Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 17, Number 40, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 7 February 1945 — Page 2

HE TWO

SULLIVAN DEMOCRAT 6uili'an. Ittdiamt. ered us second class matter at Sullivan, Ind., May 31 1925. Published weekly on Wednesday.

II. .Adams Editor nriur Poynter Jamison Alanauer and Asst. Editor

l'"vntei

Publishe.'

Furniture in . the house of the future, according to one Lei will fold automatically' into the walls. The stay-too-callers will yet! the hint when the bridge table collapses ' the floor and the chairs vanish behind the mantlepiece. '

re

CLOIBIIA'SW

JS4S BY AUTHOR - DtSTRISUrBO BY KING FEATURES SVNQtCATt, I 7VC

With one pooch 'falling; heir to $20,000 and another getan "A" airplane priority, the ph'ase "leading a dog's ' has just about lost all its old meaning.

Author of a volume on magic says it took 's to write. Sounds like a difficult trick.

him many

The speed of "light, we a'e now told, is not as rapid as onomers once thought. But the motorist trying to get nigh on the green before it tunis red will dispute that.

WHAT DO WE WANT? Do we want justice? Or ersatz? 1 . ' ' ' Jn 1939 the largest manufacturer of radio receiving sets urope was a factory in Eindhoven, Holland. Not any e. When the Germans saw the Allied armies coming they iped the factory clean and took the whole works, down to last wheel, to Germany, So let's have a little justice, en wo occupy Gorman y, say we move that machinery, or ?quivalent, back to Holland. Say we do the same thing in similar cases restore to the other countries of Europe r factory equipment which" the Germans have stolen or ;royed. Of course we couldn't do a complete job of it, be-

se there would nt be enough to go around. When every e and dynamo and drill press had been taken out of Ger7 j iy there would still be empty factories in Belgium and i

iiee and Norway and Russia. At this point, from certain quarters in America, a howl

rotest is heard. Strip Germany of machinery? Intoler- I

i. Leave the skillful and industrious Germans with no 3? Insane.' Good heavens, are we barbarians? Why, it Id reduce their 'standard of living! ' "" " . ' ' A recent estimate is that the armed forces of the United ions havp suffered, so far, over 16 million casualtiesMi. wounded and captured. .Who reduced the standard of )g of that 16 million? ': - Do we want justice? Or do we want ersatz?

N OF A

use

d Preparations at diitcttd

SOCIETY

lluniemakers

Gill Homcmakers will meet

cuv afternoon, Feb. 8. at the

of Mrs. Meiv'in Pirtle.

lie and Inter-American Commission of Women." Mrs. F. G. Alig's paper on the Dominican Republic's fight for freedom, "Cradle of America," was read by Mrs. Thomas Lippeatt The Dominican Republic is a most interesting country of over a million and a half people, with prosperous crops of sugar, cocoa and coffee. The first European' settlement in' the New World, discovered by Columbus, abandoned within s century after its discovery, it came into

its - own, then internal strife! caused a re-annexation to Spain. Riots, dictatorships were common, I until the United States estab-I

Notice choir of the Christian

h will have rehearsal at nshed a military government. This

was not satisfactory. Troops were withdrawn in 1924. A president, Genera! Rafael Trujillo, was

Thursday night.

appus Meet Alpha Omicrun chapter

of elected in 1930. They declared war

CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT And Nugent came back into the room, shook his head to the anguished question in Craig's eyes and sent for Maud Chivery; When she came, looking horrible with .great dark, pockets around her eyes and her face the color of wax, ' he asked her about the decanter of brandy that stood habitually on Conrad's desk. For her fingerprints were on it and so were mine. I explained my fingerprints quickly; I had touched that decanter. 1 was shocked, I started to take a drink of brandy, and then didn't. And Maud said in a tight, strained voice that was exactly what she'd done.' "It was a shock to me; Conrad dead like that. The - brandy was on the tray

and ; . ," . "It was on the desk," I corrected

"No," said Maud, "it was on the

tray. I stood right beside it.

would have noticed if it had been

on the desk; that decanter drips and alcohol ruins the desk top; I

bought the tray for it myseli. '

"How much brandy was in it when you touched it, Nurse Keale?" "I'm not sure not very much the rim of the brandy came to Hot

more than an inch from the bottom of the decanter." Maud said, ''You're quite wronjf,

Nurse. It was more than half

full..'.." Nugent remarked, ''Perhaps you

are both right. If poison were in

.the brandy . . .'"

