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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1909)
..... n THE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 21, 1000. A Picture of Our Homes FRUITS AND VEGETABLES GROWN M FLORIDA The Fnormous Yield to Ttcsc Who Own Farms Adjoining Our Tract Tomatoes On 2 acres there average 40 crates of tomatoes to the acre. The cost was 60 centj pr crate. From the 1,117 crates ihere wa netted, after de ducting commission, freight, etc., $1,849.83; from taJs amount the eoat of growing, picking and packing Is deducted, SJ68.60. leaving a profit of fl.m.SS. for four month' work on only 2 acres of land. Suppose the owner had farmed 10 acres, the smallest farms in the division suggested? He would bav bad over $4,000 for part of his year's work. Btrawberrles -From one acre of straw- berries $500 was realized. Considering the small capital Invested, this Is one of the mit profitable crop f the eectlea. Potatoes -Potatoes yield about $200 per acre per crop. Two crops a year may be grown. The profits from grape fruit, cocoa, mangoes, oranges, lemons, limes and all garden truck arc now matters of reoorsl In Dado county. The, official statistics of Dade county show 2,410 acrea in tomatoes, valued at about three-quarters of a million dollars; acres of beans valued at $20,000; 21 acres of eggplants, valued at $10,000; it) aeres of cucumbers, valued at $9,009; 27 acres of peppers, valued at over $20,000, 21 acres in white potatoes, valued at about $$,000, and some small acreage devoted to raising cabbage, English peaa, etc. The shipments from this section come Into market when highest prices prevail and good produce always brings good prices. Tartles having sugar mills In the neigh borhood of this company's laud will be able to contract at $5.00 a ton for the cane. At 30 tons to the acre this would give HBO per acre. Sugar cane needs little or no cultiva tion. It is cheaply planted and only re llaced once In seven or eight years. A level tract within a golden section of our country, swept by ocean breeze. Where the bees underide wild geese and honeysuckles bloom per petual. Where no frost falls and where the perfume of the orange blos som is a continual reminder to gallant old gentlemen, and gentle old ladies of the beautiful days when they plighted their troths. Such a country. If you are old or young, man or woman, business or professional, master or servant, attend: Here is the opportunity of your life. The possession of one acre in Florida land now may be worth more to you than all the rest of your efforta in this life. And now or never, will you possess itt Now you can buy a farm on our tract for $10.00 a month, and begin to improve it. You can put out your orange groves, plant your grape f ruit and cocoanut groves and pineapple farms, while your patches of strawberries, lettuce, celery, beans, tomatoes and potatoes begin to yield returns right away. You need not give up your position here to carry on this work there. You will be entitled to n townsite tract upon which you may erect a home, where you may spend your winter. The Atlantic ocenn is within a few miles of you. The cluster of picturesque cities, Palm Beach, Miami, Ft. Lauderdale and others are in sight, while the streams which empty into the ocean abound in fish and crustacean food. You may have your launch and traverse every section near you, fishing' aud hunting and drinking in the life-giving breeze of the ocean. Adjoining this tract are hundreds of the prettiest groves and farms that the eye ever beheld. Huyler, the candy man, owns a tract here, and his land cannot be bought at all. An. Iowan owns a farm adjoining which is recently improved and could be bought for $500 an acre. ---'.". - A ' ' a ' " V ' I i ' . i ' t " - - - - -. - .... . ... .... j ... - ...... -. . . . . . . - , ,... - .-. 1C: 1 S240 Payable $10 a Month Bay a Farm and a Lot. SVIi-DIVISION 2. farms of 010 acres each. 8 farms of 320 acres each. 20 farms of ICO acres each. 100 farms of CO acres eaci. 200 farms of 40 acrc3 each. 8,620 farms of- 20 acres each. 8,000- ftcms cf 10 acres each. INFORMATION TO PURCHASERS The Florida Fruit Lands Company is a corporation and ia composed of men of wide business experience, well known, careful and successful in their undertakings. One person may purchase ten farms and lots, but he must sign a separate appli cation for each farm and lot applied for. Sign the application, paying the agent $5 In cash and get a draft or money order for $5.00, made payable to us, and give same to the agent to be forwarded to this company with the application. The second payment will be due one month from the date of the application and the same day each month thereafter until fully paid, and these payments