Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1920)
I '16 THE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 192U. i 1 as' I THE G UMPS WEU. HOW'S THE QU WS PEPTIC TrtS ttORJUNj? ' AWT ou Afraid 0 EAT THAT HOT MV ATE 3 More Truth By JAMES FATHER ANP SON When Smith was twelve, or thereabout, '. . k Without a single qualm or shiver , He used to help the ice gar out i V - By riding on it down the river. If Smith's young son UDon a floe Alohsr the river should go sailing, ' Inside the next two-hours or so, The kid would get an awful whaling. When Smith was younjr, along in May, When swallows o'er the pond were skimming, He frequently would run away And spend the afternoon in swimming. If Johnny Smith should do the like I. e.. splash round in chilly water, When he got home, the luckless tyke Would get exactly what he oughter. -- - In early youth, Pa Smith would hitch His sled behind a passing cutter, And often finish in a ditch Or land, in tatters, in the gutter. If Smith, the younger, did the same, The rashly reckless little sinner, That evening, penitent and lame, Would go to bed without his dinner. Yet Smith is old and well-to-do, And even now, as age advances, He makes a, lot of money through His aptitude for taking chances. His offspring' isa timid lad; All sorts" of trifling troubles fret him. He never will be like his dad,- Because the old man will not let him. ' i . f-i: 1 ... r; " : THE INDIAN GIVER 'When Tennessee gave the vote would be mean enough to keep it. ' THE SONG OF THE PROHIBITION OFFICERS "And when we got there the warehouse was bare." , THEY HAVE TO BE ' ' Have you noticed how much more particular the candidates about their neckties, now that women are going to vote? Copyright, 1920. By The Bell Syndicate Inc.) 7 Lottie's Soldier 5ank By SAM HELLMAN. . The tragedy of all tragedies en twined its tendrUs of crepe' about thi heart of Little Trout. $he was kgirl without a "teller," a wall flower in a forest of raates. a drug on a market that was glutted with eligible youth. ( - y V; At the Peerless (department store, where she stood timidly behind the notion counter llr, hours a clav 11 .the girls she some, in fact, of them.- d scveral changes Occasionally Mabel Swift, her counter mate, moved by pity, took "Lottie along with her to dances, much to the disgust of Mabel's "steady." To him three wasn't a crowd; it was an army, corps. Early in he spring the Employes' Benevolent aad Aid society of the store gave its annual dance.- This was the recherche event of the year for the Peerless girls. The dance Vas not popular with the manage ment, however. The tang of spring and the propinquity of the waltz and two-step caused the clerks to talk enthusiastically, about three-room apartments, raising chickens and such like? anyhow, Campbell, - the - twiner of the. Peerless, figured that -the dance cost them between 0 and trained employes "each year. i?"Vell, kid, going to the dance to right" asked Mabel on the morning oftlie great day. . ' i Has Something to Tell. ''I don't know," stanimercd Lot ' tie. ."I thought maybe " "I'm sorry," said Mabel, kindly. 1 "I'd love to ' ke you along with us, but Harry par,'cu"larly asked me not .,. Oh, n be ain't got anything gainst you. fic says he has some thing important to tell trie." Lottie gazed at label's flushed face-and sparkling eyes and turned away 'to hide the, rising tears. "Maybe I can fixt for you," sug gested Mabel. "I might " "Never mind. It won't hurt me to miss it. anyhow. They might reed the chairs there, for the danc ers." she finished bitterly. . "Aw, cheer up, kid. You know what I'd do if I were in your place? I'd get a feller to take me to that dance if I had to knock him down , and drag him there. Get some pep, kid. You're not a bad looker by a 'whole lot, but you've got such a timid, let-me-alone-sir air that the fellers are afraid to talk to you." ' Not Leap Year. "I can't f ctjr well ask a man to APPETVTE 0 , NOTHtNG THE MATTER. WITH AN VTHI K6 AoOVT AfPETITE"- EVER. SEE. ONE 4 PANCAKES AHC VP. HERE. EAT VSR THEAR. PAH SOHE BA.COM CONCRETE. ttVXERS Than Poetry J. MONTAGUE to women she had no idea tljey icle arc take me can, I? -This ;s not leap year."