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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 12, 1920)
RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF i i HOUSE IN WHICH GENERAL WOOD WAS BORN ftaaWfetiaaSferfe&L'fr , Bgy .w" IK "BpI "x B .-& -ifi SVvMftji Q 'l rpTfillf' S f '0'ti cl'C' ifc 1 ! li-"'-- - J?M8MSKSl-Vi'Mriii8BaMMM' HBflBBflBBflBsHBflBBflBBflBBflBBflBBflBBflBBflnSVfljMr&BBBB aBBBBBBBBBaH'.iBmBBBBBBBBBBmLKmBBBBBBBBBBBflMMBBBBBBBBH -TbTbTbTbTbTbTbTbTbTbTbTbIbybwbTbTbb 1 MBHH'VRflHKyniBBiL f S. .A.'iQBBBaBBBSMaLam. 13855 I t. . wW. . . .. '-in i iwlv. r -i t --r- lli'viV' wyww w Astwninwiiiixi-rjjtw .& a '.. vM 1 '&'-''"- V'l''?aHVF JJ"SiMi7wl "- 1 auAAVMaSft r MSwKf? jjuli.vs')MiitiikVi-tm4 4rtWHWrfVr?1vrl This Ih the Iiouhc In which Gen. Leonard Wood was born In 1800. The building stunds on the innln street of Winchester, N. II, opposite to n statue erected to memory of Civil wnr dend. The lower part of the. dwelling tins been turned Into tho town post of lice. New Source of Food Supply Suggestion Made That Musk Ox Be Added to National Bill of Fare. VAST HERDS IN THE NORTH Practically a Permanent Supply of Beef Assured by Domestication of the Xnlmal, According to Vllhjalmur Stefansson. Washington. Having nlrendy done remarkably well In reindeer farming In Alaska, Uncle Snm Is to ho asked now to try his baud with musk oxen, to the end Unit the national meat hill may bo cut down nm! a permanent supply of beef ensured. Explorer Vllhjalmur Stefansson brought back 'from the arctics n story of great pos sibilities In tho way of meat produc tion, lie told this story to members of the Canadian parliament In Ottn wn, and hns also laid his facts and conclusions before some of the Wash ington officials. Roth governments will be asked for appropriations to ex tend the reindeer Industry and to at tempt the domestication of tho musk ox. As Stefansson sees It, there nre at least a million square miles of natur al grazing ground In tho sub-nretlcs, suited In every particular to the needs and tnstcs of tho northern cnrlhou nnd the still more northern musk ox. Vast herds of these nnlmals, In tho wild roam over the so-called "barren lands." Why not tnke them under protection, turn their feeding ranges Into ranches and abattoirs and ship the meat to the hungry folks down south? The territory is Canadian, but the hunger nnd high cost of liv ing nro International; therefore, let tho two countries' co-operate In a Bcheme of conservation. Reindeer Meat Liked. Alaska and Labrador have proved thnt tho reindeer enn bo domesticated Into u public meat producer. Deer meat has been shipped from Nome nnd other Alnskan points to Senttle, Minneapolis, Chicago nnd even to New York, nnd people who have bought It have asked for more. Stef ansson now suggests that the business be tnken up seriously, Its herding and ranching extended to the great prairies of the Canadian North, and the supply of ment to tho whole con tinent begun on n renlly commercial basis. Hut he ventures still farther nnd urges a slmllnr experiment with the musk oxen. Now, the music ox, being a peculiar ly nrctlc animal, hns never before fig ured In tho American schemo of mar PIG, NOT BRITISH COLONEL - .Italy's Chamber Gets Laugh Over Story of Mistaken Identity of "Drowned Personage." Rome. In tho general debnto on the reply to tho king's speech. Count Frolu, who, although the cx-mnyor of fTurln, belongs to tho socialist group, denounced severnl nbuses In tho army. He declnred that while during the war the front trenches had not suf ficient automobiles to transport the pounded to hospitals, thcro were plenty of automobiles to transport of--fleers 'to theaters fln neighboring towns. When In Albania, Frola said, his Vcnerul had a pig farm from which he sent dally suckling pigs In auto mobiles, accompanied by an officer, o Santa Quarnntn, from which port the pigs were shipped on a transport to friends of the general In Italy. A dally telegram was sent from Santa Qaaranta to tbo general announcing HiKi! rtj' - u - A - JVvtvvVTM'' - keting. In Its own country, however. It Is greatly valued fr Its meat's sake, and explorers who have eaten musk ox roasts up there sny It U a pity that tho Eskimos should hnve a monopoly of so good n diet. The meat Is hnrdly distinguishable In taste, It seems, from regulation