should be made by you direct to this office each month. ' The title to this property Is absolutely perfect and unchallenged and each pur chaser will get a warranty deed for each farm and lot applied and paid for. The ab stract will be very brief for the reason that title runs to you through us direct from the State of Florida. There ia no Interest on deferred payments or taxes charged to any purchaser until he has received the deed. No application will be received signed by a negro., It Is not necessary to expatiate on these lands from a standpoint of Investment,, Land which today may be bought fcr $24 an acre will, on the completion of the canals and a complete un watering, be worth from $100 to $1,000 per acre. This haa been the history of the peat there is no logical reason to suppose it will not be the history of the future. INVESTMENT The company anticipates being permanently Interested In these Florida lands, mainly from the standpoint of sugar culture and manufacture. Such being the caBe, It ia vitally concerned in the formation of desirable communities surrounding Its own holdings. People who form conditions of health or age desire a climate equable all the year and free free from extremes or heat or cold, should secure at least a small home farm In Florida. REPORTS Or EXPERTS ' .Prof. H. W. Wiley, Chief of the Bureau of Chemistry, United States Department of Agriculture, says. "There Is practically no other body of land In the world, which presents such remarkable possibilities of development, as the muck lands bordering the southern shores of Lake Okeecholee. With a depth of soil averaging, perhaps, 8 feet and with a surface almost absolutely level, It affords promise 'of development which reaches be yond the limits of prophecy." FLORIDA FRUIT LANDS CO., Northern Branch OIUcc, 110 Board o! Trade Building. M. SEGEARS, Manager. SOME OF THE . CROPS OF FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Grown On This Land and What it Yield) to the Owners. Hunanas riantlng bananas 10 feet apart, as the trees are small, and getting only one bunch from each hill, the owner would have on each acre 400 bunches, which, at $1.00 a bunch would pay $400 per acre per annum. Pineapple Pineapples yield from seven to ten crops without replanting. The first and principal cost Is for the land. The In come from the second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth crops is profit. From nearby lands one acre of pineapples containing 10,000 plants yielded 300 crates, averaging 30 to the crate, or 9,000 apples. They netted over transportation and commission $2.00 per crate, or $C00 per acre. From this same acre $32,000 planting slips were secured, which sold at $6.00 per 1,000, adding to the profit of this same acre $192, or a total or $792. Rice Two crops of rice can be raised annually and one may conservately count upon 60 bushels to the acre from each crop. Independent of this revenue there Is profit In the volunteer rice for fodder crops and gracing. The price of the rice at the plantation avefages 75c per bushel, or an annual per acre yield value of $76.00. Teaches Peaches yield a profit of from $100 to $150 per acre. On these lands this crop could be har vested and sold from the middle of April to the middle of May, or about one month earllert than the maturing of peaches in the northern part of the state. Celery Celery, will yield from $500 to $1,000 per acre, for the reason that on theee lands the plant would mature when all Northern celery was out of the market. But It is needless to further illustrate. $240 Payable $10 a Month Buys a Farm and a Lot. . SUB-DIVISION 2 farms of 040 acres each. 8 farms of 820 acres each. 20 farms of 160 acres each. 100 farms of 80 acres each. 280 farms of 40 acres each. 3,200 farms of 20 acres each. 8,000 farms of 10 acres each.r LAETARE MEDAL COES SOUTH Annual Medal Conferred at Notre Same on Mrs. Tiernan. LTTEEAEY MERIT RECOGNIZED Recipient la Author of Fortr Novels of High Clnaa Conat Cretan toa Wan Onco So Honored. NOTRE DAME. Ind., Mar"r20.-The Lae tar medal, which la annually conferred by 'he University of Notre Daine on soma lay member of the Cathollo church In the f nltc.l States for dlatlnsulahed service In art, literal ure, science or philanthropy, will be given this year to Prancll Christine Kiaher Tiernan, the author, better known In the literary world aa Christian Re Id. She has written nearly forty novels of dla- tlnct literary merit, and she Is also a con stant contributor' to the literary magaslnrs. Her books and articles are of atrong moral tone, wholesome and elevating, and It was fur this reason specially that the officials Of Notre Dame conferred the medal on her. Announcement of the award will be mado by the president of the university