Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 52, Jasper, Dubois County, 7 September 1894 — Page 7
ENTITLED TO CÄXDIT.
T0 The democrats la both fcoasea of congress, with bat few exceptio, are entitled to credit for doing all that it veeu to them possible to do toward the fulfillmeat of the pW(tcs with respect to the tariff which their party aade in 1SW. They have made an honest, earnest and persistent attempt to obey the popular mandate delivered when the present democratic congress and president were elected. They are deserving of great praise for wresting what they have wrested from a protectionist senate, and for holding out so long as there seemed to bo a ray of hope against the protectionist amendments which that body thrust so plentifully into the Wilson bilL The democrats of the ways and Bicans committee labored with great zeal and industry, and finally produced a bill which was fairly acceptable to those who meant what they said when they voted for a tariff for revenue only. They did not produce a perfect bill by any means. They did not produce a bill which was satisfactory to most of their own number. But they did produce one on right lines, bated on right principles, and making a long step toward the final goal of commercial liberty and the ultimate abandonment of the entire policy of supporting and enriching favored industries by levying forced contributions upon others. They went as fnr as they believed it possible to go. In view of the known character of the senate, toward the total abolition of the republican system of legalized robbery. The house, led for the time being by Fuch men as Tom Johnson and le Witt Warner, went further than the committee and voted for free coal, iron and sugar and the immediate stoppage of the McKinley sugar bonniy. A majority of the democratic senators stood ready to go even farther than the house, making larger reduc tions on manufactured goodsand going farther in tfte direction of ad valorem rates. Hut presently they found themselves confronted not only by the republican senators in solid array but by this body reenforced by enough senators calling themselves democrats to defeat any bill not acceptable to them and tbo interests they reprefentcd. The question with the loyal democratic senators then was not what they wished to do but what it was pos sible to do. They contested the ground inch by inch, and yielded to the renegade senators no more than they were forced to yjeld. The result was a badly mutilated bill, hut it was tnat or no bill. Thev had savetl much that was valuable. The bill, bad as it was. wr tili vastlv better than the Mc Kinley monstrosity, and they accepted it as better than nothing. The house has at last done the same. but not without making prolonged and heroic resilience. The house son ferrees, headed bv Chairman Wilson, struggled long- and manfully against the bad amendments, forced upon the bill by the senate renegades, and their democratic associates in the hoase supported them without wavering until they became convinced that the choice lav between the mutilated bill and none at alL The majority of the democrats are entitled to hich praise for making a courageous and determined Sght and saving the bill from wreck. It is not their fault that the measure is not far better than it is. Chicago Ilerald. SOME GOOD FEATURES. Mnch Hal Brm Caloed 'T th Vnmge er the Tariff Mil. The democrats of the house for reasons admirably stated by Chairman Wilson and Speaker Crisp, accepted the senate tariff bill, with all its imperfections and its shame, rather tlian to get none. Like the "held up" passengers in a helpless stage coach, they yielded to the political highwaymen of the senate without pretending to make a virtue of the necessity. As a vindication of democratic principles against the betrayal of the four trust agents and specalating senators who forced the surrender, the house with surprising promptness and unanimity passed a bill making all sugars free, and also separate bills untaxing' coal, iron and barbed wire. This action was at once a challenge to tha senate and a promise to the country. It mitigates the surrender. It proves again that the popular branch of congress remembers the pledges of the party and respects the demands of the people. There is this further compensation for the humiliating result; It will relieve the country, for some years at least, of the fear of another general tariff upheaval. Had congress adjourned without passing- any bill tariff agitation would have dominated to elections and have been revived at the December session even if President Cleveland had not felt constrained to call an extra session. 1 f President Cleveland shall permit this bill to become a law no party woald dare to propose tearing it to pieces again immediately. Xor can McKinlcyism be restored during the next three years, even if the republicans should venture upon the issue and control the next two gre&ses. Mr. Cleveland's term will not expire until March, 1897. His veto cannot, be overridden by the next congress, and the congress to be elected In 1S2 will sot meet for more than a year afterwards. Even those who are most disappointed in the bill will soon come to consider three years of peace preferable to further suspesse, anxiety and baslncss depression. y. Y. World. -The tariff, as f Bally passed while la many respects it falls short of the expectatioas of the coantry, is an enorraoas step forward ia the direction of reduced taxation, a step that will never be retraced. From this time the ffsed psiicy ef the coaatry will be toward the gradual red actio f import duties. -Philadelphia Times.