. "Did you find poison in it?" I cried. "Did you find digitalis in

it.'" "No. Not in the brandy that was

in the bottle when we arrived that

night. But we can find no other way by which Conrad Brent might have taken poison. He had a habit of drinking brandy at odd times; it's why he kept it constantly on his desk. Poisoned brandy may have been put in that decanter while he was out for his walk. .In that case, he returned, drank it and died. Then in the time during which the room was empty the poisoned brandy was removed from the decanter (there's that little washroom on the other side of the panel; the poisoned brandy could have been poured down the drain and washed away with water from the faucet) and ordinary brandy put back in the decanter. It could have been done, like that. It's a good thing you didn't drink any, Miss Keate," he said a little drily. I was thinking . that , myself, rather vehemently. He went on, "Conrad had to get the poison, somehow. It's the only way that hasn't been eliminated so far as I can discover. All that - method needed was three things the digitalis, a knowledge of the household and where to get more brandy, and opportunity to make the change after Conrad was dead." He looked at me gravely; I think he felt sorry for me. Every few moments there would be a report from someone somewhere looking for Drue. Troopers mainly, tall and military-looking in their trim uniforms, snapped to attention, took their orders,

a K.ippa Kappa met at the on Japan Dec. 8th, 1941, It' has of Mrs. Ella Briugs Monday, been called the Cradle of Amerirary 5. After the regular ta, Here in the Cathedral on the oys meeting, games of bridge Plaza of Ciudad Trujillo in a played. Those receiving the leaden casket lie the remains of ; were Allan Billman, Rnch- the great discoverer, Columbus. springer, Beatrice Owens, The Cathedral, ordered ' by Isa-

elh Powell and Betty Crow- belta of Spain, was completed in I :" . .

140. j basketball Mothers Mrs. Ralph Adams, countvarti The Basketball Mothers

snapped out again. But still there was no news. And -then Nugent went back to Maud. "Mrs. Chivery, I must ask vou again: Why-was your husband killed?" "I tcH you I don't know." And Craig leaned forward. "Maud Claud said you quarreled. Lately. About money. What was it?" .. ' " She whirled on him. "I-didn't murder Claud," . "Why did you quarrel?" She eyed him for a moment; then she told him. "It -was an an investment I wanted to make. He thought it unwise and refused to sell some bonds we owned together." ."What investment?" "It's a secret, it has nothing to

do with this." There waB & silence and again that look of concentration in Craig's eyes. And another trooper came in to say ,that the knife that killed Chivery came from the Brent, kitchen ; Beevens, he said, was willing to swear to it. But no, one knew just when it disappeared. . Maud left and just, after. that, Beevens made his not inconsiderable contribution to the thing..

"It's about the vase, sir," he said

to Nugent. "Or rather about the

noise the sound of something falling, if you remember, the night Mr. Eretit died." Craig got up on his elbow to listen. , , . , ' . . 1 "I think I know what it was, sir," went on Beevens and told his story. He'd felt all along, and Mr. Craig had . agreed . with., him,., that the sound had sol; been an accident, , "So I took a look around," continued the butler. "This morning I found it.". "Found, what?" , V ; ; . " ' . ,; "The vase, sir, broken in fifteen or twenty .pieces, all of them gath? ered up and wrapped in! BrAwA piper and shoved into the bottomvof one of the ash barrels. The ash barrels," said. Beevens austerely, "are removed once a week by a truck from the village. There Was also a large, thick, twine at leuit tweuty feet long, and, one. e"nd of it was tied around, the Ibwevipai't of the vase. The kind of tw'ine;that I keep in my pantry for tying up parcels; anybody could havetakW it." . ... ' ;.' !.,':;.; It was a large vase, at least three feet, high, and heavy, fts, rightful place. was on a table in the econdfloor corridor. Beevens hadjn't missed it because the household had been so upset that .he hadn't really taken a look around the upper hall as' he usually did (regularly) just I be sure all was in order, but had left it entirely to the housemaid. And she had apparently assumed that he had removed the vase. But when be had missed it, he had

looked for it with the. result that he believed it had been, nlaced at

the top of, possibly, the back stairs.