beef, nnd In nutritive value Is quite Its equal. There Is wool to he considered, too. The nverage sized musk ox carries 15 pounds of Just-us-good-us-shoep's wool, which It wears as a thick cold-proof vest under n shnggy hair topcoat. In fact, tho musk ox Is pretty nearly ns much sheep as cnttle. It Is two and one-half or three times the size of n sheep, running nbout 700 pounds, nnd Is In thnt same proportion n more prolific source of raw mnterlal for stilts nnd socks. Thick-set, with mnsslvo head and short legs, tho musk ox looks clumsy, but Is surprisingly nimble on Its feet. It travels usunlly In herds of 25 or 30, nnd Its feed Is grass, saxifrage plants nnd dwarf willows. Stefansson points out, ns an nrgument In favor of his subpolar ranching scheme, that the musk ox needs neither to be housed nor fed, being quite nblo to AN INDIAN'S - Face on Cedar Log Mute Evi dence of Affection. Proof of Truth of Romantic Story Found by Hunters After Many Years of Searching. Manistee, Mich. On an old cednr log In the village of Copemlsh Is mute evidence of nn Indian brnve's great love for bis squaw. The unspoken ex pression Is In tho form of it carved fnco of an Indian maiden, tho circum stances 'around which tell of a love as devoted as In any modern love story. Albert T. Sanders and his two brothers, John and Henry, nro ama teur hunters and trappers. Years ago they went to tho upper peninsula and enmped' on Ford river. They met nn Indian, John, then ono hundred and four years old, but active as a school boy. John told the following story: There was a young bravo who took his squaw from Marquetto and enmo to Ford rUer to trap. Ho was very much In love. He wns a good pad dler, but ho couldn't keep his eyes off his squnw. The ennoe rushed Into some brush near ttfioro and capsized. Tho brnvo escaped, but tho squaw did not come up. Tho young brnvo wouldn't go nwuy. Duy after day he tho arrival of the pigs, which were designated as "personnges." Once n pig was drowned, Froln continued, nnd tho telegram to the general read "personage drowned." Unfortunntely an English colonel wns duo to arrive, so the general lie llcved the victim to bi tho colonel nnd ordered nn Inquiry Into the drowning which lnsted in days. Tho entire chamber was convulsed with laughter over this revelation. Rough Sea Cured Deafness. Paris. A now cure for denfness hns been dlscoveted by M. Iguacc, under sfcretnry of stnte, who accompanied Premier CJcmcnceau to London re cently. Tho channel wns unusually rough and M. Ignnco suffered terribly from seasickness, but when ho landed at Dover ho found he hnd fully recov ered from deafness with which ho hnd been afflicted for years. Specialists havo begun experimenting with pa tients In a specially constructed chair yftr-.fofltfft a : ft . ilfl Lji fend for Itself nnd even to protec, Itself ngnlnst wolves. Provides Beef, Milk and Wool. Tho habltnt of this zoological non descript, which gives beef ns tender ns n prlzo steer's, milk ns rich ns Jersey crenm nnd wool ns good ns sheep's, Is tho very "top country" of America. The herds never come fnrther south than halfway down the coast of Hudson bny, nnd they do not go west of tho Mnckcnzlo river. . On the north they ronm along the nrctte mainland coust nnd on the Islands be yond. There does not seem to bo any good renson, however, why the musk ox could not be kept successfully within the nonrer bounds of tho "bur ron lands." or In Alaska, where trans portation facilities would bo more easily possible. Nearly enough like tho musk ox to be n dlslnnt cousin, the woodlnnd buf falo Is another denizen of the North that may some day be made the base of n now meat supply. His habits nre somewhnt tho same as those of tho arctic ox, but the country that ho In habits Is an nren of wooded land nt the extreme north of Albertn, west of Slave river. Through the forests of this region ronm small buffalo herds, whose total numbers probably do not exceed KOO head. They nre tho only survivors In n nntural state of the rountless bison that once covered tho western plains. LOVE CURED SHELL SHOCK British Soldier, Wounded More Than a Year Ago, Has Memory Restored by Wife. Rrlghton, England. Loss of mem ory through shell shock nnd Innblllty to dlscloso his Identity took n happy turn n few dnys ngo In the enso of Charles Edward Morris, who