Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 September 1952 — Page 13
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8, he said, a member party. So a pleasant uman, Mr, procession \ughan and siclan, Maj, um,
Mr. Caudle, [r. Truman slip, he got
““jcan war crimes court in 1948
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*
"MONDAY, SEPT. 15,
Vast German Krupp Empire Due to Shrink
By United Press BONN, Germany, Sept. 15—Al-
fred Krupp, the munitions king, |
must, under Allied decartelization
laws, dispose of an estimated 350,
000,000 marks ($83.3 million) worth of coal and steel propertics, American sources disclosed. Foung Alfred, sole owner of the
sprawling Krupp empire under a
1943 ‘law passed to avoid inheri-
tance taxes in the event of the death of his mother, Bertha, may |
retain his bridgebuilding, ship-| building, locomotive and truck manufacturing interests. Krupp, an American spokesman said, has presented the Allies with a detailed plan for the disposal of his coal and steel properties over the next five years.
Holds Steel Plant
Krupp's largest steel holding is the Rheinhausen plant, which last year produced about 1,900,000 tons of pig iron. The plant is estimated to be worth 170,000,000 marks ($40 million). Krupp owns 53 per cent of the “Constantin Der Grosse” mine, with the remainder controlled by Swiss financiers. Krupp is now negotiating a sale of this property, which has a stock market value of 40,000,000 marks (about $10 million), to a French banking group. ” He must also dispose of the Emscherlippe and the Hannover and Hannibal mines. The steel processing plants Capito and Klein and the Westfelische Drahtindustrie Hamm will be sold to other members of the Krupp clan,
Factories Retained
Alfred Krupp will retain his loecomotive factory, a machine factory and a truck factory, all located in Essen, Although he also retains the mighty Essen arms works, it was partially destroyed during the war and further reduced by postwar dismantling. Since then, Krupp has leased the bulk of it to the city of Essen, which has sub-leased it to small industries. Krupp also keeps a 55 per cent interest in the Bremen shipyards. The family council which has run the empire since it was founded in Essen in 1811 is to be broken up. Krupp was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment by an Amer-
and his property was confiscated. U. 8. High Commissioner John J. McCloy reduced the sentence to time served early last year and ordered his properties restored.
Army Sells Bath Water
In Economy Campaign SAN FRANCISCO. (UP)—The Army is stopping at nothing in its economy ‘ campaign—it's even selling used bath water. The Port Quartermaster Division here reported that it sells the water used in washing x-ray plates in Army hospitals to a private firm for five cents a gallon. The firm distills the water to recover the metallic salts freed in the washing of the plates.
Polio Victims Not Sure LINCOLN, Neb. (UP)—Health officials say it’s “unlikely” that the polio virus is carried in drinking water but they will have to prove it to four Lincoln polio victims. A family of five picnicked at a state park and four became polio victims. The only one who didn’t get the disease did not drink any of the water,
Mystery Solved NORWICH, N. Y. (UP)—A mysterious spring bubbled out of the ground here about 10 years ago. Today—365 million gallons later—it's dried up. by curiosity, the village superintendent and a crew dug down a few feet, found a broken water main and fixed it..
Official Weather
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU —Sept. 15, 1952— :
Sunrise . .... 6:26 | Sunset vars Qi08 ecipitation 24 hrs. end. 7:30 a. m.— 2.23 Rota rec ipitation since Jan. 1 ..... 33.66 Excess since Jan. 1 ...............0 5.39
“The following table shows the temperaSure in other cities:
High Low Station 85 70 63 57 84 51
Cincinnati Cleveland «.....+ 82 69 VET .oasseans 69 46 yansville 82 63 | t. Wayne . « 1B 62 | Pt. Worth, .... 08 4 dianapolis 79 60 Kansas City ...... hi 52 Los Angeles ....... .. 70 56 Minneapolis-St. Paul 4 49 New Orleans ...... 817 72 New York _..... « 18 63 Oklahoma City . 91 67 OmAhS ......eo 73 53 Pittsburgh ...... 90 66 San Antonio .... . 90 69 San ancisco .. . 86 56 8 vivian . B8 56 ashington, D. C. ....ccoonus 93 72
Consumed |.