BEATEN. taawrtaat KXMtloM la tka XfcaUatef Hlch-Tari DatWa. Whatever has been gained has been wrested from a protective body. The coantry concurs in Mr. Wilson's report. The Maate has a majority for protection. There are thirty-seven republicans, three populists and seven democrats who are champions of prohibitive tariffs on articles produced by their friends and therefore for ail prohibitive tariff protection consisting in being for the other fellow's tariff if be will be for yours. From this protective body the tariff reform democrat have wrested a reduction of sugar duties, free wool, lumber and salt and a great curtailment of tariffs on the textiles which the masses must buy for clothing. An income tmx is secured, which relieves taxation on the household and place a share of federal expenses upon the wealth whose concentration has been favored bv federal laws. Kot all that the house contended for and the country desired has becu ob tained. The sugar trust has not been severed from government partnership. Iron and coal are still taxed, and the commodities into whose cost they enter are still to bring higher prices than the people should pay. But, as the chairman of the ways committee, himself as brave a champion as a cause ever had, says to his friends, when men have done their best,according to their capacity and judgement, they must fall back on the consciousness of duty done. For the democrats of the house the voters of the party have nothing but approval. What obligations came to them under the laws and the instructions of their constituents they have discharged with promptitude. .7 i There has been principle- In their proposition to rei . i ,Ä , and business interests were never left 1U a ft luv. v. vwuv ----- . in doubt. The contest, for a better bill than the measure offered by the senate they have fought as long as there was the slightest chance to succeed and have abandoned it at the demand of business when success against a protective senate majority was a demonstrated impossibility. That atrocity, the McKinley bill, is about to be wiped from the statute books by democratic votes. The pledge öf 15W to the people is redeemed as far as the people have conferred the power. The tariff reformers could not control a senate tc vhich a rnajoritv of real reformers had not been elected. The house has shown what honest reformers can do bypassing bills for free sugar, free iron, free coal and free barbed wire. Having placed the blatfie for the incompletnessof the reform where it belongs, the house democrats can adjourn in the "consciousness of duty done." Xow that tariff legislation is at an end for this congress, business men owe to the country an increased activity and confidence- The elements of prosperity are all with us. Set everywhere the example of faith and energy. Doubts about the laws are at rest. There is nothing else for businessmen to doubt except their own strength of wilL Matters will not come right of themselves. Men must make them right. It is just about a year since the acut financial trouble began. It is just about time for the sharp revival to begin. St. Louis Republic. OPINIONS AND POINTERS. The McKinley monstrosity has been beheaded. Toledo Bee. The best thing about the revised sugar schedule is that it Is a still greater improvement over McKinley'. The farther we get from McKinlcyism the bettcr.every time. Boston Herald. Republican organs are trying to scare the men who have had no wages under the McKinley law with the threat that they will have "lower wages" under the democratic tariff. Chicago Herald. McKinlcyism at least is dead, a its vile offspring is already doomed. Only let the people, whose cause has been so ably and so nobly led by the men who stood true to the Wilson bill, now take up the battle, and "protectioaism will meet its Gettysburg in November. X. Y. Herald. If business is so improved by the settlement of the tariff question for the time that the gain is apparent to the most obtuse observer, the fact will prove so damaging to McKinlcyism as to render it a losing game to clamor for the restoration of McKinley duties. Boston Transcript (rep). The new bill, whatever its defects, is better than its predecessor. It sounds the knell of McKinleyism, ami, if it does not reduce the profits of all bloated trusts, the fault is not with the democratic party, but with the Ireebootcrs in the irresponsible senate, who will doubtless be dealt with in due time. X. Y. Morning Journal. If anybody thinks tariff reform sentiment is less strong throughout the country than it has been let him follow the proceedings of the democratic conventions and meetings that are bcinfr held in various sections of the coantry nowadays. No step backward is the unanimous cry. If this strong, popular sentiment is not beetled in Washington those who are blocking the way might as well prepare for permanent retirement from public life. That is their usual destiny. Boston Herald, Use lesson principally to be learned from this tariff contest and its impotent conclusion is that when the republican party made the protected interests a partner in the government it in fact made them the governing partner in the firm. The way to cure the situation, so intolerable to tho people, is not to red tic; the interest of the protected manufacturers, but ta dissolve the partnership altogether. The way to reform the tariff is to abolUh it. There caa be no half way measures with vice, and protection ia nothing bat ecoaoml vice the Prostitution of govcrameat to tha eads ol private profit. Ckiatfo Timea.
