Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 81, Decatur, Adams County, 3 April 1934 — Page 2
Page Two
—— ——■— F classified” I ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES ■ • FOR SALE FOR SAlJi—Will have frost proof cabbage plants. April 1 and 2nd. L. E. Summers, 909 Walnut St. FOR SALE—Brooder house 8 x 10. 10 rod of wire and posts. Dun Gould at Batons Bros., 2 miles west of Willshire, O. 79-3 t FOR SALE — New Living Room Suites $45 to $l5O. Sprague Furniture Co., phone 199. 80t6 FOR SALE Coming two year old black mare colt, sound. R. E. Brown. Mile north and mile west of Monroe. 80k3tx FOR SALE 5 year old cow, part Durham and Guernsey. Fresh soon. Chas. Thieme, 4% miles northeast of Decatur. 80t3x FOR SALE Registered Holstein bull, 4.7 B. F. dam. J. O. Tricker. route 8, Decatur. Phone 869-H Mg. FOR SALE OF TRADE—Roan colt coming yearling for good work horse, also good Guernsey afid Jersey cow fresh. Clarence McKean 1-4 mile west St. Paul church. 79-3tx FOR SALE - New and Used Pianos $35 to $225. We sell on terms. Sprague Furniture Co., phone 199. • 80tG FOR SALE—-Brown mare, good worer. Max Thieme 7 miles northeast of Decatur. 79-3tx WANTED WANTED —-Light hauling, ashes, rubbish, etc. Prices reasonable. Phone 1208. 79a6tx WANTED —A good housekeeper in motherless home. Write or see Homer Li'by. Belmont Park. Route 3, Decatur. 81-g3tx Q Breeders Club Held Meeting Last Night The Adams county Guernsey ] breeders association held a reor- j ganization meeting Monday evening, April 2. in the dining rooms of the Rice Hotel. All the old officers were re-elected. They are: Peter B. Lehman, president; Wesley Stultz, vice-president; Reinhold Koldewey, secretary; and Dale Moses and Floyd .Myers, directors. The guest speaker. R. L. Holden, field man for the American Guernsey cattle club, reported himself as being extremely well pleased with the progress Guernsey breeders are making in Adams county. The local .people attending were: Peter B. Lehman, Wesley Stultz, .Mt iwin 'dtih-i. Ri <. imid K.iLe wey. Dale Moses. James Anderson. Frank Fogle. Earl Haskell. James A. Hendricks, Oren Stults, C. W. Moser, Floyd Myers, Louis Koldewey and John Walters. Dan and Noah Schwartz. Roy Johnson, Ed Ells worth, and L, E. Archbold, county agent. 'Jo the drpoMitorM and creditor* of 'J hr People* l.oan and Truat ( <mi-i pan* of Decatur. Indiana. Notice is hereby given that the' Department of Financial Institutions! of the State of Indiana by (’lark J. j Lutz. Special Representative, has filed with the court and in said cause No. 14721 of the Adams Circuit Court, an account in partial' settlement of the Liquidation proceedings setting forth all receipts and disbursements from the date the assets of said Institution were turned over to said Department by Al Kirsch, Liquidating Agent r<> wit: September 9,1 J*33 to the Ist day of April 1934. Also a list of the claims which ! have heretofore been allowed by said court and notice is further given that said report will be heard an J determined by the Adams Circuit Court on the 3rd day of May 1931. Notice is further given that up until said date any creditor, shareholder or other interested person may file objections in writing to such account. ( lark .J. I.nt/.. Special Representative of The Peoples Loan and Trust Co. Decatur Indiana. April 3-Ki-lT SHERIFF MLR In the Adams Circuit Court, Stat** of Indiana, Cause Number 14,835 First Joint Stock Land Bank of Fort Wayne vs. Jacob M. Neuenschwander, Lydia Neuenschwander, his wife The Bank of Berne, First Bank of Berne, The Peoples State Bank, Rudolph Schug. Special Representa-, live Os the Department of Financial Institutions of the State of Indiana. By virtue of an order of sale t<> me directed and delivered from the Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court in the above entitled cause, I have levied upon and will expose for sale by Public Auction at the Court H.4>use Door, east entrance, first floor in said County, between the hours of 10:00 o’clock A. M. and 4:00 o’clock P. M. on Saturday, the 14th day of April A. D. 1934, the rents «nd profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following described real estate to-wit; The south west quarter of Section 32 Township 26 North, Range 11 East, containing 160 acres, more or less, in Adams County, Indiana. And on failure to realize therefrom the full amount of the judgment and interest thereon and costs, I will at the same time and in the manner aforesaid offer for sale the fee simple of the above described real estate. Taken as the property of Jacob M. Neuenschwander, Lydia Neuenschwander. his wife. The Bank of Berne. First Bank of Berne, The Peoples State Bank, Rudolph Schug. S|MM3tal Representative of the Department of Financial. Institutions of State of Indiana at the suit of Firist Joint Stock Land Bank of Fort Wayne. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. Burl Johnson. Sheriff Adams County Indiana C. L. Walters and Vesey, and Hoffman, Attorneys. March 20-27 A-3
