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FORECAST: Mostly cloudy tonight, tomorrow. Not quite so cool tonight. Scattered light showers tomorrow. Low tonight 63. High tomorrow 80.
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1951
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erad. as Sscond-Class Matter ht Postofies Indianapolis, Indiana. Issued Dally,
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‘Hey, Mike, Come-on-a-My-House'—
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Society G
By ROBERT F. LOFTUS
United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Sept. 5 ~—Michael V. (Upper Crust) DiSalle doesn’t know it yet,
but he fell into the social
swim today. 3 The glamorous Mrs. Gwendolyn Cafritz, Washington's busiest hostess while Mrs. Perle .Mesta is off ministering in Tuxembourg, wants him to come on out to her house next Wednesday.
She's giving a small dance
that probably will turn out to -
be THE thing of the season. Mrs. Cafritz confided to the United Press that she has just dropped an invitation into the mail for the price controller and for Mrs. DiSalle—if Mrs. DiSalle can spare the time from her five children in Toledo. y 8 4 THE DARK-HAIRED social, ite said she does; too, think Mike is -pretty enough to sit : around her table with ‘handsome men like Tony Biddle and Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Hoyt 8. Vandenberg. “I'd be honored to have him,” she said. “I do hope he won't say no just because it comes out in the papers like this.” : : Mike, who hasn't attended a
Hoosier Farmer Visits Fair as Top
Agriculture Aid
Another Story, Page 2
gon
Mrs. Gwendolyn Cafritz . . . she's giving the party.
half-dozen parties sinee he came to Washington nine months ago, wasn't available for comment. Mrs. Cafritz said it wasn’t true that she told a reporter in Paris she never invited Mike to her parties “because he wouldn't look nice around my table.”
“I WOULDN'T think of being disrespectful to worthwhile people,” she said. “That reporter
Why, I never saw Mr. DiSalle in my life.” Mrs. Cafritz said she hadn't either used words like “divine” and “wonderful” to describe Gen. Vandenberg and Mr, Biddle to the Paris reporter. “That reporter used those words,” she recalled, “and I thought to myself at the time: ‘What a funny way for a man to talk about another man.” Mrs. Cafritz said she was ‘absolutely distressed” she picked up her newspaper last week and read an account of the Paris interview, along with this terse reaction from Mike: “Now if Mrs. Mesta had said that about me, I'd really feel bad. They tell me she knows how to throw a party.” n EJ - “I WAS so embarrassed,” she . Said, “that I called Mr. DiSalle right away to apologize. He wasn't in his office, so I dictated my apology to a secretary.”
>
“I feel sure he accepted my
apology,” she added hopefully, “because he called back in a little while. Unfortunately, was out when he called,” “Anyway,” Mrs. Cafritz said,
‘Communists Break and Run Away—
UN Seizes Bloody Ridge After 18 Days; | don Starving Buddies
| |
| Bodies of
Fleeing Reds
Page Gls Du
3 Loeal Back in States 10 By United Press 3 EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUAR-!
Hoosier . farmer Clarence J. TERS, Korea, Sept. 5—United Na- |
McCormick, U. 8. Undersecretaryitions troops ' captured
“Bloody |
of Agriculture, was an unexpected Ridge” on the east-central Korean | visitor to the State Fair Grounds front tonight after 18 days of
this morning.
|
savage fighting.
Demoralized Communist troops|
his way to Washington from Oma-| starved and wounded North Ko-|
ha. Neb. where he attended a réans who were taken prisoner. | | | half-starved North Koreans
Farmer Labor Day celebration.
He was scheduled to speak from the Radio building at noon, and hoped to see as much of the
.sprawling exposition as possible.
|took the three hills along the] | east-west ridge line at 6 a. m Wednesday,
Little tootlers made big music|
Children’s Day” at the fair. Compete for Awards
Forty-five Hoosier high school they in awards in front of the grandstand. The program was sched-
band marched,
units, playing as competed for $425
uled to begin at 10 a. m,
Pike Township High School;
Band carried tHe banner. of Mar-
| |
jon County against such nearby!
foes as Johnson County, Plainfield, Knightstown, Fortville and Lebanon, as well as the 60-piece 1950 champion, Alexandria. Meanwhile, Fair officials ported 66,195 paid
passed through the turnstiles yes-
“Education and!
gas rates on the way.
re. available to more homes.
customers, late yesterday was granted an
victory was won without a shot.
i
The final phase of an Allied
United Nations infantrymen |
Indianapolis time, |
and found only wounded and!
