Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 347, 27 December 1921 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, DEC. 27, 1321.
Notable amonz the holidav funntinna
is the dance which Mr. and Mrs. Charges McGuire and their sons, Whitney McGuire and Scott McGuire, are fdvinp; at the KJchmond .Country club Tuesday evening. 1 Invitations, have been issued by the Knights of Columbus for their annual New Year's dance which will be given Monday evening, Jan. 2. at St. Mary'3 Community House. Dancing will commence at 9 o'clock. The committee in charge is composed of the following persons: Albeit Nolan, Harry Frame, Walter Cronin, Walter Boyce, Albert Caskey, and Bartley Gordon. The fifth annual reception and ball of the T. P. A. will be given at the ; Knights of Pythias temple Wednesday evening. The Harry Frankel entertainers will play for the dancing. Thirty men compose the reception and dance committees for the affair. The Thi Delta Kappa fraternity is to be host for one of the largest holiday functions of the week when it entertains Wednesday evening at Community hall. Dancing will be followed by a banquet from 10:30 until 12 r o'clock when there will be dancing 'until 1:30 o'clock. The party is exclusively for fraternity members. The Joe Kayser orchestra of New York city, makes its first, bow to local dancers Thursday of this week
when it plays for the Christmas-New Year dance Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp are giving at the Pythian temple. Dancing will commence promptly at 8:30 o'clock and ends at 12:30 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp will entertain with a dancing party at the I. O. O. F. hall Friday evening for memO. F. hall Friday evening for members of the Friday evening class. Guests will be members of the first term class and those who are going to attend the second term class. The Harry Frankel Entertainers will play. Dancing will commence at 7:30
o'clock. There will be no assembly after the party. The gallery will be open to parents and friends of the class members. j 'A dancing party for members of their children's class which meets Saturday afternoons will be given next Saturday at 2:30 o'clock In the I. O. O. F. hall by Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp. Members of the first term class and those who are to be members of the second term class will be the guests. The party will start the work of the second term. A card party will be given at the Moose club Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. The public Is invited. The Y. M. I. is giving a Christmas dance Thursday evening at its club on South Fifth street. Dancing will commence at 8:30 o'clock. There will be special music. Reservatians for the cabaret dinner dance which will be given at the Elks club npxt Sunday evening must be made with It. E. Heun no later than Thursday of this week, it is announced. Day Nursery children will be guests at a Christmas party to be given from 3 until 5 o'clock. Wednesday afternoon at the Nursery. Children who have attended the Nursery the past year and their mothers are invited. Pupils of Miss Elizabeth Kolp will give some fancy dances . and Miss Georgianna Doan will play some violin selections. Mrs. Fred J. Girty will tell a Christmas stnry. Gifts from Santa Claus will be distributed to the children later. Miss Elizabeth Williams and Miss Sarah Williams, of 215 North Sixth ftreet, will receive from 2:30 until 6 o'clock Wednesday afternoon for Miss v
, . J
Alice Locke, of New York city, formerly art supervisor in the schools here. No Invitations have been ' issued. All friends of Miss Locke and of the Misses Williams are invited to call. Dr. and Mrs. Rogers Smith and son, Rogers, Jr., of Hot Springs, Ark., returned home Tuesday after visiting Mr. Smith's parents, Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Smith, of Easthaven. Mrs. W. E. Bell and Miss Constance Bell, of South Nineteenth street, are the holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Scott McDonald and family, of Huntington, W. Ya. Willard Z. Carr and son, Jimmie, who were Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Carr, of Westcott O., to join Mrs. Carr, who i3 visiting
ber parents. Mr. and Mrs. George Brownell, before returning home. Robert Tilton. of Hoopestown, 111., is spending the holidays here with his family at their home. 225 North Twelfth street. Dr. Albert Feeger, of Elkhart, left Tuesday, for Dayton, O., and Chicago after spending Christinas with relatives and friends in this city. Miss Dorothy Cook returned Saturday from Indianapolis where she has been the guests for several months of Mr. and Mrs. James Morris and Mr.
