The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, April 23, 1925, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1S25.
PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOTTRNAL
PAGE THRES
JPUBLiSiDiD SEMI-WEESLY AT
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00
PROPHECY OF CHRIST'S COMING
And in that day there shall be a
root of Jesse, which shall stand for
an ensign of the people: and his rest
shall be glorious. Isaiah 11:10.
:o:-
Don't go swimming just yet.
Tight shoes sell a
biles.
lot of autorao-
-:o:
Clean up and paint up and you
will turn the knockers inter boosters.
-:o:-
An early spring is all right, even
if it is two weeks earlier than last
year.
:o:
The people who are not for home j
first, should get an airplane and go
up in wind.
:o:
We are so seared our hair is going
to stick up in the back that it won't
stay down.
:o:
Every woman dreads disease and
nearly all know that disease germs
breed In dirt and filth.
-:o:-
It's none of our business, but some
people look as if they were raised on
lemon Juice instead of milk.
:o:
If Henry Ford really is going to
make airplanes there is a fortune for
someone in selling steel helmets.
:o:
It's funny. If balloon tires look
good on cars, why can't they start a
craze for comfortable balloon shoes?
: o :
An Italian queen has ordered la
dies to wear trains. Couldn't do it
in this country. Would be worn out
first day.
:o:
Every woman with her own cares
would like to see the whole city as
clean as her own house. Clean up!
Paint up!
' 7. :o:
If you want her to think you are
sentimental, blow smoke through
your nose until there are tears in '
your eyes.
:o:
The Illinois legislature is consid
ering a vote for 2.75 per cent beer
to get a reflection of popular senti
ment in the state.
:o:
In telling a funny story to any
body always preface it with "stop
me if you've heard this before" and
save time and breath.
:o:
The old fashioned man who could
drink it or leave it alone is now
pushing up the daisies, having been
planted there by bootleg booze.
:o:
Spasmodic campaigns of swatting
the fly gives only temporary relief.
The Clean Up and Paint Up cam
paign, destroys the breeding places of
flies and mosquitoes.
:o:
The German presidential cam
paign seems to be getting into form,
the republican and monarchist par
ties having exchanged charges that
slush funds are raised.
. :o:
A French statesman recently urg
ed his countrymen to forget the past
and look to the future. In -the mat
ter of its debts, the French republic
eeems to have forgot the past long
ago.
:o:
Let's organize a clean-up and
paint-up campaign. Give the school
children a chance to make this cam
paign a success. When properly or
ganized they become one of the most
efiicient units in the campaign.
:o:
The department of agriculture an
nounces that artificial rain-making
is impossible. Still, as a matter of
practical experience. It has been
found that getting up a Sunday
school picnic usually does the busi
ness. :o:
Statistics prove that clergymen
have more distinguished sons than
any other profession. A contempor
ary thinks this disproves the old idea
that ministers sons are scapegoats.
Not necessarily. It may prove that
scapegraces become distinguished
men-.
. :o:
The Pittsburg Gazette-Times is of '
the opinion that the Indiana man
with a salary of $35 a week who has
been keeping up two wives and a car
certainly is a financier." There's a
shorter word than the last one in the
quotation, to fit the case. It has t breakfast in thirty minutes Is a won
only four letters and begins with.der, to say nothing of dressing and
"f." 'getting to the office.
P LATT SilOUTH. 2TEE2ASKA
PER YEAR IN ADVANCE
Lot3 of fellows are good providers
but they are liable to get caught at
it.
:o:
A musician says jazz is dying,
and almost anybody can hear its
wails.
:o:-
Ah, wouldn't we farmers be hap
py if insects didn't eat anything but
weeds.
:o:
It is springtime in Boston, where
a millionaire will marry his house
keeper. :o:
The ordinary taxpayer isn't hard
boiled, he's just soaked, and usually
skinned.
-:o:-
It is hard to look prosperous un
less you have a good job and look
prosperous.
:o:
A St. Louis! woman struck her hus
band with a knife. Well, wasn't he
her husband?
:o:
Golf is such a crazy game. Inno
cent bystanders never know what
you're driving at.