PROTECTION
POULTRY CRATE. lone Valuable Uinta KrlAting to tha hlilpHirut of Lite l'uwtf. Express charges on live poultry being double rates, it is desirable to make the crate in wblc.h poultry is shipped as lignt as is contistent with strength. The illustration hhows what Ss perhaps the best framework for such a crate. An empty grocery box of the requisite size may be sawed in the middle, making the top and bottom of the crate, though if the box is at all high some three or four inches only, of the top and of the bottom should be taken. The corner post of inch and a half pine should be well nailed to the box. and the sides nnd ends then covered with burlap or cotton cloth. The top may be of slats or of boards, as shown in the sketch. '. of the latter, a hole should be cut both for ventilation and for convenLIGHT 1'On.TRV CItATR. lence in handling. Straw should be placed in the iMjttom, nnd plenty of oats or wheat scattered into it. If thebirds are to be shipped but a short distance, no vat"r should be placed in the crate, but if sent a long way a tin cup should be provided, nnd notice pasted on the outside that the fowls within are to be watered by the express racs-sencer. II looa is provided lor a long journey it should be placed in some receptacle so that the birds will not soil it before it is all eaten. Do not crowd birds that are to be shipped a long distance. If they are to be on the way but twenty-four hours, or less, some little crowding will not injure them. American Agriculturist. LEAVES AS FODDER. Interesting anil Vulaalile Tfit Made by Trench rartnera. About a year ago 3h Girard created great interest in agricultural circles bv his strenuous advocacy of tree leaves as eattle food, lie held that i the leaves of trees, as compared with ' other fodders, showed a high nourishI ing ratio, whether fresh or dried, and i that certain tree leaves are not surpassed as fodder by the products of i natural prairies or pasture lands. ' European farmers, among whom the i French have taken the lead, have been ' systematically testing M. Girard's j ideas by placing their cattle on n tree- ! leaf diet. The results are said to be most encouraging. The leaves after being picked are spread on the barn lloor to the depth of 3 or 4 inches, and are turned once a day. The process of drying takes from three to five days, according to the weather, and when dried the leaves are piled up ready for use. It is found advisable to prepare each day's supply twenty-four hours beforehand, when a small quantity of chopped turnips is mixed with the leaves, and the whole is left to ferment. Milch cows thrive surprisingly on this fodder. The degree ol nutrition afforded by different trees varies considerably; in fact, tome trees were entirely rejected. The final selection of the French farmers was narrowed down to the leaves of five trees, the hazel, aspen, ash, elm and willow. RELIEF OF HEAVES. Tbrre Are Sererat Waja of Alleviating Till I'alnful DUenM-. Heaves, the common name for broken wind in the horse, is susceptible of great alleviation by attention to the character and quantity of food to be eaten by the animal, as everyone knows. If a horse suffering from this d disease is allowed to distend his stom ach at his pleasure, with dry food entirely, and then to drink cold water ad libitum, he is nearly worthless. Hut if his food be moistened and he be allowed to drink only u moderate quantity at a time, the disease is much less troublesome. A still farther alleviation may be obtained from the use of balsam of fir and balsam of copaiba, four ounces each, and mix with calcined magnesia, sufficiently thick to make it into balls, and give a middling sized ball night and morning for a week or ten days. This gives good satisfaction. Lobelia, wild turnip, elecampane and skunk cabbage, equal parts of each. Make into balls of common size, and give one for a dose, or make a tincture by putting four ounces of the mixture into two quarts of spirits; and, after a week, put two tablespoonfuls in their feed once a day for a month or two. This remedy i also good. Farmers Voice. A HUtorj- of Green Manuring-. A history of the practice of green manuring, by J. Kuhn, in an oflicial publication in Saxony, bears, the conclusion that green crops can be used more economically in feeding lor meat ami milk than in plowing under merely as a manure. 1 1 ir. assumed that tho search for n profitable crop for green manuring of the better elas of soils is without avail. But the plowing- under of the stubble or remains of a crop is proper and profitable. It Is held to be a mistake to plow into the soil for manure a pound of ulbtitnhioUls which conld be used for making fiVsh or milk. The practice makes no headway in farm management, except with lupine on light sandy -soils. It is recommended to take advantage of recent discoveries in agricultural science, and instead of manuring the soil with nt mospheric nitrogen, utilising to the fullest extent the nitrogen itis and carbonaceous materials derived from the air by feeding them to farm animals. We should not feed broken glass to fowls. Feed gravel. It is quite as easily obtained as broken glass and generally more easily obtaiued.
