Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 279, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 March 1928 — Page 2

PAGE 2

PHONE MEETING WILL BE HELP AT PURDUE U. Sixth Annual Conference To Open Thursday. Bn Times Special LAFAYETTE. Ind., March 19 Construction and maintenance of telephone plants and equipment will be the principal topics brought up before the sixth annual telephone plant conference which will be held at Purdue University Thursday and Friday. The program will include addresses and round table discussions that will continue through Friday morning. Samuel Tomlinson, president and general manager of the Winona Teelphone Company, Plymouth, will preside at the opening session, which will be addressed by Prof. C. F. Harding, head of the Purdue school of electrical engineering; E. K. Goss, general plant superintendent, Indiana Bell Telephone Company, and Harvey Walls, general manager of the Greencastle Teleplone Company. Goss will discuss the economical design and construction of an outside"cable plant, while Walls will present an address on "Central Office Maintenance.” H. A. Barnhart, Rochester, president of, the Indiana Telephone Association, will preside at the annual banquet Thursday evening which will be addressed by J. W. Wopat, Kansas City, Mo., noted investment engineer. The closing session on Friday morning will be given over to two addresses and a round table discussion of telephone company problems. R. Ewbank, Aurora, will speak on "Rigging for Pole Line Construation,” while “Cable Construction and Maintenance” will be presented by F. C. Morrill, Ft. Wayne. Let Polly, the want ad girl, help you word your want ad—she knows how!

3 Generations Have Taken It Cardui Benefited Tennessee Lady Who Tells How Mother Gave It To Her and How She Gave It To Daughters. “I have been familiar with the benefits of Cardui ever since I was a girl,” says Mrs. John Brown. R. F. D. 9. Cleveland, Tenn. “I first took it when I was in my teens, as my mother took it before me. It was from her that I first learned of this splendid medicine. “When I was entering womanhood she gave me several bottles of Cardui, and I remembered that it helped me a lot. At that time I suffered often with a bad pain in my back and sides. “After I was married I suffered from weakness, so I asked my husband to get me some Cardui to take, which he did, and I was soon feeling much better. “I have been married thirty-five years, and during that time I have had occasion to take Cardui several times, and every time it has been of great benefit to me. I can heartily indorse it, for I know what a splendid medicine it is. I have given it to my daughters as they grew up. “I have taken Cardui during the change of life. I was very nervous. That was my worst symptom, nervousness and sleeplessness. Cardui seemed to overcome these troubles, and with its aid I passed safely through that trying period.’ 'CAR9UTI USgD BY WOMEN | I Cardoseptlc, for hygienic reasons, I should be used by women as a | mild, harmless detergent; 50_cts.

Take Care of Your Kidneys - Colds and Chills Throw Heavy Burdens on the Kidneys.

ARE you getting- over a cold or grip only to find yourself always lame and stiff—tired and achy? Are you bothered with nagging backache, drowsy headaches and dizziness? Are the kidney eliminations irregular or painful? Then you should give some thought to your kidneys. Colds and chills increase the poisons in the blood and bring extra work to the kidneys. When the kidneys act slug-

Doan’s Pills A Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys At all dealers, 60c a box. Foster-Milbttrn Cos., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y.

