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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 1889)
i THE DAILY HERALD: lLATTSMOOTIf. NKBSUAKA. .THURSDAY, JANUARY-IT, The Plattsmouth Daily Herald. KNOTTfcJ B14C 3., Publishers & Proprietors TIIK I'LiTTSMOUTII IIKKM It pul.lislif.l every eveiiliiK exr . Sitnliy and Wkly ev-ry lliurd:iy ii.nriiluK. Iieis tereil at tl Mftnici. I" an miioii! Ii. Hr.. eeMi.l-tl.- niatt'T. OtUee corner of V Ine and Fifth Btrel.t. Teleliois No. 3m. TUMt von IJAILV. One copy o!i e:ir in ;idvai;cc by iiiiill ?'. '' One co,y per inotiili, ly earlier f One copy per week, ly earlier H TERMS run WKRKLV. v nun vep.r. hi :il v.inci' fl n' One copy six nioiitb. in advaue-e. . Our Clubing List. Vr.r.KLY Hkicai.i aud Y. World ! N. V. Trbuntt. . . Olii:ill Rep N. V. I'r-H N. V. I'oi-t. " Harpers Alauaine ' Weekly. .... Bazar... ' " Yoimir Iepli Nel. Farmer " lieiimrest'i Month ly M:iyaIe American Ma'ine 'Hie Forum Tiik treasury outgo bus exceeded its income sine the calendar year beun, ami the surplus i again on the decrease. The effect of the heavy treasury disburse ment it seen in the reserves of tlie New York hanks, which have been expanding largely in the past ten or twelve days. Gov. Martin certifies that the Kansas prohibatory liquor law is a decided suc cess. It is not to be denied, of course, that there is still a good deal of drinking in the state; but certainly u republican gain of about '1't per cent in the last four years proves that the democrats are being reformed at a very gratifying rate. For the rw.sttime in his life Satan has an opportunity to settli dowu as an hon est farmer and utilize Ui& fighting quali ties in contending with the weather and the hard times with which the husband men of all climes are continually em broiled. A late wealthy and eccentric farmer living in Finland having been an noyed during Ins lifetime by the charges made against him by his neighbors that lie had dealings with the evil one, re , -yenged himself by leaving all his land to the devil in his will. It is some boiaix to know that the lawyers have taken hold of the case to light the will, and Old Scratch will (in 1 pretty nearly, if not quite, his match before he rets legal possession of hi propel ty.--Lincoln Journal. THAT "GOOD LAHK." As time ro Is n and things come to light connected with Tuesday night's lawlessness, it appears that uot only our chief-of police was on a "lark," but one of the city councilmen was on a " lark " also, and that the night before in one of the saloons he knocked down a man who is a carpenter anil builder, but the matter was hu.shcd up in hope that it would oon Mow over; and now comes our hief-of-jjolice anil keep a drunk and brutal slugger from being put in j id, after h has been arrested tvvh e by Olhetr Fit?. patrick. The IIkuai i demands un in yestigation, and it is the plain duty of JIayor Hich-y and the council to iuvesti jate these cowardly assaults and, if they ha found true as stated, remove the oili cer at once. If it is true tint tlie chief of. police, or ny othe-rctizi n, can rel-.;is fcuch characters, after arrot, when break ing the peace and ass iiilting pe-eabl . law-abiding citizens, the public ought to know it. There must be um.-thing wrou;; with the police force of tlie city win i such outrages are permitted to occur. Again, it is openly charged that ill TVisall is a frequenter of the saloon ami was in the company of Charley Nichols up to the time tf rhe assault on Mr. Bach. Let the city council examine thes siffairs and publish the facts titid me: t iut punishment to its officers if they arc deserving of it. The IIkrald deems it due to the chief-ff-policc of this city that he clear him t-lf of the charges ma le against him j;i j this cae and also of the charges that he is in the hitu of drinking an I associat ing with men who compose tlie law breaking portion of this community. There was much nu favorable comment made by the better clus of our citizen over the appointment of Jr. Pois.di when it was made, and much since !; was confirmed by the council, and very much more since the shameful s-luggii;; of Tuesday nigh'. TIktc is but one ci: timent on our streets over these matters and the IIkkam deems it du to th mayor Had council that tlie head of tlie police force be investigated. Tin-' HAILliOAllD