Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 63, 18 January 1912 — Page 4
THE BICHMOND FALLAMUM AJiTr 8UW-TELEGBA21, THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1912.
e3 Ssa-Tetesrca - Published and own ad by the PALLADIUM PRINTING OCX Issued Every Evening Except Sunday. Offlca Corner North tth and Aftrart. Palladium and Mun-TaUcram Ptaonaa
Business OKlce. 2C; Nawa oeparmsnl, 1131. 1UCHM0KD. INDIANA Madalab G. Laada SUBSCRIPTION TURKS In Richmond 91.00 par year (la advance) or lOo par waak. RURAL ROUTE Ona year, In advance If-'! Six month, In sdvanoe Ona month. In advance Address changed as oftn as daalrad. koth nsw and old addrasaaa must be Ivan. Subscribers will plaaaa remit with order, which should be riven for a specified term; name will not be eaterad until payment la received. MAIL. SUBSCRIPTIONS One year. In advance Six months, In advance One month, in advance M Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office aa second class mall matter. New York Representatives Payne To una-, 30-34 West 33d street, and -II West 82nd street, New York. N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne a Young". 747-741 Marquette Building. Chisago. ItL Tfca AesocUtf erf Am rfilVlM Advertisers kaa liaarcaUtiMaf this ab- . . i-.i . 1M ngar mt oiwuu'" si la the AssocistWs re nTrSSSijfftiiw No. 16. Wkihwan tUf. i. Y. City IMeart.tolEIeart rmz nuMAN brute. A 1MB, worn team of horses was bitched to a heavy truck Oiled with coaL Tho tired animals thrust their necks Into the collars and strained hard to keep the load moving. The street led up a sharp Incline. There had been a slight snow, and the street was slippery. The load was heavy enough without a bill to contend with.' There must have been hard hearts at the coal yard where this truck was loaded. The team tried to get a start up the hill and failed. The driver brought bis heavy whip down on the backs of the poor brutes. They longed forward, straining at the tugs. Their feet slipped. Ona went down, and the harness dragged the other one off his feet. And the driver? Without asking help from any one In getting the animals to their feet be deliberately got down from bis high perch and as deliberately gave each of the prostrate horses a kick In the ribs. The coward t He who kicks a horse when It Is helpless Is as mean as he who kicks a man when he Is down. And It Is as brutal to kick a bone without provocation as to kick a man without provocation. Only there is this difference The horse cannot tight back. The driver of that team would think twice before be mistreated a man. He might cherish a wholesome fear of getting what was coming to him. But the horse was effectually tied up in . m - m - t narnese ana ueieneeiess. ' In this case I telephoned for a humane officer. A few .weeks before X had been in the tent of the boss hostler of a big circus, x asked him concerning the treatment of the fine, sleek horses under bis charge. "Kind treatment only. . "If a hostler mistreats a hors" by beating or kicking he gets his time and Is promptly discharged. I will not even permit my horses to be spoken to harshly." Some of the owners of Kentucky thoroughbreds are almost as particular concerning tb treatment of their fine horses as about the treatment of their children. Only a human brute will maltreat a dumb brute. It Is a great pity that In every such case of cruelty a like treatment cannot be accorded the human brute. This h My 33rd Birthday WILLIAM T. FOSTER. William Trufant Foster, president or Reed College, the great educational Institution that Is being built near Portland, Ore., was born in Boston. Mass., January 18, 1879. After graduating from Harvard College 1n 1901 be taught English at Bates College for two years. In 1904 he went to Bowdoln College aa Instructor in English and argumentation, and became professor in 1905. The year 1909-10 he had a leave of absence from Bowdoia. which he spent at Teachers' College, Columbia University, in the study of the college curriculum. At Columbia University he also filled a position as lecturer in educational administration, pad completed the residence requirements for the degree of doctor of philosophy In education and sociology. Congratulations to: Austin Dobson, the noted English poet, 72 years old today; Olga Nethersole, the famous emotional actress. 42 years old today; WUUs S. Moore, chief of the United States Weather Bureau, 5$ years old today. E. 8. Candler, Jr., representative in Congress from the First Mississippi district, 56 years old today; Seth Low, former mayor of New York City, and president of the National Civic Federation, 63 years old today. . -When you want a reliable medicine for a cough t or, cold take ChamberIain's Cough Remedy It can always be depended upon and is pleasant and a a 4 a, - -ssm - v an a .paua u uuM. ,.rr sauevy sui aeauera.