NORA BAYES, STAR OF STAGE, IS DEAD

Nora Bayes

L\i railed Tress NEW YOLIK, March 19.—Nora Bayes, stage star for more than twenty years, died here today in the Jewish Hospital, after an abdominal operation performed last Monday. Born in Milwaukee in 1880, Miss Eayes made her first stage appearance as a vaudeville actress in 1902. After a time on the variety stage, she joined the Fisher stock company of San Francisco. She was instrumental in creating the first edition of the “Ziegfeld Follies” in 1907. Fifth Husband Survives Her Miss Bayes is survived by her fifth husband, Benjamin L. Friedland, to whom she was married- in March, 1925, on board the Leviathan, and three adopted children, Norman, 9; Lenora, 7, and Peter, 6. Her first husband was Otto Crossing, Chicago business man. Her second was Jack Norworth, actor; the third Harry Clarke, once her dancing partner, and her fourth was Oscar Gordon, actor. Her most recent success outside of vaudeville was her appearance in “Snapshots of 1921,” produced by the Selwyns. Miss Bayes had been ill for the last two years, but had continued her stage activities till the day before she was taken to the hospital. Given to Temperament Generous when she felt she was appreciated, Miss Bayes was given to temperamental displays if the management did not suit her. Only a few years ago she refused to appear on the same bill with Sophie Tucker unless given a preferred place on the program. The next week she was giving her services to several benefit performances in behalf of crippled children. Her last appearance on the stage was at a benefit play for the Doyers street mission—an appearance which had been preceded a few days by another benefit performance for children. Robust, rather stout, and full of laughter. Miss Bayes was popular with vaudeville audiences throughout the world. Though best known for her work in revues and vaudeville sketches, she also appeared in many fulllength productions, including “Little DISTURBING NIGHT COUGH QUICKLY STOPPED “A distressing cough and irritated throat kept me miserably awake at night and prevented others from sleeping. Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound quickly comforted and ! relieved me. Helped my neighbors | over ‘flu’ coughs, too. Feel I must j tell you about it,” says H. C. P . Sailors Snug Harbor, N. Y. Wonderfully soothing and healing. Bland to the tender throat of a child, effective in stopping the stubborn coughs of grown persons. Advertisement.

gishly waste impurities remain in the blood and cause many unpleasant symptoms. Following winter’s colds many users rely on Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. Doan’s increase the activity of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Since 1885 they have been winning new friends the country over. Ask Your neighbor!

Miss Fixit,” “Her Jolly Bachelor," "Ladies First,” and “Queen o' Hearts.” DAM DISASTER QUIZ IS BEGUN Claims Will Be Presented to Los Angeles. r,il l nilcd Tress LOS ANGELES, March 19.—The State board of inquiry today will start its investigation into the St. Francis dam disaster. Nationally known engineers make up the board. The investigation will be the first of a group of official inquiries through which, it is expected, the blame for the dam’s collapse and the resulting flood will be settled. Damage claims will be accepted by a committee at Santa Paula today. When all persons have filed their claims the committee will present the bill to Los Angeles, it was said. Search for dead in the flood district continued today, although the majority of work was directed at rehabilitation. The best check obtainable placed the dead at 270 and missing at 175. About a score of bodies were found Sunday. Damage is estimated at $15,000,000. HALL CAMPAIGN PUSHED Royse Heads Local Work for Seventh District Congress Candidate. Wilbur A. Royse. local attorney, has assumed charge of the campaign of Archibald M. Hall for the Republican nomination for Congressman from the Seventh district and will be in charge of headquarters. 