Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1905)
I s TIIE OMAITA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, SErTEMBIt 24, 1905. SOME OF TIIE BEST WHIPS Colanal Murray ant Otbar Lttdicg Hon- men. Coming to Omaha. ENTRIES ALREADY ARE RECEIVED HH Jfaaaatera of the Show Are Flat at the Prospect for Exhibi tion of the Highest Order. Horse show entries have been coming In ewlmmlngly during the last wtk and the director are correspondingly happy. Some of the moit noted whips In th country have aent In thlr entries during the taut few dnya and will bring with them aome of the best airing of horse which this nation boosts. Colonel Mur ray la a feature of any horse show and will always be remembered for the fun which he creates at nil times In the arena. Besides being a splendid whip he Is a dar ing rider and enters Into the potatoe racee with a vim. He will bring with him hla four-in-hands, his tandems, his spike teama, hla roadsters and best of all his Jumpers. The Jumpers are the most attractive horses to most people when In action and they are always put on last on the pro gram as the feature of the show. What la prettier than all. Is to aeea beautiful borae carry a rider over bars six feet In the air. An entry which also gave the directors considerable pleasure was that of Pepper of Toronto. Ha will lie remembered as the owner of the horse, Crelghton, formerly owned by Charles Crelghton of thUf city, the horse which takes the ribbons not only In Omaha but at Madison Square and anywhere else he Is shown. Patrons of the show will remember Roach who drove for Pepper. A straight backed youth who looked boyish and yet handled the rib bons with such skill In the arena that ha commanded a salary of t3,o(Q a year for driving and tiding the Jumpers over the bars. Window decoratlona are filling the thoughts of the merchants of the city. Judg ing from the numeroua Inquires which are dally being received at the horae show headquarters In The Bee building. Numer oua promises have been made by mer chants ' and the prize list offered by the directors Is also of sufficient Inducement to have the merchanta put forth their best efforts. Assistant Manager Haller Is an expert In the art of window decoration and la called upon dally for Ideas which are new. Tenta will be erected on the street and on the vacant lot adjacent to the Audi torium for quick hitching and for the storage of rigs which are used in the arena. Mr. Austin la fast getting every thing In readiness at the Auditorium and local drivers may practice this week to accustom their horses to the short turns. $ 1 95,000 IN 000 FUEL THI CAN BE SAVED WINTER 50,000,000 tons of soft coal and lignite at $3 a ton, costing $150,000,000 and 30,000,000 tons of hard coal at $8 a ton costing $240,000,000 are used annually for domestic heating. Where ordinary stoves and furnaces are used, lA this money goes up chimneys in gasand wasted heat. COLE'S ORIGINAL HOT BLAST STOVE Saves All Wasted With Other Stoves Will Cut Your Fuel Bill in Half For Soft Coal and Lignite For Hard Coal and Crushed Coke ELEVATOR TOG0 UP AT ONCE Tranamlaslaslppl Grain Company's Granary to Be Started Tbla Week. The Transmlsslsslppl Grain company of this city hsving completed all arrangementa for the site for Its new terminal elevator to replace the old t'nlon elevator In Council Bluffs, which burned last March, will begin work at once and push the building for ward aa rapidly aa possible. The driving ef the pllee, of Which tnere will be about I TOO, will he begun next week by the Camp- I hell-Flagler Bridge company. I , The new house will be located south and west of the I'nlon Pacific Transfer and aome BOO feet west of the Omaha Elevator company's house. The elevator will tie of tjOO.ono bushel capacity and will be capable of handling eighty to WO cara per day In and out. In shape it will he. somewhat the same aa that of the Omaha Elevator com pany, with a car handling house 88x45 feet at the east end. and working and atorage capacity extending west therefrom BfixliW feet. Three tracks will run through the handling house, two for unloading and one for loading purposes. The storage will be uf cribbing, while the elevator legs and bin bottoms will be of steel construction, materially reducing the fire risk. Belt con veyors will be used for distributing the grain to the various parte of the house. It will be equipped with electric power. Thirteen motors of various sizes will be In stalled, aggregating 500 horse-power for the working of the machinery. The building will rest on concrete foundations laid on tha thirty-foot piles. The equipment of the new house aa