A wakening Of Churchmen. It has long been our belief that the undeniable loss of influence by the modern church upon the thought and conduct of the people is a deplorable hurt to our civilisation. We have contended frequently that in a .democracy more than In any other form of government, conservative influence of pure religion, exercised, as it can only be, through church organization, is a saving force of Inestimable value for the furtherance of the idealism and altruism without which any democracy ia foredoomed. Yet we havo been forced to recognize the loss of the old loyal devotion of high and low, rich and poor alike. Nor could there be honest ignoring of the logic of the statistics that show that, neither in the country nor far less in the crowded cities, is membership in organized denominational religion keeping pace with the growth of population. But viewing the problem bias, sectarian or otherwise; adopting deliberately the reasoning that every sane, fair agnostic student of history must surely follow, we never have doubted that, sooner or later, there would come a revivification of the church to its highest functions and influence by a strengthening of humanitarism that will work a good to man that will be a glory to God. Over and over again we have argued that organized faith in the divine power, no matter how expressed in creed or sect, is bound to be linked inseparably with social service, humanitarian works and unselfish striving for purity government and all daily dealings of man with man. And as the seasons pass, more and more confirmation comes of the quickening recognition by the churches of the truth spoken last year by the Rev. Henry E. Fosdick and approved by the northern Baptist conference: "If the churches cannot agree oa doctrines, they can agree when the voices of children cry to them from the factories; when families clamor to be rid of the drink curse, and w.ien the poor laborer asks for a living wage. They can be welded into uni:y of effort by the hammer of common needs."
It is not only from the mouths o! ministers that the essential sermon is being preached to the churches. From across the Atlantic comes the report of a remarkable address by David Lloyd-George, chancellor of the exchequer of Great Britain, delivered at Cardiff to a non-sectarian and non-political audience of 1,500, representing all the churches of Wales: "I assure you that I am not here today to advance the cause of any party. I am not here to put in a plea, direct or indirect, for any political program. I am here rather to help to rouse a spirit that will compel every party in its turn to deal with these social evils, and that it seems to me to be the great sphere of influence of the churches not to support 'particular parties, not to advocate particular measures of reform, but to create an atmosphere in which it will be impossible for anybody to remain a ruler of the realm unless he deals with these social problems. "Our foreign policy is outside party influence because it involves our national honor. So do slums. So do public houses. After all, it is as deep a stain upon the national flag that it folds should wave over slum-bred and half-starved children, our ill-paid, ill-fed, ill-housed working men and women as if it were to wave over defeat in a stricken field. "The first thing we have got to do is to create a temper, a spirit, an atmosphere, that will compel men of all parties to deal with these problems, which ever party is in power for the time being. "Poverty is not the fault of providence, which provides abundance. Poverty, misery, wretchedness, do not exist in the land because the land is sterile and bare and does not provide enough for all. There are millions of men, women and children in this, the richest country in the world, who, through no fault of their own, go through life sodden in poverty, wretchedness and despair. "Again, the area of poverty fluctuates without any fault of the people who endure it. My proposition is this: That there are multitudes who live a life of wretchedness, misery and despair partly through the fault of their surroundings. "You cannot deal with a problem of this magnitude by mere spasmodic appeals to the charity of the benevolent. That is hopelessly inadequate as a remedy. You might as well try to run the army and navy by voluntary subscriptions. "In the same way you cannot get rid of poverty, wretchedness and