"With the other end of the twine at the bottom of the stairs, per

haps," said Beevens. ancL stopped

significantly. 4 ' , , '

Nugents green eyes were nar

row. Craig said, "You mean somebody placed it there and hung the

string aown tne stairway and then

gave it's jerk at the right time from below." "It would fall, I believe," nodded Beevens, "in a series of thuds upon the treads, -which wootd sound extremely loud at night. It 'broke, perhaps at the bottom of the service stairs which accounts for the crash the nurse mentions and which I . myself heard. However, the pieces of the vase must have been, picked up at once and hidden." He looked a little bleak. "I don't know who could have done it" , Craig turned t9 Nugent "Why? Why would anyone .. .", "To get Miss Drue Cable or Miss Sarah Keate or both of them out of the library, of course." Nugent's green eyes -were intent. "So whoever ws waiting to dispose of the poisoned brandy could do so. Bnt who picked up the. pieces nd hid them before we got here? There was nothing there when we looked, and whoever changed the brandy had to woTk fast It's impossible for anybody to be in two places at once." . '. "Yes, sir, agreed Beevens je-, speetfully and,, stubbornly. "You might look at the pieces of the vase, for fingerprints, sir." "Naturally," said Nugent "The wrapping paper, too. Although I

doubt . . . Where was the vase, as a rule?" . "On a table at the'south end of the corridor, sir." - ' ,', ?South. Then anyone carrying it to the back stairs would have to pass this door., H'm the back and front stairs are not far from each other; both in the middle part of the house.-Well,", .Nugent looked at we. "You : heard something bump against the door , shortly before Drue Cable screamed. When, presumably,.the murderer realized that there would have to be a surefire device to get her out. of the library before anyone came in order t change the brandy. Was it the vase?" ; ';-;. - . "' ; ''It could have been." '"' " "" "But whet you opened the door yoii saw no one?" -. 'I've told you that. There wasn't anyone."'; , Did y;iig( ;tMhe. door. 'immediately?!:,. );.!;! ., ii "iSV I' was litye; surprised, I waited for' a few seconds sj,d ten went... . .", .s-, !'-.. 'Ytt waited long enough for whoever w a t there to have time to SetaKV?V-..:- ' ' " .-, V "? J suppose no." ;, ' '. :. Nugent sxt f or Nicky and ?etjy The latter cawe first and, when he heard of .the' hypothesis -of the broken ; taaci-jsaid ,he . thoinhfc -it

very likely. , I watched h ha closely for I suspected everybody, but his boyish, bltnrt. .face ; looked merely perplexed.. v .. . 1 1V .

- 1 didn't see anvone " ho aaiA. T

glanced down "the back staii-wav..

too, and al along the corridor in the back of the house.. I thought a window had been broken, from the sound." .'. :. -.. "Did you, see any .pieces of. the vase?" asked Nugeni , . " "No. - But J -wasn't. 'looking for that. I -was looking1 for a person."v' . (To be continued) ' : , ejritiu ij Km, a. juiiihut:

r OVER TOKYO B-29 Superfortresses i Sy with Phillips super-octane fuel : ; : as i thev do on all of the vorld's flving fronts

M -V: A : .

I '

t

U V-'"l"'"-'"V,rfr vw -r . y,tnvrnfr , ' ' v ' ' " 1 :::V':::.. :..:. : A iwW A y"--..:: . .,.: . - :; ''v. ;.r:.,v.. '-. : . : . ; ;-.;; :":':r - , " v ' - y. - -i-j iillfl

Pliillips is one

six largosi 'of Cc$iiliat Jlwi

piOH

When you read or bear postwar promises of fabulous : motor car gasolines, or of 'astound- '.: ing products of petroleum chemistry, recall the simple words of the ; headline above. ' ': ' V- They record a triumph ofChcrn- ; ical research, engineering, and ': production. Add to them, Phillips - -grand-scale contribution to the - making of butadiene for synthetic rubber, and they suggest how competently and completely Phillips

It has been said that the future

is the fruit of the seed of the past. Little wonder, then, that intelligent men and women expect great postwar products from Phillips. In the meantime, every timeyou . see the Orange and Black Phillips 66 Shield, let it remind you that Phillios refineries ... in addition

to producing gasolines, lubricants, and fuel oils ... are also gigantic tbewka! plants pouringout weapons for victory. Phillips Petroleum Co., BjnUsviiU. OhU.