regards fire protection will Include the latest and best devices known. The grading of the site and the tracks lead ing to It will require the moving of an normoua amount of dirt, as there will be a. fill of eight feet around the building and the tracks will be graded correspondingly from the main line dump on the north. The Barnett & Record company of Minne apolis, who are among the largest contrac tors In thla line In the country, furnish the plana and auperlntend the building. As you kriw fully one-half the carbon available for heat in soft coal is gas, the entire gas supply used for fuel and illumination in many cities and towns being made from common soft coal. The ordinary stove in burning soft coal allows this gas half of the fuel to pass up the chimney unburned, thus wasting it as a heat producer. Cole's Original Hot Blast Stove, by means of the patented Hot Blast draft and other patented features, distills this gas from the upper surface of the coal, utilizing it as a heat producer along with the fixed carbon or coke in the coal, thus burning all the coal. This is why Cole's Original Hot Blast Saves the Dollars and makes a ton of common $3.00 soft coal or aaZVIUaiUal Afs. 41a MrSVl-L 4 tO AH ajjvp.! -v karrf i a Your old stove and imitation Hot Blasts are not air tight, do not save the escaping gases and do not give you a warm house at night. You cannot afford to say to yourself " My old stove will have to do this winter." The old stove is eating up the price of a new stove every year. Not only that, but on top of the cost is the unsatis factory result it gives. It is always out the coldest morning. Even Heat Day and Night Fire Never Out Cole's Hot Blast is so perfect in construction that fire keeps all night, and when the draft is opened in the morning will burn two or three hours with the fuel put in the night before. No other stove does this. Fire, therefore, never goes out, and the rooms are kept at an even temperature all the time. Burns Any Fuel Without Change. Hard Coal Strikes and Soft Coal Combines need have no terror for the users of Cole's Original Hot Blast as this modern heater burns any fuel. Soft coal, slack, hard coal, crushed coke, Lignite coal, wood or cobs without any change in the stove. The cost of the stove is more than saved In fuel each winter. Read the guarantee. Would You Lose $50 In Fuel to Save $1 on the Cost of Your Stove? That is what you do when you buy a cheaply con atructed, putty jointed, showy made imitation stove. The waste of gas in burning hard coal is shown by opening the magazine cover of an ordinary base burner, when the oxygen supplied fills the entire stove with naming gas. Cole s Hot Blast stove burns this gas in hard coal which, in ordinary stoves, escapes, on account of their leaky con- P struction, causing great waste ana endangering healtn ana lite when it escapes into the rooms. In the ordinary magazine hard coal stove, three-fourths of the coal is partially consumed in the magazine, where it gives oft no heat, as it is not in contact with the radiating surface. The one-fourth of the coal in the fire pot must be kept at a white heat combustion to throw the heat into the rooms, thus causing great waste. In Cole's Original Hot Blast Guarantee I We guarantee a saving of one-third in fuel over any lower draft stove of the same (ice, with soft coal or slack. l We guarantee Cole's Hot Blast te ue leu hard coal for heating s given space than sny base burner msde with same heat ing surface. J We guarantee that the rooms can be nested from one to two hours each morning, with the soft coal or hard coal put la the stove the evening before. 4 We guarantee that the stove will hold fire with soft coal 36 hours without sttention. 5 We guarantee a uniform heat day and night, with soft l. .hard coal or lignite. e We guarantee every stove to remsln absolutely air tight as iong as used. 7 We gnarantee the feed door to be smoke snd dust proof. The sbove guarantee is made with the understanding that the stove be operated according to directions, and set op with s good flue. The combustion chamber and the maear.ine are combined and the Combustion is Perfect. The stove is filled to the top of the inside cast iron lining. Thia large body of hard coal is burned under perfect control by means of the abso lutely air-tight construction of the stove giving perfect con trol over the drafts. The coal is kept at a slow, economical, cherry red combustion and as the heat is in direct contact with every square inch of the sensitive steel radiating sur face, all the heat is radiated into the room where it is wanted and not blanketed in and sent up the