T n. ,, J fS-VTj, -HN-VfimTfwv -yr r fjm ?mw?v!r Tt "',, 1'1'fSf -1.1 v l tfiKW, KrT'v "'T- VK"T"f TT. BID OLOUD, IIIlilEA, llllf "fW li'T'!PPTP:BT;',',,iT'J'Ti,w "rv y r ' BLw BBBLHBBBH BK2SK(i. bA BL EJHkA -1 MWJWJJHW.,,, .,.,. ,,,,. .ji.nn-nrwvi vHtVhi TiHAflK&FK H LbbbbbbbbmbLbLL H be - jfllH s4LHLLLLLLLLLLLLb bVvjiIbbbj BHK LBBBBBBBBBjflBBBBBBKvBBBBBiBB tbK " jjjtjjnw.'j vvwhh4 jjj. b4Bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbi5 BBHbBBBBBBBuJbBBBBBBH'! tWBl lifvn llfr JBBfiJMTJB I JmtMZjlS jZ-"BJy t!rBhlBlSOBnBBawiiBB&v . ,...i i i ..t it..i..i,., Armenian flag brought by General tank fire nt Greenpolnt, Long Island. NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Peace Conference Devises Plan for Settling the Problem of the Adriatic. O'ANNUNZIO'S FIUME RAID Baltic States and Russian Bolshevists Talking Peace Prealdent Wilton Explain Application of League Covenant to Shantung and Irish Question. By EDWARD W. PICKARD. While D'Annunrio held possession of Flame after bis spectacular raid on that disputed city, the pence confer ence In Paris got busy and announced Its solution of the entire Adriatic problem. It Is a compromise plan de signed to satlRfy both Italy and Jugo slavia, nnd It was cabled to America to be submitted to President Wilson. Tills compromise settlement provides that Flume shall be a free state and that Its hnrbor shall be n free port; thnt the Jugo-Slnvs shnll have all of the Dalmntlan mainland except the city of Zarn, which shnll be n free port, and most of the Dnlmntlnn islands; thnt Avlona nnd the surround ing territory shnll be under Itallnn sovereignly, nnd thnt Itnly shnll re ceive n mnndnte for nil of Albnnln ex cept the Eplrus, In the extreme south, which shnll go to Greece, noth Itnly nnd Jugo-Slnvln mnkc concessions un der this plnn, nnd It Is believed thnt it will enable Flume ultlmntcly to be come n pnrt of Itnly n consummntlon which the American pence delegntlon was nble to prevent during the trenty negotiations. D'Annunzlo's seizure of Flume was decidedly embnrrnsslng to the Ital ian government. To use force against Mm wns plainly out of the question, for the sympathies of the nation were ,wtth him, despite the fact that he and bis troops were technically mutineers. Ilowcvcr, the government did take steps looking townrd n blocknde of Fl ume by lnnd nnd sen In the expecta tion thnt the poet-soldier's nrmy would be soon stnrved Into submission, nnd in this measure the Jugo-Slnvs co-op-ernted by cutting off nil supplies by lnnd. D'Annunzio nnd nbout 10,000 regulars nnd four battalion? of vol unteers under his coinmnnd, and oc cupied a fortified line around the city. It was reported that he was prepared fo rnzc Flume if he could not hold out, and thnt In this he was support ed by the citizens. Naturnlly, the Gerninns were wntch Ing this affair with great Interest, nnd the news that the allies had decided it was to be handled by Italy alone wns looked on by them as significant, for some of them wero contemplating the possibility of n similar raid on Danzig. They figured thnt If the ex pressed will of Uie allied peace con ference could be defied in one place, It might be defied In another. In nungnry the nllles arc gradually bringing the situation around to their own way, for the Roumanians, It Is announced, are withdrawing their troops and hnve promised to rcMoro the mntcrlals they had confiscated. Prime Minister Frledrlch of Hungary, It is expected, will quit, and a coall tion cabinet will be recognized by the allies. The representatives of the Ilnltlc etntes are holding, or nbout to hold, conferences with the Russian bolshe vlsts, with the prospect that peace be tween them will be nrrnnged. Wheth er this is with the tnclt consent of the allied nntlons Is not clenr. At any rate, the White Russians nro desper ately fighting against such nn outcome, for It would mean their destruction by the Reds. The Gennnn troops In the Baltic states, commanded by Gen eral von der Goltz, are Increasing In numbers nnd nro very active. The )lcrlln government, In response to tho demand of the peace conference that they bo withdrawn, said they wero not under Germnh control, but this plen the conference refused to nllow. Tho Russian soviet government nsserts that, despite its recent victories on the .....I r'..r,iiiini iiiiiimtiu filintnirrnnliiwl ni Torcom to be presented to President Wilson. 