Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 319, 24 September 1910 — Page 4

PAGE POUR

' THE niCII2XdNI PAIXAUIUM AKD aUW-Tltl,EGItAM, SATCKDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1910.

PubUah.d and osroad by the " PAlXAtIUM FRINTINO CO.

leaved T days each wk. availing end Orne Corner North th and A streets. jmm mono int. KICUMOND. INDIANA. BadeJa fl. UmI Editor Leftae Jmm oImoo Cert aVroMrdi AoMdato Kails I W. St. roa4aOM Slews SSdlter STL'BSCRI PTIOK TERMS. Xa Richmond il.oe per yaar Cm ad-1 vanes) or 1 00 per wea. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. Ona roar, In advance 'SSI! 1 m im.ii I,. In atia.n. - - ...... Z.BQ One month. In advanco mm at. nnim;! One year. In advanra Is month. In advaneo One month, in advaneo 25 MM . l t mm AmmrmA : both bow and old addraasss mut bo Iven. ukuHktM will rtlafta remit with order, which should be a-lven (or a a pacified term: name will not bo enteroa until payment ia reoalved. En torod at Richmond. Indiana, post of flea aa' aocond claaa mall matter. mi (Now York Oty) haa to tta mstt ml RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Haa a population or SS.000 and la Browlnc It la the county aoat of Wayne County, and the trading- center or a rich egrlcultural community. It la located due oaat rrom Indianapolis miles and 4 mllea from the atate Una. Rlohmond la a city of nomea and of Industry. Primarily manufacturlna city. It la alao the Jobbing center or Kaatern Indiana and enjoys the retail trade or the popufoue community (or miles around. Richmond la proud or Ha splendid streets, well kept yards. Its cement sidewalks and beautiful shade trees. It baa S national banks, t truat companies and 4 building associations with combined resources of over 18.000,000. Number of factor! ea lit; capital inveeted 97.000.seo. with an annual output of 117.000,000. and a pay roll of 9l.700.OOC. The total pay roll (or the city amounts to approximately 9S.SOO.000 annually. There are five railroad companies radiating in eight different directions from the city. In coming- freight hr.ndled dally. 1.fSO.000 lbs.; outgoing- freight handled dally. 760.000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day, 1.700 cars. Number of passenger trains dally, St. Number of freight trains dally, 77. The annual post offloo receipts amount to 180,000. Total aaaeaaed valuation of the city, 118.000.000. Richmond has two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with) a combined circulation of lt.000. Richmond Is the OTreateat hardware Jobbing- center In the state and only recond In general lob-' hlng Interests. It baa a plana factry producing; a high grade piano every II minutes. It Is the leader In the manufacture of traction engines, and producea mere threehlng machines, lawn mo were, roller skates, grain drills and burial caskets than any other Mty In the world. Tho clty'a area Is t.40 acres; haa a court house costing; 1500.000: 10 publlo schoola and nas the ' finest and most complete hi! school In tho middle west under .construction: S parochial schools; Karlham college and the Indiana Runlness College; five splendid flro companies In fine hosa houses; Olen Miller park, tho lara-eat and moat beautiful nark In Indiana, the homo of Richmond's annual rhantaaqua- seven hotels: municipal electric light plant, under successful operation, and a private electrlo light plant. Insuring competition; the oldest publlo library In the state. cept ono and tho second lararat, 4S.SO0 volumes: pure, refreehlnar water, unsurpassed; 8 mllas of Improved streets; 40 miles of aowers; IS miles or cement curb and gutter combined; 40 mllea or' cement walka. and many mllea of , brick walka. Thirty churches. Including the Tteld Memorial, built at a coat of 9110.000: Reld Memorial Hospital, ono or the mm modem In tho atate T. M. C A. , building, erected at a cost of Sioe.eoojono o ino nneat in tho state. Tho amusement center or Kaatern , Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the site or Richmond holds as rina an annual art exhibit. The Richmond Pall Festival held each October la unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It Is given In the Interest or the cltv and financed by the buetness men. Purcees awaiting anyone with enterprise In the Panto Proof City. REPUBLICAN TICKET WAYNE COUNTY ' I For Congress WILLIAM O. BARNARD -Tor RepweenUUve . LEE J. REYNOLDS lor Joint Representative (Warn had Fayette Counties) ELMER OLDAKER For Joint Senator Wayne and Union Counties) WALTER S. COMMONS For Prosecutor . CHARLES L, LADD For Auditor LEWIS 8. BOWMAN ' For Clerk GEORGE MATTHEWS For 8herttt ALBERT a 8TEEN . For Treasurer ALBERT ALBERTSON V For Commissioner . . (ttlddle District) i BARNEY UNDERMAN , (Western District) ROBERT BEESON For Coroner DR. ROLLO J. PIERCE . - For Assessor . - rn.TJAU UATUSWS

