H, . i e.4 i r t i 5- Sr . f ft v f V u h & . I- W1 zESSf Colombost MoTor KararaHacta nor Parser, ay SIX BOIlhl Xbi laoatae.. . .IS wSJ WDTC8DAX. OCTOBKB IS. HOT. - R. C STROTHER. F. K. STROTHER.-. KKNKWALS-Tha rfat opposite mot roar natior. or wtmtumt titumm to eaharrintion is naid. Thus JaaAft eaowa tWBSSU 'partaont Hm hsra racwtwd ap to Ja.l.lM, !s nmde.th data.waMi Ffltna to rab. i,mBdio ob. ml be chaagsd aeoorUiagur. DrtfCONT! XTJANCKH-Basnonaihla er will eontina to rwive this Joeraal HI ass aahlishars ara bkkIbmI to letter to iliauuatia , wfaeo all armartaa bmm( be paid. If joaaeaot visa the Joornai onanaatd Zor aaot&er earths Unas paid for Bteiluasl notify aa to CHANGE IN ADDRESH-Wfan ateae ia the address, aahscribers ahoakl be i mtaatt omaawMiaai Rfpublicaa Ticket. -r. For Sapraaie Jadge M. B.BEE8K. University Bcgeats CHABLE8 R ANDEB90N, J.A.COUPLAND. Bailraai ComaUasioaer HENRY T. CLABKS. District Judges J.C.MABTTN, ' , C.E. ABBOTT. CoaBtrTroasarer F. K. 8TB0THEB. Coaaty Clerk FRANK SCHBAM, Clerk of District Coart J0HNGIL8D0BF. ConatySaperiBteajdant J.B.ALGOCK. Coob'j Sheriff J.L.BHABBAB. County Coroner DE. W.W.FRANK. Cora'yJadgs JOHN MOFFETT. Coostjr Assessor JOHN LEU8CHEN. Cosaty Sopervisors A. K rniEST, ' W.J. NEWMAN. The Hepsblican Stat Flattens. , PolnH with pride to the snfvevemoBta of taa Jlcpiblio in pan? an r the splendid leadership of Tno-dore IfoosL'Tclt, an 1 leftists that his aac cessor slia'l ba a min wh will 'ontiaee the Bocscvelt p iliciea, and' suggest Secretary Taft aienehn m-ta, Comnradsthp present St te officials for their care of the Stn'e iatifatioas, maintmfoing the Craiit of the State, and redacing the State debt Coauneads the Nebraska delegation la Coa- Callsatteation to the inagniaoeBt record of the last Legislatore which carried oot the plodgoa of the Bepnblican party, as follows: L A statewide direct primary. 2. Abolition of the free pass eriL 3. Comprehensive powers for the atate rail wayeOBuaissioB. ' 4. More equitable rates for transportation of pastienpTs and freight. 5. Kqial .taxation of raiiroad property for eity purposes. . 6. Abolition of fellow servant law and fall employer' Jiibllity. 7. A pare food and dairy law. 8. Rigid economy in appropriations. Endorses the direct primary, and pledges aoch amendments as shall Improve its workings Commends the good work of the state railway commu-sioa, in its efforts to secure better freight rates for the people of the state. Calls for the rigid enf rcement of the anti pass law. Declares th-it in salts at law corporationa should be d-eml citizens of every state where they have filed articles of incorporation or exer cised the rights of eminent domain. Favnrn an enartmont of the federal law for bidding the federal courts from issuing writs of injinctioa a.?ain4t stiti officers charged with the enforcement of state statutes. Howards with liish favor the nominees ob the state ticket nnd invl'es voters who believe in official probity au J efficiency to join in electing them. The" republican ticket is worthy of .the support of every republican in the county. Vote it straight - Platte county has been solidly dem ocratic for many year?. If it has been an advantage to anyone except to the office holders, it U not visible to the naked eye. Have taxes been less' than in other counties? Not .much. Have we fine public buildings, or fine bridges and roads built by the county? Not any. Is it necessary to always reelect the same gang to hold down the fat offices at the court house? We do not think so. The republicans have up a good, clean ticket, made up of active, competent men. Voters and taxpayers, give them a trial. . Let us have a court house cleaning, and toy a change.. In two years if the change is not satisfactory, the voters have the power to express their pref erence again. Let us have a new deal. Professor J. R. Alcock, the republi can candidate for county superintend ent, is in .every way qualified for the position, as he has made educational work a life study. He was educated in thepubl$c schools of Independence, and graduated from the Iowa State noimal at Cedar Falls in 1882. He has had twenty-five years experience in school, work in Iowa, South Dako ta and Nebraska, during which time he has held the poation of principal for eighteen years.. He is now serv ing for the -fifth, consecutive year aa principal of the Monroe schools, where he has given the beet satisfaction. During his incumbency at Monroe the school has reached the point of efficen cy in which the new standard course of atady for first class ten grade schools iafceiag