3 Scene during the great oil Ilnltlc front, It desires pence nnd friendly rclntlons with the new stntes formed In thnt region. Of course It would then bo able to turn most of Its attention to the East, where Admiral Kolchnk Is reported to have had sev eral notable successes recently. Japan, according to report, hns been nsked by the United States to pledge formally the return of Shantung to Chtnn, nnd to set n dnte for the resto ration. At the time of writing no re ply had been received from Tokyo, and the Japanese foreign office de nied thnt nny such note hnd been re ceived from Washington. In state ments Issued In California, In reply to lists of questions nsked him, President Wilson asserted thnt the League of Nntlons would have a powerful effect In forwarding the final restoration of Shantung to Ghlnn, and thnt nn other instrumentality or action could be sub stituted which could bring nbout thnt result. In one of his San Francisco addresses he said the great powers hnd Japan's promise to return Shan tung to China, nnd Intended to see thnt it wns fulfilled under the lengue. His colleagues at Versailles, he snld, told him they meant under the league to Inaugurate a new policy toward China. Another subject taken up by the president in his answers to questions and In his speeches was the Irish ques tion. This, he asserted, could prop erly be brought up In the council of the league under article XI, "which makes It the right of every member of the league to draw attention to any thing anywhere that Is likely to dis turb the pence of the world or the good understanding between nations, upon which the peace of the world de pends." The covennnt would not bind the United States to assist In putting down rebellion In any foreign coun try, he snld, nor would It limit the power of this country to recognize the independence of nny people who seek to secure freedom. He explained thnt Irelnnd wns not given n hearing nt the pence conference because the confer ence hnd no Jurisdiction over ques tions of thnt sort that affected terri tories thnt did not belong to the de feated empires. The Irish-American opponents of the league were far from satisfied with this reply, and cspcclnlly did they dis like whnt they termed the president's nblguousness. They nsked hi in to nnswer polnt-blnnk the question : "Are you In fnvor of self-determination for Ireland?" and requested n reply by September 2.r. when the Irish execu tive committee meets In New York. It does not seem possible thnt they ex pect n "yes-or-no" nnswer to such n question. Some one must hnve whispered a warning to Mr. Wilson concerning the resentment caused by his general nt tncks on nil senators who do not fnvor ratification of the treaty as It stands, for lust week his speeches were much more conclllntory, nnd he even had good words to say concerning the "mild reservatlonlsts." nut his ex pressed opinion of the Rornh-Johnson group had not changed. Throughout the country there Is evident n de termination to learn definitely whnt the treaty and covenant mean, and the crowds thnt flock to hear the presi dent and the opposition senators nre not actuated solely by curiosity to see and hear notables. Each In his own way, and from his own standpoint, tho speakers are trying to enlighten the people, nnd It Is especlnlly gratify ing to note thnt Mr. Wilson Is moro explicit In his explanations of tho articles over which the main contests hnvo arisen. The uationnl committee for organiz ing Iron nnd steel workers nnnnunced that the great steel strike would be gin Monday, September 2ii, according to schedule, since every effort to hold n conference with Chnlrninn Gary of the United Stntes Steel corporation had failed. Mr. Gary Issued a state ment explaining his refusal on two grounds: First, that he did not be lieve the committee was authorized to speak for largo numbers of the em ployees; second, thnt a conference with tho committee would have been treated by It Is a recognition of the. closed shop method of employment, which method the corporation Is de tcrmlncd not to countenance, since It destroys tho worker's personal Inde pendence and ambition to succeed and prosper. The organizing committee re plied thnt these two reasons nre fnlse, tlu lattor's homo In Itnltlmorc. 