[MARKETREPORTS i DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL i AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET f Decatur, Berne, Crsipvill .Hoagland Willshire, Ohio Corrected April 3 t No commission and no yardage • Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday i —— t 1 160 to 210 lbs $3.85 l ' 210 to 250 tbs $3.90 ’ 250 to 300 lbs ' NQ to 350 lbs. $3.60 140 to 160 lbs. $3.10 ; 120 to 140 ll.| $2.20 1 100 to 120 lbs $2.00 Roughs $2.50 t Stags $1.60 [ Vealers $6.00 ■ L.ituUs SB.OO t East Buffalo Livestock i ■ Hog receipts 1,100; holdovers i 70. slow; few loads 15c to 30c under Monday's average; bulk unsold; desirable 160 to 230 lbs. $4.65 to $4.75; other weights , quoted correspondmgly lower. Cattle receipts 90; cows un- . changed; cutter grades $1.35 to . $2.50. i Calf receipts 100; vealers slow; weak to lower; good to choice - $7 to $7.50; common and medium. 1 $4 to $6. Sheep receipts 50; lambs quot•l ed steady; good to choice wool- • skins $9.50 down. Fort Wayne Livestock ' ! Hogs 24c lower; 250-300 lbs. $4.15; 200-250 lbs. $4.05; 180-20(1; lbs. $3.90; 160-18* ths. $3.80; 300- ' 350 Tbs. $3.75; 150-160 lbs. $3.25; 140-150 lbs. $3; 130-140 Tbs. $2.75: 130-130 Tbs $2.25; 190-120 lbs. | $1.75; roughs $2.75; stags $1.50. Calves $6; lambs $8.50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat . ,858 k -86% -86% Corn .47% .50J, .52% ! Oats .31% .32% .32% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected April 2 Na. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs or better 79c• No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs 78c Old Oate ... 51c New Oats . 29c First Class Yellow Corn 58c ’ Mixed corn 5c less Soy Beans to 90c SHERIFF s II.E In the Adams Circuit Court, State) of Indiana, Cause Number 14,772 First Joint Stock Land Bank of Fort j Wayne vs. James H. Andrews, Ethel! M. Andrews, his wife, Nathan Andrews. By virtue of an order of sale to] me directed and delivered from the | Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court in j I the above entitled cause, I have I levied upon and will expose for sale I by Public Auction at the Court House Door, east entrance, first floor in said County, between the | hours of 1 <»:»(» o'clock A. M. and 1.00 I o’clock P. M. on Saturday, the 14thj day of April. A. D. 1934. the rents) and profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following describ- | ed real estate to-wit: 1 he northeast quarter of the north ] east quarter of Section twenty-nine (29), Township twenty-seven (27)1 North. Range fourteen (141 East, I | containing forty (40) acres, more or. | less, in Adams County, Indiana. And on failure to realize there-1 ■ from full amount of the judgment i | and interest thereon and costs. I will | ‘.at the same time and in the manner ( aforesaid offer for sale the fee sirn- ■ I pie of the above described real es- ; tate. Taken as the property of James J H. Andrews, Ethel M. Andrews, his L wife. Nathan Andrews at the suit of First Joint Stock Land Bank of ' Fort Wayne. Said sale will be made without any ’ relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. • Burl Johnson. Sheriff ’ Adams County. Indiana. I- Valter* and \e*e», Shoaff and Hoffman. Attorney*. March 20-27 April 3 Appointment of Adinini*!rntor Notice is hereby given, That the > undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Mary E. i Fisher late of Adams County, de- > ceased. The estate is probably sol- '* FL Burt Lenhart. Administrator Heller ano Schurger, Attorney* March 27 1934 n March 27 April 3-10 Bingo and Card Party at Catholic school W ednesday night. See me for Federal Loans and Abstracts of Title. French Quinn. Schirmeyer Abstract Co. Guaranteed RADIO SERVICE We repair anv make of radio, promptly and at a very reasonable cost. Tubes tested free. Phone 241. Decatur Elec. Shop N. A. BIXLER i OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. tn. Telephone 135.
