5 J' rv--j. V-Kj. --JffRtit; Wfmm- - sr "I -J ,, . .-- I 5 8. 5 Eft! l?-a S t i $ fej Columbus gxrurual. Colamaaa, Naar.. m eimwimioi: LW WKDMS8DAT. HAY 6, IMS? 8TBOTHKB ft STOCKWELL. Proprietors. anYIWALS-lae data opposite you bum oa r wrapper abowa to what time roar ia 'paid. Ifcaa JaaSS shows that i baaa raeavred ap to Jaa. 1, 1986, .l,ttSSaadso oa. Whaa pajasaat la aaaia.tta aats.waioh samara aa a raeaipt. WlllSS DfliOONTnrnANCCS-KaaixMaibia sabserib ib wfll oatiaas to rscafre tak joaraal aatil tas aotiladtv letter to diaoontiaaa. 'all arraaraaaa aiast he paid. If voedonot aWJoaiaalanapaasdgocaaotasr. yaar af- aaid for has aspired, yoa shoald ttadawwatiaasit. CWAMQZ IH ADDBBSB-Wbsa orderiac a toalisaaali, old aawaU as teair saw address. Ban V. Stephens, chairman of the Democratic Central Committee of the Third Congressional District, received half a column of criticism in six point type last week from the caustic pen of J. w. Tanner, of the Fullerton -News-Journal, for prostituting his position in behalf of J. P. Latta's candidacy for congress. The action of Chairman Stephens, in his offensive partiality, will not strengthen Mr. Latta's chan ces for landing tne nomination at the primaries. Latta's principal qualifica tion arises from the fact that he has a "barrel." Possibly this might appeal to some members of his party, but there is. a growing tendency on the part of all political parties to require other qualifications than accumulated wealth for positions of trust and res 'possibility. Previous to the War Between the States there was a man in the United States Senate named Jefferson Davis. He was a cultured and refined gentle man. When the Southern States ceceded, he went with them and be came President of the Confederacy. Years have softened the feeling in the north against the man who stood at the head of the states in rebellion for four years. But the new Jeff Davis the Senator from Arkansas is the opposite of the man who represented Mississippi in the Senate before the war. The modern Jefferson D. is a coarse, one-gallas individual whose principal claim to notoriety is his bull voice and lack of decent manners. Davis is a representative of that ele ment in politics that occasionally breaks into a place of responsibility and honor only to befoul it with his presence. aaaaaaaaa The New Jersey Democrats, in state convention assembled, after handing Mr. Bryan a lemon, proceeded to con demn President Roosevelt for doing things which, in their opinion, he ought not to have done, and for leaving un done things he should have done. The criticism of the president was according to the Jersey idea of what is wrong and what is right, and agrees, in some respects, to the opinion Mr. Bryan entertains of the president's official acts. It will be remembered that in 1905, when Everett Colby cut loose from -the Republican machine in New Jersey, and undertook to intro duce some much needed reforms in state affairs, he was opposed by the very men in that state who are now so rampant for the Peerless Leader; not only was Colby opposed by the Bryan Democrats, but he was also fought by that wing of the party now so pronounced against the nomination of Mr. Bryan. New Jersey will be against Bryan in the Denver conven tion, but the crowd opposing him has no better standing than the fellows who are shouting for him. There's, room for reform in both political par ties in New Jersey. 'At Ann Arbor, last Thursday, in addressing a Democratic club, Gover nor Johnson repeatedly asserted, "I am a Democrat!" and then added, "The Democratic party is the only party that has any principles." Gov ernor Johnson could have added, how ever, that the principles of the demo cratic party are -widely at variance in different states. For instance: In the mining states of the west the Dem ocratic party is in favor of free silver, while in New York and other states of the east the democratic party is oppos ed to free coinage; in Louisiana the democratic party favors a "robber tariff" on sugar; in the east democrats want sugar admitted free; in Georgia, Alabama and South Carolina the dem ocratic party stands for prohibition, while in Illinois the demand is for "extreme personal liberty"; in Wyo ming aad other wool producing states the ateamocratic party shouts for a tariff aa wool, and in the manufacturing districts of New England a democratic wail goes up for free raw material If the deaaooratic party ever had any well defined principles, they sleep in the grave with Stephen a Douglass. The democratic party of today is a party of protest and obstruction. KK aalaMBaa VsKSBasVah, It is a lamentable fact that Ne braska, oneof the great agricultural states of the Union, is behind -other Western States in teaching scientific farming. This negligence on the part of the state's law-makers is partly due to combining the State University with the so