chimney, hard coal at Cherry Red Combustion burn 48 hours, while at white heat it Is consumed In from 2 to 5 hours. Sold Under a Positive Guarantee We guarantee Cole's Original Hot Blast to use less hard coal for heating a given space than any base burner with the same heating surface. Requires attention only morning and night with hard coal. Warm rooms day and night. No escaping gases to endanger' life. The heat wasted up the chimney with other stoves is saved. Scientific Construction Cole's Original Hot Blast has an absolutely air-tight and gas tight construction throughout, by reason of its numerous patented improvements. The patented Hot Blast draft saves the gas. A patented steel collar con nects the elbow draft to the stove bodv and cannot be made to leak air by action of the fiercest heat. The patented i& closes air-tight by its own weight. The heavy fire box protects the Joints, where other stoves bum out first. The guaranteed smoke-proof feed door prevents smoke, soot or dust from escaping into the room when fuel is put into the stove. Perfect cleanliness, therefore, from soft coal. rf ill .- - m ' Via1T III . Shows Stove t$ Burn,ntf Lj Mfl HARD C0AL CAUTION Like all successful Inventions, Cole's Original Hot Blast has many inferior imitations, avoid them. They all lack the patented features and careful construction, which make the Original Hot Blast a great success. They do not stay tight and soon open seams and cracks which render them worthless as fire keepers. See the name Cole's Hot Blast from Chicago " on the feed door. None genuine without it. If you enjoy the luxury of getting up in warm rooms without kindling new fires; If you would keep your plants from freezing and want to save dollars in fuel you will buy Cole's Original Hot Blast. Investigate today. Orchard & Wilhelm Carpet Co.,- 414-416-418 South 16th St. Milton Rogers & Sons Company, 14th and Farnam Street. John Hussie Hardware Company, 2407-2409 Cuming St. E. L. Jones & Company, 2709 Leavenworth Street. Sole Agents for Omaha, Neb. O. F. Beavers, 424-426 North 24th Street, Agent for South Omaha. Faddock-Handschy Hardware Company, 41 Main St., Agent for Council Bluffs. The best dealers In every town generally handle Cole's Original Hot Blast, Write the makers, COLE MFG. COMPANY, 3218 South Went era Avenue, Chicago, for their valuable booklet on the scientific combustion of fuel, and telling all about Cole's Hot liiaat. Mail order purchasers protected by above guarantee. and general discussion. Public meetings wlti be held at the same hall Saturday afternoon and evening and Sunday morning, afternoon and evening, at which meetings the principles of Mormomsm will bo out lined. Those from out of town are: Joseph A. McRae, president of the Colorado mission; Lewis A. I.ee, lona. Idaho; William H. Cook, Vernal, I'tah; J. E. Ashcroft, Ramah, N. M.; Alma Redmall, Pleasant Valley, I'tah; Charles F. Perry and Oeorge l Johnson, La Orande, Ore.; John E. Roger son, Montlcello. I'tah; Forest A. Fackrell, Randolph, Vtah; Oeorge C. Nielsen. Hyde ECHOES OF THE ANTEROOM Royal Arcanum. At the recent meeting of the special ses sion of the supreme council of the Royal Arcanum at ' Put-In-Bay, O., the roll of members contained 109 names. The only question before the body was the matter of the Increase of the assessments of the widows and orphans' benefit fund and the rark, Utah; Thomas O. Howell, Clifton, I work of tha session waa devoted ex- Idaho; W. H. Telford, Iwlston, Utah; James P. Baxter, Wellsvllle, Utah. RECEPTION FOR THE BISHOP MORMON ELDERS ASSEMBLE OOlrlals of C hares) Opts Asiul Meet las; af Two Days la Fra ternal Hall. Tha elders of th Nebraska conference of tha Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Pay Saints are holding their annual meet ing at Fraternal hall. Fourteenth and Podge street. The meeting opened Satur lay morning with a secret business session Meetlna Will Be Held at Creishton In.tttote I nder Knlshta of Colambua' Aasplres. A public reception to Rt. Rev. Richard Scannell. bishop of Omaha, will take place at the Edward Crelghton Institute next Tuesday evening. The reception was orig inally Intended to be given on the return of Bishop Scannell from Rome last month, but waa deferred until suitable accommodation could be had. The new Institute building at HO South Eighteenth Btreet has been placed at the disposal of the Knights of Columbus, who will have charge of the alTalr. The reception will take place In the large assembly hall on the ground floor. Ad dresses will be delivered by T. J. Mahoney and President Dowllng of Crelghton univer sity, to which Bishop Scannell will respond. After