Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 February 1896 — Page 4

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BANNEH TIMES. GKEENCASTLE. LVDIAMA i'UESDAi FEBRUARY 11 18W

^_EACH BOTTLE SOLujVIAKES MANY FRIENDS.” piek cmsi in him cm. THE GREAT FOUR “C” REMEDY. THE ONLY KNOWN SPECIFIC FOR ILi.A. C^Sr K XIPJF^ES.

If yon have LA GRIPPE, try 4-C. If your Children have the CROUP, try 4-C. If you CAN’T SLEEP from Coughing and Cold, try 4-C. if you have the ASTHMA, try 4-C. If you have a HARSH, HACKING COPGII, try 4-C. If you have CONSUMPTION, try 4-C.

There i* actually more FORCE and “GET THERE" properties in n bottle of Four-C than in a pallou of ordinary cough medicine. In compounding it 1 have followed in no “ruts" or used the prescription of no Dr. So-nnd So of Amsterdam or London, or any other place. I owe its composition to no one in no single particular. Neither is it made of herbs and roots dug in the dark of the moon in the jungles of Atriea or South America. This preparation 1 first put up in Chicago in 1870. Since that time I had prepared it only as called for. My first adverti cim nt appeared only a few wetks since (put it on the market the 1st of Dvtcember last). The demand for ih. Colon, Cold and Citour Cure, and its wonderful success, has been electrical. Nothing lit the whole history of Cough and Cold medicines can compare with it. No disease of the Lungs seem “.le to resist its cun.I've properties, as is well proven by the numerous cases of La Grippe Cured, Croup Cured, Tousiiitis Cured, Pneumonia Cured, Itron* chilis Cured, Consumptives’ greateti help if not cure. Dry, Hacking, Harsh Coughs ol weeks’ and months’ standing cured v.-ith from one to three doses. My aim is to convince the public of my sin ferity and of li;e true merits of this remedy.

NOTICE TO DRUGGISTS AND THc. PUBLIC. CONTRACT.—Druggists are Hiithorlxed in ALL CARES TO REFUND THE PURCHASE PRICE if tl.i Eour-i' Remedy (Phelps’ Cough, t old and Croup Pore) fitlM to gli e sat I Afar Hon In Prmin, Itroncliitirt, AM hum. La Grippe, Coughs and Cold*, no mat ter Iiow long Btanding, or deep fteHteri, in fact X guarantee it in all manner of Itronclilal or Lung trouble, not a* a Cure-All, but to give unbounded ftatitifaction. Give it a trial on the alxive eonditioiiK. 1 take ail rbaneeM.

Testimony of the Traveling Agent III. Cent. K. K. Mh. R. R. PfiKi.Pi: Your Four-C Remedy certainly a RKMAKK ABLC MRUICINK. TOO MI CH CANNOT Bk: HAII* IN its favor. My daughter suffered fm»n an Attack of La GRIPPB that Anally resulted in Tonsllltis, with ulceration of the throat. Libs than one bottle effected a COMPLETE CORE. GEO. K. ItlNE*. 392 57th Street. Chicago. IIL Cough and Cold one yearn Standing Cured. Union Stock Yards. Chicago. Jan 5, 189?. IIR. R. R PHELPS: We consider your Cough and Co.d Cure a remarkable remedy. My wife and I. after suffering with a cough and cold for one year, and trying various remedies until discouraged, were Induced almost against our will to try your Fonr-C Remedy. Its work wss magical. Less than a bottle cured us both. Dennis Cpnerty

Seven Years’ Cough Cured. Mrs. Fuller, of 6S22 Sheridan Ave , Chicago, aged 8T years, has this to say: “I have been troubled with a cough for the last seven years, destroying my rest by night and day. One bottle Phelps’ Cough, Cold and Croup Cure cured me. I most gratefully recommend it to my friends." Henry Grady, elevator msn of the Anglo Am. Packing House. Chicago, says: •'Phelps’ Four-C Remedy is an ELEGANT MEDICINE. A FEW DOSES CCRED ME OF A SEVERE ATTACK OF LA GRIPPE and COld."