bad housing by mere appeals of that character. The community as a community will have to deal with them with the whole of their might. It is the community that alone can command the resources to drain the morass of wretchedness so as to convert into a verdant and fertile plain. "What is the function of the church in reference to social evils? The function of the church is not to engage in party brawls. It is not to urge or to advocate any specific measures. It is to create an atmosphere in which the rulers of this country, whether in the legislature or the municipalities, not only can engage in reforming these dire evils, but in which it will be impossible for them not to do so. "How? First, by rousing the national conscience to a knowledge of the existence of these evils, and afterward to a sense of its responsibilities for dealing with them. The second way is by inculcating the necessary spirit of self-sacrifice without which it is impossible for any man, or for any nation, to deal with gigantic problems of this kind. The churches must insist on the truth being known and on the truth being told about these social wrongs. "Let us get to the real, terrible, human, living facts writhing and seething below. Let us tear from this pit of wretchedness its flimsy covering of phrases so as to reveal that mass of human agony. With the help and sympathy of those able to help, let us say it is the business of the churches to insist upon the facts being known, upon every man realizing his own responsibility, upon every man realizing that he has got to sacrifice in order to help. "You cannot touch any evil in this country without finding that there are interests that have struck their roots deep into it, and are flourishing even upon its very putrescence. Attack it, and you bring upon yourself not unpopularity that is not what you have to face. You have to face a very hailstorm of abuse, -insult, calumny. Help the men who are fighting. "The church cannot stand by with folded, pleated hands while millions are in despair. The church certainly cannot say, 'Am I my broth, er's keeper?'" Philadelphia North American.
"THIS DATE
JANUARY 18TH. 1641 Marquis de Louvois, the great war minister of Louis XIV., born. Died July 16, 1691. 16S9 Baron de Montesquieu, famous French author and scientist, born. Died Feb. 10. 1755. 1797 Weekly mall service established between the United States and Canada. 1802 Town of Detroit (Michigan) incorporated. 1812 Amos S. Blake, constructor of the first locomotive ever seen in New England, born in Brookfield. Vt. Died Feb. IS, 1S95. 1871 German Empire proclaimed. 1S73 Lord Edward Bulwer Lytton, English novelist and playwright, died. Born May 25, 1S03. 1900 Statue of Daniel Webster unveiled in Washington. 1911 Henry Cabot Lodge re-elected United States senator from Massachusetts.
What is Castoria C ASTORIA is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing- Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it bas been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 90 years, has borne the signature of Cbaa.H.Fletcher, and has been made under bis personal supervision since its infancy. ADow no one to deceive you in this.
au uounxensKS, imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that
un wiui aum wuaugvf U1C DCWUl JX InfnTUff BUJU Children Experience against Experiment. Genuine Caetoria always bean the signature of
iN HISTORY '
How Fares the Poultry During These Frosty Days and Nights
BY ISAAC L. TOTTEN. The recent zero weather was not very conducive to the health of those fowls that roost in the shade of a whip on a binder reel in a wind-swept tool shed. It surely does effect their laying propensities. Most chickens that are housed in the above manner do a greater portion of their laying on their backs when the thermometer mercurv roosts on lrch No. 15.' Of course, there isn't any one in this community that could possibly be so nearness as to let their poultry or oth-r-r farm animals ahircr r-. ... in the fury of the breeze while they sit bv the fire tnaatlnff tliol, ,.K A - . j y. L t.., ouius auu studying their Sunday school lessons. For some reason though, many farm-1
ers reported that thv hart u..rai.flani air sav our dairymen, but will