Men become exasperated too eas
ily. In New York, a man took his
girl out and shot her.
:o:
An auto driver with no life insur
ance is neglecting his family when
he admires the scenery.
:o:
The cross-word puzzle hounds
should have a good time guessing at
the meaning of spring poetry.
:o:
News from Turkey. They have
called off a war, perhaps to end it
in time for their next one.
:o: :
No wonder some women haven't
any clothes. They wear out two
dresses shopping to buy one.
:o:
A man in Italy jumped 100 feet
with an egg without breaking it.
They think he is crazy. So do we.
:o:
A Los Angeles woman butted a
robber in the stomach, laying him
out, which was using her head.
:o:
spring makes us reel as ir we
would like about a million electric
light bulbs to throw at telephone
poles.
:o:
Harmony in local affairs is what
makes good towns. Then let us all
boost for Plattsmouth and be good
to ourselves.
:o: '
Recent aircraft tests indicate Gen
eral Mitchell's serious mistake was
in having more sense than his supe
rior officers.
-:o:
When men can't find anything
better to talk about, in an ill man
nered way, than the town in which
he lives, he had better get up and
dust.
:o:
A slight decline in food costs is
announced by the department of la
bor, which has instruments delicate
enough to detect things that would
escape the attention of the unscien
tific observer.
:o:
Dollar bills are said be In unprece
dented demand, and the treasury de
partment is trying to find out the
reason for it. We have a theory, al
though we do not urge it as the cor
rect one. OursIs that everybody
wants dollar bills because for five of
them you can get a $5 bill.
:o:
Another miracle is credited to the
radio. A Maryland man, after tests
carried on for two years, has suc
ceeded in broadcasting a3 far as tlio
Pacific coast, a distance of 3.00J
miles with his underground set, both
sending and receiving antenna bein
beneath the ground. It has been
found that an air-tight back vault
does not interfere materially with
radio reception and the question now
is does man really understand Just
what radio waves really are? Are
' they waves after all, and if not,
what are they?
The most humorous cause of di
vorce yet found comes from Chicago.
A man in that city wants a divorce
from hi3 wife because she woke him
up with only thirty minutes to dress,
eat his breakfast and get to the of-
flee, and most of the time she fed
him mackeral for breakfast. Any
man. that can get rid of a mackeral
$2$r srvfct? jfaa
ORIGIN OF THE BOB
uoDoea nair originated as a sign
of mourning.
After the fall of Louie XVI and the
end of the French monarchy with
its powder coiffures and wigs, short
hair came into vogue. A club had
been formed which reunited the
families of those who had fallen vic
tims to the guillotine. As a sign of
its new outlook and hope, this club
gave a ball at which the woman ap
peared with their hair cut and neck
shaved as a sign of mourning. This
was the beginning of new hairdresa
known as Coiffure a la Sacrifice.
And in spite of the ensuing riss
and fall of new governments with
attendant change3 in dress and hair
dress, short hair partly retained its
favor and most any event was likely
again to make it the ruling fashion.
This event came after Napoleon's re
turn from Egypt. Napoleon himself
had his hair cut very 6hort and his
soldiers did likewise. So when they
returned to France with the glamor
of service, this style of hairdress was
immediately imitated by wem and
women all over France.
In a similar manner, short hair
came into vogue again after the war
in our time. American nurses in
France found it more practical in
their work at the front to have short
hair, which fashion was soon imi
tated every where. To women it be
came the cymbol for everything
"American?' just as the "Charlie
Chaplin" mustache was to men.
Of late years bobbed hair has be
come more than a style. It has or
dered almost on a mania. Women
have spent millions of dolars having
their hair permanently waved and
cut In the latest fashion. But the
fad hr.s passed the peak of its vogue
and long hair will soon be the pre
vailing custom.
:o:
LOOK IN THIS MIRROR
Is this world getting better? Look
Into its mirror, which is the news
paper. Consider the improvement of
its news column, in the things they
include, and of its advertising col
umns, in the things they leave out.
