Marshall County Independent, Volume 7, Number 52, Plymouth, Marshall County, 6 December 1901 — Page 4
DO YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK ?
Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the newspapers is sure to know of the wonderful cures mads by Dr. i Kilmer's Swamp-Root, Ä El i-v-f I Lk and bladder remedy. ll'fRT I I. : .L- . J: II 15 IUC ICdl II1CU1cal triumDh of the nineTil teenth centurv: disi till covered after years of juI scientific research by V3!! Dr. Kilmer, the emi1 f til neni Ktaney ana ciaader specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid troubles and Bright's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not recommended for everything but if you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found just the remedy you need. It has been tested In so many ways, in hospital work, in private practice, among the helpless too poor to purchase relief and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root and how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer Ät Co., Binghamton, N. Y. The regular fifty cent and Home of swamp-Root. dollar sizes are sold by all good druggists. (D?el3nbepenbmi CLAT W.METSKER, EDITOR AD PROPRIETOR. SUBSCRIPTION' PRICE. One Year. $1.60 Six Months, .75 Three Months, cash, .60 Far Copy, .03 Entered at the post office at Plymouth, Indiana as matter of the second class. Friday, December 6, 1901. A great many United States senators of the machine variety are suspending judgment until they learn just what a strenuous president with opinions of his own, is going to do. Indianapolis Sun. Mr. Ilillis, who conducts the music at the union services, has been an esteemed friend of the publisher of this paper for the past dozen years. He has long been a conscientious worker in his chosen field. Our people will find him genial and companionable, as well as an artist in his profession. According to the Democrat, the publisher of the Independent is responsible for what is said about him by every other publication. Perhaps he, the publisher of the Independent, is responsible for the nice things that the Democrat says about him. We are certain that he is responsible for most of the news items that get into the Democrat. DANIEL AND THE "SORK TOE." The editor of the Democrat quotes from a periodical published at Indianapolis an item making flattering reference to Clay W. Metsker, of Plymouth, and proceeds to roast him in a manner that shows the editor of the Democrat to be still troubled with his "sore toe." The "Hon." Daniel McDonald, as he calls himself in twenty-six different places in a recent issue; of his paper, otherwise the sore-toed defunct politician of Marshall county, imagines that every body has as much egotism as he displayed when he aspired to be secretary to Parks Martin. He informed the chairman that the entire Thirteenth district were clamoring for his appointment, but itnnge as it may seem, there was no substantial support to his aspirations and Mr. Martin selected a secretary that could be depended upon at all times. Since this startling revelation of his insignificance in state politics, the ex-tinguished gentleman, knowing that he is a "dead one" politically, has been doing all he can to demoralize the party. With him, his efforts will be concentrated for the purpose of vengence. But, you will fail, Daniel the people are onto you all spraddled out. McDonald and His Sore Toe" is a subject that furnishes laughing stock for the publishers and politicians of Northern Indiana. Even his most intimate friends apologize for him. UNPARALLELED EGOTISM. The situation will be that the Democrat will be sold on its merits tnd the Independent, if at all, on account of its cheap price. Plymouth Democrat. Some men never get too old to letrn. We have in mind one who is actuated Dy a great many foolish idea rather than wisdom in his de clining years. It is none of our
1! ' tl
business if he wants to burn his toes by trying to start a daily paper in Plymouth. We haven't the slightest belief that he can get the support of twenty people in Plymouth for such a project. A drowning man will grasp at straws and in his dilemma he is doing about what the fellow does as he goes under the third time. The Daily Independent will be here to tell the story of the deceased 'Daily Democrat,"