from the pulpit of the college church tomorrow. Al though the eward will be made tomorrow and the reotplent named, the actual presen tatlpn will not take place until aome timo later. The occasion of the formal giving of tle medal always brings together noted dignitaries of the Catholic church and also otter men and women eminent In their lines of work. The LaeUre medal takes its name from the fourth 8unday of Lent, on which It Is always awarded. The custom of giving It Is modeled on the anolent observance lol lowed ty the pope of sending a golden rose as a mark of especial honor to sovereigns and other notable persons. The gift of the medal Is confined to members of the Catho lio church In the t'nlted States. It U I large d'ak of pure gold beautifully etiamtlud and chased and bears some appropriate de sign, which changes from year to year, and which la aulted to the profession or line of work for which the recipient Is distin guished.. Surrounding the design appears In Latin the motto, "Truth is mighty and shall prevail." The address of award which accompanies the medal Is a beautiful piece of art work done In water colors on silk. , First Time la Soat. This la the first time In Its history that the medal will go to the south. It was first given In 1883 to John Qllmary Shoa, the historian. Then followed for this dis tinction Fatiick J. Keeley, architect; Ells Allen Btarr. art critic; -General John New ton, civil engineer; Patrick V. Hlckey. ed itor; Anna Hanson Dorsey, author; William J. Onahan, publicist; Daniel Dougherty, orator and publicist; Major Henry P. Brownson, soldier and scholar; Patrick Donahoe, editor and publicist; Augustln Daly, theatrical manager; Anna T. fiadller. author; General William Starke Rosecrana, soldier; Thomaa Addis Emmett, physician; Timothy E. Howard, Jurist; John A. Crelgh ton, philanthropist; William Uourke Cock- ran, lawyer and statesman; Dr. John B, Murphy, surgeon; Charles J. Bonaparte, lawyer and statesman; Thomaa B. Fit spat - rick, merchant and philanthropist; Richard C. Kerens, publicist and philanthropist; Dr. Frauds Quinlan, surgeon; Catherine Eleanor Conway, author and editor; James C. Monaghan, publicist and educator. The recipient of the medal this year was born In Salisbury. N. C, where she now lives. In 184& She Is the eldest daughter of Colonel Charlea Frederic Flaher. who waa killed In the battle of Bull Run. Bhe was man led to James Marqula Tiernan of Mary land In 1&17. Her first novel, "Valerie Ayl mer." waa published In New York by D. Appleton Sl Co. In .1871, and was so emi nently successful that It waa shortly fol lowed by "Morton House," a atory of south ern life cf thirty years ago. Her novels now number nearly forty. By literary crit ics her style I pronounced as singularly pure. The award of the medal will meet approbation everywhere, especially in the south, where Mra. Tiernan la admired and beloved. ClLF IS A REAL SCIENCE Veteran Player Insists Game Will De velop Brain.. REQUIRES PLENTY OP STUDY One if May Not Cngace la It Llsrhtly He Will Ret All Benefits Which May Be Derived from the Snort. NOW WATCH GHOSTS WALK "To Them That Hath', A SHORT SEHMOX TO FAT FOLKS "To them that hath shall be given" Is a sentence that applies to fat people very neatly. It la common knowledge that once a human being boglna to fatten up, to what they have already Is added more than they want until finally a stage la reached where reduction must be made or decided disad vantage results. Then cornea forward the agea-old query. "Reduce but howT" To the uninformed nothing suggeets Itself but the to them) twin evlla loss eating more activity. Thy contemplate a more or less lengthy siege of dieting and exercising. So It may be said safely that every man or woman In the land now undergoing the fattenlng-up pro cess has his or her mental eye fixed du biously on that not far distant day when he or ahe will have to don the "ashes and sackcloth" of reduction. Thla Is not an enlivening prospect, and so it Is with considerable satisfaction that we announce the - emancipation of the fat. Nowadays one may reduc much or little, a round a day It desired, or hold their fat In check, absolutely stationary, without doing a tap of exercise, missing a single meal, doing a particle of haru or causing a solitary wrinkle. All that's required, aa hundreds testify, la the taking after meals and at bedtime of one Marmola Prescrip tion Tablet, which tablets are sold by the Marmola Company. Uetrolt. Mich., or any aood druggist at the uniform price of Ti cents, this sum being accepttd for a caae of tablets so well and genitrous'.y filled Is! evea ose yroduoes dealrttbls resulta. WIU Beaaeathlasi Half Millies Splrltaalistlo Propaganda I'pheld. for The will of J. T. Crun&augh of Leroy, 