Care For Your CifFor Your Country

-5

u.efl; in face regions, and additional; electrical safeguards. He explained' that the mine is recognized .' as gassy by the Indiana Bureau of Mines and Mining and isY'classeq gassy by the Federal Bureau Of. Mines! Malesky also called fur a firefighting -organization,' increased fire protection - around Airdox

compressors, use of ,'

RATIONING SUM3IARY

Meats, Cheese and Dairy Prod

ucts Book 4 red stamps Q5; through Z5 and A2 through D2 j now valid. Q5 through S3 invalid j March 31. T5 through X5 invalid April 28. Y5, Z5, A2 through D2 invalid June 2. Processed Foods liook 4 blue

adequate i stamps X5 through Z5 and A3

earpieces in timbering, installa- ( through G2 now good. 112 llnoiifihl

tion of air-lock doors and other L2 valid Feb. 1. V; iln ough Z5, , venjilating improvements, better !a2 and B2 invalio March 31. C2

I'he hostesses for the meetere as follows: Ella Briggs,

0 Killman, Jeanette wernz,

Campbell. Victoria Crowd-

Methodist Choir' - Mrs. Connie Doyle returned to with; their parents and families i i. -l. -i : T r. ..i i ..a .... - , . . - . a - - ,

The Methodist cnurcn ci.tm nriw mi weeK aner visiting Mrs Phyllis Stringer Went to

will meet for rehearsal i nuisaay ue.e i iew oajs Indianapolis Friday to" ioiii ;'her

evening at 7:30, . i Mrs. Wayne Borders and Mrs. husband and go to, their home at

- ivh js.rause

Friday.

club 'rt; S'ses Jean T.ri.nn and. Nnrma

were in Sullivan

Stringer

chairman, and chairman of art for1 will meet with Mrs. Robert Clark- Jean Snyder of Indiana Unive'r-

the club, announced the cominu son on South Section ' street, sity spent the week-end here

elen Kirk, Pauline Lowry, art program by the Art. Depart-' Thursday at two o clock, instead -

Chanev. Ruth Poole and merit of the Counfv vrin,-uinA nt at the home of Mrs. Kerlin as 7

Lloyd. " 1 Clubs and sponsored by the three 1 formerly announced. I ' "" clubs of Sullivan, Woman's Club, . ' " ,: -J ' " . 1 1 Delphian Club Friday Afternoon Club aiid Alpha 1 C. VV. E. Club ,l '.! - Alpha Delphian Club met Del'phians. This will take place in! The C. W. E. club will meet! Mrs. Omar Nickel Monday the Christian church of Sullivan j with Mrs. H. A. Bland, 213 West ioon. Two , informative pa- Feb. 14th at 2:30 p. m. The exhibit J Washington street, Friday ' All mi Latin America were read. ' is coming from the Swope Gallery 1 members are. urged to. attend. E. .A, Billinan's' paper was m Terre1 Haute, and the director! -mm. 1

n of the Dominican Repub- of the Gallery will give a talk on ' HOSPITAL NOTES ' - "How to look at a picture and get Admitted Feb. 6: Mrs. Leonard .the most out of it." This is to be Bledsoe of 243 West Graysville

t paying rent and own a e. Special bargains on icrty on installment plan. farms for sale. I W. T MELLOTT

. J. Aikin & Sor

FUNERAL HOME ' Dugffer jk in's Service Costs No , . More." f '

a very worthwhile program, and Street, for observation. is open to the public. It will be a Dismissed Feb. 5: Mrs. Victor most unusual opportunity' to see Shorter and son nf Sullivan this collection from the well-1 rural route three; Don Howard .known gVllery in Terre Haute. All' of Shelburn rural route one; Will;elub members in the county are iam Hargis of Carhsle; Sam Whit- ' urged to attend. ' j field of Carlisle rural route three. The hostess. Mis. Nickel, served Dismissed Feb. 6: Mrs. Charles a Valentine tea at the close of the 1 Young and daughter of 801 East

' program in her usual very hosoit- ! Dude Street; Mrs. Paul Bledsoe

;amejnanner. Mrs. Herman Mc- ; Kinley and Mrs. Sam Frakes attended their first meeting of the

.club. Mrs. Elsie Bridwell was re-!M. Harrison

instated in the club, having beeniRosie McDade of 511 West Grays , a charter -member. -. - ville Street; -

and son of Shelburn; Mrs. Lloyd Phillips and daughter of 219

North! French Street; Mrs. Jessie

of Oaktown; Mrs.