133 Denison Hotel. Organization of a Hall-for-Congress Club placed Walter Montgomery in the presidency; Mrs. Pyrle Hughes, woman’s division manager; Jacquelin Holliday, treasurer, and executive committee members: Frank Butler, Harry Wade, C. N. Williams, Edward Scoonover, John Collins. Guy Jeffries, Jerry Liddy, George Levinson and Robert Hall. Injury May Stop Dancing By Times Special BRAZIL, Ind., March 19— Miss Imogene Richmond, this city, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Richmond, has suffered an injury which may bar her from a promising career as a professional dancer. Miss Richmond, a dancing student in New York, suffered a fractured veterbrae in a fall from a street car at Elizabeth, N. J., and according to advices to relatives here has suf- ! sered a nervous collapse.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Sloe SENT BY ROOSEVELT TO BORAH'S FUND Other Contributions Raisa Total: Asks Cash to Repay Sinclair. B, a Vniled Press WASHINGTON. March 19.—C01. Theodore Roosevelt, former secretary of Navy and son of the late President Roosevelt, today contributed SIOB to the tund Senator Borah is raising to repay the $160,000 Republican party campaign contribution made by Harry Sinclair, indicted oil man. Borah announced S3OO had been received in the morning mail, swelling the total amount of cash on hand to about 1,901. The Senator declined to name any of the other contributors, who sent amounts from $1 to $lO. The Republican party must make plain by forceful action that “it indignantly repudiates the men who participated in the rape of the Government oil lands,” Senator Arthur Capper. Republican, Kansas, said today in a statement. “The smudge of oil being smeared blackly across the pages of history is repulsive to uic citizens of the entire country,” Capper said. “The trail is slimy, odorous, reeking with corruption.” The Kansas Senator suggested laws “with teeth in them” to limit campaign expenditures, and to require that the real source of every contribution be a matter of public record. Capper did not mention Borah's campaign to raise $160,000 to repay Sinclair. SCALPERS ARE FREED 2 Cage Ticket Speculators' Fines Suspended. Frank Stafford, Otterbein high school coach, and Marion Owens of Bedford, Ind.. were fined $25 and costs and sentence suspended when arraigned before Municipal Judge Paul C. Wetter today on ticket scalping charges. They and five others were arrested at the State high school basketball tournament Saturday. Jack Sill, 16, and Norbert Zahn, 18, of Lafayette, were let off with a reprimand and judgment withheld. In all cases the judge pointed out that he did not consider any of the offenders “professional scalpers.” Principal Aifred Scales of Bloomington Junior high school, Homer Lux, 17, and Maurice Clay, 16, of Waldron, were to be arraigned later. Stafford said someone grabbed his ticket and gave him $5. Scales is charged with buying a ticket from Lux and was booked on a vagrancy charge. MRS. NANNIE BAKER FUNERAL TUESDAY The Rev. Edwin Dunlavy Will Officiate at Home Services. Funeral services for Mrs. Nannie E. Baker, 78, of 860 College Ave„ who died Sunday morning, will be held at the home Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 with the Rev. Edwin W. Dunlavy. pastor of the Roberts Park M. E. Church, officiating. Eurial will be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Eaker. who had been a resident of Indianapolis for forty-two years, was born in. Petersburg, Ind. She was a member of the Roberts Park Church, past president of the George H. Thomas Woman's Relief Corps No. 10, past noble grand of Temple Lodge No. 591, Order of Rebekah, and a member of the Queen Esther Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star. Surviving are a son. Victor M. Baker, Indianapolis, a passenger conductor on the Big Four; a brother, D. S. Osborn, Petersburg; three sisters, Mrs. Mary Stucky and Mrs. Effie Tevebuagh, both of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Sarah Harrell, Petersburg. Mrs. Baker also is survived by two gianddaughters, Mrs. Berenice Smartz and Mrs. Marion Collins, Indianapolis, and two great grandchildren, Kenneth and Charlotte Smartz.