1952
No
3
| 8 | §
| | |
|
NATURE'S FIREWORKS—While visitors at fairs and celebrations all over the country are watc ing man-made fireworks, Nature is putting on her own display with the Earth's newest active volcano, on San Benedicto Island, a speck of land in the Pacific Ocean 789 miles south of San Diego, Cal. There's a new show every 20 minutes, with flames and smoke shooting as high as 1500 feet into the
air from the mountain's bright yell
Religion Our Greatest Resource, Adlai Says
By ‘United Press | SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Sept. 15— Gov. Adlal E. Stevenson today termed religious faith.“our greatest national resource” and “our protection against the moral confusion . . . of this age.” The Democratic Presidential candidate said if he is elected “I should be utterly dependent on the sustaining power of God as the source of truth and of wisdom in the endless hours of uncertainty and anxiety.” “In my public life,” he said, “I have tried always to follow the rule laid down 2500 years ago by the prophet Micah—‘to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with my God.’ ”
Quizzed by Publisher
Mr. Stevenson made the statement on religion in answering an inquiry by Maurice E. Bennett Jr., Richmond, Va., publisher of the Episcopal Church News, a weekly. Mr. Bennett asked how Gov. Stevenson's religious faith “will influence your decisions and actions” if he is elected, Gov, Stevenson said he considered the -question—“a—legitimate inquiry in judging any man’s fitness for high public office,” although adding he always has be-
Queen of New York Night
Life Puts Era
By ALINE MOSBY United Press Hollywood Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 15 — On an jvy-covered college campus this fall a short, 50-ish, gracious women will register for courses, root for the football team and lug books under her arm.
She looks like the owner of a mat shop, or maybe she could be somebody's mother going back to school. i Her fellow pupils in the hallowed halls of learning won't recognize her, but her name fis
Vermont Inland Village Gets Old Lighthouse
SHELBURNE, Vt. (UP)— There’s going to be a real lighthouse right in the center of this) inland village in northern Vermont. The 81-year-old Colchester Point lighthouse has been dismantled and next spring it will be reerected outside the. Shelburne Museum here; For more than three generations the lighthouse served as a guardian on the rugged shores of Lake Champlain,
Sheriff Bans Free
Shows for Prisoners ST. CLAIRSVILLE, O.—S8heriff C. L. Barricklow rang down the curtain today on prisoner Alfred Hennebert Jr.'s act. He said Hennebert, a carnival worker -had been eating light bulbs and sleeping on a bed of gsix-penny nails to amuse his fellow prisoners.
| Claims Record
SOUTHBRIDGE, Mass. (UP)— Miss Marie Delia Therrien, 78, be-
lieves she’s worked longer at the
same job than any woman in the United States. She has completed 60 years as a lens inspector for. .the American Optical Co.— and she's still on the job.
ow cone.
lieved “a man’s personal religious beliefs had no proper place in our political life, except as they may influence his public acts and thus affect the public welfare.” The Governor, a Unitarian, said the Christian faith “has been the most significant single element in our history and our tradition” and religious faith remains “our greatest national resource.”
‘Incaculable Worth’
There is “one thing of incalculable worth” which the religious outlook has given the United States, he said. “It is our protection against the moral confusion, which is too often the moral nihilism, of this age,” he said. “The ‘blight of moral relativism has not fallen destructively upon us.” W on talk of the difficulties in charting a moral course, we acknowledge that there are all too many who confuse mere legality with morality,” he said. “But the mass of our people expect of -their-publie-servants-probity-and] decisive distinction between right and wrong in the discharge of their public. responsibilities.”
In a Book
that sprouted from-.the growing
|
1
United Press Jelemhath
Rommel Film Dud in Reich
By DAVID M. NICHOL COLOGNE, Germany, Sept. 15 (CDN) — For more than two weeks, an unusual yun in German theaters, one of the principal movie houses in Cologne has been filled four times daily for performances of the American version of the life and woes and death of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. Similar crowds are reported wherever the picture is shown which is also remarkable, for German critical opinion has been uniformly opposed, ranging all the way from sneers to outraged anguish. A large measure of curiosity on the part of the Germans themselves probably accounts for some of the throngs. Gen. Rommel is the first of the wartime heroes to be rehabilitated sufficiently to make a screen appearance possible. : Gen. Rommel was a first-class soldier, by German standards. Equally he was a babe in the woods in the ‘tortured intrigues
realization of Germany's coming defeat.