- "Forget it. Every year is leap yeat in a pinch. Oh, look here comes the United States army. Lottie turned. At her end of the counter stood a three-striped khaki clad figure. Ho was fingering sonic pocket knives. He, smiled pleasant ly as Lottie approached. "What kind erf a knife are you looking for, captain?" - The soldier laughed, a hearty, re assuring laugh. "Do I look like a captain. I may be some day. At present, howeverJ I am jus,t a sergeant first sergeant. He spent a long time over the knjves and the new Lottie found him easy to talk to. ( Not Afraid to Talk. "I guess you'll be fighting pretty soon, she suggested. "I'm afraiH lint." rpnliprl tlin sir. geW You see they're sending me to Panama tomorrow. He finally picked ou a knife. "Any good picture shows around here," he asked while waiting for change. "I've got a whole uight to kill." , The blood rushed tg Lottie's face and her-hands; gripped the . couutcr edge. . . "Listen," Mr. ScrgiBnt," she said in., a steady voice. l"The store is giving-a dance tonigfj Would you like to go along wily me?". Helps Lonely Fellow. "Would I?" repeated the soldier. "I should say I would Say, it's awful white of you to help out a lonely fellow." . ' - "hs a patriotic duty," stammered Lottie. "We can't do too much for the soldiers, can we?" Half of the daiicers that night lost a step when Lottie entered with her handsome, robust sereeant. Mabel Llost a couple of steps and a glide. can you beat ?t? she whispered to her partner. "A fine looking guy," remarked Harry. "I wonder how she hooked him. I never knew Lottie was so good looking. She looks fine, bo" Becomes Popular. "Come on. watch your step," in terrupted Mabel hastily. . After a bit Lottie introduced her soldier man to Mabel and several others. For the first time in her life Lottie danced every dance and the encores, not all with the ser geant either, not by any means. Of a sudden she became popular with men who had never before done anything but step o,n her toes as they danced by the wall. Lottie's eyes were still dancing when she came to work the' next morning. "You certainly '-looked pretty last night." remarked Mabel. "It's too bad the sergeant is going away to Panama, but, believe me, Aid, you won't have any trouble getting felt THEY STACK 'EM WITH A DERRICK, AT SHADY TALK ABOUT AN EATING Plt TOO OP THOSE. LUMBER JACKS ; MIX THE BATTER. CAKES WITH ANP .O 1 '.-T A , : f'li .III?! jbr- CHAPTER ". All's Welt Again. ' After " Rusty 1 Wren had revived his drooping spirits by eating heart ily of three dozen insects of differ ent kinds and sizes, he felt so cheer ful, that he couldn't help trilling a few songs, It was almost evening, and he was glad not to let the sun go down without thanking him in that way for shining, so brightly all day. -j 1 Though it was so late. Farmer Green still toiled in the fields, but Rusty could hear Johnnie and old ciog Spot driving the cows down towards the barn. Now, above the. wide door of the carriage house a window was open a window through which Rusty had flown early in the morning. Un like old Mr. Crow. Rusty Wren was not in the least afraid to enter any of the farm buildings. Perhaps if Rusty had been in the habit of tak ing Farmer Green's corn he Would have thought twice before he ven tured inside the cow barn or the She moved aside then. "Look!" she ! , , said. . . " ' carriage home. But since he never damaged the crops i.ind always helped them by 'destroying a great number of insects thatiate all sorts of growing things. Rusty had noth ing whatever to fear from anybody in the farm house except the cat, of course. There was really no reason for Rusty's flying through the open window, beyond the fact that he liked to prowl around the great, dusty room under the eaves, to see what he could find. Once he was I'M THE GUY I'M THE 1 GUY who dawdles along on a busy sidewalk. I'm in no hurry, so why should I, walk aHy faster than I want to?