
The getting away from such hospitality was not easily
accomplished ; and then the ride home, the moon hidden
behind dark masses of clouds, and the snow-flakes falling
thick and fast, covering us with a fleecy mantle!
But I must tell you of our own New-Year, which was
so quietly pleasant. Frank’s picture of the old homestead
for mother was the gift which appeared to give most
pleasure. The little secrets and surprises of us children
were well managed ; and Annie’s pin-cushions and wateh-
MARY’S LETTER. ‘sn
eases, and Charles’s tame pigeon for Annie, and his little
gray owl for Alice, were as wonderful as ever gifts were.
Willie had made us some thread-winders; Frank had
gathered a huge basket of cranberries for family use ;
Robert had a picture-frame, which fitted Frank’s offering
to mother so exactly, that it excited a suspicion of con-
federation; and Henry, who had nothing to give, got up,
shook hands with each one, and offered his services for
the next year to whoever should want them. Alice, when
it came to her turn, jumped upon his neck, and would not
release him until she had received a good hearty kiss.
Mother’s large New-Year’s cake was not wanting, nor
were the apples and nuts; and then, when all our merri-
ment was hushed, father reminded us of our obligations
to Him who had taken care of us, and read that beautiful
Psalm,* beginning—* Bless the Lord, O my soul ; and all
that is within me, bless His holy name: who redeemeth
thy life from destruction, and crowneth thee with loving-
kindness and tender mercies ;†and the evening was closed
with prayer.
Thus we live, dear Lucy. I have not told you all that
I would like, but enough to have you know that life in
the woods is far from uninteresting or uninviting to us.
We miss our old friends; and it is their absence alone
that makes us ever look with longing desires toward our
former home. I shall have to write to you again ; for I
can say no more now than that I am
Your affectionate friend,
| Mary MOoRETON.
% Psalm cili.
108 THE MORETON FAMILY.
CHAPTER XVII.
FARMING.
“ Tiere is scarcely any well-informed person who, if he
has the will, has not the power toadd something essential
to the general stock of knowledge, if he will only observe,
regularly and methodically, some particular class of facts
which may most excite his attention, or which his situa-
tion may best enable him to study with effect.â€
This observation of Sir John Herschel* still holds
true; and of no class of persons is it more true than of
farmers, whose hourly and daily business brings before
_ their minds facts in the natural world which must awaken
curiosity, and results which baffle their powers of inves-
tigation. The geographical distribution of plants, the
characteristics of soils, the growth of trees, the eradica-
tion of weeds, the perfecting of various kinds of grain,
the improvement of vegetables, the knowledge of the
structure and habits of animals that are useful or trouble-
some, and of insects and diseases that hinder or destroy
their crops, and the improvement and good-keeping of
domestic stock, are among the most obvious of a farmer’s
cares.
In a new country, we must add to these the clearing
and subduing of wild lands, the wood-chopping, the
logging, the burning of brush-heaps, the making of potash
from the ashes, the laying out and fencing of lands, the
rotation of wheat and grass crops, giving time for the
_ decay of roots and stumps, and the draining of marshes ;
and we can readily see that to be “a tiller of the soilâ€
brings with it many and arduous labours, which call for
strength of body, and no less for ingenuity of plans and
* Discourse on the Study of Natural Philosophy.
FARMING. 109
wise calculations. The introduction of scientific agricul-
ture has already benefited the furmer, and we may look
for still greater results in his behalf from the careful and
close investigations of chemists and men of observation.
Only with the illiterate is the term of a “book-farmerâ€
one of reproach; for experience has proved the value of
many a suggestion, and the utility of many a scheme,
which has originated in the mind of some secluded stu-
dent, working away in silence upon the basis of facts
brought to his knowledge by the practical labouring
man.
The partial clearing and cultivation of Mr. Moreton’s
furm, while it increased the present comfort of its occu-
pants, did not preclude the necessity of attending to all
these earlier duties of an emigrant. Many a winter’s day
did the young men take an early start for the woods,
with dinner-basket in hand, and Carlo frisking by their
side. With axes over their shoulders, would they briskly
go to their day’s labour; and the merry ringing echo of
stroke after stroke resounded through the still woods,
while, with mighty crash, one old monarch-tree after
another was laid low. Then the loud “Gee! whoa! Gee
up!†might be heard day after day, as, with heavy chains,
and the help of the oxen, they drew the huge logs together,
and heaped on the brush, ready for the first still, dry
weather, in order to burn them. Nor were their woods
less picturesque and beautiful than others, as, with great
delight, the younger boys kindled fires beneath these
heaps, and watched them lighting up so brilliantly by
night the forests around, and sending forth by day their
columns of blue smoke, that rose gracefully, and diffused
a mild, soft haziness throughout the atmosphere.
It had been of great benefit to Mr. Moreton to retain
the services of Mr. Hinckley through his first summer.
A new and large farm, with imperfect means of culture,
and but little hired aid, was very different from his small
110 THE MORETON FAMILY.
and highly-cultivated homestead in Laurelton ; and it was
with interest that he watched the contrivances and de-
vices of his predecessor in securing from the land all the
advantages it could be made to yield. This knowledge of
the hindrances he must mect, and the expedients neces-
sary to overcome difficulties, placed him on an equality
with the neighbouring farmers, while his acquaintance
with the later modes of producing a greater increase of
crops gave him, in some respects, the superiority.
The return of spring was welcomed by all. Again did
the lark, the robin, the phebe-bird, and the whip-poor-will
make themselves heard. Again did the yellow cowslips
appear on the margin of the brooks, and gaily nod to the
snowy “arrow-heads†that gently reposed on the waters.
Again did the humming-bees daintily visit, first one, then
the other, but tarried not long, as if they would say,
“You do very well for the present; but we know that
the eglantine and the sweet violet are coming, and we
will yust wait, if you please ;†so they but sipped of their
cups, and away they flew. Again did the golden sun-
shine brighten the borders of the fleecy clouds above,
and gleam cheerily, peeping in under the spreading
branches of the trees, and calling out the “eye-brights,â€
the blue lupines, and the crimson lich-nedia, to welcome
its genial warmth. After the long winter, who would
not rejoice at its return? The birds loudly sang their
happiness; the flowers blossomed in their joy; little
children shouted with pleasure, as they threw off their
hats, and its warm beams fell upon their clustering hair;
staid housewives opened their doors, that its golden light
might come in, and its cheerful influence reached their
hearts; and the farmers, ready with their open furrows,
cast in the grain that itcame to quicken into life. “ Truly
the light is sweet, and a pleasant thing it is for the eyes
to behold the sun.â€
If “ weather be the farmer’s master,†as has been said,
FARMING. lll
its ordering is for his happiness. The accumulated la-
bours of spring, as the seed-time, can be met by the an-
ticipatory work of a leisure winter; and if the weeds of
summer must be rooted out, the ripening of growing
crops gives the time; while the bright, warm days of
autumn, with their invigorating atmosphere, invite to the
extra toil of harvesting.
Mr. Moreton’s design in removing to his Western farm
was to prosecute his occupation in all its varied branches.
A large wheat or a large corn farm was not what he wanted.
To raise such supplies as he might need fur family use,
both in summer and winter, was his first object; after
that, to adapt such crops as might be marketable to his
locality, and gradually to enlarge his cultivated fields, as
opportunity offered for making them profitable.
His new house, into which the family had now re-
moved, was a substantial two-storey wooden house. It
stood on the elevated land behind the log-cabin; and, at
first, with its white walls and need of shade, it was not
very attractive. Busy hands soon gave its interior a dit-
terent aspect. Familiar articles of furniture tastefully
arranged, a few old pictures hung upon its walls, and
vases of wild flowers upon the table and mantel, gave to
the new parlour a very satisfactory appearance. Then a
farmer’s kitchen, with its shining black stove and its tidy
cupboards, always has a cozy, comfortable look. The
“mother’s room!’ what family knows not that sociable
spot—that heart of the house? To it go the weary, the
sick, the sad, and the happy, all sure of sympathy and of
aid—all secure in their expectation of meeting there the
cheering word, the comforting smile, and the loving
friend. The “spare room,†with its chairs demurely
placed, its well-shaken bed, and its snowy curtains;
Annie’s “little sunny-side,†opening out of the mother’s
room, fitted with its pillows and cushions, and showing
on every hand gifts adapted to soothe her hours of weari-
/
112 THE MORETON FAMILY.
‘ness and languishing; the boys’ rooms, with their shelves
of books, and drawers for their varied possessions; and
the pleasant sleeping apartments of the girls, so white
with muslin drapery. Who could say that, even in its
freshness, Mr. Moreton’s was not a pleasant house?
Who should care for the chickens, little feathery broods
of which rapidly made their appearance in the yard; whose
labour it should be to watch the wandering ducks and
geese; who should feed the pigs and look after the new
lambs; and that the first calf should be called “Snowballâ€
—was all duly settled. The flower-garden was planned
and planted, Annie’s flower-seed, in spite of their age,
proving good and true to their labels. The kitchen-
garden, with its beds of light green lettuce, its growing
cabbage-plants, its vines, and its bushes, was finished.
Mrs. Hinckley’s currant-bushes were found to be in a
bearing state, and the small green peaches took the place
of those rosy garlands that hung so beautifully over the
garden fence. Then the corn-fields were green, the potato-
patches promising, and the melon-spot was doing itself
great credit. Beyond all were the wheat-fields, spreading
out their broad acres to the borders of the farm. , That
first year, as if to encourage their hopes, no mildew, nor
blight, nor rust, came to mar their freshness or promise.
From the first bright green covering of the ground, to
‘the full swaying of their laden and bearded heads, yellow
with ripeness and ready for the sickle, it was one pro-
gressive course, without hindrance or drawback; and
with joyful hearts did they reap their grain, and bear it
‘to the new thrashing-floor, adding themselves to the last
heaping load, and loudly shouting their Western “ har-
vest-home.â€
During the whole year, Robert and Henry, with the
natural impetuosity of youth, would often have overtasked
their strength by undertaking labours too severe or pro-
‘tracted for them to accomplish. To prevent this, their
FARMING. 113
father would propose plans of entertainment and excur-
sions to the neighbouring settlements, to occupy hours
that could be spared from the farm-work, and which
would give them opportunities for social intercourse with
their neighbours. The Sabbath came too, with its hal-
lowed rest, refreshing both their physical and spiritual
natures with its benign influences. In the early spring,
the roads were to be mended and new bridges built, and
cheerfally did they all associate with their townsmen in
their efforts for the public good.
As for the younger children, there was school, with its
pleasant intercourse. There was fishing for the boys,
and holiday walks after cranberries; then came the maple-
sugar season, and the clump of trees left for a sugar-
orchard was the place of resort. To tap the trees and
gather the sap ; to keep the large iron kettle boiling
many days, and then to bear the thick, luscious liquid to
the house, where Susan and Mary were ready to purify
and finish it more slowly—this was pleasure, not work.
The gathering of wild flowers, the improvement of “ the
birds’ parlour,†the taming of squirrels, and the attempt
to naturalize some plants and shrubs sent from home—
these were the employments that gave a variety to their
life.
But the bearer of those plants and shrubs—who was
he? That very Richard Gray of whom Mary wrote to
her friend, Lucy Leighton. Days, even weeks, passed
before the stock of news he brought from home was ex-
hausted. Everything and everybody in Laurelton wa
discussed, messages received from friends, and tokens ot
affection admired. Of Richard’s plans and prospects,
there was no little talk among themselves; for was he
not to be one of them? Susan herself, though more
nearly interested in their success, was not more carnest
in her hopes than they, or more ingenious in her schemes
to help him in this, his first start in business; while Mr.
i
114 THE MORETON FAMILY.
Moreton’s words of encouragement brightened the future
of both, and his advice and aid smoothed away the first
difficulties in their path.
“This shall be your home, Richard,†said he, “ until
you have one for yourself. Begin carefully and economi-
cally. Remember my motto for all sure progress, ‘ Never
haste, never rest.†With a good trade, industrious habits,
and a bright prospect ahead, you will succeed. I shall
keep your partner with me this year, and you shall have
all the labour and all the profits of the establishment.
After that, we will see.†And, with an order for some
furniture, he left him to work his«way on.
There were two great events to mark the summer, in
the estimation of the children. One was the birth of a
little girl at Patrick’s—a nice little baby, whom Winne,
from gratitude, desired to call after “ Miss Annie;†and the
other, the due celebration of the yearly-recurring national
holiday. For this, all ordinary labour on the farm was
suspended, and the day given up to amusement.
The Lakeland people readily responded to the eall for
help in this festival (ostensibly given in behalf of the
Sunday-school), and as readily accepted the general invi-
tation to be present. Children, teachers, and parents,
assembled in the court-house, and there they had music
and speeches; after which they marched, in not very
orderly procession, to a neighbouring grove. There were
bountiful tables prepared for their refreshment, of which
all partook. An oration from Robert Moreton, short, but
directly bearing upon the subject of temperance, and a
hymn in honour of the same virtue, sweetly sung by the
children, finished their public exercises; but an impression
was left upon the minds of most, which firmly remained
there ever after—that Sunday-schools and temperance
were good things; and all agreed, as they dispersed at
the setting of the sun, that this fourth of July had been
“a very pleasant day.â€
CHARLES MORETON. 115
Our readers will easily see that in all these employ-
ments there were toil and labour. For none is there
exemption from that sentence which proclaimed that by
the sweat of his face should man eat bread; and our
friends looked not for a life of inaction or freedom from
care. Would they have desired it? Did not the weary
physical frame sometimes faint by the way, 4nd did not
rest, bodily rest, seem inviting tothem! Yes; and sleep,
refreshing sleep, brought it! “sweet†to them, as “ labour-
ing men.†For a life of indolence, a listless state of per-
sonal ease, their habits and education had unfitted them,
even if their tastes had led them in that direction. In-
dustry, cheered on by a love of all that was beautiful in
nature, characterized them as a family. Labour, directed
to a desirable end, was praiseworthy ; and the lesser cares
and toils were all made light and pleasant, as they were
seen to promote the comfort and wellbeing of those
around. “The hand of the diligent maketh rich,†not
only in the attainment of outward possessions, but in that
wealth of the heart, contentment. Day after day did they
experience this, as, rising from their beds, they shook off
slumber, and went forth to their daily duties, “ providing
meat in summer, and gathering food in harvest ;†and to
them was the promise fulfilled, “ He that tilleth his land
shall have plenty of bread.â€
CHAPTER XVIII.
CHARLES MORETON.
CuaRLIE Moreton in trouble! Can it be? Why else
does he, so long befvre evening, seek his chamber, and
remain there too? Why sits he disconsolately on the foot
of his bed, pressing his throbbing temples with his hot
116 THE MORETON FAMILY.
havds? Why does he refuse to hear the gentle knock at
bis door; and when Annie’s soft voice says, “Charlie!
Charlie !? why does he not hasten to receive her? Why
offer no word of welcome or thanks, as she herself opens
the door, and carefully brings in the little salver with its
burden of choice food for his evening meal? Is he sick,
or weary, dr discouraged? Notwithstanding Annie’s care
for him, it is easy to see that she is grieved; her eyes
gleam through a misty veil of tears, her pale cheek is
paler than usual, and sighs, that she vainly secks to re-
press, come one after another from her lips.
As she lays her soft hand on Charlie’s head, he impa-
tiently says, “Don’t, Annic.†She sees that he cannot
yet bear sympathy, and she waits in silonee, quietly seat-
ing herself by his side. As the minutes pass away, so
passes the anger and impulsive passion of Charles More-
ton. He knew that he had done wrong. Although, on
his way from school, and while the shouts of the boys
were ringing in his ears, he had deemed himself a hero
fighting a worthy battle, the stillness of home, and the
sad looks of father, mother, brothers, and sisters, as he
came, torn and soiled, with flushed face and bruised eye,
into their quict circle, gave a different aspect to the
whole case. If he had not pleased the Scotch boy, Duncan
Dunwoodie, in their bargain, and had been called “a
cheating Yankee,†why need he have resented it, and
called him “a mean thistle-thorn back?†Was there any
necessity of “giving as good as he sent,†when Duncan
heaped opprobrious epithets upon him, or of returning
that first half-accidental blow he reecived? Ah, Charlie!
is that quick, passionate temper of yours ungovernable?
Shall it be master, and Charles Moreton be its servant?
“Don’t stay, Annie,†at last he said; “don’t stay with
me.â€
“But shall I not tell father you are sorry?†she an-
swered. “They are all so sad, Charlie.â€
CHARLES MORETON. 117
There was no answer, and she pointed to the plate, and
asked—
« Won’t you have this nice cake that Mary sent you,
and a glass of milk y
“ J cannot take it, Annie. Do go and leave me F
« But let me first bathe your head with this fresh cool
water, Charlie,’ she persisted ; “ it will make it so much
better.â€
Busying herself about him, she led him to talk of his
quarrel, and give a continuous account of it. He found
+t hard to justify himself; and when she said—
« You did wrong, Charlie,†he was ready to answer—
«JT know it, and that is the worst of it; that is why
father is so much displeased, and why mother looked so
grieved, and why I feel so unhappy.†|
«Then I may tell tather you are sorry. O, I am so
glad! Now we shall be happy again, and father will let
you come down. May I tell him, too, that you promise
not to quarrel with the boys again ?â€
«] cannot make any promises, Annie. I always break
them.†|
«But you will try; and I may tell them that â€
With permission to do this, she gladly departed on her
joytal errand, leaving him to solitude and repose.
The following morning Charles was early strolling in
the garden. The flitting clouds were no unfitting em-
blems of the gloom that overshadowed his face. His
anger was gone, his temper subdued ; but with the re-
inembrance of the past there came a distrust of the
future; and as he seated himself on one of the garden
benches, he exclaimed—
«J cannot do it! I know I never can te
“ What is it that you cannot do, my son � asked a voice
behind him, which he knew to be his father’s.
Charles hesitated. He had thought himself alone, and
had spoken from the impulse of the moment. Should he
118 THE MORETON FAMILY.
confide his griefs to his father, and tell him the struggle
that was going on in his mind; or should he sit silent,
and strive alone and unaided? Should pride conquer,
and he lose the blessing of a wise counsellor; or should
he unburden his heart, and tell his perplexities? It was
a turning-point, a crisis in his history. But Charles was
now in earnest, and he nerved himself to meet his father’s
eye as he said—
“T never can be rid of my bad temper, sir !’
“ Have you ever tried ?â€
“ Yes, sir. Last autumn, after Willie broke up my
bird-traps, and I struck him, I could not help thinking
that, if I had only the strength, I might have been like
Cain, and killed my brother; and I resolved that I would
fight against my temper, and that I would conquer it;
but I kept failing, and now I have done a worse thing,
and for a less cause.â€
“ Look here, Charles; what is this?†said Mr. Moreton,
stooping to the ground, and carefully removing some
loose dirt that seemed thrown up.
Charlie looked; and, with brightened face, exclaimed—
“That is one of my peach-stones that I planted last
autumn ; it has just sprouted. Now I shall have a peach-
tree !â€
-“ How do you know that, my son?â€
“ Because I shall take care of it, father ; and things that
are taken care of almost always grow.â€
“ What care shall you give it, Charlie?†asked Mr.
Moreton.
. ©JT shall put some little sticks around it, so that no one
will tread upon it or dig it up. Then I shall keep the
earth loose about its roots. If it is dry weather, I shall
water it every day, and as it grows older I shall make
the earth richer, and tie it to a stout stake, that the wind
may not break it down; and in four years, or less, I hope,
if nothing happens, it will begin to bear peaches.â€
CHARLES MORETON. 119
Mr. Moreton was often in the habit of inquiring into
the knowledge that his boys had gained in this way; and
Charles saw no other object in this conversation but an
‘ntention of testing his ability to take care of a tree, and
he eagerly talked on, endeavouring to show that, as
regarded the culture of peach-trees, nobody knew more
than he! >
“Ig not four years too long to wait for the fruit?â€
asked Mr. Moreton again.
“ Why, no, father; four years is a very short time for
a tree to grow. An apple-tree sometimes takes ten, and
a pear-tree as many.â€
« And are you willing to wait four years for peaches,
working away every summer, and not being disheartened ;
and are six months long enough to discourage you about
a little resolution planted in your heart, and to make you
ready to cry out, ‘It never will come to anything! I
cannot get rid of my bad temper fe
“A resolution is different from @ peach-tree,†said
Charles.
“Yes, a very different thing, and of far more conse-
quence to your happiness, my son ; yet their proper treat-
ment may not be so unlike in principle as you think.
You will guard your peach-tree, you say ; and you must
guard your resolution while it is young and tender. One
way to do this is to talk with me about it as you are
doing. Can you think of no other way?â€
“J must ask Duncan’s pardon, and let him know that
the resolution is planted, I suppose.â€
“Yes; then, every day, you must think about it, and
repeat it to yourself as a resolution. But you will water
your peach-tree, and enrich the soil it grows in. What
can you do to make your resolution increase?â€
“JT must keep telling myself why I ought to keep it.â€
“Observation will quickly show you, Charles, the
worldly advantages to be reaped from a quiet, equable
120 THE MORETON FAMILY.
temper. You will see that it enables a man to judge
rationally, and to act consistently. An angry man is, for
the time, a crazy man; nobody respects him, or is guided
by his wishes. He is liable to commit acts of which, at
other times, he is heartily ashamed, and which disgrace
his character and mortify his friends. Then what does he
gain by indulging in his passion? A torrent of abusive
language may flow from his lips; but it lowers his own
respectability, by showing the evil of his heart, more than
it alters public opinion regarding its object. He may
knock a man down; and this resort to brute force will
cause him to be shunned and despised rather than ad-
mired. If he has physical strength, he may even be con-
sidered a village bully; and what is that but a noisy,
quarrelsome fellow, who by all reasonable people is con-
sidered a village nuisance? Beyond this there are other
reasons, far weightier, why you should keep your resolu-
tion. Can you not think what they are?â€
“The reasons that the Bible give, you mean, don’t you,
sir?â€
“There you find such words as these :—‘ The patient
in spirit is better than the proud in spirit ;? ‘Forbearing
one another, and forgiving one another, if a man have a
quarrel against any: even as Christ forgave you, so also
do ye;’ ‘The discretion of a man deferreth his anger,
and it is his glory to pass over a transgression ;’ ‘ Not
rendering evil for evil, or railing for railing, but, con-
trariwise, blessing; knowing that ye are thereunto
called, that ye should inherit a blessing.’ Any one of
these texts, well-remembered, would help your resolution
to grow; and, firmly fixed upon the promises of God, no
storm of life could uproot it. Then, to those who ask
help, help is promised. You say that you cannot keep
your resolution. Remember, that he that secks the
aid of God’s Spirit, secks the aid of a true and able
friend.â€
CHARLES MORETON. 12}
“There is so much to do,†said Charles, “before every-
thing is right in a man’s character.â€
“That is truc, my son; but the work, once seriously
entered upon, and earnestly prosecuted, the difficulties
diminish; and now is your planting time in the garden
of your heart. You would like to have it fruitful and
well-cultivated. In order to this, the weeds of idleness,
impatience, foolish prejudice, and the like, must be rooted
out. The soil must be enriched with knowledge, the
seeds of industry and good habits sown, and closely
watched. If the unsightly offsets of vice or error are
there, you must not spare the sharp pruning-knife, nor
must you loosen the tight-binding cords of principle. All
this requires effurt and watchfulness, but not greater
than it is in your power to exercise. One fault con-
quered is a step towards the subduing of the spirit ; one
right habit gained is an advance which opens the way
and smooths the path for another. No miraculous power
will cause your peach-tree to grow in a night; neither
will any be exerted to make your resolution at once firm
and unchangeable. You must work out your own salva-
tion in this matter, every day watching your resolution
with fear, lest it may be overcome, and God will, if you
rely upon him, work in and with you.â€
The breakfast bell rang, and they returned to the
house. Charles's way was now clear before him. His
path was not an easy nor a pleasant one to enter, but its
end shone out in bright relief, and hope—buoyant hope-
beckoned him on: Cheerful mirthfulness, never long
absent from his heart, resumed its sway, as, in reply to
Willic’s question, “ Where have you been ?†he replied,
“Learning how to keep my resolution.â€
Firm as that resolution was at first, it was staggered a
little, when, on approaching the school-house, he saw
the boys drawn up in a line, with Duncan Dunwoodie at
their head. O, how he wished Willie was with him!
122 THE MORETON FAMILY.
And then how he wished he’ could let them know his
determination not to quarrel, without telling them so!
But there he was, alone, and the bearer of his own
message. As if to test the strength of that resolution,
one of the boys called out, “Haloo! black-eye!†but
Charlie repeated to himself, “He that rulcth his own
spirit is better than he that taketh a city.†Quickening
his steps, he reached forth his hand to Duncan, and,
despite the choking in his throat, said, loud enough for
all to hear-—
“Duncan, I did wrong to quarrel with you yesterday ;
we will settle our bargain over again, and try to make it
right. Iam sorry I struck you! Will you forgive me,
and let us be friends again ?â€
If Jack Sumner did say, “ Coward! he durst not fight !â€
and if Henry Brown did sneeringly turn upon his heel,
there were a dozen of the boys that rejoiced ; and among
them was Duncan, who really loved Charlie, and was
truly glad to have the foolish altercation ended. He
readily took the proffered hand, and responded to
Charles’s declaration, “I don’t mean to quarrel with any
of you, boys,†by adding, “And that will make it far
pleasanter ; for why shouldn’t we all be good friends ?â€â€
As the little sticks guarded the young peach-tree from
harm, so did these few words serve to protect that young
and still feeble resolution. From that time, either he
had fewer provocations, or, having openly committed
himself on the side of what was right, he was stronger in
his purpose and power of resistance to temptation in that
form. Be it which it might, he continued steadfast and
firm, persisting in his efforts to overcome his besetting
_ gin, until he gained the victory over his own passions,
and was master of his own temper!
Charles was not the only member of Mr. Moreton’s
family who found out that, at the West, there are mani-
fold temptations to do wrong. Every one has need of
CHARLES MORETON. 123
the prayer taught by our Divine Master, “Lead us not
into temptation, but deliver us from evil;†and to every
soul, whatever its acquirements, comes the exhortation,
“ Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation.â€
The unregenerate heart may think that there is no dan-
ger, that the path of life is a path of ease, and that its
own strength is sufficient to meet every peril to which it
may be exposed; but how differently are we taught in
the Word of God! There we find life set forth as a jour-
ney, a scene of probation, and we as pilgrims, whose walk
here is amidst dangers, each bearing within us an immor-
tal treasure, committed to our trust by the King of that
country whither we are journeying. For its safe-keeping
and its improvement each one is responsible ; and, know-
ing our weakness, for each is provided two able and will-
ing hclpers—Jesus, the High-priest, who, having been
himself tempted, is able to succour those who are
tempted; and the Holy Ghost, the Comforter.
To those who, with wary steps, and careful earnest
hearts, are travelling on, there comes the gracious
message, “God is faithful, who will not suffer us to be
tempted above that we are able to bear;†and far on, in
the distance, Jesus holds up to their view the golden
crown and harp, bidding them walk steadfastly on their
way, with that wonderful promise: “To him that over-
cometh, will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as
I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in h's
throne.â€
The hidden evils of our hearts, our selfish desires, our
grasping after earthly pleasures, our low and ignoble
hopes, even our bodies, with their appetites, are all to be
subdued, before the soul shines in the beauty of holi-
ness. Our senses must be made the willing channels of
none but pure pleasures; our tastes must be cultivated
to a high appreciation of things lovely in the sight of a
holy God; while our affections must hold all earthly
124 TILE MORETON FAMILY.
objects of love subordinate to the claims of our heavenly
Father.
“Take us the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil the
vines,†said the wise king.. Take us the sins, the little
sins, that ruin the soul, we would say to every youth to
whom future character is a matter of interest or effort.
It is the little sins that make up the whole evil character,
even as drops fill the rivers, and the rivers swell the
mighty ocean. Think no failing too small or too trivial
to be watched and striven against; and let these words
help you in your struggle :—“ He that is faithful in that
which is least, is faithful also in much.â€
Carelessness of personal appearance, carelessness of man-
ners, carclessness of words,and carclessness of morals; these
are all temptations ina newcountry. The same reason that
prompts to unmindfulness of one’s appearance, makes a
person chary of their words of welcome and politeness.
The temptation to be witty leads to slang phrases and
stories without truth, while this, in its turn, blunts the per-
ception of what is true and desirable ; and the whole moral
man is injured. Little do those whose homes are guarded
by Christian watchfulness, and whose lives are passed
ainidst Christian communities, surrounded by all the
amenities and usages of well-ordered society, realize
how much of their safety they owe to these restraints,
or with how much reason they too might say, “Thou
preventest me with the blessings of goodness.â€
“Aunt Rachel,†who has before been introduced to
our readers, was quite a favourite with the younger
members of the Moreton family. The respectful atten-
tion they paid her, and their uniform kindness to her
little grandson, who bore the lofty name of Count So-
bieski, had gained her confidence. It was in their power
to perform many small acts of kindness for her, and
she, in her turn, was always ready to mect them with a
cordial grecting. If they stopped to pay her a passing
CHARLES MORETON. 125
visit on their way from school, she often had some little
offering for them, such as a few plums, a peach, a cup of
maple-sap, a baked potato, hot and smoking from the
hearth, or a generous slice of cake, full of dried whortle-
berries, which, with true Western hospitality, she urged
upon them.
But the readiness with which she met their unwearied
demand for tales of adventure and of personal history
was the great attraction which drew them so frequently
to her cabin. Her life had been full of change. A com-
fortable but plain Connecticut home had been exchanged,
at the early age of eighteen, for a cabin in the woods of
Michigan, where, for six years, she lived and laboured as
the wife of a Methodist missionary-preacher. His death
was her first great sorrow; but, with two young children
to support, she had no time to spend in grief and fruit-
less mourning. After a struggling l-fe of two years or
more, she married again, and removed to Indiana. Here
her happiest years were spent, though toil and some hard-
ship fell to her lot. Her children left her for homes of
their own; and when her husband, Mr. Whitely, died,
she gathered up what property she could, and left the
farm to the care of a tenant, that she might spend her
last years with her kindred. Her son had removed from
his first location, no one knew whither; but her daugh-
ter was a resident in Lakeland, and there a cheerful
welcome awaited her. It would seem that there she
might find rest, but it was not thus to be. The sudden
falling of a tree, which her son-in-law was cutting down,
so injured him, that, after a year of suffering, he died ;
and, in a few months, his wife followed him to the grave.
Thus was the little grandson thrown entirely upon her
care; and her sole object in life was to keep the farm
his father left, not only entire, but in some order for
him, till he should be old enough to work it.
It is easy to see that, with an unimpaired memory, and
126 TIIE MORETON FAMILY.
a good deal of natural shrewdness, aunt Rachel Whitely
had at her command a fund of stories that possessed
great charms for listeners. One tale of an adventure
with her first husband, when, in riding through the
woods, they had encountered, or rather scen, a female
wild-cat, fierce and resolute to protect its young ones,
had great attractions for Charlie. To be sure it ended
in nothing but their being wonderfully frightened, and
whipping up their horse to get out of its way ; but, in his
estimation, it made her a heroine. |
Then she sometimes let her imagination take the reins,
and would describe the beauties of the woodland scenery,
and the brilliant autumnal nights; or else she invented
personages and scenes in the fable form, that she might
convey instruction to her hearers.
Further than that, she had dwelt three years near the
royal hunting-ground of Tecumseh, and was familiar with
the traditions and legends connected with his history, as
well as with those of Pontiac, the famous Indian chief.
She had herself received frequent visits from parties of
the Pottawatimie tribe, and could tell of dealings be-
tween them and her husband, and of their sorrowful
countenances as they bezan to realize that they were
perishing as a nation.
Occasionally she would revert to her own home ex-
perience; and then she would not fail to mingle with her
narrative words of Christian love and good counsel, and
cheerfully recommend trust in the Almighty as the only
sure foundation upon which to build happiness.
Thus it was that she alone, surrounded with the evils
of poverty, and possessing few attractions personally,
_ was yet enabled to do good in her humble sphere, and
to prove that the Spirit of God can refine and elevate the
tastes as well as comfort the hearts of his lowly followers.
LETTERS. 127
CHAPTER XIX.
LETTERS.
AGAIN must we have recourse to a letter of Mary’s, as
the speediest and most agreeable manner of informing
our readers of the state of affairs at Lakeland and about
the Moreton farm, during the third year of their resi-
dence at the West :—
LaKkLAnD, October —, 18~.
Drar Franx,—Your letter, written upon the anniver-
sary of your reaching , was receiyed some days
since. One year of the prescribed fowr has passed away
quickly enough, to make us feel that the three remain-
ing will soon be gone; but we have not yet become
so accustomed to your absence as to feel that home is
home without you, and it seems a long time to wait.
You would be surprised to see how much our place has
improved. The grass this year entirely covered the site
of the old log-cabin, and the trees bordering the carriage-
walk and about the house were sufficiently grown to cast
a shadow. The green blinds upon the house, the new
barn, the arbour at the foot of the garden-walk, and the
well at the top of the hill, with its real old-fashioned
curb, seen against the sky, and the new fences,—these
are all this year’s improvements, in the true dictionary
sense of the word, as well as in its Western meaning.
Within the house, the great change has been the arrival
of uncle Alfred’s present—the new piano; and such a
source of pleasure as it is! For a few days we made it
sound incessantly ; now, it is not silent long at a time ;
and I find I shall readily regain my knowledge of play-
ing. Being the first instrument of the kind in the village,
it has attracted considerable attention, and, I can assure
128 THE MORETON FAMILY.
you, it is much admired. I hope it will be in my power,
through it, to convey pleasure to many beside our own
c'rele; if not, half its charms will be dispelled, for the
identifying of ourselves with the village people, and of
our pleasures and interests with theirs, is, to my mind,
one of the strongest ties which bind us here. The great
occasion upon which I intended to dwell in this letter,
was the approaching marriage of Susan and Richard
Gray. The time fixed upon is the 20th; and, as they
will move directly to his new house in the village, every
preparation for leaving us must now be made. Their
house is small, but new and convenient ; Richard having
aimed to make it easy for Susan in her household duties.
The wedding will be here, and will be as quiet as it can
be, while we ask all the people we have learned to know
and love in three years. Our new minister, Mr. Nesbit,
will officiate; and we all rejoice that he has arrived in
time for the ceremony. We like Mr. Nesbit; and his
wife we hope to welcome here soon. They propose to
commence housekeeping as soon as a house can be pro-
cured, when she will come immediately with her three
children. . . RP ae
I had written thus far, when Charles came in, and
called “Mary! Mary!†so loudly, that I ran to mect
him, fearing some accident.
“Put on your bonnet, and come with me, quick!†he
said; which I did, and fullowed him across the fields to
the new road leading to Lupine Prairie. There we found
a woman sitting by the roadside, holding in her arms a
dying baby, and another child standing by her side. The
waggon in the road, with its chests and trunks, showed
that she was a traveller, and her moaning and sorrowful
ejaculations soon betrayed her origin. She was a French
woman; and I did rejoice most heartily when I found
she could understand me; and she, poor woman, in her
joy at meeting with one who spoke her native language,
LETTERS. 129
took my hand and kissed it again and again; then turned
to her “pauvre enfant,†and begged me to help it. I
soon found that her husband had gone to the village to
get some medicine; but I sent Charlie home for a pillow,
and thought that, upon it, we might carry the baby as
far as the house. Before he came back, though, the
poor little thing died; and when her husband returned,
her first paroxysm of grief was subdued, and she was
ready to listen to any proposal from us. They were
poor, and would feel it no degradation to go to a poor
home; while to be with those who could understand her
seemed a great comfort. I thought of Pierre Bonte,
and ventured to bid them drive the horses there, while
the woman and I took the shorter path through the
woods, she carrying the little dead baby in her arms.
You should have scen us, and listened to her outpour-
ings of grief, as, overpowered with emotion, she would
linger behind Charlie and me, cast herself down upon
the wayside bank, and, in accents of tenderness, talk to
the child—address it with endearing epithets, as if its ear
were listening to her voice, and its little heart still beat-
ing in unison with hers.
O, it was worth ten times the labour and study that
the knowledge I possess of French has been to me, to be
able to speak to the sorrowful heart of the mourning
woman, and to try to comfort her. Madame Bonte re-
ceived us as cordially as I could desire ; and, when I left
them, she had taken the child away from its mother,
stored enough of their own possessions in one corner of
the room to make another corner empty and ready for
the stranger’s bed and chest, and was cooking supper
against the man’s arrival. Then Charlie and I went
home, to ask father if we had done right; and were glad
to find that he thought we had. He went over that
evening with me; and, while he and Bonte made ar-
rangements to bury the baby in the morning, I sat and
I
130 TIIE MORETON FAMILY.
talked to the woman. They all went away in the waggon
the day after the funeral, and we know nothing more of
them since. It hardly seemed possible to me, when I saw
how comfortable Madame Bonte made this poor woman,
that I had ever gone to that same hovel (for it is nothing
else now) to cure my home-sick feelings, by seeing some
one worse off than myself. To set off for “the poor
Frenchman’s†was equivalent to a confession of sad and
desponding longings on my part; but no one but Susan
knew it at the time; nor should IJ tell of it now, if I had
occasion to employ it as a remedy.
I must not forget to tell you that the new school-house
is completed and occupied. Mr. Blagden is still the
teacher; but he has now in Susan’s place a young lady
whom we all like. Annie is well enough to go to the
school-house every day, and the two boys escort the two
girls there daily. After this summer, Charles will work
on the farm during the warm weather, and study only in
the winters.
We have had quite an excitement here lately about
the burning woods. The atmosphere is often smoky, and
the hot air has reached us, rising with the gusts of wind
before; but this time the red and glary horizon, and the
trees standing out at night as pillars of fire, and by day
with smoke issuing from their tops, showed it to be quite
near our premises. One night, father and the boys heard
that it was approaching a fenced field, full of standing
corn, and that it had already commenced its ravages
upon some piles of split rails that they had prepared for
the winter’s fencing. We begged to go with them, and
had the satisfaction of seeing them ‘ whip out fire,†which,
you know, is to beat down the burning grass with branches
broken from the trees; and we girls helped to kindle and
keep within bounds a back-fire, that father thought it best
to have set. It was all pleasure to us to march back and
forth before our burning strip of grass, and turn its course
LETTERS. 131
towards the heated forests, using our verdant branches
as if they were sceptres; but to one who sces his best
crop in danger of the devouring element, and whose
barns are in the course of its march, it must be with
extraordinary energy that he works. Father says the
best way is to plough six or eight furrows about a field,
outside of the fence, and that he shall not again neglect
ey See ee ee ee
Now, Frank, you must confess this letter to be as long
as even your craving for news from home can desire.
But Charles begs for the remaining half-page, and I yield
my place to him.
Your loving sister,
Mary.
Will our readers have Charlie’s letter? Here it is; but
we must premise that Charlie Moreton was not a very
wonderful scholar for a boy of fourteen years of age ;
and, if they should find it somewhat disconnected, some
of them can remember, from their own experience, how
hard it is to write letters, and will readilv pardon its
defects :— *
Dear Broruer Frank,—I thought you would like to
hear from me and Carlo; and I write to say that I am
very well, but that he is getting very lazy. Henry says
he is too old for anything but a house-dog, and that is
the reason why he won’t go into the woods with us; but
I think he is afraid. If you see Bob Palmer, you can tell
him about him. Henry has got a first-rate dog. We
went out last week, and had the best of luck, bringing
home birds enough for ourselves for two days. Of all
the birds we ever get, I think prairie chickens are the
best. O,I must tcll you that Snowball got mired last
week, over in the swamp at the back of aunt Rachel’s
farm. She was missing two whole days and a night, and
132 THE MORETON FAMILY.
father told us that we mus} seek for her. We found her
in a few hours; or, I mean, Carlo found her. You have
seen cattle mired, so you will know all about this, when
I tell you that she was very deep in the soft mud, and so
exhausted with trying to get out, that at first we thought
she was dead. She seemed to know Carlo’s bark, and
tried once more to move, but could not. With help, we
soon got her out; but you could never have known whose
cow she was, if her white forehead had not kept clean.
She has been steadier ever since, and has not tried to run
away at all. May be it has done her good. I like the
new school-house ; and Mr. Blagden is going to make us
study hard this winter. I wish I knew a great deal; but
I think it is harder to study than it is to work. Patrick
has got over his ague; but he will have it again, if he
isn’t more careful. You should see his steers! Young
Pat is in school, and is a real clever boy. Father lets
Willie and me go to the mill by ourselves this year.
Last week we took the largest grist over that we ever
carried, because Susan must share with us now. When
we came back, we took the new road, that you and Henry
helped to survey and lay out. The log-bridge is finished ;
and you never knew a better one, or one that gave a
driver such heavy jolts; for the earth has not yet filled
up between the logs, and the logs were very large. It is
a great deal of work to make aroad. I used to think,
before we came here, that they came of themselves, but
now I know better. The old horse is dead. Father bought
amare of Mr. Johnson, that we can drive in double har-
ness; but the reason that he got her was because she was
such a gentle one for Mary to ride. She is as frisky as a
kitten, but has no tricks. We call her “ Dancing Molly ;â€
and her mistress, Mary, says she takes real comfort in
riding now.
Willie and I runa daily express to the village. We
have all the errands to do, and have regular times for
THE CHURCH AND THE MINISTER. 133
starting, and a depot for bundles. We take no passengers,
for we go on our own feet, and have no accommodations
for others. As it is time for us to start, I must close my
letter, I hope you will write to me.
CHARLES.
CHAPTER XX.
THE CHURCH AND THE MINISTER.