2 nnd that the employees of the corpo ration are now compelled to resort to n strike In order to prove td Judge Gary tho authority of their selected representatives to present their griev ances. In the Chicago district, nt least, strlke-brenkcrs will not be em ployed, nccnrdlng to the company of ficials. The strikers will be pnld off nnd dlschnrged permanently, and If the walkout Is general, the mills will shut down. Disorders In Boston, due to the strike of policemen, were largely sup pressed by the military, but the situa tion otherwise wns little improved. The firemen, however, decided not to quit, nnd the threatened -general strike was nt least postponed. The attltudo of the American Federation of Labor toward the Boston case Is peculiar. President Gompers, while defending the strike, ndmlttcd the police were given a charter on the express un derstanding thnt they would not strike. Then Mr. Gomper's secretary visited Boston to study the sltuntlon, nnd on lenvlng announced thnt the federation stood solidly behind the striking po licemen. He intlmnted thnt he did not fnvor a general strike at this time. Chiefly because the police force of Washington also was unionized In the face jot orders to the contrary, Presi dent Wilson took a hand In the mat ter of police unions. He sent a tele gram to Commissioner Brownlow of tho District of Columbln In which he snld: "I think thnt any association of the police force of the capitnl city, or of nny grent city, whose object Is to bring pressure upon the public or the community, such as will endnngcr the public pence or em bnrrnss the mnlntennnce of order, should In no case be countenanced or permitted." Announcement that the carpenters strike nnd consequent building Indus try tie-up In the Chlcngo district hnd ended wns not only premnture, but seemingly false. Tho enrpenters were ostensibly given n chnnce to vote on the question, but Instead of a secret ballot, the voting was open, and the contractors assert that thus the labor bosses were able to intimidate the men nnd obtnln a mnjority for rejection of the compromise offered. Two big meetings of general Inter est were held In Chlcngo last week. The first was the annual convention of the Zionists of America, at which plans were laid for the Industrial In vasion of Palestine by the Jews. The first of tho Invaders will be members of the Jewish legion thnt fought In the Holy Lnnd under General Allenby. Steps were taken to raise the Immense sums needed to develop Palestine. The executive committee expects to get ns much ns $7,000,000 In Amerlcn during the coming yenr. The other meeting wns of some 300 leaders of tho Anti-Saloon Lengue of Amerlcn, who were completing their program for n campaign designed to mnko the whole world dry. They de cided they must raise nt lenst $5,000, 000 for the work und thnt prohibition must be enforced In Amerlcnn cities ns proof to the world thnt the sale of liquor can be stopped. The gulf coast of Texas suffered se verely from the troplcul hurricane thnt. swept up from the Cnrlbbenn sen. Scores of persons wero drowned nnd Immense property damage was done, especlnlly In Corpus Chrlstl and the region roundabout. Prosecution of tho packers by the government proceeded npace with the presentntlon of evidence to the grand Jury In Chicago. Notwithstanding the outcry of Chlcngo organizations In de fense of the "big five," this evidence nnd whnt Is yet to come Is declared by Attorney General Pnlmer to bo ample to sustain the Indictment of the combination of packers, and ho ndded that when the collected data "Is laid before a Jury tho wrath of the Amer ican peoplo will compel n verdict of conviction. Tho story will nmuze America." Patriotic Americans were gratified by the sentence Imposed by Judge Dean at Jackson, Minn., on President K. 0. Townley of tho Nonpartisan league nnd Joseph Gullbert, former manager, who hnd been convicted of conspiring to tench sedition. They wero given 00 days In Jail the limit under the statute. CORNHUSKER ITEMS News of All Kinds Gathered From Various Points Throughout Nebraska. OF INTEREST TO ALL READERS Iu mlilda.v. with the usual number of people on the streets, two unmasked ImiMllts entered the ('illens State lunik at Italston, a suburb of Omului, covered the cashier and two other of ficials on duty with revolvers, gathered up all the currency In sight, about !?t,. 