I

1

LOANS FOR LESS Buy U. S. War Bonds Here Until It's Over Over There Sullivan State Bank . SAFE SINCE 1875 ; ' Total Resources in Excess of $5,400,000.00. EMBER OF FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP.

PAXTON Mr. and Mrs. Lex McCammon of BicknelU Mi's. Mary Woodward and Miss Ruby Griffith were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. McCammon. Mrs. Jesse McCammon ' spent Saturday with Mrs. Mabel. McCammon and sons. 1 Mrs. ' Ora Leslie and Wayne Woodward were Sullivan visitors Friday morning. . Mrs; Paul- LaFolIette was in Sullivan Friday. ' Mrs.. Mary McCoy is ill. ' - ? Ezra M. Cox and Mrs. Phyllis Stringer were in Indianapolis Wednesday and Thursday. Misses Sharon Kay and Phyllis Jean Sexton returned home with tbern.

Calling, gulliy an t.

For More;)Yste v

per, More Tin

Curt Nichols ( local salvage director, announced today that another drive for waste paper and tin will be conducted .in. Sullivan (Turin? the' next two Saturdays. As usual, local Boy Scouis will collect the. salvage materials with the assistance of the city street department. 'The drive in the south half or the ctty, including' Washington street, will be held Saturday February 10th and the north drive will be held the following Saturday.' There must not be a ."breakthrough". on the home front and with the war at its crucial stage in both Pacific and European theaters, every household is urged to scour their premises for all scrap paper and tin cans to be processed for the collection. Get your ' salvage materials ready in advance and have them at the curb bright and early on the" day oif the pickup in your section of the city. ; ' ' - t,v . i The nation's ofV i critical war material shortage Is 'still waste paper used to make or wrap over 700,000 essential war items of supply, "( "' ' " " ;'n "Back up General EisenhoVer and General. MacArthur help our fighting men save 'every scrap of waste paper and every tin can."' " -.. v '" "'". . .-'-; ' Get it ready now!'; -" '

Bunker Hill where Mr.

is stationed; at present. ' i'Mrs'. Bessie .Nash was in Sullivan last .week',""'"; ' !' INSPECTOR MAKES': V , REPORT ON MINE ' y IN THIS COUNTY , ': The Principal recommendation Repeated in a fourth Federal inspectioa report' on the 2,000-ton-ja'-day Mine No'.; 28 of the Glen.dora' Coal Company at Sullivan, Sullivan County, Ind., is that the imine be .operated as gassy be- ' cause ' analysis of air sampler again have proved that it liberates explosive gas (methane) in unsafe , quanities, the Bureau . of Mines disclosed today. . In' preparing this and . other "safeguards for the 247 employees and the 'mine property, Federal Inspector J., S. Malesky,. who revisited the operation a few. weeksago, also credited. the mine with ,ai) above-average production per j lost-t ime injury and ; severa" safety . improvementsi 'since the' previous inspection by the Bureau in February, 1944. " , Malesky.. recmphasized, however, : that ',: permissible electric cap 'lamps' should be iised exclusively - for Illumination , underaground instead of opeA-flame' cap 'lights 'which were used by 75 jpercent. of the., ifliners arid "that smoking bejovy ground should be i prohibited . because open flames jhave caused disastrous fires and 'explosions at other operations. ! "Ample ; .permissible electric : cap lamps are available for all underground -employees of. this mine," Malesky. asserted. : . " ;

Malesky .;ufged preshift examinations'.'of ,the Mine. No. 28 within three hours before the men enter, the exclusive' use", of " permissible flame-safety lamps Or permissible m'etha!nei .detectors f or ;gas-testing purp'oses, V tests, f qr Vga's .at .'least

every 30r minutes -'while: nonper.

miHSiblc

clearance and other haulage bet-

term'en.ts,, further, curbs on the coal-dust '. hazard, more hoisting safeguards,' carrying of identification' checks by all persons in the! .mine, and an organized safety 'program. ; He pointed out that the mine produced 14,442 tons of coal per lost-time injury in 1942; 15,509 tons in 1943,! and 12,'300 tons the first 11 months of 1944, compared

with the national average of but 10,700 tons per loft-time accident.