' ereen shaded liehts above the dance
floor studded a canopy of wires spun
ith cotton and hung with 'ellver
i icicles. The Steiner Six of Indiana
university, one of the most popular college dance orchestras in the middle west, who played the order of dances,, scored a great success In their premiere here. Over 200 couples were on the floor during the evening. Among those present were: Miss Gertrude Eggleston, Miss Blanche Norris, Miss Lucile Weller, Miss Doris Puckett, Miss Catherine Binkley, Miss Josephine Hiatt, Miss Wilma Sudhoff, Miss Virginia Livingstone, Miss Helen Ber-tlage, Miss Dorothy Lebo. Miss Esther Reid, Miss Mildred Whiteley. Miss Madge Kitchin. Miss Gertrude Williams, Miss Esther Fouts, Miss Helen McWhinney, Miss Miriam Jordan, Miss Helen Jessup, Miss Ogen Shelton. Miss Neva Bowman, Miss Madge Townsend. Miss Clara Myrlcfc, Miss Helen Hazeltine, Miss Esther Coyle, Miss Betty Brown, Miss Sarah Jessup, Miss Betty Saxon, Miss Ruth Harrington, Miss Dorothy Korves, Miss Miriam Jordan, Miss Eliabeth Kolp, Miss Louise Spaulding, Miss Juanita Mcdeland, Miss Janice Meredith, Miss Martha Plummer, Miss Esther Bosworth, Miss Margaret Hiatt, Miss Marianne Swaynie, Miss Alice
Starr, Miss Betty Coate, Miss Esther
Reid, Miss Edra Johnston, Miss Erailine Land, Miss Helen Eggemeyer,
Miss Ruth Ferguson, Miss Eetty Mor
gan, Miss Thelma Bymaster, Miss Marie O'Brien, Miss Mildred Jenkinson, Miss Margaret Shinn, Miss Ellen McCarthy, Miss Juliet Nusbaum, Miss Margaret Calvelage, Miss Edith Ha-
worth. Miss Helen Sackman, Miss
Mary Lahrman, Miss Kathryn Bartel,
Miss Alice Gennett, Miss Helen Rust,
Miss Katherine Carr, Miss Mary M'j-
Kee, Miss Lucille Loufborrow, Miss
and Mrs. Harry Newton nee Loriene Pauiine wessel, Miss Bernice Urton,
lams, Carl Amick, Bart Hagemeyer and Clifford Hagemeyer, of Cincinnati, Ralph Motley, Thomas Sehumaker, Herbert Gross, Harold Mueller, John
Bond, Robert Tomlinson, Peter Lachtenf els, William Jenkinson, George
Fee, Glen Weist, William Watts,
George Tarkelson, Everett Phillips,
Barnet Brown, Eugene Messick, Rob
ert Saxton, of Chicago.