Million Dollar Gas Rate Slash In Prospect Here
By HAROLP HARTLEY Times Business Editor : There's a million dollar cut in
.
"And gas furnaces should be
The Citizens Gas & Coke Util-
terday, compared with 60,419 on increase of nearly 14 million
the corresponding day last year. Carl Tyner, secretary-manager of the Fair, said there was a good chance this. year's show would
|feet when turned loose into the draw mere persons during Its) onsumer mains at the strength used in Indianapolis.
nine-day run than in 1950 when 610,103 Fair-goers passed through
. the gates. ;
Still Running Behind”
“We're &till running
{cubic feet of natural gas a day by {the Federal Power Commission.
1 |
|
artillerymen rounds and had inflicted an esti-
Stray Bulle Misses Baby Before Birth
Aban
HONG KONG, Sept. 5 (UP)— Hong Kong hastily pulled in its “welcome” mat today when it
heard reports that the Korean |
cease-fire talks might, switched from Kaesong to British colony. “That's: the “ last thing the Hong Ko want,” a
be this
rell-informed source
Mr. McCormick stopped here on, broke and fled, abandoning many 521d. “There's too much chance
that somebody might be bumped off.”
awaiting them.
weet on DiSalle
just made up all “those things. °
when * 74
" .
government would |
_|ter: Ahead of the Americans there,
The prisoners said that the de-
fending forces had withdrawn |
hours earlier.
Bloody Ridge fell to the Allies
after the heaviest artillery con- force: trapped in the “Punchbowl!”
centration of the Korean War
against a single objective. Since the start of the offensive 18 days ago the United Nations had. fired 390,000
mated 6500 Reds. Farther north, below Kumsong,
casualties on the
the main contingents of the three U. 8. divisions, which won a 17day battle to bréak the enemy's east-central and central defense
eee seem
f
SAUGUS, Mass. Sept. 5 (UP)
.—The mother of a new-born
The 14 million cubic feet trans- Se¥en-pound girl was “doing well”
Cut Last December
[the “probable effect” of the ad-|
. charged his .22 caliber rifle w The utility has been working onicleaning it.
[lates into nearly 25 million cubic 1oday with a bullet in her Stom-
ch. Mrs. Bernice Sturnolo, 22, was
struck by ‘the bullet yesterday when a fisighbor accidentally dis-/tip of Jamaica today for signs of
hile new life in the weakened rem-
12,000 behind last year's attend- time but had nothing to say about at her telephone talking with her
ance but we may make it up if
the weather stays nice because ft rained on the last day last year,” Mr. Tyner said. “It's even possible—but not probable total attendance may top the alltime record set in 1946.”
“Anyway,” he said, Twe feel
Continued on Page 4—Col. 6
And No ‘Free Throws, Either—
Old Attucks Stars Prove Fair Barker Not So Cagey |
land punished for breaking Fire i : partment rules will face new Bureau identified it, had veered house persons forced to move ges of driving an engine westward before He will appear sparing the island a return of Housing Authority plans to build Board the whirling fury which killed|/0W-cost apartments. d by the 154 persons three weeks ago and|
Three guys and a gal had doi, kewpie dolls, and a stuffed De j doll.
lot of fun at the State / Fair Monday night until they made the man at the Midway stand finally wise up and ‘cry “Uncle.” °° The quartet wandered around taking in the sights and spotted
the basketball-shooting pavilion. One of the quartet plunked
basketball, shot three times and won a kewpie doll. He tried it again. Same thing. :
Then his buddy stepped up to last year. . the board. Swish. Swish. Swish. But Hallié Bryant, Willie Gard- | “Then the third féllow repeated. “° This went on for nearly an - hour. The quartet left. It came|getting e : BE ghey carrying three man said paste-board boxes of loot. They . Miss
in pa
{its effect on the rate structure at sister [this time.
|
| Continued on Page 4 Col.
|a. great big Teddy Bear.
that wasn’t about to miss.