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GEORGE LOOMS AS CONTENDER AT CONVENTION Georgia Senator Claims 100 Democratic Votes Lined Up. BY PAUL R. MALLON, United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, March 19. Friends of Senator Walter F. George, the Georgia “favorite son’’ claimed today that he would go into the Houston Democratic convention with more than 100 votes. They contend he has developed in the last few days from a hopeless candidate of his States’ delegation to an important candidate of the entire South —like Senator Underwood of Alabama was in 1912. They count 28 votes in Georgia, 24 in Alabama, 24 in North Carolina, and 18 in South Carolina for a basic total of 94. Then they say they expect George delegates to be selected among the 12 in Florida, 26 in Kentucky, 20 in Oklahoma, 24 in Tennessee and It in West Virginia. Their figures, of course, are discounted by friends of Governor A1 Smith and others, but the claims reveal a change of strategy on the part of at least a section of <the South. The old plan of the sou* hem Smith opposition was to select favorite son delegations in every State with Senator James A. Reed of Missouri as an open or an unnamed second choice. The claims also mean that while George’s chances of the nomination may be remote, his bloc of Southern delegates is growing to such an extent that it will prove to be an unexpected influential power ai Houston. The manner in which George last week sewed the Georgia delegation in his pocket is proof that his move-ment-taken none too seriously at first—now is getting down to business. For the first time in years. Georgia leaders encouraged him to “hand pick" a delegation which would prevent any men who favored Reed or Smith as second choices from getting into the convention. He is opposed strongly to Smith and not favorable to Reed, so his votes can be expected to be of little help to the two major candidates oi the party. GATGH JAIL-BREAKER One of Crawfordsville Fugitive Quartet Gives Up. Leslie Johnson, 19. one of a quartet to break jail at Crawiordsville Saturday night and who gave himself up to police at his home, 115 E. Walnut St., Sunday morning was back in the Crawford, vine jail today awaiting a trip to the State Reformatory at Pendleton, where he has been sentenced to serve five to twenty-one years. Warren H. Spooner, 25, another of the four who escaped was also back in jail, having been captured near Crawfordsville. John M. Watson, 47, an ex-convict, whom Johnson says engineered the escape, lias not been returned, although Crawfordsville police allege they had information that he has been captured “smewhere in Illinois.” The fourth member of the quartet was Fayette Hiner, 24, 2714 Burton Avo., who was sentenced with Johnson for robbing a Crawfordsville filling station. He still is at large.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Calvin Fausett, Pendleton. Ind., 1 Marmon, 430-664, from 1927 N. Meridian St. James McAnslan, Claypool, Chevrolet, 517-196, from Alabama and i Ohio Sts. Eugene Sheehan, 2911 N. Delaware St., Marmon. 33-276, from Ohio and Alabama Sts. Harold Switzer, Franklin. Ind., Ford, 161-606, from Franklin. Ind. Miss Katherine Porter, Kokomo. Ind., Oldsmobile, from Capitol Ave. and Market St. William Pickard, 1122 E. St. Clair ; St., Ford, from 3759 W. Tenth St. Marmon Motor Car Company, Eleventh and Meridian Sts., Marmon, from Thirtieth and Pennsylvania Sts. A. W. Riordan, 3401 E. Washington St., Essex, 16-730, from 3304 N. Capitol Ave. H. E. Woodward, 3716 College Ave., Hudson, 37-465, from Meridian St. and Monument PI. BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found by police belong to: George McClain, 1338 Barth Ave., Pilot, found at Garfield Park. Rudolph Steinberger, 109 E. Ohio St., Ford, Ohio St. and Capitol Ave. Patrick McMahon, 2305 College Ave., Oakland, Hillside Ave. and! Twenty-Fifth St. James Maloy, 120 S. Denny St.,' Ford, East and Washington Sts. John C. Nusba’>m, 5 Eastern Ave., ; Auburn, Brookvi..e Rd. 'and Emerson Ave. Albert Molner, Bedford, Ind., McCarty St. and Madison Ave. Rolland Arens. 1564 Broadway, Essex, 218 S. Meridian St. George Wilson, 346 Harlan St., j Nash, Eighteenth and Illinois Sts. Quick Tire Service Company, 936 N. Meridian St.. Ford, Thirteenth and Meridian Sts. Huge Beacon for Aviators Bn Times Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., March 19 An 8,000,000 candle power beacon will be placed on top of the old Na- | tional Bank Building here as a guide j for aviators. The light will be 163 j feet from the ground. Plans for the beacon have been approved by the Department of Commerce at Wash- ! ingto.n and it is planned to have it in operatic Jam 4