Sheldon Simmons, John Kelley, Russell L. Jenkins, Earl Taurer, Mark Golden, Samuel Kolp, Jesse Haberstadt, Peter McMahan, Wayne Hill, Edmund Sudhoff, Robert Watt, William Marshall, Keifer Calkins, William Winchester, John Highley, John Fitz-
patriek, Paul Fouts, Allan Campbell,
tricia Louise, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jay, Nancy Jay, Palmer Jay, William Jay and Richard Jay, Mr. and Mrs. Frank O. Chambers, Frank Chambers, Jr., Harry Chambers, Miss Irene Mather, Miss Naomi Mather, Ernest Mather, Earl Mather, J-Iiss Martha ' Horney, Mrs. Emily Hunt, Miss Eliabeth Allen, Miss Bertha Kelsey, Mr. and Mrs. Mather Kelsey, Richard Kelsey and Robert Kelsey, Miss Stella Kelsey, Mr. and Mrs. Wavland Kelsey, Mrs. Jennie Jay, Miss Elizabeth Jay, Miss May Jay. Miss Jennie $baugh, Mi3a Fannie Ibaugh, Mrs. Henry Mather and Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Girty. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wise, north of the city, was the home
of a pretty Christmas function when
rtES::V entertained Sunday for the fol
Cummins. She was accompanied
home by Miss Ruth Graves of Columbus Ind. ! Mr. and Mrs. Huston R. Mailatt,
are the parents of a son. born the
morning or v.uriMiuas uaj ii unu Memorial hospital. Mrs. Marlatt before her marriage was Miss Ixiuise Malsby. Mrs. O. A. Crisler, of 'the Vista apartments, had as her Christmas guests her sister, Mrs. William Coffman, and little daughters, Freda and Mary Katherine, of Peru. They will remain over the holidays. Miss Louise Marshall, of North Ninth street, has returned from Oxford, O , where she was the Christmas guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marshall. Mr. and Mrs. John Clements, of Thirteenth street are the parents of a daughter, born Monday. Wiley Glass, of Chicago, who has been visiting his mother, Mrs. Frank Glass, of East Main street, has gone to Huntington, W. Ya., to spend a few days. Mr. and Mrs. John McManus and daughter are spending the holidays in Indianapolis the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George J. McManus of that place. Phillip L. Dunn, of Wellsville, O., has returned home after spending Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Quigley, of this city. Tirzah club members will hold an all day meeting at the hall Wednesday
commencing at 10:30 o'clock in thej
morning. Election or omcers win De hold during the meeting. All members of the club are urged to be present. Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Brubaker and Dr. and Mrs. G. E. Ferling spent Sun
day and Monday in Dayton, O., the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lang. One of the most brilliant affairs to take place this holiday season was the Christmas dance given for members of the younger set Monday evening in the ballroom of the I. O. O. F. hall by the Orriis Melas. Gorgeous decorations, from which hung glittering, scintillant tinsel f-treamers, converted the ballroom into a wonderful Christmas setting for the function. Red and
Miss Marguerite Cox, Miss Louise
Roberts, Miss Vera Pfaflin. Miss
Ruth Simmon?, Miss Florence Wilson, Miss Frances Sheppard, Miss Ethel Tillman, Miss Doris Groan. Miss Reba Townsend, Miss Rhea Crandall, Miss Eliabeth Marshall, Miss- Frances Gault, Miss Pauline Marshall, Miss Reba Boggs, Miss Alice Lemon, Miss Maude Reber, Miss Helen Robinson, Miss Eliabeth Bates, Miss Dorothy Rees. Miss Ida Spears, Miss Helen
Dunn, Forest Gartside, Thornton
Brehm, Harold Sinex, Howard Deit-j rich, Marion Lahrman, Kepler Bowman, Roy Hawekotte, Clarence Taylor, Keith Crum, David Rost, Cecil Cureton, William Clendenin, Fred Clark. Varley Young, Andrew Maag, Francis Robinson, Benjamin Ahl, Arthur Johanning, James Wentz, Irving Kelsey, Reid Jordan, Harlowe Aiken, Roland Osborne, Earl Keisker, Jake Turner, Robert Crowell, Byron Wettig, Wilbur Hippard of Chicago, Mark Heitbrink, Lester Asbury, Dr. Herbert Thompson, Dr. Albert Feeger, of Elkhart, Mr. and Mrs. Horatio Nelson Land, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Preston Grimes, Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Clem Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Crichet, Mr. and Mis. Bert Kolp, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Vaughn Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Smith and Dr. and Mrs. Earl Zinkan of Columbus, O. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mendenhall entertained with a Christmas dinner at their home, 431 South Fourteenth street, Sunday. The guests were: Mrs. H. C. Larsh and daughter, Mayme of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Ray G. Weeks and daughters, Marion and Jane Ann, Mrs. G. A. Mendenhall and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mendenhall and son, Eobbie. Mr. and Mrs. William Ballard. Sr.. of north of Straughn, were host and hostess for a family dinner Christmas day. Guests lor whom covers were laid included: Mr. and Mrs. Claude Wright and daughter of New Lisbon,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Gauker and two
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bal
Clark, Miss Evelyn Lllom, Miss Mar-,lard anJ daughter of near New Lisbon, garet Coe. Miss Harriet Lllis, MuJS.Mn and Mrg John Hi?gins of near Ix)is Ward, Miss Mane Faulkner, Miss r i m M d M Harrison
Juliet bwayne, iUlfah miu oiiuiuiu, ; Hnnv.r ml d-AmrhlPr ami son. nf npar
Miss Emily iianey, miss neien oit-iu- New Ljsbon. Mr. and Mrs. Olen Hig
brink. Miss jane uarpeme.. miB gi of Rit.nnlond and Mr. and Mrs.i
Louise Colvin, Miss tieien jiarvey, villi
lowing guests: Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Roller and daughter, Betty, ot ureens
Fork, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Petty, Mr.