Mr. Nessrt, the new minister of whom Mary wrote to
Frank, came to Lakeland as a missionary. Ile was not a
very young man, and had been the pastor of a church
before. His appearance was preposscssing, his manners’
agreeable, and he had received a liberal education. He
knew beforehand the varietics of character he should
probably come in contact with, and that he must accustom:
himself to mect with difficultics, and expect to experience:
personal inconvenience. His salary was small; part of it
guaranteed by the society under whose patronage he was,
and part promised by the people among whom he had:
come to live. “The labourer is worthy of his hire.â€
Truly might this be said of him, for, with all his natural
and acquired abilities, he brought with him a heart will-
ing and desirous of labour, a love for the souls of men,
and a spirit so carnest in the cause of his blessed Master,
that to exert all his powers of body and mind to extend
the knowledge of his name, was with him a pleasurce—a
privilege. How many such are now living and to‘ling in
the wide Western woods, of whom the world knows little,
but who are God’s workmen, each in his place helping to
raise the fallen souls of men, and to lift their earth-bound
affections to higher and cternal joys! How imany such
joyfully encounter hardship and deprivation, if souls
134 THE MORETON FAMILY.
can be saved and God’s name be honoured! Their re-
ward is in heaven; and the last great day can alone show
to men the mighty influence wielded by these chosen
servants of the Lord, as, in weariness of body, they go
from place to place to make known the unsearchable
riches of God’s redeeming love—sustained by faith in his
promises, and by strength granted according to their day.
That all the Lakeland people gladly welcomed the
arrival of a clergyman among them, our readers will not
suppose. Some were opposed to the sentiments he sought
to inculcate; others differed from him in opinion; many
cared nothing about religion and the concerns of their
souls ; while a few received him as the messenger of God,
and carnestly sought a blessing upon him and his mission.
Yet nearly all promised to contribute to his support: one
man would give so many bushels of wheat; another, pota-
toes; another, corn; another “would have a-fine young
pig for the minister in the autumn;†some few had money;
and one or two would give certain amounts in groceries,
or store-pay. Mr. Blagden was indefatigable in his efforts,
and undertook to collect these various things, and put
them in an available shape fur Mr. Nesbit; so that, when
his family arrived, there was every reason to hope that a
comfortable living would be provided for them.
The Sunday-school, now attractive enough, with its
&ne library and well-conducted Icssons, to gather within
it most of the young people of the village, had been con-
tinued through the whole of the past winter.
No one who has not seen the blessed influence of such
a Sunday-school in pr: paring the way for the introduc-
tion of the stated ministrations of the gospel, can have
_any just conception of its importance. The labours of
those devoted men who explore the destitute places, and
give to the rude materials their earliest shape, cannot be
too diligently cmployed nor too highly valucd. The regu-
larly read sermon, with devotional exercises, which fol-
TILE CHURCH AND THE MINISTER. 135
lowed the services of the Sunday-school, had formed the
habit of church-going among the people, so that a congre-
gation of attentive listeners was gathered, ready for tho
ministrations of Mr. Nesbit.
To form a church, and to have him regularly installed
over it, were the first steps to be taken. The little band
who had before associated together, again met, and others,
like-minded, united with them, as, in the prescribed order
and form, they renewed their public covenant to be the
Lord’s servants hereafter and for ever. Some new-comers,
and others who had in former homes taken vows of obe-
dience and love to their Saviour, but had here (to their
great peril) hesitated and doubted, now united with them.
Others still, moved by the Spirit of God, for the first time
professed their faith in Jesus, and joined themselves unto
his people ; so that a church of twenty members welcomed
Mr. Nesbit, as he publicly promised to “live and labour
for them in the name of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ.â€
But not only was he welcomed—he was sustained b
their co-operation in all his plans. The Sabbath was
given to his people ; for he deemed the proper and strict
observance of the day by public worship as the surest
way to gain the confidence of lookers-on. At other
times he was ready to go into other neighbourhoods and
to the near settlements to preach, or perform other minis-
terial dutics. Once during the week did the church
gathcr for social prayer and praise at his house; an en-
gagement which no duty in other places was allowed to
infringe upon. To Mr. Nesbit’s decision and regularity in
meeting these home duties, did he afterwards impute the
feeling of stability and trust regarding the church which
prevailed in the community; and which extended into
the adjoining country, bringing from quite a distance
many constant attendants upon the Sabbath services.
No doubt it had this effect; but tho consistent and
136 TIIE MORETON FAMILY.
unswerving devotion of his life to the one great object
of elevating the moral condition of his fellow-creatures,
gained for him in time the respect of all. A well-
regulated life, a well-ordered conversation, a cheerful
reliance upon God, true benevolence and sympathy for
man, and a hand ready to help any in need ;—with these
characteristics, is it wonderful that, in some measure,
differences of opinion should lessen, opposition become
weak, ill-will be forgotten, and jealousies be subdued ?
When he had been with them but a few months, the
proposal to build a church was made. It was an advance
upon their position, which all agreed was natural and
desirable. But how should it be done? Sufficient sub-
scriptions in ready money were not to be expected in
such a community as theirs, while promises, though
plenty, could not be made available, unless put into some
reliable and substantial form.
A union church, as it is called in the West, designed for
the free use of various denominations, was first pro-
posed. This would unite their means, and make them
better able to accomplish the proposed end. Many
thought this the better way; but Mr. Nesbit was of the
opinion that, as different denominations increased in
numbers and strength, so difficulties came in propor-
tion, and that quarrels and animosities were awakened,
which no present ease or good were an equivalent for ;
and that, therefore, the most desirable way for them was
to have the church property belong to one society, held
together by one common faith and interest. With the
responsibility thus thrown upon a few, would come in-
creased interest in its behalf; while they could, and
should, with proper restrictions, open their doors to
others at all times, when their own stated gatherings
would not be interfered with. All might thus be accom-
modated, and all help to furnish the means and place
suitable for their odject.
THE CHURCH AND THE MINISTER. 137
- The matter was at length decided upon. Mr. Moreton
was to procure the plan and specifications of a church
such as they required. It was to be a wooden building,
plain but tasteful, with pews and a neatly-finished pulpit ;
and its cost not to exceed two hundred and fifty pounds.
This money he was to borrow at as reasonable a rate of
interest as possible, and was himself or his heirs respon-:
sible for it by a mortgage upon his farm to that amount.
A subscription paper was then to be circulated, and as
much money collected as the people were ready to give ;
and (to their credit be it told) there was no grudging or
unwilling hand among them.
Notes, payable in money, produce, or labour, were
received by Mr. Moreton, to secure him for the remainder
of the sum; and, as he himself subscribed handsomely
and freely, no jealousy or fear of being overreached was:
awakened in the minds of any. Three years was to be
the limit of time for which the money was to be lent, and
no note running after that time was to be received.
When all this was arranged, the work was begun. To
work rapidly is no novelty in a new country; but this
church sprang up as if by more than ordinary power.
Robert Moreton, Mr. Blagden, and Mr. Johnson, were the
acting committee, and devoted much time and thought,
as well as labour, to it. One man, with his oxen, came to
cart lime; another had a load of wheat to take to the
market-town, and would bring back lumber; one would
give so many days’ work in digging for the foundation ;
and another would contribute so many thousands of
bricks. When the frame was ready to be raised, nearly
every man in the village came to work; and, according
to Western custom, the women had prepared fur them,
tpon tables within the court-house, abundant refresh-
ment and entertainment when the afternoon’s work was
done.
Thus, “with a willing mind,†they progressed, and,
138 THE MORETON FAMILY.
speedily finished their work. As the year passed on, and
every month saw notes redeemed and promises per-
formed, Mr. Moreton felt mere strongly the wisdom of
Mr. Nesbit’s plan, and acknowledged it openly—thus
confirming others in their good opinion of their minister ;
while he himself willingly relinquished a part of his
salary, small as it was, that in such a crisis they might
not be overburdened.
The dedication of their new sanctuary, with the attend-
ance of clergymen from adjoining counties and States ;
the preparation for singing, and the formation of a choir;
the gathering of the young women to make suitable
drapery and cushions for the pulpit; and, finally, the
presentation of a large and beautiful Bible for the minis-
ter’s use (received but a week before the dedication from
a friend in New York, who interested himself in what
interested Mr. Blagden)—all these were events calculated
to vary the scene at Lakeland.
Thus the preaching of the Word was established among
them—not without effort and sacrifice, nor without some
opposition, it is true; but the success was complete. In
a Western community there is a fair and open field for
the spread of religious truth. Most minds are prepared
by experience of life to acknowledge its uncertainty, and
the unsatisfying nature of worldly pursuits, and the heart
craves afature of promise. Infidelity is not so thoroughly
rooted, even in the hardened hearts of those who openly
boast of it, that they will not listen to truth forcibly
illustrated, be it only to gainsay it; and while they may
affect to despise fear as unmanly, and love as too effemi-
nate a passion for men, yet the great truths of the Bible
will bear the broad sunlight of investigation, and com-
mend themselves to their consciences as right, and just,
and good.
Practical religion—every-day holiness—this it is which
must win its way, whether preached or practised by the
THE CHURCH ANP THE MINISTER. 139
minister or the humble follower of Christ. Its manifest
power over the life of one will influence the life of
another. Its control over the heart and life roll on until
the life and heart of another is reached. The traveller
who passes through village after village, disturbing the
worship of little assemblies, gathered in humble school-
houses or in Sunday-schools, and himself forgets it is
God’s day, or flatters himself that, riding through the
lonely woods, he lifts his heart acceptably to his Maker—
he it is who is wasting a treasure of influence committed
to him. The children who see him, the loiterers at the
tavern-steps, the stable-boy who feeds and grooms his
horse, the family whose day of quiet is broken—all these
remember him; and in proportion to his appearance of
respectability, so is his power to lessen their reverence
for the Sabbath.
“TI remember,†said a useful and intelligent woman,
whose life was passed in a Western village, “one man
that stopped at my father’s a Sabbath when I was about
fifteen years old. He seemed so surprised that we should
think two miles far to go to church, that we all accom-
panied him, though it was unusual for us to do so. And
then, when we reached the log school-house, he seemed
so pleased and happy, and listened to what I thought a
very dull sermon as if he liked it and understood it.
But the fact of his knowing by heart, and singing with
evident enjoyment, a hymn expressive of love to Jesus,
made an impression on my mind which has never been
effaced. He was a man in middle life, healthy and well-
looking, evidently a man of wealth, and thus in possession
of all I had considered necessary to happiness. But I
could not deny that he had a treasure of enjoyment in
religion that I knew nothing about. His look, his man-
ner, his voice, all told me this; besides, he knew the
hymn, and would never have learned it if he did not like
it. After I reached home, I got the book and read it over
140 THE MORETON FAMILY.
and over. Then I went to the Bible, to see if there I
found the same sentiments. From that time I date all
my interest in religious matters; and from that man’s
silent influence upon my own heart, I have learned that
no man liveth to himself alone.
The influence of settlers from other and more advanced
States, their indifference towards the institutions of the
gospel, their disregard for its: humbly-administered ordi-
nances, their forgetfulness of the Christian covenant into
which they have entered in other homes—are all power-—
ful hindrances to the work and success of the Western
missionary. Christians, so called, plant obstacles to the
progress of Christianity, and professed believers become
a hindrance to the spread of the gospel by their ungodly
or inconsistent lives and actions. The eyes of those who
love not the Saviour are not blinded, nor their percep-
tions dimmed towards the failings or shortcomings of the
Church of God; neither are their hearts insensible to the
power of example from such a source. Let but the in-
fluence of all who know the will of God, and who acknow-
ledge the excellency and Divine origin of the Scriptures,
be seen openly exerted, and we need fear for our beloved
country neither the reign of superstition nor of open
infidelity. “ While men slept, the enemy came and sowed
tares among the wheat, and went his way.†“Let us not
sleep, then, as do others ;†but, each at his post, wherever
God may appoint, rouse ourselves to the great work of
being good, that we may do good; heartily entering into
those great plans of our Creator which are in progress
for the redemption and salvation of a fallen world.
TUE STEAM SAW-MILL AND THE DISTILLERY. 14]
CHAPTER XXI.
THE STEAM SAW-MILL AND THE DISTILLERY.
Ir is unnecessary for us, as it would be uninteresting to
our readers, to enter into the detailed history of the pro-
gress of improvement in the village of Lakeland. The
fresh, new paint upon the church and school-house con-
trasted too glaringly with the weather-worn colour and
gray sides of the court-house, and a unanimous vote was
passed at a county meeting to have the building repaired
and painted, while John Dudley headed the enterprise of
planting the open square in which the three stood, with
thrifty young maple-trees.
Ambition was aroused among the people to make the
vilage attractive ; and streets were levelled, decayed
stumps removed, fences repaired, wood-piles taken to the
rear of the buildings, flower-borders made, and fruit-trees
planted. Rose-vines were seen clambering about doors
and windows, refreshing the eye, and pouring out upon the
air their wealth of sweetness.
Now that the school-house was pleasant and cheerful,
the children were more regular in their attendance, and
cleanliness and tidiness of dress prevailed, making the
cffort to instruct more agreeable to their teachers and
more successful in its results.
The Sabbath, too, was better observed. Seldom was a
load of wheat now brought to the village on that day.
The grocery-store was never open to customers ; and if
parties were made to go in quest of nuts or to gather
cranberries, they appointed some week-day, instead of
Sunday, as the most fitting time.
We do not intend to convey the idca that there was no
evil abroad in Lakeland at this stage of its history; but
142 THE MORETON FAMILY.
to show that it was advancing, and that changes, trivial
in themselves, and gradual improvements, made up an
- aggregate of good which was perceptible, and to them
important.
Under these combined influences, Lakeland had become
a decidedly thrifty Western village, so desirable as a
location, that some other families had removed there for
the purpose of educating their children, there being
greater inducements in other respects for the removal.
In society, in schools, in the establishment of regular
Divine worship, in increased facilities for reaching mar-
ket towns, in the improved mode of cultivating their
lands, in the planting of young orchards, and the im-
provement in the stock of their farms, one might see
the sure tokens of advance in public opinion, and the
more gencral diffusion of useful knowledge among the
people.
It was in the autumn of 18— that the good people
of Lakeland were all alive to two projects which were
simultaneously started. One of them concerns our friend
Robert Moreton, and our readers shall be informed of its
particulars.
‘As far back as the building of their own house, the
difficulties attending the transportation of lumber had
been felt by Mr. Moreton asa serious objection to settling
there. Every new building, whether public or private,
had brought the subject up freshly for discussion between
him and his sons; but their own wants being supplied,
and the press of farm-labour sufficient to occupy their
time and thoughts, it had heretofore been but asubject of
conversation.
The time for action, however, had now come. Henry,
advanced in knowledge and with robust health, had be-
come an able and efficient helper to his father; while
Charles, now a well-grown lad of sixteen, was rapidly
developing strong fancies and decided abilitics for a
THE STEAM SAW-MILL AND THE DISTILLERY. 143
farming life. Then, Patrick and his boy Pat were still
employed by Mr. Moreton; so that Robert rightly thought
he was no longer needed at home.
To erect a steam saw-mill, and to superintend its
operations, became the object of his desires. To do
this he inust have capital and knowledge. The latter,
reading, thought, and observation had already given him
in some degree, and a visit made to other parts of the
country soon put him in possession of its practical de-
tails.
The money necessary for his object was not so easily
attained. Richard Gray was in a sufficiently prosperous
condition to repay the sum lent by Mr. Moreton, as
Robert’s share in his enterprise. This, with the use of
his father’s name, enabled him to commence his under-
taking ; while some of his townsmen, sufficiently alive to
the best interests of the village, themselves came for-
ward and offered assistance, should it be needed, on easy
terms.
The spot for the site of the mill had long been selected.
A belt of timbered land, covered with the magnificent
growth of years, ran to the east of the village, and spread
itself out for a long distance. This lay partly on the
farm belonging to Mr. Moreton; and the timber growing
upon adjoining ground was easily procurable from those
who were anxious to have their best farming-land cleared.
This of itself was sufficient inducement to place his mill
there; but the gift of the land from his father, and the
abundant supply of water near by, seemed to make it,
without doubt, the best place for him.
Beaver Lake was the name of the small pond upon
whose banks he broke ground for the fuundation of his
buildings.
A never-failing spring, of considerable depth, appeared
to have overflowed its bounds, and spread itself between
the gently-sloping hills that lay around it, the clear
144 THE MORETON FAMILY.
waters of which bathed the fresh grass that grew quite
down to its edge, leaving neither swamp nor sedgy land
upon its borders. What had undoubtedly been its natu-
ral outlet was now closed by an over-grown beaver-dam,
deserted many years before by its amphibious inhabitants,
but still bearing marks of t
heir ingenuity in constructing
a home; while the waste-water had forced for itself an-
other channel upon the opposite side; there, meeting
with descending land, it ran gaily on, like a silver thread
in width, but rapid in its course, until it mingled with the
current of a river and was lost to the eye.
“Too beautiful a spot to spoil with a mill,†said
Mary; but the West +s full of such beautiful spots, where
Nature has been lavish of her favours, and scattered
her gifts with a liberal hand; and even her devoted
admirer, Mary, yielded the point, that, in a utilitarian
sense, none could be better adapted to Robert’s object
than this.
To work, then, he went, favoured by an early fall of
snow, that made it easy to transport from other and more
distant towns the necessary materials for his use. As far
south as the Moreton family lived, sleighing in the winter,
although uncertain in its duration, is highly prized. The
leisure of winter gives time for the taking of produce to
market, while a smooth and even road made by the fall
of snow presents facilities that even a dweller in an old
country, where highways and turnpikes are known, does
not despise. Robert’s mind was of the systematic order.
His plans were thoroughly made “1d considered, and all
his arrangements wcre the result of mature thought ;
while his mechanical education had fitted him to meet
emergencies with a ready hand and a quick wit. Thus it
was that he was able to accomplish his object so success-
fully. The same power that was used to drive his saws
was also made to work a pair of millstones for the grind-
ing of wheat, thus obviating the. necessity which had
THE STEAM SAW-MILL AND THE DISTILLERY. 145
existed among the villagers of going a greater distance;
and the whole was in operation the following summer,
with a good prospect of soon paying for itself, and after-
wards yielding a fair income to its owner.
But another work of nearly equal magnitude was started
at the same time with the saw-mill, and prosecuted with
equal ardour. This was the erection of a distillery, under
the superintendence of John Thomas, the eldest son of
Mr. Thomas, the lawyer. His means were more ample
than Robert’s, and the speed with which he accomplished
his purpose was wonderful. The abundant harvest of
the first year brought the price of grain so low, that
great profits were to be made on whisky, and purchasers
were not wanting. A feeling of rivalry or jealousy
spurred young Thomas on to make great efforts to eclipse
Robert Moreton in the perfection of his arrangements
- and the amount of business done. Robert, it must be
confessed, felt uneasy, and sometimes disturbed, by the
apparent success of his neighbour, and sometimes wished
for greater means of extending his business.
“ ¢ Never haste, never rest,†said Mr. Moreton to him
one evening, as he heard Robert’s account of a large
order’ received by John Thomas for prime whisky.
«“¢Never haste, never rest,’ and you will never want.
Were you as-old as I, Robert, you would have learned
better than to allow your feelings to be disturbed because
your neighbour is prospering. Candidly, with all his
apparent success, would you to-day exchange places with
him?â€
“No, indeed!†was the hearty response of Robert. “I
would rather be a poor man ail my days than furnish the
means of ruin to my fellow-creatures.â€
“But,†said Mr. Moreton, willing to try him further,
‘young Thomas sells whisky only by the quantity, and
thus evades the name and undesirable fame of a spirit-
seller. He is # manufacturer, and a drunkard is never
K
146 THE MORETON FAMILY.
to be seen on his premises. I even hear that he will have
none but temperate men to work for him; and he himself
never tastes his own whisky.â€
“So much the worse, father,’ said Charles, who was
listening to this conversation; “for he thus acknowledges
the evil of intemperanceâ€â€”
“ And shifts the responsibility upon others, while he
pockets the profits of his establishment,†added Robert.
“But, where he stands, it is impossible to meet him with
any proof of his doing wrong. When Mr. Bradley told
him last week that he was making drunkards by whole-
sale, while poorer men made them so by retail, he an-
swered, that ‘the appetite was there, and if he did not
supply its cravings, others would ;? and even added, that
‘it was better to give them good whisky than poor,
poisoned stuff, that was not fit to drink!â€
“By such arguments he doubtless satisfies himself,â€
replied Mr. Moreton; “but the end is to come. He may
accumulate riches—everything now seems to favour it;
but the influence which goes out from that establishment
one would not wish to be responsible for. Ten years
hence we shall be better able to judge of its amount, as
well as of his success. Meantime, let us remember the
words of David, ‘Be not thou afraid when one is made
rich, when the glory of his house is increased; for, when
he dieth, he shall carry nothing away, his glory shall not
descend after him.’ In the choice of an employment, as
well as in the care of our hearts, it is well to have this
‘testimony, that it pleases God; and those professions
and callings of which this can be said are so abundant,
that we need not resort to unlawful pursuits to gain a
livelihood or to insure a competence. As you cannot
hope to influence John, let him and his success alone. It
is not to interfere with your prosperity. Keep the end
steadily in view when we must all give an account of the
use of talents lent us by our Maker, and be sure that
‘
WILLIE MORETON’S DEATH. 147
yours are exercised in such a way that the bodies and
souls of your fellow-men are not thereby injured, if you,
at the close of life, would look back with joy, and not
with grief.â€
CHAPTER XXII.
WILLIE MORETON’S DEATH.
HitTHERTO we have had to record only the prosperity and
blessings which had attended the course of the Moreton
family. The minor ills to which all are liable, and the
infirmities of body from which none are exempt, had
sometimes visited them. The same causes which had
destroyed the crops of other farmers had operated un-
favourably for theirs; and the fluctuations in the prices
of staple commodities they had felt as others did: but
their history, on the whole, had been one of mercy, and
gratefully did they acknowledge the guiding and protect-
ing hand of Providence.
The ensuing summer brought with itasad change, The
prevalence of a fever, contagious in its nature, and often
fatal in its attacks upon the young, was felt throughout
that portion of country. Unknowingly, Willie Moreton
was exposed to it, and for days suffered all the agonies
of its worst form, while his mind wandered in delirious
imaginings. O how anxiously was he watched, how ten-
derly nursed by his fond mother, who, forgetful of self in
the care for his safety, would allow none but Mary to help
her in her labour of love! Those nights of wakefulness ;
those days of tender ministration to his wants; those
gentle words of love and sympathy, whose tones were
felt, even when their import was not understood; above
all, these carnest prayers for submission to the Divine
will, and for willing acquiescence in whatever their
148 TILE MORETON FAMILY.
heavenly Father should order,—who but those who know
a mother’s heart, and who have dwelt, both in health and
sickness, in trouble and joy, beneath the beaming light of
a mother’s love, can tell? The full fountain of sympathy
which was opened for them in the hearts of others, the
ready acts of friendship, and the willing help which was
at their disposal, all showed the strong hold which they
had upon the affections of their neighbours. Many, alas!
of these kind friends had cause for anxiety and watchful-
ness in their own dwellings; and some, who had laid
loved ones in their last narrow beds, came to proffer help
for the invalid, hoping that their former exposure to the
disease might prove a sufficient reason with Mrs. Moreton
for employing their services, while she sought necessary
rest.
What a change came over that family group, as they
realized, from their own experience, for the first time,
their slender hold upon life! With what tenderness did
they gaze upon each other, as they felt that they knew
not who should next be laid low beneath the withering
hand of disease! How gently did they speak, how pa-
tiently bear the small mistakes or infirmities of brother
or sister! How, day by day, did they comfort each other
with words of hope, which, their own hearts whispered,
were feeble to soothe! How their own desires went up
in silent petition to God, to look upon them in their sor-
row and to grant them healing mercies!
Then Alice, the darling of their hearts, sickened, and
for days she too was dangerously ill. Never, until now,
had they felt how dear they were to each other—how
their lives were entwined together in loving bonds, and
the’r happiness dependent upon the happiness of the
whole.
But Willie was never more to take his place in their
family circle. From the first attack of illness, his case
had been deemed nearly hopeless, both by Dr. Mason and
WILLIE MORETON’S DEATH. 149
his mother. Watchful nursing and efficient care only
served to prolong his life a few days more upon earth, and
then he closed his weary eyes upon the world, and slept
his last sleep.
Reason was granted him in that last hour of life.
Feeble and faint the vital current moved in his veins.
He awoke from a disturbed slumber to recognise his be-
loved mother bending over his pillow with maternal ten-
derness. The change which she saw in his countenance,
her experience too truly told her was the change of ap-
proaching death. Silently she summoned to his side
father, brothers, and sisters, each of whom he recognised
with looks of love and faintly-spoken words. Their tear-
ful eyes and saddened faces seemed to grieve him, and, as
he asked for “ dear Ally,†and was told how very sick she
was, he sent a message of affection to her and Frank.
Then, looking in his mother’s face, he earnestly repeated,
as if to comfort her—
“ You know I love Jesus! You know I love Jesus, the
Saviour !â€
They knelt in prayer by that dying bedside. In faith
did those parentsagain yield up the beloved child to God,
surrendering themselves, with all that was theirs, to his
sovereign disposal, and asking for themselves unwavering
submission and earnest trust in his love. The dying one
they commended—O how fervently !—to the Saviour for
whom, with his fleeting breath, he had avowed his love,
beseeching him to place beneath him his everlasting arms,
to sustain him in this his time of need, and, when his
spirit should be {:eed from his weary and perishing body,
to bear him to that world of glory where he might eter-
nally dwell with angels and saints, and with Jesus him-
self, the Saviour, the Redeemer !
For the iurther comforting of the departing soul, Mr.
Moreton repeated portions of God’s word:
“Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow
wt
150 THE MORETON FAMILY.
of death, I will fear no evil, for thou art with me; thy
rod and thy staff, they comfort me.â€
“ And they remembered that God was their rock, and
the high God their Redeemer.â€
“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only-
begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on him should
not perish, but have everlasting life.â€
’ Lord, I believe; help thou my unbelief.â€
“Into thy hands I commit my spirit: thou hast re-
deemed me, O Lord God of truth.â€
“ Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his
saints.â€
Thus, upon the ear of Willie fell the sound of God’s
precious Word, until that ear was dull, and the eye, wont
to beam with affection, was dimmed with the shadow of
death. As they looked upon those features, lately so
bright and joyous with the sunshine of a loving heart,
now fixed and motionless; as they viewed the stiffened
form, which they had ever seen active and buoyant ; as
they remembered the pleasant voice and words, now
hushed in never-to-be-broken silence; as they recalled
his many little acts of kindness and of self-denying love,
—it seemed as if the blessed gift of memory itself would
turn traitor to their happiness, using the remembrance
of past pleasures to heighten the present grief.
What, then, could give them comfort ? Upon what can
the afflicted heart rest, when earthly joys and earthly
hopes are taken away? ‘T'he promises of God’s Word ;
and upon these only could our sorrowing friends rely.
Willie’s appeal to his mother—* You know I love Jesusâ€
—so emphatically uttered, was the connecting link be-
tween his soul and theirs.
thought his to have been, but they knew that faith in
Jesus was the only plea which sinful man could make at
the throne of God; and these remembered words, speak-
ing of trust and confidence as well as of love, lingered in
WILLIE MORETON’S DEATH. 151
their memorics, soothing their grief and mitigating their
sorrow, as they, with them, recalled that word, “ Whoso-
ever believeth on him shall not be ashamed.’â€*
By these same promises they were also consoled, when,
accompanied by neighbours and friends, they bore his
body to the village burial-ground, and there laid it, to
resi until the resurrection-day. To seek out some quiet
retreat upon his own land, where it might silently repose
near them, was the first thought of Mr. Moreton. But he
had come to live and die with his fellow-men, and where
they were buried, there should he and his be laid. Nor
did he regret this decision, as, around that open grave,
he saw the countenances of sympathizing acquaintances,
and witnessed their sorrow in his sorrow.
A few words of consolation to all mourning hearts were
spoken by Mr. Nesbit, a hymn sung, and then friendly
hands lowered the coffin into the earth, and all silently
withdrew.
But where was Susan Gray in this time of trouble?
She, too, sat by the side of the sick; but it was in her
own house, and it was her only child to whom she mini-
stered. Now nearly two years old, it had become an
endeared member of their circle, winning their hearts
with its infantile charms, and expanding rapidly in in-
telligence and physical growth.
It was spared, after a struggle with disease and bodily
suffering scarcely less to be dreaded than death itself,
and lived to be a further source of joy to its parents and
to all at the farm. Alice, too, recovered, but her recovery
was slow; and they received her once more to their fire-
side circle only as the first frosts of autumn were gorge
ously tinting the forest-trees. As she took her accustomed
place near her mother’s chair, they remembered more
vividly the departure of one who would never return ;
but no heart was ungrateful, or forgetful that God, in
* Rom. x. 11,
152 THE MOREION FAMILY.
sending chastisement, had mingled mercy with it; mercy
in staying the ravages of death, and mercy in their good
hope of the happiness of Willie.
CHAPTER XXIII.
CONCLUSION.
Two years after the date of our last chapter, a waggon
drawn by a fine pair of horses might be seen starting frem
a country inn, in the vicinity of Lakeland.
“Only ten miles farther,†said the young man who was
acting as driver, “and the road good all the way !â€
“Which last sentence could not be added, Robert,
when you and I passed this way together, eight years
and a half since.â€
“No, indeed!†answered Robert. “Your five years’
absence has given time for great improvements, Frank.
Five years at the West are equal to twenty in New Eng-
land, in marked external change.â€
«J shall not complain, if the alteration does not affect
people as well as places.â€
“Nor should you, if it did,†said an elderly gentleman,
who sat by Frank’s side; “for, if I mistake not, the
Frank Moreton who left the West to go to college does
not look exactly like the Frank Moreton that is coming
back.â€
“You are right, Dr. Newton; and, if they don’t know
me at home, I shall rely upon you to introduce me,†re-
sponded the younger man, laughingly.
“Only see that forest of girdled trees!†said Dr. New-
ton. “What a sad sight! It looks like an army of
skeletons; and this breeze, that rocks their dry arms,
makes them more hideous still.â€
CONCLUSION. 153
It was, indeed, a wild landscape, and calculated to
arrest the eye of a stranger. They had passed fields in
all stages of cultivation: some spotted with stumps of
trees so thickly, that there was little room for the plough
or the spade—others free, and stretching out a broad
expanse of smooth, level land, rich and fertile; they had
ridden for miles through woodland covered with gigantic
trees, at whose roots grew an impenetrable mass of un-
derwood, and around whose hoary trunks were clinging
tendrils of wild vines, full of crimson berries; they had
started from the forest-coverts partridges and quails
innumerable; had watched the wild-ducks fluttering
about the margin of ponds; had seen the nimble squirrels
almost fly at their approach; and had often come unex-
pectedly upon some farm-house, set down, like a whip-
poor-will’s nest, all alone in the woods.
All these gave evidence and bore the impress of life
and activity. But not so the girdled field. The ground
was half-cleared, the underbrush all rooted out, and the
plough had passed more than once through the earth.
Perhaps three years had passed since each tree had had
the fatal mark set upon it; and yet they stood in all their
former magnitude, but dead, throwing out their leafless
and whitened branches, that creaked with a hollow
sound as they waved to and fro in the wind. There were
scattered branches lying upon the earth ; and, occasion-
ally, one weaker than its neighbour, leaned heavily, their
boughs locked together, and together waited the shock of
the tempest that would uproot them. A more desolate
sight could not be imagined; and the more so, because
around it, and upon the very earth in which they stood,
there was full and luxuriant vegetation, as yet untouched
by frost or wintry blight.
They gazed upon it as they slowly passed along.
“It is a murderous practice and a slovenly one too,â€
said Robert ; “but the farmer who has little money feels
154 THE MORETON FAMILY.
as if wind and sun, tempest and time, must be employed
as his servants; and the marks of each, as a labourer,
can be seen there.â€
“Beaver Lake Saw-mill,†read Frank, on a guide-board
that stood at the angle of two roads. “How far to your
mill, Robert, from this highway ?â€
“Less than a quarter of a mile. We are earlier than
they will look for us at home; what say you to a turn
which takes you out of your way that distance ?â€
“Nothing, but that I should like it,†said Dr. Newton ;
and in a few minutes they were in hearing of its saws;
and in a few minutes more, stood within its walls.
Robert took them about its precincts, showed them its
machinery and its manner of working, and then went
with them to another apartment, where two men, covered
with flour, moved industriously about.
“ Well, Bonte,†said Robert, “are you at work on the
new wheat to-day, as I directed ?â€
“Yes, sare.â€
“ And the alterations we made, do they work well?â€
“Yes, sare; he go nicely.â€
“Ts that your ‘poor Frenchman?†asked Dr. Newton.
“Yes, sare,†replied Robert; “and he go nicely too,
since he came here. You know he was a tinker by trade,
and strolled about the country, mending tin-pans and
doing odd jobs, for which he received little or nothing.
When this mill was building, he applied for work, and he
really showed so much mechanical skill, and was so
handy (as the Yankees say), that I have kept him in my
employ constantly, advancing him, as he showed himself
to be competent to more responsible posts. He has
been honest and sober; and, while he himself adheres to
many French ways that we do not consider praiseworthy
or desirable, his wife and children have kept up with the
tide of improvement, having become cleanly and tidy in
their personal habits; and his eldest son and daughter
CONCLUSION. 155
are among Mr. Blagden’s best pupils; the boy is even
studying Latin and mathematics.â€
They left the mill, and stood among piles of boards,
planks, and bundles of shingles.
“These,†said Robert, pointing to some fine walnut
logs, “are only squared off, and ready to send East. We
find a ready market for them there. Pine-wood we bring
back, for our white-wood is too sensitive to changes of
temperature to take its place entirely, unless we use
paint more freely than most of us can afford. These,â€
pointing to a lot of boards, “are sold, and so are these.â€
Frank had left them, and was talking earnestly to some
one who seemed an acquaintance.
“ Ah, Frank! and so you and Revere knew each other,
did you!â€
“That we did,†said Frank; “and I am right glad to
see him here.â€
«“ And I to be here,†said Revere.
Thomas Revere was an important personage now in
the affairs of the Beaver Lake mill. With great effort,
he had broken off from his former companionship; and
though in that struggle he had suffered, yet he came off
victorious over his own appetite, and had remained firm
thus far. His former intellectual standing no habits of
sobriety could restore; neither could abstemiousness
repair the shattered bodily vigour. The vacant eye and
the trembling hand, the frequent indisposition and the
fits of despondency, all betrayed the sad inroads that had
been made by intemperance.
But Robert met him as a man: sympathized with him
in his efforts; was not discouraged if he once or twice
failed; he assisted him in the settlement of his affairs
with his creditors; saved for him some little personal
property from the grasp of the rum-seller; procured
board for him in a good, plain family ; and, finally, gave
him employment which was constant and remunerative.
156 THE MORETON FAMILY.
“ Are you going to take into your establishment all.the
poor fellows in the country ?â€â€ asked Frank.
“ Willingly, if they would do me as good service as
Revere,†answered Robert. “I enjoy much in his society,
for he is a shrewd man, and his knowledge is of advan-
tage to me. He is my book-keeper; he measures my
lumber and prepares it for transportation; he pays my
workmen. In truth, he does as much for me as I ever
can do for him; so that, in the matter of obligation, we
are about equal.â€
It would not do to linger longer, and they were soon
at Mr. Moreton’s door. Frank leaped from the waggon,
eager to greet his mother first ; nor did he heed Carlo’s
first welcome of a growl, and afterwards of fawning
caress.
Father and mother were there, with eyes tearful
through joy; and scarcely had the words of salutation
passed between them and the new-comers, when Mary
cantered up to the door upon her pony, and threw her-
self into Frank’s arms, gave him a hearty kiss, which he
as heartily returned, and then she greeted Dr. Newton
with the same salutation.
Susan was the next tocome. A light waggon, holding
herself, the baby, and Richard, appeared at the door ; they
having been invited to meet Frank and good Dr. Newton
at the tea-table.
“ Where is little Dick?†asked Mary.
«Coming with Annie,’ answered Susan ; “and they
should be here now,†she said, going to the door.
There they were, and Annie’s cordial voice was heard—
«Ah! are they here already? I thought we should
have been before them ;†but Frank stopped her mouth
with kisses, for he was boisterous in his joy at being once
more among them.
“Have you called Henry?†asked Mary. “We pro-
mised we would.â€
CONCLUSION. 157
Robert started for the adjoining room, and, in an
instant, a loud-sounding note ona horn re-echoed through
the air.
“That is the very same old horn,†said Frank, “and
makes just the same fine music it did years ago, when
it used to say, ‘Boys, come in to supper ? and ‘Boys,
you've played out long enough!’ â€
When Robert returned, he complimented him upon his
musical skill and proficiency upon his favourite instru-
ment, adding—
“Time was, Robert, when three abortive attempts
would be made, before one such successful blast as you
just now favoured us with could be heard. But I must
go and meet Henry.â€
Henry was hastening from the field. He was dressed
in coarse trousers and a short white carter’s frock, while
a broad-brimmed straw hat shaded his face, though it had
not prevented his acquiring, in his out-of door pursuits, a
high-coloured and somewhat dark complexion.
What a hearty greeting was there! No small degree
of strength on either side was exhibited and felt in that
old-fashioned shaking of hands, and mutual exclamations
of surprise at the personal change each found in the
other,
Henry tarried awhile in the shed, ere he was ready to
greet Dr. Newton. The trousers were changed ; a clean
coat substituted for the carter’s frock ; house-boots, black
and shining, were pulled on in place of the stout cow-hide
ones with which he followed the oxen and traversed the
ploughed fields.
Pure cold water was at hand, and in a shorter time
than it has taken to record it, he was ready to appear,
fresh and acceptably clad, before his friencs.
Frank waited for him; and, as he joined him, he
said—
“You keep up the old habit, Henry, that we used to
158 THE MORETON FAMILY.
think mother so particular about. Do you find it as
burdensome as we formerly thought it was?â€
“OQ no, Frank! I amold enough and wise enough now
te see that it adds to my own comfort, as well as to that
of mother. Besides, every arrangement is made here in
this outside room for one’s doing it with speed and ease ;
and it really takes scarcely five minutes a day ‘to doff
the old habit and on with the new.’ â€
The same signal which had summoned Henry had been
heard farther away, and Charles and Alice hurried up the
hill, panting with quick exertion, and soon were in the
midst of the assembled family.
And now those few wonder-working years were seen to
have wrought many changes! Mr. and Mrs. Moreton,
with Dr. Newton, had still the same appearance, unless a
thread of white was seen here and there more visibly on
the temple. Robert and Richard Gray had only matured
and strengthened their well-expanded forms, and put on
the look of business-men; but “ Henry had really grown;
that,†said Frank, “is certain.’ As certain was it, and
rather more perceptible, that he himself had; while
Charles and Alice, one would have thought, could have
done nothing else. Mary was a woman, too, still bright,
and with a countenance that told of a heart full of
melody; Alice, tall, fair, with clustering ringlets about
her face, shrinking from observation, but eager in her
love; Annie—“ sweet Annie!†as everybody called her
—calm and self-possessed, thinking of all the otlfers’ joy,
and of their happiness, and allowing no selfish wish to
arise that she too was fair, and straight, and strong;
Charles, robust and ruddy, even now in the midst of his
joy, finding time to tell little cousin Dick how many
“ nuts he and Alice had gathered that afternoon, and of a
fine squirrel he had in training for him ;†information
that set the little one in such an ecstasy of pleasure as
fairly lifted him off his feet, and could only be allayed
CONCLUSION. 159
by successive hops and skips. Notwithstanding this de-
velopment of love for boyish pleasures, Charles was a
man in feeling and in aim, but retained a freshness and
vigour that usually belong only to earlier years. Susan
too! (Mrs. Gray with everybody else, but still holding
the appellation of “Cousin Susan†here), she sat like a
young matron, now hushing the little boy in his noisy
demonstrations of happiness, now gazing tenderly on the
baby, whose existence was numbered by months, instead
of years, and, again, looking around that family circle,
with an evident satisfaction that she was embraced within
its bounds.
Then came the gathering about the hospitable table.
Plenty, that characteristic of Western fare, was here
seen, but in conjunction with the nicer culinary arts,
and with an evident reference to the health, instead of
fastidious appetite, of its participants.
-Do my readers ask, Was Willie forgotten in this family
reunion? Passed away from earth, had he also passed
away from the remembrance of those who had loved
him? O no! Little do those who could thus inquire
know of the depth of that love which still reigned in
their hearts for him who was not lost, but gone to their
heavenly Father's house. Little do they think of those
yearning desires which were only stilled and quieted with
the confident belief that for him to have departed and to
“be with Christ is far better.â€
Hallowed and subdued by a remembrance of mortality,
life lost not its charms. It came as a gift from the hand
of a gracious God. Their creation was with them a
matter of thankfulness. The mercies surrounding their
path were so many increased obligations neither to abuse
it nor pervert it from its true end. The uncertainty of
life was but a stronger reason for valuing and improving
it as it passes; and to its end they looked as opening to
the servants of Jesus a higher service and endless bliss.
160 THE MORETON FAMILY.
Sunset came, with all its gorgeous drapery of clouds,
golden, violet and crimson; it found Henry and Dr.
Newton in the fields, looking at changes and advances
which Mr. Moreton pointed out. There was much con-
versation about ploughing and planting, of subsoil and
sandy loam, of pasture and woodland, of draining and
fencing, and all that vast variety of subjects which mixed
husbandry necessarily sneludes. Frank walked away, for
+t did not interest him as it did the others. He found his
mother and sisters together, and with them explored the
garden and orchard. In the latter they found Charles,
with his hand full of late yellow peaches, which he offered
to them.
“Do take one, Frank,†said he; “I went purposely to
show you and Dr. Newton some of this new kind. We
call them resolution-peaches, and think them wonderfully
good for preserving ! ss i
Frank was quite in the dark as regarded the history of
the peach-tree, but he praised the fruit, which he very
safely might do; and we as safely praise Charlie, who
had kept his resolution watchfully, until it was bring-
ing forth the fair fruits of forbearance, kindness, and con-
sideration.
At the side-door stood Annie, talking with a lad.