LIGHT
PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. United States Treasurer Momak now owns the table upon which President Lincoln signed the proclamation of emancipation. Mrs. Catiiarixe Salisrurt, a sister of the Mormon prophet, Joseph Smith, who was killed by a mob at Carthage, 111., Juno 27, 1844, is still living sear Fountain Green, 111. Washington's second Inaugural address contained but 134 words. Lincoln used the personal pronoun "I" fortythree times in his first Inaugural and only onco In his second. Tun Louisiana legislature has voted an appropriation to erect a handsome statuo to Thorny Lafou, c negro philanthropist who died at New Orleans a few months ago, leaving nearly all his fortuno (8000,000) to charities. Thomas Wicke9, tho vice-president of the Pullman company, is an Englishman by birth and is forty-eight years of nge. Ilo cmno to this country In 1SC0, nnd two years later entered the employ of tho Pullman company as sa assistant ticket agent. Judge Henry Craft, who died recently at Memphis, was an intimst friend of the lato Judgo L. Q. 0. Lnranr. They wcro born in houses a stone's throw apart in Georgia, went to school together and at tho samo timo moved to Mississippi to practice law. Judge Craft settled in Memphis after the war, becoming one of tho leaders of its bar. BOOKS AND AUTHORS. Tun Pctcrsboro (X. H.) public library, numbering four thousand volumes, la known as the oldest frco library in tho United States. The astonishing information is vouchsafed by London Vanity Fair that Rudyard Kipling hns taken up his residence in Vermont of Central America. Octave Tiiaxet is greatly interested in photography. Sho is going to use a number of tho photographs sho has taken as illustrations in one of her stories. TnE manuscript complete of the first Biblo (Old Testament was finished in the year 430 B. C. It was first trans
lated into Saxon in C37 A. D., and into English in 1534. Thomas G. Stevenson, on old Edin burgh bookseller, who died recently was an intimate friend of Sir Walter Scott, Lockhart and most of tho other literary celebrities of a bygouo time in the Scottish capital. It is said that Zolo's "Lourdcs," a A 1 A - . . sxory wnicn uas 10 ao with tno socalled miracle cures in tho south of T" .1 a . k . ranee, uas increased lenioiu tue circulation of Gil Bias, tho French paper in which it is nppearing. Mrs. Fkaxcis 'noDGSOx-BcENrrrr is deeply interested and an active worker in a London chnrity thn furnishes comfort and amusement for little children who are incurable invalids. PEOPLE ABROAD. Prof. Blackie, of Scotland, Is 65 years of age and is vigorous and energetic. The khedive of Egypt, Abbas II., is engaged to Ermine, youngest daughter of tho late Sultan Abdul Aziz, who was murdered in 1881. Lady Rasdolth Circxcnrix is no longer the beauty sho was. Her illness has not been ovcrcomo without impairing her once lovely complexion, and a woman past thirty without a complexion has met her Sedan. Another lord has drifted into trade tho earl of Harrington, known as an enthusiastic collector of snuff-boxes, who has opened a fruiterer's shop in London. It will 1m supplied from his gardens, which are among the finest in England. SMILES BETWEEN SERMONS. Yacrtino gloves are the latest fad. They arc worn chiefly by people who can't afford to keep a yacht. Boston Transcript. "What does Barlow menn when ho speaks of his ancestral halls?' "I dunno. Maybe his father was a truck, driver." Life. A RARnnR in Detroit was knocked speechless the other day during a thunderstorm. Lightning's mighty powerful. Philadelphia Ledger. Bildeck "I saw tho doctor's carriage at your house yesterday. Anything serious?" Gasscr "I should say foI He wanted to collect his bill." Brooklyn Lifo. THE MARKETS. Xnw Yohk. CATTLE Xattvc Steers t COTTON-MI.l.lIlnir. FLOCK Winter Wheat WHI:aT No. I! Iteu COHN No. S .. Sept. 1. ... a 67 3S 15 50 ? s er a o h w 3 0) CA 2 35 50 52 : hV.i 10 00 12 W) 11 W 21 13 H3T H c. i. 2 tf) 3 CO .Mf .Vif MS Ji 14 00 2 U) w 33 & 15 -Jo t& oats-no. POKIv NcwMcss . ST. LOUIS. COlTON-MhWHns IlKKVKS Shlimlnc Steers... 