" y at the stand cown down .a dime. He grabbed a 5 ‘what
months, depending upon demand!
of defense plants and the avajl- and
about the forthcoming
|birth of her child when she was The million dollar rate reduc- wounded. Her tion, which 'might not be an-/scream on the other end of ‘the lo — that hounced before three to six Wire and called police.
sister heard a
She was rushed to a hospital two doctors, delivered the
ability of some additional equip- baby safely by performing a
five baskets in a row. He did. He| had a soft, one-hand flick shot York St., is charged with operat-|
{i |
Caesarian section. 3 |was made to remove the bullet, ~ (which had missed th
His girl friend thought it/char would be nice if she could “have whil |Sept. 19 before the Safety To get it, her boy friend had to to answer charges file plunk down a buck and hit all/Board of Fire Captains
No attempt
e child.
Fireman Faces Fifth Charge
A fireman four times convicted 15 miles per hour.
e drunk.
Tony Boyd, 45, of 538 W. New prope
ng Engine 1 under the influence
The crowd grew hilarious. The of liquor while en route to the
those
't figure Selig Junkyard fire earl ) three. white morning, Aug. 5. i sweaters with green “A's” stood The three-alarm blaze was
for. Maybe he didn't hear of fought for more than 24 hours.
shoot any more. The -stand was,
cular H He
Elizabeth “of Crispus
mpty of prizes and the chauffeur to private for being ab- . “That's enough, boys.” sent without leave and received Carbon, a June 30
BIE
| Crispus Attucks’ basketball team Boyd previously was convicted by the Board of Safety of being drunk on duty and received a ner, and Charles Cook—couldn’t nine-month suspension, in 1949, .
In 1943 he was reduced from
/ suspensions ‘in 1944 and
vs
same charge. He AY 23
{80
Into Rainy Squalls
about ditional natural gas for some| MRS. STURNOLO was seated Rurricane.
|
|
miles
| {
{ i
y in the Welfare. Suit Delayed
§
|
i
|
“Indiana Calls Tax Dodgers Into Court
By IRVING LEIBOWITZ
new “get tough” policy, today |
|
‘socked tax dodgers and tax \chiselers with a new weapon |—court suits. | For theyfirst time in history, the
state went to court to collect back
{gross income taxes from delin-
|quent Hoosier §axpayers. {It was a mass attempt by the {Department of Revenue “to force
{payment of taxes” from approxi{mately 20,000 individuals and {firms that have ignored the de|partment’s formal notices and ‘demands for payment.
7 Suits In County
More than 100 court complaints are scheduled to be filed {today all over the state. In| |Marion County, the department! filed suits against seven persons. Similar suits were to be filed! in Lafayette, Hammond, East |Chicago, Gary, South Bend, Ko-| (komo, Anderson, Muncie, Marion, | Ft. Wayne, Richmond, Terre {Haute, Evansville, Bedford, Co|lumbus, and New Albany. | Revenue Commissioner Conn J. | | Sterling said: | “This move is only the begin-| {ning of a relentless campaign to| {force payment of our taxes.”
Statistics Cited
State revenue officials said a {comparison of Federal and state |statistics shows that approxi-| {mately = 200,000 Hoosiers have
line and knock him off-balance;f2il84 to pay the state gross infor an offensive threatened by,l0™Me tax but are paying the |850,000 Communists, dug in and '®deral income tax. : ‘braced for the expected enemy Mr. Sterling announced his lattack. . staff was cheeking this discrep- | The battered Reds on Bioody| 2 with the idea that “full and | Ridge lost 26,000 men—one-third {of their front-line forces—before| {they broke and fled.
ans
Mike DiSalle-, . . and he's
uppercrust now.