• l COUNTY AGENT’S COLUMN » - — —.. — ♦ ■ Less Intensive feeding is one of the more effective ways by which 1 dairy iartuers can bring about the I reduction of output proposed In! 1 the tentative dairy program of the agricultural adjustment administration. Tills means of reduction is emphasized by O. E. Reed, chief of the Bureau of Dairy Industry. U. S. Department of Agriculture, and ' at one time head of the dairy department of Purdue University, who calls attention to experiments whkti show that by reducing the
ire m woiFr som" by LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE
SYNOPSIS Sailing from France to America aboard the S.S. “Navarre,” Michael Lanyard, reformed “Lone Wolf,” erstwhile master crook, meets w-althy Fay Crozier, one of his antique shop patrons, and her lovely daughter Fenno. Mrs. Crozier shows Lanyard the famous Habsburg emet aids which she bought secretly to avoid payment of duty. Lanyard's experienced eye discovers that counterfeits have been substituted for the gems. He promises to try and retrieve the emeralds. Lanyard suspects Maurice Parry, a youthful fellow-passenger, who appears deeply interested in Fenno. The resemblance between Lanyard and Maurice causes the former to wonder if they are related. In a bridge game with two card sharks, Maurice loses heavily. Lanyard joins the players as Parry’s partner. catches their opponents cheat-
ing and threatens to expose them unless Maurice's loss is called off. Later. Lanyard tells the appreciai tive Maurice that he can repay him by returning Mrs. Crozier's jewels. 1 The youth removes the top of his cane only to find that Lanyard had been there before him and had replaced the stolen emeralds with the zircons (false gems). Maurice i discloses that he is Lanyard’s son whom the latter believed killed during the war. Though happy at the reunion. Lanyard is disappointed to find his son a thief. Maurice explains he was forced to steal since boyhood in order to exist. Lanyard hopes his son’s interest in Fenno will continue, for the boy’s own good. Detective Crane, whom Lanyard knew from his “Lone Wolf” days, warns him that the two gamblers he exposed are “Jack Knife” Anderson and “English Archie,” gangsters, who will seek revenge. Later, while Fenno is speaking with Lanyard, a ship's officer calls him aside to say the liner’s captain requests his presence in Fay’s cabin. CHAPTER XI The sitting-room of the Crozier suite, when Lanyard saw it for this third time, presented for his further mystification all the effect of one of those improbable inquests which take place behind footlights, with jroor Mrs. Crozier in the part of the impromptu corpse. Engagingly disheveled though i dressed as if ready to get right up and go on deck, the hapless lady was stretched out with her eyes closed on a sofa and looking decidI edly blue about the gills and limp— I looking, for once in Lanyard’s acquaintance with her, all her age. The other actors in the scene were the captain, M. Pascal, a sturdy seaman with the steely eyes of tradition in quaint contrast with the complexion of a bisque doll and ripe red lips pouting through a black spade-beard; another gentleman with a beard, in this instance grizzled and pointed, the right badge of a ship’s doctor, a M. Louvois whose mien was modest and whose other points were equally unimpressive; and one M. Pion, wivh sly eyes and a sardonic mouth in a plain shaven gray face, whose presence would haae been unaccountable, since he didn’t sport the ship’s cloth, had Lanyard not known him of old as an agent of the Prefecture de Police of Paris. The Captain, squared to a table with his peaked cap and one clenched hand resting on it, had much the air of a truculent and hairy cherub sitting as coroner and ’prepared to call the proceedings to order as soon as the culprit was haled in; the French detective was stationed to one side and observing the invalid with his smallish head at a critical angle; the physician | was hovering in solicitous attendance on her. From the first Lanyard as he entered had a brusque nod, from the second a slanting glance with- ! out one gleam of recognition, from the third no sign of interest whatI; soever. One of the windows had ; been opened, a strong salt draught
THIMBLE THEATER SHOWING—“FAMILIARITY BREEDS CONTEMPT” BY SEGW /I VIONT WEAR IF YOU'LL COME BACK) IXAHCiY‘ ItI>ANTS\ J" ANY CERTAIN TYPE— ’\l THIS BLASTED I'LL LxT YOU TAKE A y I IDO YOU U)ANT THE KIND 1 / p; TEDDY UNER- CAR-AMD I WANT < .SOME UNERDEARj t. 1 Hi' X- (W rfe l 7 Ms - S Y J ....-A- Ab) iaK Li b).<-y>- wk , tc .„^ 1. <■.!• .