“You have been very successful, Patrick,†said she ;
“and very nice roots these are. Now, put them with the
others, on the floor of the wood-house chamber ; and one
more Saturday afternoon’s work like this will finish your
task.â€
With these words, she turned and saw Frank.
« Ah, Frank! this is Patrick M‘Coney ; and we all think
him a very clever boy. See what a quantity of ginseng-
roots he has gathered since noon 1†and she put her
slender hand into his basket, and held up some of the
joints. “Tle has quite a quantity of it already, and we
store it here until it is nicely dried and ready for sale.â€
CONCLUSION. 161
“What will he do with the money it sells for,†asked
Frank.
“QO! that isasecret between us; is it not, Patrick?â€
gaily responded Annie, with a genial smile overspreading
her features. “ But we will trust you with it, since
visiters should receive extra attention. A History of the
United States is to be the purchase. Then Patrick can
go into one of Mr. Blagden’s higher classes, if he has
a little perseverance and a little help in learning his
lessons.â€
The perseverance must be on Patrick’s side, but it was
easy to see where the daily patience, in helping a some-
what obtuse intellect in keeping pace with quicker minds,
was to come from.
“JT understand,†said Frank. “ And, Annie, I hear that
Bonte’s boy and girl—your old pets—are both bright and
improving.â€
“ Ah, yes,†said Annie; “and suclr a comfort as it
is!â€
“Did the mother ever learn to read?†asked her
brother.
“No; I was not wise enough to know how to teach
an older person; but I go and read to her very often.
Were it not for her and aunt Rachel, I should have little
to do.â€
But where were Mr. Moreton and Dr. Newton? They
had strolled over the field and come out by Patrick’s
house. The lingering twilight sufficed to show the place
to advantage. Its master and mistress were both at the
back of the cabin, mending the cracks which a summer’s
sun had caused in a hollowed log of wood. This log was
the trunk of a tree, and sufficiently long to extend the
length of the house. It was placed under the projecting
eaves, and would both catch and retain (when whole) a
large quantity of water. The “water-waggons,†as the
clouds were called, which had been floating in the sky
L
162 THE MORETON FAMILY.
betokencd rain to come, and busily were Patrick and
Winne employed, filling these cracks and openings with
the bark of the slippery-elm, which, when moistened,
would swell and make it tight and whole.
Looking about the premises, Dr. Newton was struck
with the manifold uses to which wood, in its natural
state, could be turned. A little hewing and splitting, and
there were mat rials for a house. There was a snug
fence, the gate of which was held together by a wooden
pin, fitted to a knot-hole in the post. There was a log-
stable, with a manger made of a hollowed tree. There
was a well, and its surrounding curb was but a thick slice
out of an immense tree, hollowed by fire and by slight
cutting. The bucket itself was swinging from a flexible
tamarac pole, held by a stout walnut arm. A grape-vine
was stretched across the yard, from pole to pole, upon
which hung children’s aprons, stockings, &c., to dry. A
pile of logs, like a miniature cabin, was the place to keep
ashes. Another stored potatoes and turnips for the use
of the animals in winter.
He remarked this to Mr. Moreton, who replied—
“Yes, it is wonderful; but you do not here see it
exemplified in all its varieties. I have sometimes lifted
the wooden latch to a door, and seen within a cradle and
a bedstead, seats and table, even the hook for the boiling
kettle over the fire, made of logs. The cradle was a
short one, hollowed, and a blanket within it; the bed-
stead two stout ones, of equal height, securely nailed to
the floor; resting on these were split pieces, that met the
wall at the two ends, and each other at the side; over
this were laced grape-vines, or else small pole-like
branches rested upon it and upon the side-logs of the
cabin. The seats would be good-sized logs, smoothly cut,
with sometimes an attempt at a support for the back ;
the table a larger and higher log, such as you saw about
the well, only whole. A crotched branch of a tree held
CONCLUSION. 163
the kettle, and a large wood-pile furnished the fire for its
necessities. The candlestick was a bit of wood, with
shingle nails set in a circle; while the babics played with
peeled sticks, dressed, upon which faces were marked at
one end, and with the fruit of buck-eye trees, husks of
corn, and nuts of every kind.â€
“Thus their necessities are met,†said Dr. Newton,
“however uninvitingly it may appear to us to be. Our
power of adaptation to circumstances, and the contrivance
often shown in procuring the means of satisfying our
wants, is t> me often wonderful.â€
But this is a digression; and we would draw our
reader’s attention to one scene more, passing over even
a visit to aunt Rachel, with the presentation of a pair of
spectacles by Frank, which she averred made her eyes
young again. More than this, we may not stop to tell of
an excursion into a neighbouring county, which was
taken to show Dr. Newton a large prairie farm, with em-
bankments of earth instead of fences, and its immense
fields, with corresponding corn-cribs and thrashing-floors.
Nor may we dwell upon Frank’s welcome in the village,
nor his arrangement to enter himself with a party or
engineers who were surveying the land in that region as
a railroad route ; his father thinking that he would be the
better for an active life for a while.
Before Dr. Newton went away, he became aware that
John Dudley and his favourite Mary were to unite their
fortunes, and he begged them to hasten that event, that
he might witness it. This was not done; but he saw
daily progressing the building of the cottage in which
they purposed to live, and was witness for himself that
this union was to be one of congeniality, uniting hearts as
well as hands, and promising a future of happiness for both.
“ But I saw a cottage much like this one near the mill
the day I came,†said he, after going about the little
building. “ Whose is that?â€
164 THE MORETON FAMILY.
“Mine,†said Robert ; “and I only wait for this to be
finished to take Mary’s chosen friend, Dora Van Weichten,
to it; for the same day that mother gives her daughter
to John, I bring her another, whom she says will be
welcome!†:
The last Sabbath of Dr. Newton’s stay had come.
They had attended church, and heard the Word of God
preached, uniting in worship with an earnest and listen-
ing congregation, and singing the praises of their Maker
with the voice and heart. The duties of the Sunday-
school had been attended, and were varied this day from
their ordinary routine by an address from their Eastern
visiter, and by a resolution to bestow the old library on
a new school some twelve miles distant from them. As
a school, they felt rich enough now to have a fresh one,
and to pay for it, and they would show their thankful-
ness for that given to them in their weakness, by sending
its well-read but well-kept volumes to those who were
needy.
The walk home was long, but the gentlemen preferred
it to riding. The waggons had all passed them ; the chil-
dren hurried along, turning, as they overtook Mr More-
ton, for their accustomed salutation: even the women
who came on horseback to church, and brought babies
with them, had slowly moved past ; and when Mr. Blag-
den overtook them, he seemed to be the last of the con-
gregation who went their way.
They passed aunt Rachel’s, and received a pleasant nod
of recognition from the old woman, as she stood leaning
on her crutches, while Sobieski let down the bars for her
‘to enter the yard.
“ That boy is growing up into a very promising man,â€
said Mr. Blagden. “ He is no longer in school, but comes
often for books from my 1 brary ; and, in my opinion, bids
fair for respectability and usefulness among us.â€
CONCLUSION, 165
“ Your whole Sunday-school seems full of likely boys
and girls,†said Dr. Newton. “I never spoke to an
audience of youth whose faces so generally denoted in-
telligence.â€
“We have mo reason to be ashamed of our village
youth,†said Mr. Blagden. “Their advantages have been
steadily increasing for the past eight years; and for that
period their improvement has been, from one season to
another, marked. I date from the time of Mr. Moreton’s
arrival heres for his coming gave us an impetus in many
matters, which we still feel.â€
“ How was that?†asked Dr. Newton.
“ Our people were just in that state in which a leading
mind is necded. We were ready to unite in objects of
public good, if we could clearly see our way before us,
and could have them put in a practicable shape. When
Mr. Moreton came, he was fitted, by position and by
education, to be that leader. More than all, his example
was eminently calculated to do us good. Good, plain
common sense we saw he had. His way of working
showed this. We soon found that he feared God, and
that his religion was a part of his every-day life. He
praised every advance we had made. This pleased us,
for we Western people are not much accustomed to
praise ; and thus jealousies were warded off. If he did
not approve of a thing, he said nothing. We found him
and all his family ready to help, and their influence in
matters of religion, in the cause of education, in social
intercourse, in manners and dress, has been felt the more
powerfully, because unconsciously received.â€
Mr. Moreton, who was walking in advance of them,
here turned, and inquired if Mr. Thomas had been heard
from.
“Yes; he has sent to his son John to make the best
settlement he can with his creditors, and join him ina
proposed journey to California to dig gold.â€
166 THE MORETON FAMILY.
“T hope he will not go,†returned Mr. Moreton. “A
mine of wealth lies buried in his own fields, if he will but
dig for it.â€
He turned away, and Mr. Blagden resumed—
“That Mr. Thomas and his family werea perfect con-
trast to our friends the Moretons. They were always
intending to leave us and their place, consequently they
made no effort at improvement in either. With equal
means and equal advantages, Mr. Thomas always com-
plained that he was not appreciated, and that Mr. More-
ton usurped his place; while his success was ever @ mys-
tery, for he would not see it as the result of well-directed
labour.â€
“To what do you attribute the higher state of morality
I have heard you mention?†inquired Dr. Newton.
“To the more elevated ideas respecting education, and
the demand which they have made for more thorough
instruction. Our Sabbath service has awakened atten-
tion, and the hearing of a well-written sermon every
week has had an effect upon the intellect, and elicited
inquiry. Parents are naturally ambitious for their chil-
dren, and a feeling of ignorance on their part awakened
anxiety for the better information of the young.â€
“ But were the young people obedient and willing to be
under restraint? In new countries it is not ordinarily so.â€
“ Now we come to the first cause of the change, and of
it I may speak the more freely, as I had so small a share
in it. Our Sunday-school was really the foundation of
our improvement. Here the children were taught the
commandments of God, and were led to feel that they
were holy, and just, and true. As they grew up, the im-
pression stll remained. Our children eight years since
are our young men and women now—some of them heads
of families, and all of them exerting an influence.â€
“Has the school affected the interests of the church
here materially, do you think?â€
CONCLUSION. 167
“ Nearly every accession to its numbers has come from
the school. At our last communion season, eight persons
were received to our church who had been scholars or
teachers for several years. One of these learned to read
in the Sunday-school, and has never, through poverty,
had any other opportunity for instruction. Mary More-
ton found her out, and has lent her book after book to
study at home, until she is a tolerable scholar. Better
than all, she is an earnest, devoted Christian; and of
those received to church-membership from the school,
we generally feel quite confident of their knowledge, and
have good hope of their sincerity.â€
« You value the Sunday-school, then, as a help to the
church, as elevating our ideas of education, and as an
influence promotive of a higher state of public morals?â€
“Yes, and as an efficient aid to every one. The parent
feels it in family government; the teacher feels it as
promotive of effort; the town-officers feel it as an instru-
ment of good order; the minister regards it as his own
right-hand man; even the farmer looks to it as a protec-
tion to his orchards and garden. It has done us good;
and, in wise and judicious hands, I believe it to be a
powerful and wonder-working instrument for the good
both of the body and souls of men.â€
They drew near to the house. There it stood, with its
green blinds, and shaded with trees just tinged with
autumn hues. The blue smoke curled gracefully from
its chimney. Alice stood in the doorway, waiting for her
beloved father. Charles, who had hastened home from
church, and was already attending to the necessary duties
of the evening, that he might be at leisure for the social
worship of the family, now held open the side-gate to
admit a flock of geese, who, in single file, were returning
to their safe night-quarters. The ‘lowing of the distant
herds, as they clustered at nightfall about the well-filled
barns, was audible ; and old Carlo himself, with unwonted
7
168 THE MORETON FAMILY.
effort, roused himself to meet and welcome the master of
the house.
Thus would we leave them. With no real want un-
supplied, no imaginary one created by an artificial state
of society; where honest labour is honourable; where
industry secures a sufficient fortune; at harmony with
the world, and dwelling together in unity ; with habits of
sobricty, intelligent minds, and a wide and open field for
exerting a good and wise influence—who shall say that,
in the broad ficlds of the West, they had not found a
happy home?
THE END.
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'2011-11-14T23:31:36-05:00'
describe
'2011-11-14T23:29:49-05:00'
redup
'1098534' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIA' 'sip-files00001.jp2'
1da701d19bf01bfe940e05d14a011273
81cc9ca09fcee0e254547eb43b1597de954d8798
'2011-11-14T23:32:24-05:00'
describe
'28923' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIB' 'sip-files00001.jpg'
84ccb38a1b299f1fb3cc137c46118715
47522c68a36c2190e38de7c2136b265ad3ce2cf1
'2011-11-14T23:32:59-05:00'
describe
'960' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIC' 'sip-files00001.pro'
8c4103ca6f7654c97455fa64c72d2035
772f835390a06fb100c464d943d7b08def024a1a
'2011-11-14T23:33:41-05:00'
describe
'7175' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABID' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
f5de725d6686dbee2ef7070cdb28916c
6bab5604804a57b49b54e001c0da85f4025236a2
'2011-11-14T23:32:11-05:00'
describe
'10162601' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIE' 'sip-files00001.tif'
2aee83ecddb16d970f4c95c48f5ada65
95fac58744ee33373b1de37a9818a31095455f37
'2011-11-14T23:32:51-05:00'
describe
'94' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIF' 'sip-files00001.txt'
b86217ee5cd1d24deace6afd617efec9
cc0a63f487abba28b53e2f7d3b8dd0f77d02b07c
'2011-11-14T23:31:57-05:00'
describe
'2175' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIG' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
310dc92ff812af1f17afe805c67390b6
44151b8147659272dbb2932f75dce0c4534fa7c0
'2011-11-14T23:35:38-05:00'
describe
'1214894' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIH' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
1eb9e39e3e55c2d72a20751415ba1208
a1f01b786cf86579ff49e96078f36c00570b4e6c
'2011-11-14T23:33:34-05:00'
describe
'37571' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABII' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
d6784503d29dd6182b1e271b7c16e3a9
a3afad79de73e273a64b0ac831e44b51730d0911
'2011-11-14T23:34:07-05:00'
describe
'932' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIJ' 'sip-files00002.pro'
58078cc0baa40a844ac13955e6ee928b
30e80c6a7206299d099e45d02e000471e64dcac7
'2011-11-14T23:31:33-05:00'
describe
'11590' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIK' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
1ad46b1796c545104552e2d1b16067ed
dbc4860a3ef8dcdf9b324881fde97fcc24a99b30
'2011-11-14T23:35:24-05:00'
describe
'10183107' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIL' 'sip-files00002.tif'
1c5ace288082d36ed74d76c26afbafc2
81ae9976297fcda78377944918aeece48692af3e
'2011-11-14T23:33:08-05:00'
describe
'50' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIM' 'sip-files00002.txt'
3974ff4abede2286862d1c8093c168fa
76827c9942d4cfa8db3bebdba70ff210e39acbfe
'2011-11-14T23:33:19-05:00'
describe
'4209' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIN' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
43e106cbfbcded781575961274cc44d7
4ebe95d5e810c8f1e9a7ac969433cfa6a947cfbf
'2011-11-14T23:30:16-05:00'
describe
'1200138' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIO' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
732b9172368d94fea124cf919df50c49
c50f3260780c48df86b32289928944e61f5fbbc7
'2011-11-14T23:31:50-05:00'
describe
'93169' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIP' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
7067cfcbb08e530364acfc53ce83e258
03c2be4e647b3b70542e2001f5eb160402cf1103
'2011-11-14T23:32:49-05:00'
describe
'1532' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIQ' 'sip-files00003.pro'
a8c742db4c29978e7fea0ea416baa044
8ac7fc4f88f2109f3b4913c067cf7d48cf090480
'2011-11-14T23:34:27-05:00'
describe
'26289' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIR' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
334bf4ba1b63424078fac464998608a3
4c39de3a146c5b543c5f13b8ae07b234595c6838
'2011-11-14T23:31:19-05:00'
describe
'9609005' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIS' 'sip-files00003.tif'
444a66d0331634ae7d2978537cb2d54d
4aeb5f4c62034ea62147c46d04501395eb04595e
'2011-11-14T23:30:19-05:00'
describe
'125' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIT' 'sip-files00003.txt'
0755b70fe5938c80d162cbfd6fa0b329
29be10f5a60ee96bf7717982ee3af90d65602813
'2011-11-14T23:35:15-05:00'
describe
'7712' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIU' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
7e5ce198d40854de8d7975725908b75b
3bd9dfd4488cad6e20cb486a28259a5fbb564188
'2011-11-14T23:33:24-05:00'
describe
'1185433' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIV' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
804f8063c1042996910713b0690e99f1
730fbd2cc62890bae3bb73712750c45f20640bbe
'2011-11-14T23:31:59-05:00'
describe
'72058' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIW' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
6c720fae38ab3f503a872519af201396
49657cfaa18339bb1ef204054f6f710cccede059
'2011-11-14T23:34:08-05:00'
describe
'3815' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIX' 'sip-files00004.pro'
da30b9e5f49939ab1b99b7123e1e115d
52dce3b0bc7a7b97d3bd9030c52c09bf1f19c328
'2011-11-14T23:30:29-05:00'
describe
'21465' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIY' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
4be05527bf9871091e44a0f13dccb0df
8517f1e847410d9af2b267d092d9684082e57639
'2011-11-14T23:34:49-05:00'
describe
'9489325' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABIZ' 'sip-files00004.tif'
5febd6807aab22beba4304172c620eed
1b7414fede6cc724d9b263d36df962087a47df7e
'2011-11-14T23:34:24-05:00'
describe
'235' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJA' 'sip-files00004.txt'
0353bfbf217341861841465c9901f64c
3864ca1c297ac9618d8b545e41d0ab63efd252a8
'2011-11-14T23:30:23-05:00'
describe
'6780' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJB' 'sip-files00004thm.jpg'
c4379fcf4cbcdd75dbda2cad5dfcbed9
18d8447e5966f29e81bcd5df14a0a19f548c2962
'2011-11-14T23:31:44-05:00'
describe
'1106050' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJC' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
7000c6fde06b21cd7d758f4b27998e52
59547a577db2c4c6739fb10312948f2637ce8a25
describe
'36174' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJD' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
93d056f28fc1c5f14789dd1ade96324a
9db1608807fd2a219e3a02cf7001d844e365fe01
describe
'429' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJE' 'sip-files00005.pro'
57db86de9f78c34d5f60af8320300239
8d203a4e0196d59f2bec22bf8c7b8abc181e78ed
'2011-11-14T23:30:30-05:00'
describe
'9496' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJF' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
3a114d4f73c1a512839e22b5354ed395
52f335d4eaf2107ebce5832ef6f0979eae872d45
'2011-11-14T23:31:28-05:00'
describe
'8854815' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJG' 'sip-files00005.tif'
a1a898dc741ab954e3278957f9ded216
b6c11448b8de7385954479d0e042f1e6096d58f0
'2011-11-14T23:33:32-05:00'
describe
'16' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJH' 'sip-files00005.txt'
ef291f53a625b1d4630641fa7f6ea4c0
aa176039abfcf399cf1dff3a3dd1f96acc4c9028
'2011-11-14T23:33:21-05:00'
describe
'2970' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJI' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
81b94deda7c2d7e1e90e4863001915a4
f9c144ea3e54d9c8a507f3539cb8e1cf84dbf58e
'2011-11-14T23:31:55-05:00'
describe
'963865' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJJ' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
f35526f6520599599f45d35c39205527
da82daeb129840893fa39469ddf0bc554db02f76
'2011-11-14T23:34:31-05:00'
describe
'36356' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJK' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
c67a0adac79f9e4929c264ff0518c350
60c17cf6afac0a93fc9c5bf5b74563e6ce0ab9da
describe
'9153' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJL' 'sip-files00006.pro'
ea283520d0adf7983097b409ffc62d6f
1e6d7031a0ae5fc53f7b998f6450cda89627e14a
'2011-11-14T23:34:46-05:00'
describe
'12222' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJM' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
f4b6a0c1d3361e14bacaab87b4cba950
09d8dc552899f165ae139284f178fb832ce8b1d9
'2011-11-14T23:35:06-05:00'
describe
'9041281' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJN' 'sip-files00006.tif'
75904cb7aeb17d0e2ab4939621d82508
ccddc30d54372a3e95dbdf4301f9f328b4e1faec
'2011-11-14T23:30:44-05:00'
describe
'631' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJO' 'sip-files00006.txt'
492496963ea21a2a2ac38ba3cbf1efd0
5451275631a7c7b3eb0d9cab4006384fce909615
'2011-11-14T23:30:46-05:00'
describe
'3932' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJP' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
873f51fe4c230e806ffa670a194459df
1306bc61b761f8f2e856127dede4399a937f2786
'2011-11-14T23:32:18-05:00'
describe
'756891' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJQ' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
9b55d0c76098ced83480e6d243dc6540
f120c773c327b1a91084d5d9e1caf5f7bc92cd7d
'2011-11-14T23:32:16-05:00'
describe
'17210' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJR' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
443b9d7abc474e84b57871c934927c28
355110c2c6aebe70b5ef73cce9b2e38480333896
'2011-11-14T23:30:42-05:00'
describe
'215' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJS' 'sip-files00007.pro'
28d667b15548f7977054ed186f3b8a3b
c71c8194112e99420e014aaaf11fb31b7b2dbd18
'2011-11-14T23:33:07-05:00'
describe
'4618' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJT' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
15300f7fa07a8a3399ad78db200576fc
72e88dc0451bffce5a1ba5dfb377a1d11bf7da3a
'2011-11-14T23:34:21-05:00'
describe
'8370185' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJU' 'sip-files00007.tif'
10ff55575f2f93a6a3db7fdfc30fa6c8
a89e4d912cb989ecef9774d893bf6d4f37068c9d
'2011-11-14T23:31:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJV' 'sip-files00007.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
'2011-11-14T23:30:17-05:00'
describe
'1670' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJW' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
4ab3b48f6fdede060760cfec23160f4c
132a5b5407846c658361cd048ff85bc3d6348707
'2011-11-14T23:31:09-05:00'
describe
'1043851' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJX' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
92b1214f9eafb6bb2defce0e3ca2b4cc
d18ae532b5a188c50be65299d9b6c8a843e3cbff
'2011-11-14T23:33:57-05:00'
describe
'73549' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJY' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
502f3b8d0b1353f03b7773b65590ffd7
cc4c0efdf1315f052e3a9a71558a902df48616a6
'2011-11-14T23:31:01-05:00'
describe
'28045' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABJZ' 'sip-files00008.pro'
8dc003339d89f61435624fb086aa1406
7afc41f6280ac46248b9598fc390cebf028776b9
'2011-11-14T23:31:15-05:00'
describe
'25895' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKA' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
3e2680d7415f59e7e48e5833a40510c0
5d307b5510ac3e1ca5d34976a4c0e585741fbf8b
describe
'8360539' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKB' 'sip-files00008.tif'
59538693febc0a1c3b001919ac502a2a
7d7ce4727f228f2e4a7c415e317cf305f19546ff
'2011-11-14T23:35:01-05:00'
describe
'1117' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKC' 'sip-files00008.txt'
3b7c88cf18f6918b6f7d08899f93de3f
e78d4cedc5d76de3930d29246bdb1489d6739ec5
describe
'7885' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKD' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
5760e088ba204b74c786909224ecb3c7
2d6fd1bb2f5403414cf62d015784f0b0e0ea6dfa
'2011-11-14T23:30:56-05:00'
describe
'706623' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKE' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
f0b0ca8ca159c92766099fd326c5a286
497691a5f7a6155e2717075021b2162236ee3540
'2011-11-14T23:30:59-05:00'
describe
'15881' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKF' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
8f196cff4aa2d8908b3873509811e195
dc4d634600ecd1483a6c6b7a27641d70497640c1
'2011-11-14T23:30:28-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKG' 'sip-files00009.pro'
cece7165417dab51b1ce831069e6c244
0ca1d1593e4e8c58baaac8a2bd7e0fda310ffd7b
'2011-11-14T23:31:10-05:00'
describe
'4068' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKH' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
ae0d834ba2bf07f5fb12b6a821811fee
b43805536e9d58a8c2adc785b63a265807388d3d
'2011-11-14T23:30:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKI' 'sip-files00009.tif'
f1db2bc3c57bb129317ac98fb58ecee4
814650f58d4504b8e3cb843c99ca5e329d8a68ae
'2011-11-14T23:33:23-05:00'
describe
'1504' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKJ' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
9ff305f34a7eb8c27fa74c0089420b4c
f89ece53caa8eb6840615f4fab09ba38ac2e3359
'2011-11-14T23:34:59-05:00'
describe
'1043834' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKK' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
f366dd18b60c2d3a5983226185dd39d3
9cc9bdf74448d1081f33d0e3f273ac05b0bee46f
describe
'47075' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKL' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
78276f9987d2dd8bb4295e1da5e21da5
7719d7d5b94ddd36b06102be141d800b46d319b6
'2011-11-14T23:31:39-05:00'
describe
'33102' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKM' 'sip-files00010.pro'
03aed1c7315ab5399088bfb8e2ee4bd0
5e534400c86b06856c59a201b40e84759437c304
'2011-11-14T23:35:04-05:00'
describe
'17416' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKN' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
d2280d32ce9c4d5c26927e8a3331db4d
bd35ae5a5e60a72d55f7d290809bc1cdd00aac45
'2011-11-14T23:33:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKO' 'sip-files00010.tif'
eeb8d284ad0e18bb3ad84ad355d42615
1d368fd495d7a44b5315153758a1463c8b95ba2f
'2011-11-14T23:35:14-05:00'
describe
'1538' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKP' 'sip-files00010.txt'
014847ba1cbda066c9ffa833ebb184c8
3c058cb9a926768efbac9782301206553f0943da
'2011-11-14T23:33:51-05:00'
describe
'5710' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKQ' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
a28b56183b1879b6c289227cf3108b9d
a045d8b7b327b2fecce58045f4ac1b0ebe4f74a9
'2011-11-14T23:33:06-05:00'
describe
'683884' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKR' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
b01fed3feab8f45db22d65a81c9e1077
4bc6f73651cd3909cf398cc4e2521e02cd875775
'2011-11-14T23:31:35-05:00'
describe
'15063' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKS' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
27dc4ceaa0a03741ac441fefc2bc3ec1
e7b5f9ba72f1130ba80ccda15baeff09a9e16b3e
'2011-11-14T23:35:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKT' 'sip-files00011.pro'
742f2930d73f37c2234abba19af717ee
b44e50b87261f2829149e200d090f4b95bc21995
'2011-11-14T23:30:22-05:00'
describe
'3913' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKU' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
4b82a7dcc62bc87d7f606fbb1b5be2da
8a81b4a11adea4e9bd8a730586dab99576b882a1
'2011-11-14T23:33:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKV' 'sip-files00011.tif'
d28dc4685d193cace67ebacbfc4e66de
e22d884a1baa4caad084be11f173151d445cdc4c
'2011-11-14T23:32:44-05:00'
describe
'1411' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKW' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
5dbf706e5daefbd0ff674d9be51f2a02
a4e665f68348034283b3c39e21b05ca3af6eb5dd
'2011-11-14T23:30:07-05:00'
describe
'1043831' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKX' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
0b762faa8684afc86f23cf09a12db0d5
110c0e7a9deecccc398f42697ea81147fc0c0f2c
'2011-11-14T23:30:49-05:00'
describe
'68055' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKY' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
677a43174568e7e86f9ab206d46e5265
b39739827d7b2ae3606732890e39fd054c19fe86
'2011-11-14T23:33:04-05:00'
describe
'25596' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABKZ' 'sip-files00012.pro'
94143310a967c97f268c166241582a99
98d61b5708a9b2914744564a1f9795b0466b9b0c
describe
'23271' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLA' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
43f4ecd301e2a3fae0d5cf7d2762a186
4fe5f34949acc5cf91d5d63de7f0ee2e426efa67
'2011-11-14T23:31:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLB' 'sip-files00012.tif'
51f63729a52d65cf9fc4aa02a10f9568
b74d7ebe6266576aab5d3390297ffca72988b7a8
'2011-11-14T23:34:25-05:00'
describe
'1158' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLC' 'sip-files00012.txt'
15563d0d07ebfb47bc697335e00e9cb1
cfdc90f550fc3d08cbad05b042eb5b4f0ca868f8
'2011-11-14T23:31:17-05:00'
describe
'6942' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLD' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
94184eb8b1f895a74d6a72721081a964
6af0e28d85eacdfdb89c2530a03328bbb5b48bad
'2011-11-14T23:31:52-05:00'
describe
'1045052' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLE' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
f79fc3b4d969ca1989ecf903a8218723
4d7f70ed08d4328591c148fa813e2727ca2904ff
'2011-11-14T23:33:25-05:00'
describe
'91749' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLF' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
c7f254bdcca882374b986bb2130a1bde
abaa60b567794915038830b627bc434b81096493
'2011-11-14T23:30:39-05:00'
describe
'42245' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLG' 'sip-files00013.pro'
01d8cc06ff460169731ebd8bc2bcdaf5
f6a7aa35a842a3ee70cfbf5af691d91da9f955e4
'2011-11-14T23:31:07-05:00'
describe
'32250' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLH' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
0c22c00a3048ee15464076f537dd89c3
d1e8ffa82571de38e4a9c76644f5de28319656c9
'2011-11-14T23:33:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLI' 'sip-files00013.tif'
621c399822427f48f981176bab6839b3
53cc5a8b4998f78765c6873098cfb9b7dbf81252
'2011-11-14T23:30:52-05:00'
describe
'1799' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLJ' 'sip-files00013.txt'
5de600e514ca8df9aa41c15bb046bfb4
c5ecbe48248b8be6eda4efb0f3c9946d76b3619f
'2011-11-14T23:33:49-05:00'
describe
'9812' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLK' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
19de5b8f35ad390a643593fae3f88839
1ba6df7012fc00be42ea39e1b4f0482a404bf594
'2011-11-14T23:29:59-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLL' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
b320da59e609e11100e2df594fe77c48
0da451941a875778161f831a7f2d9207797c3721
'2011-11-14T23:30:25-05:00'
describe
'97958' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLM' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
cfc3269612135e65434a284225f05c84
ef6753a3982e2249e1f2b9ee1f49bc7f934290bd
'2011-11-14T23:32:53-05:00'
describe
'44651' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLN' 'sip-files00014.pro'
683a520bb2a8e9f2f76df8fe230b3767
5662ee99fd0d396a62cc964d328a0edc753bcb38
describe
'33969' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLO' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
b82428cd8c2be99a7bd44df1218ef923
bb65b8968cd6031b704888d132d2f379dbb7cc72
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLP' 'sip-files00014.tif'
395a9645b2c1d09e31a9c20212186a75
cc076b14c4a1db5fa675afec9a571f21bf4c331a
'2011-11-14T23:34:52-05:00'
describe
'1911' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLQ' 'sip-files00014.txt'
d5e0e94610ec79e2b49d57cd9a78cde2
c72456dd3ef7f5b7e1ed5bc321369df6cb838315
describe
'10097' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLR' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
f03da8ab1e93fa68f47cdbf8245d854d
ed1bbbac1c46e83f0d3c0c44e835f6a1b280cfba
'2011-11-14T23:31:03-05:00'
describe
'1045051' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLS' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
bccb4410a30fb4ca2ddd117b22232098
0de27338499781a6bf71b9f534f81bb8cdcee271
'2011-11-14T23:30:45-05:00'
describe
'99845' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLT' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
a7990363d8977216526533f27bc3fd7d
3b8606c32caf134ef7377677ba179d13e690e8c2
describe
'45993' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLU' 'sip-files00015.pro'
5cc31f08dc44cd3a4e210bdb3a5b90b2
3e17316f90604e7719750c354094c62c80fbe91d
'2011-11-14T23:33:44-05:00'
describe
'35133' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLV' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
2520bcfd0d204f96ba46c29642da599f
6fc23f592e325f5e1b0232be1ef6441122666c57
'2011-11-14T23:32:07-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLW' 'sip-files00015.tif'
604941572479b970e05dd385fdf5d4fb
1beb952df8e7d1eb9817549448b548831112ed15
'2011-11-14T23:32:35-05:00'
describe
'1939' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLX' 'sip-files00015.txt'
4336ee3e48cd05be701b69200f63cf7e
1eb4b566290c6d500767e812ff289632d40b95ba
'2011-11-14T23:31:37-05:00'
describe
'10597' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLY' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
d748915e8b44c575491abeda78382d1e
7eea341aebc359fb0ce5d3c935ee2f7992f226fb
'2011-11-14T23:31:24-05:00'
describe
'1043846' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABLZ' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
0a8ad824136c4f7edd65a34170a5aa60
220bd4594c57bfcac096d198b9c876b3cc585f78
'2011-11-14T23:31:25-05:00'
describe
'107199' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMA' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
b34f66bd88b91960d63b95ea2abdc8b3
ece02e4b4f7fe5b3d43dfe6fa5b26b71856b23c8
'2011-11-14T23:30:06-05:00'
describe
'50481' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMB' 'sip-files00016.pro'
2c8eed5040120249e5d4e88c8f7c8baa
c5d24366c13aed319268f3c926c9e95ee67a6bda
'2011-11-14T23:35:40-05:00'
describe
'37212' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMC' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
4742a0509e01864d1ca91e0b439bb677
400e0fc52d4173c7d26cadc9f934ee4bd9b19deb
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMD' 'sip-files00016.tif'
1b00453f5c8e0ac40b3e5b2ae82a2d9b
414ef85fe2f81675d34703092e89ec987a34f417
'2011-11-14T23:35:21-05:00'
describe
'2111' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABME' 'sip-files00016.txt'
d7f813d9962e743d43bd268cab782e25
1e9c1e6a9cf27e061a4f6c8241b97435253fa2dd
describe
'10576' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMF' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
51b33cfab7cd3039eab85ff786d4e492
fcd4f78c7968332cb96f8b4e3910666e6b9ef128
'2011-11-14T23:33:13-05:00'
describe
'1044880' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMG' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
3ac2f0ca1ccbb35f14b72ece9c341039
d9c67b9818f7f50d48214ec525d4e967aa45b2bf
describe
'102835' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMH' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
a084914c3b6514c445281711d8085aa8
e89da0bd218e448275146d6ffcbf908abeb4e2eb
describe
'47492' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMI' 'sip-files00017.pro'
a626cca198036a8c233d88185745aebb
b90be1fb26223c08285cc3a94ee13bf249e428de
'2011-11-14T23:30:54-05:00'
describe
'35054' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMJ' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
99cce0666ac3afb17d79be95975c9e85
4807807d1d4e5051c0e9a04d2235f78e70fabf1a
'2011-11-14T23:32:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMK' 'sip-files00017.tif'
9f7489a212597131d35d7faed6e17cc3
07c45e8978b948431a198eadcdee42ae4f708e8e
'2011-11-14T23:34:37-05:00'
describe
'1955' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABML' 'sip-files00017.txt'
8cdad0d95f37559524063eef4633e4c9
8a1a53094ce8d002264a46dcb0318718f3c2ac42
'2011-11-14T23:30:00-05:00'
describe
'10460' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMM' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
f996f1fdf07c6e9a2a2433fd309233b7
5179a5f4f92189458b0630319be81a2ed1a3cad2
describe
'1043848' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMN' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
3385dca2c91cfeec141abb95fc59c4e8
ec40a718f9a29ef12ec0a6cff1fd1e90688449ba
describe
'106089' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMO' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
4ceea97415cb66534aec023c293467f3
4dd337b3d2db26edbe5938dcee2109e3d6091f3b
'2011-11-14T23:31:26-05:00'
describe
'49476' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMP' 'sip-files00018.pro'
5a2bfcdf08600f6eab2b7ce52137d0ba
72731932e78c06c16a4c88133efb013ac942ed90
'2011-11-14T23:35:13-05:00'
describe
'36440' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMQ' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
4dadc36cfc16afb1946afc49e5f6edc3
1a3b61a575bf9dc6e35fd33119830f06462e90c6
'2011-11-14T23:31:38-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMR' 'sip-files00018.tif'
76db4befca9ff4bc353c8feef51f4a7c
76b4d57c912d700177213d5c00ed85a11dc51796
'2011-11-14T23:30:32-05:00'
describe
'2105' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMS' 'sip-files00018.txt'
0bb02c6eaf7df81f3b2e9fa25067e2c0
3f06bcbf7d807619460969202a5c3c8f1e3fbc5f
'2011-11-14T23:34:29-05:00'
describe
'10481' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMT' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
3cf7e4d3e38eca52dec634974f19b2a6
c52bd2c872c8b67d274bc2b86bfa5f8fc0470876
'2011-11-14T23:30:11-05:00'
describe
'1044979' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMU' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
24f2ea3d90ea90954dc8a05c72c09191
31803bea54ce67a140958b33b4c641e971c12692
describe
'107945' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMV' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
d67b2a0322b6f5562b8c2041bbf04f30
4adac2e0b8a76ff390a8e62413765b2faede23c3
'2011-11-14T23:32:37-05:00'
describe
'50133' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMW' 'sip-files00019.pro'
5ad66adf1dd2701cd45755256293147e
d34fe0542c380e8fa4739ed955b6ea9497f65695
describe
'36792' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMX' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
836cd306a887c8208602af28f7ad6e09
54a2217551aded99943d563d25b4da802aee5641
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMY' 'sip-files00019.tif'
c0207d215ff7778658074075d76d365f
7898ce98f6870f6638eb90fd874afe833bac9ee8
'2011-11-14T23:31:51-05:00'
describe
'2131' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABMZ' 'sip-files00019.txt'
887898f14d4a12bd5122f72df55a3845
20776ce43c31602749a8dae681f4dfe9b85f4ccc
'2011-11-14T23:33:31-05:00'
describe
'10660' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNA' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
1ab28a9ea5d4937531c465a03ec334cd
106df38714029f96fddd8ea078f06fde4323d37c
'2011-11-14T23:31:48-05:00'
describe
'1043833' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNB' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
8d7456a2208e9a10e0bc50f311d5e062
8f1a5278d34f5aee0f0152135961464b32008637
describe
'87509' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNC' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
6b1ebbb69d8ebaedf24b57d0fb1761f5
adf2d69524e760abdd8583b526be1cb2c7739ef3
'2011-11-14T23:33:58-05:00'
describe
'38329' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABND' 'sip-files00020.pro'
e448324df858a45641cabf87b2a32431
da9df83aff9a0d40c9cf421cb0982ec617974dcf
'2011-11-14T23:30:40-05:00'
describe
'30384' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNE' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
6de7d9275fded5211a4718beb501571b
2c0558071e7601fdab2acfd6d6f4c0e131f7bf4c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNF' 'sip-files00020.tif'
9d83b8d5ca324e5a9315ccbd2c3875c8
a91ad018435710641e3a28d784e7b5c66fb48c30
describe
'1724' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNG' 'sip-files00020.txt'
9f12bab3e9423a35bee6cf1b5070f0c7
9258226d0e165eb3b065905d7140d7963e0351df
'2011-11-14T23:34:05-05:00'
describe
'9053' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNH' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
c1c333e7f9e98098a7a7a32efdf18897
1bd0af70f6ef94c7485e0c94bd947e3d271eee5f
describe
'1045050' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNI' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
801e1ea6bb52a2486b5ee8331bad9ccc
c9426597452edcd2edcd03837ebb4fab046674ff
'2011-11-14T23:32:47-05:00'
describe
'106473' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNJ' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
18f23d97cd89a39c7e10ab914fb562c3
e1a175551ace7a599cead04b61eaa0d1b81d4d48
'2011-11-14T23:32:33-05:00'
describe
'50403' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNK' 'sip-files00021.pro'
ec6bdbcebfb791f7c351320490db07db
02c80535f33c58e1caa5c8ad40ab4627b6070b61
describe
'36916' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNL' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
9b6a3e3bc4b21f2db5296537db749470
206827881b11623b5627ce4010578925b45eb51d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNM' 'sip-files00021.tif'
665ad114bd8dfa9a9d021e7bbe0361e8
b7ea8c5bb7a5e702e2819579b12e82fb71326897
'2011-11-14T23:33:00-05:00'
describe
'2141' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNN' 'sip-files00021.txt'
3b537a6b85263415bd6a7406d061266c
5e971ad94560c65f5eaac36e90db9dfbbeb35298
describe
'10683' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNO' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
654d8c3dab9d907b7f73e703645ecdcf
9b8f77b062cf1ef302dc17247cebf12ab5965896
'2011-11-14T23:34:03-05:00'
describe
'1043855' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNP' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
8d6f467ed8cd96f7e5d58ad8d8f24fe1
8e5dc7b1f95df48970e4b816ca27c3ff531d1f21
describe
'104814' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNQ' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
1934ae8fb8124ba8d033e3a358489850
11f8d97c8343488084c9e122b4ed200d91eeabbe
describe
'48456' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNR' 'sip-files00022.pro'
2b30a8a47f27ae8a90bb0c2c7b436ff9
deb4b9b87b61b40531f88bf0870af07f22823831
'2011-11-14T23:32:04-05:00'
describe
'36173' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNS' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
ea6f12da93192b4010b802651b2238a9
8f63a8e58faec88d3bc7edf520a843b588ab5357
'2011-11-14T23:30:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNT' 'sip-files00022.tif'
124fde883ba5ce89894cb29f4ae7d0e0
21522ad35c31d97ddd8f386a1a076dc95f06cdad
'2011-11-14T23:34:02-05:00'
describe
'2055' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNU' 'sip-files00022.txt'
c5c87f86041fdb7d6b8459a0a5dc422e
d6773ee8a076d3562eb776a6e9e2c1c280be7ddf
describe
'10503' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNV' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
22683d1719633b56828b9ba4cca8e766
b1602e3082575e1df62f8e3bc0a9af3d7c5b8780
describe
'1045048' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNW' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
7d830d565a3e930b59967d900281d014
bf2d3a52da8d91ac28a4b284d024e828e51e7239
describe
'102399' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNX' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
681d0179352c830db02039b74da4c1f0
a28a17a3a0ffc06004938c86e62e3aea7faf3f5e
'2011-11-14T23:30:13-05:00'
describe
'47760' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNY' 'sip-files00023.pro'
9cf8ec4705c6c6aa244fcb7edc611b11
049664c9d68f3cba4d04c88ecd25f71c76fde307
'2011-11-14T23:32:06-05:00'
describe
'35835' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABNZ' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