amaintained, as per the new high school kw.; Professor Alcock awkkavyuwnsinnsl state .certificate, issued apt year an exaaunation in v It k not soaaaaiy VtfjM ago tdto the i t mm mart f Nebraska was composed of two dosmocrsis and one republican, Judges Holcomb and SdHvan being tkdeamocrata, When Ucaawtb the election of the third judge, did anyone hear of the Oaaaha World-Herald or the Columbus Tele gram, or any other dWocratic paper advocating a good republican, so as to make the supreme court awn-partisan. We ask, did any of these newspapers advocateano-partitM judiciary then. No, not that any court knows of. On the contrary, they brought out what they considered their strongest candi date, frdee Conrad HoUenbeck of Fremont. But now, when it would help the election of a denwarat they want a non-nartifam judiciary. In this Sixth judicial diatrict the voters placed one republican and one desnocrat on the bench. James 6. Boeder, the republican, proved Umfelf aa excep tionally strong onactaL He was not only .fir and impartial in all his de decisions, but he has the faculty of clearing up the docket, disposing bf more cases than any judge we ever had here on the bench. Everybody liked him, everybody spoke well of him. Men who have served on juries under him praised him for. his kindness and the courteous treatment they received at his hands. The voters of thk dis trict have repeatedly, approved of Judge Hollenbecaras a district judge. Here in this Sixth judicial district wm a splendid opportunity to have a non partisau judiciary. Did any demo cratic paper or any democratic politi cian openly 'advocate it? Vote for Reese,1 Martin and Abbott. a ' It would seem that Oaaaha is a city big enough to have at least one train a day start on time on the Union Pacific railroad, without waiting for any other connection. The train ser vice now is such that nothing is on time any more, either mail or peroen ger. It does not seem that it should be necessary to appeal to any railroad commission, but that theUnion Pacific system should of its own accord think enough of its record to run its trains somewhere near schedule time. One train a day, at least, should start from either Council Bluffs or Omaha on time, and should be on time in Ne braska at least Four years ago J. L. Sharrar was a candidate for sheriff on the republican ticket He received every vote but nineteen in his own township. Is not that an exceptionally fine record? Ifjat is an endorsement Mr. Sharrar can be proud of as long as he lives. Here in Columbus Mr. Sharrar wm almost an entire stranger; and here, where the heaviest vote is, he wm beat on. But conditions are different now. Mr.Sharrar is still strong with his home people, who know him best, and here in Columbus now has hosts of friends, for they know him now, and they know him to be the right man for the place. ' It is plain that the campaign for the fusion nominee for supreme judge is to be urged on a plea for nonparti sanship on the supreme bench.' Judge Loouis, himself, gave the cue' for this in his speech to the democratic state convention, when he said: I beUere that aablie eoaideace ia the eoart of any atate is atraagtbaaed by tha fact that the jadges of that ooart are not all of the aaaae political party. Following this up, the democratic. World-Herald, after, attacking Judge Reese m the republican nominee, de clares: AdadtothiafatheargaaMrtforBOB9arti. aaa judiciary; ia other words, a jaaJeiary ia which both partial Bare repreaaaUtioa, What buncombe this sudden con version of hide-bound democrats to the principle of nonpartiaaaship is may be more readily understood by reviewing a little recent history in Nebraska politics. The demo-pop fuaonists first secured a place on the supreme beach in 1897, when they secured one of the three judgeships by the election of Judge Sullivan over Judge Post Two years later they captured a second place by the election of Judge Hol comb over Judge Beese. With the court thus consisting of twofusionists and one republican the nonpartisan ship idea would have required that the third place continue to be occupied by a republican judge. - When the time came, however, to choose another supreme judge in 1901 the bipartisanship of the deanoerats and populists wm strikingly noticeable by its absence. The republicans nom inated Judge Sedgwick, who at that time wm serving m a member of the supreme court commiwion, to which be had been appointed by the unani mous assent of tike entire supreme bench, including the two fusion judges. His judicial qualifications were not at and the argument for a