Story Superficial
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
| division, filled me in.
|forum-type evening sessions and
Business Notes—
Night Study Keeps You
Abreast of
By DON TEVERBAUGH FOR TWO BUCKS you can get the real lowdown on business—it's the “What Every Man Should Know About Business’ course now offered by the Adult Education division of the Indianapolis Public School System.
the Times
Bob. Shultz, supervisor of the] The program consists of a dozen is set up by the W. H. Stevenson |
Co., a Chicago industrial educa-| tion firm. |
They've got an exceptional rec- Standard Oil |ord—there has never geen a strike Whiting, will be the guest speaker at any plant after the course has'taA~v at the
been presented. Brass Hats Get Choice It goes first to the brass hats, because they are the keystone to good relations, If they won't participate the Stevenson outfit shrugs and says, “forget the whole idea.” And they do. But where they apply it, it sticks. Last year the school system handled special classes for the Richardson Co. It was a huge success. Now the company wants the | classes again for their employees and will send 'em in on company time, no less. But the classes now offered by the school system are for anyone interested im business and economics—housewives or blotterdoodling executives. Hours for Classes Classes will be held from 7:30 to 9 p. m. weekly ati seven Indianapolis High Schools. At Howe and Manual they start Sept. 29; at Shortridge and Washington, Sept. 30: at Technical Oct: 1, and at Attucks and Broad Ripple Oct. 2. Classes are handled by regular high school economics teachers who have been specially trained for this course. And they lay the facts on the line. They talk about profits<—who profits from profit, production against buying power, where money comes from, what's behind money, what forces control wages, and current business problems. Typical Words (Cited Here are some typical words from the Stevenson texts: “A pusiness system has only one reason for existence: to provide a means of team play through which the useful goods and services needed and wanted by the people can be produced and distributed efficiently. “The value of the system is correctly judged by the quantity of food, clothing, usefull articles, luxuries, pleasures and! material satisfaction it delivers to those who work within it.” : There is no tuition for this well worthwhile course. It costs only $2 for the materials you. will use. Enrollment cards are available
The Hollywood explanation of
how this led him into treason and the choice between a hero's funeral after his death at his own hand or trial before the star chamber “People’s Court” is slick and superficial.
at all seven high schools previously listed, the Chamber of Commerce offices and in the School Administrations BMg., 150 N. Meridian St.
Butler Too
familiar to tabloid readers of the last two decades. Polly Adler was the queen of New York night life from 1922 to 1945. She was the confidante of movie stars, gangsters, authors, socialites and diplomats. | Three years ago she decided to go back to college so she could write a book about her fabulous life. It’s entitled “A House and a Home.” : “I don’t glamorize the business. I just tell the facts, I'm not here to preach. I portrayed them —gangsters, authors, everyone— as I saw them. I didn’t write an expose or. any ‘call house madam.’ I tried not to hurt anyone.” “I wrote my book all myself, most of it in longhand,” she said. “No one ever thought Polly Adler could write a book. { “But, then, after all,” she add-| ed, “I was creative in my own field.”
U. S. Statement
WASHINGTON, 8ept. 15 (UP)—Government expenses and receipts for the current scal year through Sept. 11, compared with a year ago:
This Year Last Year Expenses § 13,040,988,755 § 11,908,201,333 pts 058,86: 7,300,807, 44.
Receipt 8,476. 27 +300,807, 4 Cath Bal. S430200080 _ 3.930.004.016 as al. ,424.280, .930,604, Public Debt 26%, 116, 131.978 258.798.9084. 103
Gold Res. 23,343,278.446 21,852,474,168
Produce
Eggs—Prices FOB Cincinnati, cases included on graded eggs, consumer grade, U. 8. A large white, 62-65%a, 62-64%c: U. 8. medium white, 52%-53c, brown mix, 5012-53; wholesale grade, commercially graded 40 per cent extra large, white, 50-53c, brown mix, 50-53c; current receipts, cases exchanged, 36-40c, small, 30-31c; market barely steady; light purchases at anchanged rices. Chickens—Red, 33-35¢; white crosses and white, 33-35¢c; hens, heavy. 22-25c; hens, light, 14-15c; old roosters, 14c; fryer market barely steady. balance steady: prices unchanged. Butter—Creamery, 950 score, 78c; premium butterfat, 8lc; regular, 56c.