“this dance is coming up next Wednesday and I'd love to have Mr. DiSalle.” Just one thing. M¥. DiSalle wants everybody to call him “Mike.” And Mrs. Cafritz said she never calls people by their first names. Hey, Mike.. Come-on-a my house.
| |
t eliminate the additional takes being levied upon : those taxpayers who are now { From the heights won by the 'U. 8. troops, artillery poured Pearing the cost of operating che
|round after round into Kumsong, “tate government. :
i | Mr. Sterling apparently meant | Communist troop and supply cen-|p.¢ i Roa the gross |
income tax he owed, the state would collect’ enough money to) \make it unnecessary to levy ad- |
{opened the long valleys down] which the enemy must move to jcarry out his expected counter-| hens | {offensive. ; | Gontinued on Page 4—Col. 4 | | South of the advanced positions, | CO |other’ Americans and South Ko-!
|reans mopped up a small red Bauers Send Another Son To Hospital
THE FAMILIAR name “Bauer” was back on the list of patients in the children’s ward in St. Vincent Hospital today. But this time the first name was different. Hospitalized since yesterday when he showed symptoms which might be polio is 4-year-old Brian Bauer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bauer, 5013 W. Minnesota St. ” n » HE IS THE BROTHER of Norman (Butchie) Bauer, has spent ‘most of his five years "in the same ward, first with polio d and more recently incased in a
‘valley north of Inje. The enemy threw 83,000 men against the United Nations troops when the Allied drive started Aug. 18. Although they lost one-third of them in dead, wounded and captured, they could get quick re-| inforcements from the estimated!
$ivisions massed behind the lines. :
Hurricane
eect.
Breaks
Off West Jamaic
By United Press MIAMI, Fla,
of the spine. Brian became ill late Sunday,
squally caldron off the western house” for Butchie's birthday party, the first birthday he's ever been well enough to celebrate. Today Brian's condition was nants of the year's fourth big listed as “good.”
Weather Bureau planes found the hurricane had broken into rainy squalls over a vast low! pressure ared which crept slowly ward the Gulf of Mexico. . The Public Housing Authority The. forecasters predicted a of Indianapolis today submitted continued westward movement 3 oping variance ordinance to throughout today and possibly city Council for the proposed until tomorrow morning, but project ‘at Dawson St. and Le-, warned that the random turbu- grande Ave. lance still. had the ingredients = The ordinance would alter the needed to form a raging hurri- zoning from business to .resicane once more. dential on the north third of the The Miami Weather Bureau in Housing Authority tract bounded a 4 a. m. (Indianapolis Time) ad- by State Ave. Dawson St. Levisory located the center 200 grande Ave. and the Belt Ralilsouthwest - of - Kingston, road. Jamaica, moving westward about = The Housing Authority proposes . to build dwellings there for reloThe project will
Housing Authority Asks Zoning Variance
“Hurrican Dog,” as the Weather cated families.
it broke up, from other -sections where the
worth of
- . | = |
damaged $50 million rty.
Hearing of Indiana's
. Methodist churchmen rap social a ‘Times’ Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON, Sept. 5—Hear-| ing of Indiana's $20 million wel-| fare fund suit against Federal
. «Pp o misses so many Senate séfsions,
Security Administrator Oscar P, Baby harness horses eye Fox Stake purse ...
wing has been postponed until 3 : EVARE ras been postponed ! Other Features: It had been. scheduled for to: morrow. But attorneys here, who are representing the state along with the Indiana A Gen-,
Amusements sisseciane. 8 Bridge sess rsarreninannn 6 Comics Casas nsrrsean enn 2 Editorials .........c.00z0s 12. Movies
saver
| The State of Indiana, in a
| selected National Sweetheart of KDR.
lete compliance with the law! possibility of|
|The increase is 14.5 per cent over from Stalin. His sla
who the
swelled budget. In approving the pyljet and Assistant Hu expenditure ne +cast as the result of tuberculosis lowed wage hikes for nearly all county employees.
Sept. 5—Storm the same day dozens of Visitors recommendations of a salary surhunters watched a slow-moving streamed into the Bauers’ “open vey conducted earlier this year.
That. was the boost called for in
On the Inside
| Seven die in fiery crash of B-29 at Jdaho base... ' You might call Sen. Jenner 'senator-at-large' because he
That new automobile will cost you $80 to $250 more...