'tl0, and made their escape hi 1i high-powered automobile. There were three robbers, two operating In the bunk while the third kept guard on the outside. The cilllcliiW were locked In the bank vault by the lilgliwa.Miieu hut liberated thpiiisclvct u few minute1 nfler the robbery. No trace of the bandits has been found. A Jury In the district court at Fre mont awarded I.e Roy MctJce S'JO.OOO damages against (lie Stockyard and Land Co., for permanent Injuries re ceived while In the employ of the com pany. After settlement had been made under the workmen's compensation law. the suit was brought and the court refused to dismiss It, sustaining a point (hat since the boy was under the age whereby he might be legally employed, the compensation act did not apply. The primaries of September 10 to nominate candidates for delegates to the constitutional convention, held In twenty-live legislative districts, was Nebraska's tamest election. Less than 10 per cent of a normal vote was cast In most of the districts. . Election of delegates will be held November -1 and the convention will nssemblu Decem ber 2. Gov. McKelvIe Issued a statement urging Nebraskans to send contribu tions of money to the mayor of Corpus Chrlstl, Texas, for relief of storm vic tims In that city and vicinity. His ac tion followed appeals for help made by tho mayor of Corpus Chrlstl and the governor of Texas. Eleven of twelve steers exhibited by the Nebraska college of agriculture at the slate fair won premiums. Their winnings included live firsts, six seconds and six thirds. Alliance Is to be tin; headquarters of n new oil company, capitalized at $1,000,000. which will operate chiefly in northeastern Wyoming, the location of the latest oil excitement. Despite the fact that luck of ma terial has retarded the work of pav ing twelve blocks of Teeuiiiseb's streets, contractors expect to finish the Job this fall. Wild ducks are reported more plenti ful In the sand bill regions of Nebras ka than for many years and an excel lent season of fall shooting Is ex pected. Assurance has been given thnt n new concrete state-aid bridge will bo built across the Platte south of Shel ton to replace the wooden structure now In use. A 'J.OOO-acre tract of land nenr Rushucll, sold the other clay for S7f, 000, Is to be divided Into IftO-acro farms and put under cultivation. The congregation of the Methodist Episcopal church at Clmppell has be come so large that an addition to the edifice is to be built at once. It Is estimated that tame hay pro duction will amount to 4,Ai,000 tons in Nebraska this year, as compared to 2,380,000 tons last year. The State Railway commission has postponed the date of the hearing on telephone service charges from Octo ber l.r to the 28. The Trl-stato fair held at Crawford was a success from every standpoint. Attendance for the three days exceed ed 20,000. Sulllclent stock bus been sold In the proposed butter factory at Bloomtleld to make sure the establishing of the enterprise. A movement Is under way to estab lish an Ice plant at Tekaiuah. an en terprise badly needed by the city. At a special election at Guide Rock a proposition to Issue bonds for elec tric, lights carried by a vole of 14!) toO. Tho Farmers State bank of Gurloy has moved Into Us new home which cost approximately $15,000. Annual lire day will be observed In all public schools throughout Nebras ka, Friday, November 7. October 15 to 17 are the dates set fur the annual fall festival and stock show nt Wayne. i Sugar factories of western Nebraska are to begin the 1010 campnlgn In a few days. The operation Is expected to lns,t about 120 daj. It Is estlmnted that no less than 80,000 bend of cattle from drouth stricken states have already arrived In Cherry, Grant, Thomns and Hooker counties. The state supreme court on October 0 will hear 1m appeal Involving tho validity of the constitutional conven tion law. The case is from Douglas county, where the lower court held the net valid. Ogallnla citizens are agitating the question of establishing a hospital In the city. The 800 acre Gardner IToiisel farm, near Ansley, which changed hands this spring for u consideration of $50,000, was sold u few days, ago to Peter llookstra of David City for $08,000. A number of Nebraska cities had terrific rains during the past week. They wero caused, It Is said, by storms In Texas. In less than twenty-four lours Red Cloud hnd 0.03 Inches, Au burn -1.30 nnd Falrbury 3.27. Many other points had excessive downpours. Nebraska boys and girls won twetv prizes nt the Interstate Live Stock fair nt Sioux City, la., Including first for pig club Judging and second In can ning. With eleven tcntns competing, 3 Seward county boys, Norvnl Clark, Peter Pratt and Walter Itrlggs, took high honors as judges of pigi. and three Omaha girls, Mary Honey, Ruby Olppon anil Anna May Unbind, second place In running, Governor AleKolvIo has called upon Hired or General lllncs of the rail rouiliidiiilnllnitlon to take smno nc- Hon to save Imiiilnwlu nf timnuinwiu ,.r bushels of wheat In western Nebraska from rolling on the ground, because freight cars for Its shipment have not been furnished. Great damage has aN