So many things are now news
which the editor of a generation ago
would have rejected a3 beyond the
interest or knowledge of his read
ers foreign news, art and musical
news, archaelogical discoveries (in
other words, King Tut and dino
saurs) science, religion, education
all these are treated with a fullness
indicating a recognition of the wider
intellectual interests of readers.
Even the "Sunday Sup" contain
an increased admixture of intelli
gent features. If there is still sen
sationalism, it less "yellow" than its
predecessors; if some things are said
plainly which used to be suggestive
ly insinuated, that is at least more
frank.
And in the advertising columns,
indecent advertising is gone and
fraudulent and deceptive advertis
ing is going. Quack doctors have
nearly disappeared and quack medi
cine grows constantly less.
Blackmailing collection agencies
are unknown; get-rich-qulck specu
lations are largely banned; there is
of course no liquor or saloon adver
tising; and there 13 a ban on bogus
"bankrupt sales" and an immensely
coccemrcial advertising.
Berate the newspaper all you like.
They doubtless need It still. But be
fore you praise too much the "good
old times" when editors called each
other liars and thieves and made part
of their living from obscene and
fraudulent advertising look up
6ome old nies, to remind yourself
what they were like.
:o:
A Philadelphia man sneezed a
steel file from his nasal tubes that
had been there for twelve years. It
it time to get out of the way when a
man commences walking around In a
circle with his head up in the air
and his mouth open like he wanted
to sneeze.
:o:
Most every boy has a distinct re
membrance of the days when he used
to hurry through his wood chopping
or garden hoeing in order that he
might take his reed fishing pole and
home-made line, with a can of earth
worms down to the slow-moving
creek for a few hour's session with
the bream and perch. Well, the
beauty of it is those days are here
now, and the boy of today and the
boy of yesterday have the same fever
in his bones and the same old long
ing for the creek.
ELECTRIFIED FARMS
Only two and one-half per cent of
the farms of the United States have
electric service. Nevertheless, the
department cf agriculture says elec
tricity is already supplying more
farm power than is supplied by gaso
line engines. Some of it is received
from central stations. Many farm
homes have individual generation
plants.
This means much in better light
ing for house and farm buildings, in
the opportunity for the farm wife to
use labor-saving machinery and for
the farm hubsand to have improved
equipment in many phases of his
work.
It -is partly the use of electricity,
along with the gasoline engine and
other up-to-date equipment, that hr.s
enabled the American farmer today
to produce three times as much per
man as was produced with the meth
ods of 1S50. The power available
to every farm worker is now esti
mated at 4.6 horsepower as against
1.5 horsepower 75 years ago.
Undoubtedly the per cent of farms
using electricity will not long remain
as low as it stands today. It will be
a happy day for the farmers and for
the whole country when electricity
is available in every farm commun
ity. :o:
A BIG PROBLEM
A birth control convention has met
and adjourned. Its members took it
very seriously. The rest of us were
shocked, amused or indifferent.
Reallj for us, there are more inter
esting things on which to hold con
ventions. But not for most of the world.
For the major part of the human
race, exactly this question over
shadows every other problem of life.
Japan found it easy to adopt west
ern civilization, but it is still stag
gered by the problem of an oriental
birth rate and an occidental death
rate.
No other civilization is thinkable
for China than the present one, in
which everything is done the hard
est way, to make Jobs for more peo
ple, and the surplus is kept down by
starvation and pestilence, so long as
the present birth rate continues.
We can teach these people every
thing we know, of science, of indus
try and of organization, but it is all
useless and meaningless while popu
lation crowds the limit of bare sub
sistence. It would be biologically
possible to populate America with 1
billion people In two or three gener
ations.
It would be sociologically impos
sible, even for us. to maintain any-thinp-
hut a Chinese civilization If
we did.
:o:-
SOCIAL WORKERS MEETING
The regular monthly meeting of
the Social Workers Flower club win
be entertained at the home of the
Misses Olive and Blanche Homing
on Wednesday afternoon, April 2 2d
Doan's Ointments are recommend
ed by many who say they operate
eaSilv. without griping and without
bad after effects. 30c at all drug
stores.