_ Robert Ruark ....... a 1m
Sal] WHS0R fe.iesss. 11 Nomar ron -
eae 5 Basel
.
| ! | |
|
IT'S EASY—Miss Indiana has no problem when it comiés to prettying up. Here our queen, Carol Mitchell, Rochester, makes - use of compact presented her in Atlantic City by Roland Gammon, vice president of Kappa Delta Rho, national social fraternity. Carol, who is competing in the Miss America pageant, has been
Hoosier Lovely To Dress for 1st
FBI Told Kremlin | Beauty Parade
i . By United Press Killers May Have ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Sept.| x {
5—Lovely Carol Mitchell, Miss : » | Got U. S. Writer
Indiana who hails from Roches{ter, Ind., steps forth tonight in {the first round of the Miss America contest. hers, {-. While some. of
the nation's) By United Press
{ {others display talents, Miss Mit« —FBI agents investigated today {chell will compete in the evening the possibility that left-wing Nov-| {gown division. lelist Louis Adamic may have been] Tomorrow and Friday she will killed by Kremlin secret police] compete in the two other divisions for joining Yugoslav Marshal and then wait to see if the crown Tito’s anti-Soviet camp. is placed -on her head and the, The G-men were put on the royal robe about her shoulders. | case after Mrs. Ethel Sharp, Mr.) TTT TT {| Adamic’s secretary, told police | four Communist men had threat-| ened the writer last year because]
Council Approves sr. 8-Cent Hike in Final ‘chapters of the 500,000Property Taxes
"word book, “The Eagle and the) By TED KNAP
Rock,” were found beside Mr. Adamic's body early .yesterday| in his burning home on Mount! Joy overlooking the Delaware River Valley. { Trotzky Slaying Recalled | Another 8° cents today was added to your property tax rate recalled the slaying of Leon Trot-| for 1952. _The County Councii approved a! Russian revolution. Trotzky was| record budget which boosts next hacked to death in Mexico with| year's rate to 63 cents for every a pickax in 1940 by an acquaint-| $100 of taxable property you own. ance allegedly: acting on orders;
yer has not |
this year’s rate of 55 cents. Pressure for salary boosts was principal cause for
been found.
Mr.- Adamic had been shot {
n| the the head once with. a 22
-caliber | nterdon| Fuhrman said the- 52-year-old writer had died from a “supposedly self-| inflicted wound.” No suicide note was found. . Mrs. Sharp, who saw him last Friday, said Mr. Adamic had been in a cheerful mood. His wife, visiting a cousin in 0s Angeles, said Mr. Adamic did! not have a motive for -sucidet| The cousin, Abe Roth, said Mrs.| Adamic was “taking the news! pretty rough,” but would return: to New Jersey today.
of $10,091,805 for County Coroner John B council members al-
xt year,
The boosts closely followed
Although the 8-cent hike is bad news for Marjon County property owners, it was a relief from 1, the threatened rise of 32 cents.
proposed budgets submitted by various departments and passed by the county commissioners. Council .members substantially cut the original requests. Spending in 1952 will be $325,-
Papers Examined New Jersey State Police - Lt. 580 higher than this year. Jacob Harris, in charge of the The biggest raise comes ‘under ¢asé, said “the investigation is the general fund, which covers Still heing carried ;on” and asexpenses of administration, Signed his men to examine Mr. courts, law enforcement and other Aga 8 papers, books and many / t. is year's USCripts. county" .government, This ves Mrs. Sharp, a bank teller who has typed Mr, Adamic's manuscripts the last three years, told State Police Detective John Lee) that four men came to Mr. Adamic's farm® last October to dis-
Continued on Page 4—Col. 2,
Pollen Count Grain per Cubic Yard of Air
EM desireaniaries 670 Today - 583 cuss the book about Tito. . aT I ERE CRA Bove TR “If we don't like it, ‘it might IR nS ) FOCAL TEMPERATL RES be too bad,” she said one of the Tam ..62 11am. . 77 Men remarked to Mr. Adamic. Sam... 12 (Noon) 8 Mrs. Sharp told Detective Lee Br Mss. " v \ that Mr. Adamic said the visi-| Pring Flutaidity , gaoy, ° tors were Communists. | Er ———— pre aE miei eg Cp. Vanishing Indian | A lesson fpr Cleveland, | next year’s new owner of the Indianapolis baseball
y 4
|
1 . » Photo, Page 4 lenge '#t
| Mr, 3 hoaon aa the conterbeauties parade in swimsuits and ~ RIEGELSVILLE, N. T. Sept. 5 ce. vas mot io hvite rebe
zky, and anti-Stalin leader in the 9¢clared.