SITU ATI (jy. The agreement recently entered intob. the representatives of the leading West ern railroad is calculated to prove ad vaov "tjeous both to the corporations and to the eoplc. if it shall be honestly anil thoroughly observed. It is welt known that tfie railroad hi3inis has not been profitable for tlie past year. Tiie rivalry between the different lints Iins caused u legree of rate cutting never before ex erun e-d, and it has been impossible ti tell feuj one day to another what the j charges would be for a given service. In ! Mime instances shippers have reaped ft j considerub'u beit tit from this condition of things; but in a g'-tn-rul way th. elTit has been th tliui -lital to th - public. 'i li ' tiling that is inut ih .-ii al.h in radi o., i rates is stability. Where there is cuii ; tinual fluctuation, business of every kind j must be done in a blind and haphazard fashion, and tlie true laws and rules ol commerce fan not have their proper in- 1 i ri 1 . . .til. .. t.. I liueii.e. liauroaii i-einioein ion in ovr-n-s able, of v. urs-e, within safe ami practical I i i ... . i . i:.. : iioumis; out wneu u passes a eei lain iinoi it Incomes iihindi-ranee r it In r than a help in the intercuts of trade. It is belter to have fixed rates, even if they be some what excessive, than to have a system of cutting which depends wholly upon thancc. There is only one way in which railroad warfare can be avoided, and that is by the process of pooling, direct or implieel. The word "pool" is an unpleasant one, but the idea which it involves when properly considered is not u dangerous one by any means. In a strict sense, it only means an agreement between two or more rivals to abide by a definite schedule of charges, instead of carrying on a strug gle which can only bring con fusion and loss to all concerned. There is nothing more certain than that where pooling is forbidden there is no adequate and prac tical method of adjusting railroad differ ences and preventing conflicts thut tenel to demoralize business operations. The principal weakness of the interstate com merce act lies in the fact that it prohibits this form of action under any conditions. That is to say, it provokes railroad war fare without supplying any means for making peace. The rai.road companies can tight one another to ah3' extent, al mos", without violating the law; but the j inom.ut tin-' seek to establish order and I harmony by mutual toiiccsssious as to the j points in dispute, it peremptorily forbids them to take advantage of the only the i ;y V .'' h is adapted to the situation. The agrccmes.t of the Western roads does not coine within any explicit provi.-ion ol j the lit sV. It is a voluntary undeatakiui. made- i:ecesary by the want of propel legal rciluies. The courts can not be called upon to enforce it. aceoiiling to the interstate commerce net; bin there is reason to believe that the e ntractin parties will abide by it in go.l faith. simp:y bi-cauc the law (!;-:ii s them any oihei ;! belli r mi ans of escape from ; seriou.s dil!5eulij.-.--!;!obe Democrat. T -KM-nn r-i r-rr At iirst a little-, lucking couyh, ' .Tis nothing but a cold," Tii y m ""Twill very soon wear off.'' Alas, the stor .,Jd' The hectic cheek, the tailing ieno th. The grief that cannot save, Ar..t life's wan ll line goes out, at knglli 3 i a coiu;:ni!t ives grave. If pensons would use ?r. l'ierce's Gol den Medical Discovery, when jr? station of th lungs In indicated by a conph, it would be an eas- matter a :iveit con sump: ion. B wise in time. REMEMBER. Sv.if t the flocking clouds are fltcjf As the night shades sullen grow, Anl the day leans faintly dying In the western sunset glow, H is desolate December! E;.riat was prophet of completeness, 1 ul of promise and of light, K'.n of summer days, whose sweetness Thrilled within the winter's night. fWe were glad then you remember.) Summer blooms were shy and fragrant, Ax you gathered them, you know. Yet the briars were bold and vagrant When the mowers cams to mow; (AVe were sad then you remember.) V.'he'n the mowers' scythes went 6winghig All luo flowers were hushed to death! Now no birds are joyous sieging, And the winter witheretu In the desolate Dee-ember. V.'ith steadfast Ifcht and uight so blended The haunted winter day is assed; 1 ii blithesome hUisKom lime has