the reception an opportunity will be given those present to Inspect tha building and the equipment. Members of the fac ulty and atudents of both law and dental schools will be present to explain tha pur pose of each department. This your head to the left? Then there's no use trying. It's too late! Noth ing in the world can make hair grow on a bald scalp that has been smooth and shiny for years. It's too latel No use trying now! Or is this yours to the right? Good. Only look out for dandruff! It leads straight to baldness. But there's use trying now, for Ayer's Hair Vigor cures dandruff, keeps the scalp clean and healthy, and checks falling hair. L Xsa k ta. 9. O. lr . lvU, Haas. ATWr. l iit811Alnta-Fsc tis slaud. ATBB'f rTLl-f soaitiMtlsa. a T kit'S CaKkf tC10aAl-iw aM(aa. aiur ahum iu kar a-aam aal 4r. cluslvely to that subject. The various pro tests, resolutions, memorials, plans and correspondence received by the supreme officers' In relation to the new rates and options were referred to a special com mittee of eleven. The better part of four days was given to the hearings on the subject. The proposition to return to the old system of rates and assessment was defeated by a vote of thirty-eight In favor and sixty-three against. The special com mittee of eleven submitted its report which waa unanimously adopted. Ita features In brief are: Reaffirmation of the rates of assessment and legislation adopted at Atlantic City for the government of the widows and or phans' benefit fund. Striking out option D and all reference thereto InMhe amendmenta to section OJ. Giving new members the choice between the regular rate and option A only. Giving present members the choice be tween the regular rate and options A. B and C. Allowing a member at present over 6. or hereafter attaining that age, to pay one-half of his assrHsment In cnh and the remainder to be charired nnlnm hi. certificate with 4 per cent compound In terest and deducted from the benefit. Providing for the Issuing of new benefit certificates, free of charge, where changes In amount are rendered necessary by the new rate. Allowing members suspended during June, July. August and September to be reinstated without a new medical examina tion If they comply with all other condi tions and sign a warranty stating that they are now In good health and have not been rejected In any application for life Insurance since Ihry were suspended. KsUhli and Ladles of Honor. An Important action haa been taken by the supreme lodge of the Knights and I.adiea of Honor at 'Its session held last week In Indianapolis. It provides for the staling of certificates of life Insurance and la designed to protect the order from fraudulent representations as to the state of health of persons taking out Insurance. It provides that a certificate holder who dies within a year of the Issuance of the policy shall receive only one-third of the face amount; In two years, two-thirds of tha face of the policy; In three years. SO per cent of the policy face, and If he dies after the third year of the Issuanee of the policy his heirs shall be paid tha full amount of the policy, Masaala. Considerable Interest Is being manifested In Masonic circles throughout th state Just now over the approaching cornerstone laying of tha new Masonic home at Plaits mouth. Elaborate preparations are being mad for the event, which will be par ticipated In by the grand lodge and other Masonic bodies of this and adjacent states. The data for tha ceremony haa not yet been definitely decided upon, but It will b soma time, between October and 10. Wooamaa of tha World. Tha program for the 'memorial and un veiling ceremony of Omaha-Beymour camp No. IK at Myrtle hall on Wednesday even ing. October 1", Includes a violin solo by Miss Iiulse Shadduck; vocal music by a quartet, tinder the leadership of Prof. Krats. th recital of th ritualistic poem by Miss Cora Illtciicock of Council Bluffs, and addrcaw-s bv pronJr.