and Mrs. Monroe Sheery and Mrs.
Huffman of Hagerstown.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Osborn enter
tained with a dinner party at their, suburban home south of the city on! Christmas day. A large bowl of fruit formed the centerpiece of the table at either end of which were baskets of
sweet reas and narcissus. A threecourse dinner was served after which the afternoon was spent with games and music. Persons for whom covers were laid at dinner included: Mrs. Martha Jane Osborn, Mrs. Maggie H. Miller, Harry G. Miller, Mr. and Mr3. Fred B. McClure, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Osborn, Mr. and Mrs. William L. Seaney, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Osborn, Miss Lucile Seaney, Miss Florence McClure, Master Ralph McClure, Roland Osborn. Harold Osborn, Robert Osborn and little Martha Jane Osborn. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Mullin gave a Christmas dinner party Sunday at their country home northeast of Richmond. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Allen Levering, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mullin, of New Paris, O., Mr. and Mrs. Frank Walley and children, Madge and Paul, Miss Jewell Clampitt, of Richmond. Howard Mullin, Harold Mullin, Miss Agnes Mullin and Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Mullin. Mr. and Mrs. Orlie Showalter and W. V. Young entertained with a Christ
mas dinner Sunday at their home on the National road west. The guests were: C. V. Young, of Arcanum, O.; Mr. and Mrs. L. Reynolds, Miss Hazel Showalter and Miss Emma Showalter, of Fountain City. The Sweet Sixteen Euchre club will
be entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Ed
ward Ball at their home on North Fifth street Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lashley will be host and hostess to the H. S. Euchre club Tuesday evening at their home southwest of Boston. The affair, though the regular meeting of the club will be in the nature of a Christmas party. The U. C. T. club will meet with Mrs. Fred Cain at her home, 1520 North A street, Friday afternoon. The Penny club will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Corlista Carrington at her home, SO North First street. No meeting of the Alice Carey club will be held, Dec. 29, as announced
in the year book. The meeting is to!
De ommea.- The next regular meeting of the club will be held Jan. 12, with Mrs. Walters as announced in the year book. The Home and Foreign missionary
society of the Second Presbyterian church will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Morris, at her home
2310 North D street. Mrs. H. J. Sar-; kiss, will have charge of the mission! study and Mrs. Addington of the de-1 votional. Mrs. Verlin Ballinger will entertain with a supper party Wednesday even-! ing for members of the Young Women's missionary society of the Reid! Memorial church.
Mrs. Gus Sudhoff, of Kinsey street;
MILK is a Food Himes Bros. Dairy Phone 1850
will be hostess to the B. B. B. thimble club, Wednesday afternoon. The Lawton cluD will meet with Mrs. Albert Kennepohl. at her home on South Sixth street, Wednesday afternoon. The Women's Relief corps will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Emma Ranks, 410 North Seventeenth street, to attend the funeral of Mrs. George Irwin, .it 411 North Seventeenth street. The Women's Missionary society of Reid Memorial church, will meet Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the church. The Women's Missionary society of the First Presbyterian church, will meet in the church parlors Wednesday afternoon, at 2:30 o'clock. Mrs. Paul Ross will give a talk on Japan and Korea. Mrs. Stephen C. Markley will have for her subject "The Problem (Continued on Page Twelve.)