Local Truck Grain Prices
Wheat, $2.03. White corn, $1.90. Yellow corn, $1.60. Oats, 84c. Soybeans, $2.76.
LY CLOUDY AND A LouDY AREAS
brown mix, | be
| Schwitzer-cummins 5% ptd .. its
For a German audience, many of whose members faced somewhat similar problems, either consciously or unconsciously, the portrayal is empty and unenlightening, and one feels it as one leaves the theater. No German, either Nazi or anti-Nazi, ever will vote it a great film. Audience reaction does provide one valuable clue for the future. For ‘the most part the audiences are quietly attentive, but they break into derisive laughter at the point where Hitler is portrayed. One realizes suddenly they are laughing, not at Hitler, but at the absurd American idea of this involved and evil genius. No man who brought them so much destruction and misery can be explained away satisfactorily to the Germans as a joke. i
Profit Vanishes
DANBURY, Conn, (UP)—It| cost thieves $100 to try to rob a dairy. Police said they left tools worth that much when a watchman came upon them and they ran off.
Local Stocks and Bonds
STOCKS Sept. 12, 195% J. D, Adams Mtg. Co. American Loan 2% ny American States Class A *American States 48% Ayrshire Colliers com 8. Ayres ¢%% pid Belts RR & 8tk Yas com . Belt RR & Stk Yds pid Bobbs-Merrill com .....ceess Bobbs-Merrih 4%% ofd ... Buhner Fertilizer 5% pfd ... 9 Central Soya com ........... 35% Chambet of Commerce com .. 22
circle Theater com rons 40 . Citizens Ind Tel 5% ofd % . Commonwealth Loan 4% pfd 80% MY .
Cont Car-Na-Var
Fourteen forum type lectures on salesmanship will be offered by the Butler University College of Business Administrati and the Indianapolis Sales Executives’ Council. The evening course will be keynoted by top Hoosier business leaders and ‘sales executives. Registration will be opened ‘Sept. 18 and classes will be held 7215 to 9:45 every Thursday. First speakers scheduled are Ray Woods, genéral agent John Hancock Life, and Bert C. McCammon, director of the McCammon Course.
76 Centuries of Service Thursday is a big day out at National Malleable and Steel Clasings Co. That's the day they'll honor 296 active and retired employees in the firm's NACO Service Society. Together, they've compiled 7610
| years of service with the firm.
A special banquet will be held for the group at 6:30 p. m. Thursday in the Riley Room of the Claypool hotel. Organized in 1944, only employees with National Malleable for 15 years are eligible for they society. Judging from the experienc records at National Malleable, when you land a job there—youw stick. A total of 127 employees have been with the firm more than 25 years. The Indianapolis works, started in 1888, employees about 675 workers and 296 are members
of the society — that means .|they’ve been there at. least 15 years.