95e3b026999de21c8677ea6997281c02
895864f78b94d0a696f14cdc1b319d754fd21285
'2011-11-14T23:31:56-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOA' 'sip-files00023.tif'
6e8c04dcd597821464eb319af5b8965f
71d3743e855265f9597966205aa60d17336dbe44
'2011-11-14T23:33:17-05:00'
describe
'2035' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOB' 'sip-files00023.txt'
ddb65ed74bf3964cc1b93aba2b2faf50
6c0c1b713f583bbdfed4951cd585210ef12f4fa8
'2011-11-14T23:33:45-05:00'
describe
'10639' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOC' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
26567d7e41f066bb95f0cc7f94bb9e15
b10c29baef7b55dbe3b6d325015e91962aee9bb2
'2011-11-14T23:30:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOD' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
c68ea97e731ea4d5f7f6f9f54822eb70
ffb4652dee5faa4f9da7298adf32cf6ca545b70f
'2011-11-14T23:32:39-05:00'
describe
'103261' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOE' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
d2850700b1da392d8809282d1369dd61
4ec070a316545eb49cfcd44f012238b264d586d9
describe
'47416' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOF' 'sip-files00024.pro'
9fc2a9040ffd121d39454847d8226982
0d544895578cc5bbb8e40158387b9fc4fadb44bb
'2011-11-14T23:34:18-05:00'
describe
'35781' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOG' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
807512857be865eb1bf56b5ed719b953
a2c5a2414726959c8d097cd128df82889e24604d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOH' 'sip-files00024.tif'
4a14738e1f17abd820d1e701db347434
6ba3121231f79282ece08805f1a77057405c6d90
'2011-11-14T23:32:42-05:00'
describe
'2010' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOI' 'sip-files00024.txt'
493d5b8187cbf169ccf10d6dd1bf3191
1275a2e89a992c2cbacaaa10088628deb3227b7d
'2011-11-14T23:35:48-05:00'
describe
'10272' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOJ' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
9c150cc32f26009b7626159660db7b2f
fbe47f99ac8440414f301067ee31a9aadd807af8
describe
'1044919' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOK' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
702d29d61fb04a5212b1afc32d9b63a8
d0892413a5782b5b602261b47de8622c53ac4d7f
describe
'105492' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOL' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
0b4593fc8dbc9d8a8095702cbdfce8f3
c88dc9f23a5593d65d1742aedd4ed04e6e4b6d51
'2011-11-14T23:34:38-05:00'
describe
'50731' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOM' 'sip-files00025.pro'
eb95d391bbf92bcce6865aba3576c29c
2477d129c8861c5392349da737796a70dcda948f
'2011-11-14T23:31:14-05:00'
describe
'35897' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABON' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
5e76ac85e29a8c5369308f042a01d3c7
47d03c320086feddf01026603ab595c2895ab7da
'2011-11-14T23:32:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOO' 'sip-files00025.tif'
9bc2072c54c447954c503a2da16f6296
17774f5d7d52f22eb9369c307c7dfa8e198f8b6d
'2011-11-14T23:30:38-05:00'
describe
'2155' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOP' 'sip-files00025.txt'
225029ec87be6dd7ce9e2045b8f92b6f
db8a398d9d2eca58f29d1739fa56d9e58562d0fc
'2011-11-14T23:32:43-05:00'
describe
'10396' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOQ' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
10ca007ec3973706220bf46bcf2622f1
e9490c6ccd9382033093ed27679d2e807e600091
describe
'1043633' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOR' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
0da02eccd22d2b13065c3674d743fffa
124e7ca85f13d1cfb85c6514fd911e5b80b0d552
describe
'93355' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOS' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
28cab6357755b39426b581bd411f7c29
141eead438ac3dbbc27da906590daeebc68ae444
describe
'42875' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOT' 'sip-files00026.pro'
a3a768a5162ae7e6e2b0cf14595f539d
062892a7b8b6aff672ca65b8c232c3a97e88c2b2
describe
'32692' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOU' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
5032b9024ca76434511be6956018f2ad
35d2a56a3b37cccf582f4056bbbe326047cb3d31
'2011-11-14T23:33:02-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOV' 'sip-files00026.tif'
7009416fce98628c01fbb4a6d44cdd24
9eb2787a3cc8745ace4431eb315875562c344a5e
'2011-11-14T23:33:14-05:00'
describe
'1904' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOW' 'sip-files00026.txt'
99ac67f98ac4251d226a0af2b14a43cd
e83e63fbf7da7ffc5f580331013cd8c9226b391e
'2011-11-14T23:35:26-05:00'
describe
'9617' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOX' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
25c3fc0b1bb096627b8c47afcf103991
576e495e0f4f64c821fa3d6ebcdff4bf92f4be5a
describe
'1076332' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOY' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
c3cacda6d5cdd6412897ce90061aef30
e4d8ab3e4964bab321e6fffd0063a09e354dd699
'2011-11-14T23:30:50-05:00'
describe
'99067' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABOZ' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
685501be4a45a5bbb9bc30d4cfcea98f
08f3cb758cbe8fa32b01bc929b8d8e78e40e08c1
describe
'46261' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPA' 'sip-files00027.pro'
2f65e655895de515f5e4b0449b36c6f0
91a75f6b9d0f00ceddb4fe42fcbb77d11c2f9198
'2011-11-14T23:32:14-05:00'
describe
'33923' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPB' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
98b855811bbdc671ac2c8747c1e178f3
f91f3076a8ce4069d7bc8ea14f946abc1f3a066b
'2011-11-14T23:35:44-05:00'
describe
'8620665' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPC' 'sip-files00027.tif'
51a2e945978842fe65a1da5c776b7bd4
7bd92cd3c49a907537a8d4f077d839862948cf65
describe
'1903' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPD' 'sip-files00027.txt'
699437705fe9a69c2e72be952d17e208
85e69d51c87bd9db417f4940b1a8cdaf4dd9fb13
describe
'10363' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPE' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
6a833f3bfb95412262e484ab75c055b2
3e2e393c3fbd59b61306d9285cea0ece15027347
'2011-11-14T23:33:27-05:00'
describe
'1059699' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPF' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
c57f895481697e3299f7266dfac770ef
c43692324ff9f1d713884f59d60c4426cfbe0834
describe
'104789' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPG' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
44826b45c746582cc97750d2516ff804
9e73c90f96bf53fc8e9d194f14e44c22e763ef0f
'2011-11-14T23:34:26-05:00'
describe
'49078' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPH' 'sip-files00028.pro'
b261450b1677270d3bf42364ded0f58e
69e14040e6c28e6fd0e13f04faba7b8404641aa0
'2011-11-14T23:32:27-05:00'
describe
'35953' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPI' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
3f4243a152d447d1e719c7264f958a48
48e1d5766e37de17a3b968595040f68c8ff2b770
describe
'8487537' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPJ' 'sip-files00028.tif'
eddc2b6eb69429fc31297e7a9c932e94
5c28424ec64b4ac8c320dfbb3c3e14af7d8f423f
'2011-11-14T23:35:17-05:00'
describe
'2064' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPK' 'sip-files00028.txt'
4abc1274a15ee4396ab8443e0ebd703f
6a23cacacd5aa23e10139b818e15daa0593cb7b3
'2011-11-14T23:32:03-05:00'
describe
'10477' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPL' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
ef7403aa4eb0e7b467f34cbf6bcc8bbd
53368dd8c37a5b35d75cae1deaf5a5a1bc8f917f
'2011-11-14T23:31:08-05:00'
describe
'1076314' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPM' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
b6d8d5be8c3ab43188848fcf00f5c004
46263d6ca15782dfd577c4c2d8cbd9bc63a6f302
describe
'81020' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPN' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
5c395045fad69d5c30250d47d3a726ef
bd773a4a43c0e8b8535c9f2995603ce4ea9bcf8a
'2011-11-14T23:32:28-05:00'
describe
'35333' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPO' 'sip-files00029.pro'
416b9c7997f1f43d20ecfe4a9224a4f5
15a84705a75176d2408d02a7e4ea289cbf68415f
'2011-11-14T23:32:17-05:00'
describe
'27473' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPP' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
cc0c871eb4ca4590c9cf4f0b2af72de7
412360b36439d6b7c3930f089d29c4c2eee52ad9
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPQ' 'sip-files00029.tif'
a2f6c12be7d2758dbfe5713164e4fd77
2df4693def07224a3f34195b4e7a58232090785c
'2011-11-14T23:32:20-05:00'
describe
'1619' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPR' 'sip-files00029.txt'
cbf204c26b86706d9a0e2a50b79f0902
8f19aafd2e555251f0c985291f69c55a4003146e
'2011-11-14T23:33:16-05:00'
describe
'8770' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPS' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
e279b7795f257fdcee715a12b321f313
581ce5b1dde274d16af75d1ff8f7ea3ea3775288
'2011-11-14T23:31:54-05:00'
describe
'1059709' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPT' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
480fb67b95e47543c1d8970f1eae8e6d
8b1da2ed57f31bbcdfd0a3016a861799ef017153
'2011-11-14T23:32:32-05:00'
describe
'100905' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPU' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
c565ed453c2f0e8f963a88e8ef6e3a2b
40ab0fa378dcc2a1f2d56116fe56353b72e8f80a
describe
'47721' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPV' 'sip-files00030.pro'
846a2d4bdd1582ece86890c08b0e5cd7
40d887a69b1099c22b94215d35f36a76ae7e78ed
'2011-11-14T23:30:05-05:00'
describe
'35119' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPW' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
90146376dc3f39d16b6fd984c5eed1a8
8143c4815b2a0148b06f378e9a72ccf407346d5a
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPX' 'sip-files00030.tif'
dca086208bd78654586ced0eb3653a11
1adf2c477938ef1e079c55519d2bb381d610a981
'2011-11-14T23:32:29-05:00'
describe
'2007' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPY' 'sip-files00030.txt'
25a1e350a6cd71fe38656c58e86d4303
11083be8e8d663f5292e2f46f82a487bf4af0d9d
'2011-11-14T23:30:02-05:00'
describe
'10264' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABPZ' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
fb8ab33c4444bed0422cfd4bdc3f6f86
f71f28395ae65b43019f615906e214e9aeac1a93
describe
'1076333' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQA' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
921036de576f4e8c058c3dd2e05f59db
9cd1462eb5f8a42dcb7485c338f33ec724472d41
describe
'103142' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQB' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
37be79cd8b09cf94df71b88f97238655
6ea5285b0ced83ba54f56262698299b7b904c7ba
'2011-11-14T23:31:43-05:00'
describe
'49859' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQC' 'sip-files00031.pro'
60e93ba9205a86ecf528bb43ddf5f541
6d635a0b6d6e3400c52e086863919ae87db59c80
'2011-11-14T23:31:22-05:00'
describe
'35433' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQD' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
3c0f7136bf862247b9bf7734212fd609
7f18a402318fec94cbbd883045bd40b5f49a8eaa
'2011-11-14T23:30:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQE' 'sip-files00031.tif'
dd27f5c002b093d934fa4cf9fa1a723d
9bf0055d67e4a561f6d601f7ad518bb0007d2233
'2011-11-14T23:32:55-05:00'
describe
'2051' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQF' 'sip-files00031.txt'
5f3143c437c8284ebc7d073605e03ce1
adf0d3ec78ea2ea1057efcc3641c23ac917177b0
'2011-11-14T23:32:13-05:00'
describe
'10350' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQG' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
0ff50f13c52ad177977b545a472a36a9
a6880a99611f6df7d5a3b4904dfbc41e5285f3df
'2011-11-14T23:33:15-05:00'
describe
'1059691' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQH' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
81c0a5b6a5e9ca7cca28d1de4383be9f
d0a976a8bb6f811523e50bc4264e7b4176309b2a
'2011-11-14T23:32:52-05:00'
describe
'100161' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQI' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
c23b66d1a7538c9b3c6c55ff9220e90a
0c23ff34179b2a03949b5dae216b53cb97ea6b85
'2011-11-14T23:34:54-05:00'
describe
'46567' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQJ' 'sip-files00032.pro'
6bfaf184366f8bba0b48c985f91a24e4
41d3a6ced7a63c07da418a6c8b2d29f4b36d6f35
describe
'34645' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQK' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
07ccecabdfe4f35de4fd8020c1389dec
588fcf894b77a5eb4a1d2d59b6f620a99388be9b
'2011-11-14T23:31:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQL' 'sip-files00032.tif'
f2a38a59b7823f30fff3e14a391fb80a
bbbbe4146369b33d4d27633e0bb9ef27f9467006
'2011-11-14T23:34:01-05:00'
describe
'1962' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQM' 'sip-files00032.txt'
deae205e2fda40ee3b142ea768e13a19
9fa2dc936717440430713042d3faa73df1784292
'2011-11-14T23:35:36-05:00'
describe
'10369' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQN' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
f04f85d40136a3f6d1072fa0e58a63a1
03c236f4c479a4aaaa3ab6ed85b3211568a29662
'2011-11-14T23:31:46-05:00'
describe
'1076229' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQO' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
097698e1e030e20b177b8dc32b488af5
0b0f11fa3550da79395850b2f1eaf25d31e3672a
describe
'96527' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQP' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
497c1cb54b7a4fb6433b1d7b94af0ebb
d39303acbea300c958e80c99c6ed2158b639ec16
describe
'45960' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQQ' 'sip-files00033.pro'
be7423880d3b56706214ff9fd552bb61
9b8fcbe4311f65e4d6999ca8a6904dadb22c5436
'2011-11-14T23:30:36-05:00'
describe
'33139' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQR' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
14f74f11cad4d80654400b7be87bbe73
c75f3f22da25f5b2596679ae131a26981a6ded82
'2011-11-14T23:31:13-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQS' 'sip-files00033.tif'
d232d7a32b8a19f6bfad360ad52d143f
ce27d3a0917cb00b4df5d6c2f6387c1f99219ac4
describe
'1925' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQT' 'sip-files00033.txt'
d866c1af77fac3ab4250add385274aae
d3780614908d479c3562b94346e12556ed99f78c
describe
'10039' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQU' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
5fd20639f126c1d6f0a9fcbc3d7cb983
7886041bc4ff831159de305ab22285ebede309df
'2011-11-14T23:35:10-05:00'
describe
'1059529' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQV' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
493a5c1ea98e9d777aca3fc45e734a21
6ee370d1a7fddd1345f9364033e3d2ce6a8b88a2
describe
'104377' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQW' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
643cff184f9e842093517514c843294f
80dd5c7c55306d3b8cdad9f178cec8463f814701
'2011-11-14T23:29:57-05:00'
describe
'48606' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQX' 'sip-files00034.pro'
6712926e9b936dad5fd287cf270639a8
d0b06b7a8de83b65ccced5550e3c64a46a8441e3
describe
'35261' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQY' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
122b683ceefbb4cc5a0fcf8b57e39fea
084fffd0a4aa2e3755c60dfdb90c72eeb99e0681
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABQZ' 'sip-files00034.tif'
6fa571c83d8bd91a844ab7ae589c58d7
6f136da74241df1bb1ce731cea74abcf9d88870a
describe
'2049' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRA' 'sip-files00034.txt'
66762f40cfcd4f0f4f09840f0b853d13
7a6bbe562ddf9e66b51855e31103b2499187b450
'2011-11-14T23:30:37-05:00'
describe
'10245' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRB' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
a2193a32a6a0c6928a71006622337d89
f6bfb63541577589e1bc6c2b6b1c40f91804ffc9
describe
'1076318' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRC' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
4c37a04872569b4eb21b0f9ac207b610
8c2912e72542b661d10371a50fcfc91f3998414a
describe
'101472' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRD' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
98f3240c1ded38b45f71f69b08cd2d0f
0b9deb49c8f32edc6fa7209385591581899b032f
describe
'48608' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRE' 'sip-files00035.pro'
70f0d441db951046df29998abae3d181
fd57fa9619d774c3aae5a5d916cf441fc74aec77
describe
'34800' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRF' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
018ab3ce41ba863c115fc4c704ff930d
a7c6d6775dbbfb591e9d846c8013f088e41f742d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRG' 'sip-files00035.tif'
cb3b4934737d305ac43c953ee97cc99f
d6d03f66cd5b11a22937c37fdf694c9fce244ed3
'2011-11-14T23:32:19-05:00'
describe
'2002' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRH' 'sip-files00035.txt'
2bb19dd3d4f0e6642c88f4c72b0ec567
40881acf2e453ea428a5bf5f23be2faa4371d5e8
'2011-11-14T23:33:30-05:00'
describe
'10584' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRI' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
7fc0a5815c77ba85d464385704220971
effdea789b1e8ef167e1fea1d99b034334776c49
'2011-11-14T23:31:18-05:00'
describe
'1059536' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRJ' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
c1441a3d8d58e0a1378f82f534c02265
034e94338de707574a9ab937f68c1e8427101534
describe
'80562' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRK' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
a875f2dc8edc93f07eb7c456ad820d07
4df60eacdde2ef64cab7341ad1faff3fa444a4b9
describe
'35821' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRL' 'sip-files00036.pro'
4ec1cfc9eab71af9f7d5662bf2639a90
5efad7a0d0543f93545bdb5f86a209642dd3f62f
describe
'28015' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRM' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
ca63755a370cfd187a8a6677a6a64010
6595d63e96b0f7c6333d0d52b31f421268ba7328
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRN' 'sip-files00036.tif'
080f260e34e8b8e6698daeaf69e9bca7
34db4b7fd837703045995e1e1140fa74debd313f
'2011-11-14T23:35:46-05:00'
describe
'1596' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRO' 'sip-files00036.txt'
507110f2db6e8d56532d02eee092366c
457819406458859f837ad333ba5491ac30727262
'2011-11-14T23:33:01-05:00'
describe
'8511' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRP' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
0c4fbbcc3d43e51c1279295b5dff7f2b
b5063b7e62677e736203cdaffd8d6e27b0927f0a
describe
'1076300' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRQ' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
1f12ef455a0d076eede18cc8b2acd6ba
df1c75f2f639815c0740c8fd784e52f089257a6c
'2011-11-14T23:31:49-05:00'
describe
'94369' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRR' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
bd888066f8c9ce89a77de361230c413b
b2abc624b60c41fcd8bdfac100742e099e49bf1a
describe
'45093' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRS' 'sip-files00037.pro'
0d49e720af1bc471595f6964724ed506
92ad7a8d40bd2b46f8e74624318816dbbdbdfd29
'2011-11-14T23:32:46-05:00'
describe
'32723' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRT' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
1b539ddc3121a924a6dc55883a7261be
d3a76432b462eb5ec35b1d97959c6d3ec9043ff8
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRU' 'sip-files00037.tif'
616423430fd6dee45c54e82281712df2
c2ce11239acd128996a06735d8db462979a34176
describe
'1907' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRV' 'sip-files00037.txt'
3e5ee71131152f862125f828cbcbdec0
059dc9441fcbddf374f7ad0acfdd0534a5da2de2
'2011-11-14T23:33:37-05:00'
describe
'9874' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRW' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
f0af7b4cffceabfbad60a23c06628133
fc0b9209fe647a259555f1c0d54734b159a9da9a
describe
'1059701' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRX' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
6b575c4ef72eb074cec8cb1fa786ea4a
b0cd698436397f6a1fb57bd2beb1258bb6873f8d
'2011-11-14T23:32:41-05:00'
describe
'96290' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRY' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
7d3702ceda8f4daa41a4c6e830d35b52
0d4ef02d298e28d2a9c339ede1c6998b32aa1240
describe
'45234' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABRZ' 'sip-files00038.pro'
3dd21f55a9591ae10308e35f8b75a08c
0d50a0f76e2fb2c49801a3abbacaea1a4d6b6a0a
describe
'33447' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSA' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
582de48fed4128abb2f16324c435cfa5
bec611ec9149295a41f088ca1f838ee09db5bd42
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSB' 'sip-files00038.tif'
051bdda05fa4aadc28509b7511c4936b
fea8e5665332f28714b04c94e6c10bd49b9aaed9
'2011-11-14T23:31:02-05:00'
describe
'1931' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSC' 'sip-files00038.txt'
a654dd989eeb7f05a59ec5ff9752fba7
59dfbb818ed877cd44fd2ed8a72c131fd60cc342
'2011-11-14T23:30:53-05:00'
describe
'10122' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSD' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
f380dd7f4d7ba66aa0823c98c0e50cae
ba968c78d1895b4328871490b51776afd9fd1b0e
'2011-11-14T23:35:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSE' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
2b48bbf74ed43fdee2082065056d1b59
1794825425226727fd17ec7f20ec3e7569bf9a74
describe
'97896' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSF' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
562a8adcf05f1a829ee55e3187529095
cd5600d759f59f47476026517717b4ce6742d9de
describe
'46406' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSG' 'sip-files00039.pro'
d98bc119da5ad5fc1839ba68e3b8217c
d0bc5cc6608618f1b0d45cd1ebff13fabc0ad99b
'2011-11-14T23:30:08-05:00'
describe
'33908' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSH' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
5a447724629440884cfd5f3bbb7ef5f9
6a030585c29bee153cdeb436cb4bb44e58752f98
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSI' 'sip-files00039.tif'
4127c67b490fef0615c7583885967a4c
73aa84dfcdaa27000645ec69689b253cde52ac79
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSJ' 'sip-files00039.txt'
c3d9a4887505fc4963c285c45f4263d4
432e3b012041ae2b158d4b0b7f8cd6a3f4d4f636
describe
'10353' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSK' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
1d4663cf5a97b20ab32c1d04334e3de1
6c67c9c37fb95b030886450bf73a92de264f1e2e
describe
'1059712' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSL' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
5b9e6018341c80d44b725c5624a31588
c5845f25e7fa3a0675f0b6770f5a344c5e0b3288
describe
'100955' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSM' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
fad7d75a5117af5ccdc5840671c39e5b
13e1f5eb39e6ff53793fc7ac613bdede367fba7d
describe
'47159' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSN' 'sip-files00040.pro'
d8942a6cca66cd62c5769743843f0d0d
3151da390e01a0ebe9466b4e0c1f6df591f49d60
'2011-11-14T23:32:08-05:00'
describe
'34801' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSO' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
4d451443684bfee665de120973b57340
5f5d5804e27d8ef37c95bcc30ea6a2d61b39aea1
'2011-11-14T23:29:55-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSP' 'sip-files00040.tif'
107435710d585b412ffb86ffd14b03b8
12b521306f129e104bc5d44186b1fce1d0d5b6b3
'2011-11-14T23:30:24-05:00'
describe
'2008' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSQ' 'sip-files00040.txt'
5455231636e0976093f2add3c898373f
81886a3d646c666f7025118c498910c28c7d0bbb
describe
'10211' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSR' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
fc7ae60ba167b8a4d818773163605de8
330988a8369b9786845c9875a6357a774da332f4
'2011-11-14T23:32:58-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSS' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
ca97e977ada609bbc762c491327b5f5c
5eb1c5cb9bed7129bfc737b8e94363ec49aeeb38
describe
'90623' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABST' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
d35e94e17429dc59f7ce28c3b4d42eb6
60c950ce2fb9b8cd63e8ac7aaa122cf2fed85e3f
describe
'42246' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSU' 'sip-files00041.pro'
32962126a0097e2d2ebf064555cf05a2
4e2445851e3cac93c67b6eb75858da21281436f4
describe
'30702' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSV' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
0139867f773b86441ad7f802969b072b
dfb70ddf24db7c930ba7f3a610b41d7a6db70741
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSW' 'sip-files00041.tif'
8c0f38bed72b5f031fbd58f105cbb56d
97d6ee287ac39c4f8c223cc22b2c1fb71daddd75
'2011-11-14T23:31:58-05:00'
describe
'1745' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSX' 'sip-files00041.txt'
7690880d737b621ad3143a53421bcb15
932f32733c2ad7766b4018d0699cc5ba081827ba
'2011-11-14T23:35:08-05:00'
describe
'9323' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSY' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
e2736d94c38a473db9e49a4485b8015d
b421005625c0ea6bf6262c3a10299f42c37266a3
describe
'1059583' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABSZ' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
9146fbdd7d936e839420d8e144432961
7e34c3b999a515423cd5d92344da7c43bfde1ab7
describe
'83135' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTA' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
970ac43155f8ef58f7ccb1f03360383a
2cc0ccf4ffc5eefc47a5daafbc56fc32468ac18b
'2011-11-14T23:30:41-05:00'
describe
'36933' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTB' 'sip-files00042.pro'
76dbc1376c849c3c661028aced7e35be
5cea695c89fea13d2b1d444e058e08f247b3017f
'2011-11-14T23:32:54-05:00'
describe
'28681' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTC' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
88b0af1ff8a5df568f2a59e7fb3bf2a0
545942f4eab6971b6b6c4c55747b33606b3a9de0
'2011-11-14T23:32:45-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTD' 'sip-files00042.tif'
df08b6f903d0ff9c0d6e52658b5bbdcb
3a3590b7a42d0051581a8d8617992d20c4409b35
'2011-11-14T23:30:18-05:00'
describe
'1605' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTE' 'sip-files00042.txt'
760f6f55ee0cf935056a2a12cd4bbfa3
fcd6a8fbdf99f9ffdc126655dc7045dd85311723
'2011-11-14T23:34:20-05:00'
describe
'8932' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTF' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
8bee4f1589a74ef1940d523c3a4b8490
0e6f65c62968a6c6067d5c6bba8b054a49606234
'2011-11-14T23:35:39-05:00'
describe
'1076330' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTG' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
4968c17148d2d48c97bdfcd6cb340ba2
b2f5cf991ebafff6d912f1baf9771354619c84ee
describe
'92456' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTH' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
33a0dcf0af2c93c2c6095d4ef448581c
0b806c6f37e2e59e0712b189a595f8170644cd1e
'2011-11-14T23:30:33-05:00'
describe
'43860' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTI' 'sip-files00043.pro'
c5125d92ad7f084a110da4b03b076a99
975712dbcaadb59518c152386d4314a67cf3d3ed
describe
'32032' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTJ' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
02a0c643e2f8d36e5519d3f165890b55
328e82853146c88e9fca30a3506dcb119341040b
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTK' 'sip-files00043.tif'
33734e7e7f319a6ca1d1902e4b6d338b
094966b9615cc6420607379137743fedc4a6f664
'2011-11-14T23:35:32-05:00'
describe
'1860' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTL' 'sip-files00043.txt'
1663289636ccc229b1a4ebd89a0f6a05
b6f8532f19a83f8abb396e914fcb466fe358bb14
describe
'9887' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTM' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
259f9fb52f29be672c2b3809f03de32f
f6b30f42f8264d5c256765e1e6aa66283cce4ceb
describe
'1059704' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTN' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
7a7dad14b92f8e9ffde3bde19b66ece8
c3bc9ccc9fa0b75b106a16867ab14bd1c8db7c15
'2011-11-14T23:30:03-05:00'
describe
'94825' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTO' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
6f1ce79e2c9d427e4a11396fb5f8aad3
15554428280fe73921bf60f29431b085b4e86f61
'2011-11-14T23:31:11-05:00'
describe
'43595' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTP' 'sip-files00044.pro'
cb1171f52871ccf90e0054cbfbd98d01
b4bec2fc5b278414d074d6a04f6184da6e17e7c9
describe
'33005' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTQ' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
527e98e57ca37090e56f5b766466e20c
ddfb9272dfc5f0aa73b765825a1c1aa74acb85ad
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTR' 'sip-files00044.tif'
c48b024b17507aee2707c04e42d19f00
3d6f99628ae84859f315c768815bd8c13d13b3ef
'2011-11-14T23:33:29-05:00'
describe
'1861' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTS' 'sip-files00044.txt'
a05ec6691f35eb15b05c9a951c7ec551
4be5c6945eb64cdf7f1ee735dec6f93708327303
describe
'10274' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTT' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
481681d7137095b562e9f03d5c048787
2a709bd020895fa5c2bdb29e5c0675a275231d8e
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTU' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
dfcafb986a01bf8f4df81804e603410e
f6a15fcf36ed0b2e56031108f5bcb16381a95d73
'2011-11-14T23:34:39-05:00'
describe
'101584' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTV' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
e7f8ba1ed71f5605088a771c4daa23b9
9c6c9fc016c42055b1092ebb48d38e5f1cd5b2cb
describe
'49422' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTW' 'sip-files00045.pro'
dc332757f39062831f8109fb38a6876f
ee32450efa251ed0a24d70b7aa8fd2d78d5c8b5a
'2011-11-14T23:33:48-05:00'
describe
'34981' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTX' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
4f79f0dffc6576e7dd1d861bda762bd9
8af37a5d67dc03bbd4f0f357ef50ccb8baf05c07
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTY' 'sip-files00045.tif'
e9ad9f821bd62fe66b931fcfd134a729
2ada6adc701851787bed2310202755a0486f01c0
'2011-11-14T23:31:32-05:00'
describe
'2027' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABTZ' 'sip-files00045.txt'
a2e260039b522a105aa91d89afdf4f69
334e6350515eece9de1990f749907b1db3a0e2a8
'2011-11-14T23:30:15-05:00'
describe
'10406' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUA' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
f652da65b8e62d02a5e8141a8a9cc84d
063da03b68ed91959489b3699a8e36e366c52ed6
'2011-11-14T23:30:58-05:00'
describe
'1059711' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUB' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
7d84e7756728bbed172241106c6f8501
f875f68dbe23500dc4dd05810f67d009f77e6c58
'2011-11-14T23:32:36-05:00'
describe
'106207' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUC' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
bd278db1dc995820712c1f3826ef577a
ef33af275fac59e114ec0d5bcc80e73f22f45e6b
describe
'50551' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUD' 'sip-files00046.pro'
7d66416205cd627d90d94b8800e6e1c7
d5a42945ec1ca2f085396c714cef66a5ed26154b
describe
'36536' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUE' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
7fcc199075a6db71f09d5321da80512e
9f79ed9f77c5e59da2b94b3890d8c0118d82b1bd
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUF' 'sip-files00046.tif'
216e5f6f7af0776a9bc78ad94cb139ab
0866e19b600b02a2f34eb13f39eb86faf22a0222
'2011-11-14T23:29:58-05:00'
describe
'2098' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUG' 'sip-files00046.txt'
9fa7b3ae24069d3db2f20a89390174bc
a80d260247fcb5112592c50df4c96bceebeb714a
describe
'10561' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUH' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
85d96aef412f9953e53bb8c26fc45836
132d99a7be7dd1792522caad574e5fdd07333a13
describe
'1076212' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUI' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
cad7a580625a83b499025dcd17f9e3aa
5204473bf7753c61620069144db0839dd682767d
'2011-11-14T23:32:34-05:00'
describe
'82286' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUJ' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
8e8e23741e44ba4c710a815c85738f7e
f940f964a5d91717290ac8f7e37bf6f13eef2d7b
'2011-11-14T23:32:48-05:00'
describe
'36904' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUK' 'sip-files00047.pro'
f3da07c299bd52bd207e08da01398220
358ddaba066e05dd0742a6fd23fc896f1a02326d
describe
'27957' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUL' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
c990ff1777388625d1e4391e85ad969a
17882e4837271f7fd56adf2d4d432b72b6b7c6fd
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUM' 'sip-files00047.tif'
6900818058611c16811fa33f4cb54dc7
3cab3df2aac34f47d36e86d6047432d651c46f82
'2011-11-14T23:33:20-05:00'
describe
'1585' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUN' 'sip-files00047.txt'
d5bc925f61ea7ca2aeb463bf8d63e983
4e5ff9ab2b7842e916c3926180d69af616518d2e
describe
'8812' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUO' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
bc6a005544367db9d04b4b6e5203668c
e1bc31b6e6160ad30eb131e12c481a8dd17db82e
'2011-11-14T23:30:01-05:00'
describe
'1059680' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUP' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
ef475e7dceeee54fabd29929e61e39d7
e5bf8d69e87b29c0cdf16393ccf80bab5b1f6195
describe
'102220' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUQ' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
83667dc40277505e7d50cce84a923b39
36194c84bf1b794039269c23a64a4a1ff1fadfe0
describe
'47157' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUR' 'sip-files00048.pro'
172de125ab9134e755a8b4b1c39c09f3
c034e23213fbdd5ef117ff507bbe2512552273a7
'2011-11-14T23:30:12-05:00'
describe
'34881' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUS' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
d5204bde807fa900a8fbe78cd00fbb90
f9eed568059e0f05a03771d707c31a398a956f92
'2011-11-14T23:34:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUT' 'sip-files00048.tif'
7a219eea1fbafa6bf410964c80fc215d
b9af81f2cf36a9b77e6ba7ade211335f1ee6325e
'2011-11-14T23:30:26-05:00'
describe
'2003' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUU' 'sip-files00048.txt'
b19b779513555f506cd2fa813411e195
11730d6e45405650370e61e86324a546ac455ca2
describe
'10361' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUV' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
4aebdc0c4d24316070a33367e65dcccd
41e824bcc5a0c523ec6b6104c0f528567edb48d9
'2011-11-14T23:35:22-05:00'
describe
'1076312' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUW' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
a4ee60c16ae5d9b7f6317b0be2936d9e
0b54849fe00237e6cc4295e0de5b587970d9d650
describe
'102199' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUX' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
40b3c4d0afbf7811403c9fe42f78c8ee
68b0b2dcc5567e7355e418972c849f6529a76216
describe
'48794' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUY' 'sip-files00049.pro'
edcaa779ce434542d26636d4fdacbdb2
d4708ce2ac0f914d95e47148eaea3348fa5834ae
describe
'35127' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABUZ' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
8c64f4bc247cfda6d3179d11cb85a34f
fe989b2269aee884139bd6928fb144c9cd6e97fb
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVA' 'sip-files00049.tif'
d157b29eac1f469a9499575158e246ed
74cddaf41a74ca6ada0463c7272f537b3df9b4c9
'2011-11-14T23:33:56-05:00'
describe
'2020' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVB' 'sip-files00049.txt'
e8d2ba2ac4dbfea4010fec94585cf375
24564e60bf62239b5770dfa6f7515a014e359622
'2011-11-14T23:34:10-05:00'
describe
'10657' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVC' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
68d2c17c7ab587a7e48a84509a36995e
9d7b112740b9ae205c8509a75fb50e2e25081141
describe
'1059708' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVD' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
ca0ad159cf490c2131c85088ea90e1e2
2a4c544c9dbe6e87e03cd1bcd7ecdc6518702065
describe
'104162' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVE' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
117fbab6cf71beae86e00e21f48e5207
06609f3297d500c275aeb3b46a83e121b4c55e9d
describe
'49022' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVF' 'sip-files00050.pro'
9adbdcd5db0b4c78e10bfa278ea93e54
f65d7b0fb2b2f99b865f676aadf77f28083760c6
describe
'35819' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVG' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
0a9f61be43ea887647f0d79c2b743bd5
d9c7fafbaa9e694af2b62ef29e4c212154a3f361
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVH' 'sip-files00050.tif'
e2e7598482783a8b6c19f3528e659c3e
633a8513b4a2b4e090d5b294d53908ed75283c84
describe
'2080' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVI' 'sip-files00050.txt'
e2976874b9cd887c02cafd1fcd7cd90a
ce99950c7bf602a0157b2e428f65d365f187f089
describe
'10541' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVJ' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
ba77ef0f5b36a89d89eccc4812d6ffe2
ffd85beaac31bb666629cad946599bba946da13b
describe
'1076315' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVK' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
10166d7491be6fb53c6dd8224eb1be7b
8c61381a14b6c5ac49d85cc3d296cbb0aa9781f6
'2011-11-14T23:34:23-05:00'
describe
'89627' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVL' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
55dd886b2b0426f8f19ecdf474b6db98
7c51c88fa3ccb7a49e6743b51581406419ff752a
describe
'41011' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVM' 'sip-files00051.pro'
8e29081f8150541cc7499db935c261f4
05735b6c9c29b67b1f84306b3f1db54d14136bb8
'2011-11-14T23:30:20-05:00'
describe
'30219' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVN' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
6e4e5eddd5c71bb2f0b150e1ba5c0d84
a2a4181ef332931f869c5c0d62a01c936f08bf7f
'2011-11-14T23:32:23-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVO' 'sip-files00051.tif'
43e13f426b1a076b581346b0f465e553
1c52f3e3e52c2686a9640d64caec5ee5b14b6094
describe
'1727' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVP' 'sip-files00051.txt'
5d11dbb1053ab25eb36ad400b10187c7
854f0afe9348f57ccb6e8e9da3d8a6db152df219
describe
'9229' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVQ' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
86d4479a46f1b7e892ade2dbcab81e14
637ea0b2d49567f7e410435d4a21494653579501
describe
'1059671' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVR' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
c6c57472cf52c9d6677df3de9d6cd1fb
6278abe0c29982c2c65d97c850ee8047c7ec6bec
'2011-11-14T23:35:16-05:00'
describe
'107989' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVS' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
e6d3d8495ff6f1125752802fa3ee361d
07eedf1b6727cf794a09b6f4d7ab77082921d1d4
describe
'50928' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVT' 'sip-files00052.pro'
0d69c9d4f6baa397acfc328715051833
63d60cc7cffd67067129b424254b1221324cd3dc
describe
'36678' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVU' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
53c5b1db33ec85f13a8c53ede6bd2999
f254ab320ba3a1785df282a115b0f5cfda6f2e23
'2011-11-14T23:34:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVV' 'sip-files00052.tif'
32a3053297d942cf3b70c8bb28a53381
049f74848ee5c86e43079b4cca28e1aeabacd5e0
describe
'2103' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVW' 'sip-files00052.txt'
7965b63c906e93357965763351b0716b
6aa8fd173e69fa209e67597ba2a11d54057dfc03
'2011-11-14T23:31:42-05:00'
describe
'10655' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVX' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
3b1df92a315046fcbd04a0a46515bbba
81b150a82147d7d60a9d30225dee38669746092f
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVY' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
3cd78adbf594966d782e53ce9559de6a
d94e0eaa3f0e33083e75609e61b1e3b9776cdb15
'2011-11-14T23:32:21-05:00'
describe
'103127' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABVZ' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
b7b608b72ee778239d43538dd7709c03
1cc22453db92bb372b34e8e2724776b8bc1d28dc
describe
'49813' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWA' 'sip-files00053.pro'
ee37c87fca692489d0006136ad93bb6d
7d6ab5a4f57a7833e2a6c7ceb461f4eac0a9796c
'2011-11-14T23:30:48-05:00'
describe
'35306' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWB' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
aa0e7c5c8fce9b8233db652028020490
2c0085f090876e11ec5f1bc921977f19774c27ce
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWC' 'sip-files00053.tif'
5272c90fd873b8f584aa900caeddf969
3ff6a6cf13c0ecf895140613743e3365a73a8286
describe
'2056' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWD' 'sip-files00053.txt'
a1ed6c7f1620369a756e57b354fd5cfd
fe34d3dec13c65f00c984854a3cf0779c9def6df
describe
'10687' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWE' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
4d9cac910e7652eecba723ee12cc8a3e
7e9344d2618c3145c06eae28718b028fa62e5ac0
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWF' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
8dd9770950c0e8367df549e8807d19b9
f85f9bca52dbbec88d03233aa2df18e8cac54e63
describe
'100131' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWG' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
4c4139442cecb10849eef3f87ad7097e
7791e823fbae782542fcec0ddf3952c882e84cb1
'2011-11-14T23:32:57-05:00'
describe
'46350' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWH' 'sip-files00054.pro'
3281c61244acd060c5e1dfe93b838db6
b95a5079c4c66f406d278b7c2d648b6f2a2b9511
describe
'34452' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWI' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
3fee456d12297cbbe7790a2c69dfaa2a
27125a6102f8f01155d941032d8215b887ecb7e1
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWJ' 'sip-files00054.tif'
4683840d90f854a61993ef40ae836a71
2e5f08aec7103f1e1e64a43366c5fa365c411f0d
describe
'1940' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWK' 'sip-files00054.txt'
34af146fd0be25fe94caacc296b3f883
ebff913e10e8a1822e4f8d5d37a76f8b9e2e6a31
'2011-11-14T23:35:29-05:00'
describe
'10247' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWL' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
598a3e696f6fb40b4cfabbb86fba8b84
33dd539a399f9beba01cf55daf42acbe49fb854e
describe
'1076304' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWM' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
4711809b980fe4601d9def77323be632
025614f3b76baee29d717f9ecdec1bd86755ea6d
describe
'104254' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWN' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
57361c80cb2e2264d0e722443fcc7b25
68ea32dabec0e7a641c035097c9164429fa97f76
describe
'49340' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWO' 'sip-files00055.pro'
1aa21314a723a747b9d9823582845e92
498edbf4044541945b27ec6cd81ed5749d024aeb
describe
'35599' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWP' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
8999af6ab5d05c3bf1ec344a8ddc2aaf
db31d455ce00ad414a7e8610b85e4816fc2e95f8
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWQ' 'sip-files00055.tif'
5d1d2bbc2ddafaed648e0d6738d7887e
8adfcb09b898a47d839f087d44b5569343991522
'2011-11-14T23:34:56-05:00'
describe
'2040' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWR' 'sip-files00055.txt'
6076c3ac703331513c25f550ad9acbf4
94cb699a81cd53631023e77521bda320c6ee1620
describe
'10432' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWS' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
c0c533ab8486b476eb507ee69ce818f0
c0dcc9114b4acaa56344a1dbb0baa3bf452da200
describe
'1059681' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWT' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
da483d1919b7bc68bed779aff849ba87
7537b6daa3ba21a9d8e46d8b458263a4f9c7caa3
describe
'104572' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWU' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
ef47af6aba6b1b32c1c8d9f365786683
c848a7b2a59989f234bdabd93ad2b9c5f3a65ce7
describe
'49164' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWV' 'sip-files00056.pro'
9191d2a436fed24cdc6971bbafd018c4
d15a89fb1697065bacfa7f08f66e4c9a3c4ccd0f
describe
'36000' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWW' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
a7bab257c0a6113b49cb418eedcc00e8
f69331b3a3893996117f369beab6e75c2ebe8212
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWX' 'sip-files00056.tif'
51aea2227f0b22f4b89e3707214ab528
8833ec530433c086a68e514f9926773d4c69dd9b
describe
'2052' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWY' 'sip-files00056.txt'
38b2849392174817a4dc4da0e9f49ef2
47f684d568bf265e3f8398ddcc68ea43bef6133f
describe
'10554' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABWZ' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
4f8056a9bc0770a57fe3b6e882540ed7
d80757f3e118c8852d755845fd308d9670fa7673
describe
'1076176' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXA' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
0aed4e2ddf928a2b186d7524e1816722
3443bfec151e78a6b03f3743127935bd717a8e5d
describe