BASKETBALL SCORES Wiley, 31; Sullivan, 28. Robinson, 58; Marshall, 24. Brazil, 36; Spencer, 25.

Gerstmeyer, 44; Rosedale, 20. , Paris, 62, Westville, 25. Bosse,. Evansville, .38;. Reitz, EvansvUle, 25. . ,

through G2 invalid April 28. 112

through L2 invalid June 2. Sugar Book 4 stamp 34 good for five pounds until Feb. 28. Stamp 35 becomes valid for five pounds Feb.' 1 ane will be good until June 2. All sugar stamps must last three months now. Another sugar stamp' is expected to become good May 1.

FACTO GRAPHS The word "pyjymies" comes from a Greek word meaning cubic, i. e., 1V.-2 inches, rygmins were a nation of dwarfs' met mentioned by Homer. MrnrlclsKohn, German con-ipoR-rr, wrnte! a nmcclio fur violin and si ringed in.fl ' umctiU-, and a concerto l or violin., pin no- and strings at the ngo c 14. One of tlif worM'3 grralp.-t forcKla, the taixa of Siheria. i3 4,000 miles long and 1,000 lo 2,000 milts wide.

GEO. WASHINGTON VERSUS MARTHA IS SET FOR FEU. 22

BRAZIL. Ind. Judge Robert H.

Shoes-Book 3 airplane stamps Slewart hag case No 83,jn fin.

trial on February 22nd. This seems appropriate for the title of the case is George Washington vs. Martha .Washington, divorce.

1, 2 and 3 valid indefinitely; OPAi

j says no plans to cancel any. j Gasoline 14-A coupons valid I everywhere for four gallons each j through March 21. B-5, C-5, B-6. j and C-6 coupons good everywhere I for five gallons each. I Fuel Oil Old period 4 and 5

and new period 1, 2 and 3 coupons " ' '- '

valid in all areas throughout cur- DCKj P( )ll I AA rent heating year. UlLIN I VlUfVI

DAILY TIMES

iAViii Address lilissionary RaHy Here

0":

mm I i 4 -11-

, Letters and interviews if a iuilablc riulure and proper newtsi paper interest arc sousiil for tUin ooluinn, the editor reserving tl'C right to censor or reject any article ho may deem is not s;iil;ille and proper. Articles of 511') word. or loss are preferred. All articlesent to the Ojien Forum must in: 1 signed ind adcress givt'i, in '- dcr that the editor may know the writer, however, the writer's ! name will not be published if requested. . Articles published herein do not necessarily express the sentiment of the Daily Times and this 1 paper may or may not agree with

tatnientft contained herein.

wm m m..i M '. iLiiLiu junmu-miu inxa

MR. RALLA RAM

MISS ZILLA SOULE

Augustine Pwalla . Rani, former cal Seminary, and has taken part stated clerk of the General As-iin several world interdenominsembly of the United Presbyterian ational conferences. Cliureh of North India, is one of ; Miss Soule. now a student at

three members of a Christian Fellowship Mission team from

Columbia University, is a graduate of Isabella Thoburn College,

India which will address the Dis-1 Lucknow, India. Mr. Singh is pas-

triet Missionary-Rally at the Pres-i tor of the qldest church in the

byterian church . here Thursday,! Punjab, and is widely known as a '

Feb. - 8. Meetings will be held at 3:ao!'and 7:30 p. in.

t Other' niembers of the , rally

group are- Miss Zilla . Soule and Danijpi Khazan Singh. Mr, Ram is a graduate of Forman Christian

elerioal.v ' eqiiipmnt is Colleg'and Saharanpur TbeoloKi-

progressive leader there. He also,, has served as chaplain for Christians in the armed forces. Leader of the team is Dr. Herbert Rice, president of Forman .Christian College.

NOTICE. ;

e will not be

able to accept any mors orders for coal deliveries for the balance of the week, DRAPER Goal Company

-ax- rw ,