DF.CATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. APRIL 3. 1934.
grain ratlou and feeding more roughage greater profit may be made on a lower milk yield. "When we have good roughage J to feed and cut our full grain ration in two. we get approximately I , 10 per cent less milk than on full | i grain feeding." aey» Mr. Reed. 1 "When we depend* on roughage I alone, we get about 30 per cent ■ leas milk thiiu we get on full grain feeding. “Thia drop in pnxluetion does not Involve a corresponding drop In profits. Dairy farmers who plan to feed lew grain and grow more roughage will benefit themselves and also agriculture as a , whole. “Leu intensive feeding 'of dairy
its air held still an odor that was unmistakable, the smell, well-di-luted, of an operating room; and in sharp alarm for Fay Crozier, Lanyard crossed directly to the sofa. “My dear madame!” The blue eyes at the sound of the door had opened. “Are you ill? What has happened?” “I’m all ritrht,” her accents protested as listless as the hand which Lanyard bent low to lift to his lips. < “I’ve been robbed again, that's all.” “Chloroformed," the physician took the trouble to explain, “ —but i lightly. The stewardess found | madame unconscious on the floor here, but she was coming to by the 1 time I arrived.”
3 J € L d 1 t x I i ■ "I’m all right,” Fay said, listlessly. "I’ve been robbed again, that's all.”
was sweeping through the room, but “Don’t worry about me, my dear Lanyard,” said the victim weakly. “I’m getting better every minute. Just do what you can, please, to help these gentlemen.” “Madame has already told us enough, monsieur—” Captain Pascal wasn't submitting a suggestion so much as sounding a challenge—“to encourage the hope that you will be able to name the author of this outrage.” “I, monsieur?’’ Lanyard rounded on him in amazement. “I am altogether at your service, naturally : but I must confess—” “Regard that there is reason to believe the criminal was the same who robbed Madame last night, and 1 whom, she tells us, you know.” "Impossible!” ' A cry of incredulous expostula- ’ tion perhaps natural enough under ! the circumstances, but one to be ■ repented as soon as uttered: Lan--1 yard saw it wake cynical glints in 1 the regard of M. Pion and stiffen : the Captain’s animus as well. • “How is that ‘impossible,’ mon- • sieur? Who else, except Madame 1 and yourself, knew where the emer- ■ aids were to b« found?” “The emeralds, monsieur? But > they are in the purser’s care.” » “What makes you assert that?” 1 “Madame promised—” 1 “I was too fagged last night to 1 keep my promise,”—Fay Crozier s struck a note of childish petulance, s —“so I put it off till today; and I s had just taken the case from my j trunk in there, meaning to go downI stairs and give it to the purser myv self, when this bandit—” Her voice began to climb to a hysterica) pitch, 51 Louvois in a e low tone adjured Madame not to n excite herself; and she permitted . the Captain to round out th* acn count. - “Madame was coming through d the bedchamber door when the II scoundrel, who must have slipped
l aitlc lu< rbaac in pas ture and roughage acreage at thoJ expense of cultivated crops, al shift already taking place in many I regions It helps to solve the! I grain surplus problem, and to re-: I duce the output of livestock pro I I ducts. “Tile dairy farmer's gross in-i I come may be less if he has his' I cows on roughage and pasture; I but his costs of production will, 1 be less also. It >a net income, rather than gross income that | counts. “In all regions where grasses I or legumes grow well there are i .opportunities to shift advant-1 I ageously from grains to grass and othei roughage. in some regions