chickens frozen on that cold Sunday ! morning Nov. 12; but, of course, no one would ever think of having such cold weather at that early date That early warning, no doubt, canstd every poultry raiser to get busy and : i-iu,iuj tomioriaDie quarters ror tne, ra m a i r i n r rr rtl-r KA rit. ! guently we do not look for any reports ' now of poultry being frozen because of I the lack of comfortable housing. ! All of us, however, are not agreed ' on that subject of "what is meant by
comfortable housing." j tan be housed properly. AVe have Maybe all of us are right, who found this out to our own loss, knows? j Our laying hens and pullets are proIt is quite strange, though, that one vided with fairly good quarters which neighbor's hens are laying well while ' are provided with a scratching place another neighbor's hens are not laying j covered with a layer of straw so that at all. I they can exercise by scratching for Perhaps this may be due to the kind : the grain with which they are providof poultry, or the strain, or the careied; but we have another lot of late
and not to the housing perhaps, a sain. This subject, nevertheless, like Mark Twain's rat hole, will bear looking into. If the hens are not laying as well as they should and the fault is found to be in the kind of class, or in a certain strain, it would be a good idea to keep in mind the fact that there will be a right classy poultry show at the K. of P. temple, Richmond, Ind., Jan. 24, 25. 26 and 27. At this show one should be able to find something that would suit as far as class, kind and strain goes, at least. If the hens are not laying and the fault is due to the lack of proper care and feeding, then of course, that is something else again. There are several good rations sugFeeted for the laying hens, and some of us will no doubt have the best success with one kind of ration, while others will get the best results from another ration. Our affable instructor at the corn school last year, Otis Crane, said the following in regard to feeding poultry for egg production: "To properly feed poultry, it is necessary to understand something about the composition of foods and the amount required for different,, purposes. "There are two important elements in our common foods to be considered; protein and carbohydrates. Protein is required in the formation of lean meat, white of eegs, feathers, nails, et 'cetera, while carbohydrates are used to keep up the required heat, supply energy.) form fat and make the yolk of the egg. "By experiment it has been shown that a food suited for egg production rbould have a nutritive ratio of about 1 of protein to 4.5 of carbohydrates." In as much as corn has a nutritive ratio of 1 of protein to 9.6 of carbohydrates it will be seen that when it is fed alone it is too fattening. To balance the ration it will be necessary to feed something that is rich in protein beef scraps, fresh cut bones, skimmed milk any of these will help wonderfully. Perhaps the best advice that can be given in connection with the care of hens to make them lay during the winter season is to say that the best results will be obtained when we duplicate as near as possible, the summer time conditions.
Fresh water, not ice cold; meat scraps, skimmed milk and vegetables to provide the elements which the hens get from the green vegetation and bugs et cetera during the summer; quarters where they can scratch and exercise and feel comfortable on the shivery days and nights.
As to comfortable housing for poul try it is our idea that they should re-
teive just as much consideration as j hft-v chickens to their houses, feome our horses, our cattle and our sheep w?re sitting on the fence Vith their and hogs, if not more ' beads tucked under their wings, others Horses are better off. so it is claim-jw" 8ittin iS" ed. for abuihiant air, and in cool or al- tered corners of the building and oth- . ' f , ,.,.' rt lers were out behind the barn afraid to
c-uch, that however, even the that we like to feel horses are comforta- . i . ! Cows Riving milk also need abunnot endure cold well or as low temperutures as make horses thrive. Sheep, so it is said, and the saying seems reasonable, are better to have a very &reat flood of fresl air. They do not mind the co,d at a11ruuiuj-, uae an omer animals, reriliirA freh aii Kn ..n
yet been known to grow a coat oftl leam that th V nitd StateS trea8 wool, and cannot stand as much cold j ury dPartment only introduced double as sheep d and still thrive. ' entry bookkeeping in the conduct of its never did and it never will pay affairs within the last four years.