'87880' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXB' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
5e8d640c02ca31e2b0cd71fbc5dbb16a
e8408e2b8fce39c829c956e6a0dd10a970bd74ae
describe
'40274' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXC' 'sip-files00057.pro'
8311034a29b88d34476946b6e53b3b83
62a3f6b9ca19e799ae06a1fa1ea113a4108c1550
'2011-11-14T23:32:40-05:00'
describe
'30139' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXD' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
ec46b94542fec20272028efd6f34eec4
cd58ef946b8b178192f0c81e79e0d2f5c5c8409e
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXE' 'sip-files00057.tif'
68990833a9f1e975a4a0b6069a1277f8
a9738046040a60efc0343214801f6dde32559500
'2011-11-14T23:35:47-05:00'
describe
'1704' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXF' 'sip-files00057.txt'
abc9426f3c77565ec3b69bf4d4a6d90c
8e419873b21796c598a09ffbaf43dff3f35ee245
describe
'9005' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXG' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
f2ff6fd5e64ae25f67f0525b7dc06dbf
8a9ea1e399f9bcbcc9875c07340a0710408b7666
'2011-11-14T23:34:44-05:00'
describe
'1059651' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXH' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
778b1d58a58f2edeaf4a6eaf96d40773
3f9ffcdc4394bc24ab27b0353e40170b95f7b61b
describe
'100165' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXI' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
30146947d5884fd382ab07eaac7d260a
e72023545bfeec865da49c131a2d9c0b4ee842dd
describe
'46718' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXJ' 'sip-files00058.pro'
6e3c3aa3a79c2a7a3f269828219f5481
7e0579d4913ba07a9dd0436ffc71471bd557d412
describe
'34609' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXK' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
45a2a69a179c90e5f39fa8ff780308f0
eaa59ca75f26795273df617532a0c1612fceb012
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXL' 'sip-files00058.tif'
9ec4f967d12eefc0f4be16a7c73a3ac1
67622ae916bdb3dd3b24330e377e0c3e64767097
describe
'1946' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXM' 'sip-files00058.txt'
ec07aae05bf12ef6ec4dfe107ab09758
ae64d6e86d02d4ac4660a18df2c7edbc4bf3a346
describe
'10539' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXN' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
9bbd9641fc6c4da9040ac7653c249501
c606f890ab21023ae97a1eee7eced46e69592836
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXO' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
07ee630f6914e6ee017771e1ee3f43ef
9f45e3c2069a9559567d35d9186feb10e1aebdcd
'2011-11-14T23:35:37-05:00'
describe
'104086' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXP' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
1457d333c49aed904b1218c4b2bb42f9
8fb04f6a7309bfecd11cde18f170d6b265813b7c
describe
'49884' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXQ' 'sip-files00059.pro'
5ccead2bbca9fb32177d5cf0cffce498
8768a0ee30d2533f202614d45a7d6db0d000103f
'2011-11-14T23:31:20-05:00'
describe
'35558' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXR' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
f399fed2ed38b7f5d314cc10e4a9a72f
92fd50d86bb0b1edac723d51f17f042e334bbd63
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXS' 'sip-files00059.tif'
c1b7f7dc541f042305fca7b946990eb8
317348dccb904525ee52e7042098ed591bab5d71
'2011-11-14T23:31:45-05:00'
describe
'2075' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXT' 'sip-files00059.txt'
5ce1909684387d32df3eac40b129673e
67a8901365422529c4962a1290842bbcb18e5824
'2011-11-14T23:31:06-05:00'
describe
'10766' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXU' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
1d271180fd297a39bab299db4f3f66fd
c21d7bc40c69eebf61900da20996910d1511065d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXV' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
4456a07357ac25c00a18cf6f98c66c97
672931ff673fa1dfe6b7e64c2b960bfba8d3a83e
describe
'96725' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXW' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
6d583c9d6d059a5777970377b311849a
c3182c0b37e4be460f612e27edecb1703a86f3e6
describe
'43891' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXX' 'sip-files00060.pro'
0575920b309cc226414d4f9eddc680ac
04d0830955ca80e2f140159629232aeae637b1cf
describe
'33445' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXY' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
65d2e0d0be06792f011843b29c59d615
d258cdf59a7635180d3bb9c5a00f7c85805512d6
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABXZ' 'sip-files00060.tif'
852cc5a85bc3d33842f9e210db402067
2416d5a9f4c17dbaf4d3cd54d4418fdd566e54e9
describe
'1802' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYA' 'sip-files00060.txt'
e50f7dfe11fcf5549292aa27be7e406c
0eeb9378eb6e378590110e93646ef1036b8bf5e4
describe
'9749' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYB' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
19044355e73caee8420f23a11164ad74
ea48b91c292beb3496c9dacea44d6d943608b17c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYC' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
7161366d6054f3cdde85da4af68a46c6
67707a708bf0e285e62c604d9f575de950f18bce
describe
'94473' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYD' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
4460f8883742a016eff50de2e096c5a9
e8376fe421a7a018bc86554a063c0a785e34550e
'2011-11-14T23:29:53-05:00'
describe
'42775' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYE' 'sip-files00061.pro'
f81091bc1f72c4ae93fe8705d23bf51b
3d88350aba0b8ffbe8d91ff760fc4a68d67b6862
'2011-11-14T23:33:53-05:00'
describe
'32097' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYF' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
d6c3760889c428a76f1891738b3ae0be
21400f98ffa4bd5da2334f8de676fe1cc81b8703
'2011-11-14T23:32:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYG' 'sip-files00061.tif'
04978644e800209db9d13f7fc4736de6
ff033994ea7965eaf6be1926e7888ae3c5780312
describe
'1808' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYH' 'sip-files00061.txt'
57ae359c42f2f38c673133dfa544fb29
da7998ac3a75215adf2d25da8a54f25c5c6a088d
describe
'9875' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYI' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
6a845f86e12447c4fa0d6488c45fc5e9
4b7a8e112bf181e91faa0c7964446f8ba43e9364
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYJ' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
9341c38da4ec202ac78568e8956fb3ac
fa10e3ac616331b19c278da90ab876eb622612d3
describe
'104251' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYK' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
0a4d9da61a4bd0e950090c77c0260f4c
99b217dbf49b29fdc63019d9ad9c0cdd14fa000f
'2011-11-14T23:31:16-05:00'
describe
'48025' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYL' 'sip-files00062.pro'
99ee5d20e58ec63526f3b73eb1239c70
75267bbc05d23cd900a59f3556f1090dfa7e8acb
describe
'35962' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYM' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
81d1b930df1889fefd2e5da53cdeca55
74071eee7d42f46e0331275b19dcd0d1a1afa524
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYN' 'sip-files00062.tif'
2f04449f7fb9628769d1a19f893181f7
f988503adf958b5489d50add2823e7ac93583ebe
describe
'2001' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYO' 'sip-files00062.txt'
e3acf1c37764cc029e775fb00bd7a923
df01bb118019019ce6ba0a5afbcee92fe88ef6c4
describe
'10629' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYP' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
1b059df6ed8b3a34c45f19c99e55055f
419ce58fa8d66fa33294e893eb6edb34df13fd7f
'2011-11-14T23:30:09-05:00'
describe
'1076325' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYQ' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
6c158b2b4c1ebc2db348c25be2ad7a48
985a33b9e87e4b8cafea7d2d6b6efab8aaf96654
describe
'102223' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYR' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
937ce51f2a743f711f5fb75b912e4d70
dc56e4f543278409875f9161bbf3356a782ce036
describe
'48151' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYS' 'sip-files00063.pro'
a36ef90ceb1d09a7e8522aacf27afe7c
78e8cfd9cd3432af8f91a02b9560a97c165ca168
describe
'34626' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYT' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
88c17d4a7e235b31845fb9025249fb95
fc94d5cf4fc9962c12f32dce9cba737eb3d20645
'2011-11-14T23:33:35-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYU' 'sip-files00063.tif'
c6501017a5fb8725e1dc7d47905644a3
f1ef71732aab55bb62a13e836461a0caafc97eee
'2011-11-14T23:29:56-05:00'
describe
'2016' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYV' 'sip-files00063.txt'
1533685d92d7dc41e04fd55ad7acecad
5bdf44c511560d25c822379e3544996461d30263
describe
'10507' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYW' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
7c72f69786b715d898bc6c6cacfec875
6a22f7fdfeab6fce2a51133ae08f3c6220877b5e
'2011-11-14T23:30:51-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYX' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
5c3fd7f27b01ddcc9b186bd7626e7cc0
3a1bda1da4c5e151af415ed2bcd50bc4b84b8e15
describe
'106550' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYY' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
9451d78fd13f60c203ab1ba34aa89595
2fbd8b3a1713c912ab88d182ac11beb58210aa57
'2011-11-14T23:34:32-05:00'
describe
'49310' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABYZ' 'sip-files00064.pro'
f9bf350d75072d581529ea5fd2c3b0b4
1012558234015f3583add95c1c24128e0d7cec20
'2011-11-14T23:33:03-05:00'
describe
'35490' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZA' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
ae18bebd24f89812bb6858048579d7f6
fe0e082a742d2cfdd61bd36d68fee6377970ccaf
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZB' 'sip-files00064.tif'
c029944186e84a9162d1a2acd8f01c9a
8a5f259f3f07a1691f73f2117ccaa42cb7ef4370
'2011-11-14T23:32:38-05:00'
describe
'2041' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZC' 'sip-files00064.txt'
24091a85baf223165834d0110e869a37
5975a96ab4af5078de598dfd8be82430fd22d0f0
'2011-11-14T23:33:18-05:00'
describe
'10637' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZD' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
8d7836b002d89bd9533e3c360db57705
ed75a2292d3e6608fe451825a4724f3bc78b6479
'2011-11-14T23:30:10-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZE' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
2bb0d6f7c0739c586062f6e10e669bf7
67500137ac2d5e7a741d9982e2b50840fdffacc6
describe
'78989' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZF' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
3b297f8a8099182f451a22004def51a0
ba806233c20d5addc9d7a8d9bad4871393b5cf62
describe
'37902' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZG' 'sip-files00065.pro'
c64dcc6fcb7f5b6da4dd30c785e0a0d1
64ce2989aad6a05e90a5f9c5bf4c8e546b6efb51
describe
'26106' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZH' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
70e23bc60fde715fc0cb08bff77f30dd
d4132daee1f024cdf819802df1c34e15f3491b3c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZI' 'sip-files00065.tif'
ea14dedb7c5e0687c8356b5fd3f7b65a
b9de99ee5ee83b2484a2362637932c8f89e14663
describe
'1796' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZJ' 'sip-files00065.txt'
bb6cb6154e600b5464236c70d49b086a
ac77e2bb907fc5f0563db9667aeec3eceaac0278
'2011-11-14T23:33:09-05:00'
describe
'8169' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZK' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
957e8530f6d6b99b5ba4268f96d36ce3
40cdc37870d931f6d05ad2c87d913b311068b4ff
describe
'1059617' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZL' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
ba25e1a06cc3751d6576b51fbb15422e
8cd65eaa225f50302f5a801d18d04d1a676a46b3
describe
'103867' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZM' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
22cf9a919d8843783515bee56fb9cc4d
ca0f8e1a47fd36ddafe74421e1f83acae6ed2ae5
describe
'47289' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZN' 'sip-files00066.pro'
7f96feae4f0c6897a1b654ed1ddb36ec
7cf0f82fa1c864817af7e6527d0ea9b5f0da8fe3
describe
'35534' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZO' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
8aab168a865e3dcac10c16837b2a7383
b5637f5c0c74cd1c8677de2174b739f2bcf1ab2d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZP' 'sip-files00066.tif'
2c04e677d83a71686e1368a17c8d0a6b
05d925caf88ab19a06e276d7a6c4d3549eddf9c4
describe
'1973' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZQ' 'sip-files00066.txt'
18ca3fda7e88ab2ca45fde5b57783ecd
7c5f39e865ff31500035e9672c573e7580aab1d6
describe
'10742' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZR' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
b13ff7cccbdaf70bfa7dd156ab1e394d
1bdeeb672b7fba6d05247e7c7907b0d205825d79
describe
'1084076' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZS' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
ed15f86ac1d06c4706ebb30440e8f9b3
2f60c00f00f796e0ee0bf14c56644743eb613c7e
describe
'107211' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZT' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
d81190741c78e85dac02e9ebd5887555
29e44d33400d37ffc5e0789aa802e770d31b0ba0
'2011-11-14T23:31:05-05:00'
describe
'49655' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZU' 'sip-files00067.pro'
74a405c450809cba362d1c0d16e4c6e8
13b56c0f2b5c3371d5d6c774053539aee25e6f26
describe
'37105' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZV' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
baec47702d49302c313a1720f57de915
9e08df4117876ded5c98999727defc83b6fd13d0
describe
'8682491' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZW' 'sip-files00067.tif'
c0f4fa892e7c8c7f10e114b532054aaf
0ebb2019e9d4b03c61ec349d73c486604162643d
'2011-11-14T23:31:34-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZX' 'sip-files00067.txt'
9c8cc72563f67e2bd228314afd5bff98
0e206bf8e2fcd00542407d7f220e90836b0ad02e
'2011-11-14T23:30:43-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZY' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
1dc7fa43889595ea74a43532c3c8b2ce
51f28107ca8a9507ca47855b3820d560b111caef
'2011-11-14T23:33:43-05:00'
describe
'1094561' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAABZZ' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
8130523e7262d4d486b25e6ef8046ce0
4ce46158cb8ab6828651120cdc50f19927ea7a53
describe
'90707' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAA' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
ee5dad1bf67dc172a64e2b6b33ff8bc0
3f7e810a7902f8ce7f5de2e891230a281e106a3a
describe
'38486' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAB' 'sip-files00068.pro'
9e0c56751e3bfefdad1fed91f449a8eb
7cecde5f03580d31097af1a2df3c4534122f8e1f
describe
'30587' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAC' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
56e03005fb8ca62f5cff7a630c3e7e61
bc1385375122fa4575d8ce43740999e783314b1b
describe
'8766425' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAD' 'sip-files00068.tif'
98d5b7e82bf4bdb1798061132e8c4447
e99d723634036479a17fc0c5a039946b5d202fc5
describe
'1681' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAE' 'sip-files00068.txt'
c52a9149fc5f0999ec4a5e947f3c0f56
3f01756411c5826042c2c0a5f4d6d3b3262172c4
describe
'8604' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAF' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
605a4379bb00af51ef87e65f233b7518
4d733d2c19ff6d101dcd904f8fb41de5f6690bc6
describe
'1084082' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAG' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
bf6d3bb50c12276150d3f64dd980a720
c42582a66a3a116223d29a0ae7f47a01022630a8
'2011-11-14T23:30:04-05:00'
describe
'105354' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAH' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
76d1c331d60df3283013ad7cc212e773
6ebca110226b290c8740d828a38a0639e9b3dcfd
describe
'48072' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAI' 'sip-files00069.pro'
530c1d8691295ddc304c94773b43913e
35f31217c42c18e493da3acab3a49ce947054d23
describe
'36149' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAJ' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
8eec2a4bff870e624a17c1694ca199c4
49c4346c2036c908ec48cc861d37a7bc2e535573
'2011-11-14T23:31:04-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAK' 'sip-files00069.tif'
dd4834ef9a8b1d9b65c44b4fb2b3d98d
c688efa2fff34d762ab28196130eb7debc5c0cf4
describe
'1981' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAL' 'sip-files00069.txt'
1b3c3d20d03375d1b2cba4c2d88eee92
ddcd1a4b619de92645796892687d2c7f3ac0fbce
describe
'10070' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAM' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
98dd8ec3eb6ec12fa59627ee206b0790
5e5caca896414c4ebdfcebea5adc95b862b97869
describe
'1094571' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAN' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
a99525650d22fc4ef3642a28c38d0d80
627d384492583469e36f9f5860c27130cb443b5c
describe
'106644' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAO' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
c42b37b24b4b4795acaf6e3521278a03
e7e742fc15d7705a8289a3d21f22f0c407436d46
'2011-11-14T23:34:09-05:00'
describe
'47189' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAP' 'sip-files00070.pro'
17789992c04d0639baac410286310515
ae3cf0d2d3003f21ab7d5e82cf4e813bc3310dbf
describe
'36032' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAQ' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
9393f5c1c3db3614b8e224e900f33fab
d23a7a54719e5085e11531fbc449b4107087ec0d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAR' 'sip-files00070.tif'
e155fa5ac3f7ca4c4034f99e4aa36078
fed45067c23f24ae54ef68c844eea86f97d210e8
describe
'1982' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAS' 'sip-files00070.txt'
bd1386830baae0c0660af870cd5e0018
543944f1609b63b6a0ef1032e0196c73a979c591
describe
'9985' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAT' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
611a7bf2fef850002a2b7e5f5703c593
5be4d92ebb38422517bfb49af7f666b53beff16d
describe
'1084025' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAU' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
516bcd5b21df316c2b55379b981a8f9e
444299dfafdf646c9ede2f8b084fc5f0541c586e
'2011-11-14T23:31:53-05:00'
describe
'97814' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAV' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
d5f43b55bb1fec4f380a63d532e93e29
b67bff4ae39c706fb746fa1f9c1311bf2153d89a
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAW' 'sip-files00071.pro'
c9ceb143b1b78c133b307c88f39f07e6
ecf423ca44c3844e3f3cc9f2484f16c40efff966
describe
'33273' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAX' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
afeb88a6e69b014b4bd51be5dabe4780
c3f12bf41e2eb937f458e8982001ee2f0968b67c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAY' 'sip-files00071.tif'
14ce318326e775025d31cb9ed9dbf29e
333c3c39e33717455dfcfab5bb789e27fbeb71ed
'2011-11-14T23:35:18-05:00'
describe
'1933' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACAZ' 'sip-files00071.txt'
3ff2f648833a240a4b49112521a14a1f
2361157bb673bd55c31ed85f82fa95485e545aa4
describe
'9495' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBA' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
ccdbb370cb9176df084900f840beeeea
e6de374fccec74dc5ba859db0af8431c278068c8
describe
'1094441' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBB' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
efbcaa85c3c7dae88fa96c1a90c53d6a
d60671d5c9819c398ddb065294db13e140ac8acf
describe
'113096' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBC' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
c85655ba6404dd8d81f62f4997da3947
7b765be2bb7cfa6680e4968161da24e32254ecf1
describe
'51380' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBD' 'sip-files00072.pro'
7ef0c2c6247957baabf4a1147535e4f3
cb5e2ede5d4283859e273c6cb082dc56cbf6131e
describe
'38119' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBE' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
b355925d83106b5ee151a96455f6eed1
663929fa37ccecf89c138df9ea24d818880d474b
'2011-11-14T23:31:29-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBF' 'sip-files00072.tif'
b4e8ae874e18423bfb2b2531bb836179
7d7b547334c02f3273a417a688b8d5fcb34fc123
describe
'2139' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBG' 'sip-files00072.txt'
2c626008cef857e17d45f7af879828a8
e13cae3fb9c8b976c4e52480eff438e0ea4f76b8
describe
'10109' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBH' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
ba9636318d8aa30ec881fab3e231f105
6c296073158243b765b0dbbb46142b2697896971
describe
'1084083' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBI' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
af8c94440fa4e95b302209efe5c75691
f123b6b18824c25751b213e285962c00e967a27e
describe
'104512' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBJ' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
2a186a6ee90e5b3105062deced6b4b19
88234b41a18f9c171836fbf75315c77aaafefe24
describe
'48225' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBK' 'sip-files00073.pro'
ee2115b6e63032001e2af51dae28f429
e98c4491c889d645eb81118868cb4175888bd6fc
describe
'36361' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBL' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
a07367f1f0faba18ca4078f24a62bae7
e18904c8177072907b942f8bd98a245552b81a74
'2011-11-14T23:29:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBM' 'sip-files00073.tif'
9b55542a84d98c2373b88022b5705a23
aad64b0e87933f2bbcdb49ae628f87e5e66e0533
describe
'2021' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBN' 'sip-files00073.txt'
e7610108bbb764ca9d419b9898d61979
ee7f956dd5acfe7cc87a4260d94c26b2cacf3479
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBO' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
301851f5b42499066f5106aee211a6f2
b3b04c9684c3b876d895571be5b7d8c8463ca76e
'2011-11-14T23:35:07-05:00'
describe
'1094530' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBP' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
f6982fd715455aefb88fafe0a17ba6bf
e2f1ed199b5a3e9219267a89a041b5c152c91e4f
describe
'87030' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBQ' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
aa879ac1863c6ac1ea343ba626dc3100
855d9e31309a379935ffdee81c0ac94b9be0f305
describe
'36595' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBR' 'sip-files00074.pro'
ba6b37fc0e06bb1993f6cf0d565e315a
2053687949ed8dace5ae66e0b9bc00d03a69d1f6
describe
'30236' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBS' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
411c0dffd9a22b92fe0929def99cf6b3
b375358ba216817226a83b6b9a987c5a9e9152cc
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBT' 'sip-files00074.tif'
40f008a656d841605fedf14ef3927c8d
a3afd58c2a9de8efe2cf156c42503da7b9dc50e5
describe
'1598' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBU' 'sip-files00074.txt'
e06d72ae4285caa5f1a66a4cd0890f67
4f1e11b48724ff9b285ff85a2a9cdb5ce229c214
describe
'8522' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBV' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
ad6536f356c7781c998bea2b0662b31a
3bdb7c074c14f7d139ba6e08b9a3e5729c25048e
describe
'1084077' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBW' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
c3214afa4a22c706b1e866e54f485483
a731c7a78020b7fb4fe377e20289b0d83b436116
'2011-11-14T23:32:56-05:00'
describe
'100737' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBX' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
5e9dde4fb53fd6a41109b66b1b255db5
8f7e5d35fec150f83af44ee4c1cad108085a1da7
describe
'46207' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBY' 'sip-files00075.pro'
19175dfd5bdc65df5411f56735088274
135ca1d4d667bb76637823f6b60d413bc35cc3a0
'2011-11-14T23:34:58-05:00'
describe
'35218' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACBZ' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
6cb0f940f1cdf009fa63992bf6e404a5
0633be88ad2ac46b29c9d25ba406a4b1d892a33b
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCA' 'sip-files00075.tif'
4397e5fbb9f54e1ada343c49aa22db7d
8ff7d10fea25ec5e7be5d2876e65f15410110291
'2011-11-14T23:33:46-05:00'
describe
'1950' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCB' 'sip-files00075.txt'
ee188d4f7a9b112ecceeeb5b3c13158e
72105c85049687600b6b6c459c7455a27c5f38da
describe
'9853' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCC' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
516f5ae3c11732fc2957841c1ca9782e
d2eeccf1a11058f79825c2206fa1a25bb7390326
'2011-11-14T23:32:22-05:00'
describe
'1094581' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCD' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
f0b8774f2c7a45d3cf2a4afe3cfaa0fe
ae0026824bd6d4d97740792a8e829b2c20ad3580
describe
'105955' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCE' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
cb28c04bdfde9ce80d7dc8bda9e25991
bf1654d76ba9857961022ae567859928acb9ee32
describe
'48212' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCF' 'sip-files00076.pro'
5af66f034f56af41f32af2f70053fc5e
d5f210070fd411e20694030bd09c32b3411791df
describe
'36805' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCG' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
738634c53c4c084b0cf0f092d19c7646
8042ec72dd097e7c388cf0f84328eacfb19f9b43
'2011-11-14T23:31:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCH' 'sip-files00076.tif'
6d81efe803f858eaabacca549dd08df8
a7051d7f7cdd38957c42d222f88f59bc0e83f53d
describe
'2059' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCI' 'sip-files00076.txt'
eab5b42e304eb05392e3c890ec080d7d
62ecca0d8f904cd00ea920dbb7df7a2d180c4370
describe
'9918' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCJ' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
f77e06676f3c6e0c32d96e180a367a3a
17ce9009a848afdf345f13a55612e8057819dc22
describe
'1084085' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCK' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
41202136747425fc9689d81ff3b76210
325e9a53b2ac7fd69b3a5ca7a4dc0c6ad6f147e5
describe
'100647' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCL' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
16aa84bfa211bbc34e6b456aae13264a
eb3ed00c2a028542a56b3aeb7d39e4b65bb65b7a
describe
'47365' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCM' 'sip-files00077.pro'
119e4fe93e9d7e9d4bd8aa6b849d16b5
97aaa2c4abe3cce6db95ce8211d3e3196dd79858
describe
'35524' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCN' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
a3e0fa6211fd05692b9e43aa071d1d6c
53e5155c3a02a41381473433f440a456678d321d
'2011-11-14T23:34:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCO' 'sip-files00077.tif'
aea9397bf3e44066b230736d319a8ca3
082e8da82e1c93b9f497b871acf90d8259fe5d0c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCP' 'sip-files00077.txt'
1f4f7b93b72b566c5a681f634c3f13c7
afb78a2043c7cee3c7d2a543c7b93050837d5100
'2011-11-14T23:35:35-05:00'
describe
'10135' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCQ' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
64fe3b1707c6c219674cf936677e6949
70d93a8b6209cffea57067f94b02bac6c2ab6092
'2011-11-14T23:34:12-05:00'
describe
'1094557' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCR' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
1489db82c3088685f71d43201f9171aa
f6facf2611f8a79088a68c8d8d887526f66fd64e
'2011-11-14T23:35:11-05:00'
describe
'102408' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCS' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
ee5e58c2384bbe5fd6214f083bab9c17
557f8110cadda39c62565aa7a3b698abed973407
describe
'48629' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCT' 'sip-files00078.pro'
1334e8d36e67633ccf9ac730e5b5a366
cf69d5db5467c813c2051450ba17c67e3ad833aa
describe
'36264' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCU' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
b9d47dd907281252e0e7ee6cfa57a1cc
4bb77af35aea19eb1eb1a752662bd30ddbf7fac6
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCV' 'sip-files00078.tif'
39a4082db910d0e1724f7554d3d20b3b
06f6965f330539632d8819bd67d59e7694292f2c
describe
'2032' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCW' 'sip-files00078.txt'
cf20cd4123158c6f82c09658c4960b2a
10cbb463617244ee66263ed18163537dd43e404a
describe
'9701' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCX' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
c3166f4b6f73d814c5dcfecc28cbfc8c
c8aec506b7ac1698d553864ef5d8abbdade8dcb3
describe
'1084079' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCY' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
1f9bebd8e2bb15ae21dfd4a52fa5bd97
e22f9dd1775ee07407a8addb21453f226d09cab9
describe
'101267' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACCZ' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
1c55e86fff498c42c527080cf87a90b9
474eba3e5a665812109442b14246362bb34f3a52
describe
'47798' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDA' 'sip-files00079.pro'
88369280ec996434a47d1eac9350afa6
8ec3285327eb0295a8233675d700987c544aa198
'2011-11-14T23:35:00-05:00'
describe
'35338' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDB' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
38024bfe60596666362098ed1eb80aba
cc6242569af6ed49e0f179cd2e1f80e16e4627ef
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDC' 'sip-files00079.tif'
5d29186a461bcf7e7840eaaf9289ace9
2b0c5d7935b7f50a6dd717fc210a8df95844a094
'2011-11-14T23:30:57-05:00'
describe
'1979' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDD' 'sip-files00079.txt'
3ce6c2579cadef95f4aabcd91d748e6c
4a0b07644608ce490c67fa9b8d1726b30c24afd5
describe
'10058' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDE' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
43ffb60e4d24ca1d826c2d1b2596382e
5277186e98a09aaf353099b6c883176694682fc9
describe
'1094560' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDF' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
68a7a65c46a941682ce53dd845754061
f508e1674ea4a9f1d399c375514d988d36db4ebe
describe
'100586' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDG' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
194a326643c16957f20115bf9e7d087f
63691d7f350ccd6979deac3c1991cbe0fb35b7ad
describe
'47527' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDH' 'sip-files00080.pro'
8d30cea0c95ed41ce876ee55526574bf
eb53bb89842a402a6062732517d4bf42b03df267
describe
'35251' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDI' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
cb554404afa56d31f228da1eb71c5777
6fc2064b2e502d036926953c45176110ac6b254e
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDJ' 'sip-files00080.tif'
333c92d5785b766dbc63bae2edcc8626
f177a976af752073ca01dd049ae5a7a614ece947
'2011-11-14T23:34:16-05:00'
describe
'2011' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDK' 'sip-files00080.txt'
8a13a90792443f576f6400fc07efd407
2fdfce8d80f18fc0e8df7980b5ddfc5dc902e33e
'2011-11-14T23:33:40-05:00'
describe
'9471' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDL' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
c3379614d38b9194dd7cb377d5760b4d
2f55b3b444794a6ae560f6515a17c92c039dbf3a
'2011-11-14T23:30:21-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDM' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
56dcb0671f3e4307e3782c79ba5e2cf5
ddb2313c546d6501d07d17a1ed99ab4449a8ff80
describe
'106900' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDN' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
395f883508cf40578448ceefc287cbff
e04c6378e1b515495167752e2b732ea8c2a49f21
describe
'52227' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDO' 'sip-files00081.pro'
9ffb7ca96b6d3433565f3a4d7dda007c
099d13eb750065926b2244b227e21360045a0c42
'2011-11-14T23:34:17-05:00'
describe
'37263' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDP' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
1eaecb0d8462818ba6cb137fa729ec43
cf5c377c5245335c42e9d2994089d54bd1e5870b
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDQ' 'sip-files00081.tif'
80e3bdf6cb24310c9d61466a29f26e48
b71085f1df6c434b64fa9dd916d0161178571904
describe
'2169' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDR' 'sip-files00081.txt'
cf423820c62af982a2e95ed8a7ff3aa9
9310c5df561b5cb0b2dab2895cf233017f7063e8
describe
'10059' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDS' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
11013c7a32d36e12cac30fec3f5a6bc1
60e6d34c12b38df1a4ede8a065faf745f2ea6bfb
describe
'1094576' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDT' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
d23091d125740bd85ab807eba900394d
05f65fd3b800d179347a93af6bd6e1f0ff51a493
describe
'104822' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDU' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
972d04c9f318336b551507a9556321db
fbc7b9aee53fc0acd09ad961046910af2fe00a70
describe
'49890' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDV' 'sip-files00082.pro'
9f93d382cf0647d9ec76705ccad740c3
0cbce8a73e77b2918993098d7c4b8d9ea783aabd
'2011-11-14T23:30:35-05:00'
describe
'35988' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDW' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
94dfc8197fbfce1e9181fb31a5cf9204
200d37eaea9a7ad0ec1cbc75f0a55538ef18dcb0
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDX' 'sip-files00082.tif'
7c2982715143461398656111df92e4b8
3448145531b24d67eabf07c9deba42c68efadeb6
'2011-11-14T23:35:41-05:00'
describe
'2062' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDY' 'sip-files00082.txt'
bbe6015b4c58d260360604be2d301c99
3dc1c8fd85b830c8df877b930438a2c5b0ff0075
describe
'9816' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACDZ' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
1b66245f53ea496eede3f93feb8908c5
ae8665b1851436734266aa71b00190ca2fa3fd2b
describe
'1084071' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEA' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
bbad1437af4790fd823e2e55c6c6c728
ffc16338d474e1d5990274846cb138dc03ef6455
'2011-11-14T23:32:26-05:00'
describe
'84714' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEB' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
16c61ceaeaad319189974d352807893e
a3cdc72510035b49b4905c4770f2c1c3b2a17dd5
describe
'38375' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEC' 'sip-files00083.pro'
41622ee698ec56faa4afbba5d5c62eef
5aad5bbb4daee9b92a838764c08693521984a930
describe
'29957' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACED' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
395fc0dda01a9a4083861ceadc95199f
6708c7685b7a636c242314b531b5a91685456f29
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEE' 'sip-files00083.tif'
4fbc5974160bb3e9bc23f6f31b831b5b
6770ee27d3594c00fd08a6f259cfcc2244fbb474
describe
'1646' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEF' 'sip-files00083.txt'
bff5fd4b4395f815a45ce6c56c4a7848
fd07ed98c907c5b02b3fd1134e0753b571083f72
describe
'8716' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEG' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
203e25a23ff67e0ac35c1176ba5e0397
aef4a50307d35679cbcebc221d9da44bebcd33f2
describe
'1094573' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEH' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
a080300d9f4df0c888832c82d89c17c9
5ab7cc31e07a60f0aaa03497c47696521009862c
describe
'102931' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEI' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
edc89a2bc91d90cb20c3b6e42973fb0f
4b9ebf9655d8e2af4e83e2652b0269642dc7c942
describe
'48530' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEJ' 'sip-files00084.pro'
44228bae730d188ad4c48d95151e5efd
0927b45612dc571332651803736204aa55519e57
describe
'35858' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEK' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
178b5bfcb4ff9141f6c5b917812c1622
8ad47fae3824b27be863cfddec62c68237f54822
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEL' 'sip-files00084.tif'
924b4f8040f6e5e72252bc69e9cfd37b
afaaba83e94ebec92588673b992cc11170f33585
'2011-11-14T23:31:12-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEM' 'sip-files00084.txt'
17ab24e8df8db63a2ae4d76362012146
41ab918b30ca55c0ba2d345e1f311a261bc13837
describe
'9943' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEN' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
2155aba273273d295bd47edd0ad8d55a
ac655f05dd92bd141913ef9a0ad7acef3da8ebb7
describe
'1084073' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEO' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
741fac0d402efdc44916decd9b63f72b
40960832ce2b8b9a2a91391e40bb372c3c1bbe48
describe
'105595' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEP' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
8d745c9c00b00c38f89caa7d0722c73b
1f0314b300e525e3b5cad6f0e23dbf8d3968c1ee
describe
'50295' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEQ' 'sip-files00085.pro'
5612e730b88044c086cec4c3ba5db3c9
aedacb20e1b163c79e308c0368c17908f7ab9eb1
describe
'37043' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACER' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
699cc764063dd0978e49c818764e636e
4858392c54ba10b8971ff42ec4e7496140873c3c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACES' 'sip-files00085.tif'
711b162fca6121c2323b70bc91928f6e
91b92d4aa65173039b79f2dd6d9b446aed263976
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACET' 'sip-files00085.txt'
d2f53834e54de4d2bcbb3ffab170bd1b
238b09416f61056ad75def4f927bf299aab17eb9
describe
'10171' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEU' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
311fc76c448849bc0c7025c3b70e2808
c0233b9f74af26f6be8fb007caab8d0e828a5df2
describe
'1094566' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEV' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
71c1419306892d9dd988f935b409959e
b63639b80379adff31687e5fbbfa5ff049d3fe8b
describe
'99088' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEW' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
7dc79ba10be8866bd1fd01be7063a617
c9c8a2b41c1d9226ed80d83d75e11ffee7e0bbac
describe
'46121' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEX' 'sip-files00086.pro'
f9424c5797a613adcb0c159eed0a540a
2eb3f931b74e9006bb13766be86c29756f92ee9f
describe
'34679' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEY' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
4d495e3465f8f9701ad8b2924c13fcf8
06e5fbd655cfc7dbed7a7a76749de601654ca26f
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACEZ' 'sip-files00086.tif'
49c496a88e34031963ad76b2bdb35507
2a4ee30e31988b07a69729bc4a64a3eb76c2b71b
describe
'1922' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFA' 'sip-files00086.txt'
733f35fde9247edc3d694c0d4f516888
a2612a5b87dcb55812308d783577108910d543c0
describe
'9366' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFB' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
798d9d4c5271f09123b0b7b5da6eba6c
d312ad9b77a2685d946a6be64ad293a49c1ee86f
describe
'1084051' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFC' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
27f5ae8d8d206e10b65c8b6b602c18bd
56434abf778be632cb37df866bc4a76a790f5858
describe
'102861' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFD' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
9bd8bb33fd8c8dec9b53780686aba7c2
c87ae3d4a97394e812032144faf430f490fffa3a
'2011-11-14T23:33:55-05:00'
describe
'48927' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFE' 'sip-files00087.pro'
b312dff743667df87c894dd57f384868
65ab4b9382a6eaba91b4cb9ff85748a1066faa0b
describe
'36172' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFF' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
a0f6de31c373b8131212e20d8e25e71a
af6d8c569f956ff6c7bde19fbc1ab7cd6ebf1b81
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFG' 'sip-files00087.tif'
81b565f256485535a805b974d1d922ec
cec326e6395d859133ae63dcab86a41ab87404bc
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFH' 'sip-files00087.txt'
6ec9f534db6efbfad140cab14386c9ba
833e66e7a3eb6c82709e3cd0c8a0fe13a20043e9
describe
'10141' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFI' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
5b990b7c9e0e85f0c0d149f840af2c06
ff93fe840efa83d41f7baf49aa50e688e54e4da1
'2011-11-14T23:32:09-05:00'
describe
'1094579' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFJ' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
34356de4edb0c06f1feaf1b7b665de8a
5c8432f1ac279a4ae6a3c75297ed3c23210560ba
'2011-11-14T23:35:09-05:00'
describe
'96973' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFK' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
0c753583ea932a06fdbf9a39b85b53bd
e017e2715fff19f9aaa3b82d58b6631a3fb20349
'2011-11-14T23:34:42-05:00'
describe
'45206' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFL' 'sip-files00088.pro'
c6ff9eb268dbe5b6c5e40125728b829d
c5c1c3cbdc480855dcec233a31438076560ef044
describe
'33655' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFM' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
ea42711eba63875a2a534315b944af13
4fe5ab526e943c22c7a303795c858e23340933a3
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFN' 'sip-files00088.tif'
168cbdf0bbbf1b73af6142c535148910
e609a9fe5e2e221fbfc7d4db3c3c4eedfe9b8518
'2011-11-14T23:31:23-05:00'
describe
'1951' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFO' 'sip-files00088.txt'
eccfa086ea253fdd136e8bb88f334a83
2680fd10a35a3cbe35e93befdbdbdb01f0531941
describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'9375' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFP' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
8d9794338927572a609abc08cc53ce98
616d334bb3140b4ca97e346974bff88a32bca02b
describe
'1084067' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFQ' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
7928816f4420b0505793f6ae9cd1337b
aa5f175c889e55d29a9290d7a7ab85373bbe2f18
describe
'99556' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFR' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
849222cd80b32faa56f9ee7a986e46ee
3fabe923c10d9b40c39172e12edd22cb2fc5ce0f
describe
'47338' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFS' 'sip-files00089.pro'
1625dc2748ebc2a68b51d8a506a24dfd
097c0e3125087995fd50f66212b8affea7101007
describe
'35021' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFT' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
3169e1fad8cd625137e4a33f081710ef
20cad05b6ae20a01199b28fc79caafd5e04750af
'2011-11-14T23:32:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFU' 'sip-files00089.tif'
3160189e3da3d4c130de82bbefb81a36
7091c82951c3acf7a83aed02273eaf91f59a3bc3
'2011-11-14T23:30:55-05:00'
describe
'2030' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFV' 'sip-files00089.txt'
eb1cd2d7ff7c1a92a9eb7f1e1289e094
fa71c95ed3e15e2aa584a362d5ee31121b0cc84b
describe
'10028' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFW' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
0fd844989124a59ed1fc6225958d0ace
e65102f7050d68656b8af0077772a4023fcca140
describe
'1094582' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFX' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
fb83584ac1723e80f3a2dd5810e812fe
644a5146a996ff0c719b9bf166af9e00abc69763
describe
'99851' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFY' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
eef9acb4227812e9f7f87424129e4883
6c7611585a4025258a31f52ce21e516000e211ae
describe
'46417' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACFZ' 'sip-files00090.pro'
e0eaa76197043b30c6c7f34c1cf9f9f2
e024a210aeb5fbdcf932256a179bdf56af403001
describe
'35214' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGA' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
a111cde65e5e6e91f1cf3d6d08713784
869fa9c715b1d1f25a460bfec4d18ea6f7f8d204
'2011-11-14T23:31:41-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGB' 'sip-files00090.tif'
57e739dcfcab2bfeff73492dce5fdd2c
58135a8f232ad532c05b8a1f33aa42bff8bc14ff
describe
'1949' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGC' 'sip-files00090.txt'
fa3e48728747aabaa93ffffbe5abff5a
d2e5ee85b43275c6c030ebac322efd63d059629e
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGD' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
8205cd270b9de755062ea2caeaf936dd
11ebfceb3da7a3aaed96473a660cd1a40175f376
describe
'1145557' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGE' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
5be9d1a991aaa51b9cb065b1a65bd0d0
85973e9ff1edea5f491959149346bc81985a2553
describe
'95839' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGF' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
70bd86d47bc3f7204f964ac51ae4958b
2af4aafe0276ef108c4fcd7361d7aeb5629e79c2
describe
'46797' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGG' 'sip-files00091.pro'
3334b2e13cd82b1c9887245444976310
3d04430b77f396aebf85d8053385d0bc90188b5d
describe
'33924' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGH' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
b4048359c1fcab9240e961d0b939ab9b
4bd3e13956226702a923760a679a49749bc7a915
describe
'9174925' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGI' 'sip-files00091.tif'
745e878d20e5b373757b2a669d15db1d
03490ae68d386b63b4e66691a7b0c0f0607e7d23
describe
'1977' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGJ' 'sip-files00091.txt'
d82247d27c95be782836749acc388777
343dacec90c0f957e7457e77187268e415db0ee6
describe
'9448' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGK' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
