'I f UOEVHiJIUJHIff WmmW Better Plumbing MANY homes should have better bath rooms hlm .K,,.. n... i. xr i i R uiau nicj nuw tried not onlv to do nllimrtinrr Tinr iiu xro. piuniuillg L11U.11 Wfe VVl before, but better than any body else can do. The vol t ume of work we are now doing shows how we are suc ceeding. Wc use only genuine "SMkbmdT plumbing fixtures and employ only experienced workmen. Our repair inn service is prompt and reliable. 1 A. DUSSELL, & SON, (ii Columbus, ITEMS OF INTEREST SOIinVLKU. From tlioHnn. Hello Newman and Janet McAUiHter of ColumbuB caniH clown Monday morning to attend teachers' inatitutu and to visit their frienils Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Do well and family Tho funeral of Peter Caha, aged 87 yearn, grandfather of Oharles Tony and Joseph KaBper was conducted by under taker Kolni last Sunday. H: bad been a paralytic for 12 years. Interment was in Him Sehuyler camotery. Mr. Williams, who curries rural route No l, telle ua that Mr. Cannon prescnt ed him with two tomatoeR (not rotten ont'B) that metiBiired I'.i inches in diame ter. That Hounds pretty big and they may have been pumpkins, but neverthe less those are Home tomatoes. .M.1IION. From tliu Aixiih. Did you see that lf foot stalk of corn standing in front of ltuddy's office, 8'2 feet up to the first ear? It was raised by I 'at Malony on the Pittenger place. Pat biih be has :0 acres of it. It is the Iowa Gold Mine. Itwns planted May!). Mrs. Ivathcrine Lewis, who lives with her daughter Mrs. A. Green, of Middle town, in Dea Moines county, Iowa, has just reached the remarkable age of 101 years Mrs. Lewis came with her hus band to Iowa in 1811, settling down on the farm on which she is now spending her last days. The trip into tho un known west was made on a raft on which Mr. Lewis bad erected a log cabin, and sailed down the Allegheny river. In 1875 they moved to Nebraska, whpre in 1SS7 Mr. Lewis died, and a few years later Mrs. Lewis returned to the old home to spend the remainder of her days with her daughter. i.Kinn. From tlm World. Relatives at this place have received news of a sad accident which has be fallen Ernest Staab, a Mn of John Staab of Berwyn, formerly of thiB place. Through some accident Ernest has lost one eye and is at present m an Omaha hospital. A few of the farmers on this route are summer fallowing, that is. plowing very shallow to kill the weeds and catch and hold all the moisture. In the spring they will plow the same fields from t'i to 8 inches deep which will leave thegioiind in splendid condition for corn ami mil to apt to get hard and lumped The Farmers and Merchants bank received a teleurmu yesterday appris ing tho management of the fact that the National Banking board had just grant ed them Charter iS:tl which authorizes them to do busine-s under the name of tho First National bank, of Leigh. The First National bunk will succeed the Farmers and Merchants bank and the Maple Valley State bank. It's capital is SSO.uiK). The National Bank examin ers made a thorough investigation of the records of the pieent institution and finding everything in first class con dition, issued the charter. f FR1SCHH0LZ BROS. SHOES CLOTHING Gents9 Furnishing Goods RELIABLE GOODS AT RIGHT PRICES. FRISCHHOLZ BROS. 405 11th Street. B MMfllPJMSa-4!! 1 imvc. vvc nave always better ? ! 5 I UIU jQ Nebraska ABOUT OUR NEIGH BORS AND FRIENDS CLIPPED FROM OUR EXCHANGES FDIibKHTOIf From the Ntiw8-.loiirnul. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stillman returned last week from their western trip. They report a glorious trip, but after visiting five western states decided that Nebras ka was the beet state "to live in." Miss Gretchen Horet, of Salt Lake City, winuMhe president of the School Board that she would lie unable to fill her position as Latin instructor in our High School. The Board is very much disappointed as it is difficult to find a first class instructor at this late day as they are all engaged for the coming years work. Chas. Corriel brought in a bunch of onions one day this week that to us .seemed the finest we bad over seen. They were grown from tho seed and I measured from ten to thirteen inches in circumference, which is a very unusual size for seed onions. When they grow to that size in dry weather what might we see with the usual amount of mois ture? cnilAIC ItAI'IDS. From llio