called Agricultural College. That branch of the university where scientific farming is taught is nothing more than an annex to'the greater in stitution of learning and has complete-' ly lost its identity by combining the two. What the state needs, and the people should demand, is an agricul tural college separate and distinct from the State University, located at a point somewhere in the North Platte Country. The two institutions in Iowa are separate and have no connection whatever. The agricultural college of Iowa", established at Ames in 1868, has grown into one of the strongest institutions of the kind in the country. This year 2400 students are enrolled, the number exceeding the enrollment of the Iowa State University. At the Ames college are students from nearly every state in the Union and many from foreign lands. A few years ago the Sultan of Turkey established an agricultural department for his empire, and thirty graduates from the Iowa Agricultural College entered the ser vice of the Turkish government. The time has come for Nebraska to pay more attention to progressive farming and less attention to progressive poli tics and partisan measures. THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE. The May number of the Success Magazine contains replies from ten thousand subscribers in response to questions sent out on National Policies and Presidential Candidates. Success Magazine had no means of knowing the politics of the parties to whom the questions were propounded. The subscribers were residents of dif ferent sections of the' country. The questions were framed with a view of securing answers that would indicate the trend of opinion: In each case it was requested that each subscriber vote '.'Yes," or "No," to the question as seated. The following are the questions voted on: Question 1. Should the National Gorernatent exercise a stronger control of corporations do ing an interstate business? On this question 9,146 voted yes and 209 voted no. Qaestion 2. Should business corporations conducting an interstate business report annu ally to the National Gorernment, aa banks and railroad companies now report? The vote on this question was as fol lows: Yes, 9,101; no, 244. Question 3. Do you beliere that these reforms in the conduct of great corporations should be carried out, eren if in doing this there should be a risk of temporarily unsettling business con ditlons? On this question 9,097 voted yes, and 219 no. Question 4. Would you support the President and Congress in carrying out corporation re forms which would tend to the permanent Bet terment of our social conditions, erea if It meant some personal sacrifice to you yourself in the way of "money panics," restriction of bank credits, and other matters affecting business? Only 175 voted against this question and 9,312 voted yes. Qaestion 5. Do you believe in the policy of permanently retaining the Philippines? la other word?, do you believe that America aboald re main a world-power, or should oar national policy be one of cutting off all foreign complica tions and coming back to the confines of our own original country? On this question there was a greater difference of opinion than on any of the others, 9,208 votes being cast, and of this number 5,214 voted yes, and 3,994 voted no. The states of Mary-. land, Virginia, North and South Car olina, Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama, Florida and Mississippi voted in favor of the proposition two to one. Question 6. Would you approve liberal appro priations by Congress for the upbuilding of the American Navy, for the purpose solely of prop erly defending our present seacoast and island possessions, and of increasing' our prestige among nations? On this question there was a greater difference of opinion than on the first four questions. The vote cast was 8,218 yes, and 1,088 no. Question 7. Do yon approve the policy of ex pending vast sums of money for the develop ment of our national resources, such aa are illustrated, for example, by the Panama CanaL the improvement of our internal waterways, the improvement of waste lands by irrigation pro jects, etc., these expenditures being in the nature of investments w hich require present sacrifices, but are expected to increase the national wealth and the facilities for doing business? The number voting yes was 9,050; no, 266. Question 8. Do you, on the 'whole, approve the administration of President Roosevelt? Those who have been so bitter in their antagonism to the policies of the President as to claim that he is losing his popularity; or those who insist that Bryan is the idol of the people, will find in this vote that the people of every section are with the President in the fight he is making for the poli cies he represents. The emphatic manner in which 8,648 voted yes, and only 669 voted no, is not only an en dorsement of the present