Brave Boy Loses Plucky 2- Year Tilt With Death

Cheerful, Hopeful to Last: His Money Couldn't Mend Shattered Spine. H.H I iiih i! Press PITTSBURGH, Pa., March 19. The two-year fight that Rody P. Marshall, Jr., 18, put up for his own life—a fight against overwhelming odds—has ended. The youth, confined to a wheel chair since his spinal column was shattered in July, 1925, died last night. He had been cheerful and hopeful of recovery until the last i minute. It was at Naraganset, R. 1., that j the youth's fight started. He was' diving with friends when he struck j the post of one of the piers, fractur- j ing his spinal column. His parents, Mr. and Mrs Rody P. Marshall, wealthy Pittsburgh residents, were in Europe. They I were notified and immediately made ; the fastest trip possible to their son in the United States. The event; brought national recognition to' young Marshall’s case, as the par- j ents’ dash home was called a with death. But. young Rody clung on to life. He grinned at his misfortune. ! He was an admirer of Babe Ruth. ; The homerun hitter, upon hearing • this, visited young Rody and the youth was pleased. He was an ad- : mirer of several screen and stage \ redressed. They visited him and he was pleased. In fact, he was pleased at every attention shown him—and there Were many—and continued to show improvement even though he never ■ recovered use of his legs. Then Sunday lie became worse ! and his grim fight ended in death last night. mst MflT w =3(13 STSOC . Jf L tki> i Hi i 3 IUW Cardinal Mundelein Ends Visit to Rome. /V/ I nil ell Pei \s ROME, March 19.—Before leaving for Cherbourg to sail for tne United States, Cardinal Mundelein of Chicago told reporters that tire forthcoming presidential election in the United States had been wholly alien from Ills conversations with Pope I .us. Cardinal Gasparri and other leaders of the Roman Catholic Church. He emphasized the Holy See was adhering strictly to the time-hon-ored po'icy of not meddling in the political struggles of other countries. He said the Vatican would be just as pleased with the election of a Catholic or a Pr .le.stiuit. Cardinal Mundelein said it was felt the Catholic Church would enny the same freedom cl' religion under a Protestant as under a Catholic President. He concluded that if some few people had the opinion that the candidacy of Gove nor Alfred E. Smith of New York really was the Vatican’s candidacy, then such an opinion was wholly wrong and groundless. Twenty Birds Die in Fire Pi' Times Scicial WABASH. Ind., Marcli 19.—Fire which caused $1,500 damage to the Trcmont Hotel cost the lives of twenty canary birds, owned by the hotel proprietor and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Despard.

Advise Home Use of Hospital Method to End Colds During “Pneumonia Weather”

Many Here Find it Brings Sura Relief from Cough or Cold — Often in a Few Hours Realizing the dangers as well as the misery caused by neglecting common colds in this pneumonia weather, doctors are now recommending for home use among their patients a remedy that is inexpensive to use, pleasant to take and capable of relieving even the most extreme hospital cases. And numbers of Indianapolis people find that it brings quick, sure relief —often in a few hours —from a head cold, cough or chest cold. Took Doctor’s Advice— Cold Soon Relieved E. H. Snyder, for instance, told : a doctor friend that nothing had done his cold so much good. He

felt -feverish” and “grippy,’ he said, and feared pneumonia as the cold started spreading dow-n towards his chest. Then, on the advice of his doctor, he started taking double

||j£ ;> ffMm *

strength doses of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral—a hospital certified mixture of wild cherry, terpin hydrate and other ingredients which hospitals have found to be the quickest to end colds.

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Rody Marshall Jr. NEEDY MINERS UPHOLD LEWIS Bickneil Workers Vote Support to Union Chief. Il l Tine s Special. BICKNELL, Ind . March 19. Miners in the coal fields around this city, suffering privations due to lack of employment, remain loyal to John L. Lewis, president, and other officials of the United Mine Workers of America. The officials have been under fire by the National ‘'Save-the-Union” committee in which John Brc.phy, former head of the miners union in Pennsylvania, is active. At a mass meeting here, the miners adopted resolutions which read in part: “We are asking all mine workers >n refrain from having anything to do with the new organization, as we fee! that such propaganda as that being circulated by Brophy and his gang is only playing into the hands of those who would like to see the destruction of our organization.” FACTORY MOVING HERE Automobile Parts Firm t<> Occupy Massachusetts Avc. Building. Removal of the King Quality Products Company from Buffalo, N. Y.. to Indianapolis is under way, it was announced today. The company, large manufacturer of automobile replacement parts, with an annual output of more than $1,000,000 will occupy a building at Massachusetts Avc. and Steele St. \V. K. Norris heads the corporation. Ft. Wayne Woman Missing Ha Tim. s Special FT. WAYNE. Ind., March 19. Three months have passed since the disappearance of Mrs. Marie Huff-man-Erdmann from her home here without a trace of her being fauna. Relatives have had the aid of police, newspapers and magazines and radio in their search.