in when her back was turned and I flattened himself against the wall . to one side of the door, stepped up behind her and clapped a cloth 1 soaked with chloroform over her 1 nose and mouth.” “How long since—“ "Madame had paid no special attention to the hour. The assault ' probably occurred about half past ' eleven. The stewardess came in to do up the rooms at ten minutes to twelve.” < “Ah. madame,” lanyard lamented, “if only you had kept your promise—” “If only I had! But they do say there's no cure for a fool.” "Monsieur now comprehends, bei
yond doubt,” Captain Pascal re- ■' sumed, “that it becomes my duty to k make you name the thief of last night without more delay.” Lanyard, at his wit’s end but determined at all costs to shield Maurice, found no more useful shift 1 ’ than a deprecatory shrug and a flat denial: “I am desolated. Monsieur le Capitaine, but I cannot oblige you. I was able to retrieve the jewels so 1 speedily only by promising the thief I would never betray him.” “What! You have the effrontery to tell me you refuse to permit me 1 to protect my passengers from the . felon among them?” “I am sorry, monsieur. It is a matter of my word of honor.” ' “But naturally!” Pion of the | Surete for the first time added his I ’ voice to the controversy—a moan voice, greasy with innuendo. “Mon- i sieur Lanyard doubtless means to I remind us that there is honor among thieves.” : < “Eh?” The Captain gave a start. ’ “To be sure: it is, as you say. with the Lone Wolf that we have here to ' deal.” “An insolence, which you may be I sure, Pion,” Lanyard icily added, i “you will duly repent.” The French detective chose to pass that off. “One has had too » much to do with thieves,” he pursued, addressing himself to the Capi tain, “to repose great faith in their reformations. Once the virus gets in • , the blood, I assure you. there is no I cure known but a life-sentence. Regard that M lanyard frankly admits he sides with crime against • society.” “You hear, monsieur?” Cafrtain i Pascal grimly lowered on Lanyard. I i “Be grateful that I offer you this I > last chance—” I “And if I refuse?” | 1 “It will become my duty to order your arrest and a search made of i your cffec.ts for evidence to connect , you with this crime.” 1 (To Be Continued)
iegumaa do not grow well R®-, | cent scientific findings indicate. | I however, that other grasses cut < in an immature state contain as. ' much protein a* do legumes cut at the ordinary stage. The shift Ito grass and roughage is practlc-| I able to some extent almost every l where. “Erosion losses are terrific on , I many lands in cultivated crops. | | These same hinds in pastures and | I legumes would be protected. Cui ' j tlvuted crops are hard on soil (er- > I ditty. Pastures and legumes are I a partial answer to this problem. I “It is generally assumed that i ! many cows would have to be I I butchered to gccomplish the pro-1 I posed production, but the fact is | that a shift to roughage and grass • might make even more cows j necessary because of a smaller J yield per cow." Other methods recoin mended by j the Dairy Bureau for meeting the . requirements of the proposed. dairy adjustment prgoram are: 1 (1) Raising fewer heifers and ex-j tending the period of whole milk feeding; (21 Delaying the breed-; ing of