administra tion, but carries with it an endorse ment of Secretary Taft who has so ably upheld Roosevelt and defended him from the partisan attacks made upon him by the man who has .twice been repudiated by the people for the presidency. Qaeatioa 9. Who would be year firat aad ttrnrnfl rhnirr for ttw rieeiilmi j ihnTai Ian aait four years? Here again-Roosevelt ahowa up strong. Even in the Southern; States, where "everybody except the niggers", is claimed for Bryan, Roosevelt has more votes than the Nebraska candi date. The vote received by the five leading , candidates was as follow: Roosevelt, 5,460; Bryan, 1,178; Taft, 1,110; Hughes, 975; Johnson, 192. For second choice, Bryan received 645, and Taft 2,596. The effort made by Success Maga zine, to secure a fair expression of pub lic opinion on national policies and presidential candidates indicates that the people in general are in sympathy with the. republican party and have faith in the men who are standing by the President in the splendid fight he is making for honest business methods, and a square deal for the people. WILL DEMAND CONCESSIONS. The fight against prohibition now going on in the South and .West was settled in Massachusetts a generation ago. It caused the Republican party to lose the governorship for a time but from the clash of conflicting ideas came a settled policy which, on the whole, has worked out fairly well. Changes may be necessary occasion ally, but the principal of local option is decided. What they went through thirty years ago in Massachusetts is now being repeated in the South. Thirty million people in the United States are living under "dry con ditions" as against three millions only a few years ago. The prohibition party has made such tremendous gains that it is in a position to demand con cessions from both the old parties. Mr. Bryan has already capitulated to the Prohibitionists, and as far as he can control the platform at Denver, it will be made to suit the idea that saloons are a menace to the good of the community, both from a business and moral standpoint As the Demo cratic states have been heading straight for sumptuary temperance legislation, the Republican states have been going the other 'way, towards what is called "personal liberty." It is quite possible, in fact probable, un-. less the national Democratic conven tion acts more warily in this matter than is now likely, and especially if the Republican convention refuses to be influenced by the prohibitory de mand, the temperance question may cut considerable ice in the national campaign. The same kind of a fight is going on in England, where the proposition of the Liberal government toecall all licenses after a period of years is being fiercely contested. The Church of England Temperance So ciety has approved the bill, which gives some ground to believe that the church is friendly to the Liberal bill on the general proposition that clergy men will support anything labelled temperane, be it good or bad. Most clergymen do believe strongly in tem perance and know better than any class in the community the necessity for it, but the majority are not too easy to stampede nowadays; they take the' position of Dean Hole, the well known English churchman, who one time when he was being pestered by teetotalers who reproached him for not joining their body, said: "Because you have water, on the brain is no reason why I should shave my head." Atchison Globe. NOW CHANGED. If some political Rip Van Winkle who had been asleep for the past dozen years should suddenly waken and be told that the Democrats, had decided to hold their national convention this year in Denver, he would declare that Denver was the place of all places for such a gathering. Is not Colorado one of the greatest silver producing states of the Union, and were not the silver mines of Colorado reduced to dump heaps by the demonetization of silver: win not Mr. .Bryan Denom inated at Denver, and is not Bryan the peerless champion of the free and un limited coinage of silver at the holy ratio of 16 to 1. But the man who has been snoozing away ever since the campaign of 1896 would be in for a tremendous surprise. When he went to sleep Bryan was shouting himself hoarse for free silver; Colorado was full of little silver camps' that had been wrecked by the cyclone of demonetization. Now all is chang ed but Bryan. Bryan is still the candidate, though even he will not drag the "crown of thorns and cross of gold" from the "property" trumpery of abandoned plays. Denver got the convention by offering $100,000 in gold for it in gold, the monetary octopus that has been strangling the life out of the nation with its countless tentacles ever since the crime of '73. The convention will be addressed bv United States Senator William M. Teller, who walked out of the St Louis Republican convention into the Demo cratic fold for the