unless it should die a "bornin'." LET TU KHK UK II A KM ON V. At a meeting of the democratic state central committee it was the unanimous opinion that the free silver plank would not be a part of the platform of the party during the coming campaign. The men who compose the committee have been loyal to free silver during the past campaigns and their reason for dropping it now is the fact that conditions have changed. They want democratic harmony and a reunited party. These men recognize that the tariff and trust problems will occupy the attention of the political parties for some time in the future. They, as are thousands of democrats throughout the country, are willing to fight the party battles on other issues, but this does not mean that they have buried their convictions as to needed financial legislation. Let us hope that the democrats who have contended against free silver will cease their spasms of criticism of those who have stood faithfully by the party organization and let us who urged our convictions on this phase of national policies be equally charitable in our dealings with tho?c who could not see their way clear to stand by the organization as faithfully as we. While we may have differed, we must attribute equal honesty of convictions to others that we have claimed for ourselves. Let us shake hands, make up, and with a solid front go forth to meet the common enemy and to victory. KICHAKDSON'S POLICY. The Chicago Chronicle gives a statement of the policy that will probably be followed by the demo crats in the next session of congress, as outlined by Representative Rich ardson, of Tennessee, as follows: i. I think we shall stand for reciprocity and demand legislation upon this subject that will be of practical benefit to American consumers. 2, That democrats should advo cate reduction of the tariff the re moval of prohibitive features at least. 3. We will certainly work for retrenchment of expenditures and endeavor to prevent extravagant wastefulness in the use of the people's money. 4. We will demand legislation for the suppression and control of the trusts. The republicans of the house passed an anti-trust law last congress, but it was carefully pigeonholed by republicans in the senate. 5. In my opinion, there should be reduction of the war taxes. A large surplus has been piled up and it should be returned to the people through curtailment of internal revenue taxation to which thev are now subjected. We are ready to join hands with any party to do these things. CLEMENT STUDEIIAKKR. The death of Hon, Clement Studebaker was announced in these columns last week. With his passing the state and nation loses one of its greatest men. He has been a benefactor in many avenues of life. He was charitable and unselfish. He was always ready to help any cause that had real merit. He was firm in his political and religious ideas, but was broad enough to recognize that men could honestly differ from him. lie was no fanatic. His heart beat in sympathy for humanity and he consecrated much of his substance for the bettering of society. The greatness of South Bend today is largely due to his public spirit and his industrial achievements. He was an esteemed benefactor of DePauw university and the Methodist denomination, with which he had been identified since childhood. In the death of Clement Studebaker the commonwealth has sustained an irreparable loss. To Care Cold In One Day. Take Laxative liromo Quinine tablets. All druggist! refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. QroTe'i signature ii on etch box. 25c.
Q0X0KOKOCHCK
fflanksfllvlng Sermon . . . NOV. 1901 . By TtEV.J. E. HARTMAN, of the St. foul's "Reformed Church. 00KCHCKOOCHO0CKCKKK Cor. f ' t hanks h? lo (iod u'h'uh givefh us the viiiotv thro our l.orj Jesus ( 'hrsf. 0X0XKXHH0000000 This holiday which we are called upon to celebrate once more is sanctified by a hundred sacred memories. We approach it tenderly as we might walk to the graves of our beloved dead. It is eacred to na because it wae eacred to our fathers. It means bo much to us because it meant bo much to them. In the days long gone it commemorated a few joyous victories taken out of the yielding hand of (iod. Today U repre sents au accumulation of national and individual victories from the very birthday of our bioved republic to this its Utest hour. From the star? it has been a national day in the widest, deepest, truest eense of the word. Itistne day that the nation as uch carries its trophhs to the shrine and lays itp heart on the altar of (od. It is a day when the Kepublic remembers the long and bloody path its past has trod and with a bosom big with hope turns steadfastly futureward. From the stnrt also it has necessarily been a christian day. It is only the principle of Christianity the true leaven of (Jod'B highest revelation to menworking in the great heart of the people that could make such an occasion at all possible. The religion of Jesus alone is able to seal every stony path with a glad Kbenezer and bless the spilled blood of sacrifice with a hope that is not afraid nor ashamed, with a trust that IB triumphant with a faith that becomes a coal of tire in the breaet of consecration to urge it on to vaster undertakings and gladder accomplishments. lut