nonpar judiciary, "in other words, a ju diciary ia which both parties have a deanutded his unani- electiou tothe place about to he. by the judge. But did the above aartiseaehi and andcn the sg ispukliuan T -S- bladMaeybT Jri Sedgwick k ottfaf to keep the court from becoming wholly partisan? Not at all. They immediately put their party labels oa Judge HoUenbeck, a dyed in the-wool deafAcraVM the fusion nominee for supreme judge and fought just m hard to exclude the republicans from aay representation on the supreme bench' m they are fighting new to smuggle ia another democrat This record' fully exposes the hol lowness of demo-pop Bipartisanship. When the bench is occupied by repub licans the demo popspokesmen beg the people not to allow the court to be made up of judges all from the same party. But when there is a prospect of filling the whole beach with fusioa ists, nonpartisaaehip is thrown to the winds and. the party lines are strictly drawn. Omaha Bee. . TOTGE. Roland B. Molineux, whose own ex- one or tne newspaper a few years ago, mys that ao human being, whatsoever his crime, should be sentenced to a definite term in prison. For this he says there are "a thousand reasons," thefirst of which is the financial. The prisons of the United States cost a billion dollars a year. Annually, he declares, this country "spends 500 millions more on a fruitless and farcical coatest with crime than it does oa all its works of charity, religioa and education." - A second reason advanced by Mr. Moliaeux for the udeterminate prison sentence is that in almost every ease our prison system releases the crimin al a more dangerous menace than be fore his incarceration. And in this connection Mr. Molineux voices a vi tal truth: "Our criminal law aims to benefit society. In this it faiLxIt should aim to benefit the criminal. In this it could weeeed." Whatever fault may be found with the rest of Mr. Molineux's argument we believe the words just quoted are sound and, indeed, we have so said on several occasions. Our penal institu tions are "penal" in too strong a sense of the word. We seek to punish more than we seek to change the lives and tastes and ambitions of the crimi nal classes. Punishment at times is accessary. The most severe punish ment is frequently required. But society has-a greater work to do. It could .mve thousands of the guilty ones if it would seek to lead them . instead of lashing them. Of course when a man is. so depraved that he will not he helped, or led, or lifted up, then he must be kept away from the rest of uunldnd. His im prisonment must then be perpetual. On the subject of indeterminate punishment Mr. Molineux nays: The criminal' court should deter mine but one thing the guilfr or in nocence of the defendant HMhe,or has he not committed the crime of which he is accused? If guilty, whether of murder or of disorderly conduct, the one and unvarying sen tence should be banishment The criminal code should be stripped to a bare list of the acts constituting crimes and misdemeanors, and provision made for a uniform treatment of .all those coavicted. - '- . Banishment, which should be spent in prison, should be absolutely inde terminate. By his own deed a man has proven himself unworthy to dwell among his fellow men. He must re main apartfrom them forever, or un til restored to citiseaship by a "court of rehabilitation." Is not this equi table? It has required a judge and jury to deprive bint of liberty; only by a judge and jury should it be restored. The second judge and jury should form the court' of rehabilitation. It must be free from sentiment," have nothing to do with pardon, remain uninfluenced by political power or the prisoner's friends, he actuated only by absolute justice. Do this, bring the question down to the simple one of guilt or innocence, let the sole permissible sentence for any crime be banishment with the on ly means of gaining freedom through a court of rehabilitation, aad everv evil of the criminal law will dhrnp-per.- Lincoln Star. J. C. l'S To the ritiseas of the Sixth Judicial District of Nebraska: a Gentleman: As no political party hM. adopted a platform for this judi daf district, I deem it fair to the elec tors of this district to advise them of the following principles for which I stead and which I would strive to my utmost ability to enforce should I be elected one of the judges of this district, to-wit: 1. "EqaaHty before the Law." 2. Remove the law's vexatious j del! 3. No politicBor favoritism known on the Beach.' "' 4. Snhstantial jastice nnlhampered by technicalities. 