heifers; <3) Using morel dairy products on Ute tarin; (41, Culling unsound and diseased i cows; (5) Slaughtering low pro-' ducers for home meat. COURTHOUSE Cause Dismissed First Joint Stock I*md Bank vs. ' Nettie Aspy et al. foreclosure, cause dismissed and cueUs paid. Named Executor John Appelman estate, Joseph ■ .'ppelmain appointed executor. Real Ectate Transfer Elizallieth M. Hendricks, to the; Dixie Queen Markets, dnc., land in Wabash township for $5,00(1. Marriage License G. DeWill Mullen, clerk. Detroit, Michigan and Dora Kilby, dental assistant. (Adrian, Michigan. John 11. Kain, salesman, Detroit, 1 Michigan and Grace Baxter, teach-' er. Detroit, Michigan. Alvin Harvey, Damschxoder, El i more, O.iio and Elizabeth Avon Arquette, Curtis, Ohio. Willard L. Baumgartner, truck driver. Berne, and Margaret Rawley. secretary. Berne. Luther Howell, farmer, Napoleon, Ohio and Beatrice Dunbar, teacher Napoleon, Ohio. Carl L. Summereett, cashier, Delphos, Ohio and Mary E. Heller, clerk, Bloomington, ill. (Herman Burke, farmer. Route 2, Geneva, and Virginia Callihan Geneva. Henry Gerber, Wedls county and Ada Heyerly, bakery. Route 1. Monroe. Lawrence Fisher, box sealer, Weston. Ohio and Gayle Heckman. Cygnet. Ohio. Russell'Duval, truck driver. Mon- ; roe. Michigan and Ellen Woodward. Monroe, Michigan. Earl A. Root, tool die maker. Jonesville. Michigan and Eva Buskirk, clerk, Jonesville, Michigan. o Mrs. Anna Burkhead of Hunting-1 ton spent the day visiting with Mrs. ‘ Via Martin and family. o—teroiM Ml.xT OF i;xi:< i Ton Notice Is hereby given. That the j undersigned has been appointed Ex- ! ecutor <»f the Fist ate of John Appel- ’ man, late of Adams County de-< as ‘»i i T*he Estate is probably solvent. Joseph Appelman, E vv»t-»r , Lenhart. Ilrller and >rhwrger %tt>*. Apn! 2. IM-I \pi‘l £ If YOU MEED ■Money Qyieklu CALL ON US / J j Ip you have an urgent need for money you will appreciate the promptness of our financial service. You can get any amount up to S3OO here —and get it quickly—no red tape —no embarrassing investigation. And the repayment terms are most liberal. Franklin Security Co. Over Bcbater Hdw. Co. Phone 237 Decatur, Ind A AM A.<
* Test Your Knowledge Can you anewer aeven of theee teie Queetlone? Turn to page Four so” the an»w«-e. I» — ♦ 1 What I* ex omuiuuicutlon. 2. Where in the Holy Ikwd was ; 'the Valley of Kidron? | 3. Who was Elhidbert Nevin? 4. Un which war did the Conway , Cabal Intrigue oecur? | 5. For what Is Seth Thomas fit-1 . inou»* 1 6. Who wrote "Ttie Comedy of | ■ Errors? , 7. Name the second book of the I ! Pentateuch. 8. What nJtioiiality was the ex ' plurer, John Cabot.’ 9. tH what country is New Bruntswick u province? 10. Can the title of a Imok be copyI righted? 5c Supper at ('a t h_o Ii c school Wednesday 5
Decatur. Indiana E Wednesday Speca BEANSS3IbsII KRAUT each ill WALDORF TISSUE 1 foMW 650 sheets to roll Prunes ™ 3lhs2i| i PINEAPPLE No. 2 can]« Country Club, finest quality, sliced or cr u s( c. •’ti.-Uz. RRFAB - - Q(1 SPINACH 21 g a Finest Quality O jjfe* j lOiatoeS r:/;: : Jif 11 New Texas OI ’ 1A Hl labbageriJlbsM Large 126 1 i Oranges - SEED POTATOES S2.® Certified Ohios and Cobblers —IOO tb. bag O 1W tb. bag COBBLERS $3 9 I NOTICE — — ■ S Starting April 3— Decatur n at the Nickel Plate Stock Vbil> I BRADY BROS. I H\\i'l teethe hogs dail’. Lambs atitl ■ ' ■Tuesday. 'A edncsdin. { ridaj and Salt:; ! ' "‘‘wj Phone 301
, I P ■ ... sceon I "W Notice W, ~d s F< r turn ..I HU. <. ' mil'' i ,i. . I'"' . .... quest.