The announcement that there is a

politan Opera production including Pavalowa la worthy or commonThe excellence of the production and the magnitude of the performance

takes away the commercial side of To put Richmond In the class of such high trade and to have the same only at the Metropolitan opera house

cipal capitals of Europe is surely to raise the standard of Richmond and remove it from the ordinary middle western town.

With all the papers of New York sines of the Srst rank taking editorial there Is something for the ordinary the town he lives in. The only thing that can ever be

live is that It does not hare the advantages of the larger cities in the finer

things of life. To remove that gives

beat all 'round -town In the middle west not. only of its site but able to

hold up Its head with Indianapolis and As to Pavalowa herself she bide

ine Oenee if there can be any comparison.

People still talk of Jenny Llnd and

the land marks of the dramatic firmament.

The only thing that Richmond haa to fear is a lack of appreciation for the best things and with a town already noted for a aincere feeling for art and music there seems no reasou to think that Richmond has not enough people In it to recognize tho real thing when it sees it.

Where Dreams

Collier's came out with a leading editorial the other day in which it said that the only way in which the coal lands of Alaska could be kept for the people of the United States and not allowed to pass into the hands of the railroads was to have government ownership of railways in Alaska. This sounds pretty revolutionary to the everyday man, whether he be a consumer or a capitalist. But what would you say to a place a country where all the railways are owned by the government? (And a popular government at that) Where all water powers and irrigation rights are owned by the government and leased to private companies for a short term of years? Where coal mines are owned by the government? Where the government loans money to private individuals for the development of the country on long time terms and builds houses for the citizens? Where the government owns warehouses and refrigerating plants and makes the contracts with the 6teamship companies in such a way as to assure even the smallest producer equal transportation charges with the largest? Where there is a wage commission that regulates and settles . the disputes of employes and employers to such mutual satisfaction that there Is practically no friction between employer and employe. Where there is a protective tariff based on the 'principle that every beneficiary of the tariff must pay good wages (in comparison with the cost of living) to all employes and that a business which cannot do that is a publlo menace? In other words the government is run for the man and not for property except to afford a good living for all.

The sentiment of the people in

of public ownership of all public utilities no hardship is done to the in

dividual he profits. There is scarcely think that incendiary?

. It is merely a statement of fact the country is not Utopia but the colony of Australia from which we draw our Australian ballot system

(albeit It is a corrupted form of the

Besides this, the platform of Collier's . sounds weak. Conservation there in Australia is the real thing it shows what we have failed to

achieve. , A DEEP WATER PORT On the Coast of Texas Will Be Built by the United States Government. A NAVAL BASE IS PLANNED San Antonio, Texas, Sept 24. Ac cording to the authorization of the last Congress the Board of Army Engl neers is now on the Gulf Coast in the vicinity of Arkansas Pass for the pur pose of locating the exact site for the new deep water port for that vicinity. The Board of Engineers is composed o. the following members: LL CoL Lansing H. Beach, Major Chas. S. Riche, Major Henry Jarvey, Major F. E. Mclndoe and Major Geo. H. PowelL The United States Government has I already built jetties extending far into the gulf at Arkansls Pass. The pass is a narrow waterway between two is lands and has already 21 or 22 feet of water. Just Inside the pass is about 1 40 feet of water landlocked and well protected. The rush of water through the pass at the receding of the tide Is such as to constantly deepen it so that the beginning of the port is assured. Three towns are applicants for the location of this port. Corpus Christ!, which lie about 20 miles from the pass across Corpus Christ! Bay, Is anxious for a channel cut through Turtle Cove and over the bay. Rock port, which lies about 14 miles from the pass, is anxious to have the channel cut to that place, and the town of Arkansas Pass, which lies across Harbor Island from Aransas Pass itself, wants a channel that is already cut through the island deepened, and still another group wiahes to have the port at Harbor Island claiming that deep water being practically already there will make this cheapest It is expected that the Board of Engineers will recommend one of these locations. It la also believed that the govern1694 William Penn appointed his governor of Pennsylvania. 1710 Expedition from Boston, under 1755 John Marshall, chief justice of