- And if T want to stop now and then to think what I'll do next, or look in a window or even turn around, to saunter in another di; lection, why shouldn't 1? You may be hurrying to get somewhere and walking behind me may make you late, .but that's your affair; not mine. And if I want to take my time going up or down stairs or through a doorway, I'm going to do it- no matter how many people I'm block ing. If you want to get along faster, try the other side of the street or hire a taxi. I don't care what you do. But dem't- think you can hurry me, for you can't.. . And if you crowd me or shove me, I'll get sore and bawl you out. I pay taxes for my share of the sidewalk, and I'm going to use t any way I se fit. (Copyright, 1920. Thompson Featur ' Service.) What Do You Know? (Here'" ttianre to make your wife worth money. Kach day The Bee will publish a Herie of queHtlom. They cover tliin(t wliirh you should know. The ' firtt complete list or correo anitwerii and the name of the winner will be published on the day indicated below. He sure tn (rive your views and address In full. Address "(iuestions Editor." ftmaha Uee. i. Would the foot serve ys just as. well if it had. only onebonc instead of many? ; - , , .2, On what river is Albany, N Y.? 3. Did Morse discover or invent the telephone? . . 4. What terrible persecution, oc curred in Salem in the early days? 5. Wffat large branch of the Mis sissippi on the east? (Answers Published Saturday.) SATURDAY'S ANSWERS. 1. Where is. Abraham Lincoln's body bureid.? Springfield, 111. 2 In what year did the United lcrs to take you to dances from now on." "I don't think I'll go to any more here," said Lottie, with a distant look. "John might not like it." "Hugh?" "But he says they have dances all the time down in rauaan lt2$Z&r (A oY ARTHUR SCOTT 3QT ONE OP THOSE 816 CRANES WITH A 5COOP AND SCOOP EM RV6HT .0HT0 THE ' 60X 5 b 6DYS-THEV SvOrT OF baco TO "THEIR, feett TtfEX SKATE. OYER.' -YHEV GRWLK TO KEEP 'EM GEASeD ,0 ffH r trmtrn mir-m , i- i -. rr - "7T! BAILEY inside, he noticed something - that ia not caught his eye on his former visit. Hanging from a-rafter, where , - , i . V.i c i "'"" i , bunch of brown tobacco leaves. Rusty Wren gave a chirp of pleasure at the sight. That was where he must have picked up the bit pf tobacco that had clung to his tail feathers and ' upset his wife's good-nature: ' 'I'll go right home and get her and bring her here so she can sec tin's tobacco- herself!" he said aloud. ' Then she'll know where that shred enmc from which fell on the floor." He did not say "which I brushed onto the floor," for he never could remember long that he ever did such careless things. , Well, Rusty Wren went out of the window a good deal faster than ke had flown in. And, in Jess, time than ' it takes to tell it, he was perched on top of his house again and calling to his wife. "I know now where the tobacco came from !" he sang out. "Jutt come' outside and I'll show you. It's upstafrs in the carriage house.!" . To his delight, Mrs. ' Ruty an swered in -the sweetest tone fimagin able. ' But she said she didn't want to come out just thi. And she didn't seem a bit interested in to bacco any more. "You come right into the house!" she cried. "There's something here that 1 want to show you." Rusty Wren whisked through the hole in the maple syrnp can. Home had never looked' quite so good to him beforet for he had not Vbeen (here since the middle of the morn foig. "What is it?" he asked eagerly. His wife was sitting on their nest. And there war, nothing new in the house, so far r.s he could see. She moved aside then. "Look!" shc-i said., , ' And, peering into the nst. Rusty :aw a speckled egg there. It was really a small egg. lint to Kusty Wren's eys it .seemed decidetlly He was so surprised that he couldn't speak for as much as two seconds. And Oien he began to sinr- hq was so happy. Though Mrs. Rusty kept very till, she seemed much pleased. And, tVill, she seemed much pleased. And. slrange to say, she never .mentioned smoking to her husband again. She had something more impor tant to think about. Copyright. Groasett & DUnlap. States start work on the Panama canal? 1904. 3. Wfiat state ' is known as the t:ne tree states? Maine, 4. What- is the highest mountain in the world? Mt. Everest.-' 5. What city in California was wrecked by an earthquake in 1906? San Francisco. Winner John Leitel, jr., 5327 North Thirty-third avenue, Omaha. .WHY?