Outlook. Mr. Wheeler Lyman, an old and high ly respected citizen of Primrose, met a very sudden and peculiar death last Sunday while enjoying an outing at Freeman creek. From the reports we have at hand, Mr. Lyman had drove to Freeman creek Saturday afternoon with the intention of fishing that evening, also part of the next day. When he got ready to return home his team ran away. He then telephoned home for another rig to come to bis assistance. While waiting for the rig evidently he decided to continue fishing, nnd dropped his line in the steam off from the bridge, which crosses the creek on the main road. The bridge is rather a rickety affair, nnd in leauing over the railing it gave away, and he fell headlong to the water S below, striking his head on an old piling protruding from the water. This, no doubt, is what the post mortnm ex amination revealed as not a drop of water was on the unfortunate man's lungs. The water at this place is oeven to fifteen feet deep. HELL-WOOD. From tho (Snzette. It is said that cattle have been disap pearing from some of the pastures around Bellwood and that a olose inves tigation is being made. The Nebraska law relating to automo biles makes it a misdemeanor punisha ble by a fine of ?2T for nnj' person to operate an antomobile at a rate of speed faster than one mile in six minutes in the close, built up portions of town or village, or at a rate greater than one mile in four minutes in other portions of the town or village. The safety of the public demands that this law be obeyed. A pocket book containing about STiOO in notes and paper money disappeared from Jim Jackson's pocket one day last week. He hunted high up and low down in bis little cabin for the missing money and also telephoned to Columbus, thinking it dropped out of his pocket while over there previous to its disap pearance; but the missing pocket book nnd contents finally turned np between the screen and the door of his cabin. How it got there, he is at a lo6s to know. Columbus. ii rMBBW i v i vkkk- tuBfe -r-L SSpppMpBaTpBc-r 1 ii pjjaC PLATTE CKKTBB From the Signal. Fred Scholte arrived here Monday evening from Washington, where be went a year ago. This is Fred's second try in Washington in the last five years, and he thinks he has now come back to Nebraska to stay. Ed Roberts has rented his farm land joining the village on the east to Dr. IVmhuck. He lutH hIso rented all his otbercnltivated laud. Mr. Roberts has livtd un this farm over forty years and be thinks h has earned te rest from lunnjging it Misses Agnes and Gertrude Lynch w ho had f pent the week with relatives and many friendB at this place, left Monday for Columbus, where they will make a short visit with friends before returning to their home at Minden, la. These young ladies formerly resided here with their parents, and are better known as the "Lynch Twins." An accident rather painful bat not serious is responsible for the absence of Mis-. Stacia Cronin from her post of doty in the Bruckner store. Last Saturday night, during the storm. Miss Cronin arose to close a window, and being in the dark she struck her right foot with each force against a trunk that the nail on the largo toe was torn almoBt complete ly off. A stalk of corn something over twelve feet high is on exhibition in front of the Glodowski hardware store. It grew on Eiler Bros, farm, west of town, and is a new variety here. It mnst have been propagated especially for the Eilers, as the ears grow seven and a half feet from the ground, and anyone of less length than they couldn't reach them without something to stand on. Monday morning a small band of dirty greasy looking gypsies drove into town and the women, as ssnal, started out through the town soliciting fortune tell ing, and the children to begging. Mar shal Oarrig soon approached one fat old greaseress, who was apparently the boss, and in a few well chosen but impressive words informed her that they had best move on. They moved. Mrs. Ernest Arndt, whose illness we reported last week, submitted to a seri ous surgical operation last Friday, by Dr. C. Allison, of Omaha, at her home northeast of town. The work in this case by the noted surgeon involved the removal of a tumor, or abcess from the right kidney. At this writing the pati ent is slowly gaining, and an early re covery is hoped for by her many anxious relatives and frienils. HONKOB. From the Itepnliliran. Ralph Hollingshcad of Arcadia, Neb., is visiting his aunt, Mrs. J. It. Smith. W. L. Smith left last Saturday for Illinois, called there by the serious ill ness of J. F. Irwin's mother. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Durham and children returned home Tuesday, after a two weeks visit with relatives in Kan sas. MiBes Ada and Mary Hendryx, who have been gueots at the Chas. Kelley home, left Tuesday for their home in Kearney. Not near so much fall wheat will be put in tuts year as last. 'A number of farmers say their land blows away when fall plowed. Miss Jennetto Burris, who has been spending the summer in Oregon, Cali fornia and New Mexico, arrived Wed nesday evening for a weeks' visit with her sister Mrs. F. A. Read. Mr. and Mrs. Vestal Moore returned last Saturday from their trip to Jones boro. Tenn., where they were called by the sickness of Vesta's mother. When they left Tennessee Mrs. Moore's health was improving. During the heavy electrical storm last Saturday evening lightning struck the ho me of Mrs. L D. Smith, in the east part of town, and her daughter Lydia received u shock, ns she was in the net of pntting down a window. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Gerrard left Tues day for an extended trip in the east, in cluding Auburn, N. Y., the home of Mrs. Gerrard's sister, Mrs. 'Weeks. They will also visit with Mrs. Shepherd, formerly Mies Fannie Weeks. They ex pect to be absent from four to six weeks. Wednesday of this week T. N. Wo mack, who has been Union Pacific agent at Monroe for the last several months, was transferred to Yutan. Neb., and RobL Daugbertyv formerly agent at Tarnov, checked in as agent. Mr. Daugherty has moved bis family here and is living in the John Smith bnilding for the present, but will move into a dwelling as soon as one is available. central crrr. From the Nonpareil. The new Union Pacific freight depot is completed and ready for occupancy. Agent Tom Costello received a telegram Tuesday instructing him to make the change, but as there is no furniture in the new bnilding he will not be able to do so for several days. Mr. Coetello's office will be in the freight depot although he will still have general charge of the work at the passenger station. Sheriff Her was called to Salt Lake City Saturday night to take into custody Othello Evans who is charged with hav ing recently acquired too many wives. Evans and Miss Grace Gorman, of Grand Island, were united in marriage in this city on August 3d. Rev. C. G. Wil liams performed the ceremony and at the time the couple gave their place of residence as Jackson county, Missouri. It has since developed that Evans has another wife living in Kansas City. J. H. Gorman, father of Miss Grace, came down Saturday and filed a complaint in the district court, charging Evans with bigamy. AK-SAR-BEN IS NEBRASKA SHOW Enchanting Festival of the Nerth Attracts Wide Attention. STORY OF ITS ORGANIZATION. 6ixteen Years Prove Value of King Ak-Sar-Ben to Trans-Missouri Coun tryWriter in Hearst' Papers Gives State Big Boost for Its Enterprise. By Will A. Campbell. When Mark Twain wrote thirty years ago that no such an enchant ing festival as the Mardi-Gras of New Orleans could live in the practical north any longer than it could live in London, one season the distinguished journalist did not know what kind of men and women the future citizens of the middle-west would be; did not Im agine that a foundation of business fratcrnalism would continue a great festival in the north just as surely as the love of romance would sustain such a festival in tho south. On the practical foundation of busi ness, Ak-Sar-Ben has been built and has nourished. The festival is about to open in Omaha for the sixteenth year and for the first time membership has been limited because of the grow ing popularity of the enterprise. Void of all those things which set the world in love with dreams and phantoms; without sham grandeurs, gauds and chivalries, Ak-Sar-Ben is really a big "boosters" organization which has done more to put Nebraska on the map and renew the confidence of her people, than any other force in the trans-Missouri country. This festival has everything which Mardi-Gras has and more. The ro mance is present; there are kings and knights; big sounding titles go thun dering along after the names of its officers, but the soul