to winter over more poultry than what '
I Am Willing To Prove I Can Cure You To That End I Am Giving Away $10,000 Worth of Medicine
In order to show beyond all doubt that I am in possession of a medicine that will cure kidney trouble, bladder trouble or rheumatism, I will this year give away ten thousand dollars' worth of this medicine, and anyone suffering from these diseases can get a box of it absolutely free. All that is necessa.y is to send me your address. I don't mean that you are to use s part of it or all of it and pay me if cured. 1 mean that I will send you a box of this medicine absolutely free of charge, a gift from me to the Uric Acid sufferers of the world, so I can show them where and how they may be cured. I will not expect payment for this free medicine, nor would 1 accept it now or later if you sent it. It is free in the real meaning ot the word. For twenty-fire years a quarter of a cen tury I have been trying to convince the pub lic that I have something genuine, something better than others have Tor the sure of stub born, chronic rheumatism, for torturinar kid ney backache, for annoying calls to urinateBut it is hard to convince people they try a few things unsuccessfully and give up all hope and refuse to listen to anyone thereafter. Happily, I am in a position now to demonstrate to sufferers at my own expense that I have a medicine that cures these diseases. I don't ask them to spend any money to find out; I don't ask them to believe me, nor even to take the word of reliable people, but all I ask is that they allow me to send them the medicine at my own cost. That is surely fair. To this end I have set aside ten thousand dollars, which will be used to compound my medicine. Much of it is ready now to be sent out, all of it fresh and standard. There wil', be enough for all sufferers, though there bo thousands of them. And anyone who jetds it can get some of it free. But in order that I shall know that you have a disease for which this medicine is intended, I ask you to send me some of your Isading symptoms. If you have any of the symptoms in the list printed here you need my medicine and if you will write me I will gladly send you a box of it free with full directions for your use. Look the symptoms over, see which symptoms you have, then write me about as follows: "Dear Dr., I notice symptoms number" here put down the numbers, give your age, full address, and send it to me. My address is Dr. T. Frank Lynott, 5042 Occidental Bldg., Chicago, 111. The ten thousand dollars I am spending for the compounding of my medicine is only a part of the money I am devoting to this cause, for the package of medicine I send you . will be fully prepaid at my expense. From any standpoint you view it, YOU incur no expense or obligation. Just tell others who you know are suffering who sent you the medicine that cured you. I am promising to give away ten thousand dollars' worth of medicine, and I will do that; I am promising to send any sufferer who writes me s box of this medicine and full directions free of charge, and I will do that. Snow and
Cold
Rain and
Slush
is the usual weather for January, February arid March. You will need good shoes and heavy, warm rubbers for genera! wear and out of door work, or light rubbers to wear over your dress, shoes. We carry a very complete line of all kinds and styles of Rubber Footwear for all .kinds of service. We have also received a large shipment Of Men's and Women's Dress Shoes in Tan and Gun Metal for the winter and early spring trade. New Lasts and Patterns. Anything in Footwear you will find at our store.
Neff & Nysbauoim
batched tall chickens that we are compelled to keep shut up in close quarters during this snappy weather, and they are not paying for the food let alone the care. Raising poultry demands considerable attention, and some times we get considerably vexed. If there is any animal that hasn't one bit of sense, it is a chicken out in the cold. We speak of people being
crazy with the heat or of going bugs! from the cold, and this latter can sureI ly be applied to the poultry family. I That first cold night. th writer was compelled to drive and carry about brave thecutting wind and go to their Quarters. Fiattsned Out. Heriwayte I thought of a very funny joke in my sleep last night, but when I woke up somehow it was aa flat as a pancake. Lltewayte No wonder. I suppose yon slept on It. Business men have been surprised ' ' REST AND HEALTH TO MOTKEt AXD CHILD. Mas. WimsloW Soothiso SYaor lias been wd lot over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS ol MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. U SOOTHES the CHILD. SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN ; CURES WIND COLIC, and U the best remedy for DIARRHCEA. It is ab. soluteW hsrmles. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing 8yTup." and take mo otacc kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle. DR. T. FRANK LYNOTT wfco issavtwsy $10jaO0wertbsi!ssssllss. I can say further that this medicine has been vouched for according to law as complying in every detail with all requirements. It will stop rheumatism, it will atop pain and backache, it will stop too frequent desire to urinate; it will heal, soothe and strengthen. You will be better in every way for having taken it. There is not an ingredient that can injure; not one but will benefit.' All that I ask is that you use it yourself so that you may be personally convinced. Owing to the large number of requests, I have had ten thousand more copies of my medical book printed. This book is new and up to date ana contains complete descriptions, symptoms, causes, effects ana cures of kidney, bladder and rheumatic diseases. All who write for the free medicine will be sent a eonv of this grand illustrated medical book the largest ever written on these diseases for free and general distribution. If vou need medicine such as I have, if you are anxious to be cured and don't want to spend any money LOOKING for cures, write me. Read the symptoms over and let me hear from you today. These Are the Symphisis: 1- Pala In Ch back. 2 - Too rraqurat destow to wrteato. 3- Burning nr 4AmtrmAm n airistA. run or orcnesau 8 Prostatic tronblc. S-Oaa or aln In uw t 7-CncnIdchUltf.m S Pain or Mini riihi 4k 9 SwelHBg- In any part of tho body, I O-Conatfnatton r liver troabta. 1 1 raipitation or pain ni IS Pain In tba blp Joint. 13 Pain la Ik bmK or a. 1 Pain or tommt In tha kfdneyn. or swat una Of vna Mini 16-Paln a awatMng at tba snneeta 1 T Pain and aoraaaai la awtia 1 8 Acuta or csuwatc iTisiiinallsm
f 9
o Y M v) ' ill I ' S I f mO A IU f WP
How's This? We offer Ona Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cared by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY, V CO, Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in alibusiness transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm.