if on all occasions it has been a season to be legarded with such tender ness, this time it mut be more so. We come to it with solemn step and bowed head. We speak very gently le6t we disturb and desecrate the hallowed hour while we sit with (iod and remember. Our hearts are e till swollen with a great national grief. The body of our fallen president is scarcely cold un der the sod his breath has scarcely winged its beautiful way to (iod. And while we stare and wonuer at the disas ter, we tremble none the lees for the sorrow that has come unbidden and so unwelcome! But it is easier for us to be reconciled because he was reconciled. It is easier for us to say, "It is (lod's way; he knows best!" because he said it. Submission is better than triumph suffering is better than immortal pleasure. Thankgiving is better than mourning and the gladdest cry of all our thankfulness now must rise be cause out of our national allhction (lud has still left us hearts that can be thankful! Let us address ourselves today to the seeking after the significance of (lod's greatest gift to the race, for the natural course and extremities of human hie, personal and historical. And the theme is by no means a narrow one. It is as wide as the purpose of Providence with men. it Btarte with material benedictions, with physical powers and comforts, with the miracles of human ingenuity that have utterly transformed the conditions of civilization. It scarcely ends with the high and exquisitely beautiful idealizations of art aud music those angel-presences that touch us with lingers of lire and heal us of our earthlineps and transport us into heavenly habitations to dwell a tim with (Jod. Victory is a word that flames out over all the history of the christian dis pensation; beautiful word soulful syllables that stretch out like streaming light into the dark places of the future and fill every nook and cr mny of our benighted hopes with a radiance that puts to lligbt every r-hadow of fear and despair! Victory is the watch cry that men never learned to speak until it had been spoken in times of crors and bloodl Victory at the cradle victory at the open grave; victory, when love and faith are born; victory, when hopes fade into fire and die like the leaves of i summer chased by the winds today; victory, in high places aud in low places here, there, every where Victory ! Thanks be to God whicb giveth us the victory through our Lord Jcsub Christ! And it is victory in spite of human limitations. The text stands as a mag nificent contradiction. The apposite has just dug out a grave and bade us look into its gloom and dark. He has given ue a picture of death that picture vhich always makes us shrink and tremble and turn away to grope after a glint of immortality. And then he turns and smites his dreaded picture with this quick, incisive little contra diction and It crumbles into fragments at our feet and victory rears its glorious ensign high above the glad ruin. The dark grave is filled up in a moment with that ponderous "but" the first word of the text, and the wheels of the conqueror's chariot roll smoothly and magnificently over into eternityl Christ is a constant contradiction. They that cannot reconcile a paradox are not able to find a calvary for the cross nor a heart for a faith in the beautiful religion of Jesus. The gospel is a contradiction to the will and sin of humanity; it" demand for faith is a bold denial of the rights of doubt, lis proffer of hope says a mighty "no" to the quiverings of natural fear. Love triumphantly speaks its golden rule against all the array of argument that selflehness can marshal on the troubled field. And out of this very paradox is the victory born! The voice of nature cries out of the heart of the sea and the hot bosom of the earth "Defeat!" "Defeat!" But thanks be to Uod for
victory' Humanity from the deepe of its history and persons frum the soul of experience exolaim, "Defeat!" "Defeat!" Hut thanks be to (iod for victor) ! Dowu by the way of the tomb, where friend clasps hand with friend and grazes deep into the vacant eyes and speaks tenderly to ears that are deaf with the fai-'.vay silence ot terrible absence, the heart quails and swells to bursting with the anguish that muttars dolefully "Defeat!" "Defeat:" "Hut thanks be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ!" The victory which we have by the ?ift of (lod in Christ Jesus is at least three-fold. It has to do with the conflict between mind and matter and the triumph of the mind. It has to do with the subtle and refining powers of the arts. It has, finally, to do with the prowess and conquests of the spiritual