of Ak-Sar-Ben Is the co-operative spirit of the people of the middle-west the eternal effort of the business fraternity to boost for each other and for the trans-Missouri empire always. Ak-Sar-Ben is more than a relic of the French nnd Spanish occupation with the religious features knocked ot. It is more than "a tawdry mas querade of knights and nobles clothed in silken and Paris-made gorgcousness. Ak-Sar-Ben has a reason and has had Since its inception back in thore hard days when Nebraska and Kansas were thought to be a blizzard cursed western waste in the winter; sun baked prair ies the harbors of cyclones and grass hoppers in the summer. "We must do something." said the men of Nebraska in 1895 when the veins of commerce had become so sluggish that the state had lost con fidence and lay bankrupt at the feet of the national government. What to do was a mystery. Eastern insurance and trust companies became possessed by foreclosing of the most valuable real estate, some owning from fifty to one hundred pieces of property wide ly separated. Out in the towns and cities of the state homes of men were being moved to the ranches to house cattle and sheep in the winter that the more comfortable quarters might tako thc place of nourishing food. Thus the Ak-Sar-Ben festival was born in poverty; planned with the be lief that it would bring the people of the state closer together; keep their money at home and working. As they joined hands to hold this festival six teen years ago, confidence began to re turn; an opportunity has been given each fall for taking an inventory of the resources of the middle-west and a graphic lesson In the advantages of co-operation has been driven home to tho people. There was something about the se lection of the name which increased this business fraternalism. True, the name Is Neb-ras-ka reversed, but it is more than that. "Ak" is Syrian in Jts origin and Is said to mean "head of a aousenoia." Tnen "Sar" Is good Arab ic for "household," and "Ben" in tne Hebraic is literally translated as "fam ily" or "brothers of a household." Thus there is a touch of Oriental enchantment about the word. There Is Ak. the head of the household, or the king; sar, the board of twelve gov ernors who manage the affairs of the festival; last there Is the family called hen, which embraces the body of knights, and every true Nebraskan Is a Knight of AK-Sar-Bon whether he has been able to journey to the den In Omaha and attend the ceremonial or not The same spirits who organized Ak-Sar-Ben made tho Trans-Mississippi and International exposition possible In 1898, and this enterprise marked the close of stagnation and opened the era of prosperity in the middle-west; the period of the 'OO's.' dark with industrial gloom and commercial disaster, be came history and the star of Nebras ka began its ascendancy. The men who have continued Ak-Sar-Ben for sixteen years and made it the most enchanting festival the north has ever known, are the men who have planted the boom seed deep in the soil and nourished it until Nebraska and Kansas are second to none in the indi vidual prosperity of their people, and in the amount of food contributed annual ly to help feed a hungry world. Ak-Sar-Ben has two distinct seasons. The first comes In the summer and is for initiating candidates. The second is festival time In the fall. Beginning carhr In June the uskscirs ic BIHHMEVFTHHpdCV King wno is to 'he revealed r.:i:i crowned in the fall, holds initiations In his great den every Monday eve ning. Business men of Omaha join each year and pay substantial initia tion fees. Some 2,500 contribute thus annually. Every stranger witnin the state is knighted without paying a fee If recommended or accompanied by some Omaha knight. . The initiations are unique, change each year and aro originated and exe cuted entirely by Omaha talent Some of the ceremonials "would linger in the memories of your great great grand children" to use an expression of a distinguished visitor who knows. Three presidents, McKinley, Taft and Roosevelt, have been Initiated and Colonel Roosevelt returns this fall' as a private citizen to renew his alleg iance to the king. Foreign ministers, cabinet members, senators, army offi cers, governors of almost every west ern state and many eastern states, have journeyed to Omaha, been knight ed and experienced' the mysteries of Ak-Sar-Ben. All