5 Purify the Courts by severe puaushsaB for perjury.' -. i. "To do right m God gives me to see the right" "-'' Joan C Majernr. aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa BaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBvl BaBj BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBJf aasss JOHN R. LUSCHEN, ran narrjaucABT candidatk von oouhtt I respsetfully ask the support of the votem regardless of polities who waat a "Square Deal" ia the Aassssnrw omce. MY MOTTO: UA tguare. deal' for everybody ngttrdkm of poKUm." MEBWIA1 RAILWAY COMIHHH ' Lwcolw, Nebb Oct 14, 1907. As the record of the Republi party is scrutinised ia anticipation of another election,, it is discovered that ia the long list of creditable perform ances of the past twelve-month, none stands out quite so conspicuously m i to assertion by legislative enactment of the state's authority over the rail roads. For many yean the undisput ed right of the people to compell through their state government' fair treatment and reasonable rates from the carriers to whom, they had given special privileges, such m the right of eminent domain, land grants and. bonuses in one form and another, hM lain dormant All political parties have recognized existing evils in their platforms, and legislatures have been repeatedly elected under pleages to ooiv net them. But the system of ree passes and the wiles of the persuasive lobbyist proved effective' factors in pre venting any legislation calculated to curtail corporate liberties until the rejuvenated Republican party under the leadership of such men m Norris Brown, George Sheldon and uncle Dan Nettleton assumed the reins of author- i7- The ground work for effective con trol of railroads wm laid in the legis lature of 1905, when the Cady amend ment to the state constitution provid ing for the creation of a State Rail Way Commission wm submitted. This aaaendment wm. adopted in the elec tion by popular vote one year ago. The most important duty which de volved upon the ensuing legislature wm the passage of a law which would confer adequate powers upon the Com mission thus created. That this duty wm conscientiously performed let the record of the Commission bear witness. Although it hM been organised barely six months, during which time much of its attention has been devoted to preliminary work necessary to the intelligent solution of so intricate .a problem m the adjustment of the rates, the Railway Commission has already accomplished definite results in a great many cases that have been brought before it Approximately 100 complaints have been -filed with the Conunissioa during the first half year of its existence, and about 50 of these have been settled to the entire satisfaction of the aggrieved parties. While little attention has been at tracted outside the city directly inter ested, perhaps the most important de cision rendered by the Commissioa up to the present time wm in the cise of the City of Lincoln against the street car companies, in which an order wm asked to compel the sale of six tickets for twenty-five cents. The order wm granted, and while on the surface the issue involved appeared to be of lit-' tie importance, this case established a precedent which will be of far reach ing effect in the future work f of the Commission. Ia arriving at the rea sonableness of the six fbra quarter rate the commissioa followed the plan advocated by President- Roosevelt in fixing a definite valuation upon the properties of the street car companies, thus forever preventing stock-jobbing schemes of high financiers or the eara ing of more than a reasonable divi dend upon the actual investment So far as; known, this principle hM never before been applied to the making of rates, aad if followed in the more com plex casmyH to coaM before the' Com mission, it will place Nebraska far ia advance of all other states in'the ef fective regulatioa of transportation Another important decision by the Railway Comipiwioa wm rendered in the application of the railroad and ex pram companies, for penussioa to, change rate oa milk aad cream. In stead ef adopting the rates proposed by the carriers or continuing the eld desired by the bag creamery the Communion promufr gated a scandals of it. prh which W detigncd toT build up meal creamery interest throughout the atate. Al though the new schedule will not go into eueet "until November 1, its in fluence laMalready been felt in a great many of the smaller citie of Nebraska, where the .creameries will be eatabluhed within the mxt few months. Asa result of-the Cummis sioa's action uh crvam and milk rates kia