75 Medium 4 Si HOGS-Fnlr to Select. hM MIKKI'-Pnlr to Choice 22S FLOCK-ratcnts 2 JO Knncv to Kxirrt do. U IKJ WHEAT-NO.-' Ited Wlmcr.. COKN-No.2 Mixed OATS? Nc. . ll 1 No." ....... TOUACCO Lum. .... tn q. Lear lluriey. HAV -riearTiinothv t ' ft IICTTKK-Cholce Dalrr 1Ü (I iresii g I'OKK Standard Mess (new) IIACON-CIiarKlh LAKO Prime Steam tf CUICACtt ' ATT L K S h I p n l n r. IHMis Fnlrto Ohoico MlUKl'-Falrto Choice .... FLOUK-Wlnter Fatenli. Mirinel'atciips.. .., 4 2. A ff) 2 :i 2 CO 3 10 WitF.AT-No.-JSt.rlny ... . Win No. Sited M'.m "OKN No 2. OATK-NO.& - .... it, I'OUIC-McM ItiCTl 13 W a KANSAS CITY, CATTLE Shipping Steers. ... 3 TS IUKIS-A1I tirades 5 4& 5 50 4 3IH WHEAT NoJ Ked. OATS No. 2 COKN N,S NEW Olt LEANS. FLOUR-Hleh Grade 2 CXItN-Nö -! M 3 60 0? Id (10 11 50 8!t !4 se MM II CJ ft mm HAV-Cholec 15 ff) POKKNe'vMevi. 1IACON Sii.C COTTON-Mlddlln Ctfto LOUISVILLE WHF.AT-No.2 Ked M COItN No 2 Mixed M OATS-No.2 Mixed (New).... 31 POItIC NewMc.... - 13! HACON-ClearKlb 9 COTTON Mtddliu
Highcst fall ia Lcaveniag Powar. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
PrtVtl
Absolutely Mine
The Serpeat'a Trick. The power of continuing motionless with the lifted head projecting forward for an indefinite time is one of the most wonderful of the serpent's muscular feats, and is one of the highest importance to the animal, both when fascinating its victim and when mimicking some inanimate object, as, for instance, the stem and bud of an aquatic plant; here it is only referred to on account of the effect it produces on the human mind, as enhancing the serpent's strangeness. In this attitude, with the round, unwinking eyes fixed on the beholder's face, the effect may be very curious and uncanny. Fortnightly Review. Don't Tread or Me, Vibrates the rattle snake with his rattle. Sensible people tako alarm at the chill which ushers in chills and fever. If they don't know they should, that Hotsetter's Stomach Bitters is tho preventer and remedy. 'or idiould they forget that it remedies dyspepsia, liver complaints, nervousness, sleeplessness and debility, and Is a general tonic without equal. Xevkk Saw Anythino Else Bradfcnl "I wonder where Bigps acquired all his knowledge alout women's hats' ltobin-son-'IIcused togo to the theater frequently." Truth. When the shoestring of a pirl thirty-seven vears old comes untied you may be verj 6uro that it was bv accident; also that Mm will have to tieft up herself. SomervillO Journal. Hull' Catarrh Curo Is a Constitutional Cure. Trice 75c When a man does not want to do a thin?, he says: "I cannot:" when he cannot do it. ho says: "I don't wantto." Fleigeudo Blatter. Ladies can permanently beautify tlictr complexion with Glenn's Sulphur Sonp. HUl's Hair and Whisker Dye, ) cents. All the evils that nro to le found in soda water nro always winked at. AFTER THE GRIP, pammonia, fevers, or other debilitating h tun, your quickest way to get flesh and strength is with Dr. Pierce's Uolden Medical Discovery. That gives purity to your blood, aba rapidly buikk Hp lost flesh and strength. Mrs. Nkau of Crockett Mill. Tcnn bad an attack or nwtufc, followed by 6 roach if ü and pneumonia. U er btMbaad J"' es: . "I feel gratified vita the effect of Tour WMderful me, ctoc. I canrrcntnmead r. v hi Be; uuu j . mmn leet il am doing them im. uce. my w:d ni oat able to perform bar cousenoki duties far Wm. Kir. ur months. She bat m.! oapd two bot ties of Golden Medical Discovery.' and to now able to do all her work. I think It the firxi wdiciac ia tbo world, aad I mas, gratefully, your Ufe-loBg frieaa, J. B. NEAL." PIERCE CURE MKET HEXfJKNEaV
4aflKElLik
AMI LE55
FOR ALL WOMEN WHO USE Clairette Soar SOU EYGRYWHEM. 1? THE RKJA1RBAHK GOHFAKY. Sri.