over the material. It is the drama ot triumph in three aets science, art, religionmatter, mind, heart the true, the beautiful, the good and the greatest of these is the good. It is doubtless a truism that the history of the world is nothing more than a record of wars and rumors of war. Hut it is a truism that needs to be battered down with iconoclastic determination. At least, we are glad to know that the history of America has colors not all of blood it owns the blue and the white, truth and purity, constancy and aggressiveness, loyalty and action. Our history is not all written on battlefields, well won triumphs of brother against brother but much of it is recorded in even more immortal phrase. The hand that has digged a treasure out of the heart of the old hills and fashioned it into a locomotive, a thing of beauty, power and speed, that hand has done a uobly as the one that wielded a sword on the fields of onr nation's fearful travail. The mind that, has unraveled a mystery and taken together the threads to construct a miracle, whether it be the cotton gin, the steam ship, the telegraph or X rays, that mind has triumphed as remarka bly as the commander-in-chief cr our brilliant armies, who has conceived a strategem aud won the day. The inventive genius of the human mind is one of the biggest miracles God hath wrought. We have heard of Hudhi6t prayer machines rattle boxes to please a deaf (Jod. Hut every machine that turns a wheel in the civilzed world today is in a real sense a prayer machine; the temple ol the true tiod has led the way into every wilderness of history out of which men's minds have gathered secrets. The bible and progress in science are inseparable. The twain have become one nay, rather always have been one, for what (iod hath joined together no man may put asunder! "Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free" free from the limitations and shakels that have bound the race like Prometheus to the rock physical, material trammels that have imprisoned the spirit and made the soul a convict of the clod. It is highly significant that christian nations need not sit at the feet of heathendom to learn a single lesson. Christianity leads the van of all progress. When Home sat on her seven hills, the queen of the world, her heart was a slum of iniquity. We cannot in our times conceive of the wretchedness and equator, the discomforts and inadeauasies of a pre-christian civilization. The highest character and the lowest, the best men and the worst were alike polluted. Christianity has stretched the rails of travel and t rathe across the continents and ploughed the ocean with her swift ships; Christianity has spun cables under the sea and wires in all directions over the earth. The miracles of Christ no longer startle our incredulity when we consider the miracles wrought on every hand by his disciples, for chritiauity is after all the greatest miracle that can occupy the thought of men. If the heartless Herod's sword had struck the manger in the little Judean Hetbleham and spoiled its treasure, it would have severed from the world forever those vast potencies that have made civilized ho manity what it is, and will make it what it is yet to be. Hut (iod had purposes for his world. He laid the gift on the heart of men; he vouchsafed unto the world a victory over the very primal elements, and no frail arm, be it even the cruel arm of a Herod or a Nero, was strong enough to lilt itself in contemplated defeat against that (iod-man, the gift of heaven, the light of men, the lamb that taketh away the sin of the world. Hut this victory over the physical and material is not yet complete. It is only begun. The present tenses of the gospel are a constant incentive and inspiration. We give thanks to our God not because simply he gave us the victory, but because he giveth it, he continues giving it. It is this supreme excellence of God's word that makes it ever a living book. It is more than a record of the past; it deals vitally with the everlasting present, (iod giveth us the victory yesterday, today, forever. Pursuit and possession are our unchanging experience. Hlessed thought heart-swelling, soul-liiting gift of (iod! (iod giveth us victory, this our Lord Jesus Christ. A missionary from the Orient recently remarked that heathen cannot sing. Once they have learned to know God tbey learn to praise him. All those vast lands where Jesus Christ is unknown are desohtions songleso, muslcalless, and their arts are the r iins of dead centuries, mo89-growu in ancientnees. Music is born out of heaven. Its perfect consonance and uplifting harmonies never touched the deaf heart of the world with hearing until that memorable night when the new king lay swaddled in the manger, while a host of angds thrilled a company of shepherds on Judean hills with the first perfect bjrnu that men ever beard
iff 8 FW3 We have put up ment in four lots at Lot No. Lot No. Lot No. Lot No.