ended. The summer cannot always lasfc. Nor the desolate December; KcMiiember this, dear, ah rememberl Harriet Mas well Converses ia llumo Journal. A Wonderful Diamond. A remarkable precious stone has been uis overed rccoiitly. It was a diamond of ti:;o white color, wcil.'in about lour carats and handsomely cut, whicj. had cracked into two tujual parts, re ves'i:;! in its center another diamond. Th'j intei ipr stone was a pentahedron, with facets upon it as regular and per fect ts if they had been t-iit by a skill ful lapidary. So ;erfoctiy did thi$ little diamond Gt into its matrix that it was invisible when tlie three parts of the combination were put together. Tlia impossibility of putting two diamonds together in aucji a way by art is beyond question. It was the work of nature, but what natural law, or perversion of law, had such an am izing effect was far beyond even the theorizing of those who inspected tiiu stone. Brooklyn Eagic. Aii Earl as oo JCuginecr. Faion do Winiou, of Shropshire, En oh :d. was forced to flee his native land on account of heavy obligations iie hrd contittcU-d in gambling and oil ih-' turf. While on the continent ho !o t over Z'i'S; CO!), and his financial ali'aiis being greatly mixed up, lie car.ie to this country to c-3cuj?e the dis-ag.- -;ble task of settling and me-etipg hi'; i .th- v. l or a while he manageti toli-.e quite elegantly in Brooklyn, but after a 1 ng gprco" found himself pei- .:i!ess. '..lien he accepted n posi tion as tngir.e driver on tho Jersey City eoal. Here he worked for some time. Ix-camc very popular 'with his co:rea!es, and by a very virtuous life p.i r vTvd to &-ve cnoi:gh inoney to ua.v :ls pat'-'e LioiH'.1, New York A MATHEMATICAL PRODIGY, Ybo Keniai knble Talent of n Htilf Wltteil Negro t'ountrj iii:im. Hculien Field. tliL' nifitheinatical pro digy of Ixjxinton, who has attracted eo much attention, wr.s Lorn at Warrens burg, Johnson county, nlout thirty year3 ago. and possesses onlv fclihtlv letter intellectual f: -u!lies than "blind 'JVjIii." "KuebV gift is made the more promi nent by the barrenness of bis mind in other features. lie has no intelligence aside from bis reinarkablo manipulation of ligures. (Jive lieu lien Field a problem, no matter whether it bo in decimal, com- ou i id or vulgar fractions; it makes no tiiirercnco whether it is better suited to tho i -idea of hhort than long division; it is immaterial whether there are ten fig ures or 700 in it; whether multiplication or eubstraction; and ho will, without tho aid of paper or jiencil, give you the answer before tho echoes of your voice in propounding the question have fully died away. Ho cannot read; ho cannet write, lie does not know one figure from another, and yet mentally, by the gift which ho possesses, ho can solve any problem submitted to him. As "Blind loin's" talent of repeating pieces of music played in his presence for the first time by many of tho most brilliant performers in the country has lieen tested, and always with the result of making more wonder ful his great gift, so have learned math ematicians tried to trap Field, but with out success. To pivo him a problem which one himself could not solve would not determine whether ho was right or wrong, ami lest errors might be made the most difficult "examples" in the higher arithmetics, as well as others, originating with their questioner and simple enough except for their long array of figures, havo been hurled at him, and quick as a Hash would t "me his answer, always correct. CJive him the diameter of the wheel of a locomotive, and the distanco between any two points it makes no difference how great tho time spent in traversing this distance, and you have hardly ceased speaking before ho gives you the number cf revolutions the wheel makes in covering tho distance. Give him the distance and the time and he will tell you the diameter of tho wheel. Tell him tho dimensions of a brick, and say to him :i wall is so many feet lung, so many hili and so many thick, and he promptly tells you how many bricks are in the wall. Not in a reasonable length of time, as though calculating it, but in stantly, and while skilled accountants who have witnessed his feats have ques tioned the correctness cf his answers, they have found they were in error and Reub was right whenever they did so. Tell him to multiply 0,898,70,32,156 by 13, add &9,572 and divide by CO, and iu U.si time than the reader can calculate it lietib will havo the answer ready. These figures are only used us an illustration, but they are simplicity in its purest form compared to somo submitted to him. He has p;ray eyes, and, when not .engaged hi exhibiting his strange gift, they are entirely free of expression, as though the3r were of tleadgiass; but have him ia the excitement of lirmrcs and a strange glitter something little short of an impression of madness-li-hts them uo. 