ORDER OF HEARING
and Notice on Petition for Set
tlement of Account
In the County Court of Cass coun
ty, Nebraska.
State of Nebraska, Cass county, ss.
To the heirs and all persons in
terested in the estate and guardian
ship of George W. Shrader, now de
ceased:
On reading the petition of Wil
liam D. Wheeler, praying a final set
tlement and allowance of his account
filed in this court on the 21st day
of March. 1925. and for his dis
charge;
It is hereby ordered that you and
all persons interested in said matter
may, and do, appear at the County
Court to be held in and for said coun
ty on the 4th day of May, A. D. 1925,
at 10 o'clock a. m., to show cause.
if any there be, why the prayer of
the petitioner should not be granted,
and that notice of the pendency of
said petition and the hearing thereof
be given to all persons interested in
said matter by publishing a copy of
this order in the Plattsmouth Jour
nal, a semi-weekly newspaper print
ed in said county, for one week prior
to said day of hearing.
In witness whereof, I have here
unto set my hand and the seal of
said Court, this 20th day of April,
A. D. 1925.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) a23-lw County Judge.
Barred Rock Eggs
for Hatching from Ac
credited Faran Flock
Average Egg Production
148.6
$1.50 per 15
7 per 100
MRS. C. L. WILES
Plattsmouth, Nebr.
? JL T. D. HO.
- $
You can saw Sheet
rock, nail it, fit it to
form, just like lumber.
It makes standard
walls and ceilings. It is
easy to erect you or
your carpenter nail it
to the joists or stud
ding. Its cost is low. A
different wallboard.
Vtirraaca
Ask your lumber
dealer for it
FARM BUREAU NOTES t
? Copy for this Department
furnished by County Agent J
v vr
Achievement Day For Hot
Lunch Club
Miss Hoover's Hot Lunch club,
near South Bend, gave a fine pro
gram to the patrons of the district,
consisting of club songs, readings,
demonstrations on packing the scholo
lunch and setting the table. This
club has completed four years of
club work. The following received
third year pins: Olive Bricker, Freda
Schuelke and Lois May Funk. Fourth
year pins were earned by Marion
Kellogg, Rolla Bricker and Nelda
Funk. The teacher, patrons and club
work deserve much credit for the
condition of the school building. One
derives pleasure from visiting a rural
school like this one.
Sweet Clover
George Althouse of Eagle cut 20
tons of hay off of 18 acres of sweet
clover. He threshed the last crop
for seed. Seventy-two bushels sold
for 6c to Sc per pound, seed from
one acre bringing $24. Hay was
stacked in the field, cattle eating en
tire stack. Frank Cook of Alvo had
fourteen acres on which he kept 140
sheep, IS head of cattle and three
horses.
Baby Beeves
Mr. McMahon's Baby Beef club, of
Eagle, has tome fine calves, two
Herefords, one Angus, one ' Gallo
way and two Shorthorns. The mem
bers are David Moreland, Harold
Wall, George Youngberg. Clifford
Jacobsen and Keith and Floyd Alt
house. Clean Up the Poultry House
The "spring clean up" will not be
complete until the poultry house has
been cleaned thoroughly. To make
a thorough Job of it, the agricul
tural college suggests that all re
movable fixtures should be taken
out. If the floor is of dirt the top
six inches should bo removed and
new dirt from a place not liable to
have been contaminated by poultry,
put in.
Whitewashing Is effective in
brightening up the interior, but for
getting rid of parasites as mites and
for disinfecting purposes, stronger
mixtures (though not necessarily
more expensive) should be used such
as waste oil from the auto or tractor
mixed with equal parts of kerosene
or one pint of crude carbolic acid to
one gallon of kerosense. If possible
apply with a spray pump so that the
mixture reaches every crack and
crevice in which mites or- disease
might be lurking. If a spray pump
is not available use an ordinary
whitewash brush covering every
square inch of space. Painting the
roosts and nests with a good pre
servative or creosote is insurance
against mites. It may be this will
be the time to discard the old fash
ioned sloping roosts and put in a
dropping board and horizontal
roosts.