Ira
GIFTS THAT LAST
Elgin Watches
Miss Loraine Shute. Miss Mary Reinhart. Miss Mary Louise Bates, Miss Helen Rees, Miss Rhea Pyle, Miss Lona Weist, Miss Gladys Longnecker, Miss Elizabeth Bell, Miss Martha Jones, Miss Elizabeth Pettibone, Miss Edith Lewis, Miss Mildred Shideler, Miss Edith Decker, Miss Mary Collins, Miss Mary Eyden, Miss Martha Smith, Miss Martha Holcomb, Miss Luella Marston, Miss Janet Seek-
After dinner
William Ballard, Sr.
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Raeburn Kenley and daughter, of near Straughn. Dr. and Mrs. Melville F. Johnson, of North Tenth street, entertained with
a continental breakfast party Sunday j
morning for the following guests: Mrs. Caroline Miles Hill, of Chicago, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Bond, Miss Florence Bond, Mr. McFarland, Miss Emma Bond and Donald Johnston of New
BUCKEYE MAZDA LAMPS The Way to Better Light Crane Electric Co.
10-12 N. 5th St.
Phone 10S1
er, Miss Vivian Harding, Miss Annal1""1 t-'L'' Dallas, Miss Clara Daub. Miss Laurene I Mrs. Hanry Mather and Mr. and Jenks, Miss Cathryn Williams. Miss! Mrs. Fred J. Girty entertained with a Maxine Noblett, Miss Georgia Healy,! family dinner at their home on South M.nrarp; ATrT.f.land. Miss RonHa ! Fourteenth street Christmas day. Dec-
n..i, mu Loraine Lnnff. Miss orations through the rooms for the
occasion were ntJtij, puuibfiiiua, auu mistletoe. The guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mather, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde N. Remler and daughter, Pa-
Phone 1330,
r.
I'D
Alice Smith, Miss Okal Mather, Miss
Juno Robinson, Miss Marjorie Gen
nett, George Krueger, Ronald Cox, Thomas Noland. Dr. E. A. Wysong,
Conrad Ottenfeld, Omer Monger, Don
ald Cutler, Mat Mercurio.
Gurney Mann, Willard Morgan, John;!
Lemon, Frank Crowe, Dr. A. W. Smith,
of Chicago, Roland Englebert, James
Sackman, Paul Loos, Thomas Bell, El-
win Hoemer, George Weaver, Roy Johnson, Dr. J. J. Grosvenor, Frank
Bescher, Fred McClure, Charles Rocinson, John Livingstone, John Jones,
ral Thnmns Knrl Cnrr Mnrn Justice I
Earl Wessel, Jack Miller, Hampton j I We Treat All Conditions off Stidham, Harold Norris, Ross Harring- the Skin, Hair and Scalp ton, Marston Hodgin, Griffing Jay, Tal- j I 1 bert Jessup, George Cummins. Mark J Approved Mariltello SllOD I Kennedy. James Quigley, Harold Good- , ,. . enough, Howard McManus, Fred I Phon 5234' Suite 203 p- D!d3-
Swisher, Loring McFail, William Will- I n iutiM fitfimiiittiiniiiiiniiiiHiiiiMKiiiin itnwtiinntn nn i u 1 1 11 utui hB i
Radiator and Hood Covers BETHARD AUTO CO. 1117 Main St.
: BREAD :
-,f-The New Delicious Loaf at an; ! i , groceries. ; I RICHMOND BAKING COMPANY! 710 Main j .i i ii i mi.
fttmmmimiiimiimHiimmiiMHUiiimnmMiiHmmmmtimmmmiTirmim"
Buy Your Furniture Here
cI)umn
Backward
Bilious Headache Made Her Almost Crazy Tuesday Health Talk No. 47 By G. C. Wilcoxen, D. C. When the doctor arrived this woman, a refined type given to much mental activity, was pounding her head against the wall. To be sure the pounding was not vicious enough to be injurious, but the jar was all that interrupted the increasing pa n and nausea.