- Is Black :the Symbol of Mourn ing? (Copyright, 3 320, by the Wheeler Syn dicate. Inc.) From time immemorial man kind has connected the night with trouble and danger, the day with brightness and joy. The passage from life into death, therefore, was .'manifestly analagous to going from day into night, and, as a result, black the . color of darknes was considered em blematical both of death and of deep sorrow. But it should be remembered that, while black js the accepted symbol of. mourning through out, countries inhabited by the white races, other shades are' worn in various por tions of the world. The south sea islanders, for instance, stripe their black witfc white, as an expres sion of the combination of hope and sorrow; the Ethiopians wear a greyish brown, the color of the earth beneath which their dead lip. buried, while the Persians put oh' a richer brown, symbolic of dead" leaves. Sky-blue, indicative of hope for the future of the de ceased, is worn in Syria and Ar menia, and deep blue is worn in Bokhara and in central Asia White is the mourning color of China, and Henry VIII, wore white for Anne Boleyn, just as it was the official badge of sor row at the Spanish court in 1498. Purple and violet, the colors of royalty, were worn ;for the kings and. cardinals of France, and violet is the mourning of Turkey. Yellow is worn in Egypt and Burmah as a token of ex altation, and Anne Boleyn Jtvore yellow for Cartharine of Amon the customs at the court of Henry VIII, being apparently as varied as were his matrimonial ventures. Tomorrow Why Is the Sea Red? J M". . ,..i,A-lJi JJ JtHim-UULUr; REST Drawn for SPRINKLE THE MOUSSES OW 'EM VAfH. A hose PUT The butter, on WITH A TROWEL THEN THROW V JRAP A 4 OR. S OP THOSE. OVER. WITH A , pitch fork -Aao rr the sz,e of A BATH R06 AHD WATCH 'EM TAT WHEN THEY TAKE' A MOUTH PVL. IT LOOKS LHpfE A LOAt OF HAT C30INb,TtfcOU6 A BAtNt00t- -i- NST4 HOLDING A HUSBAND Adele Garrison's New Phase of Revelations of a Wife Ftom Madge. Dicky had done bis work well. I found that out when I tried to put together the pieces of torn tele gram, which he had dropped, and which I had secreted. He had torn j 2. ' " ."." 1." :: Iln;hnitv tn f;, thtn ,ntLr r - j - - ....... ucu,... Hut fortunately the reading table in j lilll 1U1 1UM icr s room was a large one.. anu I clear eared everything from it, apd with infinite care snread out everv tiny scrap of paper so that the writ- ten side was uppermost. Then I scrutinized, these carefully to' find jagged edges that would fit together. I was able to get the date and enough of the. word New York to know that the telegram was sent lrom tliere. Uut the res: of the words foiled me. Some of them had been torn first horizontally and then vertically, making it imperative ii f uat the letters as well as the words e matched. It was a seemingly lopcless, endless iob. and I had almost given up in despair when from out of the jumble in front of nie there seemed to jumped at my eyes a Christian name which I knew. V "Let Me In." I ,felt myself turn cold. If this were not a couieidencc if the name belonged to the person I feared it f'id then, 'indeed, were all Major Grantlaqd's' precautions justified., With hands that had turned icy, with fingers that had stiffened as with rheumatism. F fantically searched among the fragments for the, surname, which I was sure was there. '.', ' 1 Dicky's . voice, low, insistent, jsaundpd putMde the door. f "Madge." he said, a ncte'of com mand in his voice, "let me in at once." s ' VTth a sudden reckless determina tion I left the pieces of torn paper in full view on the table as I un locked the door and swung it open. I onlv made one change, the name I had put together I pulled apart. - ' Dicky's face held a curious-expression as he strode into the room. Sternness and indignant contempt were mihgled and something very like fear. But he frowned wither ingly at m as h;s eVcs fell upon the torn pieces of yellow tctegram. Madge , Makes a Guess. "I thought sj!''' he sa:d contemp tuously. "So this is what you arc stooping to, is it?'1 I looked at hinv with level eves hi which 1 knew there was no hint of discomposure. Whatever linger ing qualms I mi?ht have cherished had hern buHed fathoms deep at the mere sight of the name I had found among the torn nieces. "If you conside it Istooping to ascertain by any means possible the danger about which you and Major .ommon oense DO YOUR PART AT HOME. B J. J. ML'XDV. There are a whole lot of fathers who think that children are to be cared for solely by the mother, and that if they provide a living for them they have performed their duty. Are you one of these fathers? Do you feel that when you get home at night you should not be bothered with anything concerning the children? Do you think, that all responsi bility ceases for you when you leave your office? Do you say to the fretful child, "Go to your mother?" You won't try to pacifiy the child because you think your work is done. 