becamo reunited with his wife In this city. Ho had been reported dead, nnd. the supposed widow had taken employ ment ns nsslstnnt In'n shop. Chancing to look through tho shop door while a soldier In uniform was pnsslng, Mrs. Morris, with n cry of delight, dnrted out and caught him by the arm. Ho stared blankly nt her nt first. Then, slowly recognizing Her, ho took her In his arms. 1'iivato Morris had suffered shell shock more than n yenr ago. When sent to hospital In Mons, Belgium, bis Identity was unknown. Not hcnrlng of him, tho regltucntnl nuthorltles re ported htm dend. By the time bis Identity was established tho wife had moved, lenvlng no trace. As It wns supposed she was In Brighton, Morris wns sent there nnd ordered to walk about, with n paper pinned to him bearing his name. He had been walking for two Lours thnt morning when his wife saw' him. When she had him back she quickly changed her black gown for one of bright blue. Slnco then the memory of Morris hns wonderfully Improved, nnd his full recovery Is fully expected. GREAT LOVE searched near tho spot of tho drown ing In vain. All that summer nnd fall he searched. Tho river never gave up the body. In despair one day ho gave up, and on n largo cednr treo near,, the river he carved a picture of her as n me morial. It wns his last tribute. Then he left this region nnd never returned. Tito Sanders brothers were Im pressed with the legend nnd started to hunt for tho carving. This wns 18 years ago. Their first search was fruitless. But they did not glvo up. Fourteen years Inter they again took up tho search. Again they failed to locate tho carved Image. They began to doubt tho story of Indlnn John. Two years passed and ngnln tho Sanders brothers went North to hunt and trnp. Ono day while woltlng for deer near the Ford river they snw tho cedar tree. And there was tho carving, wenthorhentcn but clear. Al bert Sanders chopped It out nnd hud It framed, and It Is now in the posses sion of Mr. Snndurs. who has had It copyrighted. Groom's Father Dropped Dead. New York. A mnrrloro ceremony was postponed when Milhnel Monte flscp, sixty yenrs old, dropped dead In the presence of his son, his son's bride-to-be and .'100 guests who had nssembled to witness the wedding. of the type formerly used In physical tests of army aviators. .gSSSSSSSSSftSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS Kin of Famous Nurse Is Victim of Thief London. Miss Florence Night ingale Shore, n second cousin of England's "Lady of tho Lamp," Is near death from wounds In flicted by an unknown person while sfie was traveling by train from London to Koxhlll. Miss Shore, who did distin guished nursing service during the wnr, Is about fifty years of nge. When the train nrrlved nt Lowes, Miss Shore wns found In nn unconscious condition with n wound In her bend, nermoney nnd railway tickets hnd been taken. Miss Shore hns not regained consciousness nnd so far no clew wns found to the supposed assailant. NEBRASKA NEWS IN CONCISE FORM Stato Occurrences of Importance Boiled to a Few Lines for Quick Perusal. ( A movement has been Inuugurntecfnt Sutherland to organize a commercial .club. (lood Bonds enthusiasts of Hooper endorsed a .-"il.'JOO.OOO road bond Issue for Dodge county. -. Preliminary plans for the construc tion of a new Methodist church at Al liance have been perfected. The Itotnry Club of Aurora Is back ing it movement to organize it company of National guards In the city. (Jregg Brothers, Hooker county farm ers, who raised -10,000 pounds of sweet clover seed last year, are said to have l erased an offer of $10,000 for the crop. The executive committee of the Ne braska prohibition party at a meeting nt Lincoln decided to hold u state con vention this year mid put it full ticket In the Held. A style show of made-over women's apparel, to popularize hoiiuj "dress making," Is being organized In Lin coln ns a part of the drive to reduce prices. Llsco has been left In total darkness ns the result of it lire which destroyed tho garage of the Mitchell Motor com pany which furnished the current. The loss is placed at .