25ft
Remember that none of the above eot us $1.50 and up to S:5.öü, and are the best plums that anyone. Lots of other Good Bargains in Our
WBsrrrcMWMr r
Since that hour of gladness in heaven Christ ban been the theme of every excellent mu?ical production. After the immortal Handel had completed the Messiah," his masterpiece, with streaming eyes, overcome by the match less power of his own handiwork, he cried out in trreat emotion "I see the heavene, and Christ on the throne of (Jod!" The harp of (iod in the hand ot a shepherd boy subdued the turbulent spirit of King Saul. Nor was this victory lees remarkable than the one that lay the boastful giant low with a Kedron pebble in his orain. The control of voice and instrument whereby God makes it possible for large souls to open their largeness in eweet sounds, is an achievement and a victory which come only by a gift of God. If a song hath awakened us out of a stupor of 6in to righteouBneßs, if music has ever soothed the troubled spirit into pifce, whether by the 6oft lullaby of a christian mother, or the quiet strains of some more dignified hymn of the houee of (iod; if a melody has even put iron into our souls and lire into our action, an inspiration that urged us on to conquest and vanquishing, then thanks be to God for the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ! Poetry and art, twin sisters, which sit in our homes to comfort us and amuse us when the days are long, have their central inspirations in the Christ theme. All books of beauty and power are the children of the book, God's own word. The master minds that thrill us with great thoughts have sat at the feet of Jesus and learned of him. We esteem highly in these better days the munificence of an Andrew Carnegie because he gives numerous libraries to the great and lesser cities of the wjorld. Hut let us not lose sight of the fact that stands shining ind flashing, like the angel at Eden's closed gates, at the dor of every benevolence of mankind the fact that when God gave Chri6t, he gave all! In Christ and the gospel are comprehended the whole rhelms of worthy book lore; he is the central picture of all paintinc8 the perfect form in every garden of statuary. Through him the tongue learns to talk above the ordinary prattle of the every day world and speaks words of truth, power and prophesy. Through him the hand has learned its skill to carve the rugged oak into habitations, and fashion bolders of living rock into shapes of equisite beauty and perfectness.. Through him the eye appreciates the tints of autumn leaves and sunset skies and on canvas reproduce the glory of its vision. Through him is the human spirit redeemed from the blighting powers of sin and men walk again in the felicities of uncursed garden with (iod. Thanks be unto Him for his unspeakable gift. "Hut what protiteth it a man if he ain the whole world and lose his own soulP Kings we would like to be kings indeed we call ourselves because we sit on thrones victoriously ascended The storms come like lambs and lie down at our feet; distance seems like an illusion in view of our mighty things of speed and our message hashing wires. We pierce the clouds and draw their lirey blood of power to drive the wheels of our industries aud make our nights as luminous almost as the day. Our courts are tilled with the most sublime music that can tingle in the ear and swell in the heart. Our eyes have beheld the beauty of God's holiness in things of color and of shapliness. Yet, of what good is this whole pageantry of royalty and glory if the end of all is the dust and asn in a silent grave; what does it profit if all the world follows as a vassal at our back to obey our slightest command, if the soul itself is a slave to the will of hell? Hutthanks be to God which giveth us the victory over all things material, moral, spiritual, and through our Lord Jesus Christ makes us to sit on thrones exalted above every narrow limitation in the fine air and clear sky of the high place of the power of the Almighty. The victory of thehumao spirit over
VmT A our Light Weight Jackets the following extremely low
I.?lniltr.:'arl:'"r: 44c 2. anfc":iMiT::h;k 64c 3, y"': 94c 4. ;K:;ifsi"MiW.;,;::k:SI.49
the ancient trinity of wickedne6? he world, the llesh and the devil: puts man to the fore-front of creation, "better is he that ruleth hh own spirit than he that taketh a city." Jiearing the cross ot Jesus, the church of God marches about the walls of the besieged battlements of sin and there are signs of weakening; the walls will fall with terrible destruction when God's good day has dawned :The saloon must go" the brothel must go; the cold Pharisaism that sits in many high places must go! Everything that smuts the fair name of civilized humanity must go and Highteouene-is will reign from the rising sun to the uttermost parts of the western seas. And in personal conflicts with sinin the dark places of battle when the individual soul meets hi AppolyoD, there shall be victory. Temptations will lose their charm and power; the exceeding sinfulness of sin will embitter iniquity to the cultured taste of redeemed hearts, satan will be bound; Christ will be supreme in the kingdom of goodness. These things will be so because they are so. God giveth the victory this, our Lord Jesii6 Christ. If I