Clean Clothes Before Storing
Soiled garments are more attrac
tive to moths than clean ones. For
this reason the agricultural college
advises that before putting winter
clothes away for the summer they
should be thoroughly brushed and
aired and all spots cleaned.
Arthur Brisbane says the illness
of Babe Ruth is big news because
the stories will interest children, to
whom the home run king is a hero,
and they will interest men with the
brains of children. It seems to us
Arthur was making a miserable at
tempt to be cute. If he thinks base
ball appeals only to men with the
brains of children, he had better
quit writing for the American people
long enough to acquaint himself
with their tastes. Ve go to games
ourselves and enjoy the pop and
peanuts extravagantly.
:o: j
Try Journal Want Ads. It payg.J
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass
County, ss.
In the Cc unty Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of
Kate Barthold. Deceased.
To the eiyditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the County Court Room in 1
Plattsmouth in said County, on the'
ISth day of May, A. D., 1925 and on
the 18th day of August A. D., 1925,
at ten o'clock a. m.. each day to re
ceive and examine all claims against
said Estate, with a view to their
adjustment and allowance. The time
limited for the presentation of claims
against sail Estate is three months
from the ISth day of May. A. D.,
1925, and the time limited for pay
ment of debts is One Year frm said
ISth day of May 1925.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court, this ISth day of
April, 19 25.
A. H. DUXBURY,
(Seal) A20-4w County Judge.
LEGAL NOTICE
John M. Henry and Minnie J. Hen
ry, you and each of you. are hereby
notified that on the 14th day of
April, 1925, The Standard Savings
and Loan Association, as plaintiff
filed its petition in the District Court
of Cass county, Nebraska, and you
and each of you are made parties de
fendants. The object and prayer of
said petition is to foreclose and can
cel a certain contract in writing
dated December 28, 1922, made and
executed by and between the Living
ston Loan and Building Association
of Plattsmouth and the said John M.
Henry and Minnie J. Henry for the
purchase of the following described
real estate, to-wit:
The north 78 feet of Lots 7.
8 and 9, Block 54, in the City
of Plattsmouth, according to the
surveyed and recorded plat
thereof.
That a decree be entered by the
Court foreclosing said contract. That
you the said defendants and each of
you be enjoined from claiming or
asserting any right, title or interest
in and to faid real estate or any part
thereof. That said real estate be
quieted in 6aid plaintiff and' that said
plaintiff have such other and fur
ther relief in the premises as it may
be entitled to and to the Court seem
Just.
You and each of you are required
to answer this petition on or before
the 1st day of June, 1925.
THE STANDARD SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION.
By O. W. JOHNSON,
Its Attorney.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
OF CASS COUNTY, NEBRASKA
P. A, McCrary, Plaintiff,
vs.
The heirs, devisees, legatees, personal
representatives and all other perr
sons interested in the estates of
Oran 8. Thompson, Rebecca B
Thonmson, his wife, Joseph Mc-
Creary. Edmund A. Donelan and
Lucinda Billings, each deceased, real
names unknown; and all persons
having or claiming any Interest in
Outlot sixty-four (64), Section eign
teen (18), Township twelve (12)
Range fourteen (14), east of the 6th
P. M., Caes county, Nebraska, or any
part thereof, real names unknown.
Notice of Suit to Quiet Title
To the defendants, the heirs, devi
sees, legatees, personal representa
tives and all other persons interested
in the estates of Oran S. Thompson
Rebecca 15. Thompson, his wife, Jo
seph McCreary, Edmund A. Donelan
and Lucinda Billings, each deceased
real, names unknown; and all per
sons having or claiming any interest
in Outlot sixty-four (64), Section
eighteen (18), Township twelve
(12), Range fourteen (14) east of
the 6th P. M., Cass county, Nebras
ka, or any part thereof, real names
unknown:
You and each of you are hereby
notified that the above named plain
tiff filed a petition and commenced
an action in the District court of
Cass county, Nebraska, on the 15th
day of April, 1925, against you and
each of you, the object and prayer
of which is to obtain a decree quiet
ing title to the Outlot sixty-four
(64), Section eighteen (18), Town
ship twelve (12), Range fourteen
(14) east of the 6th P. M., Cass
county, Nebraska, as against you and
each of you, and for such other and
further relief as may be Just and
equitable.