Riaesbsr, nh puk&fe sold gin perfeit satisfaction or money refunded, Prict, SO Ote, per Bottle, R. R. PHELPS, Prop’r, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. DENVER, COLORADO. I=OR SAL© BV DRUGGISTS ONLV. Insist upon Iiavins the FOUB “C”KEMEDY.

i lave YOU Has ^ got You?

4P&

Read The

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Times?

It is a paper ior the young, the old, the middle aged, for ric 1, and poor, for high and low, for Teachei and Preacher, for Student and for professor. It is a paper for the home. It is preeminently a paper for the people. You can t get along without it. You must have it. You will not live well—You cannot be happy without it. Because it is a home paper chock full of good live, interesting news every day. It is in the van guard of progress and you must take it to keep up with the times. Identify vourself with it now and stay with it. In so doing you will get good, and do good You will show your appreciation of hustle and enterprise and will demonstrate your right to live in a progressive and up-to-date town. Bring in your name or telephone it in or hire a cheap boy and send it in. Yours for subscribers, THE BANNER TIMES

Cripple Creek, Colorado. iff now uttrading attention in all |iaiiff of the world, on account of the uiarvcloini diffcoveriea of gold which have been made in that vicinity. The North Wefftern Line, with iN unrivalled equipment of guild viatibnled trains of palaee sleeping ears, ,lining ears and free reclining ehair cars, daily between Chicago and Colorado, offers the la'-t of facilities for reaehing < 'ripple creek. For tickets and full informal ion apply lu ticket agents, or address W. It. Kniskern. General I'assenger and Ticket Agent Chicago it Northwestern Kailway, Chicago, III.

Try ' 4-0”

!• Viola " I emm-

J) A lovely com-

plexion only Nature

can give. She giv

ve. She giv - a v. V yz clear and boft n^e to ihosc wbo , V/' n us Dr. He bra s Vi ala Cream. It is not i a paint or powder to cover defects. // |Vi j g’. fs rid of Ih- by Nature’s own pro- * cess of renewing the vitality of the skin;

banishing all roughness, redness, Deckles, moles, pimple.., blackheads, sur mm and tan. It does this surely and haimlc

moles,

jles, pimple^ n. It does thi; reuse naturally,

beauty and skin-

ilcssly, bc-

icans both skin-

. ucuuiy mu aiLtn-ncauu. Viola Skin-Soap hastens the process, because it r. a puie and delicate soap. !t should be used in connection with the Cream. It should be used in the nursery, too. Ordinary soaps arc not

xr:_t_ ^ rcan , t 50 cents.

Sold by drug-

in the nursery, too. fit for a baby’s skin.

Viola Skin-Soap, 25 cents, gists or sent bv mail. Send

U. C. BITTNER CO T

TOLEDO, O.

DKBAUNY UNIVERSITY

THE BEST NEWS OF OUR GREAT AND GROWING INSTITUTION.

*Iij<l4‘iilO Tlirlr Colleur «»»<l Aoi’IhI l.lic Their IiirldruiM and N«»i«h ol Hit* Llvcfc ol %<viino f|«*n aiul \Yonit* 11 Told 1>) sprt'ial llrportor.

Col. Weaver is unable to bear liis classes today on account of i sickness. Claude I). Hall and M. L. Daggy were admitted to the bar today. I After the athletic concert to lie given by the I. ('. r.lee dub next Friday nigl t in M. harry hall there jwill be a reccj ii in in the ladies' I hall at the dmm in honor of the i I U. Glee club. Cliarlcs Allen is in Crawfords ville today on business. Through the energies of Manager j Neese of the base bail team, there ! will be a- meeting of the Indiana Athletic association in this city next Saturday. The purpose of I the meeting is to arrange a base ilntl! schedule for the spring games 'and discuss points of the constitution. Frank Forworthy 'i)i ol the In jdiana Medical school is visiting ji’tii Delt brothers and friends. Mr. j Foxworthy brought a, brother ueie | with him who has entered the ! freshman class. Mrs. Fraley is visiting in Cruwlordsviiie. The seniors appeared at chapel today in caps and gowns. They sang some class songs and gave lheir yell. Joe Pulse and Kay Haynes went limiting yesterday. The members of the lust year’s (hull team met after chapel today. Wat Lewis and Maynard Dagg_> heard Col. Weavers classes u s | morning. t>tA SOU. From faroflf ocean fields th winds have mown. Gray ami mysterious now shoreward drifts The ghostly burden of the harvest gifts, Reaped by the sun and by the tempest sown. Across the land, as ’twere a mantle blown From some cloud wanderer, it falls and lifts, ! Woven of rain and shadow, through whoso

rifts

Come sudden glimpses of the day’s blue throne. 1 The fishing village like a firefly camp | Begins to twinkle, kindling spark by spark, And miles away, in meadows white with foam. The sailor gird dens—'tis the lighthouse lamp I That shows an open roadway through ’he !