In this case the headache was due to the stomach condition. The liver was also inactive. Chiropractic spinal adjustments afforded some measure of immediate relief, enough to enable her to Bleep, but it took a long series of adjustments to restore the stomach and liver, place spinal nerve openings to normal and thus make normal health of these organs possible. In other cases of headache the chiropractor is quite often able to stop the pain in one adjustment.
17 South Seventh St.
mmsmmm
fillJiiShltiiiOtii'JIiilllH.iiluiiUtii;!: tinli
Opportenit
W of a
Come in! You are invited to look around at this great sale of
Jilli
00 Worth' of
rade Furs
G
in drummers' samples from the Rosenberg & Co., N. Y., must be sacrificed at once and will be sold at less than one-third of their value. Consisting of Hudson Seal, Mink and Mole Coats and Wraps; Capes, Stoles and Scarf Sets of various furs. These samples are up to the minute in style and workmanship, and were carried by the Rosenberg Company's representatives and sold to the high-class trade in the larger cities for the present season.
R'S
SAM
I j PLES
rii
D1UMM.
You Buy What You See The reason for this sacrifice is to avoid the high cost of taking these goods back to headquarters. Don't wait until it is too late. If you are ever in the market for a real nice set of Furs orFur Coat. NOW IS the TIME TO MAKE YOUR PURCHASES. Will Be Here Tomorrow and Thursday! December 28 and 29. Come early and secure a bargain. No orders taken. All Furs guaranteed by the Rosenberg Company.
Headaches and Indigestion Gone "Being troubled with headaches, indigestion and inTiammatory rheumatism, all of which prescriptions failed to relieve, I finally turned to chiropractic. In two weeks I was normal and able to return to work. I continued adjustments for some time longer and now, thanks to the friend who advised chiropractic, I am well and. able to work without interruption." A. W. Carter, Chiropractic Research Bureau, Statement No. 1253P. ACT TODAY Why delay Chiropractic removes the cause of your disease. Also Sulphur Vapor Baths for Ladies and Gentlemen "In Business for Your Health" Chiropractors G, C. WILCOXEN, D. C. C. H. GROCE, D. C, Asst. EMMA E. LAMSON, Nurse Phone 1603; Residence Phone 1810. Richmond, 1220 Main St. Hours 8:30 to 10:30 a. m.; 1 to 4; 6 to 7 p. m., and by appointment.
HEALTH FOLLOWS
CHIROPRACTIC CORRECTS
PRESSURE ON SPINAL
NERVES IN DISEASES OF THE FOLLOWING ORGANS:
rHEAD
.EYES
EARS: NOSE
; THROAT, -ARMS - HEART LUNGS LIVER vVV STOMACH
VAV PANCREAS
Y-.V SPLEEN i W KinUFVC
Pf BOWELS f WxV APPENDIX I YN BLADDER ! Spinal eCoIunLOWER LIMBS
The lower nerve underthe magnifying class is pinched by a misalign ed joint, pinched nerves cannot transmit healthful impulses. chiroprac ticadjusting removes the pressure, the upper nerve is FREE AS NATURE INTENDS. ,
FREE NERVES HEALTH VIGOR VITALITY
Make Work Easier for Her This Year
OHE keeps the home fires burning till hubby comes home ! Eight hours of almost every day in the three hundred and sixty-five, hubby is laboring at the desk or in the factory. His main thought is his work. During those same hours wifey is laboring just as hard at home. Her main thought is to keep the house or apartment looking spick and span. This year she would like to have a carpet sweeper, an ironing machine, a dish washer or a clothes dryer. They are the things that will make her work easier. Use The Palladium to procure something to make her work easier. Shop the Classified Way!
iT..' 1 sot Hi
S3 m m '
iBOWEN
Ml
INERY
1023 Main Street Richmond, Indiana (Copyright. 1921. by Basil L. SmJth) Sl.taK&;i!ii!i!::;5