confidently expected that before another year has pas! the output of Nebraska dairies will be couveried in to butter, cheese and i4her finished uepdaets aear their point of origin in- sued of being hauled hundreds of miles to fatten the profits of the hf donea centralised concerns now exiatiagin this state. " Still another important piece ot work done by the Commission wm the issuance of an order requiring the Mis souri Pacific to repair its tracks aad roadbed in Nebraska and place them m safe condition for public travel. A similar order has been made against the Burlington with reference to the "High line" running northwest from Holdrege. Beth of these orders were WKNsil iaveatigatioB by of the Commaanea, the trips of inspection being made oa freight trains, hand cars, railroad velocipedes, aartoaaohuca aad oa foot, instead of in luxuriously furnished spuria! cars, m hat been aad still is, with soawCom aunuoaa. the custom. Waa'WaBWn samiw UsaaaWMamaaw Aside from, rate making and regu lation, a very important feature of the CVmimiBsion'a work is the adjustment of minor complaints, each of little in terest to the public at large but of great importance to the rights aad property of the persons aggrieved. A poor widow is held up for $4 50 stor age charges on" baggage which hM gone astray through ao fault of hers. She appeals to the Commmson nnd through that agency is enabled to se cure her property without cost A numer whose claim for damages from fire set by a locomotive has been ignored for weary months lays his grievance before the Commission and secures prompt redress without the ex pense of a law suit A shipper who hM been discriminated against in the furnishing of cars complains to the Commission aad is thereafter given fair treatment Gases of this kind might be multiplied indefinitely, and they would all prove the wisdom of maintaining a department of govern ment clothed with sumcient authority to command respect, oae of whose duties shall be to act m a medium be tween the weak individual and the powerful eorporatioa. - Aad so it law come to pass that Ne braska, once railroad-riddea nnd pow erless to defend herself against corpor ate aggression, today occupies a posi tion in the front rank of states which have asserted their right to control common carriers. Wisconsin, under the leadership of LaFollette, Iowa, underCummins, Illinois, under Deneen and Nebraska under Brown aad Shel don, and Reese, and Clarke, aad their coworkers are apreadiag the middle westvdoctrine of equal rights to all throughout the lead. erlln'a Woman Chauffeur. Berila's woman caamTeur la ataxia m ane always iateaeee to do a very good Uveuaooi. Clad In a atmpie but secomlns coat aad aUrt-of service able material. Fran von Papp drives one. of tne Bedsa conrpaay's electro droscakea with roasummato aMlL 8ne la not, however, at fb beck aad call of the general public, hut la In the em ployment of the Kalaerhof hotel, aad drives ita vkdtora alone. The womaa'a story Is tetereatiac. Her huabnnd an apparently well-to-do lawyer ' died, leaving: her and three young children pewBileaa. Fran von Papp always had a fondness for aatoaeobUlag; and quickly decided upon her profasalon. Having satiated the poUee aathorttMs m to her capabUltice. her present, post aad la self aad family In comfort Only Thing Left The schoolmaster wm trying teach hie daw composition. wm having great dlmealty. If I should ask. What have I 1uumT the anawer should be. Tea have aa apple In your hand.' "Now suppose I should ask, What have 1 on my feetr what should yon sayr M8hoes,w wm the fret reply. "Stock lugs." replied another boy. "No." aaM the teacher Impatiently, "both of you are .wrong. Rememher what I have Just said.'' For a moment no one ed anxJons to try to answer the tJoa; hut at last a lad raised hla hand with an air which aaM euHe plalaly that he wm perfectly sure of his knowledge. "Coma!" ho anouted tri umphantly. ,. 