gMpnapjjWpMPjMnaasaTamsB " 1 - 'TTJ,r'TTscaua "THIS DATE IN HISTORY"

born ln Virginia. Died July 6, 1SS5. 1S50 Pope Pius IX. established a hierarchy in England. 1861 Public reception in Boston in honor of Jerome Bonaparte. 1863 Territory of Arizona organised.

' 1869 Financial panic known as "Black Friday resulted from attempt to

, corner gold. 1870 Military expedition sent to valley reached Fort Garry. 1871 Anti-Tweed mass meeting ln . gigantic frauds. It M Hon. Honors Mercier, former

possibility of securing the Metro

the undertaking. cities that can afford productions of artists here who nave piayea noi in New York, hut in all the prin and Chicago and some of the maganotice or tne tour oi citizen to think about in relation to said against Richmond as a place to Richmond a standing as being the Chicago. fair to rank equal to or above Adel the other stars that come and go Are True that country is pronuncedly in favor any special privilege. Do you real thing.) ' : ment plans somewhere In this vicinity a naval base to be used in conjunction with EVirt Qnm UAiiatAn wTnfsTn will ., iw th i.r. .rmv i imor. iM riT, ,. mviT,r O 0 . troops in case of foreign troubles. ENRICHED BY MURDER Galveston. Taxas. Sept 24. Walter Gilman. a cowboy on the Silver Star I Ranch in Pecos county, who was pardoned from the state prison

about three months ago, after serv-j119 ing twelve years for the killing of

Jack Carroll, another cowboy near Fort Lancaster, has been given title to about 24.000 acres of land valued at S125.000 to S150.000 in Crockett county by A. G. Flournoy. who admtts having killed Carroll. Flournoy is said to be in South America dvlne. and the report comes that only a few months ago he learned that Walter Gilman had shooting. . been convicted for the One way In which the New Brunswick government has encouraged - -mm h. , i . IftllUlUg ii v aa lies til luc luijvri Ling of cattle and horses of approved breeds and sellng them at cost price, in some instances time being given on part of the purchase price. Great Britain exports about quarter of the coal it mines. . one-1 MUSIC AT EARLHAM. Piano Department Miss Gaston. Fall term. 12 weeks Private lessons of one half hour, two ' lessons a week..S24.00: one lesson nr week, $12.00. Miss Hecker Violin or piano. Two lessons a week. 1 18.00: one lesson a week. 19.00. Vocal Music Aurile Borris. Class lessons, one hour each (three in class), 2 lessons per week. 124.00: one lesson Der week, $12.00. Private lessons, one half hour each, 2 lessons a week, $36.00; 1 lesnn a week lift Aft. .

SEPTEMBER 24. .

cousin, William Markham, lieutenant Gen. Nicholson, reached Port Royal. the United States supreme' court quell the disturbance In the Red River New York upon the discovery of his ; - premier of Quebec, died in Montreal.