a4488deda8d94ed656acad8c2bbeb006
e6ad2a4962327e192a7c5b77deaf44d673f26857
describe
'1103100' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGL' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
bcbfb0446191c91ff303b84c774fc378
be58b15835cca2a09ae71ab8ce862a6819fc0964
describe
'106807' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGM' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
04b5ee89f0fd7ba3710bf6abc1f07110
284356e32989c75dc5e505c59b00cc828b63c849
describe
'51280' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGN' 'sip-files00092.pro'
e6fde52f2399ed2b3e39e19db956850b
1c4edf307031073d23ed653f289e2d5830aa9f8d
describe
'36941' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGO' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
d16937a35fa4a269e004753fedb688e7
de20c0bc2e7e17c3f231b51ad51346feef80c2bf
'2011-11-14T23:32:25-05:00'
describe
'8834785' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGP' 'sip-files00092.tif'
a9240d21e1ae051d82c8f9b3d465ed23
1a8cc191069f184f7a04cc6ee5473a315273e84a
describe
'2145' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGQ' 'sip-files00092.txt'
1b7fff50b85770695ea3aadbf94364ae
cb6cb62e6a43fd5351b527a8515e3a656a55b09b
'2011-11-14T23:30:34-05:00'
describe
'9978' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGR' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
3ccd628e36abef414476ccd7c8e96f66
7fdc46fa7f7eb229d9de1a1e1f644c7875d6859c
describe
'1145527' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGS' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
cabf6bb8046d6dc1187455391ec3b9f1
2a7ec7e4d938035e78cc86705e271adb9a0267ae
describe
'86650' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGT' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
6a0546ee932464f4997cb31b32169cbf
18074fc5d441b34b7167871d8c35a421dea60ae1
describe
'41088' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGU' 'sip-files00093.pro'
175d3cf73d8165cc6318aee8185d588a
f87ab4bca3aa9a375d65b239f5f8370b0e90fd22
describe
'29964' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGV' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
e34eca04747741c812e996931a71a6c5
8b1bfff3014e294529773846ce624fbe571cb65c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGW' 'sip-files00093.tif'
bd60909b86576b91e6ef96c9e279fae0
7423dea4f960d6ae012752d0e919f74edc852898
'2011-11-14T23:35:23-05:00'
describe
'1766' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGX' 'sip-files00093.txt'
53f8c5289dd41b02ee476f78a57b1f3e
3b0ea13fc8d863377be6a70d950bba6884634bba
'2011-11-14T23:33:05-05:00'
describe
'8435' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGY' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
2c99372a4d8e71f4c352c4425ef06721
f6eabfddcd699856b4a7830c5fb13307ad1cc322
describe
'1103055' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACGZ' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
43a6d5b285b249ba74aa0561e4e51dc8
42ec948c7e775613eac631161a23b6dbf15470bd
describe
'104865' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHA' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
ba6901f50c56eeae56584c1db20480c7
85759221d595e4e2cedd432178830c7582657d27
describe
'49575' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHB' 'sip-files00094.pro'
a4c553e61749c36dfe8aaed53c5bbd19
a339c4c990816fe99d6ab88fc64f6ef17d65b695
describe
'36265' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHC' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
6f375f627fb2efc4c3d2b32eb3b6be9b
293a1f2c4559d305a6c926053968a92653f4a94d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHD' 'sip-files00094.tif'
1f1ac6c111e9f6b30c611aaef8b67792
a19663cb92852cce6cf390e4249b8ba9d67cb3b0
describe
'2058' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHE' 'sip-files00094.txt'
e834f2cba4fff236dfe61977750f5f4a
85b82049429a9a38e9ea098d799886da05c66e91
describe
'9805' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHF' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
06143c24dedc06d8dabf814cfb6cb97f
4816e7d2197748e4dfb41261aa7032c56d9877b1
describe
'1145592' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHG' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
27193dcf415f4e6f654b0fe0320f1c29
5213c73a61f15298cecffd1d9f85a371c0719dd5
describe
'103214' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHH' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
d8a2401b400d30d9b46abe3b3fe431a9
73174f8554fc7578b493b7de73e6902517d62c25
describe
'50029' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHI' 'sip-files00095.pro'
9c8ac8847de14290d539ad36d49440fe
eba992452c7d0483727d9390dad757849c9bc757
describe
'35612' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHJ' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
2fd6ef2efb13a30ffa35eb370af6e169
abe31a50f3ba8fc82f3f2071f119e6c85d7e6209
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHK' 'sip-files00095.tif'
86b488ab824bc825fc29bb20529bb72e
fc6f1d36e9342bf4c06c1478dde9f8d88683a4e7
'2011-11-14T23:35:19-05:00'
describe
'2081' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHL' 'sip-files00095.txt'
6bbb49fc1d6643e6cd1892d4fe4d41ba
6608d3345af0aca7d657679b5fd27b086cd2a23e
'2011-11-14T23:35:03-05:00'
describe
'9801' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHM' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
daa1e24837f80c3dd4d9dabe1b02bbb8
7fb4d8d67f9634df096a9d024e3d24db993e6d32
describe
'1103105' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHN' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
d5430de64fd850806ea0015a302b1e88
cd63c9c042673d8f25d4fbb65942871a5ed695ad
describe
'102602' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHO' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
37b5788733b533bc7ed174e07a5cda88
d1c0432a069ab8b28a88544564253036d3ddb7f0
describe
'48087' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHP' 'sip-files00096.pro'
b42f952a6d39e379787f4230f5261e96
06449d007bb9941118dc3aa3cf743ff200bf7136
describe
'35846' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHQ' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
9b28c5c552558a685cb8ee42bf5904a6
1f37b29fd5b32b92d379dc7b2b02ee3919a5f36d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHR' 'sip-files00096.tif'
7a7ffa0b1f0f5d79e588e78da738b6cf
1bdf1af6b80c1d15f60b690b38ad626d0309da45
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHS' 'sip-files00096.txt'
bd17c47568d8356ea4d17d4ec3dbcc4e
6af018b02818506559ac2338fbedc6b5cf54d885
describe
'9620' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHT' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
c510a47f50fe18c65750284b93a4c2ee
24b654895eb68e0416afe0b76e5f0b37530aa979
describe
'1145576' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHU' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
515bc36478f2eaaa49d225b0cab83c7d
8afd5721fbc0a31a005a78cd60414866d0e19897
describe
'104509' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHV' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
fa81c5dd3895fbae257d294e0834dde8
973212356cc3267c2baeb8492665a3e22a6955b5
describe
'51035' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHW' 'sip-files00097.pro'
2b9bc6b25fc0e5a76742b84b34c62729
a8f03b049627e302f98497b93638d9ad30e3b077
'2011-11-14T23:33:28-05:00'
describe
'35454' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHX' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
d81240053b0e9f0476d48ce4038afc84
d092df0a7c449e9ede8abe0a21d92043b1f97a4f
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHY' 'sip-files00097.tif'
4835d8e0a8a72373a11184bcd630e7d7
a4bdf1148ceaf7f4ea8a0e10447568d696c3a6d5
'2011-11-14T23:35:27-05:00'
describe
'2094' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACHZ' 'sip-files00097.txt'
2891575335ca58ddc508e1fdf6ec636b
56d6558e399f9edf7c9799748c78c077a4069d48
describe
'9693' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIA' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
989452a2327738b4e8d622da5471afdb
0630a0c0b60ca6f3a4d1cf4c2b4f32ae25440695
'2011-11-14T23:34:22-05:00'
describe
'1103021' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIB' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
fdb364eb8fed03f3605fb302aac1c689
2fcf2e083d4140598fca55dc1847b6fcde787aaf
describe
'87508' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIC' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
a7394b6a9e91e1aad58b6c5c30820d8e
235fd73e3329770f2c1c41e432f38031e81bcc21
describe
'39847' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACID' 'sip-files00098.pro'
241819e418b7656ddfec3c423781f716
816cd52b5214cb4fce7b1782341a5e07c50b7d06
describe
'30302' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIE' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
69f27e5488dba50cadd9441b5517bf77
a990c540e6d63ebb2b6bb69108ebd6a41095b162
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIF' 'sip-files00098.tif'
4039a5f573c72520ef574d1d88fae9ae
920c1f353e4af49520af69d8f2d10682f24b1d95
describe
'1711' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIG' 'sip-files00098.txt'
e14052b20b2cdd3f15bc5a755c5028a1
5857b5cb501a3d28de46d878d3a637b518c7da31
describe
'8301' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIH' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
c8346083ac5f99030a53863fca32828b
95d9876917f9ed8559916d8f3db0a0038d0b90ee
describe
'1145479' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACII' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
4d1b3416a9238e4edc39aac3ee102e28
f053f939deec8b5d9d396adad4cebcaafec27465
describe
'104595' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIJ' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
9183d8d59a6b734898237d897c6a2e3e
09a4e6c5720d3dccc16a6dbdfbedcd9d699b8c4f
describe
'50880' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIK' 'sip-files00099.pro'
25a075e9c3c24f3ac4621154da4001e7
148682d28b79ebafea2dadfa5f65db905209869f
'2011-11-14T23:35:12-05:00'
describe
'35963' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIL' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
31f14b0703f35a914381df1a7aec7728
f355d06bc348b328f38e5c09fa04b974136e021c
'2011-11-14T23:31:21-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIM' 'sip-files00099.tif'
649197c746fe7a84b493711b4a7811ce
01fef3483c73690b14246b818fd3a64c0d38fb54
describe
'2091' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIN' 'sip-files00099.txt'
582f81d4749a9ec505d793b2546a4a48
41105753b9b0620be72d28f01ed52b57d94e44bc
'2011-11-14T23:35:25-05:00'
describe
'9844' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIO' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
0ba2a1af07171bab66cb30757a801808
fa43acf05b5f0bd6be3bfb49607ab8642028cf92
describe
'1103102' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIP' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
e1966f9717b7b15d0492e253c91e66a9
4eed98218b94b4f2630d4fe322c2c741300796dd
describe
'104812' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIQ' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
ac37d1fa20c31cc115f9393a1c26a91f
b58a03a6e98b6a49b5fca112c37939ac4b59365b
describe
'49412' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIR' 'sip-files00100.pro'
1cbaec74042b75ef3fff46b408917661
1967693311f1bf73f52b411d00046767a8979ddf
describe
'36162' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIS' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
a8d68b39ca24481f1775800e314060ad
35b9b3802b9507b2e6b81439ff954da54766a72c
'2011-11-14T23:34:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIT' 'sip-files00100.tif'
e62585c569df1d63716a7b258c239696
2cfbe4acb197f60e140815f3b208da4662e60533
'2011-11-14T23:32:01-05:00'
describe
'2053' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIU' 'sip-files00100.txt'
4e9d7ca01d9bb80118dc6c567a63aae4
f0d278844dbab1ca429272375023ac290d4f9cc0
describe
'9711' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIV' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
cd3cb3df116c110eadd9bef90f8342c0
331479b5ce7911a69412bcb48aefa49ee1b921d4
describe
'1145516' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIW' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
26776b8d9fc8e33cdbb4df220a69cc4c
985012723a6f8d466bb152c30a9f2782db2ae44a
describe
'101538' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIX' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
7a4135c423db2f467f08fd248255187e
944cdadaea3dc037f66bf8029cc2f4f6ba434cae
describe
'48865' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIY' 'sip-files00101.pro'
68b089b0bf8cf06d9b0d64dce525df11
1f48bbcecb42dd9b40df340e08fa44342487864b
describe
'34580' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACIZ' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
0e536e64ad383c0474a6369a5bb5c7ce
b05abad147a2effc8394af86c437aad1ce5990de
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJA' 'sip-files00101.tif'
6156ae243920b0cd75a45b7f4fafc455
757992c819526970c58645649b72f6c4915a4261
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJB' 'sip-files00101.txt'
ca07e93a3aac50098d0facc70a7382c7
cbe62580a20c3550b99b04df1501f69dca4e36fc
describe
'9557' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJC' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
f90d60e82bd5f56f3b905409ef188beb
c0ea5e9a23c5f182c16dc868ce98a04695279d4c
describe
'1103084' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJD' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
bcab56f7e23bd32bfded782633d6b09e
781b03592777723c0cc66fc14e18f3218c37644f
describe
'105082' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJE' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
5dece26f0b7cff59ab2059a75cd82f2a
f40c73a576cdf484580a8614345f9b9d0f7be4a1
describe
'49812' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJF' 'sip-files00102.pro'
5bb00e7565beb2d1209d09ec703f4882
fbadb738fb862a8070f1acd8fde04a9cc2964ff4
'2011-11-14T23:35:43-05:00'
describe
'36305' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJG' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
ce2dcdbb2a3080aac4fabded50057944
47cc66a21580770f3c7720e3e97af9db08d914f6
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJH' 'sip-files00102.tif'
3fb2ebc02160780a934c55479377b34e
6d75e54e44a9cedae64ee5cd2f937908ef74e8c0
describe
'2065' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJI' 'sip-files00102.txt'
246fba47c4f629ef47fc5059003e7712
bf7cc5775cb986bb5319356d9b6b97bb59cbf4b4
describe
'9457' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJJ' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
75f6b09a32c81a1c0156f9e2da8d844b
4721f5a636907f219b59a7fa70ec59dbe4b08b89
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJK' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
633b64eaa1d74e3b46235cf9f475643f
b383aff06ecf2eff995a78391aa453159f108fa5
describe
'99545' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJL' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
f774d9983f76ee0f9beec3db220e1257
7d609421b9727116fd9856440244e5553d44a5ea
describe
'48968' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJM' 'sip-files00103.pro'
bad345093a45024e63640cd087be6c1d
b42374a691d9fae61c3380806fbb9b5ae1c33301
describe
'34460' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJN' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
277d0cbbabecf42829c7e6fe0584cf4f
b072866a6072d4a9362fd7fcac7c76f835d1b666
'2011-11-14T23:35:45-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJO' 'sip-files00103.tif'
4e0727171387256831d5f1c6d7934533
61aadef1bf6ddaea3d45d2698312cb5cc37baf6c
describe
'2060' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJP' 'sip-files00103.txt'
bc2ed41399fa88dab25ee8491702ac64
7cf22b7e14eb2ffe50f8c409df68d436cec808f9
describe
'9599' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJQ' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
05b093c80ee5f650d7cb7fd1976a6c54
01d8b871ffb2e6756c5eff8dbfbfd5b25280b8ca
describe
'1103104' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJR' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
64d6bbb644302d2692567760c0bcf492
8da636933030084f4d69dd897b4123b9073dca92
describe
'96899' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJS' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
99f38691e9e8859d5315dd29dbad237c
8cdf4e8f2f7c19d9ecc10193fe90d400926ce3f2
describe
'45495' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJT' 'sip-files00104.pro'
aea94a1b9b62d184fd94b2e274e20669
6fecbfa814bc8c8ed05acbd32efe193a02879dcf
describe
'33959' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJU' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
398d40db20e891735f7d152ac06750d9
caae83b4c095f069a39f9ff9361ed5f5a1da23c1
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJV' 'sip-files00104.tif'
47abf60bf52997c01e079f45be6abf47
54c47ed796875c44a868a1e5e264ee292e65c111
describe
'1932' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJW' 'sip-files00104.txt'
29cbd426d693e718a5917da461f3ab54
0e37d8119271f81061add9c09697847bedb5f5eb
describe
'9365' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJX' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
c3f1f21bc12f8c739d8d2a99807c4bc8
59bf54cb5fde75263e0a43886bb2ec4bda6952c2
describe
'1145604' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJY' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
015c401436432adb86c5123acc184a04
861739326c097df78cf26893bd103b46b9dda399
describe
'95427' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACJZ' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
57aec9ded742bf460c605c2fbf6eaac4
552e221bd2b4736b93f91429df11d3aa65e4a63e
describe
'45757' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKA' 'sip-files00105.pro'
c5a5cb4b60cd2ab553133ca7eb3dde2e
6b7406315e5830e433e3a7b9c940ca92fe6e4d43
describe
'32319' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKB' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
31ac34b70ee37a6ade416b7189b25462
92f90feba87a34d777503cbecd3a705707ec3f8e
'2011-11-14T23:35:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKC' 'sip-files00105.tif'
7840268893546243b98cab4d3da70cb2
6db504a998f40b412a880706a1252a6184e7cfca
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKD' 'sip-files00105.txt'
7773173fbaeea32b3f0eaa2b45bab954
a9f2a515c26bb034ad4cd70837e5051125453a0a
describe
'8680' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKE' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
3c8872ebf603e5a60c955b7332cd896d
b18fb3f49df70ec241bf75b88f1876f01b57c359
describe
'1103080' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKF' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
b98fd72578caa0519a40f3520dbc7fea
2ee28ae0ed071f18629f0c3cb9beb7e28b62a0d7
describe
'93638' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKG' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
5a6bc707f7e2ad098d926be1950c2644
a7bf471b765703c2d02006c9559000ab6b8f3dc6
describe
'42983' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKH' 'sip-files00106.pro'
7b6a562c105c6ad7c0ff710b1eff3e46
1610061f8ccb70c1fe7b655541a13ab7c476c7e8
describe
'32179' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKI' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
85125cd38106cedfa9b4eadbddad50f1
483a9a0f66e6e720651a2c9aa71899baee4c66ae
'2011-11-14T23:33:10-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKJ' 'sip-files00106.tif'
94be0b5f48ab56165958b25a21125bf6
1e053fa2d59a0b816d78dcabe32af267197cd862
'2011-11-14T23:33:36-05:00'
describe
'1821' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKK' 'sip-files00106.txt'
1f3850e382e71579bb7d2dc54eff93a4
83a6ebf822925425e47130024af4fe0a3b9caa7e
describe
'8707' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKL' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
15ca5059cfd00d40dbf29854f869f0e9
7b0a8be242c598e9e9f573a6205593adafe07f3e
describe
'1145577' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKM' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
2eb467cad0e36a24cce050c3cccc1fef
e16afaa01f27277e9a1ccdaac200c3627fcc5b6b
describe
'102403' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKN' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
9fee48c24b1a727b1352a1d9dcca8b7a
4566b35ec75effa46427e67bb2e49ce241a4a694
describe
'48549' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKO' 'sip-files00107.pro'
db92aadb475aa0d99b8ff0becd3b226c
57afc91900111f56658f5dcc88659cdf048c8c16
'2011-11-14T23:35:49-05:00'
describe
'35735' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKP' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
ed9a111e9c9232c56d264034229b25ca
d68ec0b843325c8da2e1f331d2c06f7ca374c4db
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKQ' 'sip-files00107.tif'
04df1b751feb97b6e120a2d4f62ba650
7d0c142491a273d6b7ddff0c76c815be9aecdc09
describe
'2038' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKR' 'sip-files00107.txt'
d24e71af78fed1ec7425ac922b5ec2ed
a559cbdbee55518aea1f44e9537da8483d2753f8
describe
'9765' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKS' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
3ac70cb1c493230e43a41e7e58443119
0011dba9ca316d72d82f735675b2bde582cd4ef6
describe
'1103106' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKT' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
0ccebd4f4906b15c1a762bdb95168acb
095c4a450eae99217a520c402fef01d7ec74749e
describe
'101685' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKU' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
4975c0b37e2841910e4cf64f84198e1f
fb94cbaa100231787f1ea88dcc871ce027f82548
describe
'46378' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKV' 'sip-files00108.pro'
00b360aa820a7b23495c46693f28ae59
cdc21e74b81ec97951c93849638a265755f6c631
describe
'34903' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKW' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
51640d7380cd94c51d3a849542e4bb00
d9e3ee7eaa0663a220d8b74a5548cedab7a9a4fd
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKX' 'sip-files00108.tif'
a6d30ac938252cb9bf7a93f5abb9a529
b1882936cbb9d593ccd610b937f365baecb77ee2
describe
'1945' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKY' 'sip-files00108.txt'
073031fa64552f1428d9be68aafa9f69
ce6dbdc5ae607fb69c062adc7f6b24f17746cc20
describe
'9763' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACKZ' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
e03a85522caefb4a857be4f8dfbf23a2
fc413a293fda00989841061855c1d9fbcf1426af
describe
'1145609' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLA' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
5e709fddd1aa60ee3f7b4af2ba4fcccc
ee81e9e2be82f4251c876e9ec8897423a504426a
describe
'106021' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLB' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
0259f1d83baea6f8bfe7b66e60bbe08b
d6cfecbd8839c75dfd0984f8f4453f963ed16429
describe
'51116' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLC' 'sip-files00109.pro'
3861e7a6603b72a1904955faa56de767
1a15b02644f8def5fdf50c3043185a7c848b4e4c
describe
'36489' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLD' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
5a23715642b03326ab7383d197b7f67a
56df7c9a69deab6f12828d8fda20abf733760360
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLE' 'sip-files00109.tif'
133e39d9e9856bcb463f93c92215c710
471cd805c2e23b32328a0531564d9f2f2048fdb3
describe
'2097' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLF' 'sip-files00109.txt'
b713489fb47630c210d0252672b32700
43ad8c6a3e4c9c7699a263309e931ade6c05af6c
describe
'9877' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLG' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
55a987c4563485379d1b88eeecc693eb
29760f9593fc8a28a0d08970ef24e8041bea9be1
describe
'1103113' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLH' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
f2389a6876d8fb64b3975420579a7ea9
e5fd88f58f5a37d73c27aed43ebb73d8081b07cd
describe
'98123' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLI' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
bd20f36f8ece46131af2e5c1e7584ec6
48966ba0eb76129eda794ddd17116e83d8094f1f
describe
'44850' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLJ' 'sip-files00110.pro'
7e7144c1d4c85ebe3c56a8f4a7d8f239
52067ad9cf9a7f8099ab0d2620d44c580998e3be
describe
'33547' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLK' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
b503f78c4ff1b424dd809be6bd30ce0c
dcdc77ed5371390289dd127be80a26056d7caaec
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLL' 'sip-files00110.tif'
03c9d830bd17dd39d61d4f6f199ad65d
067fd7fa1fb0021c98632201f980262ba1dc231c
describe
'1924' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLM' 'sip-files00110.txt'
70effa931bda84765ababda68516e915
3ffa7e1149cd84398c29eb9691c6d49aeb9a7dc5
describe
'9683' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLN' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
c8bf7fe14055d8d4e52cd2665468aa3f
d6d1e070b4931ccdab75c626d78f7d1506c47b87
describe
'1145603' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLO' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
4ed2680c37aa800f46e2882f681d216d
1b7d1a5a5c49c36f5cf426f56180ab8bae9b5a09
'2011-11-14T23:34:55-05:00'
describe
'103378' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLP' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
ec0756a801e16b9ed09d6dddf664b621
bd1551c881fc29c0f5ff28946d19ad93a5a6cb9a
describe
'49461' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLQ' 'sip-files00111.pro'
5861e9aa2f7627e4044918a999337204
90f87e380da749838f7b315496b94afaf02372c7
describe
'35004' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLR' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
df45400f714037a4386c2f85a8eadb78
24fae213505028eb9e83f02726ae26248858482c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLS' 'sip-files00111.tif'
c3ec022d796fd83d5403bb827515b7f8
5495c8f644506ca359eb36aed72f6bd70c486e77
'2011-11-14T23:32:02-05:00'
describe
'2034' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLT' 'sip-files00111.txt'
effb1f0180d164bffbfaa8bfce0f5baa
56c0825879d76e8374a51e58fddc2c986dbf7bae
'2011-11-14T23:33:38-05:00'
describe
'9717' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLU' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
527cd4c650ff1d2919466ef241031f63
38f7a3c6eab6d8d174fde3892bb4e65b6961a230
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLV' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
6085d19bf4158ce486fe3406b925f728
f4f1e4633eb9b37b99d44010907976eec1b37c0a
describe
'97856' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLW' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
d38e55ef1e155f62ef8f55f7bf869fba
5ca63e099e2fbf75125e24b67f1f75b7ec794804
describe
'44450' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLX' 'sip-files00112.pro'
16ebac328fd52dc406252d0acf56a826
b3a264a3e5ad9a544c6a4dfbecea92d41a20f7d3
describe
'33331' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLY' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
f5c9d0fc3ad68885ff6cc6762bf20162
30ec57a4d8e4b5c6c155ff911457451f111ececc
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACLZ' 'sip-files00112.tif'
f573f1046ea2d9240f5c063d5e45b923
c5b3476fd4a8872e20c964b3c82eb7dc12d894ec
describe
'1857' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMA' 'sip-files00112.txt'
e5aaacb6c542fcbe0bd64297cc32e2cf
46180f91572cd8de3dc2c81933c7b234fd257250
describe
'8902' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMB' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
2f68e03f30ed64511c89d3a339dc4b74
11cca76898fb56809070edb577f918741cd71e7e
'2011-11-14T23:31:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMC' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
f65efc817061a93c8d4e77b7fd2618e4
b63b542eea6064707887cf1849242efc55bd7d8c
describe
'86355' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMD' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
42ee17521d44a62b610a1c1ef6bcc25c
b8b16df2601e6af18aba753f79bae7ed23bfd3c6
describe
'38601' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACME' 'sip-files00113.pro'
d5aa4108d90c2d75104c4c1ed1331046
cb099aeb12f68ce0c6565721fdcc75ba16f2ddb2
describe
'29574' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMF' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
0e1888f91e310073194662cbff209cf0
4c5f4294a3d88259e88347f5037fa97ee7f5c505
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMG' 'sip-files00113.tif'
191808c924ccf43c7313aad4a4a32a9e
262807bf9211868ea9723f4550cf5f5bf8a3dbc1
describe
'1674' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMH' 'sip-files00113.txt'
846a151c33f34e9b360059c6b3cf9eb4
c56a034093ee3ee705a41f8f79ed3d01f4566790
describe
'8389' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMI' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
c0c58b1ecbf902d1603faf141ea1b066
72340f7ecd5d9e55e2492eab4067fdf120569024
'2011-11-14T23:34:28-05:00'
describe
'1103112' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMJ' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
5eb9ce384da2393ea3d91aa50d78dd2b
09da10ce9809d3faaf421194d69ae94731459a8c
describe
'102724' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMK' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
b332bfa018d4745eaac996e39443c37c
81fd3d977af433adcbf9a0cc55bae46aecebe6a1
describe
'47684' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACML' 'sip-files00114.pro'
a3921eb8cb82463044ed6a15ca537c6f
1631c4a6276041995b6696407e2e563c30b284a5
describe
'35364' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMM' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
a41073ab653745b69e148134cb93f198
123bde78e1b9c14ab91e3e6da57d8e9a5d234860
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMN' 'sip-files00114.tif'
d6752079630acd5a97051f90bd21df35
6225ebbc3d18a0693c8177fed1bc68c7cbf4f70c
describe
'1996' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMO' 'sip-files00114.txt'
4a23a5e12dbb231aeff593ad60c2a34b
479fba989fe9baa2bfef3e2cd74be654bf679deb
describe
'9612' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMP' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
a1c82516eee19372e8c87c36ef50f249
88555a8af143d1337bbd40b57be16563e8b24f2c
describe
'1145610' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMQ' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
f96e8d601539141d25952900e26a66db
21a18bc3173d534b13cb6f21fec644299ca7e122
describe
'104066' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMR' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
4ad0ffc7b8ccff444327b448df4b88a5
2d5e8e14b8fe6a6e1b36285a40ad2e0432600ca8
describe
'50186' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMS' 'sip-files00115.pro'
e210fe26ce0eb37c9eab5aaa7e310ad5
f4814cd826122b57e4a3d5f056a278909f7e9fbf
describe
'35750' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMT' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
8df26ffba93657138c8ba675d015ea6a
4f924751a79d32ec3dfacd60b275464c6ab471cc
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMU' 'sip-files00115.tif'
c2929f3010177f68c05027c4ea146cf7
1ca709ea4811a0746a283cc935e3d9ed84c0cf19
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMV' 'sip-files00115.txt'
70d7f45edd176e8e4b8c452a6d94c25e
4eeabea7fc0d6e5856588938456e9f85be217ddd
describe
'9527' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMW' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
864462e342c03f9fcb34d903319c7fd3
70242279f139c3133549ef1fa8281410f0fcd38a
describe
'1103108' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMX' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
35ce8e2d6ebf8d7c779ea3cda910e5c5
683a60b596192228eebd7a38f69959455f472c4c
describe
'104275' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMY' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
40ecf5e1f296fa2f45c4e7a3430a4a3d
626202276ea0f0d8dccf41b17c3af0cc22787888
'2011-11-14T23:34:43-05:00'
describe
'48191' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACMZ' 'sip-files00116.pro'
99e11f4165acfbd3551940de6acf8fe5
9ee58d22b2f94a42b23ddd24571ebcc74ba81848
describe
'35971' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNA' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
974a806ce04587a4072f1be32e8a4f2e
21f93365263f9c2a59201ae926a86ef7cf99d633
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNB' 'sip-files00116.tif'
4a702ca2de2065925e4dbaa448f53ee7
869d7ff937a0956096f0ffe891c323efb0ced9cc
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNC' 'sip-files00116.txt'
a2151277c8ee5da4ea5185269d466434
595ab8859f00374aac519781552747cb3949a1f6
describe
'9926' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACND' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
c0668b0560e9b2eda46c80a856628217
d1b37c2602e948300bfe16e800f3016845d89996
describe
'1145596' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNE' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
e621200c3d446ab2760f1017383e73b5
33fc4bfbd08c136e060a24dc82ba9022b9912fb2
describe
'103600' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNF' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
ddbb9e31f5e1e2e9e2e0de5f938cc3fa
5f03bae25af176029c187b9945b94f3df7c4807d
describe
'49927' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNG' 'sip-files00117.pro'
ed7170ab694aba17b277570d66e88eb7
4750e54b87591b65c82442069f22a09adf3a08a1
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNH' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
3397c5d66ec15b02da240ec94cf56fa2
a1ec58987e87ce5efab0123d65fd82b5ce9ac291
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNI' 'sip-files00117.tif'
c381a6dcfc7ea43d449f98d357680e65
0dd214f59dc7ee4749ff34c66437f7f94f1fd0fd
'2011-11-14T23:32:00-05:00'
describe
'2050' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNJ' 'sip-files00117.txt'
9f9a128cffdc5d225f6e51a422e5b511
f7aa66eec0672f7e09bee82af8a823488c940d1e
describe
'9867' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNK' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
b3e8c7252a9d932415ee7c651af8e3e2
b5d370e601ed1e03b7a9895d21204ebf69d90d84
describe
'1102984' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNL' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
341e1bf63bbad7514f895ce66d9a57cd
0796b71842c96ea9420bdfd58be152a5cb446d70
describe
'85547' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNM' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
8a0d1f8f43b898705e5375ee8216cf6f
681fb2898ac7c91530568726592366a3bb2e2b23
describe
'38017' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNN' 'sip-files00118.pro'
06512bceb00dea1a2b143ec354546d6f
c04d31f04b70cccec27c571c3ed87b1220732e7b
describe
'29037' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNO' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
90e1551dbcacbce9a699d115943fad36
b16f3640ebddca791f0b2f32c089e310d7d9d6a6
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNP' 'sip-files00118.tif'
a3be1e34a158119477caed32a7520199
19198949b5ae33698e3c92dc8479b81b65ef9664
'2011-11-14T23:34:04-05:00'
describe
'1632' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNQ' 'sip-files00118.txt'
a2584ad8d92b7aac31107d1f82c38563
dfde292ccea04f3606c61c6cb43ee2f646179378
describe
'8048' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNR' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
10128b69c68c17e733edc42db958a140
dc368d343d7d942d13b0017160d7a19a1ac84b38
describe
'1145605' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNS' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
4284e16bcd8f4def34b216c58921cc8d
82c145c5ac433077cfc176b90b6360dba92e124b
describe
'90011' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNT' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
03c4d9ca14a9f3fe72eee32ad0241708
e45bbf5b51bb40387eacf680dc32e9f3e7034046
describe
'42386' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNU' 'sip-files00119.pro'
4cd0f172f91abd0a17ddd5555c37b42a
15632f1a5d8192c4892cd2ae630c8f27d46da32b
describe
'30791' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNV' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
2613b53df8a05e01c80254045f6d88ea
36a8b7649176ec8b75c9758ed7c7a3b6cc657a42
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNW' 'sip-files00119.tif'
134b5185b2e7e714ebf59dbcbe82e41a
b801b85d3ede0910f4d074327b2b69fbde163af7
describe
'1828' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNX' 'sip-files00119.txt'
47baa4a0bbc10e40cc4b6df3f201f879
21c5237a7e4585b15bee14f3d44fbf0614321db3
describe
'8324' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNY' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
6cd9264bf33d9e7b607d5460d23d6ba2
e43b9fa8352b256dab67fe8619da259174755d20
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACNZ' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
80c1d85931ad876ce9256513cf18dd36
1fa4afa9a70158783f5389b1af4e235dd693792f
describe
'105271' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOA' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
84a95a66512d818ef18a57b95a22d985
102e9b7a282b38030bf2ba4567db365a8df1facb
describe
'49216' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOB' 'sip-files00120.pro'
9bd3c62756e31ca7ff259b9a53f9d332
960b5dc20f1727411d0cf3f9cb79ee25c4cb7075
describe
'36285' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOC' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
bbe2c2359cd7b829efbf09a4fd75a290
e3c82b76052483acc9d0846f60023b826b05aeda
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOD' 'sip-files00120.tif'
7cd7f0dee156f9faab55027aba153f2e
1bd9d6b94a333ec539d9ba3ad6dcece5acf6feb5
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOE' 'sip-files00120.txt'
02ee73cf17605be141285a11b9a43ea9
d8d24a083f7a9fda0734dddb5f71c4dd8e1a2e53
describe
'9860' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOF' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
e3ff8ceb2d0e5cc5feed8847a7aa860a
5386fec52948d0c4dea73ac738105e8a8e43ac3e
describe
'1145601' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOG' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
2fe737b701afeefb4e66d097e88ee2ec
d8d368a86d59842ba63759dc5212206010d75f0d
describe
'104475' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOH' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
6f0a8b116bc0430b6d73112150ebb918
b81e8aac647ed5485a0146c88b5d4a05c20e3aaa
describe
'50599' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOI' 'sip-files00121.pro'
6aef96d5832b180c3c06bc800815bbe7
f73d8d10889b5ae06debb4ca16e2572e4e923afe
describe
'35284' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOJ' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
3d816e21e84dc969218fa0845ba746cf
8dae06e233d886a0f1d1fde6c1c946fa90f3d84c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOK' 'sip-files00121.tif'
28e05582c69ae318d9aa5a2881dc9e23
9b0c6bb6d8b3db56ad69d9d564e3f399b66003f0
describe
'2087' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOL' 'sip-files00121.txt'
3f8c06ded85ccd353aab4bd3343180b9
6f3f586c8b6b1e99520ad1fb12fe7c6dcc44e5ac
describe
'9512' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOM' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
f53a794db909bccc0d799c74359200c9
19a9f4433f836489ab9b2f15385c4d9ae8bb7965
describe
'1103114' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACON' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
58fa66635f36a260c27daccc9fd69fcc
8e6b498d562a3baf77ccb844199c5d51053f8764
describe
'104972' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOO' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
b87e929475c2ce83c9faacacba203a46
e20e9a9e0e7bafb72fa80e55c35837b9d50853f9
describe
'49514' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOP' 'sip-files00122.pro'
4405567b76106e5d84cba2b81b02dbfe
b7331b4677c600961027d373c046932fc1f495bc
describe
'36233' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOQ' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
8fbb58ce23ede93f8ac6bf8a44c15635
1df1d7a6ab14a0d2db48e4980f2cd76d5459d9f0
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOR' 'sip-files00122.tif'
3d461b9037186b7225c0144f82acaa2d
2c517159ce692d342c8d55a67ae6e57fcbae4c51
'2011-11-14T23:31:47-05:00'
describe
'2073' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOS' 'sip-files00122.txt'
d11676ab2402a17adfd43c2145a59401
b86fe88b53bd69d95954e5c7ceafda5ce72cd4d8
describe
'9800' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOT' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
6fd000a019e6cfbd2846d47342edbaf0
23c05b732cc009373a20ded29271bf3acdf06e54
describe
'1145606' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOU' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
a8417c05641d9c487d9c6801e1e8c564
206cc998fce34f27ade16b0e972588eda6d4ae76
describe
'105171' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOV' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
4b47acf8b77bf431d415d5ed0052a953
e3615ca2ab810efdbf3fd7e65cbfae34333757b8
describe
'50571' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOW' 'sip-files00123.pro'
b8a8bdab15e1c0e5196fb87d3bcfa408
575962fdb95638dce2248432d47401b474f1c3ba
describe
'35629' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOX' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
73a692a67315799a687a2d61b5801c3a
baffc7254ffdce26a38398a42076b81e34c90525
'2011-11-14T23:35:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOY' 'sip-files00123.tif'
76d76f18a3c61c5a12118080bb119a1d
7e20ec52ec0b7a2aeded2ac673249e08effb0d6e
describe
'2076' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACOZ' 'sip-files00123.txt'
b5cc9d728b9d612af6c0981451d267b5
d53013d5ae1376371f5b2c14535e50b6d8337bc6
describe
'9809' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPA' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
37f7087fbc1c05eaa0cf79d0ec87d9e3
eb1137418b7b00885e4b7f3a5acc746b1e925891
describe
'1103081' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPB' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
ccd804c07a87993d7a227e2e0711e462
114e6cc891cb5a62758785fac00610a626e6a87c
describe
'105861' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPC' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
7d4b80178c29df7a6132167308f8180a
ddae32b69cb2a4554cd4e6b836d264c970602719
'2011-11-14T23:33:11-05:00'
describe
'48233' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPD' 'sip-files00124.pro'
80f475032cc9ba6fed1e013c95a99562
b3a966fa9652bb66106ca18ce1bd379d2a0b016b
describe
'36705' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPE' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
50defa0c7464eb8ff066b3d923d39bd0
d0c5e492f2d7a78228ebf7e4d7860abc78dd8016
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPF' 'sip-files00124.tif'
00ee2d1b9c831ad74dd3e74d001b0c32
ee876a3ea4f15e6ee2f29b8cf49a45c7e80624d9
describe
'2084' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPG' 'sip-files00124.txt'
603611fa934fcccd7851c598c0165fc4
282a055b429e35a582acfef3ef5ed9f6225ce43f
describe
'10204' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPH' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
b9d614276326b063a20d89bb911a6bee
e0503b0f3ebd633e77f49177c8e30b0110d7afd1
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPI' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
32c560edbbd1ad191087994df8875be4
845d0d6eb7673b9a97ea381a04a5af220a5ccc9c
describe
'104346' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPJ' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
c82c07d5de0dc51a7069fa90739fc82a
68d0bceaf616a5b9eefb4e6a82356217397250a0
describe
'49326' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPK' 'sip-files00125.pro'
0d8a1697c59e51223906c2a68cca3d46
c265a21a6ca1c485ea05dfff1f0e92d205c7134d
describe
'35056' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPL' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
e02a1c481ee9026ace07a8fa2c5dee12
906fb67af09217ba9ff6b380e586f9221d513785
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPM' 'sip-files00125.tif'
d40a67e645ed253e4a87d3e7087d7f8f
c080a20f614f806cb895413b5834124f40246789
describe
'2042' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPN' 'sip-files00125.txt'
69deb00fa4a4cfff545c166923a95878
0cebbb03497d0bc1585a57253fa8423b472d84a6
describe
'9649' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPO' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
d515825dfe47ef4bdc103f599f676ee0
25edf7d87df3fb1cb4906ec62267477d8e5b9c01
describe
'1103110' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPP' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
e33e7a046fc659e3cd4267cd4b1cc773
c33ce60868c53cb8f2e61a37c7425f205b5147cf
describe
'95887' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPQ' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
6c483ebf0d03f8cb0b62f6234621b887
ccc9572b216d70e25980f073576459379c318bc3
describe
'41611' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPR' 'sip-files00126.pro'
69caff25f7e6fcd7e21bd18e7ae8eecd
d71834ce0a78bf9c593ee6a0ec6f0dabd5a1531e
describe
'32238' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPS' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
41e6d8d68dd733e6dd96221f219bd0e7
67c48408d20e2cbb499dddbc0fa268821bc04bea
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPT' 'sip-files00126.tif'
4224e61ec11583f2bc65aca819c009c3
5bc9c0588ca4c362002c8c606651f774304fde27
describe
'1795' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPU' 'sip-files00126.txt'
9c3081823706d54e6ca0271b01483aef
737cf2dfd39d69cff114c2922c4e5bf3542571e4
describe
'9042' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPV' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
143676bfe11cecbb1b237b692b2954ad
2528dfb2185a32a582194d6910d39ff2488618b1
describe
'1145608' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPW' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
a9ee634e46c8771d04af5379272d9840
962abd5b1484332a99935d26f5bc665aa15f7971
describe
'103374' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPX' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
1ca7531180a5524390b362d3d43341da
042a0380fcd173f37dbad13a2d85dce7477518ab
'2011-11-14T23:35:28-05:00'