'But how about the mother, whose wbrk is never done? Your wife works more hours than you do, has more to annoy her and has creater resoonsibilitics. ! In rearine a family there is a lot of workomtybiliyhejtet of hard work besides providing a liv ing. If you are a father, do your part. And it is your part to share eaual ly in the bringing up of. your little family . i Copyright 192K. International Feature Rprvlce. Inc. AMUSEMENT. Today Mat. A Ev'nj Last Two Time HARBACH'S & FRIML'S " MUSICAL COMEDY EXQUISITE "The Little Whopper" Night: 50c to $2.50; Mat., 50c to $2.0-3 ALL NEXT WEEK COM. SUN Seats Now EVES., 8:20 MATS, WED. A SAT. (WED. AFTER PARADE) JOHN GOLDEN Presents Two Brilliant Star HALE AMILTOF L GRACE flj fl RISES H In An Optimistic Comedy with Songf The Bee by Sidney Smith. , , Granlalid have .made such a mystery, why I plead guilty to your accusa tion," 1 said coolly. He looked at me for a minute and looV refuge in bluster. ; i "And when I asled you if you had seen those pieces of telegram you told me a deliberate falsehood!" he cried. "You, with all your high faluling, Puritan conscience! It seems to have gone stale, old dear." The taunt goaded mc into icy retort. "Perhaps my associations for the last few years have had something to do with the deterioration of my ideals." 1 said frigidly, and did not give him time for a retort before hastening on:- ' "If you take the trouble to re member my words correctly, . you will know I said nothing at all about seeing the pieces of paper. I nei ther asserted nor denied. I simply said that I had seen the porfcr brushing up the floor which was absolutely true." "Well, if you want to salve your conscience with that, all right I" Dicky said wnth an ugly intonation in his tone. ""I cal! it whipping the devil around the stump in unusually barbarous fashion. You should be jailed for so torturing His Nibs And as for my influence upon your lofty rectitude, let me tell you that when I tell 'em, I tell 'em straight good, honest whoppers, none of your Machiavellian stunts for mine. "But at- any rate, I can see you haven't been able to make head' or tail of these. Lucky thing I set my Sherlockian brain to work when you sent for dad and, changed" rooms with him after tellinigjiie you were going to lic.ddwn. I ferreted out Mandy. and a , dollar did the trick. And I knewyou hadn't had a minute alone before this. You'll have to get up earlier than this! to outwit your Uncle Dudley." He stepped tor the table, swept up the pieces of telegram and crammed then into his pocket. I could read the relief with which he secured them, and, knew that his tirade had been mostly assumed to distract my attention, if possible, from his real purpose of getting the fragments before I was able to de cipher them. " ' I waited until he had reached tl,e door with .his hand unon the knob, before I threw my little piece of shraonel, "Perhaps you will tell your friend. Grace Draper, that I know she is our neighbor." I said quietly. Continued Tomorrow.) AMUSEMENTS. . , tC HIT IS WSMVILlt Matlitn Dilly. 2:15 Every Nltht. 8:15 BLOSSOM 8EELEY - ft CO.: NELLIE V. NICHOLS: SOLLY WARD & CO.: Hunting & Francli: Jim a Marlon Harklni: Danclno Ktnnedyi: "Jan," tha wli hnund: Toplci of the Day: Klnoorami. BABE RUTH In Special Screen Feature. . Mate.: 150 to 50c: few 75c L SI Sat. a Sun Night: 15c to $1.00: few $1.25 Sat. a Sun Village Five; James and Bessie Aiken; Kahono's Hawaiians, Singers and Dancers; Olive Harding Photoplay Attraction: "The Man Who Dared," featuring Wm. Russell. Christie Comedy. 