$10,000. .Mrs. Ednit I'errln of Lincoln, who lias been made head of the women's division of the Pershlng-for-presldent movement In Nebraska, plans to or ganize workers In all parts of tho state. Dr. Dilllon of tho state health de partment says that this year's In llucnzn epidemic Is not threatening to be so widespread ns that of a year ago, and the disease Is in n much milder form. The Nebraska state exhibit took first prize at the Western Potato show In Denver. The prize was n sliver trophy cup. .Take Podrett of KliiilmU took first In Individual mnr lifting exhibit. Following refusal of the Guaranty Trust compnny of New York to accept the courthouse reconstruction bond Issue, of Douglas county, an effort was made to sell tho $S2L000 bonds to the Btato of Nebraska. Bud R. Latin, wealthy Burt county Btockmnn, died suddenly of pneumonia while attending the Western stock 6how nt Denver. For severnl yenrs he had been prominent In horse rnclng circles nnd was widely known through out tho middle west. The same quarantine rules that pre vailed for the "flu" epidemic Inst year have again been put Into effect for all tho cases of tho present outbreak, by Dr. W. II. Wilson, stnte epidemio logist. All casts are ordered quaran tined whether diagnosed as Influenza or la'grlppe. Scottsblult Chamber of Commerce endorsed the action of the board of directors for tho purchase of nn 80 ncrc tract for tho Nebraska Irrigation college, site. Construction work Is to begin at once. This will be the only school of its kind In the United States nnd possibly in the world. The official campaign Inaugurated In Nebraska by Mrs. Chas. Ityon, stnto director of economics, to reduc6 tho cost of living embraces every county In the stnte and Includes mass meet ings In every community, In which speakers will appeal for nil people to practice thrift and eliminate luxuries. According to Information gathered by the Stato Hallway commission Ne braska Is confronted with another soft corn crisis similar to the ono which caused losses to farmers and grain handlers severnl years ago. Thousands of bushels of new corn awnltlng ship ment contains 10 to 'JO per cent moist ure, the board has been ndvlsed, nnd If not shipped soon will doterlornto with the ndvent of mild weather to tho extent of 20 cents to $1 per bushel. Wnrden Fenton of tho stale peni tentiary told members of the stnte board of control at Lincoln, who are considering charges of Irregularities at tho Institution mnde by two former gunrds, M. F. McWIIllnms and Jason Evans, thnt In periods of from three months to n year os many ns ninety convicts havo been cured of the dopo hnblt. He stated that. If charges placed against him that ho obtained money for relense of prisoners were proven, he would take his place In n cell. The annual business meeting of the Nebrasko Press association wll bo held In Lincoln, February 20, 27 and 28. The annual convention of the Ne braska Brotherhood qf Threshermeit will bo held ut Lincoln, February 10 to 12. ' Tho stato government hns offered a rownrd of $200 for the capture of tho Mexican who, In company with a fid low country innn, murdered police of ficers S. E. McComber nnd fienrgo Hogers, nt North Platte. The other Mexican was captured soon after the shooting. Members of tho Fremont honrd .of pducntlon voted to grant nn Incrcnso of 20 per cent to teachers. George Schrleker, Holt county ranch er, In announcing his Intention to move to Cnllfornln, stated thnt In tho past twelvo years ho has cleaned up $30,000 on bin ranch, most of which was made In hay and live stock. Kenrnoy city commissioners have railed a special election for February 24 at which tlmo citizens of the city m.111 ,stn nn n ffcl IV fWl hnnil npnnnylltnn I Will wm v""lv " ihuiito..,..!. for the purpose of erecting a municipal iudlttfhim, Plans nro being mnde to pnvo ser eral blocks of street In tho buslnotf section of Mitchell. Cozad's now sower system Is expect cd to bo complptcd In nbout sixty days. A fyrce of 100 men nro at work on tit project. Tho Influenza situation lias become so severo at Shubert, Itlchardson coun ty, thnt tho vlllago school bus been closed. Attorney General Davis has ruled that garage owners cannot hold stolen cars for a repair bill Incurred by the thief. Reports from Crete nre to the effect thnt no new ruses of spinal meningitis have developed since the first report of seven cases mid llvo deaths. Methodists of Pawnee City plan to build a new church with .WOMX) Insnr mice money, which they huve Just re eel veil for the building which burned