NATIONAL. BANK OF COMMERCE. Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood r.nd mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price "Scents ler bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti pation. MASONIC CALENDAR Friday, Jan. 19. King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. Called Convocation. Work in Mark Master degree. Saturday. Jan. 20 Loyal Chapter. No. 49, O. E. S. Stated meeticg. Cuba imports most of its stone from Canada. Political Announcements REPRESENTATIVE. LEE J. REYNOLDS, or Wayne County, Candidate for Representative, subject to the Republican nomination. PROSECUTING ATTORNEY WILL W. RELLER, Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. RALPH H. HUSSON. Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. DENVER C. HARLAN, Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. GUS HOELSCHER. Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject to the Republican Nomination. GATH FREEMAN, Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, subject tc the Republican Nomination. COUNTY TREASURER. DANIEL B. MEDEARIS, Center Township, Candidate for County Treasurer, subject to the Republican Nomination. NIMROD H. JOHNSON, Wayne Township, Candidate for County Treasurer, subject to Republican Nomination. THOMAS I. AHL. of Wayne Township. Candidate for Treasurer of Wayne rVuintir anhlanr n I ha PannMiMS nomination, HOMER SCHEPMAN, ot Wayne Twp., Candidate for County Treasurer, Subject to the Republican nomination. . , FRANK B. JENKINSON, of Boston Township, Candidate for County Treasurer, subject to the Republican Nomination. MONT TORRENCE, Candidate for County Treasurer, subject to Republican Nomination. COUNTY RECORDER. JOHN DARNELL, Candidate for Coun ty Recorder, subject to the Republican Nomination.. JOHN Cj KING, Candidate for County Recorder, subject to Republican nomination. BENJ. F. PARSONS, Candidate for County Recorder, subject to the Republican Nomination. COUNTY COMMISSIONER. THEO P. CRIST, Western District. Candidate for County Commissioner, subject to the Republican Nomination. J. F. GROVES, Candidate for Commissioner of Wayne County, (Western District), subject to Republican Nomination. ELLAS M. HOOVER, Western pu trict, Candidate for County Com missioner, subject to the Republican Nomination. HOMER FARLOW, Eastern District. Candidate for re-election, subject to the Republican Nomination. SHERIFF. ALBERT B. STEEN. Candidate for reelection for County Sheriff, subject to the Republican Nomination. Special Price on CANDIDATE CARDS HOWELLS PRINT HOP . 4 15 So. 11th St. Phone 10M 4 We Carry the Union Label If You Lack The Ready Money To clean up your little ' outstanding bills and start the New Year with but one place to pay, come to us; we will loan, you what amount you may need and you can pay us back in small weekly .or monthly payments to suit your income. All transactions strict ly confidential, CalL write or "phone and we will give your wants our immediate attention. .'" TUxz 25SO.
Take Etefatsr tt Hiti Fter
."1 K 1i r paiaiaan ihWag J'nTnn lWi M-Blsjlnlnmi . .