111., bequeathing SS00.0CO tor the propaga tion of spiritualism has been upheld by the Illinois supreme court HI only child, a son, died an Infant. Ho became a convert t spiritualism and Imagined that the dead babe, having grown to manhood In the Vnt world, was always near him to ad vise and protect him. Crumbaugh named this son Bright Eyes and engaged an artiat to paint a life-slae portrait In oil of him ana as he would appear had Iw lived and grown to adult slse. This fanciful picture waa hung In the room of the banker and he was very fond ot It. The relatives contended this action Indicated a disordered mind. Crumbaugh alwaya maintained the spirit sen was by hie side, sleeping and waking; had aaved his life on several occasions by a timely warning of danger and that the son'a goal advloe about Investments had enabled htm to amasa his fortune. Crum baugh became so Infatuated with spiritual ism that ha believed Implicitly la what ha heard at ceances. , The will left nearly the entire fortune to found a church for spiritualists and to dis seminate the tenets of the cult. An an nual Income la provided by which tne cause cf spiritualism will be promoted and Its belltfa explained. Chicago Journal. That golf is a real science and a gam which may not be engaged In lightly by one who wlahea to attain proficiency Is shown by an article written for the CKId (r Magaalne by "Veteran," who Insists that mental development will follow close attention to the gnme as well oa corporeal benefit. "Dtucrepuncy of style," he says, "Is sometimes adduced aa a proof that there Is no order o. o eyptem in the game of golf, that, like most other games, any one can play It without taking much trouble, trat It must come sooner or later to all who try It, If they win only practice a little. Such notions soon set brushed away by a Httle familiarity wit'.) the game. Then, the belief that to play It well Is not easy, while It Is a uscfirt and Invigorating stimulant to the body and mind, grows apace. "When a? last the fact Is fully realised that golf Is more than a pastime, and in really worth taking up, it comes to be carefury examined. Its cost in time and self-surrender Is countod, Its ways and means begin to be considered; and personal fitness Is put to the test. Every one can wing a club, and we are told that we have only to hit the bait fairly to make It go. Bo every one who has received some cducatlcn can read and write; but It is not well done until the habit of forming and pronouncing the lettera and words distinct! Is acquired. There is a system which haa grown by use, enabling these arts to be performed, and without which every attempt would fall short of Its In tention. Formation of Style. "In golf we may trundle a ball from hole to hole, but there are ways cf doing thla, founded on Its nature and traditions, which make trelr study as necessary aa la the trouble taken about acquiring the rudiments Of knowledge. No doubt there are great differences In the styles of tha beat players, which are equalled and caused by difference in atatjrc, build, tem per and exercise; but all can be moulded to produce the very similar resulta which are keen In great matchea. Wa come then to the conclusion that to form a good style ws must follow th method by which a river collects Its waters from tha sur rounding oountry. Th springs lie far and near, the ground Is hilly and broken, but the water finds Its level by the force ot gravity, streams, once running In contrary dlreatkms. unllfc. barriers cannot resist the onward flow, tha river is formed, snd sweeps along It course Irresistibly. In this nature haa Its way. but it la checked and limited by conditions which w cannot remove, yet may overpaaa and obliterate at every turn. "The man who haa determined to learn the game must start from the point of his own aptitude. It that point Ilea along the beaten, track of general advance, all the better for him; but If net it haa to b proved a useful departure or given up. The wise man will try experiments. In which sacrifices of his own and others' theories will have to be made. He wilt have to follow the tedious windings of a current he cannot account for; but at every turn he becomes conscious of a fierce moving onward, and perhaps bring ing him nearer the goal of his desires. So, now and then, he conceives an impression of what he ought to do, he applies it to some stroke he wishes to make, letting theory and practice Influence each other till some distinct effect Is produced Indi cating improvement or the reverse. If this scrt of practice be kept up, bad habits will be corrected and good ones formed; but not wtihout some of the attention and discipline which Is needed to produce those happy changes In any other pursuit or re creation. Often