this mystery vanishes in the fall. It is a season of great events. As the carnivals of Venice became famous in history because "no less than seven foreign princes and thirty thousand foreigners" attended them, so have the festivals of Ak-Sar-Ben attracted attention because one hundred and fifty thousand people attend them an nually and men more then foreign princes have been guests of the organ ization. Last year the event of the festival was the visit of President Taft. This year it is the presence of Colonel Roosevelt The electrical parade of King Ak-Sar-Ben is excelled nowhere in the world. Tho scores of floats, different each year, move through the streets, bearing hundreds of actors appearing as the men and women of song and story or as the oddities and pleasant creatures of fairyland. All these floats arc brilliant with tens of thou sands of electric lights which from the first succeeded the smoking and flickering torches In the parades. Then at the coronation ball comes the cry, "The King, the King." and for the first time In the season the real personality of the king becomes known. He is always a gentleman of position and consequence as the "Rex" of Mardi-Gras, and it is an honor high ly esteemed to bo selected king of Ak-Sar-Ben, so tho mystery with which his personality is hidden all summer is merely for the sake of romance and not an account of the police. During tho summer and fall festival tho country west of the Missouri river Is referred to as the Kingdom of Qui vera. This Is explained by Samson, Lord High Chamberlain ftf the realm. Coronado, a Spanish grandee and nd renturcr was tempted one time bj tales of a wonderful country north and east of Mexico, known ns the Kingdom of Quivera and said to contain the sev en cities of Cibola, wealthy beyond comparison. Coronado made the jour ney to the northeast in 1540, crossing Arizona and through the Puebla Indian villages. He is said by history and fa ble to have reached- Nebraska truly the Kingdom of Quivera, wealthy "be yond compare," a land of promise and of gold not that gold which is "hard and yellow, bright and cold," but tha gold which is realized from the vast A QUEEN OF AR-SAR-BEN. agricultural area when cultivated' by an industrious and intelligent people. Even the colors of Ak-Sar-Ben, tho red, yellow and green, are explained as symbolic of the products which mako the middle-west great; the red of tho beef, the yellow of the corn and green of alfalfa. All this pomp and display of power; the mixing of progressive ideas with the jejune romanticism of the middle ages; these kings on thrones resem bling those in fabled Isles of touristry; the knights swearing allegiance to tha name of their state spelled backwards, have but one object to bring men and women of the. middle west closer to gether In a great co-operative move ment to develop the country west of the Missouri river. The success of Ak-Sar-Ben as an empire builder is unquestioned. For sixteen years his armies have battled with the knockers and the grumblers; the prairies have grown tired of pro ducing sage brush and buffalo grass and are giving the world corn, alfal fa and wheat; every town is a bivouac of this army of boosters, and backed 1HwHwHbBBwHwHwH3eP99999991 KTPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPJPHSSfl kiBhWpBnnnsHnnnnYaMpsnnl BBnBBPjPJSjpBBpnY !u'jV'vS?ilB PIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIh 1Zk fo'-s v3? m psananananananBaml tv PBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBPjft" PnBPnpnppapnpnpSBBPj ' Ba HPT JZ&'MAs HbSvHH pppppytm jbj i. fpK J jf y J' M& ? J2-S1bH w r f - .PE-4 ""X P"ta PiPPs -- W :-m m. P TPBB1 BpHvbbbbbbbbHH ' WpBpbbbbbbbbBS v -v VEL?p3py pWv JpbKRpCpbbbH ' NipBr KpbBI -SpBTt'-'lpp ; k5: jPBPP- v s vAkVAT pb i .J)vLpMi 'MHp&iA.H ! tiiippRp3p3pMBBBH vptpbKpbVBpbbbbB pKppbbbbS pUp23pbbbH .sWBpTpKg-rfppM BSIpKpBkpIW STvr3uHBE&BBBBBBfl8 fa BBB1 lPHsPSpAati2pH '4"tP9KPJMB9999999999KP'.BP999991 49pbbbbbbbbbbkmEpbbbb1 ssp9pS7p1 CSslPPBBBBBBBBBBBBBBVf bKB jpppppppHpsbbbbbbB ppppppppppppH ;LJpppbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbS vMkOHLPIp9ppppp1 A GRAND MUFTI OF AR-SAR-BEN. by a" scries of successful years in ag riculture, the middle-west will realize a record-breaking year when King Ak-Sar-Ben is crowned in Omaha, Oct 7, 1910. From New York Journal. EVERYBODY MAY HEAR ROOSEVELT IN OMAHA. When