U1 COLLEGE

TO 0P TUESDAY This Promises to Be the Most Successful Year Institution Has Had. TO CHANGE THE STUDIES SOLID GEOMETRY AN ENTRANCE REQUIREMENT AND THERE WILL BE ENGLISH EXAMINA TION FOR NEW STUDENTS. Earlham college will open its fiftysecond annual fall term Tuesday and what promises to be the most success ful year in the history of the in stitution will begin. The faculty has been strengthened, the course of ! study improved and the rooms rear-! ranged all in preparation for the open ing of the college year. The most Important change made at the college is in the courses of study. soiia geometry nas Deen maae an entrance requirement. All students wishing advance standing for work completed in the high school or acad emy will be required to take a special examination before the credit is giv en. Another examination will be held the first week of the college for all new students. They will be required to pass a special examination in Eng lish before being admitted to fresh man standing. Changes in Faculty. Several changes have been made in the faculty for the coming year. Dr. Walter L. Woodward of the university of California will succeed Arthur Hirsh as assistant in the department of history. Rainard Robbins will be an assistant in the department of mathematics and Professor Lawrence Hadley will be at the head of the department to succeed Professor W. O. Mendenhall, who will attend the university of Michigan the coming year. The most important changes in the faculty have been made in the depart ment oi music. Aureie Bornss, a German scholar, who has studied un der the great artists of Germany, France and America and who has sung in grand opera, will be at the head of the vocal music course. Miss Laura Gaston of this city will head the department of Instrumental music. Miss Ruth Ann Simms will offer courses in elementary Biblical work; M. S. Markle will assist Dr. -D. W. Dennis In the department of biology. Mr. Markle spent the summer at the University of Chicago where he pur sued advanced work in biology and histology. Building Improvements. A number of improvements have been made in the buildings, especially Lindley hall. The physics laboratory haB been enlarged and now includes two additional rooms in the basement. 1 t been remodeled and is in a much better sanitary condition than ever be fore. One Improvement that will please the students from Richmond is the changes made in the "Day Dodgers" room, on the first floor of Lfndley hall. During the summer the committee was appointed to make changes and a a result the room has been papered. Dok shelves built on the west side of room, an tne rurniture revarnishr ea" an everything made better, and more comfortable. I ' Anotner change undertaken at the cuege nas oeen tne reorganization r the boo keeping of the institution. An "P" accountant Edgar Fisher, keeD a11 B of th college, wh" Pinley Newlin will continue to mci as treasurer ana nave cnarge ot uie Ponice President Robert L. Kelly has about recovered from his recent illness and will be at the college to greet the stu dents. Dr. Kelly is enthusiastic over the prospects for the coming year ZZtohm Z VnJw h Iand 8ay that he never knew them to brighter. READ HAUGHTY BOOK Philadelphia, Sept 24. Because he said he found his wife reading an "im proper" book that had been lent to her by a married man. Harry Haas, la jeweler, of Second street and Fairmount aTenu told Judge stake ln ae" 1 .. i J. M. l . seruon court mat ne wouia not uve w,tn ner any nioro. The judge then made an ordcr of 12 a week ln faTor of kis wife, who asserted that he refused to support her. Few Peoil tw ow to shake I hands well; the general run of folk either give a nmp paw ana aiiow n to 8hak or l8t3 Sra8P yours in their hand and nearly dislocate itwith their I violence. lxraaon wono. VALUE OF LAUGHTER. i Laughter is a foe to pain and disease and a sure cure for melancKoKa and worry. Laughter is contagious. Be cheerful and you make everybody around you happy and heakhfuL Use laughter as a table sauce. It stimulates the digestive processes. It keeps the heart and face young and enhances physical beauty. It gives warmth and glow to the whole system. Perfect health, which may be injured by bad news, by grief or by anxiety, is often restored by a hearty laugh. Wear a Fad Festival badge

and be a booster. -

News Forecast For Coming Week

Washington. D C- SeDt 24. The

velt and the "old guard" for control of the republican, party in New York win focus public attention on Saratoga, , where the republican state convention will assemble Tuesday for the " nomination of a , atate ticket and the adoption of a platform. The general belief is that the

convention will develop into one of the liveliest political contests oi tne generation and the claims are so conflicting and the issues so confused that It is impossible to forecast the results with any degree of certainty.

The democratic state convention

ter the Saratoga gathering and In comparison it promises to be an exceedingly mild and harmonious affair. The belief is growing that Mayor William J. Gaynor of New York City is likely to be the Democratic nominee for governor. The others whose names are mentioned in connection

with the head of the ticket Congressman William Sulzer of New York, Congressman James S. Havens of Rochester, Thomas M. Osborne of Albany and Edward M. Shepard of Brooklyn.