That's an amazing tribute to good management. At the banquet,
|Woody, president of National
E m i 35 i Eng 4iate vid... 102 |Malleable, will present 14 emastern el . ! 0 housities COT or1vs . |ployees with gold watches for 30 Equitable Securities oid .... 14 | Years of service. Pins and cerDB oi Servers ....|tificates will be presented to other Pamily Finance ’% otd aseree :::. {employees by W. W. Flagle, plant Hamilton Mtg Co com .... 33% .«...\manager. flerlldones Clam A DI. sain *::| Here's one reason why the emHook ND ug Co com aan Jv WR lo cl ’ ‘Ind Asso Tele $2 pfd....... ws 38% ployees stay so long—there's a 1nd AS80 a $2.50 pt ah wae do rose garden in the foundry yard. 3 ater com....... tnd Sich El 4% ota . ... 98 1 And Thursday night roses from *Indpls Ath Club Realty Co... 3 305 this garden will decorate the banInd Pow 2 5m 92 91° |quet tahl on aly Water 4% % pid " 9 BT EE, ’ Va AA Indianapolls Water 5% pfd...105 Indianapolis Water com. .... 17% 18% Hoosier Hosts jelterson National idte com ... It» 14 | The Indianapolis City Balesan & CO COM ...cvevencns : Kingan & Co pid... men’s Club will be host tomorrow Lincoln Nat Life ... 3 to the Louisville organization and
Lynch Corporation . . R. Mallory Sans ns Marmon-Herrington com
ES tMastic Asphalt ...... « 6Ys **Natl Homes com" t ww 18 Ba N Ind Pub Serv com ........ 3 2) N Ind Pub Serv 4% pfd .... ® 96 N ind Pub Serv 41.71 wes ut Ye fin *N Ind Pub Serv 4.56 pid .... Progress ndry gom eee Be 22 Pub Serv of Ind 3% pid .... 83 86 “Pub Serv of Ind com ...... 32'a 32% Ross Gear & Tool. com ... 44% oa
Tanner & Co 5%% pia Ferre Haute Malleable Tokhem-Ofl Tk Pump... U ‘8 Machine com hy Telepnone
YER dividend.
.
esta rennes pi s% ofd .....
will take the 40 visiting salesmen for a quick visit to the offices of Gov. Schricker. Following their introduction to The White Hat the salesmen will play golf at Lake Shore Country Club and enjoy a banquet later
‘{in the evening.
Dave Poole of Indianapolis Nash will act as MC at the din-
|ner. include William P. Meador, presi|dent; Robert Ohleyer, vice president, and Fred Zore, treasurer.
graduate of Centre College and Johns Hopkins University.
Officers of the local group
Scientech
Dr. T. H. Rogers, director of Co. Research at
ithe Scientech . Club at the Ant-
ers Hotel. Dr. Rogers will speak on “The Future f Outlook for the ¢ Petroleum Industry.” «
Winner of the| Modern Pioneer|
ward of the| National Asso-| +... Rogers ciation of Manufacturers in 1940, Dr. Rogers has been with Standard: since 1922, He is a
Sight, Sound Phone Calls
Over Sea Seen
CHICAGO, Sept. 15 (CDN)— A telephone executive predicts the day will come when people throughout the world will see each other as they talk across oceans by telephone. Hal 8. Dumas, executive vice president of the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. says he believed that day will bring close ties of understanding and a basis for world peace. He spoke at the Centennial of Engineering meeting here. The 10-day convocation, observing the 100th anniversary of the first
weekly meeting of
RENOVATING—A. T. Moreland watches a disabled worker at Goodwill Industries, Inc., one of the Red Feather services, repair
a tricycle.
Moreland Heads Retail ‘Red Feather Division
A. T. Moreland, general man-|
|ager of Sears Roebuck & Co. has |of its Personnel Study Group, § {been appointed chairman of the|director of the Indiana Chain
Mercantile Division for this year's] $1,643,856 Red Feather campaign, | which opens Oct. 12. On his first tour of duty as al Red Feather worker, Mr. Moreland visited the Goodwill Industries, Inc., one of 50 Red Feather services. Rev. Howard G. Lytle, executive director of "Goodwill, conducted Mr. Moreland on the tour. He explained that 92 per cent of the service employees suffer from some handigap.
Employment Rising
They are trained so they can take skilled jobs alongside’ of able-bodied workers, Rev. Lytle said. Average daily employment during the first six months of this year showed a 25 per cent gain over 1951, he said. Mr. Moreland came here a year ago from Cleveland, where he
{part of the proceeds of her 1953
'|Butler Fieldhouse Oct.
chants Association and member
Store Council and a director of the Indiana Association of Retailers.
Fund to Get a Piece
Of Sonja’s Ice Show Sonja Henie has offered to give
Ice Revue to the 1952 Red Feather campaign, Ivan J. Klingaman, general chairman announced today. Miss Henie’'s show opens ip 3 and closes Oct. 11, the eve of the opening of the Red Feather drive. Mr. Klingaman said Miss Henle telephoned het offer to help when she learned of the coincidence of dates.