You and each of you are required
to answer said petition Monday the
28th day of May, 1925, or the al
legations of plaintiffs petition will
be taken as true and a decree will
be entered in favor of plaintiff and
against you and each of you, accord
ing to the prayer of said petition.
Dated this 15th day of April, A.
D. 1925.
P. A. McCRARY.
Plaintiff.
J. A. CAPWELL,
Plaintiff's Attorney,
al6-4w.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
Prank Hughson, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the county court room in
City of Plattsmouth in said county,
on the first day of June, 1925, and
the third day of August, 1925, at ten
o'clock In the forenoon of each of
said days to receive and examine all
claims against said estate, with a
view to their adjustment and allow
ance, TH9 time a mi tea lor tne pre
sentation of claims against said
estate is three months from the first
day of May, A. D. 1925, and the time
limited for payment of debts Is one
year from said first day of May,
1925.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said county ecmrt, this Tth day df
April, 1926.
A. H. DUXBfTRT,
(Seal) a9-4wfcs,enr County Juflape.
fr&Q
POVSfEK
TO YCUK
P j
r m t r :
because Texaco Meter
Oil Ford lubricates every
moving part with clean,
clear, golden colored
Te::aco cold or hot
AND
OR
ask for Texaco Motor
Oil Ford and see what your
Ford can do.
OFE OIL CO.
Texaco Service Station
PLAT'l SMOL'TH.
NEBRASKA
j
A househoM remedy In America for
2 5 years Dr. Thomas' Eclectic Oil.
For cuts, sprains, burns, scalds and
bruises. 30c and COc. At all druc
stores.
ORDER OF ID3ARING
' On Petition For Appolntmoni
Of Administrator
The Btata of Nebraska, Cas coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court
In the matter of the estate of Bar
bara Klinger. deceased.
On reading and filing the petition
of George J. Klinger, praying that
administration of said estato may bo
granted to petitioner as administra
tor: Ordered, that May 4 th, A. D.
1925, at Nine o'clock a. m., 1b as
signed for hearing said petition,
when all persons Interested in said
matter may appear at a County
Court to be held in and for Bald
county, and 6how cause why the
prayer of petitioner should not be
granted; and that notice of the
pendency of said petition and the
hearing thereof be given to all per
sons interested in said matter by
publishing a copy of this order in
the Plattsmouth Journal, a semi
weekly newspaper printed in said
county, for three successive weoka
prior to Kaid day of hearing.
Dated April 18th, 1925.
A. II. DUXBURY.
(Seal) alS-3wks,w County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska. Cam coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the eetft-W of
David J. Pitman, deceased.
To the creditors of said eatate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the county court room in
Plattsmouth in said county, on the
8th day of May. A. D. 1925. and
on the 8th day of August, A, D. 1925,
at ten o'clock a. m., of each day tn
receive and examine all claims
against said estate, with a view to
their adjustment and allowance. The
time llraited for the presentation of
claims against said estate is three
months from the 8th day of May,
A. D. 1925, and the time limited for
payment of debts is pne year from
said 8th day of May, 1925.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said county court, this 7th day of
April, 1925.
A. II. DUXBURY.
(Seal) al8-4w County Judge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The State of Nebraska, Cass coun
ty, ss.
In the County Court.
In the matter of the estate of
George W. Shrader, deceased.
To the creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notified, that I
will sit at the County Court room in
Plattsmouth in said county, on the
19th day of May, 1925, and on the
19th day of August, 1925, to receive
and examine all claims against said
estate with a view to their adjust
ment and allowance. The time limit
ed for the presentation of claims
against said estate is three months
from the 19th day of May. A. D.
1925 and the time limited for pay
ment of debts is one year from said
19th day of May, 1925.
Witness my hand and the seal of
said County Court, this 20th day of
April, 1925.
A. II. DUXBURY,
(Seal) a23-4w County Judge.
Ml
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NEVER.
A
jeRK
OR