. Democrats of Rhode Island will to name candidates for governor and gressional conventions to nominate on the same date. The first cabinet meeting afterer to begin in Washington Monday with

visers in attendance with the exception of Secretary of War Dickinson, who is traveling in the Philippines. The meeting will last aeveral days and the president expects to clear up a number of important matters. According to rumor the Ballinger case may be among the important subjects of consideration. Immediately after the close of the cabinet meeting on Friday. President Taft will go to New York, where he is to deliver an address the following day before the convention of the National League of Republican clubs. From New York the president will return to Beverly, to remain until the middle of October. Thursday is the day set by the Interstate Commerce Commission to begin an important hearing in Washington on the subject of the law passed by the last session of congress to supplement the safety appliance acts previously passed. The Vanderbilt Cup race, the premier event of the year in the automobile world, is to be decided Saturday over the Long Island Motor Driveway. The entry list includes many of the most skillful drivers of America and Europe and all signs point to a keen and exciting competition. A large number of important conventions are included in the calendar of the week. Among those that will attract more or less public attention will be the annual convention of the United Irish League In Buffalo, the National Irrigation congress in Pueblo, the National Good Roads congress in St. Louis, the Catholic charities conference in Washington and the silver jubilee convention of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew In Nashville.

NEWEST NEWS OF SCIENCE

In India more than fifty native languages are Broken. Somnambulists have been known to walk 15 miles without awakening. The vacuum principle has been applied to a new cotton picking machine. Not much larger than a Watch, which it resembles in shape, is a new English typewriter. Cypress water tanks have been known to defy decay for more than a quarter of a century. Japan is increasing its production of raw silk at a rate of about 20.000 bales a year. Though heat makes a solid or a liquid Incandescent it only increases the pressure of a gas. Vaccine virus is rendered absolutely pure by radium emanations, according to an Italian scientist. Elaborate tests have shown that the left leg is stronger than the right in about 54 of every 100 men. An English chemist claims to have made rubber synthetically from the hydro-carbon oil known as isoprene. v - ' . Philadelphia . public school pupils are being taught to foard and alight from street cars in a safe manner. ; An Indiana rural mail carrier has patented a folding metal cabinet for, stamps that is waterproof when closed. By compressing flour into bricks an English miller has succeeded in preserving it from the ravages of Insects. The weight of an eyelash will turn the balance of scales used to weigh diamonds, so delicately are they adjusted. The warfare against the deadly sleeping sickness of South Africa has cost the lives of seven European physicians. The known petroleum areas of the United States cover 8,850 square miles and the known natural gas areas more than 10,000. Many vineyards near Biarritz, France, are cultivated on dunes of quartz sand, cast up by the sea, and protected by palisades. Submarine warfare, at least to the extent of employing divers against an enemy's ships, was known more than three' centuries B. C. " ' Boiling water will remove fruit stains from clothing, fusel oil those of paint and varnish and pure alcohol marks made by iodine. The river fleet of the Volga represents three fifths of all 1 Russia's Inland waterway craft, having a capacity of 8,600,000 tons. Cleanliness and durability are two of the merits claimed for a recently Invented chicken coop that is stamped out of sheet metal.

Three yheraflbns Use If

I y - Y: , t t i S J?v. -S w iy h ?"VS. w"' Ji-yf, a . ' & -s .r"f VS1

Mr. Rhoda Pntchard, 66 years of age. not ook a day over fifty and I do not feel that old." Mis. Rhoda Pritchard, 6th Ave., Astoria. L. I. iu's Pud-g alft OhiocEioy has to its credit .fifty years of success without a question as to its merits as a curative agent. During this time it has brought the blessings of health to overworked men, delicate women and sickly children, who find in it the strength-giving properties that are so necessary to them. It quickens and

strengthensthe heart action, aidsdigcstion, restores health and vigor; makes the old feel youngand keeps theyoung strong and vigorous. It is prescribed by doctors and is recognized as a family medicine everywhere. CAUTIOV. When yon ask -ywjr dragglst, grocer or dealer for Daff7's For Malt walaksy. To in re yoa gt t&a geaalaa. It Is aa fefM!atlr par rdletnl malt whiskey aad is sold IK SEALED BOTTLES OM.Y aerer in bulk. Jjook for th trae-mrk, tka "Old CImbiIss, aa t& UbL aad teaks sura tha seal orar tfea cork la unbroken. Priea -$1.00 a larg botUa. Writ Medical BnartsBeat, Tfca Duffy Matt Whiskey Co.. ' Xocliester, W. for aa Utastrated msdlcal booklet contaiolBS teattaoalaJs sad vales fcr kaatta, and io-- f-dvlce. boti eeat fr.