Relief began with the first pleasant swallow. He felt its comforting, healing warmth—from his nose passages deep down into his chest. By dinner time the thermometer showed that fever was gone and his temperature was normal again. The next morning his head and chesj were almost entirely cleared up and in another day or so, the doctor reports, he was completely rid of the cold. Tried to “Siveat Out” Her Child’s Cold Mrs. W. L. Meade gave her little daughter Dorothy a hot bath followed by tablets and a hot lemonade in an effort to “sweat out” a

stuffy cold. Then she applied salve to the child’s chest and wrapped her up carefully in heavy blankets. But little Dorothy made the serious mistake of going outdoors the next!

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day while the salve still kept the pores of her skin open. Asa result she caught fresh cold, which became so serious the family doctor was called. The doctor immediately prescribed Cherry Pectoral every half hour until fever was reduced and congestion began to clear up. By

TRAUGOTT'S

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.MARCH 10,1028

FEME IN COAL AREA SEE! BY Sr AS FIT?’ iTi 7>, ffc tv rt *ll Ip. I : i l '' Favor Shown 1 Proposal of Fe ;ral Commission. BY LEO R. SACK WASHINGTON. Man ii 19.—Senator Frank R. Goodin of Idaho, acting chairman of the & Committee invesi.ii/,.. . : t .;■ c. 1 strike, expressed himself to y. as hopeful that “permaneni . ■ ’ la--.re-sults'' will com • ry. “We are makini Senator Gooding : 1 “All of us feel very aged and l think that before we yet through the miners and the opt.-retors will agree upon legislation, which will not only terminate eu strike, In will provide peace ful and protection for !'. ulic.” Vest Power in Board Gooding adv.s , , . vul C >u! Commission, simil; to the Interstate Comnu < ii ion, with sweeping power to y; ••• iro the coal industry. He also live legislation m compu Is ory putes. similar to th ark< bill which was enacted with the joint approval of Ire vr id executives and the b >lh Senator Burton '. Wheeler oi Montana, has served notice that nr. legislation must p 1 > ■ !-.• - by the operators of ilr> i ‘ r-f th mine workers to coil - igaln • ing. , John L. Lewis, pie ■.■ id of Ilv United Mine Wor: cr v ! ins it that “this inherent c and inehenabl •. right” be x ;co tors have testified their vriu'ugncxs to ac. opt this pm. r' . Willing to Meet Ft’ be The opera tors, on ; ’ orir.c ban. have indicated the " 1 in T Jones, president of :.c u :■• Consumers Coal Compai • . . who has had fifty as miner and ouet : or. .in 1 li.■ mine workers must a->’■{.■ th principle compulsory nr . n. Lewis told Senators thn;, lie i willing to have that i r considered at a futur c tween operator mil public, “for prop . v> . discussion.” MOTORIST D!” r 0W woman w s office: ‘•outh T Reck! : Ur\. •• . Ha i inn < ■ m < ini SOUTH BEND. 7 T ,:Vi 19. ren Hummcll, this n on road near car around one and . • ; almost cav i . . ■ ditch. Then he ad : inc .to injury by waving hi i•. . . at the woman driver. The remainder of 11 > trip to Niles was a ri ■ vrmau caught un with "■ ' a thy and arre ted L. .• ■ i rs. C. S. Overcash, a <! .X'lmell paid $28.7.' on a ; • , iruing charge. :\ oto?< Hi, Thill'S Spec ,1 SOU”':' BEN ) Harry Keller, 21. is . suffered when the cle he was riding crashed 1 a i '

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the following it.*. . * .. othy was well cn tv to f ::cu to school in a c another day or re ai. ts... co4l were gen.'. Ji<>(<•: See otlit —nil eerfl.,v I'li' .' I*-’', iDoetors roc. ' 1 because it is ;i rar If not only -toes , ■ \U but penetrates and li : 1 !s i. '■ : l inn :s <>( the brc'itlii.'i ■: on- ' ' 1 and >'.V t lie system i: un ■ ’ 1 1 helps reduce the ” ' "■ inp nutl drive, o . ■ ' '■ ami it can he taken Ih v "t -ill times - even bet ore goiter ut■: —. Just 11 spooni ll rat today ami you cut person t unor: " .v. a 1 Tt.: Hist s. 50c and, twice as in p: . W T tCOUSHS ilsßrT: -