Mlsnaderstood. "To think that because golf la a diver sion it should need no laws or study ot Its secrets, or that all restrictions are tire some, la to misconceive the nature of the game, and to underestimate the advantages It confers. Its chief attraction to an active mind J the -feeling that It has an easured order of progress, that It provide an interesting ond productive channel for the absorption of thought, and that where this channel 1b kept deep and wide tha worries of life lnk to the bottom and are forgoi In th onward rush of the new and prom ising possibilities lying around every golf links. "This order and uniformity of play In fluences nine-tenths of the style of every god golfer, and may be taken as a help to those who are learning the game, a well a a warning to those who transgress It. All will agree that thoso who wish to reach Bnd use it will best do so by their own exertions. Successful men are always self-msdc. Professionals and moft pood amateurs are self-train d that Is, while carefully cherishing up Into principles th methed which produc their best results, they continued practicing what they found useful as long a It answered, and tried something elee when It did not. To follow this course always Is not easy, nor should It be expected to be, for nothing worth hav ing Is to be obtained without taking trouble. Friends or servants may carry men over rough country, but then they never learn to walk or Jump, and the self-reliance that will be wanted at a critical moment will not come at a whistle. "Anuther proof that golf Is a science, and one designed for man'a Improvement, Is the readiness with which Its demands may be adapted to the human frame at all ages. I was GO years of age before I touched a golf club. At first I found It quite Im possible with any accuracy to make more than a half-swing. Had I been contented with this till the habit of preferring accu racy to distance was established. I would had saved myself a great1 deal Of disappoint ment and going back. Iilke every duffer, I was eager to get on, but, unaware cf the pitfalls In the way, so floundered about in MAKOR SAYS PARTY BEIMEI) Dahlman Admits Deniocratio Legis lature Ignored Platform Pledges. AFFIRMS HE'S NOT DOWN AND OUT Re fa sea to Surrender Becaaee Char ter Bill 1'aaaed with the Elec tive Fire and Polio Board Clans. "I don't figure It that we are down and out, nor do I consider that In tha passage of the chartur bill with an elective fire and Dollce board the legislature has sld, the darkness of attempting too much at j -Hurrah for the .lacks' and 'to hell with the first. By trying to Improve every way both good and bad, at last I managed to Increase the swing till I could bring the clubhead over the ball In th back-swing, then could come forward in the long flat swing which had ben my ambition from the 'first. No wonder! For all the parts of th body had to contribute their own special share of movement, that In a new and unwonted manner, and only at oc regular moment for each. Harmony Slowly Achieved. "These movements had to be carefully and slowly adapted to each other by praa tlce, until they beeaa to work in harmony, which was very gradual. But, whenever 1 expected them to adapt themselves without waking up and directing the laggard energy, naught but confusion occurred. Tha skill which Is wanted by a proriclent In golf Is of a high order, must always be available, and takes just aa much time, ' thought a.nd trouble to master as the handlness of the craftsmen, or th coolness of the surgeon; therefore, it Is neither to be despised nor grudged Its cost of requi sition. But let non despair; for, atttr my experience, I may confidently say, we shall reap if we faint not. The constant drop ping of frequent practice will make supple the stlffest Joints, put muscles on the Weakest arms, and gladden at least the ft obits t htart." m wans lc-S1.00.SM5 top f it comas from if IILLER'S 1 I most bi good 109 FarDtro St. Hf Wa Dllvr Jgff a BUSINESS AFTER PLEASURE Effect of Reanlatlon Hnndoot oa th Weulth of a Poor Old Dragar." Tha prosperous wholesale grocery dealer had aold out his loudness, preparatory to departing for th west to llvo. He waa re flecting the next morning on tha prospect of getting a good pries tor his house, which the day before he had ' advertised for sal, when the doorbell jingled mer rily. "Sir," said the maid, putting her head In at the library door a moment later, "It's j the old beggar from the corner ntur your store, air." "Old Jo, the beggar, eh?" rejoined the retired business man, taking from his pocket a coin. "I presum the wretched old fellow missed my customary contribu tion this morning snd has com for It, Here, give him this dollar." The maid went away with th money and again returned. "I gave