Clip this Coupon and bring it to one of the Quigley Drug Stores with 10 cents and receive one set of 25 colored view Post Cards of Richmond. By mail 3 cents extra for postage. . .

VuRE CIDER VINEGAR FOR PICKLING If you want your pickles to keep, use none but the best. - Also Pure, ; S Whole Spices that are fresh; Horseradish Root, Etc , 4 Phone 2292. H. C. HADLEY, GROCER. 1033 Main

fight between ex-President Roose

will meet at Rochester two days af assemble in Providence Thursday other state officers. The two con candidates for congress will be held the summer recess is scheduled all of the president's official ad The honest, straightforward state ment of Mrs. Rhoda Prltcbard of Astoria, L. L, is convincing" proof of the treat merit of Duffy's pure Halt Whiskey as a family medicine. Thousands of such letters are received from grateful men and women who have derived wonderful benefits from its use. I don't know how to express my self in regard to Duffy's Pure Male Whiskey. I have taken it for twenty years and it has saved my life several times when I have been given up to die by my physicians. I am now sixtysix years old and hale and hearty, thanks to Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey. I have recommended it to many people and also to my immediate family, my children and my grandchildren, and they in turn have recommended ir tn othm. kfv rhillrn ml An

This Is My 52nd Birthday

EUGENE N, FOSS. ; - . Eugene N. Fo&a, representative In congress of the Fourteenth Massa chusetts district who is mentioned as , a possible democratic candidate for. governor of his state this fall, 'was born in West Berkshire. Vt. Sept 24, 1S5S and received his early edo- " cation in St. Albans. At the age of 21 he went west to" Introduce a device for drying lumber. In his capacity at a traveling salesman he became acquainted with a prominent manufacturer, of Massachusetts, whose employ he entered and to whose vast business interests he subsequently succeeded. Mr. Fobs was always a republican until two years ago, when he was democratic candidate for lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, A -year ago he was elected to congress on the democratic ticket in a district that -had been solidly republican tor , many years. He js known as one of the foremost advocates of Canadian reciprocity. , , r Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPIJCATKWS, as they cannot reach the seat of ths dlea. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional -disease, and In order to eura It you must take Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and arts directly on the blood and mucoui surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is not a Quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians In this coun try for years ana is a reauiar prescription. It is composed ot the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on tha mucous surfaces. The perfect combina tion of ths two ingreaients is wnat produces such wonderful results In curing Catarrh. Send tor testimonials free. . . . E. J. CHENEY A Ct.. rops.. TOIOOO, tA Sold by Pruggisis. price t&c Take Hall's Family Pills for consti pation, i ABOUT IT? You going to have your stoves standing ln : your rooms ' this winter, or are you going to have a furnace? Better look this matter squarely In the face. PILGRIM Furnace Co. 529 wfin 8t. Phone 1390 714 to 720 8. th. Phone 1685 SELECTED BLUE POINTS 4 and STANDARDS . MUTH'8 FISH MARKET ' Phone 1535 '. Once Again ' TO , Sunday, Sept.. 25th ' -VIA- ' ' The C. (k O. R, U. (Formerly C, C L,) Q 1.00 Round Trip "Clncy" Is now at her best, Train Lvs. Richmond, 5:08 a. m. Train Lvs. So. Richmond 5; 13 a. m. Returning Lv. Cincinnati 10 p. xa. For particulars call C. A. BLAIR. P. ft T. A., Home Tel, 2062. ' Richmond Get fcZscscred Now Fcr Ct New VVccIlsy'o, 010 LZ13 its Ffouer Step i MRS. I0NA QUIGG ' ! TsnAhF Pterin strA Crmst I CkMA ft A A 1 w ar mm . at aaaajaajaaa . " 1 wvsj-aav mm mm- . - - lmTmv PI4 r rasas H t , mw ,

FK35 ISSS3ABCB r. O. ENCUCCS8 nmm . eatsasnAca? Aamx