'ihe strange of this half wared fellow's accomplishments is that, awak ened at any hour, bo will tell you the tune to a second, lie does not make a business of exhibiting his power, and it is not always that those who aro most kinel to him, and whom he knows best, can persuade him to "show olf." lie pays his power came from God, and, if he1 accepted offers which had been made to him to travel with showmen, or to take employment in large business houses, God would take his gift away. Lexington (JIo.) Cor. Globe-Uemocrat. Umbrella vs. Cane. The gold headed cane which loving children present to dear papa, to renin him that he is growing old and that . . tottering footsteps are fetching him to the grave; or which poorly paid em ployes present to the superintendent as a bit "of tatfy; or which the retiring minis ter receives from his doting congrega tion to help him on his journey, is going out of favor as a gift, in holidays or other times. The gold headed umbrella lias taken its place. The umbrella an swers all the purposes of a walking stick, without tho disadvantage of the latter. It is not a hint of old age, and is more convenient in a rain storm. As eloquent donation speeches may bo mado over a lino silk umbrella with a gold beaded handle as over an ebony wood club that but few men will carry about with them. Possibly the umbrella is more likely to turn up as lost, strayed or stolen, with less chance of finding its true owner again than the cane, but that is a disad vantage that comes entirely from the superior value of tho umbrella. There is the same distinction between gold and brass. Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. Fooling a Jehu. "Somo bright newspaper man," re marked my marina engineer friend, "ought to 6hip as a deck hand or coal passer on a big lake boat and write up his experiences. He'd get an idea of life unfamiliar to him, and be able to inter est his readers with glimpses of a strange, rough, reckless existence, and perhaps if he had a good constitution he'd be all the !etter for roughing it for a few weeks, lie would see some amusing things, too. I remember one night in Chicago, as we were lying near the Clark street bridge, a cab was driven rapidly on to the bridge iuii ns it was in tho act of swinging. The cabby wa3 ha'f tipsy, but he had a faro and was rushing away with Iiira foi ono of the depots. 'Oh, I'll get there,' he says: 'I always do, and you can't stop me.' He went cn sassiug the bridge tenders as he and his cab swung around with tho bridge. The vessel went through, the bridge swung to place, but the bridge tenelers had nut up a job on the jehu. Awy rattled tho cab, the driver crack ing his whip and yelling, '1 11 get there." but he didn't, for the bridge tenders turned him the wrong way. They sraj the bridge clear around. Buii'alo News -Wanted It Douo Fash ionabry. "Inasmuch as the animal you 6tok was only a colt," remarked the leader ol tho regulators, "we have decided to givt you forty-nine lashes with a horsewhip, instead of hanging you. But we shall lay them on well." "I havo only one favor to ask, gentle men," said th3 prisoner, pale but un flinching. "What is it?" "Gentlemen," he replied, "I have not always been a criminal and an outcast I have moved in good society a.'id 1 kno tho customs that prevail aracrrg our besi people. I will take it as a favor, gentle men, if you will lay the lashes on, as fai as possible, in regular checks or diag onals. Perpendicular btripes aro not worn tkjj Beason." Chicaro Tribune. TUa liUIboardV DecUne. x Theatrical managers have lately been discussing the question of the most profitable manner of advertising their shows. A few years ago tho billboard wa.i tho only recognized method of com munication between tho manager