the dollar, sir," said ahe, "and he seemtd vry thankful for It, but h says he'd like to speak a moment with .you on business, sir." "What business can that old beggar hav with me?" "He says tbst If you can bring th price of this bous down to I20.0W cash b'd buy It, alri'Wudf'! Library, Jims,' as some of the Jacks claim. But two things I do know: The people hav not been given what the party pledged, and the next time we will have everything doVn In black and white before election. Experience is the best teacher always, and I, for ono, have learned something." This Is Mayor Dahlman's comment on th Omaha chatter bill, which has passed the house and which took no notice of the protest against the elective fire and police board filed by himself and other chief of the Dahlmnn Democracy club, as against the endorsement of the Jacksonlan cljb. Ho Siy all that can be done now Is to "swallow the cost and losk sweet and amiable" and remember to b more careful next time, not only in the preparation of the platform, but in th choice of legisla tive candidates. Will Cripple Department. In the opinion ot Chief of Police Donshue the new charter will prevent placing more men on his department and may necessitate laying off some, as It Increases the pay of policemen more than the appropriation for the department. "Our appropriation is lluf',000, of which about IlK.oro will available,'' slid the chief. "The pay of all policemen will bo raised on the average ot flO a, month, per man. We have fourteen detectives and tea sergeants who will receive a raise On the average of ?:o a manth. We ran readily !gur out where tvo will be at the and of the year, and I will advUt- th board, not to cxamlno m re opiilcunts for police duty. ' Aoi riling ti Assistant City Attorney Rin? the new charter will not allow p'.aclng on the ballots In th primary election the names of cantlMa tts for c'.ty engineer or for police comn.irsloners. He says these candidates must flU by petition after th primary and run in the regular spring elec tion without deslgnstlon. Omaha to Be, Making Up Point Grcnpi of Yonng Women Workers Going; to Y. W. C. A. Convention Will Assemble Hera. Omaha is to be one cf the .maklng-up points for delegations that will attend the ' biennial convention of the National Young Women's Christian association to be held at St. Paul, Minn., next month. One car and others If necessary, will be mudo up her and it Is expected that most of the . delegates and vtsttora from Nebraska and Iowa will join this train. Several ot the larger delegations from the south and west are arranging a stop over In Omaha for th purpose of inspect ing the new association building. Okla homa Is among those that have completed such arrangement. Th opening of the new building next week will attract visitors from several Of th city and college as sociations near by. tincoln, Des Moines snd Sioux City associations will send of ficers snd secretaries. "SAILOR'S LIFE IS THE LIFE - . FCR ME." SINGS BENNIE A ad Jadare Eatell Will Try to Land the; Doy In the Totted States Navy, Bennle Thomas reported in juvenile court faturduy morning to sstlsfy the court offi cers that he. wst all right and was doing his fcsst to mak a man of himself. Bennle Is working now and has a yearning to go into th navy. Jutfg Eatell aald of him: "Benny is not delinquent. He Is just on of th boys of th world who has not had a chance. W r going t gtv It to him. We hope that th rigid rule of the navy msy be relaxed enough to let Bonnie gel the benefit of disciplinary training," TAFT AMBITIOUS FOR CANAL: Presldeat KanrreeM Wlik that It : May Be KlnUaed By Jaly . lftlS. WASHINGTON, March Sfc-It developed today that during a recent conversation be- ' tween President Taft and Chairman Ooethals of the iBthmian canal commis sion, th president expressed his dealr that the Panama canal b completed by the Fourth of July, 1111. Colonel Ooethals, however. Is not at all sanguine of accom .llahlng any' such result, holding to his heretofore expressed opinion that January 1, 1915, will see the canal open to naviga tion. .,;. Every woman covets a shape ly figure, and many of them deplore the loss of their girl- fT7 fCTT ish forms after marriage. ftJlVll The bearing of children is XiAvlLkA often destructive to the mother's shapeliness." All of this can be avoided by the use of Mother's Friend before baby comes, as this liniment prepares the body for the strain upon h, and preserves the symmetry of her form. Mother' Friend makes the danger of child-birth less, and carries her safely througn this critical T neriod. v. Thousands pratft- I ' fullv tell of the Len.'fit and llV, relief derived from the usej of this remedy. Stilffi gteoksulled fr to til mnul motber. afflflffffU Itsab 11 irii KiYV 4 HI .... if