dark!

| And listen—’tis the boll that calls him home! I —Frank D. bhermon in Youth’a Companion.

fc*VW*WV** »*¥****»» *1

A Light Lunch or a Heavy Meal 15 equally delicious with

m CAMP’S BOSTON BAKEBk p°sm ^ [mi MjaBSpr'’

as the chief eatable. No preparing necessary. Always fresh, moist and ready to be 5 eaten. At allgroc'rj’, 10c. IBcand 20c Send 6c for pohtago an I vse will semi . you a trample can. VAN CAMP PACKING CO., Indianapolis, Ind.

. ... *.

CATARRH BRAZILIAN

BALM

Instantly checks the ravages of Catarrh. It is a triio Balsam ol’ marvelous healing power and thft only knowu remedy that penetrates to tho most bidden recessesof this invetcrato disease. It quickly destroys tho nests of microbes, heals the ulcers and restores tho senses of smell, taste and hearing. It has been used over lO years In hosp'talsand private families and by Physicians and Specialists as the ono infallible reraody in nature for Catarrh. it is also most ocouomlcal, a fiOcts. bottle con-1 tainlng 2 weeks’ treatment and SH OO bottle «5 weeks’ treatment. Brazilian Balm often cure , a Gold over night. Cures Croup in n few minutes. Quickly cures La Grippe and takes all its bad e.fects out of the system. Absolutely guaranteed to cure Asthma. Prevents, breaks up and cures Typhoidand Scarlet Covers In ary plage, A marvelous remedy for all Stomach troubles. In Female troubles it relieves like magic. Dissipates Mumps in one day. Relieves Piles and Constipation over night. ForConstipation i:so as for Piles. It does nil this gently and promptly, yet it is no miracle; it relieves tho inflammation, nature does the rest. It is worth its weight in gold iu every family. Over lOOdoses in a /'Oc. bottle. Trial size 25c. Ask for Circular. Sold by Druggists. B. F. JACKSON & CO., fruprlotora. INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

Cushman’s

MENTHOL INHALER

Cures all troubles of the lietul and Throat. CATARRH, HEADACHE, NEURALGIA LaGRIPPE. WILL CURE hiiiuii,In 1 "Itol'i sneezing, puutlinu. "ougiiing, HKAIMCIIK. Conti n ii ed u “e efl ec18 HURK CURK. ENDORSED, 1 !'; a/v ' iilghest medical hii—n?Y thnritles of Kuroi*e f \ and Ameriea for V ' S v’COLDS,Sore Throat ^ biuy Fever, Bronfk r*hi»i• i ^ nun bid. m mgs ind Nervous Prostration. Doti’t be fooled wit In* ortlilewj imitatioiis. Take only CUSHMAN'S. Prlre.f Oc. at all Drugul.st.s, or mailed free. Agents wanted. < t’SH .MAN 8 MENTHOL BALM Cuts, Wounds, Burns, Frostbites. Fxeels el. otlier remedies for PILES Pri-•• 26c. pt I)ruggisin. Book nn Menthol free. Addreas Cushman Manufacturinfl; Co., No. 324 Dearborn Street, (Sonoa Huildinu , CHICAGO. nr VIMK>.NLs IM>.

highest tliorities and AI COLDS, Hay Fever, Bronchitis. La ORIPPK. The niont Refreshing ami llenllhful aid lo H’JADACHB Sufferers. Brings sleep to the Sleepless. Cures Insomnia Prostration. Don’t be fooled with worthb

Tin* Haxni- ii I iMi-.ff For-ratcnicntH, Kill lli*.nlff, t: -. Tin’ liANNin Timka F>>r F.nvclnpvff. Till’ Kannkh Timkh Fur I.hMit The iiAXM i: T i.mi.x For i.<*g.il itlHlikff. The Hanm it Tiaiks For Sale billff and Fosters. The Banner Times For all kinds of job printing at .owett prices (f