ready been done and a further loss will follow unless relief Is had soon. The state board of educational lauds and buildings approved valuations of school lauds In Hn counties of Hoono, HulTiiln, Chase, Dawson, llarliin, John son. Pierce. ItleliiiriNoii, Sarpy, Web ster anil Wheeler, which show an In ereiiM' of XI, 1 1S.iMS. The former valua tion of these lands was $3."0,8.T'. Tho new total on the 78,!)8."i acres re- allied ls$l,4II.7SO. Hall county Is said to have saved considerable money by doing Its own work mi the county's .section of tho slate highway system now under con struction. The work throughout tho county Is virtually finished. The road building cost about 30 cents a cubic .Mini, It being much less than projects let by contract. Nebraska's only general (outside of General Per.slilug) to participate In the world war, Brig. Gen. Geo. Har ries, arrived at New York from over seas, lie was the first American of ficer to enter Berlin during the war. Only two of the several thousand hogs exhibited at the state fair, which were ordered quarantined after ship ment home because some of the ani mals had been exposed to an Infec tious form of bronchitis, have died. The first shipment of supplies to leave Nebraska for the hungry children of Germany wns transported on tho steamship Jason, which left New York September 20. The shipment consisted of 48,000 cans of condensed milk. Workmen in the nit of rebuilding n bridge on the Rock Island, near Desh ler, which had been destroyed by fire, were forced to suspend operations when a five-Inch rain fell In the dis trict. Reports from Washington to the ef fect that General Pershing will not make his western trip as planned caused the Lincoln Commercial club to temporarily halt Its plans for u big re ception. The Nebraska School of Agriculturo opens nt Lincoln October 10. The col lege offers a training in agriculture nnd home economics to all persons with a common school education. An army motor transport unit, bringing $12,000 worth of equipment, will be established in the military training department of the University of Nebraska at Lincoln. Contracts have been let for stnte aid bridges across the Pintle, nenr Central City and Grand Island, the two to cost approximately $170,000. Because of so many alleged Illegal raids and a number of damage suits filed against Its members, the Omaha moral squad has been abolished. Buffalo county's farm tiurcau Is to he a permanent institution, A suitable building for housing tbe enterprise is to be erected at Kearney. A hundred co-eds at the University of Nebraska have enrolled In millinery and dress making courses, according to registration officials. Paving of the principal street of Alnsvvortb wns brought to a stop last week due to the Inability of the con tractors to secure cement. The recent heavy rain at Superior washed out the clam of the Southern Nebraska Power Co., the oldest dam In the Republican river. Lovers of football at Lincoln predict that Nebraska will have one of tho best teams In the history of the State University this year. The big potash plants nt Antloch have again resumed operation and tho town Ls beginning to show some of Its old time spirit. Work on paving the three miles of the Lincoln highway west of Colum bus Is not expected to start until next spring. A home-coming celebration for Brown county soldiers and sailors will be held In Alnsworth on October 10 nnd 11. Falls City people are vigorously backing a movement to build a new up-to-dnte hotel in the city. Work of pnvlng more, than 100 miles of public ronds In Douglas county will begin early next spring. P. II. Stewart, Buffalo county agri cultural agent, has accepted n position with the extensoln bureau of the stato university. The congregation of the Bnptlst church at Pawnee City recently cele brated the fiftieth anniversary of tho establishment of the church In the city. One hundred well known Nebraska men, Including Edgnr Howard of Co lumbus and Frank Harrison of Lin coln, met at tho capital city the other day and organized n Nebraska branch of the League for the Preservation of American Independence. Beatrice Is to have n new hotel, which will cost, when furnished, moro tliun a half million dollars. Tho .plant of tho Nebrnskn Post, n dermnn newspaper published at Bea trice, which was suppressed by tho Gage County Defense Council, has been sold to an Omaha firm for Junk. A report submitted at tho annual conference of tho Methodist church of Nebraska at Lincoln shows that tho church's membership In this state de creased 