recently. An American Legion post has been organized at IMalnvlew and named In honor or Claire Freyer, the only mint from that place to lose Jils life over seas. The University of Nebraska won twenty-seven ribbons on fat stcrs and twelve ribbons on fat hogs at the national western live stock show at Denver. In order that the Hirelings of organ ized ngrlculture will no longer conflict with the western livestock sl-ow at Denver, the meetings hereafter will be held the week of January 51. Plans are being made by the Mason ic lodge to remove the Old People's home at Plattsmotith to Fremont, where the Masonic orphanage Is now located. Architect Bowell of Grand Island submitted plans for Broken Bow's new hotel to it delegation of leading citizens. The hostelry Islo be a threo story affair with eighty-four rooms. Elevntors of f'happell are full of wheat and no relief In sight owing to car shortage. Cluippcll Is the largest wheat shipping point in the state and It Is estimated that oue-fourlh of tho wheat Is still In the farmers' hands. The report sent broadcast over the state that Donne college at Crete was closed because of an epidemic of spinal meningitis in the city is tlatly denied by officials of the institution, who claim that the situation has been grently exaggerated. Women of n number of Dodge coun ty towns mot nt Fremont nnd organ ized n community women's club federa tion, the object of which .s to form n better acquaintance, nmong members nnd co-operate In furthering better In terests of the community. Influenza vaccines effective during the 1018 epidemic nre declnred by Dr. Dillon of tho state department of pub lic health to he worthless In the pres ent epidemic, becnuse n different "bac terial flora" seems to' be ncting this yenr. A campaign for -tho enlistment of ,150,000 Nebrnskn housewives to old -In combating the high cost of living was launched February 1, under the direc tion of Mrs. Clins. Byait of Grand Island, state economic mrector. Ail housewives will be asked to sign pledges to observe thrift. Besides untold number of cases of flu, scarlet fever and kindred dlsenses now comes the report from Oiiinhn thnt tho state's biggest city hns a enso of leprosy. It Is believed to bo tbo first case of the kind recorded In Nebraska. The patient Is being trent cd In n hospital In the city. Four Nebraskans, It. B. Howell, Mrs. M. D. Cameron, E. L. Burke nnd Vic tor Itbsewnter of Omaha, and Repre sentative C. F. Reavls, Falls City, were named on nn ndvlsory commltteo of 100 prominent republicans of the United States by Chairman Will Hays of tho national committee to draw up n program for the 1020 campaign. It Is snld that considerably more thnn .$100,000 will hnve to be advanced from the stnto guaranty fund to pny depositors of the Valparaiso state bank which was closed recently. Total de posits were In excess of $-100,000 and tho shortage In the bank's funds Is be lieved to bo from. .$150,000 to .$175,000. A receiver for the Institution hns been appointed. Tho reclamation service nt Wash ington announced thnt homesteaders will get an opoprtunlfy to file on 5,000 acres of laud In the I'lntto Valley di strict. Applications for entry will bo accepted from Februnry 28 to March 5. A water service rentnl basis will be tho system of payment for the first three years, It was snld. The cost of tho Irrigating system will later bo'as sessed according to acreage. A 5,000 acro tract near Shoshone, Wyo will be open for hojnestendlng In the week beginning Mnrch 5. Tho board ef education nt Beatrlco has rnised the salar'es of school teach ers 20 to 25 per "out for the remnlndcr of the school yenr. The prohibition of rnllrond strikes Is tho question which will be debated from one end of (lie this stnto to the other during the next four months by the schools In the Nebrnskn High School Debntlng league which Is beginning Its thirteenth annual con tests. The contest will be concluded by the state debate at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln on high school fete day In May. Business men of O'Neill plnn to erect n 14-ton nrtlllelal Ico plant to cost .