were asked to name the most sienal victory of Christ during the year the triumph that should most inspire our voices of thanksgiving as a christian nation today. I should pass over the survey of victories over poor savages of the Philiipines; I should not mention the widening commercial interests and achievements of the nation; I should forget all that might on first thought approve itself as magnificent and most important and lead you back to the spot where we began the triumphant death of our christian president. That vfas a victory a vie tory for himself, for the Christ kingdom and for the world. It was the climax of an ascending life it was a passing into mystery, but not intodarkness. The clouds that received his emancipated soul mellowed with a transfiguring radiance; their blackness was d;esolved with the light of God. It is the process of all creation fit et the blade, then the ear, then the lull corn in the ear and then the garner! Victory stands, torch in hand, at the door of the christian's tomb and cries: "Fear not when thou palest thro the waters I will be with thee, and thro the rivers they shall not overllow thee; when thou walkest thro the lire thou shalt not be burned, neither shall the tlame kindle upon thee. For 1 am the Lord, thy God the Holy One of Israel, thy Saviour. "Fear not. I am with theo-O be not dismayed For I am tliy :od. I will still nlve tli all; I'll strengthen thee, keep thee, aud eause tltce to stand. Upheld by my ;raclous. omnipotent hand. When thro the deep waters 1 call thee to go, The rivers of sorrow shall not overflow; For I will he with thee, thy trials to Mess And sanctify to thee thy deeest distress! "Hlessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor and power and might be unto our God forever and ever. Amen." What are these which are arranged in white robes and whence came the) ? These are they which came out of great tribulation and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore are they before the throne of God and serve him day and night in his temple and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them; they shall hunger no more, neither thirst anymore; neithtr shall the euti light on them nor any heat. For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them and shall lead them unto living fountains of water; and (iod shall wipe away all tears from their eyes." " ThankH be unto God which giveth us the victory thro our Lord Jesus Christ." Amen. Stops th Cough and Works oflT the Cold. Laxative Hrumo Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No Cure, no Pay. Price lb cents.
t-i v VA Ll ? im m toxi in our Cloak Depart price s: Er3 ESS M at wholesale less than will ever be offered by 2."th Anniversary Sale. m Kl k-d Out of (lie Irm ev It (the Iuurpendent) further states that -it lt t aloDe in the daily field party interest- would not be impülrtrd," giving a true hint to the real character of his democracy m the intimation that he would be willing to sacrifice the party for the chance to injure a compernor. Here the diligence is again apparent: The Democrat will labor at all times for the success of the party, and if forty papers were to be eetab I'.shed it would not threaten that "party interests would be impaired." Plymouth Democrat. The above published in the Plymouth Democrat in an article criticizing the editor of th Independent is enough to make a horse laugh. After carefully reviewing the articles in the Independent, we fail to discern that the editor of that paper made any 6uch threat as the Democrat states. Allow us to inquire Does the astute editor of the Democrat think that old democrats have forgotten the time when Mr Winterbo'tom, of Michigan City, received the nomination for congress over him, and how his "sore toe" hurt tiim so bd that during the whole campaign outside parties were obliged to edit and run the Democrat, w hile he nursed his "soreness V" "O, consistency, thou art a jewel." A Dkmcm kat. I'illt At I.MH7. A big tight occurred at the dance at Lapaz Wednesday night, Nov. J7. It was started by two young men but before it was finished there were about a dozen in the light. One of the boye was thrown from the door in the second story and two or three others were roughly used. There was no one seriously hurt and no arrests were made. AND LTU Does your horse "feel his oats"? What a difference be tween the ir rain-fed and the grass-fed horse! The first strong and full of ginger, the second llabby, weak and tired out before he begins. The feedinir makes the difference. Children are not alike either. One is rosy, bright-eyed, full of life and laughter, another is pale, weak and dull. The feeding again is responsible. Sickly children need soecial feeding. Thev don't "feel their oats". Scott's Iümulsion adds just the right richness to their diet. It is like grain to the horse. The child gets new appetite and strong digestion. Scott's Kmulsion is more than food. It is a strong medicine. It rouses i:r thill children, puts new flesh on thin ones and red blood into pale ones. It makes children grow. Scott's Emulsion makes ordi nary food do its duty. picture tcpresftits the Trade M.i:k of S.ott's Kmulsion aiul i-j :i the wrapper of ecry IkuiIc. iend for free sample. scott & r.ow Ni:, 409 Tear! St.. N. w Yoik. 50: ard Ji. all di Ug'ut5,
m