-nl sneakers. tuaa nam 1U be, anuounctil taiar. Tha ritualistic ceremony will ba conducted by the champion dtgree team of the order. An invitation la extended to th pubtlc to attend. At the regular meeting of Alpha camp No. 1, Tuesday evening, the attendance waa exceptionally large, regardless of the oppressive heat. A strong determination is manifest to Increase the roster to 1.3V) names by January 1. Eleven new appllca tlona were received and three transfer cards received at this meeting. .The committee on program reported the following program for the entertainment for Tuesday evening, September K: Music Olllenbeck'a String Band. Address J. 1.. Kaley. Piano Solo Miss Q. E. Ellsberry. Recitation Miss Anna V. Baler. Song I. D. Redfield. Muslo Ak-Rar-Ben Banjo Club. Song Miss Gertrude Leeder. Muslo Glllenbeck's String Band. Song J. McCreary. Violin Solo Carl Lamp. After the program the evening will be given over to dancing. The entertainment will be free to all members and their frlei da and families In Invitation. Odd Fellows. The question of th Independence of th ratrlajchs Militant of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows haa been set aside by action of the supreme lodge meeting held last week at Indianapolis until the next annual session at Torodto. In the Interim the present relations between the Patriarchs Militant and the sovereign grand lodge will continue. Another Important action of th sovereign grand lodge meeting waa to make no change In the funeral services. Th pro posed resolution to Include In th Ineligible all persons who were engaged In the liquor business was tabled. The constitution was so changed that in case of th death of any officer of the sov ereign lodge that a special session will have the power to fill the vacancy for th rest of the term. It waa also amended so that the grand sovereign can deride such questions as may be put before him by the grand lodge. Ruth Rebekah lodge. No. 1. will give a social at its hall. Fourteenth an1 Dodge streets, Saturday evening, September 30. O. O. TV O. dob. The G. O. T. O. club Is arranging for a social dance to be given on the evening of September 30, at Ancient Order of United Workmen hall. Fourteenth and Dodge streets. Friends of the order ara Invited. Bankers I a Ion of th World. Omaha lodge. No. 1. held Its regular meet ing at Washington hall, Thursday evening, with President F. L. Weaver presiding. A class of candidates was obligated by Su preme Physician W. F. Hutchinson. On next Thursday evening a Joint meeting will be held, at which time th ritualistic work will be put on In full. All member of lodge Nos. 1 and 3, as well aa Council Bluffs and South Omaha lodges, are In vlted to be present. Aarlent Order Valted Workmen. Th union meeting held September It with Union Pacific lodge, .No. 17, under th aua. plies of tha Ancient Order of United Work men central committee of Omaha was sue cessfully carried out. The extremely in clement weather dd not deter a large at tendance and a very enthusiastic meeting Reports of th progress of th order wr read by Grand Master Workman O. J. Van pyk. Short add war also luad by John Bennett of the finance committee and many other prominent members of the order. The meeting was one that will long he pleasantly remembered by all participants. Ladle of the G. A. R. The Aid society meeting of Garfield circle will be held Friday afternoon, September 29. at the home of Mr. J. IT. Metcalf, Wfi Pacific street. A feature of the meeting will be the Initiation as an "honored" member of Mrs. M. M. Metcalf, mother of Mrs. J. U. Metcalf. Mr. Metcalf. sr., la past W years of age and is the mother of three sons who served during the civil war, all of whom are living. Order of Scottish Clan. Clan Gordon No. ffl held one of Its usual good meetings last Tnesdny evening. One candidate was Initiated and five new ap plications were received. Much work waa done and arrangements were concluded for bringing Clansman James Cook, th letter carrier, home from the hospital In Council Bluffs, which was done tha following day. The "Kilties" band which was here in to stage the play. The first rehearsal was held Friday night. There will be thlrty flvt people In the enst. Under the good of the order, Prof. Ritchie recited Riley's "Back to Orlgby's Station." Next Thurs day night there will he another class Initia tion. All members are requested to be present. Grand Army of the Republic. At the meeting of Grant post Thursday evening Governor John H. Mlrkey was an honored visitor. The meeting was largely attended and short addresses were made by several of the comrades. HOUSE ROBBED CURING DAY by Residence of l.ee Krnti F.ntered Rnralara who Ket Valuable Booty. The home of Lee G. Ki.its, 1302 Emmet street, was entered by burglars Saturday afternoon between 2:30 and 4:30 and two watches, two rings and a gold chain were taken. Mrs. Krats left home about i o'clock and on her return, shortly after 4, found, on the winter of 1SO0 will be at the Auditorium I entering, a door panel lying in the parlor, on the evening of October 81. Hallowe'en, j Thia had been knocked out of the cellar and will also play the afternoon and even- door which leads up to the kitchen. A Ing of November 1. . They will play the j hasty search revealed the loss of her valu two "Royal Command" programs as