1,032 in the past year. Of these 832 succumbed to the "Hu" last winter. IN MISERY : FOR YEARS Mrs. Courtney Tells How Sh Was Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Oskaloosn, lows. " For years I was Jimply in misery from a weakness and awiui pama ana nothing seemed to do me any (rood, a friend advised ma to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege tablo Compound. I did so and got re lief right away. I can certainly re commend this vnlu ablo medicine to other women who suffer, for it has dono such trood work for mo and I know it will help others if they willgivo it a f nir trial. Mr3.,Lizzic Courtney, 108 8th Ave., West, Oskaloosn, Iowa. Why will women drag along from day to day, year in and year out. Buffering such misery as did Mra. Courtney, when such letters as this are continually being published. Every woman who Buffers from displacements, irregularities, in flammation, ulceration, backache, ner vousness, or who is passing through tho Chango of Lifo should give this famous root nnd herb remedy, Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, a trial. For special advice writo Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. " The result of its long experience is at your service. A Catastrophe. Hushnnd (looking up from the paper which he has been reading) I sco Thompson's fchlrt store bus been burned out. Wife (slightly deaf) Whoso7 Husband Thompson's shirt store. Wife Dear me, who tore It? From Blighty. GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER In the good old summer time when fruits of all kinds no getting rips and tempting, when cucumbers, rad ishes and vegetables fresh from the garden are too good to resist, when tht festive picnic prevails and everybody overeats and your stomach goes back on you, then ls the time for "August Flower," the sovereign remedy for tired, overworked and disordered stom achs, a panacea for Indigestion, fer mentation of food, sour stomach, sick headache nnd constipation. It gently etimulntes the liver, cleanses the In testines nnd alimentary canal, making life worth living. Sold everywhere. Adv. Fame Usually Comes Unsought. Nothing Is so commonplace as to wish to be rcmnrkahle. Fame .usually comes to thobo who nro thinking nbout something else very rurely to those who sny to themselves, "Go to, now, let us be n celebrated Individual." Oliver Wendell Holmes. DISCOURAGED Mr. Renter Was Almost Helpless From Kidney Trouble, Bit Doan's Made Bin Well. "1 was in terrible shape from kidney West Chicago, 111. "I coulcJo't stoop because of the awful pains in my back and tbe steady, dun misery aiaost drove me lranuc. 1 nau to be helped out of bed morninpp, the pains across my kidneys were no bad and nobody knows tbe agony I went through. I couldn't do anything and was almost helpless; it seemed I would never get well. At times everything in front of me grew dark 4iril TninutAo T nnranirnil Haf E profusely and I was thirsty all the time. The urine passed far too often and burned liko Maiding water. The ?auMges were scanty and I bad no con rol over tbem. "For two years I suffered, trying medicine after medicine without relief. I was juBt about discouraged and didn't think I would ever be ablo to wrk again. Hearing about Doan's KlOkcy Pills I used them and fomr boxes cured me. My kidneys became aernaL my back got well and strong ad all tbe other troubles disappeared." Sicorn to before me, JA8. fa. OAMl, Notary Public. Cat Deoa't at Any Stor, 60a Ba DOAN'S "p'jaV FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. H. Y. Dry.Cleanlng, as It Were. "Like my new bathing suit?" "Yes." "It's waterproof." "That so? Is that nn ndvuntagjo?" "Yes. I can go in bnthlag nsw and not get wet." Cuttcura for Pimply Faces. Td remove pimples and blackheads Bmenr them with Cutlcura Ointment Wash off in five minutes with Ontl cura Sonp nnd hot water. Onco clear keep your skin clenr by using them for dally toilet purposes. Don't fall to in clude Cutlcurn Talcum. -Adv. What She Wanted to Know. The Incomo Tax Man Is there any thing you don't understand, madam? Mrs. Grabbltt Yes. In listing my Income nm I entitled to deduct the dol lnr n week I nllow my husband out of his snlnry for carfare nnd luneIicH7 ' Rests, Belrtskes, Soefactj Heals Keep your Eyes I Strong and Healthy.1 If tney i ire, smart, itch, or Burn, if Sore, Irritated, i Inflamed or Granulated. use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult At aU Druggists- Write tor Free liye Book. MariMEyeteMd7Cavuy,Calttfl,UiS.L i WnV "mSsSiM YulamS 4 .. ' r I a i t I