and his patrons. Spaces upon every fence anil corner were eagerly bought up by tho enterprising advance agent; saloon windows were utilized to hold tho litho graphs, nnd a free pass accompanied each picture displayed. "What was tho result? After tho agent had gone his rounds and papered tho town the ticket scalper also oegaui liis pilgrimage. lie bought up tho free passes at a small cost and sold them afterward at a good profit to himself and tilled the house at a direct loss to the original management. The scheme was a comnleto failure. Later another plan was adopted and with similar results, beason tickets, ad mitting tho holder to four performances a month ana not transterabie, were issued, and on each performance the floor keeper wa3 obliged to punch out one ol tho dates, as in a railroad ticket. Tho result was that tho holders of theso passes held Oil until they had accumu lated a dozen or so of admissions to their credit, and then swooped down upon tho theatro in their might and owned the house. In Buffalo last Beason one man ager was forced to give away 1,700 free adrnisrions in one week, and only Baved himst lr Irom rum by getting tho differ ences in the prices of those of his pa trons who wished to obtain better seats than their passes admitted them to. It is generally conceded among ad vanced theatrical managers that the newspaper is at once the cheapest and tno best way or reaching tho great theatro going public. Such is tho condi tion of Philadelphia at present that upon the- principal streets there aro no places iur the billboard and the lithoirraph. They must bo exiled to the suburbs, where tho theatrical patron never ven tures, and tho small boy who cannot read unites with the equally illiterate goat for their speedy destruction. An ai'tornoon's shower will erase tho work of days, batter down the signs, blur the coiors, and g.-nerally destroy tho most ambitious bill posted. The newspaper is, in truth, the only reliable means ox theatrical as it is of other advertisement. It ii cheaper, further reaching and ap peals to a Letter clientele, and the con stant increase in the enace occupied bv the theatre advertisements In the leading paj ers shows that this fact is understood. Philadelphia Tunes. Tho Major's IThUIcy Shot. Somo interestinor things are remem bered by Sherman's Atlanta campaign veterans in connection with Lieut. Bundy , com manding a battery of artil lery, now Known as Alaj. JBundy, and one of tho editorial writers on Peacon bhepard s r aw York Mail and Express. Lieut. Buudy had a tooth for a good today, and ono morning at Jvennesaw Mountain had sampled some "Diamond B" commissar? with some other officers. and reached his battery in excellent i's. oon ioi. eary roao tnai way J'nd' obnerviafj the lieutenant, gruffly ad- I 'ur! , . .. Lieut. Bllndv. von ara drunk. Bundy answered back, as quick as a uasii: "Col. Geaiy, you are a d d liar!" Hero was a situation. Geary was about to put Bundy under arrest, saying to mm: "lou are so drunk you don t Know mat gun lrom a hollow log. "I den't, eh? I'll show you whether I uo or not. fcee that bunch of reb over there?" pointing to a group of Confeder ato omcers taking an observation from an eminence half a mile away. "Just vatch me scatter em." Seizing the tail of a gun, ho jerked It round, got tne range, adiusted everv. hing to his liking, gave the order to fire. piouing a tour men 6heii right in tho -.idrt of tho group of Confederates, who uasuiy retired to cover, carrying with mem ineir wounded. Col. Geary withdrew his offensive re marks, complimented Bundy on his skill an-j roue away. Lieut. Bundy was an expert artillerist. and could land a shell about where he wanted to. The writer has often heard it said by Federals who ought to know that he fired tho shot that killed Gen. Polk, le:i:ie3aw Gazette. Tho Dominion of Canada. Canada is composed of seven provinces. am; a number or vast territorial districts, which correspond to the territories of tho United States. The provinces bear a relation to tho individual states. They are unequal in size, British Columbia having D0,S44 square miles of area, and iittle 1-riuce Edward Island containing u-ily 2,lo3 square miles. Quebec has it J,:J33 scjuaro miles, Ontario has 107,780, Nova Scotia 21,731, New Brunswick 27, o, and Manitoba possesses 118,961. The