1 suddom it Is necessary that ntea should he transacted; thsugu the amount of business that does not a tribute to anybody's comfort or ke the It la not overdone. I that muemltttng attention to hi the price of at cose, hut I dent la. There tea who wa all know, who awn a It In know what aeeeess s another ane num. the rifjbta of tamer whelaavejat m ImBaey 'Wsaaer. . SB a A BARGAIN fisi " OuW&atsE CuBBBfJUaWt? XBA J. I. GALLET COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. Correct Dress For Men Te Clean Window ttadce. We have all heard the story of the woman who told the new maid to waah the curtalaa meaning the lace ones, and came Into the kitchen jest In time to discover the newest window shades melting In the boiler. But we do not all know that when shades are merely dust soiled the aurface can be freshened by the application of hot corn meaL The shade should Irat be spread out flat on a large table and the meal rubbed In with a circular mo tion of the palm. Then if rubbed gen tly with a soft, dry cloth the meal and the daat it has absorbed will be re moved without leaving any trace of either. Country Life in America. "Fh Ju" Brooch. , A brooch which is unique, called "Fa Ju," la worn by the Chinese aa a charm for long life, happiness and success. "Fa Ju," has been worn and worshiped hy the Chinese people for nearly 4.MO years, aad la Implicitly believed In by them. The men wear these pias on their caps and the women wear them in a number of waya, usually aa brooches and as peadanta oa chains. They are being Imported for American wear la brooches, scarf pias, pendants and hatpins, and will probably prove ex tremely popular Judging from the present vogue of Chinese articles. What the Should De. They were interested only ia their own aflalra and didn't aeem to care who heard them. "Gave me the icy elbow on Mala street yesterday, didn't yon? he began. "Cross my heart, I didn't mean to." she replied. I Jast dtdet see you. "But you looked right at me." "Can't help it, I didn't see you." "Huh! Well, if you didn't you ought to go to one of these octogeaar laaa aad get your eyea Axed." As te tha Searchers. -"Do many 'endurance race' aatce paaa here?" asked the city boarder, peering down the road. "Yeas, stran ger,'' replied the old farmer. "They are all endurance racers to us." "To you?" "Sure. It la an endurance teat of patience to keej from blazing away at them every time they ran over n cow or scare a horse. ma Em VnLa aVBT?- e LAKE TAHOE v Situated 15 miles from Truckee on the Main Line of "Thi Ovirland RtiV Stop-overs permitted oa Railroad and Pullman Tide eta, Connections made witk tie famous Union Facile trau,"Tfce Overlaaw Limitcl" and other Through Trains. The Place to Rest Inquire of E. G. BROWN. s NOT a mutter ot the price but ptire ly a question of value received. Cheapclothes hare little or n6 value. Good clothes are the only kind worth hawing be cause you get a definate returoonyourmvesTtment If you want to be sure that you get good clothes isntit just as important to be particular about where you get them? - Thiv is strictly a store of good clothes for men and there's an honest dollar's worth for every hundred cents you put in the gar ments we sell Waah and teniae fresh 'snenrmlnt aad strip on ceAugh leavea te til a ejeart howL Cover with snlhng water aad steep for ten ssteuten. Strata, chill and add one cup of grape Juice aad oae cup of strawberry or rasp berry Juice, either fresh or Sweeten to taste, using a syrup made by telling eeual euanUttoa of sugar aad water for ten nUnutea. Thia aad an similar drinks are much more bland when sweetened with this ayrap than when raw sugar ia need. Mlat punch may he varied -by using these fruits, such aa lemons or curranta; a few tiny sprigs of nunt should float on the punch howl or pitcher. kod Housekeeping. Oil Take a pound of lean beef from the shoulder or shin and cut In email aucea. Spread these slices with sau sagemeat (a quarter of a pound win aassce), mixed with an canal quan tity of stale bread crumbs. Ron up the slices ef meat aad tie Brady. Sea son with salt and pepper, dredge with flour, then brown in n spider ia a Mt tlehotfaL After browning put la an earthern dish, with n little onion, cataup or any other aeasonlngy aa pre ferred. Cover with boillag water and cook slowly, tightly covered, flar three or four hours. -9 Causae Him to WarMe. "How fanayf Grandpa has been staging like a bird all the moramg." "Tes. that ia on account of the mis take the'eear old gentleman made At breakfast" "What miataker "Why he made a porridge out of the. pack age of birdseed aad tbraiht It wee 'a package of oatmeal. - ' 1 Put Hie Feet te It. That'B n beautiful photo ef .youV. "I am glad you taluk so, then youll be willing to exchange that ugly one you already have for it" "I'd rather keep it, it is so much more like you." HASDAKD SOFT COAL- 0RDEKS FILLED PavHFr LT. r. 9. SMITH LUHU CO. For fancy Wedding grama or (JalSawcarda, don't the Journal figure with you. te let Te OTTWZWMMMMMM f -i i S?' if j li " .i stf- '"-tw ;3g ! jjLvfvv- "a . ..$ - - -l jsitrii.'. .-.- - - .. s,'.jJ..-; . .-1-t . ... . .t-i. . - . . V ' a&Sjsaafe&e ?s ? s ,..-o-j& - - -. -:g i' y,'T'fJ,gV'at'jaaati; i , - t-?V J jyggij wzooa 2 gr j sUSBBllaaaamBBBBBBBUl