LINCOLN LEAGUE MEETING’

< all t<ir the Ai niial tleeting lo He Held at Iii«tiniii*(inlls. The annual meeting of the I’luh** forming the Indiana Lincoln League xvill he In Id at Imlianapolison Wednesday at 1 :.T0 p. m., February It!, IS'.in '1'hc scssi—ti will he devoted to the election of oflicers, the selection of district organi/iMff, delegates to the National League Convention, etc. After the business has been disposed of, the meeting will he turned into a republican love feast. Add re •-es will be delivered by some of the most eloquent speakers in the country. The League Clubs have for years been great taetors, especially in presidential campaigns, and by proper effort, clubs can he organi/ed this year in almost every voting precinct in the state, and the good thus accomplished will be of inestimable henelit to the daily. All iiepuhlican clubs in the State arc requested to send delegates to the convention ; and all republicans and those who expect to act and cooperate w ith the party in the coming campaign are invited to he present at the meeting. Mahcvs R. Mpizer, Pn s. J. J. llniuiNs, Sec.

For the Ladies. Hon. Chas. B. Lore, Chief Justice of Delaware, caya: "My wife has received great benefit from the use of Brazilian Balm.” A strong solution in warm water used daily as an injection quickly and permanently relieves soreness and inflammation.

The •‘Wacht Am Rhein.” Of th-, martial snugs more purtionlarly conn ‘ctcd with the various periods of storm ui I stress in Germany, one of the un -t i Ic.brnted is that of toe Rhine, •j.mipo. cd by Becker, and answered by Alfred di Musset in other well known verses. Tho “Waoht am Rhein,” by Max Bcbmu'keuburger, was composed nbont tho ranto period ns tho Rhino song, but attaint d its v/idest popularity during the war of 1870. Unlike Becker’s song, it cannot boast of having been set to music by 70 composers. The patriotic song of “Deutschland, Deutschland uber Alles” was the work of tho popular writer, poet, philologist and historian August Hoffmann, who was born at Fallersleben in the year 1798, i For a time we find him acting as librarian and later as professor at the University of Breslau, but the liberal tendency of some of Ids writings caused him, in 1838, to be deprived of bis professorial chair. For many years bo wa* librarian to tho Duke of Ratibor, and died in this sheltered post in 1874. ThoGennan national anthem, “Heil Dir im Siegerkianz,” was written originally for the birthday of Christian VII, king (if Denmark, by a Holstein clergyman. The words were written to the air of ‘‘God Have the King” in 1790, and n few years later were modified for Prussian use.—Chambers’ Journal. Tile l.m-t-H. The Boers aro a race of hunters, as well as pastoralists, and the Transvaal Boers especially have been engaged in a war of extermination (lamentable to the lover of animal life) against every species of wild beast. Numbers of them have brr:t occupied ever since boyhood in the hunting of elephants, buffaloes, lions, rhinoceroses and other heavy game. They have practically exterminated the elephant south of the Zambezi, and the buffalo is becoming very scarce No man who understands South African hunting can pretend to say that the chase of these animals is not a dangerous one, requiring the highest qualities of nerve and eounago. I will not say that the average Boer hunter will, by way of recreation, face the lion single handed in the way that the great Eng lish hunters—Selous, Oswell, Vardon, Gordon-Cumming. Baldwin and others —have accustomed ns to. Few hunters, indeed, are so quixotic. The Boer treats the lion as dangerous vermin, if possible obtains help from his fellows, and as a matter of bnsiness slays him by a volley. But hundreds of Boers have slain lions single handed, and hundreds have been mauled and even killed by ! lions.—London Globe.