sake of silver. In stead of a hotbed of free rilveriam, our Rip Van Winkle would find gold in everybody's pockets aad not even a stf ver-toagued orator in sight Verily times have changed in twelve short years. Kansas City Journal. aaaaaw "" daav aVaaaaaaan aaBBBnaaaaaaaaaaaW: dBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBAk Baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaank "'BaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaB. aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaPaaaaaaaa ''b1bbbbVbbbH BbBbbBbt wBbbBbI 'bVbbbbbY bbbbbb a-BBBBBB . BBBBBr -f B"K V. B bbbbbbbbbbbI bbbbbbBbbT '"bbbbbI aaa bbbbbbbBbm bbbbbbbT aBBBBBBBBBBBBBf SBBBBBBBB, TBBmaBBBBBBBBBBBT BBBBBBBBBB sS You Will be interested : in Our. . SMART SPRING SUITS Special at 415 Because you will find by compari son with any other enita outside of this store, selling at $18 to $20. they cannot be equalled for the price. Single and double-breasted models of the most advanced euts, exquisitely hand-tailored, fin ished in faultless fashion and made of tine wearing caseimeres, worsteds, cheviots and tweeds. When you come say: "Show me those sack suits you are selling special at $15. GrelsenBros JOHNSON AND JEFFERSON. An it is the policy of Republican campaign, orators to set great store by the wisdom and works of Abraham Lincoln, so does the Democratic wind jammer take the name and ideas of Thomas Jefferson as his guiding starrj And it is usually just policy upon the part of the speakers, a plea for votes by holding up the ideals of the great est party has-beefl. Therefore, when Governor Johnson recommended in his Louisville speech the other night, that the Denver convention should adopt a platform according to the Jefiersonian plans and specifications, he was really sparring for time; it didn't mean much. All Democrats are Jefferson Democrats, and all Re publicans are Lincoln Republicans when they talk. No one disputes the greatness of these two statesmen, but their ideas and policies were of an other time and condition, and if it wouldn't be too great a blow to ora tory, it would be a mark of kindness and respect to give their names a rest. But, returning to Johnson's Louis ville speech, the , Minnesota governor made other assertions more to the point, and of importance in outlining his platform. In fact, he probably stated one side of the issue which will be threshed out at Denver. Since it is likely to be Johnson or Bryan, with Johnson's smaller chance growing, what the former stands for is of store importance just now that what Jeffer son thought about it Johnson took a rap at Bryan, and didn't hurt himself, when he said that government owner ship of railroads and other socialistic experiments are as much to be guard ed against as the evils charged against the corporations. He added that ex pediency never got a nation anything, and never will; that it never gpt the Democratic party anything, and never will. All in all, his ideas seem to be those of a conservative man. Bryan is; well-known radical, although he doesn't believe it. Therefore, it is these two elements, as well as these two men, which will be struggling for the mastery of the Democratic party in the coming convention. Atchison Globe. MR. BRYAN AND THE OTHERS. It is not a foregone conclusion that Bryan will be nominated at the Den ver convention. Doubtless the change ed prospects have a good deal to do with Bryan's vigorous protests against sending uninstructed delegates. There may be something in the charge that money is being used to prevent in structions. Color is given to it by the testimony of Mr. Thomas F. Ryan who oaght to know that this thing was done in 1900. But the influences combined to prevent, as far as poasi- ble, the instruction of delegates to the Denver .convention, taken as a whokvJ must not be. regarded as corrupt They have their origmvatuch morerj largely in me sincerewisn oi many Democrats to do the best possible thing for the party and to have a chance in the Denver convention to deliberate on this question. For ex? ample, the country does not distrust the other candidates Johnson and' Gray, who are active, or Harmon, Douglass and Culberson, who are. I merely mentioned. The fact that these candidates, individually and col lectively, are tacitly opposed to Mr. Bryan does not mean that they are beholden or would be beholden to corrupt interests unfriendly, to. the Nebraskan. In this respect the situation is-quite different fram that on the Republican side. Between Mr. Taft and the' "allies" there is the long standing issue between President Roosevelt and the corporate interests. This issue is well defined. The people have en thusiastically supported the President and they have instinctively followed the candidate who best represents the policies of th Roosevelt, administra tion. They just as instinctively dis trust the allied