describe
'49385' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPY' 'sip-files00127.pro'
3c028151eb827075e7519035bf27ef68
3b41d55e3206fdd500ca5db63cfe1def0b69e806
describe
'35571' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACPZ' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
3945a61b48ab7da8d9fc53e5312a5ff9
805de444d9d05011dae1051cb9947426dfb6b621
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQA' 'sip-files00127.tif'
bdfdcdc5957494e21753dc3dfaf91c00
07cf1ddff036519d196945cef4a1b630df9351db
describe
'2047' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQB' 'sip-files00127.txt'
48c1e678a05e838e3e6bcf83d95a27fa
73c7ae6c0b147d91042ae05a5ce5a4fe5d30ada1
describe
'9909' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQC' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
37cbf4ff22c434b62a45a2ece4035b43
492ac873b6d98b8a45562151e67152ea1f96413c
describe
'1102940' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQD' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
8a76a4acaaffe1339087e427e2f2cb1a
0630a1416761f8240c2f81c0bf1ac50b83957e48
describe
'93221' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQE' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
ef245d1136ac9062ac45ed3af64e3667
5be739ad5e163843ff4033985c0f11a01ebd9b83
describe
'42220' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQF' 'sip-files00128.pro'
681eccb3a1051920aa71166b40b97636
be998544f256772470600221bad7c6d6f12858e9
describe
'32367' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQG' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
b99c5d8cbaa0b6183ad3bb8bab3eef03
520e56ed2a7652b64e60d0afa8e13b4397750e66
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQH' 'sip-files00128.tif'
6f2cb939a8c54157b9e1116e84441013
809feaefd2ed70036b86754e29cc7294442ff71a
describe
'1847' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQI' 'sip-files00128.txt'
bd037d1e3c4886e31a4de2f3127c9453
db6e055530b4784b36feab96b37edc24ee42f3c7
describe
'9299' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQJ' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
4ca348702d1b331eace9eb729bbc5d80
1a9da28f773fe73ff86f2855e9ae24e8478a9ffe
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQK' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
37dc581ec6b0cf0da85a80cd1086a3e4
7d96d86b2f6f5e281a42ef6571760764a7ba0cf9
describe
'95323' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQL' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
bc4f3e9b4be7fd8d8d740bc9f841b73e
21525923d86458f8076e9e3f4c2886b01f1b3067
describe
'44559' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQM' 'sip-files00129.pro'
60babeae103b8f60e36d67a150d9a42e
657a156d6d9c02f6bacc009eb8068e720aa4a882
describe
'32624' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQN' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
5b7851dd4bb341c9fcf202bd96fb04a3
ff64edf40f51898c1e08803fd48007e4324b486d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQO' 'sip-files00129.tif'
d444bbcc107c4060b0c33d04f795ce9d
edd74749dfebe6f6057567054404e51d50144b82
describe
'1877' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQP' 'sip-files00129.txt'
f1af981cdbdc32b542cbd8f2bf93baca
67de42e81857844400933094e34a20ddfb8978ce
describe
'9373' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQQ' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
ad4897b8b4ab625a855a1ee2c2ed78be
e295b1392818c4bc3ea58708d44f928f332266e0
describe
'1103116' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQR' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
5f231676ae6353ac57f10485b6c28db7
d9253ce0d382fa4c473ed04ba765877c5d166492
describe
'98504' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQS' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
603d58e4526324c35e26ee4dc4328bef
5099db54ca578a99425e0e7ba223eae31f205a0d
describe
'44430' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQT' 'sip-files00130.pro'
65126f76e9005347d61e5bb626b06e3a
daa59462ef97238937e99158c0953e9e70b329a1
describe
'33822' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQU' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
b53419bdbc2e92fdcafaaed16defc14d
b91cc7fcea656056208e8e534f7f75a3cde52c51
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQV' 'sip-files00130.tif'
69a61ca39ea973ca05fdb29fec5824d2
92751a88f62ed384dbeb4846450bedd1b49d4cff
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQW' 'sip-files00130.txt'
7e8bba0f0edb56461f6d8fc8e37f12a8
5eeb0d60acc3fa2c028c09fa397b22beecfca726
describe
'9589' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQX' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
dba1e11bb8c22da49b63de3ca2787642
d6b09d8169c062286f6294d07950d8ff31278547
describe
'1145458' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQY' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
5224ec3ab30b48d79910c78fdeded5e4
0d5e9f7aad74935127ab7cf267b378f780705ae2
describe
'101493' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACQZ' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
a60ad75414282773db50da60eb134fe5
bd831ce72899ebc01d59ac804fab3ca96cf9673a
describe
'48175' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRA' 'sip-files00131.pro'
22ca2a3ae5959fbcb41e2becc6d5dced
b265e295656e5becb3909e390234062945f2d661
describe
'34802' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRB' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
7807217c5ec76361edb3cf97cd31d6e3
f32a5ac80d851866187533f77f1480fc6ecdfbad
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRC' 'sip-files00131.tif'
636226dbb0f5b43fcae450bc2d29998a
628cd900b2a7501977d013ef49492fce82051c23
describe
'1987' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRD' 'sip-files00131.txt'
587d317af1a992229bababe74cad2997
cf3b60e35518f6666fd3af99ddb13c39e93e6d14
describe
'9658' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRE' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
a7f9e12a22679f8a5bf2daae9a17560a
1efdb44261d7705e53933380711fcedb8bc0fc51
describe
'1103111' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRF' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
a572547474c7db7a8729c7e2d9b95c7a
6e1388ab9d0a04028143400ca3505b024b31dc48
describe
'104609' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRG' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
c8729693501551cb2fe980dbfed30121
e180108f1fed064cde7922d3cbaddc93b590d7ac
describe
'48554' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRH' 'sip-files00132.pro'
e7f8296cb6b3b0cd719c8bdea63b68ec
9dc5db577de3e8a9b7e780dc8b59da0042887e2d
describe
'35827' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRI' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
72403846b27a00af88bbc41225d1cf31
40ae8d6e040d1f6374ddb56ceb4e7d9850993c8e
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRJ' 'sip-files00132.tif'
80bc5d6bc41ec7510ad0938b2adccacc
cd17837f595255e8e0bb38e4842c29190798ae22
describe
'2019' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRK' 'sip-files00132.txt'
6bf465d15d4d6617793cdec7714951db
12c7b5ba74d5a7b458b0cf2585cc358e25f598d5
describe
'9846' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRL' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
e502002c366309962e22cac52f9d627b
e0da4b2fc5ce8007fc0bc4be0e0465eca9fd2959
describe
'1145579' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRM' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
1147a0402eb5bd76a6462575a82467e9
aa065edd1b60177a49ca67cf3a2a074bd27854bd
describe
'102319' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRN' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
12c9e370c0d81d5f378a66404e1bba4f
248ca8bd27afaad07388ecd0bcdb2dfde9ca7725
describe
'48080' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRO' 'sip-files00133.pro'
e2aa1ac30b3d64e3590204a02af2b24c
dbf7db6286171ed83ecda21c932eea8a344e9582
describe
'35363' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRP' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
e68a4ec63ed6305795c447e7372a4b08
ecc74f0af4eaa44c98f9963fae3fc278d3790814
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRQ' 'sip-files00133.tif'
a1c1cfcf288b33551bc83e87a01359a8
335d5731e17ab20e314f9b9f4e3e97f7547ddda1
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRR' 'sip-files00133.txt'
22bf5f6b5c326a422b111169920d62d2
fe475de3d65fd9fa6a8f253417b4c65256cb7d65
describe
'9770' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRS' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
b1d20c51b5cde6df2b035300283fabbd
adfbf29f6fb0938b33f7722f370320081a7b2844
describe
'1103070' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRT' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
40c29c2ffa2a0e59683e62b591b9a249
303dd0977eb299d30f8157092079ac4e8500f773
describe
'107111' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRU' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
e93239230d14c810e92bc1fe792731b0
cf54876350513cb39145b08cead9bab5dacf4e85
'2011-11-14T23:34:06-05:00'
describe
'49142' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRV' 'sip-files00134.pro'
bd25e57843f4c50a645825a4597e6af8
8fea86e832ed4bc2bc4ec446a0298b3901818b3c
describe
'36759' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRW' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
93c54c0f1ee8704d8b30c0f39fe5d50a
43bf91dbd46fd6b6272c278b94c1948c1d42c824
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRX' 'sip-files00134.tif'
6c934181fba047b9f02dc87033da8c01
cbb4b44d2091db6a3dd0106705d0ab0cff64eb68
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRY' 'sip-files00134.txt'
3f69e68c35cfb52d9403fbb72c34bcf9
f184c69829e2a94e8f490aef1a80c83c314db66b
'2011-11-14T23:32:12-05:00'
describe
'10015' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACRZ' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
92718f469f52e78ad60cf1144e6b1ba6
1066005f8d5ac2b41ebc0ea140937c014fba89d9
describe
'1145578' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSA' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
ebd0e78ca9826f672af10855980b7091
e47f1fdeacf17c3dadd1c4efb1ebf752b3554442
describe
'103089' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSB' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
fe35d5a1a1098aa1ac185048c46e4fdf
f2779225a0f683304621cacff91b56c78f4e5ad9
describe
'49546' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSC' 'sip-files00135.pro'
b395ef79c305734374a60fcdbfc8e8a8
c8f8f238d858e01cfd7021b560417a320913004a
describe
'35410' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSD' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
1ad082835c5a4c487c31f5c8c0e55440
0a230f53a2a33575c66c9975b3c70163ab43d874
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSE' 'sip-files00135.tif'
b91bbbc1a812aff11b7fc537c8a51543
32da6873bfc79ef2af4a49a2b4f1186614b61cf1
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSF' 'sip-files00135.txt'
d80dc38e26b41e518144e58c83927764
db394a121a5d94f3140b2b500b03184139f4d126
describe
'9674' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSG' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
669f084a916aa75c9a2e8977e14245c0
b4c672b6847c4d0819e8326dcad21a60d36c354f
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSH' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
3b5ac269711511935e3176836bf3e4f8
b15c3f07308230408c89096c1cba82b4a8e717d1
describe
'105916' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSI' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
4eed246075f7aecac65c4a088589e00c
efa6544a7f4aae6eea0739148e4a73f404324a6c
describe
'49320' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSJ' 'sip-files00136.pro'
17cf6ec64f5f763e3c478bfc191d7b72
1d0655402c9df37c55c7fcefc9b4292bb37e04fa
describe
'36240' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSK' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
b81c9cf00fd3319e333e8658c3ecafb7
4e8c97634272933a1d75598daecb9661e34cfe3c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSL' 'sip-files00136.tif'
3bf444aa16fe1ec6d4d6a1d7fda8bb7e
46cf2928266584e05ff9e458737934dbab3ec6b2
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSM' 'sip-files00136.txt'
1026ed22cce82b077cb5b1c9da0b5575
db143a8758318654a7690a540f3febe77828b085
describe
'9884' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSN' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
5fc25e88d927b570b7d721fe32781833
c369bcab7a9d4061484614d18a22a4258fa3a0c9
describe
'1145398' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSO' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
fc38fca22037d262b96c305e9884f9e8
59e683aa55fde0fb32a544baec48954e5e82ed56
describe
'98993' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSP' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
eb2eae6a94ff514585fc7a91bf92b5f6
aae4d589cf874af26e106b9530ecdba019685a25
describe
'46052' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSQ' 'sip-files00137.pro'
3ac3755028f10327f2ae03e6a71cbace
169ccf181ca72b7c7d7a8d0d3ee9306c18b98d82
describe
'33328' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSR' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
1a2c8ba7c047a0c9ace1e64655b18f0a
665d85ea8cb341cb327865316ae9fb9247aebe09
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSS' 'sip-files00137.tif'
da8e50ec91bbf2002195ef038568ed31
94a5dd1754d3e17a72a14f407290108b7baac53e
describe
'1893' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACST' 'sip-files00137.txt'
6c249bc572128c7a2a50c7912b820282
0892ee30212073dab499bd947f512cf7b30c3606
describe
'9195' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSU' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
c16b150b24a341dbb28d07c93eaab94e
aba060677872efb9b011b909a5b4e411e12b6d7b
describe
'1103103' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSV' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
314f9b3c93f23adc4f4ed6cca42addec
8e618a5cfdeb5eefe678ac8202a751121d4d1ab9
describe
'93271' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSW' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
51a366e87cee31847f1da5b888b308d2
31a47a6a9622047ecd80ab1475e3fa18fb037ae7
describe
'40763' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSX' 'sip-files00138.pro'
ce15ed3835d903b6b5cfe3629e3a3868
511d412cf67fa276841971d898bbcd3019800a36
describe
'31252' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSY' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
3ae6eb123f95fbb5def30efe44f7cd75
6609cb83efeb5cdba1d4961254ad94923669a879
'2011-11-14T23:35:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACSZ' 'sip-files00138.tif'
9ff67e75512b4fa0b7e9171bb904b3cd
d2c729454efd5e467af4792afacd878d98844f96
'2011-11-14T23:34:00-05:00'
describe
'1773' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTA' 'sip-files00138.txt'
1abfb58cd92c0d9b5fc3e05cf560a57a
f056ff8e7dada121c389edac73bb527777049f12
describe
'8603' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTB' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
95073cb016ea812ba8302b73e439a21c
3ba2db7ee08c9740193f8e04b803f5b90beb247f
'2011-11-14T23:35:20-05:00'
describe
'1145447' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTC' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
2be85171d583c23ad3d3f9139f20535b
8e17b278a268f6f85bac426ceb624a1fa8430dcc
describe
'103944' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTD' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
971f64436e14b7e373ef23deb917266a
c20e6e0f05e01873ac57f02ed73955fbd67d4532
describe
'48830' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTE' 'sip-files00139.pro'
1fc105a0008e30beb9ec0e99900aff6e
edb83693697f0f63f054c0d9fabbfb8a37c72cb7
describe
'35653' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTF' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
8f5dafaaa36586383a7635c66b10ac0c
7240121d925a984a4825b30fcaff877aea8fc7e1
'2011-11-14T23:34:51-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTG' 'sip-files00139.tif'
31d0cf1b46d6e20764536d2d482bac43
bc8e3aa7484e3cadcf2a1d648ac96314045afad6
describe
'2023' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTH' 'sip-files00139.txt'
f9e9865e4ebf50d560554c0d78a86b24
1e0404a6b2ab37ab61e5f737fe4a4dc12a1885a5
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTI' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
e1908fbc6bed2129f7631c81b865b5ee
c4cfaefb766be62da57aba8ea0909a365cf5fabb
describe
'1103101' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTJ' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
53e28228f2f46f63f2078cbd810fc84b
e8fae7960d313e35a47aaa31562720d98e8109dd
describe
'105675' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTK' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
5e7c01030cb8b4812c0ab438b6e2a33a
d5d272722f6edc4bebceb703f0a6973953d756be
describe
'48257' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTL' 'sip-files00140.pro'
34de10fe8a1805cd65315b0613fca0c4
20d1f256b65c4a8fe4d40e2302b7edbe131b8824
describe
'36362' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTM' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
a6cd66016cdb12a2479fcbb2e74ec2dd
8b593e714b569b12a9b29efe19ff13e6d2332a6e
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTN' 'sip-files00140.tif'
879a132128e0270c33d61c78e8d2ea0a
bcc85efa6206af2697be67b883fb6914b1f26ddd
describe
'2026' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTO' 'sip-files00140.txt'
7ce9db27a7342e0960fc670d63a4816c
92156455ca8e8d9a632363377536b5670c9fc1fc
'2011-11-14T23:33:54-05:00'
describe
'9948' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTP' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
b28cd3ae37d50e47ff189eae720bae0b
0449ddcc8b3930805d9ccab3500212434bff3bc8
describe
'1145490' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTQ' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
9d14384a2e2884a5fb2076455b158656
886ba2aec23c335df16311c87c8963a424a9d51f
describe
'104064' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTR' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
9e38c6fc3aefeac6cc3a53331330ae6f
6f016ed075d3799f7133a33136daa2caa94badba
describe
'49807' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTS' 'sip-files00141.pro'
c865d05d6d632b5501cf722bcb637d62
727418f1bc969d2ca416d4437d642940a1983181
describe
'35065' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTT' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
5fdaad22ecfb04349eb19890a1155068
70d7f80f7c1f3b0d56a08971ad1ca5824ac95daf
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTU' 'sip-files00141.tif'
e3dadccac25237ea712eb90de17ee141
f70263b250767efbc355e49b13bd09be8a04b96e
'2011-11-14T23:35:02-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTV' 'sip-files00141.txt'
9c1174e5771a1a4ac2bdee8c7b843cfb
7bb325bcf9626d5867e7f6fd2e73574f7ef5c3ab
describe
'9630' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTW' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
0be29174efbe8894e682bb5ab63c0d70
59139eb7c0afd2065b4fdf8f4e22fa02b1356e0e
describe
'1103093' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTX' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
fb015a7b711d72e0936b5a9d4b4fc6d0
04193531fc4a7e83df27ae6d48fe64a828430314
describe
'91003' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTY' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
9f5050047190b9049067a74de76e9943
5fabea1d93035036e80bdb31d9df382afa650c4f
describe
'42122' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACTZ' 'sip-files00142.pro'
faabca56889eba8669daa17095b44f81
18e9d3957257685780384b3aa911e1fa584c67c3
describe
'31829' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUA' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
c98409174d608bdc1153a47b01787a14
1fef2a8b06aba18a65c8c629b5266824c96c0ea0
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUB' 'sip-files00142.tif'
1974e8a4e79d7f29ece0bf084cdf97ad
3224d598ab599f5f6daf75c483ca2c5063df8ab3
describe
'1866' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUC' 'sip-files00142.txt'
75438d025aa48ac2e5336c028394b7ee
3f2e0a0cd4a93b579e1341c5a2b69c7f9f4dfcd2
describe
'8970' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUD' 'sip-files00142thm.jpg'
ff02d72583c91ec257f5fe52754bba54
0ae65212ed2acbe2e0632af79211f776f48019ea
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUE' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
f07fbd4f1d8996cf4ecca4fbe7df78a1
c3b9406ba4dd36fb559c5f961517e81a61ab5501
describe
'104799' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUF' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
d4704e1797c36d9c1f98ae9767843b04
53989ccfe967cc40d665c62e9ecc7a7159ca1592
'2011-11-14T23:34:13-05:00'
describe
'49922' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUG' 'sip-files00143.pro'
fae1713aa68f0517a3dfd45590a40471
ae64727069c74f273e52f79fb16a0b75bbfcdfe3
describe
'36112' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUH' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
372165d37501c3e0281ba58f27f7eebf
b9e43c5ab059e8cc487c84e8c8994e98eeec2fe1
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUI' 'sip-files00143.tif'
261a85f9096cfe23e4ffe13d4709ed43
3be72bf78d7fdb86ddcd5e7f8065dc92ccad55d0
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUJ' 'sip-files00143.txt'
f9e18253bb5c65ac12a05306f7f2cd02
20945fba5112b157d13a8e35fa930391769ae993
describe
'9646' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUK' 'sip-files00143thm.jpg'
c13b1145d3ccd854cf96e5366f74753c
214fc0ab9e77905a42bf7363a7d3f5147cc7599a
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUL' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
3284ddb7423b4553511ce3a52a4b735b
fbfd34f831dd80464f735969de7f5e363a747f22
describe
'94964' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUM' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
6d9eae4eab0a71ab5b31b7011f091c8c
8e0e55ceeb4671613d9c153301ce0915c19614ee
describe
'40696' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUN' 'sip-files00144.pro'
240b437752b31688389ab06d22452c8d
304b67374b0629ebf60ce6d4b9e8045f9576cf97
describe
'32127' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUO' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
5f371d184b0b559c5dc4fee72170266e
c3d4a397f5fedd5802545f9879532e6b95a024f2
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUP' 'sip-files00144.tif'
c26a188d62edb301b992ade512afbee8
8a6c69a1d0aeea3fe37dfa97ba32bec435c15458
describe
'1794' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUQ' 'sip-files00144.txt'
b2d9789a536864f753cd384fa41a077f
5cefbd2ee6ebf3113909e11ddb92387bddccc4b3
describe
'9131' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUR' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
3afe46a058ea1c3230ca73072e06ca60
cd84df5498eb77794a44b4deb55b75147ee80972
describe
'1145586' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUS' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
a8bced97c2d40e4f1e60599027978fd8
bf9877579fefdb5b1be1d29834c2647d184f15c1
describe
'107244' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUT' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
47711f33f2f68094d11b74360b8bb5df
8900bd1462d031ff7d1cbbb6da95bb56539e3ccc
describe
'50815' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUU' 'sip-files00145.pro'
1e2e96df46224350f5b1289881d5b558
38d2347b6856e1383a2c21e9511e16c885e6405f
describe
'36939' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUV' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
6d5a265bd3ab5e4191a0dce87d507799
92df43feef57e390e76c125b329456dff0d48f87
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUW' 'sip-files00145.tif'
7fb343cad8310f1e4f61e9fc5ce55aa0
67970cf90c227883c677b6e161391bd2c9bd07ca
'2011-11-14T23:33:59-05:00'
describe
'2088' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUX' 'sip-files00145.txt'
ac52a435f621c8a2596c7c18a9b7820d
25ee93f453a01d5ca791fb3d7dc3a0e57a44649c
describe
'10111' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUY' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
c6a3a1033d929ba19000d95699aa4017
073d7e8e82fc6d738cd173e0f0c5dace7ed5d8c8
'2011-11-14T23:35:34-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACUZ' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
58425e33d237fdb1dcfd45382b30bd13
71b70bf9b5bbd2add4a3ac03f7025aef5ce851e6
describe
'106895' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVA' 'sip-files00146.jpg'
cd510356311657eb92ce15b68657f022
9507762b173fa18b81a5a3d6bf7e61a974bae751
describe
'49094' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVB' 'sip-files00146.pro'
b989b97247a8cdc007d6eb6920b1ca7d
d459a0c5396c4745f97c5804f628c8bc9fb61bc9
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVC' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
9d58d62c03aeab4fc047066795ec2d95
75c17e6a3d4525df26e10ac0a77aaa440c440d61
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVD' 'sip-files00146.tif'
639d9b3aff833fe15451f81a75af97a7
e4f987c1aa755a69fee729d9482e102a2aaf0e39
'2011-11-14T23:33:22-05:00'
describe
'2043' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVE' 'sip-files00146.txt'
547384217ed147e1d0c7707afe1cbe8d
ed6c486ffd478e55d4b83876696938cae051ebad
describe
'9908' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVF' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
6441aba31eb8d302ec37b04da9c30cab
10b6a001d7114f4694d8928877571dba2ba21cca
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVG' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
0b02c4d45426b0dc98770c04d5d37aba
f30d2bf8a528a81e71edcb226e8196dcf74f4033
describe
'104971' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVH' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
d56133cad06c398e97d74e1aafa2cbc7
eb1031864c76125a62c286e22d8f4633817b14cc
describe
'48841' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVI' 'sip-files00147.pro'
d3c3e48221ceaaff54e4b8430f28685f
cb239198225190a7d17e2d45b32e0802ac5bf58b
describe
'36147' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVJ' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
413fcc392c867322732eaa853b60773b
b59a1683ce0bd56e3fe856d5cf71b433236c3cf1
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVK' 'sip-files00147.tif'
e4bb9700bede3649af2be7db0df20a84
41331f9e382f0de1c2836e2974a2ab751b49c252
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVL' 'sip-files00147.txt'
c0da28091e0a6c27ce13aca9fbab86c7
750d7b49127b70f65e374710bbba1637c7edc499
describe
'10000' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVM' 'sip-files00147thm.jpg'
e7f602fe8005d023eef13ebac890d6e2
ff9ebedc2bba0fd41a432b064fd8fa2042fd9923
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVN' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
c80d80841295214ad35baf7402380dfb
43259a2c7813d15cf29cd78a3fd388b4cb5ba8f8
describe
'104778' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVO' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
b3486d0f6a10a6ff87218f91bf60a220
aef7c1173a6fd14fb44730b57aa9cdfd0f151023
describe
'48145' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVP' 'sip-files00148.pro'
d2ae0e2e77b0e4de649e7693e0a41c09
d9ddb5312c604307a16a3908ff661a1a74f3f19e
describe
'35919' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVQ' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
d165b6d247abbac51f26e912c18d13cb
a07851b62a937190bc019b450af94cd43abfbe92
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVR' 'sip-files00148.tif'
aafb04e0b2ac87fa0c15aa4e581df3ff
556cfe8b97ac954d38bd705e79a0f5b25cdf3daf
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVS' 'sip-files00148.txt'
b24ad5c393d2e4595d931a8f3005014b
4224c90c1219d4adcc952ee2a2524ce7092b1629
describe
'10004' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVT' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
2a85453ea87fa7bb36f1b08700bd80ae
8474ea1fcf6650632eb3da5ccc36bd46a22bace6
describe
'1145595' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVU' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
55ea9c482b33119dac103f146626f1c4
795eb9e33a8a6c8987ce42ca2ecf104794597814
describe
'102071' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVV' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
1865c561fdce1a9b57b631521ac3c80f
dbaaf0f9b8995f07a69e096084b264b58fc41a5b
describe
'48658' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVW' 'sip-files00149.pro'
2f883e610ab50bf3f51df2b7e0ace0a2
3d6621a001415c56c3af1122b6441a2f4a0fc101
describe
'35308' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVX' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
b10c8e44de8988110dc8f0b112bfe942
eac7e60fe1ab748eb6a8a1e5d22eeadf0c982294
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVY' 'sip-files00149.tif'
d4e0ab0170166196019bf02aa6bdfbad
cd06d7cf4f514a8578b8656b56b3ba7fd8948f6e
describe
'1994' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACVZ' 'sip-files00149.txt'
bd74b957f2a39ffbfe5c646702ebb39c
990de6cb5c4b9a5042041bb72ccb4d81b5b05fd0
describe
'9650' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWA' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
e1b3acb0991d116c0dcefef81ea72158
1b7294c44177fdc07abf53f33da99f513a638b70
describe
'1103039' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWB' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
7b4eb4fccb4bf161f1af19ef611f3802
d01d93a8b262ad4d63b252053c34980f65d39d8b
describe
'105452' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWC' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
eeed8e3209ffd7e9f9eac86979b973a8
cc28d1b8f2d4e3495007af32e7153ea12f67eeda
describe
'49931' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWD' 'sip-files00150.pro'
762d574cbdaef6354b9d0f245ce2a59f
83508e7ee0266c8a63f9b3de593c17a8cdd4493e
describe
'36344' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWE' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
3fbe453b6a7aefab4d0c1a5202368856
268bf0f6d85339694272a600aec6dd52885a8b40
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWF' 'sip-files00150.tif'
0dbd3d70166641833923d243f686e635
9de60e1fb82787515358e1710f2d304aff3f2a9a
describe
'2072' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWG' 'sip-files00150.txt'
6f591b68a7be08da2619e62e76ff3c0a
6675d6c122a2a6ee2d550502c19c3baea243c49b
describe
'10081' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWH' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
2c745028b93e2f7fc3c182b860f8d6fb
d202cf6d9fbc52f407c85246d42c7958aa37dde9
describe
'1145594' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWI' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
c4997210ea20e4305499a8129e6014a9
b8ee711e135c55261a4b40a23ec817d779c6d9d7
describe
'92709' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWJ' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
99984a112d6f2ebc20203f946fff6294
862ccab184ab042b4e60639a66682163a1553a34
describe
'42557' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWK' 'sip-files00151.pro'
3ab908e043a2d6a4c4add8aea5af27e9
60ed67259c6b2a43bdac513eaa98372c6984e4c5
describe
'31125' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWL' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
a3efd8632111fb39ac821291ab24cf8f
84ef167ab3126d271bdbad34d6b033bf3db91b4b
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWM' 'sip-files00151.tif'
ca8bae85964756460a3eaf37b23911aa
8052cdd7bafbf394ffd73c3ec360a05e0442a0f3
describe
'1754' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWN' 'sip-files00151.txt'
16e59e9569a51af828ea9a28e6d42b36
7444445306173394781e11d73525867c49d267b3
describe
'8258' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWO' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
15c49be1fe5213f3b639f5f78412826c
963257f3f7f97976db5a81dc33f1ba145e3e49d3
describe
'1103020' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWP' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
783fd60f2d44352dd9f9100f5e3d4120
69986007fafa0b742280c9616fc6774f605796f1
describe
'93446' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWQ' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
8006485c520ea2136c4b25a3a1570c5f
ad66e636dfcdd4a917860dbd0eb1377db9d87bf9
describe
'41690' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWR' 'sip-files00152.pro'
decd21b967fe3475fcf5ae408c9c36d5
99de6d3974e8fc8dea595cee4b3c919f968f7c4c
describe
'32017' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWS' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
e1d6e63b4257e8c935356e16fe8fc2d7
bc7804867f11807c3a4c2ae0ca352f6c3a40a90b
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWT' 'sip-files00152.tif'
5025aa136f9a25fad2d92bd600468ebd
3c304f25fcba1ad333dd24bf26b025deb443d391
describe
'1769' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWU' 'sip-files00152.txt'
70a9c923b85adf980995210722c71bf3
3202616c4dcbdc41b39f44d51f09d88c44a25f5b
describe
'9105' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWV' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
6d26f0a340b09ab9338f81d8846c6fbb
5996bc31deae33964702a96aadfb31d8bce7f36d
describe
'1145600' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWW' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
dd5266b089882cb973ee88779c21aab1
ed769a4bbd20c30e0ae0fb802e92c905687fa80a
describe
'96941' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWX' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
ea8e41298ab2de1b7777d66ccaab5f09
30df08b3ed292b3a1f4fb644ed93a160e1b3c831
describe
'46209' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWY' 'sip-files00153.pro'
fe85bcd19efcb9cefe4ac41f2962ada9
ccc800e88eb2c1eb3ebfc5a783618e6028051d56
describe
'33537' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACWZ' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
a18f4c19bc29895dc4c0ab7f4356fd2d
3faeba5ca9f7c9ebdc5afa20461b5de1d0d3b791
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXA' 'sip-files00153.tif'
a596f9b91db0be12b018036c3d00d59f
c7861ff11172ac46b749dbad1ab288df253c05bd
describe
'1974' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXB' 'sip-files00153.txt'
3aabd8e6281f144e0bc17df20e4e3211
a494a9610568cb33d24a2fe7f421e220149f5ddb
describe
'9205' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXC' 'sip-files00153thm.jpg'
e397c556e9c903c44e13dbdff3fe269d
97836522d120e4042eecfc92f858d216ae72db31
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXD' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
6fc85c161669520bfc2a9c051fc2a494
2e928e37dd557bd8ee5ce9d6aead06e13deb74d3
describe
'101026' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXE' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
dd2ff08cdd520182a048379cea101e3d
bcff411e4dd6d39b53ff0510bb99abe50b94e873
describe
'46291' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXF' 'sip-files00154.pro'
162953704d1429a408566eb6a14afb5a
d162464daf1df9217433fdec31121afae1f26f21
describe
'35469' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXG' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
2273fd516dcf6cc00e050d2c9a75d170
36280119b494964c348eeb29ce3f01ddab0ea1a6
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXH' 'sip-files00154.tif'
45e7698c8c84c64fa606a4b0d0024867
d67556bf7c7abcc273f087278e6e59ffc1928f38
describe
'1935' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXI' 'sip-files00154.txt'
4a5ce2e374f54d56c85b6392fa841284
d2eb7514aa91c8e3d5134625a2d0740176d8316e
describe
'10243' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXJ' 'sip-files00154thm.jpg'
7995aa3e356c629f64a9757c258d6568
f56064508fa8338c53ea521ca7f1db005368728b
describe
'1098970' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXK' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
2ddf368894474e9081b72841da2cce3b
a02391e7a9b880d85e06ed7e811b3e9964bb4af3
describe
'110443' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXL' 'sip-files00155.jpg'
1a82364a69df3d824494bb8a4eda91a5
7b7fb3fa3cc1e4ddab3f01c4d08ee4ec0c72dd28
describe
'49874' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXM' 'sip-files00155.pro'
d5a608724f4b5da83db552a3df0d9aec
3d7513a5ca7618b320aa5f55620820f421f89f26
describe
'37820' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXN' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
bddd51e902d4c5e06954a3b4ddb597fc
b52c43f39939098f7223ed7623b393d293cbacd9
describe
'8801985' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXO' 'sip-files00155.tif'
4284f0f6c69bac9febcd97fe6be042e2
089168cf4d3b0131b217f25622cbab445c8530a1
'2011-11-14T23:33:52-05:00'
describe
'2124' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXP' 'sip-files00155.txt'
f994e08a8a6d9bf720389c84d2782e6f
96d4563e3afd2bb4d095f467ee1a21850a8b472b
describe
'10356' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXQ' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
890061e7e58319b83301a265363df1aa
988c9054d7a6e3f508bd2413f4f31da5e6448617
describe
'1080582' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXR' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
fdb007d518db0ae09b433a7873c4b188
1241e29f4c3147041bf22b7a6089720d38f625a3
describe
'108485' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXS' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
df85ef6c6440741785d0b12d2d6281ff
631c67b391b086172d121429bb6cd284a1bae172
describe
'47916' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXT' 'sip-files00156.pro'
b2ded2c1a24d473bb80b6bb504c83df7
cd1af375c7ce38371bc57b70a141058cfb3569b4
describe
'37219' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXU' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
f0c68ffc34d7aba2ef3ef6de57ca2023
c06aea013cfd2201817614c1d6f796d4e89406b3
describe
'8654549' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXV' 'sip-files00156.tif'
c1ccf90afb08b2077ebfd48187a0b1ed
f24ee58a52001f1a774bc3fcbc8f6a4e1973d478
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXW' 'sip-files00156.txt'
c4a3a61ca0b3edcf3ac70d202dfacc6c
a02c30a15d000f542e83c152b94498a7e7844599
describe
'10421' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXX' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
b8d403ca51b62f52a629b31dc83d9ee1
47e75168a6c459198cfa272d5f050860fec90c25
describe
'1098948' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXY' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
f1e0b43db41ff907ad7d5aeedaf94095
45dae657af76a79d6bb4e5140287f9fc9f65035b
describe
'110331' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACXZ' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
50967b5f19eb415ca6488de40b5f08d6
af4e926eb4f08ca3e3ac094fe56442fafae44021
describe
'48960' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYA' 'sip-files00157.pro'
5536109dc6ad9e3586f6919e4d8792d3
ac48e356e2cdcac781807deb67190c442834de9d
describe
'37581' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYB' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
0d0b298a19a2c21d371b03f245ef49db
bd83fbcf18a9db7de99582bfb10f1b00fee3eedd
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYC' 'sip-files00157.tif'
021579b4e5392292e3971d26f1b4646d
51f9aa5b0e552aca2562c9dde06a80d3bbd17549
describe
'2063' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYD' 'sip-files00157.txt'
2db6117dfb2071a96bcc75333fd085ec
19c770c781bf20cde4b9b6e6da8d3c7dfeae0435
describe
'10328' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYE' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
aa8e32db027b44f3835b97e81d0460db
baaa22d29ca07985190826a64dbff9db5451e3ce
describe
'1080584' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYF' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
09b20f3e9579b13d3c43f9b0d088ade8
2311e6dc6077d26233b573fded2bbd1208c503ee
describe
'98539' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYG' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
b2333fc1fec7fe1b0063f4f7ca1ada5b
2c7928da780a7a796988105631bb6b37f5f8e3c1
describe
'41358' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYH' 'sip-files00158.pro'
8b79e1fe9b7cefee321b85555988290b
fc21c94e33bd72220aab13f338737dc937a1b9a1
describe
'33034' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYI' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
fd0c37c347ecd636912acff59bf20c4f
edcb32948582ff217b3f51d0c57eeb9ca5024a92
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYJ' 'sip-files00158.tif'
2e553b7a7a537b98e53919ca03035cc3
0cd503ddeeaede2ffe608e9ad1023c9492cc3774
describe
'1762' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYK' 'sip-files00158.txt'
0fd42b40d53bc973bcdf1c9539a81f37
a3bdca4fed4f0f44d4661b9b6f59d0b6f35c5e81
describe
'9515' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYL' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
853d5e6c988556a27ddd792af327033e
1d6a03ed0c5aef7894d37c027277979130471a8e
describe
'1099006' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYM' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
d01ce1da1cc7e181fb46ab27762281cd
8f174f914f2c5c9e5555bf82aff1d0ae6c1286c1
describe
'107011' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYN' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
b5ba21366c96cd75033d2207a8787992
4d4a71d5b03d8fb66fa63a24ca2a0256610b0d66
describe
'48285' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYO' 'sip-files00159.pro'
85b70cf05a6c67f19320176980cf2833
f44923ebb51b54e3b083a0819dbfb733e89fe222
describe
'35913' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYP' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
05634f61222f407770d691f34ada6396
6403cfc178293f243350fdf65a0f4564358cb9a7
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYQ' 'sip-files00159.tif'
74741ef0a888c8ec12e0af7a3a451972
8ab0b89c3472979a58802de56eb7b029b6360c0b
'2011-11-14T23:34:15-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYR' 'sip-files00159.txt'
ceae125490bc5a594adfb22b5b4c82ac
c43781973f2f5cc0a3a5f41110056aa02e444f1d
describe
'10041' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYS' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
e25b4a1800338eae2977adc7a68489c9
8fa2d3f3ed5802eb53c39f45cde7e87f63a69066
describe
'1080566' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYT' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
4d0a9942fc4bc0acb68ac5189f105716
6d7be7b5b4569158b31b63804b7acdfd8a481908
describe
'105247' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYU' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
a9f739d2fbcbdbe1a91e6872b2833dbd
1be5b50531f6d36443cf4c668fc4d34bd0b81680
describe
'46710' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYV' 'sip-files00160.pro'
8c38ddb8dbb3924900e4b6d63cb8c6a4
c12cc0f083344a5af1a6d8d30efd485b77188ac0
describe
'35839' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYW' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
4a897e10a75250980da0d16bab6a6e78
8f29b71ac9af32dc52b715aa25a1e298e2925998
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYX' 'sip-files00160.tif'
fd67120fba3c02fdf8a78ae8cd53773f
25fe08979ae0057156b958486823f54b2c761016
'2011-11-14T23:33:26-05:00'
describe
'1958' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYY' 'sip-files00160.txt'
897fc825d24d9821eb078dc24cd6225b
d63f4d2ad13f108a3bc805150643fc545bdc76e8
describe
'9970' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACYZ' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
a9c28bf884c05bd0561acf905a61b506
ffe321d96109af26ef76e08d715864b89ac7ff29
describe
'1099011' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZA' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
a4cb8b48f0d52fdcb6d3ced29479cb56
c7c3c76c86627ffea72094ff97b57d8018bb4809
describe
'104600' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZB' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
2714d3da7a45897e5f858febfdf1abaa
8afd0d7e374f9593f2a83a5739abddb0ae76ac42
describe
'46541' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZC' 'sip-files00161.pro'
767077fd054c587d4c2babfc4d034b74
5e567f92bedab1f87878dd2b19eac2f882ce5cc2
'2011-11-14T23:33:33-05:00'
describe
'35909' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZD' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
f6bbe9f9fe6cba338f632ce8b2df8b8e
565e00844556c7ba9d1744d229dea5ae127c7309
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZE' 'sip-files00161.tif'
115db93d8f7a097a808896fb1ff14c94
2971887cc869f3b916648bd2b83ba75b6e3425cd
describe
'1966' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZF' 'sip-files00161.txt'
36efc83728f1ddd2d639395afc495699
77d681cae3578b9d69bef8272bec028198eb8b4b
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZG' 'sip-files00161thm.jpg'
22379fa3f927a10aeefca7802c9406a6
5e2cb7aec7546663233d6c109829bc8dd13c3772
describe
'1080572' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZH' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
5ec0f023499eeb3476add94c065187a9
da00560541fa8d99acf60f669cf684af8a5e8068
describe
'104877' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZI' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
3295a2abc877ac419c55686d65ee77fa
5b42933c9343c90ae85e3e59dd988b65910bbd10
describe
'47372' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZJ' 'sip-files00162.pro'
6c19f5852bd26c9e3b2f211cbed712fc
e570f2fe52087ab2f8d391b26beb801c22d28f57
describe
'35452' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZK' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
24579d9b3731f8d3c48a0505671d5e0a
1c5ec34539ec88a620a8ada0cadaf66b596d3d73
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZL' 'sip-files00162.tif'
2fa36f9973ab3d33ea2e4852ca145731
a02a7f09e7de9c42b7895ba3018fb6aa90825719
describe
'2006' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZM' 'sip-files00162.txt'
91b304ba0a28ecbdf8b513fc0a06280f
302564d87486d5ac49477d93e560f87a362ca352
describe
'9882' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZN' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
4bcbfcecdc428b982916a5f73d7a0feb
50c0c35de348713de86bc0cf2ee991b3aa2dc196
describe
'1044448' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZO' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
6b314e41c37faeb362693ff6889d006f
bf274b9354fdd989251090780118615cbb6bb8d2
describe
'84600' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZP' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
901cb93a7c3844865a703fc5085bc6b9