played . ables. There la a drop door at the back before King Edward and the British court last year. Tribe of Ren Har. Mecca court No. 13 held Ita regulsr meet Ing Friday evening. Mr. Shackelford, chief of No. 110, and several other members of that court were visitors. A large class was obligated and fourteen new members Initiated. The drill team Is perfecting Itself In its work very satisfactorily. An Invitation was extended to Banner court No. 76 of South Omaha to consolidate with Mecca court, a committee from tho court having signified Its desire to do so. Arrangements will be made for a recep tion In honor of Supreme Chief M. P. Olrard of Crawfordsvllle, Ind., who will bo her early In October. Royal Achate. Omaha lodge No. 1. has during the sum mer been giving a regular monthly social on the aecond Tuesday evenings of esch month. These occasions hsve been largely attended and proven very successful. The completion of the society halls at N'n teenth and Farnam streets, where the new Achates hall Is soon to be dedicated, will be the beginning of a new era in the prog ress of this order. Arrangements are being made by Omaha lodge No. 1 to properly celebrate the occupation of the new hall on th evening of October 10. Excel lent orchestral music will be furnished for dancing and literary and musical features will comprise other numbers of the pro gram. , Fraternal I'nlon of America. Members of Mondamln lodge No. Ill and their friends are Invited to attend the eighth anniversary meeting of the lodge at the hall, Seventeenth and Douglas streets, A musical and literary program has been prepared, which will b followed by re freshments and dancing. At th meeting last Monday four new applications were read and three candi date were Initiated. Next Monday' meet ing will b the last to be held In that hall. The new meeting plaoe will b announced later. Kala-nt of Macrabee. Three new candidate were Initiated at the last meeting of Omaha tent No. 75, and several apllcatlona were acted upon. Great preparation are being made for th drama "Son of Matthlaa." to be produced shortly. Prof. O- IL iUtcJil fcaa bn acurd or tne nouse over tne outer cellar nay and the burglars, raising this and enter ing, would be quickly under cover. Then It was a simple matter to break the lock on the outer cellar door and the panel lead ing to the kitchen. They bolted the front door from the inside and went through tha house. Drawers In every room were pil fered, and left in disorder. A gold watch belonging to Mr. Kratz. and a valuabls old-fashioned silver watch which was to have been given to his little son were stolen. Mrs. Kratzs engagement ring, a fine solitaire diamond, a pearl and op;U ring were lost, much to her grief. The chain taken wns one belonging to Mrs. Kratz. Unfortunately, there Is very little chance of apprehending tho thieves, as no one saw them enter nor leave. Tt la sup posed that they snw Mrs. Kratz leaving home, or possibly, saw the grocerymen leaving an order on the back porch, thus showing that no one was at home. Mr. Krntz Is one of the best known mu sicians of the city, having charge of tha First Presbyterian choir. He estimates his loss at about $17f. Iturglars broke Into the house of Mrs. Gerard, 2211 North Sixteenth street, yester day afternoon, and took about 130 worth of Jewelry and some old coins. It Is thought to he the same gang which visited tha home of Ie O. Kratz. Inspecting Work of Children. The committee on awarding prizes for tho most beautiful lots In the rlty, under the aiibptces of the Civic Improvement league of Omaha, yesterday took a ride In automobiles over the city to view some of the lots that have been beautified by th children. The members of th eommjtte who took the trip were Mrs. Draper Smith, Dr. Towne. Mrs. George Hoobler. Mr. A. A. Buchanan. Mrs. J. F. Wagner, Mrs. Wil liam R. Hapinan, accompanied by Randall Brown. H. Clark, Rome Miller and W. W. Slabaugh. They were entertained after ward by Mr. Home Miller, and will con tinue the inspection Monday. D fl I'J l! Uf II fit. si V Can Also Enjoy Mine Pi If You Tak Stuart' Oyspapsia Tab I eta. When the food ia properly digested, the blood carriea the cutri tnent to all parts of the body and the proce&s of assimilation and re pair ia kept up uniformly, resulting in healthy organs and tuembera. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets guarantee perfect digestion, no matter what the condition of tha stomach is. The reason is plain. They themselvea digest the food and permit the atomarh to rest and get well. ALL DRUGGISTS, 60 CENTS A BOX. Y ! ; fS fefsjea,aee fv v' V 'ay y v V v v V" V V V"w N "v -V