A Dancer In Kur<lii*tan. Tho performers had already drawn themselves up in line when I arrived, and a minute later the shrill notes of the pipe gave the signal for the dancing to commence. Some score of young men and women stood shoulder to shoulder, clasping hands, tho line forming a crescent. At the given signal, the clapping of his bauds by a youth who stood in fn it of the semicircle of performers, the dance commenced, the entire line of men amt wunn n stopping slowly forward and then hack again, each pace being taken a little to the right, so that a rotating movement was given to tho string of dancers. As tho music qnio cued so did tho pace, and at each step the body from the waist upward v. bent forward and drawn back. Nor W ' i ' the steps themselves tho same, for tho youth who gave them time ran up and down the line clapping h ^.’ids and singing and shouting directions and changes. The principal feature of the dance seemed to be the bringing down of tho right foot smartly npon the ground at intervals, when, hand in hand, the whole company remained with their bodies bent for a second or two, to spring back into position again at a fresh blow of the pipes. Meanwhile the slow rotating movement was maintained, so that the entire body was circling round the musicians. What laughter and fun there were! Men and girls giving themselves up to the enjoyment of their national dance, which, graceful and exhilarating, bore no trace of the sensnal movements which usually mark the art of dancing in the east.—Blackwood’s Magazine. Inception of Fish IIutrlilnR. During tho middle ages, and throngbout the period .)f the European predominance of the church of Rome, the necessity of providing a proper supply of fish for use on Fridays and during Lent did much to create a species of fish culture. That this did not extend to fish hatching. but stopped short at inclosing and regulating the supply of fresh water fishes, seems to us probable. At the >amo time, the Romans were at least acquainted with the securing of oyster spat, and from this to the artificial hatching of fish ova does not seem a very long step or one that may not really have been taken. Tho probability is, however, that the cost of such artificially produced lish would have been far beyoud tho parses of the multitude, and the wealthy had viviers and ponds iu which they kept their own tisli for their own use. The extent to which they have gone may be judged by the system in use among thomouksof themouasteries and the great seigneurs of the continent, which was also introduced into this country, probably by the Normans originally. The absence of proper convey- : nuces for the supply of sea fish to tho inland parts of the country made it imperative for the various proprietors to meet their own necessities. In doing so they dirl not fail to discover that certain fishes required a particular kind of “cultch” upon which to fix their spawn. As the supply of this material was an acknowledged necessity this may be considered the first step toward fish hatching. —Scottish Review. ’ The Whjh of the KIJIhiih. The national character of Fiji finds its best • xpression in the songs once | common among tho natives, but now, under Christian influences, almost obsolete. These songs, or mekkes, as they are called, generally recount the story of some ancient hero, of some military campaign ur naval expedition, or perhaps of a peaceful fishing excursion. They are generally sung of evenings by the men only, who assemble for the purpose iu one of their long, low huts. Here they sit iu solemn state on mats laid upon the ground, the only light being that of a smoky fire in one end. According to Major Abercrombie, an eyewitness of the ceremony, one man begins the chant alone; a second soon jidns him, then a few more, till finally all present have taken it np, accompanying the wild music by much pantomime and earnest gesticulation. Tho time is beaten upon a wooden drum by on of their number, and is occasionally accentuated by a general clapping of the hands. After a certain climax has been reached the music stops quite abruptly j with one loud clajf—Popular Science Monthlv. How to Make a I land lo Stick. Handles will get loose, do what you will, says The Wheel, and some time or other they will part company with tho bar. Forty ways to cement them on have been exploited as many different | times in the columns of the wheel papers, but the average sticker on of handles makes the mistake of smearing the cement over the handle liar instead of placing it inside the handle, the consequence being that the handle when forced on, pushes np the cement, which forms iu an unsightly ring round the end of the handle. The proper way is ‘.o melt a little cement, pour it into the mouth of the handle while the latter is being revolved, so as to make it run routtd, warm ‘the end of the handle bur, but not sufficiently to injure the cork or celluloid, and push the handle on. The handle bar will tl V tend to carry the cement ft .ther in, and there will be none visible round the outside. Ex'»hnnor«

i

L>oc«j3 1 tine Gard.

BIG FOUR. GOING FAST.

ofiTlncimiiiti NljUdU.xprus!.. 4+ liuliiiiiupolis Flyer X- Mail Ih* Kniukurhoeker

<HMNU >m;st

No. 8B* st. L A; Uin. Nijrlit Rx No, R' Vail No. Ii* Soiitliwc stern Limited No 5+ Muttono Ano’iu * Dally t Fxcept Sunday.

^ No. nij/hi express, hin.is thmuyh cars foi Dincliinati, New York and Rnst.on. No.feonm ct> wirn (nuns I'oi Miuliijian division via Anderson a id lor ( iiu'innHti division.