8c73cd4b92c14d19099445d137e8a0d15438e903
describe
'35769' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZQ' 'sip-files00163.pro'
43bb8aa114ae78eae05de1cc4c503a07
a1ac977a4165c6d58780a9341ab5184eb3073b1c
describe
'29469' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZR' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
b496b52e7eec0d211014f572a26c1f56
9568733fba866a0f590c5e4639183f6e984dd5fd
describe
'8365487' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZS' 'sip-files00163.tif'
d66f36bbfd0e2e4727fe7fb340333d29
b7225b5e4c6243008f9724b81b673f18a33e32c7
describe
'1587' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZT' 'sip-files00163.txt'
69c3588b49f22ecf2105d0f104c65d0d
40d71bae15f750fef16cf9ac3df2c1cd6451003a
describe
'8921' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZU' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
9d04393743183f6c1c73daffa9e4e772
f49c0d8bbcc0fd30232cc5301d573aa24592c401
'2011-11-14T23:32:15-05:00'
describe
'1080480' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZV' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
f432bf2a3476d27e9c0895d88f103908
2f66098ebcde03445fbf0028483d9714b8dd17a4
describe
'107952' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZW' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
ad2da7af407a3e2ced9b44b6210b82fa
4c58db2d9adfe6201bf5d3640278689e4c00c583
describe
'48922' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZX' 'sip-files00164.pro'
6934a0428a57446150bb012db8e22e11
7e44d15adaa83aef374153b5ad1b587bb404308d
describe
'36615' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZY' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
891680f9201d02858c010fb8e403f786
5f6088590282f32675bcbd4b3bea7fac75982b54
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAACZZ' 'sip-files00164.tif'
765954a4f94a8d277954af2187706b8a
c245e038a8260ae67bfea7540c81b9f671d754da
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAA' 'sip-files00164.txt'
c5e3d71899379cdc26a6d65dbb37b42b
7d3465df5bf097596dd313d787b726aceaf9428f
describe
'10244' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAB' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
67574007b1723cd226c0a7fb1256287e
6a31baf0b0df8a9c41874915106eb999d43c0777
describe
'1099018' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAC' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
a57bcf0e295415fc2eab0a7a1933e05a
d764b7edabcf364d5227506a625b140d971894ed
describe
'101464' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAD' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
4fdf9729dcc49744a5ffdab2de829b2b
d95dff6670a1659780c9c0561eef45cc2cc6815e
describe
'45453' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAE' 'sip-files00165.pro'
59c591f396f6e0a7dfd08baaf22a2d96
238aaf2b736c50c654b4953a175e0a84a346810f
describe
'34858' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAF' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
3867972f96313cd22895e4564d8b03e9
6ceb5a61fd54bee82517cfe4feed70a3b45725ef
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAG' 'sip-files00165.tif'
e7820364d043fc32a15be9572eb5c173
c2c95e84954b1ba26d9b9c9695c0b4285b0c5e74
'2011-11-14T23:34:11-05:00'
describe
'1926' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAH' 'sip-files00165.txt'
3a1765ba6523537609880c00ae57ab6c
93b9ab5168d4be0ee6f59f93b9732a52e235f02c
describe
'9705' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAI' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
a6996d944c1f9199225e8a071dc96cf8
083fad28f51d2734a02da4e2d41f0920514352c4
describe
'1080593' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAJ' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
4ccc6632ef58ca2609401ccaa8a39bff
502a50b0cc090fc553b3716abb06d8ba803eaecc
describe
'98887' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAK' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
d3e69762960acc17ad0a5b8cdae90dd8
96eba3d8a60cee89e72c9d4fbea115e43cd42ae9
describe
'44466' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAL' 'sip-files00166.pro'
4c821b8ee039f5790a4e7909c479fbcc
9221495c2e8f09672a70b6dd1b464ee254852666
describe
'34130' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAM' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
9ed812e95be77107a9bd13d036bc86a6
0711578c11350189efef91a061af9c40626bb157
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAN' 'sip-files00166.tif'
d6c2773ad98c8076fdb5fe8fb73888e5
55c025beb08b6b8140a6e1a34b5213a15d35b8fb
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAO' 'sip-files00166.txt'
c1aca4b0d9bffdb115904ae03221175c
0ffc81d8b726e04536da16884b1cd331524c6fe5
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAP' 'sip-files00166thm.jpg'
6838605d187115e533af8f57f405bc89
8d0dfe4d0ae2eb9ab40c951e5cb349a9f92ee8fd
describe
'1099013' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAQ' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
d04636c2013d5cf3673e06edb183c9d7
80add1c72c243ca511c38f75155f19efea7f2442
describe
'97077' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAR' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
7d68278a5ab9f610390802f6c5a2c3b5
2e81b63205efcaa295791b7fe7bd936e9ecf64c7
describe
'42648' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAS' 'sip-files00167.pro'
c644c62382f5cb83e924a8387d31f985
c1847ce0bcfffa08bf603e438b01a71d6e01447c
describe
'33647' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAT' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
b868cea6433c0e99b72f9b9577f4a26e
f1e0fb363793ed7f5382f6e708de107c459ff512
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAU' 'sip-files00167.tif'
3a6efce3577817cb160d6c4890ce2c95
d399959b809a99b855d0ebb7cc551e207fbeddab
describe
'1824' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAV' 'sip-files00167.txt'
c833b9421c9300f39befda3bba663beb
1ab241b350308845af100d84e93c29b28a67d43c
describe
'9585' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAW' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
eeb81111c370e20570b3ea745e22a65e
67ff7b338554fd4dba761ce1b32cf067cf318c33
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAX' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
dc5e601105078d5055556ff1a15dbe01
2c8a39591184eeccf09baa7a0d89507acf4fa4c0
describe
'95211' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAY' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
ad5c5f8203554fb6c8af07ac01649326
0b321a9826439acea6c46deb0e4454bc0d7958e7
describe
'42082' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADAZ' 'sip-files00168.pro'
11427f04486496699dba8695120b5b0b
e9c3d432b778823256738fb2d7519475f94c72fa
describe
'33021' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBA' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
19b4876e3750008e451f82574fd9cc83
cfe69349adce4f2a250f15fa42bbec5895cffa3e
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBB' 'sip-files00168.tif'
5c9b7bcff64b0b48aae8e4d88a8f3df7
8e33007e3beb7fd3af49b846f63e9359e9983fb9
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBC' 'sip-files00168.txt'
ddb458beffa32964740568209266669f
867cfe6f2a6f36a157b72cfb76200ca3b36fa654
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBD' 'sip-files00168thm.jpg'
3b5a4745cae01de1794105831508dc85
dd78ee455febe5437344fe8e36f0bfd9dd3a6f5e
describe
'1098976' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBE' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
f8e2f670cbc7f138dc097dfcfe8d05f2
05d33ffed6831b3ae96d265525e5361221bf080d
describe
'106669' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBF' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
847b0bdd8b207740f747d084696c1668
42515c5b413e7ef8a331cb013b66cb2571f71dfc
describe
'49128' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBG' 'sip-files00169.pro'
a458adb7398d479aee165169a1caf9f2
ab456429e403e133b52433e24c0cc288e1335587
describe
'36819' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBH' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
d0048da6ab4b829e7ff5fd0bc5218382
e270eccbba433adae53c3eae2712c5eda9c877eb
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBI' 'sip-files00169.tif'
145609df4b7649d81d54431201f66bfa
1daa013c29d5f97c4b782f8e99938701f570b22e
describe
'2057' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBJ' 'sip-files00169.txt'
079708d21072e7c9b81b4d0fb5a0ec8c
6e89b17d986c61d8c88bb96507b75781f4b3cebd
describe
'9961' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBK' 'sip-files00169thm.jpg'
950a93d4fa2ea02da4647d49ab8e2ab2
48693fd1e8731d165b5774fcb1d3d3925235c26e
describe
'1080561' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBL' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
f1a91a19a4533357b64fb45be6fda4f8
97496fa1819e725e10eba672d607d5144ba68ceb
describe
'105397' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBM' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
34653ab5df62537d09c69c9989a30e81
ceae6c8b947029b264ec3bc19618b785bf659a31
describe
'48118' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBN' 'sip-files00170.pro'
0d701d2530ae85c669a8a8a0365e2e2e
6e700f4f9ccd0af65b5aaaedc20657d62e2ab962
describe
'36230' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBO' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
7ed45cee8508908459584e6929624cfe
0ae8dc804504915ef2232036f3f283e294e017ab
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBP' 'sip-files00170.tif'
7e97d512e92db25e1e2bc18354093ba2
7b8ed5daeacff32c2dee28f79b6c52d61b6a3f3d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBQ' 'sip-files00170.txt'
200ac4f58aedeb50a79df4b1b8fe84e8
302d09757ccd62a140bf7f652269cb7d3e6228cd
describe
'10032' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBR' 'sip-files00170thm.jpg'
bd0771e7f6cbbd67dd128abfbea95f11
13961d2ed0e30d21f4b333e6e120ccc62d32c066
describe
'1098920' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBS' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
f9faa557e6645e6e417315f41534ce4d
9efdbb17b16149fadfbe9ba22d846a41fad50653
describe
'101554' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBT' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
5356f45dcb5a14548600ac55d18694ae
da542eb56c06fdce64c54ebbdb9f3b141cdba276
describe
'45916' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBU' 'sip-files00171.pro'
b88f27bdc8468bcdafa9b0c2d824ec9d
67b55b3703ed3a93d04a82da81ebe7d913213f4a
describe
'35148' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBV' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
9fa874f20dc916dd786395070d2eed06
9b80b32b89702c988dd8fc8cd82afdf080734f2d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBW' 'sip-files00171.tif'
cde0bd03d11bf284e6b68493e9cc792d
09926908f7a41bb9fe643d859826a2fcbd494098
describe
'1954' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBX' 'sip-files00171.txt'
a074cbda38db424ec6fb988f4a855116
b32901361b426d8cfd11de8f9df875512f21e1c7
describe
'10010' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBY' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
d83c55129a693ce7ae18ab3233ab826f
a91dfaac9ab4b12d6b18316dca25ff6d3bb613fe
describe
'1080585' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADBZ' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
2dfd465800f67cf01cae2d078e543400
55218a1f31761d47b00a6c571b96afed77c112e5
describe
'95507' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCA' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
83b71076f9c74628c71a6b6f6ce4bf92
5e53c1c0ee8425a3188100da86e2de1955ce2fad
describe
'41842' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCB' 'sip-files00172.pro'
d54d1c4d39568d6a77f8edf1021cc43c
f4408399cfc1088f7c6f3d52d0320d6fee7fe1e6
describe
'32645' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCC' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
0701fc7f4d7bcbe1e8dc3956024013c8
2cb975725af0da3a1931f6596d99ce756f6346d4
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCD' 'sip-files00172.tif'
d7bc1697d85f5891a65279a1b4a7adaf
1b25280db0bd8f874e74939b65d5486ae3c65453
describe
'1775' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCE' 'sip-files00172.txt'
62306980e0c411acef35d61e5d101dd5
8b8eb3e6030f524e103598b123106fe260d19493
describe
'9953' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCF' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
dcec3378ca159bc6a7d89a55dcf7bfed
e9d75707f1af8e58d61e58b29de1eb2bd8e5e7ef
describe
'1099015' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCG' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
673f301b78f1932462de118c364644d0
9b73da36571ea355d071507e05b86c0a4978e451
describe
'106561' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCH' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
6da0f5cee3554af58093a7649a292b9c
8c1d2ad76b776de6734a59c364704a80febda032
describe
'49306' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCI' 'sip-files00173.pro'
aeed42bc70e4f7a3ddb4952dbbcec6e6
847736ffe273e3b48b5eaf0917e783f24837583e
describe
'36958' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCJ' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
836a48a37d91e034ed50c2ab16a53407
4bc263cbcafb4d0b4b62fa28ae10e9c454c7de29
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCK' 'sip-files00173.tif'
eda45aad7122aa86babceb554d1507c5
a22bf848554704dae069d6cbef35165ce4ee3343
describe
'2085' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCL' 'sip-files00173.txt'
860425572a57307bd1da4bed25df4bed
bd038e1f56d99beaf1f4b35518766ae9a063da06
describe
'10307' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCM' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
c4c7152cdaba833a619b3e005110fc75
4d7d27c49bfa4e68436a5190b5a1af4ca502564c
describe
'1080511' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCN' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
546a1ee335ddc9d07eed87ff6811ed7f
588340ac9415191b424b720f14b0df35eeaa49df
describe
'105458' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCO' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
5dc6642474e48a933d4fa129c2be5456
e6cae757876a8db5df6c8ec220f77fbb28b96b4b
describe
'47870' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCP' 'sip-files00174.pro'
7ea50b831015f9bda52acebb7f9d3494
207a39eebc040b1b11c6b72b72c5a860cc60cc08
describe
'35914' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCQ' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
b2c8b9411e8bd4e2925d70d63d32fac7
023f9d676f912ab0f4e6b27b3a8caaf598c328db
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCR' 'sip-files00174.tif'
a45ac2a6611438279ad6b2695d201d3d
041ddadc47ee89024d1c589d38c4e0768a6f7e23
describe
'1993' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCS' 'sip-files00174.txt'
c5861d936fa8171450d2b31a2b3248ad
d2c0bbb117e300bedb240e6f0344192f5a982b81
describe
'10142' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCT' 'sip-files00174thm.jpg'
e27f9cc7b0a0231ff8e81d68a38b2521
ed87a7122c6d7247e5e1575fa968f6c033b000b2
describe
'1099009' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCU' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
a165b872403540e757a48089d1bc7eaf
4efd99708fcc01d95d1459b39466fa36794cfd15
describe
'101255' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCV' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
4b692a11ba627b0d6f3c029947a7633f
8e54ad0f6fe4f745bb4001a65ba63306e684e414
describe
'44990' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCW' 'sip-files00175.pro'
a97adaeaa718168d131a4e61b71965ef
b56207ccdac51cc9461ccda0cc08b8ed5b085f2c
'2011-11-14T23:34:57-05:00'
describe
'35295' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCX' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
207453edb0eb739d24a9376614eb202e
d5a2bca3130f06bc46bfe07588fc2ac3283a1f96
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCY' 'sip-files00175.tif'
8e3f5c04db315ee1dc527e8758a93d95
d680635e4027ee8fe5a537135f688f01f4181cc6
describe
'1915' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADCZ' 'sip-files00175.txt'
ff6f4dd76a7f2233bd2f02a5c2611b68
c803af2e0f56ea8d44c47ac069b706f10bc9feca
describe
'9911' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDA' 'sip-files00175thm.jpg'
5edb7d95bcfe3439a974e9adfcb1d74a
742d94b55496af89d56e9c4d347b8af162997d2b
describe
'1080589' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDB' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
146a9a6d775e445477f03291e914e53f
110444ec2a3b77d77c587cc675b6e13f21a5cbc2
describe
'100730' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDC' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
158df153739f18f3a8ddf072fae35ee6
1e52fd1c71fb701e0311fd764107905ba611e1a0
describe
'45170' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDD' 'sip-files00176.pro'
4e2c0d7df6a1bb725506d7343164023c
f15fccfba15a4625989958e8248ca10cf6fbabcd
describe
'35428' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDE' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
e86514362e287046b98d878fee1d1b26
90d548cc5913e2e5f70424880ad7a09c8efad2f3
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDF' 'sip-files00176.tif'
535c01059078a6d829f86a09493f60ac
943e86b6d403d199a7cc7567f2acc910aaae9454
describe
'1882' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDG' 'sip-files00176.txt'
087bb7fe66092599faed343555690c0d
96f606b2d1eddec665576c804d87bc733a7ac49f
describe
'9799' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDH' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
935e7ff777508be6ec2f450f7b0bf676
d02cd2c241477acae450d4a15f0c23a059218b8f
describe
'1099019' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDI' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
ee9834b9c0750ff5211d8d2ed2bae32d
1e6b852710cdbad5d6799784a7317c6b8fc2b79a
describe
'104286' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDJ' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
6cc2f256582ac11e2cbf7e0cfb694bd0
d29191f92119d6ab21474c0cd3f5080648bd606c
describe
'46828' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDK' 'sip-files00177.pro'
292ce941b5477b841327d0b7709dd2ff
9b5e62e42d8d464a137358f012c79142a00f2111
describe
'35890' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDL' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
102d513a2f35488838e820bd49d79f89
af46465e887e604d29c39aa1e571ea376bde898d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDM' 'sip-files00177.tif'
37c0969c092f69704d056b277e236a85
614dd993342abf80fce40efc442e976868503fcb
describe
'1967' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDN' 'sip-files00177.txt'
34965ce3601a8f1f4f3f40fdfe09b8c6
5c5edfc46e1fb7f708243310861076d442686ed2
describe
'10098' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDO' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
002d24df14976ee0ce0cbc13d35f6e66
38bd6fd332b1c0c8e5d815d7cbba15b132e979fb
describe
'1080594' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDP' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
98238b231147296cda196dcb0f3507d5
7b4c8726ca4feef5a21431267492c9c5a4e4e685
describe
'107807' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDQ' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
c0fd0f34b92e1b5cee7af557dc8c4452
ff9ed68c0ede31eb693ce7cdb0b617a236770a9d
describe
'49299' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDR' 'sip-files00178.pro'
573eb4d5231c49f8e759910b7e25e69c
e6ebf3c0022067dbda6a61296e8aa5c968dc492d
describe
'37264' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDS' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
3fc3d03f87a581c0f55d5bfc81817534
ae8619594fce081b5ad04b5fc468a0fe2675599d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDT' 'sip-files00178.tif'
29482633644196ae0cd88f72b24c4957
b8b507c2e29495e2309ca129449691ac5e45a767
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDU' 'sip-files00178.txt'
89ce484b5278f928da929c5e2c43c93f
5a2a0e9bbbc8ed73508d71e6a01c1d34b1f06648
describe
'10409' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDV' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
5f6e315514e73eabe3545ad6635e10f3
0cb3503cd8fbb7f468b590a7e543da831267d129
describe
'994519' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDW' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
94b81aa628ea40736327e517d6e2ee09
dd1e28d3866cc6b4c99179a3a2e3c24db94407c5
describe
'45317' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDX' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
daa3c7df09ed5194a736b3dfd0143876
9b11193e3802b2542aa10741089b4db422f8c4fd
describe
'15295' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDY' 'sip-files00179.pro'
d9ba394e732f7711583a151b6afa94dc
d47be4d73042fe7bd6d890073653c8c0b4474247
describe
'14947' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADDZ' 'sip-files00179.QC.jpg'
d24ae1ef4b9d6d26193ae80d8ae4f8db
fed3371debce45547da2935e953c12b0ec47160e
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEA' 'sip-files00179.tif'
6e6c9e8bdffede6e060df98ec4597fa3
fcfb7d3c260eaf00a0b2095b615767d3ecfb674f
describe
'689' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEB' 'sip-files00179.txt'
ef4a0ff1db80778f40ac7617bfae43e2
f7a1a056cd6d7ec7d27de5a00272a71b1de22ded
describe
'4597' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEC' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
90a81f67818d2027dce316672d3005a1
78833ffd509e450b8f5ab7509b8b572c9aa2420a
'2011-11-14T23:34:45-05:00'
describe
'1080415' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADED' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
2d3fe0ab15a7d999fe230ba3cf07533a
32d601a6ef3dc4e9049746165ca0d1782991fb71
describe
'55832' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEE' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
387359cca734a6ac03a512dd52287818
3d18e80f1d312456739973177dc0253129eb46b1
describe
'5537' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEF' 'sip-files00180.pro'
3ccec00173bfc796312ba7339914838d
93eba2273f2f2879c50e6c1a57729f5211cff511
describe
'17874' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEG' 'sip-files00180.QC.jpg'
d3a757a2939130c75669108a35cefe05
b1ed224855fff0eb28cffe1c2cfab500bca64750
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEH' 'sip-files00180.tif'
9cc73feb23115c39daf458e230f73a4c
8ade08b72dc0dc85c6a2a0db9b862d185f56ca24
describe
'315' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEI' 'sip-files00180.txt'
13d46b6b408ce269e212c9fcfb6ffb0d
f09a408f89cf8cc752ef7a090a7181542af8ca10
describe
'6361' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEJ' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
762549b5a8fb4c70a898b09799cf7bcc
ce260ec2fe5483d5ef95c969c37182b99cf087be
describe
'1098949' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEK' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
72babc5ad0464a31151dc6c21d9ec7c7
2b1adb06c50ca09bb4dff70937db49e2a3d56770
describe
'78840' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEL' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
ed7a8f079d01b42cda039e639f5f1ae6
c8fba343f23fce0504ff0bbfa72e88a2dd6cb924
describe
'32411' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEM' 'sip-files00181.pro'
cfb0b89994dc19cb85a7aa10ed4cd29f
213160505d164eafce393a5e53b6b7ccac8b8923
describe
'27324' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEN' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
3c43bb57199f9c6e42f5a5bc5efecbd5
de98c343dc90767adcb51f22ab396a295b28c37d
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEO' 'sip-files00181.tif'
9271000eaba70f8235b0933d3dda0471
ed21e347370566f7200750d2836202ae8ad619e3
describe
'1535' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEP' 'sip-files00181.txt'
37f14cfde0b35d86a764577c1da6497f
60406e4d577a159e3c7fa7c5ed9ad0f8d535de76
describe
Invalid character
'8414' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEQ' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
4e742344a52f6d8cec385c2a8332aa49
e5836b5e0361f5579d7e47411d1c158ed6edf2fd
describe
'1080586' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADER' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
e3d55e6d492bc7210f384f5794fe8fc6
061e40b33e5f2bf0116b8c68eb58fb626e4a3272
describe
'93709' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADES' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
dd14242648833484012cb889947b9d60
b7b6369a3cb4affb963a4aa033677fad79c741ea
describe
'46170' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADET' 'sip-files00182.pro'
af9fe23a081eafebbac4a828725c8b6b
48f5ff7b0f0095f24422880e0494df5d2ac57c00
describe
'31783' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEU' 'sip-files00182.QC.jpg'
a01f694ae9a855c021c03d9795002f85
6ad393bc1489a1ce5dbc31a9b491793cfd8cc8a8
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEV' 'sip-files00182.tif'
3476a7f20ae038012114e5a3e22be092
63b950613b70a48475fce168aa69cfb08c845036
describe
'2099' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEW' 'sip-files00182.txt'
f5823c6e99dbd64fec7b4f617be0ab7d
c20c5c73fe905e7872dbf0e481a9c3cffd54d3a4
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEX' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
cda3c6eb62d4e8fb858077dbe657ccf8
db6bb0e9a41e43e9d76e12d45c6ce402e89192fb
describe
'1098991' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEY' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
4270aa24a2be8cc354b0b4792d00c8e3
e4023e83a2f3dfff3eca14c6426b0f2d32b4f1c3
describe
'97947' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADEZ' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
5a6ee2fcb689a0e676db70bf8fcce330
31b79c7d9838240bcf9cd394e4ff9f93b10a7226
describe
'52521' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFA' 'sip-files00183.pro'
fdffd9d72df74d0c6d932b7bd28ae15b
ee29d3edc8ce3b033797581d53e7e44d60275b30
describe
'32793' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFB' 'sip-files00183.QC.jpg'
1be27b75185209c4c3ca253d72ffc1f7
da9f11b069782442934a2abd90ee12fe52d754b8
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFC' 'sip-files00183.tif'
8102997671f1e7314a6528e65901c4f8
0f2c317615242988df401bc92e286a6004ce25e9
describe
'2407' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFD' 'sip-files00183.txt'
0a0a3ccbdffce4a1734c1bba9d8d7fb8
637b7276089cdafc12ebefc1f4f7ccd5fb730c3f
describe
Invalid character
'9745' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFE' 'sip-files00183thm.jpg'
50d8f827899bf8e566fe43ed2617f91f
22be9b6542829a6e2122736be9d04c03b823679e
describe
'1080590' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFF' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
f8ce2aa38d29276ae8b5855db6b49b9a
c0cb11016f37998fb960372c8387ed901ec52e04
describe
'95915' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFG' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
37bbedf1260414584239806bc9c91fdc
e84cd0b5a5d78f3f60012ef247f88ab8c1d790c1
describe
'48161' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFH' 'sip-files00184.pro'
62cc640f1df33410cc001d47dec3bdcc
100ff8beb32d31e61082884492d27f100030f82b
describe
'31787' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFI' 'sip-files00184.QC.jpg'
6bda60b0ca0473c474611b57264c608a
1b033ac0519bc5f4df2bc83286c537c64426e585
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFJ' 'sip-files00184.tif'
05e7b4267eaaf99b264cf277628d3f8f
58b6455ed46e75525d3b586ec89e637fc856e978
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFK' 'sip-files00184.txt'
aa08613aa981e10dd133b2e25ee8f4a4
d95ccdfc484ef721c54759ba0c11ed46572f1795
describe
'9565' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFL' 'sip-files00184thm.jpg'
d0bc93672ed9bd05b233655d07edebed
9bb4f331eb537191a3ee3bcdd20bcdd7b536e9a0
describe
'1099012' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFM' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
756a05e363c8ee5b50459dd0445d810a
6ba3ba237afce6d6c4b5a63fa5aa82f8071161c1
describe
'96507' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFN' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
8d05f2b6d8c3639538932f93b82a11b0
5cc0bb62d7bde5253014803b499626a2fab5c885
describe
'47396' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFO' 'sip-files00185.pro'
1aa75e01b4fad4ac91d11d4c6836a10e
b851de1869835d6ed8b109886cc9259eb2568dc2
describe
'33135' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFP' 'sip-files00185.QC.jpg'
549ff4d0e41f12f0339f1335d4dcd54b
d551d8305310c1ed1c76ab279a00c4ea19a37d1c
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFQ' 'sip-files00185.tif'
08e425542439629ccdb6fcdf8ff6c84b
7ad5b2dae022666902a3f02a980dcf07eac3af27
describe
'2148' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFR' 'sip-files00185.txt'
6300ad0b66a19fa536aa6a1a0e4e5e70
aea4d7787584bd9c54ab653eb8583d638db544a9
describe
'9815' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFS' 'sip-files00185thm.jpg'
062c06f65605562c12065a5c2af97ef4
6640a00c20b89a265023a7550d7f7ac294c6f5ae
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFT' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
ef9fa7fa4dcbfb59159415c673e71e49
11207cb808d09036bec58da0eea8bf906e007f40
describe
'92197' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFU' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
905392ec7f7ca85dbe5cef530020ec6f
9402c63123474e2d2960ea6ee1f1cbc1871e9d0f
describe
'42929' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFV' 'sip-files00186.pro'
58e6a9f74a855029065feeafebc590a3
1615eec0e4e96e7743acd776501449a85050bdae
describe
'31696' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFW' 'sip-files00186.QC.jpg'
93bd2d91d15ef18e26a810fb758fd8ec
13fc80b3e172229e7be3ba984305522e8370b5a4
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFX' 'sip-files00186.tif'
68103400b06c7525a913fd226097ce5c
b163a374daf7bbf145eee21021a1ed10fd58fac3
describe
'1906' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFY' 'sip-files00186.txt'
d00abba21b3d9a8da760acbdcecde65f
3e64934ee71d856bc521a0d61a982cb6e4367a94
describe
Invalid character
'9977' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADFZ' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
21c281b1c75d628dbc6e921b819bff72
5fa5c6d2a441eb588e23e5617b99b0071b8d098e
describe
'1054255' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGA' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
2ef1f8e72fd0b9dc7758d6bdf23bef47
4b6b8aa91db8dfcc58aaef150ddb0d96af59e561
describe
'87972' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGB' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
b43cf097784d8f9ff8ec10c1e0f1e860
eb5febe6c23ca998da00385b02a4b32b5fecc7b0
describe
'42173' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGC' 'sip-files00187.pro'
dbf919a7056898e8931e8143d16b3603
9eb84f623e8433bee9df0dc33ee7e6e1ed4ad302
describe
'31255' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGD' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
8112cfac5f2dc223da40a8d578747058
0d0584beab8e78fec6f12f96b7a163fe1bf7f616
describe
'8443801' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGE' 'sip-files00187.tif'
5522639e51f88faa386ad6ab598221a6
8c1f743b25531c144154ac5bb9292e063110ab81
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGF' 'sip-files00187.txt'
78ef76d7b80a3098646f49c43625b439
9fb7b92e99e90b96e15bb6ebe5663b4ef4d484ba
describe
'10257' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGG' 'sip-files00187thm.jpg'
7978d329a860a765c454b82a4998502b
50dafd6d5d51f58e98e66b3dcc0acf64fdb737d2
describe
'1080534' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGH' 'sip-files00188.jp2'
84ce767b759315fc240b9f14680f9174
298174bd506a0427202383c306d833eb53f73b65
describe
'82727' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGI' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
09565b74cb3114c608dbd3d618f930aa
d52e17c2190abaeef89577f04fcdfbca8620c94e
describe
'32360' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGJ' 'sip-files00188.pro'
eb1ecd31d9ef537cc0e46dd785a6206e
75f80f731bbe1b5f2acb14cdafee1e55dee53359
describe
'29868' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGK' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
e655bc0841135da8148ebb828a9c5afe
1c79d12764a17ce09cfe572b1e9f9b5c182f9500
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGL' 'sip-files00188.tif'
a4ebbcbb73e89c3f558a864eb870f8d5
81bb535d70cd8c226bb91e2ca578ce35e86ded07
describe
'1444' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGM' 'sip-files00188.txt'
02241c67d83a6ca808c65abc3ffaea2e
e5f2b7573d8f77bfd467e06ca5507b2afb00b2b9
describe
'9298' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGN' 'sip-files00188thm.jpg'
cfd1257344a6bc774397c0c551719436
8386f9d3b893dfef4b755f681ad3bdc187825906
describe
'1098930' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGO' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
51a6362a5fdcac761eae95b7400f5927
27bdc0fee53c3f58c8d6e865296500f5eeb683a0
describe
'79612' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGP' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
615cad4bd57d9299bfd3e4c01b2030d4
f7315a11a733a1eb08784a9f3d3ad35c8f13c22f
describe
'32894' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGQ' 'sip-files00189.pro'
b013f67fcd9975978c09ac1f982e100d
aea0654a9df0180aaeed918c5bf426d98076b22e
describe
'28156' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGR' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
1bb0f1c68d58a7356b1de3cc2a27ecfc
82c958439f8490126eaa756dc48fdc8ace44e039
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGS' 'sip-files00189.tif'
a9c0ccdeab933d20a53fadbf5755a7e5
3497896e2b73605451de6e550292d95251bfb725
describe
'1609' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGT' 'sip-files00189.txt'
eeef519c54322a748c4a435d6b47421a
7184eafbd16d4cdddeb64bb931ac0567f52ef1e1
describe
'9397' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGU' 'sip-files00189thm.jpg'
96eb8a96cf00f2fc01f7ef27471a4b73
16ea841625aae7791a36f0bcb79e0280992dec0d
describe
'1080592' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGV' 'sip-files00190.jp2'
1565c37d104a2db502c53e945696606c
e5aceb7b864beec131e76e022da8f42caaec9b87
describe
'98220' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGW' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
27fee513f22e3f5de6358a8c71d9d868
da4d5231054f538c5b68ba1be1293dda87b254da
describe
'43381' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGX' 'sip-files00190.pro'
b31c50eedf7e7e646a6fef8d8f395ed4
9c261b2336f89bfd0d7fd5f64765f71bd0cca7ab
describe
'34394' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGY' 'sip-files00190.QC.jpg'
4491f23917a1cfff45558cb85465393d
a7494d2b8e2a4c348db509f4015c7594fe033068
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADGZ' 'sip-files00190.tif'
2cfe3b06d706e1280356f582634d8796
20abfb62de251d5de64a05840ae8367fc8af55cb
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHA' 'sip-files00190.txt'
4732fd58e2b2be8ac4ede3a14a64e62b
2ee80b83a78561d9fb61dc4eab17514c6894bcd3
describe
Invalid character
'10771' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHB' 'sip-files00190thm.jpg'
e18def624d9f5d41a05b869994371524
38ff4bdf424b42f02ff1d4080d8a599bf2e1c55a
describe
'1043378' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHC' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
cf2f6e5c4cfb184c8ae4cdabdddcd292
1ab7a7ec523fad24e678a8186e09692d04e73ab2
describe
'92959' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHD' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
e5eaf59ec00aaa8199e1b73da0291f7d
7e56b02d0eb604b3613d7a6551c692fd1603e437
describe
'40311' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHE' 'sip-files00191.pro'
e4c71ec1fb031810d0f41d81f4da0e95
2ad804f9c98fc6be960bdbe2741dabf6c1ff23a3
describe
'32412' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHF' 'sip-files00191.QC.jpg'
7158ce3031ee20b26bea73293af0fe3a
a969103f28aa11996c12e324d39af2b97c6410b0
'2011-11-14T23:34:40-05:00'
describe
'8356735' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHG' 'sip-files00191.tif'
021ef2cc5170bea0bc1bb2556fce69bb
b3b2d333f749da76bf68c6b4870d03cce7236496
describe
'1788' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHH' 'sip-files00191.txt'
3b846392b59f510117d4d69ac6b3a3ff
12dfe0433e19631dcb245fd523e2b0cc980390bf
describe
Invalid character
'10734' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHI' 'sip-files00191thm.jpg'
bd2365bc90bed26d86889e3d238b2c92
278cdc5550d04fa4a79b6445acd121d7a4f57450
describe
'1080595' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHJ' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
af9cac5388983462c34c0f0f762a041b
b080c7971bf1c205cd2a050712bc3e126e8a5f5f
describe
'99883' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHK' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
bd9faeb2cf02413598a2eb431f3ab9b8
611daa40ab5ae636fc3ddd8cbdb4879751047529
describe
'49958' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHL' 'sip-files00192.pro'
14a50c34ac0161b0cd1ce5ed4110d785
cc5a66cf8a95a61b4819075680f9c2e380b80933
describe
'34295' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHM' 'sip-files00192.QC.jpg'
7229117d9adc90abfa14b7c8c24f0900
600eee27f1a4721c4faf0a37814c9d4e53f75e42
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHN' 'sip-files00192.tif'
34dc0d39b95e69fe708f0232b21d751f
1dfd4aa6897b6cdd614db33aa2dd77576fd69287
describe
'2336' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHO' 'sip-files00192.txt'
990f97f6f97646bbe3bdbbba20c96eb8
1fd3a1ea0bbd1dd1a8ec2da040bf0d3a7ce444b3
describe
'10523' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHP' 'sip-files00192thm.jpg'
a5c06a506073a01e0754d037b8652e8e
67832b9ae3ebf7f40ce790e3fb4858f0b8709c81
describe
'1018036' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHQ' 'sip-files00193.jp2'
ded4739b591c9560782922bff89571b7
01f1de6173da7baa84dc536c4db945ab9e33d60c
describe
'80603' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHR' 'sip-files00193.jpg'
e02c6b1ba1553e9bad047e80a40b93ba
ff3f9ab9d2817554263eac574137c404911a1bff
describe
'27743' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHS' 'sip-files00193.pro'
fb464e3ba6ad485c4f951410a04fefae
5870ff17432ef2a6b97b8f40d61f08913843fefc
describe
'28221' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHT' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
2de0b08a4f847b99a21902a1088e74f3
8cae4603ef1e63c965143aff210f616384161796
describe
'8154205' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHU' 'sip-files00193.tif'
99e4ab19268f1efbfd7d55188f33c829
74ad33e3bdf7687a0ee0eb7a2b71becea7f262b2
describe
'1352' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHV' 'sip-files00193.txt'
8a33fbe0833e04c531cb886d2c40c611
81c9ebedfadc057cc5f89e600cb93cc89cce5d11
describe
'9905' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHW' 'sip-files00193thm.jpg'
12f20e4b93334553564795663da16fc9
b64846a2914efe846d6e3ac9a361c15692d38d5f
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHX' 'sip-files00194.jp2'
a4cfe0428a12e2b4cbc63642db4ff323
a1a62eb515580de57d7f2e8605850f24f2e01bda
describe
'87642' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHY' 'sip-files00194.jpg'
e7ba00cbc28d0ff04bf4c2925ab784e6
262bad910e1a6012b36cf7cfb246e78deb2709e2
describe
'33645' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADHZ' 'sip-files00194.pro'
b0574e415accd31849c6294f391d65b9
2458767a4ae42f287344c0f9c168ab90d7e23b9d
describe
'29411' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIA' 'sip-files00194.QC.jpg'
d5915d376d90c4ef16185f77bce76286
97b532fa1dac6753c9a8837aa0f2ce83ad6755c1
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIB' 'sip-files00194.tif'
bdda59d2b36d24e81670d281dce654ed
413ff072bf160c69d39a596fcc8113e5cc0fa8e3
describe
'1528' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIC' 'sip-files00194.txt'
1796a9ce210fc35bdeafb7b94a4a2adc
2e8f83dfbb7698df0446bb6718ed60db232000bb
describe
'9138' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADID' 'sip-files00194thm.jpg'
e539033344bc34f1ddb70862c5d1e320
08cac304112bb633244886288b75356ebb4a79bb
describe
'1107471' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIE' 'sip-files00195.jp2'
19ee57fd5f9c81a21741a5fe4efd90da
f95075aee2c88a84c63627fce23ee55bbb90678c
describe
'85473' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIF' 'sip-files00195.jpg'
a9ef56683d54ff9a6cb0b5dbf4d8fe75
4ed916d8b78117fc4490efca5a802e2e66bc3cec
describe
'40728' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIG' 'sip-files00195.pro'
3a88a03e746c398e07040e976d5c1ad8
0f222726e4dbac738a619eb4f5bfd9baeb9ac65a
describe
'28291' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIH' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
4886b248babecbedbdfd394ed4778955
c211a90d363617e0ddebe71ad35a62c61d3a3325
describe
'8869523' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADII' 'sip-files00195.tif'
cc7bb551ecaf5a761b74d0cc7a8bea7d
23f7ab3ec6a5726ddd416fb1cd15ee96329950f2
describe
'2077' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIJ' 'sip-files00195.txt'
31ca6d01917c45d3d52e3607ff7e1e66
e2299a06a700de31a5247dcd2382f733c5e78a8e
describe
Invalid character
'8448' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIK' 'sip-files00195thm.jpg'
aca5d534e0e1ba4f3d6219c15e4856b5
fdd77c60f38a095b43f617b58062815ee422277d
describe
'1038666' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIL' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
dab4cad731f4302f9f3521e1cebc96b3
6c742108128b485a0c252c88ec547b7042dfe353
describe
'28839' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIM' 'sip-files00196.jpg'
f7804994138a31deb7923f90ba17cc88
458f04ee27a0b8cb406ff11961538d2b683ad270
describe
'312' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIN' 'sip-files00196.pro'
6e170cc048255985bf2ffe46ed9a66f5
741bbb2fe4742cfb9f360f767906c1edd4958a13
describe
'7130' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIO' 'sip-files00196.QC.jpg'
921042260be261d120a5d74fc4957764
ab482834e52e5a63392a9847b1ef927777d1ca8e
describe
'8633703' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIP' 'sip-files00196.tif'
a311b1b28bce2cf4d5c355e104821f60
fe25205a6f09d173b301b8599fd9338876c99eed
describe
'9' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIQ' 'sip-files00196.txt'
4c1a31ff9b8ab6cf59df80f2ead6f17b
74134b1b0230f5adb66f2f0c62726122f3f7e0a4
describe
'2321' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIR' 'sip-files00196thm.jpg'
2069e6291aace1cad821f15e51b4fce6
30f44b5734ec625429cf0e89e013b282fa67fb00
describe
'1510953' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIS' 'sip-filesback4.jp2'
3dd50cb3c17785e801bec84c433e4025
738b7ea77dccb52b0fdd539628c66f99e9b88600
describe
'88847' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIT' 'sip-filesback4.jpg'
3014f33d90e93df12506d6707552866c
31241305b280010c5a9894bf3953e2f80bfcc377
describe
'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIU' 'sip-filesback4.pro'
69e021565b9369f7efd203c452bf378c
5d30c8f7139241f75545e2b9809a41170080ca16
describe
'18793' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIV' 'sip-filesback4.QC.jpg'
61ef80b109c7d310fffd91c832e3c10b
3967ce1934509cc74517ed57a55b364cc5808588
describe
'36264852' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIW' 'sip-filesback4.tif'
a8857a7eac8953abe2ecbaf9bf01e87b
90abf4edefa155acb65023885e174536654ab0dc
describe
'4761' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIX' 'sip-filesback4thm.jpg'
9cbe88c3632371dbb45d87b3fcb62162
9ddd90739026c14424b872f2d709dc145dde1b37
describe
'1437866' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIY' 'sip-filescover1.jp2'
4418182f538a42c125aea6b7e43aec9d
1edb8bbda219cf7ae5cd123b3d41daa4658906ae
describe
'115847' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADIZ' 'sip-filescover1.jpg'
e1eb5daed01f1de7151e1165ca70272e
b7b05c72c48a2035df66f05f255c01ce06dc7fb2
describe
'2616' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJA' 'sip-filescover1.pro'
1b26b37073f477ca9d04380e4cf24836
cf50ad47ab3c99be3e1a30c8d76769c2c942ee57
describe
'26695' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJB' 'sip-filescover1.QC.jpg'
329f0be39784b4016c9d42a5581e428f
2fe658018e65e133225d71708be8a9e599806d08
describe
'34512036' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJC' 'sip-filescover1.tif'
3c55d4fb67dadb792fd0f82b6961b1fe
fcdbf8aa1a4914de31587a269e5eda25502058cb
describe
'469' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJD' 'sip-filescover1.txt'
e29952bcc8d97e61fc0d06bb7d0a0780
4d788ef9213ef1f12d9cb6008714550f5021efc9
describe
Invalid character
'7204' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJE' 'sip-filescover1thm.jpg'
48b9699c7ff4d4e96d0b6ce9974861db
1870e4c2b6c1ec6a0772d731f881e6fed8f06706
describe
'349145' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJF' 'sip-filesspine.jp2'
8bbfd43b8d41042bd4712a2d2f05c257
bd4ed647ec88f24ddee711f5a70a7a33643bc81e
describe
'42107' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJG' 'sip-filesspine.jpg'
2b9cfc3590931c0a65e9a7eb34ac7c9f
565e26eb03a5e2b5923984889550e9ccdfc21010
describe
'768' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJH' 'sip-filesspine.pro'
d2c36314f5368dbf317122ffec019e34
7f6faca105e99c32a0e8130e29aa4c227208547f
describe
'10516' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJI' 'sip-filesspine.QC.jpg'
8755ab94fe3b6b35472ae5fc13002cea
a70bc3e1ab8b51cb2463bb9f482f9e4638d066a2
describe
'8383108' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJJ' 'sip-filesspine.tif'
3f068f50352108eebb79092c96923936
816a7c26c0fb86ba4b5dca8b6fcba842167a498f
describe
'254' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJK' 'sip-filesspine.txt'
dc59f781d50e095a5b3418b76eb6f2ba
8cd671453c47f93f95430bef8ab403d9e135a1c4
describe
'3984' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJL' 'sip-filesspinethm.jpg'
f98d4baaa38fa11f9ca376ccfe870757
f12393a34900784f26512e1dc2eaa429b4555c56
describe
'332830' 'info:fdaE20080810_AAAABDfileF20080811_AAADJM' 'sip-filesUF00001998_00001.mets'
6a708f8458328562def1f854047e13d7
13a28f556364cf67aeec650a819a041094c2bc69
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2013-12-16T12:14:01-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsdhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
BROKEN_LINK http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "
".