out. the c¢
PRICE FIVE CENTS
ees se 5 A AA
zles
Jap Parley Backs Acheson In 45-3 Vote
BULLETINS SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. § (UP)—The Western powers today broke up Russia’s first big attempt to torpedo the Japanese peace conference. ®
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. § (UP)—Delegates to the Japanese peact treaty conferemce voted 45 to 3 today against Russia’s demand the invitation of Red China to the meeting be considered: . ; - Only the three Communist delegates to the conference voted against supporting U. 8S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson. Indonesia abstained. Soviet Delegate Andrei A. Gromyko pointed at Mr. Ache son, arose from his seat and marched .back to the speaker's platform. :
: . Page Aussie to Preside at Treaty.. 9 Top Reds Live Like Bourgeois 13
Harry All but Tosses in Hat _
with ‘Give-'em-Hell’ Speech 13 By United Press
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 5
—Russia’s Andrei Gromyko opened a vitriolic attack on
the American-British treaty of peace for Japan today and said’ Red China had an “indisputable right” sto participate in the signing of the document. Secretary of State Dean Acheson, temporary presiding officer of the 52-nation peace conference, cut Mr. Gromyko off by ruling him out of order. : “The Soviet government is not in agreement with your ais Ms». Gromyko said. “We .
resentatives of the Red Chinese government. : Mr. Acheson then quickly rejected a proposal by the Czech delegate that Mr. Gromyko’s request for Red China to be invited be considered. On being ruled out of order, Mr. Gromyko immediately returned to the speaker's stand.
Conference Tense
The tense conference hall listened to every word of the exchange between Mr. Acheson and the Communist delegates. The fight broke out only a minute after Mr. Acheson called the first business session fo order. Mr. Gromyko said it was “most important” that the question of inviting Red China should be im-
Mr. Adamic's mysterious death Metdiately considered.
“I protest this procedure,” he
Mr. Gromyko said that the
speeches, rather than votes, were !in order.
Mr. Gromyko threatened to fili-
buster until Mr. Acheson approved his request to argue on inviting : Red China.
Mr. Acheson postponed the vote to allow the Bri delegate to have the. floor Mor five minutes.” Mr. Gromy¥o promised to drag ference unless Mr. ould allow speeches
Acheson
on the question of inviting Red
China. He said angrily: » “The Soviet delegation will
raise this question until thé coh-
ference decides it.” _ Mr. Gromyko earlier served notice that he would battle the.
Allied attempt to jam the treaty
Continued on Page 4 —Col.‘'1
Wherever You Want to Live in
» The Indianapolis area . . city, suburbs or country ..., vou will find the most complete inventory of just about all the available homes are advertised in the real estate pages of ° THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Below is a sample from today's offerings.
6 ACRES—BUNGALOW 5-Room modern bungalow, basement, auto. elec. hot heater. 2-car garage, 2 large poultry houses. Located 11 miles north of Indianapolis on Highway No. 29, Y-Mile north of Eagle Vil« Harold R. Donnell, MA-2374.
JACK C. CARR, INC.
130 E. Market St. MA-2314
full water
lage
2 club: a we Tribe fans aren't used to _ | HON GROUP vuvvci i cinsnn 31 a loser after three healthy | b years traveling in first and Dan Kidney reports. ...... S12 second ond ; | seven 13. There were, 67 fans in |
the Victory Field ~ stands last night at the start of a doubleheader. And then the crowd grew «- And grew and grew until | 729 fans rattled around the | spacious premises to see . | the Tribe lose two and: sink
+80CIetY +.viieiirriernii 6 7 fd Sovola .............. 11 Sports ......i........ 004 15
-
5 Jtevaterugeses 6 7
* Whether you seek a modest bungalow, a farm or a pre«