No. IF. “K niekei’lmeker,” Iimii)

t n * onirli sleeper l or N. Y and Hoiton and for vv ashinjj-ton, I>. <\. via • ineinnnti. <’ \ <». also 'Hninir cais. New coaches illuminated with Kius on alt trains. F. P. Hukstis. Atfent.

-VR n. in R Id a. in 4:l.Vp. in 5:21 p. in

a. ro

x 5o a. in 12.p in . 5.57 p. ui

m

. V . "IK*

‘CJUl’UK YIIU ktv. ALBM. f Csk co Rr^Jr In effect Sunday, .Ian. 12.189<i.

north noiTM>.

No 4* i hicajro Mail .... 12:55 n in No (5* Mail and Accommodation. . .12:05 pm No 44t l*ocal II:in a m

SOUTH HOUND.

No 3* Louisville Mall No 5* Mail and Aueommodatinn.

No 48f I ooal Daily, t Kxcept, Sunda,.

I’ullinun si (up ere. on ni^ht trains, parlor ana dhiiritf cars on \«>s. 5and i*. For complete time cards ami full int’ormatioi m regard to rates,

through ears, etc., address .! A. Michael, Agent U.kKD, <i. P. A UhicaiTL

. 2:52 a iu .. 2:27 p in .11:40 a in

VANDALi/* UNE. ~ iii effect Ur*

Trains leave oreencfisrie, ii.a.

20. 1F9;.

for the west.

Daily s .l.'»a m, for St. Louis Daily 12:2< a m, rot* m. Louis. Daii» 1:35 p m, for *t. Louis. Dally . H:nr> a in, for 8t. Lou's. Fx. >un .. 5:IS p m, foi Terre haute

FOR THE HAST.

hr. Mm M5a m, for Indianapolis Dall> Ip in. ** Dally 3;2tl p ni, ** “ Dally 2:35a m. ** Daily 4:30a m “ Dully 6:03 p m “ »* Pi t >m \ l»i\ i<ion

Terre lia'ite.

Kx Sun 7:05 a m. lor I'^iria.

Y-*• k * ** 3:55 pir. for Decatur For coinploti- timecard, giv.i.g all trains and stations, and for f’.ll information us to

raies, througn cars, etc., a Idress

•1.8. Dowling, Agent,

i a. Eord, tin enoaBtle

om l Pass. Agt. st. Louis Mo.

No 15 No 7 No 21 N ^» 5 No ;i N o 4 .so 20 No H No 12 N o », No 2 L< a • No 75 No?"

Best Route Southeast South Southwest is the Louisville and Nashvilie Railroad SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS TO PROSPECTIVE SETTLERS. Pull inlormnllon clieerftillv furnished upon application to J. L HIDBELY, N. W. Pass. Aaent, Clucago, 111. C. P. ATMORE, Oeu’l Pass. kg\, LomsTille, Ky.

The American Protective Tariff League is a national organization advocating " Protection to American Labor and Industry " as explained by its constitution, as follows : " The obi^ct of this League ehall be to protect American taber by a tariff on imports, which shall " Jecjuataly secure American industrial products against the competition of foreign lalor. There are no personal or private proi.ts in connection with the organization and it is sustained by memberships, contributions and the distr.buticn of its publications. FIRST Correspondence .s solicits'* regordirgf “ Membership’’ and * Off.cia! Correspondents." SECOND: We need and welcome contribution!, wheiiter small or large, to our cautie. THIRD: We publish a !•'’ pn I r e of documencs covsh'g «l! r bases cf theTar.ffq ir *, 0 n. Com* i.«t will be mailed to any oc'dro'-M for 50 cents FO jR^H ; OAr.r' potte* - I ' .tM 1 '' <» onny of bn** ' Amerio.en Fronomist ** Add’* • W^'vtr f- w. : » -.r Oei.f-rnlSeorotary.

Painesville, O., druggists say uothii has been offered in that town for y. a which is so popular and gives such ui versa! satisfaction as Brazilian Bali Nearly 400 bottles have been sold the

in the last two montha.

* ~~ -I-' 1 **- ~ 4 nrr' ~ H rmrr 11 ir "