enormous Northwestern territory, winch I123 been subdivided into Alberta, Sas katchewan and Arthabaska, comprises 1.010,502 Bquare miles, SJeewavtin 895, SC3, the Arctic islands 811,700, and the islands of Hudson's bay 23,400, Hero i3 an area in the aggregate of 3,400,542 squaie miles of God's earth under the agis of Great Britain. Poly glot is the population thinly scattered over the lan el There are 1,200,000 Frenchmen, the Emerald isle has con tributed 925,000, and the Land o Cakes has 553,000 representatives. Three hun dred thousand persons trace their near decent to Germany; there aro 70,000 rela tives of Taffy the Welshman, and the bo called Scandina vians number about 11, 000 souls. Ontario, tho most thoroughly English province, has a population of 1,700,000 in round numbers; Quebec con tains 1,000,000, of whom 1,100,000 are "reach. Nova Scotia contains 450,000, cw Drunswicic nearly 400,000, Prince Edward Island 120,000, British Columbia 120.000, and Slanitoba approximately 1 70,000. Exchange. A Story of Bismarck. Thfi second volume of the memoirs Of the Di.ke of Gotha, which has made such a etir in the social and political world of Germany, contains another anecdote of T- " " J 1 1 J 4 J M jisraarcii xne latest accession to uw rants of doctors of divinity, when secretary of tho Prussian' legation at ir raniaort, ne was assed py a lady why he objected to the ap pointment of Count Thun to the -position c f ambassador. He replied that t was noi a lit placo for a man of hif extraordinary talents, there being sq attle to uo. "lnen, continued tne lady. ; "why do you retain your office?" 'Oni madam. It 13 another thing with me. have always been a lazy, good for noth? uij teiiow, ana careu tor notmng save ; my gun. Here I ran hunt as well as on ciy farm nnd enjoy my siesta," Th ; vears bnvo changed Bismarck and his! Ideas. San Francisco Argonaut. ' i P 151 D In ortli r to cut down our lurtro i-tock t Dry Goods, Underweai .Notions tfcc, we are ottering Unexcelled J J:uoh'iis in tl; i (; '.- Vu have n Silk and Cashmen And fcilk Handkerchiefs at very low G-reatb CI, In this Lep:irtment we are CL0AKSSPLUSK at prices that is i-ure to pell them, be convinced that we carry DOVEY J& jEH. JXXU HAS THE LARGEST AND FINEST ST.' K FURNITURE, ST HOUSEHOLD GOC In the city, which he is nficrir at Prices 1 1 . t w ill ir: I A complete line of Window Curtains ;it a .-;u ii:-- . Frames in great variety. You can got t vet yt hii y You can buy it on the installment plan, pay ' mi:.-i mouth and von will soon have a tine li;riii.-l.e! h;.i and hardly realize the SIXTH STREET, BET. MAIN AND WM L. BRO WNE, Personal attention to all Bualn;te Entrust- o my care. XOTAKV IX OFFICK. Title KxamltiKil, .MisTaicte Conn Pel. I: surance Written. ) eal J-'ftale s.M. Better Facilities fur making Farm 'Loanf ths.n I Any Other Agency, rial txiiioutli, - .brasUn ROBERT CONNELLY'S "WAaci-7 AND BLACKSMITH SHOP Wagon, Buggy, Machine and Plow rt pairing, and getter al jobbing t now prepared to io all kinds of repairing of farm and otber machinery, as there U a good lathe in my shop. PETER RAO EN. TUA.un.ii.ui.nT ir i Ike old Reliable Wagon Maker baa taken charge of the wagon sncp He Is well knowc as a NO. 1 WORKMAN. 5cw Wawrona and Hvccle Order MATIHFAnTTOV onRWT R.B. WIXDHAM, JOUN A. UAV1FH. Notary Public I AVIKH. Notary Public. WIXUHAH. , TCO?Z107S OJZ m XiSLT. Ofnce.over BankJofJCan County. latt aMOPTH, - - Nebraska fine line of ,y;.j ;-; r, ; .. 5 V 2 I l. showing all ilm lalf; i ("all sii.! ii.f-j the le.-t ttock in r !.. i ' 9 t. eo Call and TvT --, IM I I A'l ri : " THE LADIES' FAVORITE. NEVER OUT OF ORDER. If yeu desire to purchase a grwlnir mm-hW, ak our aerent at your i.ineo for tr-rms ana S rices. If you cannot finl our acrent, write irect to pearetjt address t' you lwiow iiiuik-1 NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE aCRAflQE.WASS ILL. " a UM10N SQUARE.NX- CflLAS. ATLANTA. GA. TEC. 1 lit. LV iHJMi. CHINE CO., O.n.-iiui, .V 1,. 'BUSINKSS MIVX k TTO KJiE V r S. F. TWM s Attorne"-at-I.aw -.tun j i yttjtycra'd Block. Vua-- v. : ,' ATTORNEY. . A. X. SfM.lv a Attorney-at-Law. Whifi-n,-,' to all butiie intrKtfi f.. u Union Blork. Kf.nt i : .. .. flKOCEUIK , CHRIS. Wi lli Staple and rrrcy C,rr-rie-. ri Crockery, Flour and Ktcd. i n Ml f f: .ie autf IL5 i.J6. .iU mm MAOr iii v. V S.