opposition, or it,ia well known that this opppsitbn--thatis the so-called ."field" is rhaqked by the corporations. It will be seen, -therefore, that there is a much stronger reason for Taft instructions .than there is for Bryan instructions. Kansas City Star. MADE THE BLUFF TOO STRONG. Ons Cass. Where Thtory and Practice DUnt Saam t Hitch. Frederick Sterry of New York's fa mous Plaza thoel was talking about the crush that restaurants experience on New Year's eve, Washington's birthday and other holidays. "But I must' not boast." said Mr. Sterry. "It Is bad luck. A grocer in my boyhood told me that. The grocer said that he had once engaged a new boy, and had exhorted 'this boy always to give customers the Impression that they 4 were very busy. " 'Wehther we are actually busy or no, say so,' the grocer said. 'Tell peo ple we are, for they like to deal with birsk, go-ahead firms that do a large trade.' "Well, an hour or so later a brough am drove up, and the rich Judge's wife entered. She did not stay Ion?. The boy looked after her. And on her departure the grocer said to the boy: "'Did Mrs. Judge Brown leave a very large order, James?' " 'She was goln' to,' said the boy. 'She had a list as .long as yer arm. But I looked mad and told her we was sorbusy I hardly seed how I could stop to tend to her, so she sald.beln as she was In a hurry, she'd just go MXt doori Tha Wisdom of Experience. There was no doubt In the minds of the Hobart family that young James had a remarkable gift. It remained' for an obscure uncle from the Cape to drop a word of caution and of worldy wisdom. "You say he's wonderful farseeing, and can tell folk just how things are going to turn out?" he Inquired. "Yes, It seems so," said James adoring mother. "Well, now, If you want him to be the most onpop'lar man anywhere round, you Just let him foretell nd prophesy and forecast," remarked the old uncle, grimly. "If you want., him to keep a few friends you mast shunt him off to some other track. Let him work out sums In his head. That's a harmless practice." "But why?" faltered the mother. "Jvst this," answered the authority from down on the Cape. "When he prophesies thing!! go wrong and they do go wrong, the heft of the blame'll be laid straight on his shoulders. When he says they'll go right, and they do, folks be too busy enjoying themselves to remember your James. And when he says they'll go wrong and they go right, they'll call him a fool. Now. I'm above 70. and you mind what I tell ye." Youth's Companion. Odd Animals In Harness. The horse. must look to his laurels, as a number of odd competitors for his place as the friend of man are springing up. At Andhelm, a German settlement in southern California, ostriches have been trained to draw light four wheeled traps. One of these birds so harnessed has .traveled a mile in three minutes, or at a rate of 20 miles aa hour. The African zebra was formerly re garded as being too wild. aad too vi cious to be of use In harness.' But time nas changed this, and now In British East Africa, any number of xebras can be purchased ready trained to bit and bridle. .The sebra will be" found most useful In Africa and India, as rt is exceedingly strong, a fast trot ter and immune from many diseases which attack horses. Perhaps the oddest animal la har ness Is the wild boar whleh Is driven by a French peasant at Hontlucon. It Is now three years old and able to draw a small two-wheeled cart. As a bit is of no use the reins are at tached to the animal's eye teeth. Covering for feather For a covering for feather beds make a slip of cottoa cloth eight inches longer aad wider than the ar; tide to be covered, leaving aa open-. ing at one side a third of" the length. Oa each inside .comer, aew tapes six inches long; also sew tapes six inches Jong' oa the four corners of bed or comfort, slip bed la- cover, tie the .tapes, aaa 'either" aew the opening si .aide or asw buttons aad buttonholes. Cotton chalUesaa be used for coat fSTaloosttomelsth, . j1 , SBJ Baj btJ Ha I Mifw Binding! I Old Books I ' Rebound H "bbbbI 1 In fact, for anything in the book I I binding line bring your work to M I Ghe ' -I I Journal Office I BB) - ' - B I . Phone 160 ' 1 BBBbI BBBBl BBBW BBW To Be Investigated. "Since Louis Ferrari began the pros ecution 'of these 'impure milk cases." remarked one of a group at the Olympic club, "he's suspicious of any thing that looks like milk. "How so?" ventured one of the lis teners. "Well, one of the fellows had a bot tle of emulsion of cod liver oil. white stuff, the vilest dope a man ever tasted. It was In a plain, big-necked bottle. 'Where'd they get that stuff?' asked Ferrari. '"I think.' said Andrew Glarner. 'I think Jack Gleason got it from his brother's place.' '"Ah. exclaimed Ferrari. 