$.'15,000 this spring. "Hearing on tho referendum case of Governor McKelvlo's code bill hns again been postponed by tho stnto su premo court, tho date now being set for February 10. The North River Irrigation district has been voted bonds to tho amount of $120,000 for tho ImpVovement nnd extension of Irrigation canals this summer. This will open up nbout 7,000 acres for beet raising, and placet J OshVosh In line for a sugar factory. WESTERN CANADA ON Wins First Honors at Kansas City. While visiting the Cnnndlan Govern ment Information Bureau nt Kansas City, where there Is on exhibition a very creditable display of Canadian products, my nttcntlon, snys n writer In the agricultural press, was directed to a few ears of Dent corn, bearing the modest Inscription, "This Northwestern Dent corn took the first prize at the Soil Products Exposition recently held In Kansas City, Mo., and wns grown by John Hnmllton of Kclwood, Mnnltobn." Kelwood. Manitoba, lies nbout twelve hundred miles north of Knnsns City, nnd It wns quite purdnnnble that theso Canadians should so proudly pnradtt the fact that they hud been able to carry off for their corn display the blue ribbon thnt for years the old "corn-growing" states had looked up on as being practically their own, nnd for which they were strong contest ants In the recent show.- I nsked Mr. Hewitt, agent In chnrgef of the Cnnndl r Government office nt 2012 Mnln Street, Knnsns City, whntr the winning of the prize means for Canada. His reply was that It mean the "corn belt" Is moving northward,, and In a few years to the fame that Canada has already achieved ns a: wheat, bnrloy and onts producing coun try, will hnve to be ndded thnt of growing the best corn In America. "Why." he snld. "twenty years ngo n friend of mine wns attracted at the Mln'nesotn Stnte Fair by the number of those who were examining some corn growth north of Crookston. Min nesota. It was not the Inrge enr pro- -duced fnrther south, but It was nn even enr nnd perfect kernel. The Interest centered In It wns the fact thnt It hoi been grown so far north. Thnt wa twenty yenrs ago. Today, the trav eler on any of the rnllwnys In thnt section of the country may see field1 after field of corn. In many portion of Mnnltobn." he continued, "out Into Saskatchewan nnd Alberto, tho grow ing of- corn Is receiving much atten tion, nt presently mainly for fodder, but within n short time.-with nccllmn ted seed n maturing corn of good qual ity may reasonably he expected. Al ready tho number of silos In use In Western Cnnnda Indlcntcs thnt the pro gressive farmers there look forward to the dny when corn will be one of their most Important crops. "Corn lands In South Dnkota nre snld to be selling ns high ns $250 per acre, nnd If corn hns been the mean of plnclng these lands nt this price what may be expected of Western Cnn nda lands, when the dny comes thnt corn will be grown ns successfully tbere?" It wos not In corn alone that West ern Cnnnda carried off the honors at the Soil Products Exposition. The awards won by Western Cnnnda wero 40 first. 20 second, nnd 20 third prizes. These Included 1st. 2nd nnd 3rd prizes for hard spring whent: the sweepstakes for wheat and the cup of fered by Cnnndlan PnclflcRnllway for tho best half-bushel of hard sprlngr wheat; 1st, 2nd nnd 3rd prizes and sweepstakes for onts; 1st. 2nd nnd 3rd prizes for bnrley; nnd 2nd nnd 8rd prizes for onts. Jt Is Interesting to note thnt the eweepstnkes for wheat and first prize for hnrd red spring whent have beei won by Saskatchewan exhibitor seven times In the last eight years, Manitoba winning-one year. Potntn clnsses have some Interesting; successes for Western Cnnndlan ex hibitors, who won four firsts, three seconds nnd three thirds. Exhibitors from these provinces nlso made fine showing In the vegetnble classes, wjn nlg nmong other prizes tho premium prizes for cnbbages, cauliflowers, pumpkins squnsh ami 'watermelons. Adr. A short horse Is soon curried if he Isn't n kicker. Sure Relief 6 BCLL-ANS j' Hot water -'ji-i Sura Relief RE LL-ANS VFOR INDIGESTION 16799 DIED In New York City alone from kid ney trouble last year. Don't allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard against this trouble by taking GOLD MEDAL v- aassoaa Th world's standard ramady for Udnay, Mvar, bladdar and uric acid troubtas. Holland's national ramady ainca IMS. All druggists, thraa alses. doarantaad. Vk for taa Ma CeU MU1 oa ry bo. PATENTS Wttioa . Oel rataat Iwf r,Waulaawaa atai raueaabla. BlsfcMt NiawaataTMiatmaaa. J '. a.awifriwwwa " tmit