try it lor
c vff )
"II V?
made easier when he can save money by it? mr1 erma tinrrnrmlocs it ore r will tell YML
WU I V - BiCa "this is as JJt; W CLL C FALSE you aa imiUtioa, be hoaatt
THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAU8H THE COOK HAD NOT USED
SAPOLIO QOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS.
Baking
Powder Bor, is youri father In!" "I guess Heard ma cull somebody a dunce just now. 'Twant me, coz 1 wau't there. Sho wouldn't a dared to call the cook such names; so X guess it must havo been dad." Bostoa Transcript. OjfE of tho prominent society ladiea er West Union was bitten by a largo block pldcr while entering a store ono day last week. Moral Patronize tho stores that advertise. West Union (Ia.) Gazette. Pare and Wheletone Quality Commends to public approval tho California liquid laxativo romedjr, Syrup of Figs. It Is pleasant to the tasto and by acting pently on tho kidneys, liver and bowels to cleanse tho system effectually, it promotes tha health and comfort of all who uso it, and with millions it is the best and only remedy. Teacher "Who Is that whistling ia school!" New Boy "Me. Didn'tyouknow I could whistle !" Travelers Record. Bou can easily haw (hebest if you only insist upon if. They arc matte far cooking and heating.in every conccivaKc style and sizefor any kind of fud and with prices from 10 io 70. ThegemiincAli bear this (rüdemarkand are sold with a written guarantee. First-das merchants everywhere handle them. UMmhi'jKar irart ano ttANuiMncmu mnaa.aacM. awTMa.m ctk cnv. HOG I CHICKEN CHOLERA SCOTTS' COMPOUNDS A Sure Cure and Preventive. Prudent rrmf r fcetl the remnllr ami ae motif y. lo.otio Inlimonlnl. Send for rirrulitm. Kltliar rrranlr In one pound tin ptkpr(pt pata) 1.00 mr .V50f-r4afrn (rhar?r not --rpatd). Kemlt wllb ordrr Me monr for lire trriit, main or femal. ii. r. Kcm r. sit uM t- Htn-rt. cuiCAue, iuu WKUU TBI riTXB ntf Um pm vrtt A. X. K U. 1515. WHKX WKIT1XO T AWTERT1SEK8 PIXJLBU tale that Jtu w ihm AdTirtluarat ta tmim pr. HEALTH WEALTH COMFORT WORRY wot1WEAR.
H CMmattiM and people H H who hTO weak lang or Anbata, iboHkl dm i'lao'iCvr for H CoftSHftMaii. It kM erea tfc.BMamMhi not injurml am. Klaliii to lak. Uh mi viAfciiii ftBp. Ba
Let the men wash, if they won't get you Pearline. Let them
themselves, ana see it tncy aon r.
say that washing with, soap is too nara for any woman.
I his hard work that femrline saves isn't the whole matter ; it saves money, too money that's thrown away in clothes needlessly worn out and rubbed to pieces when you wash bv main strength in the old way.
That appeals where is the man who wouldn't want to have the washing
va rwBaw " J" O J rood at" or "tke same as Pearliae." ITS FaarBae k aettr If Yark,