Colonel Roosevelt speaks in Omaha Friday afternoon, Sept. '2, it will be to the general public and not to an exclusive few political admirers or members of any social organiza tion. The great Omaha Auditorium which the people of Nebraska helped build has been engaged. It will seat comfortably 10.000 people and as it is fireproof there will be no fire depart jnent interfering with those who wish to stand in the aisles. At 4 o'clock in the afternoon Colonel Roosevelt will arrive" "at the Audito rium and make his address. It will he the only address he will mako In Omaha or in Nebraska. While he is going to the Ak-Sar-Ben den later In the evening nnd while he will be a guest at both a dinner and a luncheon In Omaha, he will speak but once In the Auditorium, where all who come may hear him. Only a few seats 150 to 200 have been reserved and all others are freo to anyone who gets thom. Visitors from outside will have the same chance as Omaha people. SILVER CKEKK. From the Sand. Purl Rodd and family ar back from Grand Junction, Colorado, preferring to live here to nut there. One of the finest young men of the neighborhood, John II. Zipper of Polk county, has taken unto himself a wife. The girl of his oboico is Miss Balbina Kotlar, daughter of John Kotlar of Columbus. The wedding was held at the home of the bride' parents three tnilca north of Columbus on August '22. The young people will settle clown on their farm across the river and Sand wishes them much joy and that their cares will be littlo ones. John MsOinniss, who is out here from Cincinnati on a visit, is so taken up with this country that hn has bis eye on pur chasing four sections of land and becoming- a resident. His first experiment scared him a bit but he is not easily dis couraged and we expect to annex him yet. One place he ct his eye on was the jack rabbit fnrm northeast of Rill Sturapp'a place weA of town. One of the jacks bit him but he soon found that he could outrun them and as he has not seen any Indians or coyotes he feela comparatively safe in this rapidly civil izing conntry. SSGE3 i:a1PBK7BMk ..aVZJ eSBppsssI mea tVL $25 Columbus to Many Points in California, Idaho, Oregon. Washington VIA UNION Low One Way To California Aug 25 to Sept. 9 Oct. 1 to 15. 191 Electric Block Signals. Dustless, Perfect Track. Excellent Dining Car Meals and Service For literature and information relative to fares, routes, elo , call on or address ELLIS O- BROWN, Electric Light Always Ready Brilliant Clean Safe Have your house wired Columbus light, Heat & Power Co. COLUMBUS MEAT MARKET We invite all who desire eboioe steak, and the very beat cuta of all other meats to call at our market on Eleventh street. We also handle poultry and fish and oysters in season. S. E. MARTY & CO. Telephone No. 1. - ColnmhuR. Neb. The riKht paitr caa imcurn an excellent i-oeitiou, falary orromnii"iou for Citluiubaf ami vi cinity. HtnionK. former occupation nml irf reference. AUiIreas 1XH.B. ItOX 43K, lancoiu, neu. UHHM pacific THE TULE WEST No. 11 .. , No. 13.... No. 1 .... No. y .... No. 17.... No. 1.1..... No.S No.fi .... No.21.... No.l'J.... Nn.'J3.... No. 7 . . , BOUND. .... HMO am .... 1:38 am lOiWam ....113 am ilHfipul liti! pm .... HAD p m .... ilTipm .... 11:10 uiu ....llllnm .... MiSSpm .... 2arpm EAST No. 4 .... No. 12.... No. 14.... No.rt . . No. 1.... No. 10 .. No. 18.... No.i .... No. 2!.... No.au.. No.24.... No. 8 .... BOUND. 43-am ... Ub'St pm .... 5:34 am .... 2:lri pm .... 2:111 pm .... 3:0ft pm .... R:.1j pm ... HAIpm .... 1:11) pu .... KJJUpm .... 7:12 am .... ti:ltpm BUANCUES. NORFOLK. HPALOINO ALBION. No. 7 mzil..d B.-C0 am No. 31 pas ..d 1:30 pm No.32paM ..a!2 30pm No.80mxd..a7)pm No. 77 mxil. d 7:20am No.2paa ..ii 7.011 pin No. 30 pan ..a 1:10 pm No. 78 roxd..aH:10 pm Daily except Sunday. note: Noh. 1, 2, 7 and 8 are extra faro trains. Noh. 4. 5. 13 ami II are local paMengera. Nob. 58 and Mt aro local f reiicnta. Nob. 9 and 16 are mail trains only. No 14 doe in Omnha 4:45 p. m No. 8 dm in Omaha 3:00 p. ra. e. 1. 1 1. TiM Tabk No, 22, Pass, (daily ex. Bnnday) leave ?:25a m No. fti. Vrt. & Ac. (d'y ex. atanluy ) lv.r.KX) p m No. 21, Pan, (daily ex. Sunday) arrive. .9:20 p m No. 31. Frt. & Ac (d'y ox. Snnilay) ar...fl:15a m - 4 PACIFIC Colonist Fares To Idaho, Oregon, Washington Sept. 5 to Oct. 15, 191 AcBt. Celaxaaas. He. JnjwHgl 1 1 1 1 ippHMT BJBSPSananananpBananaVaVpJ