Display Protected A fully automatic window recently developed for “drive-in
Walton L.|
was active in Community Chest banks” is electrically operated by work. He is a member of Kiwanis pushbuttons and has bullet-proof Club, a director of the Mer-|glass.
professional engineering society, ended Saturday. 2 Mr. Dumas pointed out a
simple local call may involve a — thousand electric relays alone and acknowledged a sight-and- HOME PLATING €0. sound call abroad will be in- Call finitely more complicated. SILVER But he asserted confidently RHODIUM the telephone engineer—who is BRASS WA 1512 “pushing. the frontiers of the COPPER-NICKEL }3 =="=% S208 spoken word farther and farther CHROME < afield”—will solve it. ro, Speaking at the same session, the research chief of Western CADMIUM Pest Control Union described the company’s ® Silverware Replated + latest innovation—a telegraph ® Antiques Refished branch office on wheels, © Commerical Plating and Polishing || Company Telegrams in facsimile, or pic-|} 919° MASS. AVE CApitol 9088 lure form, are Telayed elactroni- [ILS AE Sh | ndian’sd argent
cally to Western Union automobiles, called “Telecars,” cruising in specified residential areas. Any answer obtained from the delivery point can be flashed back to the main “office by the telecar two-way radio.
Top Bid $20.25 On Choice Hogs
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Carburefor & Brake (o 1 1d at . $30.32.50, prime vealsrs sold a ravorits drug store, 323 N. Delaware LI-4345
Hogs 12.000 fairly active: barrows and i pi —— "
gilts steady: 25 cents higher; bulk choice 100-250 pounds $19.75-20, top 0
choice 3250-300 pounds $19-19.85; 160-185 pounds $18-19.76; 120-160 pounds $16-17, op Regardless of what you pay you can't buy better
Brake and Carburetor Service On All Makes of Cars!
Motor Tune-Up Wheel Balancing 2 Vacuum _ Power Brakes Handy and Pierce Governors
INDIANA
Stop Damage by
TERMITES
This Money-Saving Way
Termite-proof your property yourself with ARAB U-DO-IT (Chlordane base). ,Sure death to subterranean termites—and gives long-lasting protection. A liquid concentrate, one gallon makes 100 gallons ready to use and will treat average size house. Non-inflammable, odorless, harmless to flowers, shrubs, trees. Directions on
label. Pint $5.95, quart $9.95, SHELBY |v gal $17.95 gal. $29.95.
UPHOLSTERY CO. |] pFousekeeping Dept. Fifth
| Floor, The Wm. H. Block 8631 MASSACHUSETTS AVE. | i
$18; sows slow, unevenly 25-50 cents| lower than best; choice 300-400 pounds $16.75-18.25. Cattle 3100, calves 800: high choice and prime scarce: steers and heifers slow, generally lower: bought to arrive $33.504; cows slow, few scattered sales steady: bulls weak to lower: vealers steady, choice and prime $30-32.50: commercial and good $25-30; cull and utility $15-24. Sheep 1500, fat lambs moderately active, ; high choice and prime $26-27.25, top $27.50: good and choice $22-26; slaughter ewes steady $7.50 down,
few
It it's quality work you want our craftsmen can ——————— It it's price, our low prices still give you quality. —————— We will bring samples to your home. Day nor night.
Phone CH-6717
Company.
Spi,
PANT T]TIC
YE ERIOR Miwon BURNET-BINFORD LUMBER CO. hd W. 30th. St RF NEY ks 3315 PEERLESS ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. WHOLESALE ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES
EMERSON RADIOS — APPLIANCES
A lovely basket of gifts awaits you as an expression of goodwill
from public spirited local mere chants if you have just moved to the city, are a new Mother or have moved within the city. There's nothing to buy. No cost or obligation. Arrange to receive these gifts. Call your Welcome Wagon Hostess whose phone is listed
¢ 3 A J
v
ETT
below. PL-2361 122 South Meridian St. Welcome Wagon New York @ Memphis @ Los Angeles : . j : Toronto we PHONE TA. 1796 In its : .
47th YEAR
of distinguished service
-
INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY °
Il 2960 N. Meridian St.. Indianapolis, Ind. Hickory 7421 -
oven
wn " Mi *