'I dont care if Jack is a member of the club. I'm going after his brother's dairy. I put some of that milk in my coffee this morning, and it was all to the bad.'" San Francisco Chronicle. Victory So-Called. James Carroll, the amateur light weight boxing champion of San Fran cisco, said at the end of a recent women's boxing and fencing exhibi tion: "Physical culture among women, women's growing strength and pluck, lend interest to marriage, change mar riage's complexion. "'How Is poor Smithers gettin' on?' asked one man to another. ." 'Well.' said the other. 'Smithers Ss now almost recovered from the beatiu' 'he gave his wife last Saturday night.' " True Irish Wit. "Tim" Healy. the Irish member of parliament, is quick at repartee. A voter once informed him that i.n would "sooner vote for the devil than for Healy." "But possibly your frleiH may not turn up," said "Tim." adding in a tone of mild inquiry: "Perhaps, you would support me then?" Washington's Headquarters. The headquarters at Newburg. N. Y. one of 'the most interesting of all the houses that Washington sojourned In. Is very carefully preserved and its grounds are well kept, and the people of Newburg take great pride In It, while the- state appropriates a sum for Its maintenance from year to year. But the house has been made the re ceptacle for a great mass of manu scripts, relics and memorials of Wash ington and the' revolution, and a re quest Is now made of the legislature to build a fireproof building in which these may be kept. It is a small mat tar of $30,000. and without doubt the appropriation will be made. The Oldest Royal Golfer. The king of England is the oldest royal golfer we have not the oldest, merely .la years of life, but in golfing experience. It may surprise many peo ple to know that King Edward was driving a golf ball half a century ago, long before stoat golfers of the pres ent time were bora. BUSINESS CHANCES ALONG THE NEW LINE Sales of business lots will be held in four new towns in the Dakotas and Montana along the new line to the Pa cific coast in May. Sales will be held at Reader, North Dakota, May 14; at Ismay, Mondav, May 19; at HajRes, North Dakota. May 21, ami at Sera a ton, North Dakota, May 2G. All sales will be by auction. These towns are located in a good diversified farming, stock raising and dairying country and have a large tributary trade territory. They will witness rapid development and prosperity, and offer exceptional op portunities for merchants and investers. Sales will be held later in other towns on the Pacific Coast extention of the Chicago, Milwaukee ft St. Paul Railway Six months ago the towns of Lemmon, Hettinger, and Bowman were established on this new line in the Dako tas. Today each town has a population close to 500 and all branches of business are represented in them bat omrtaaities are still pleatifal foi many liaes of feasiaess. Homeseekers' excursion to points on the new line next Tuesday, Ma 5. Low fares, stop-overs. Complete in formation free. Maps and descriptive books regarding this new country are free for the asking. F. A. MILLER f. A. NASH Oeaeral PasMBger Ageat Gea'l Weaiera ?aa. Area Caieag. UU Faraaai. 0-niT "I Flsur Putting. This desert is known In Maryland and the Virginias as a "flour pudding." but in reality is a boiled apple dum pling. Sift sufficient flour to make the quantity of dumplings you wish and mix In a little salt. Pour Into this boiling water direct from the kettle, sufficient to make a soft dough. Mix quickly before it has time to get chilled, roll out on the bread board in sheets about three-quarters' of an Inch thick and spread -over it the ap ples pared and quartered. Sprinkle over this a little sugar, roll up quick ly, just as you would a jelly roll, tie in a cloth wrung from cold water, and plunge quickly into a pot of boiling water. Boil , for an hour and a quarter. Serve with milk and cream, half and half, sweet ened and' flavored with grated nut meg, or any other sauce preferred. This also- is delicious made from peaches, and in the winter time we make it of preserved fruits, plums and peaches being particularly palat able. Lipton Turning to Hsnstlse. Sir Thomas Upton, bs-ltovss la freak air. and to avoid sleeping. In town will often drive tea miles at one o'clock in the morning to Oslage, his place at Old Soutagate. In Middlesex. He la now a keen gardener and has of late been heard of as aa orchid, fancier. All Kinds of Farm ImplemeMs do ver Leaf and Success. Manure Spreaders Recognized as the, ' leading Spreaders'on the market today More corn on the same acreage by using, the Deere planter. It is always ready for either hilling or drilling' Farmers, bring in w your tools and implements to be sharpened and repaired now. It will save you time when spring opens up. We keep only the latest and best in buggies and carriages Our horseshoes stick and don't lame your horse try them Louis Schrelber 1-i I v t .a r t. , i i r." I I nf ) 11 SSSSCTHffiaswaKWwewswasnsiKaa T- w- .. vsaK gsas