'OMAHA'S FUN CENTER" Nites: 25c to $1.25 Daily Mat: 15c to 75c MAX SPIEGEL Presents Abe Reynolds N Kevue With the Inimitable Abe. Himself All-Star C'ait snd a Ulorious Ceteris of Spiegel Choeea Beauties. The Kxireme In Spectacular Magnitude Ladies' Dime Matinee Every Week Day Hat. Mat. Wk.: Ed Lee Wroth His Beat Show. RACES . OMAHA, SEPT. 14 18 Single G, l:59, fastest pacer tn America, and over 200 other famous trotters, pacers and runners, Tuesday to Friday. Auto race Saturday. Take Leavenworth street ear.' Auto en trances: 7th and Center, or through Elmwood park. AK-SAR-BEN FIELD RACES START AT 2 P. M. BEATTY'S i Co-Operative 1 Cafeterias Pay Dividends to Those Do the Work .fJyiftcWiW .1-Mftniwt; Half Undressed Vamp Has U. S. in Clutch, Is Warning of Minister Philadelphia, Sept. 14. "A dimple kneed Delilah, a hall undressed vamp, has he United States the modern Samson in her languorous, death-compelling clutch." This is a quotation from an attack on the-extremeness of modern wo man's , styles, delivered in sermon form by Rev. Joseph JL .Krauskopf at the Kennseth Israel synagogue here yesterday. "Society women adopf the styles of undress for reasons not very dif ferent from those for which they arc adopted by the professional courtesans," he said. "Plays unabashed in exposition of nakedness arc presented that rob womanhood of the aurora and mys tery thaf constituted its greatest charm aijd glory, and that rob the home of chastity. "Whenever and wherever a people substitute the worship of gold for that of God, and make in dulgence of animal lusts its ruling passion, its decadence has sel in, and its day of ruin not far distant. "Divorces have increased at such ari ' alarming rate that one wonders whether the time has not come to discard the institution of marriage entirely." Lithuanian Border Troops Strong and Well-Equippe Warsaw, Sept. 14. Lithuanian troops massed along the demarca tion line between that country and Poland are very strong and have very full equipment of .. weapons, which they secured from Germany, according to dispatches. The Lithn- I'llOTO-PLAYS. TODAY AND THURSDAY f CECIL B. DeMILLES 'i PRODUCTION 7hen Love Says Goodbye! Shall husband and wife go cn and on, pretending? Here's the absorbing heart story of a wife who said "yes." Of a man and another woman who said "no.". Thrillingly-- acted. Lavish ly dressed and staged. Filled with the things that make ex istence life. i -NOW- bv riMDV mice w ilium niiLfcfj v APOLLO TAPiaV CADI f 24th and Leavenworth TODAY EARLE WILLIAMS in "A MASTER STROKE" r Also a Big V Comedy QldWives fbrJVevir Jl Qaramounljlrlcraft Qirtun I . MOTES I Si "A -Cumberland Jl l ' " ''Romance"; jM ALL WEEK' i R0SCOE (FATTY) AHDIiril (ByJrrarfftmwritiMth Joseph Jii. ScfrincfL) THE OUNDU (paramount Qklure via Parents Problems How can a child of four best be taught the diiTercnce between fairy stories and untruth ? This is somewhat difficult to do at the age of four. Ilowevrr, even at that age, the child may learn to know the difference between what is true and what is untryc. Instead of trying to teach him the difference be-( tween fairy stories and untruth, show' him the difference between fairy stories and true stories. This can very easily be' accomplished. anians have a force' of 40,000 men, o whom 30,000 have been formed into shock detachments. Behind this army thctc is a . reserve of 40,000 men. They arc equipped with air planes, rifles and cannon and the men wear American, British , and Russian uniforms, it is said. Esti mates rcccivcd here state the Lithu anians have about 100 cannon and plenty of rifles ajid machine gum. I'HOTO-I'LAYS. TODAY ALL WEEK Mae Murray David Powell ; Another great beauty-drama by the ma l who made "On With ihe Dance!" A tingling romance of all that human hearts experience. Beating with adven ture. Suffused with the subtle lure of Turkish palace and perfumed boudoir. Every Scene a Thrill or a Feast of Loveliness. - SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION The First Moving Pictures of OPHELIA ADAIR Omaha's prise winning besuty, revealing the whole gamut of emotions and garbed in everything from stylish evening rrowna to a ONE-PIECE BATHING SUIT. $225 FUR COAT FREE Donated by the Alaska Fur Co. and ea display in their window at 203 S. 13th St. Also 23 other valuable prizes for the best poem on "The Law ef the Yukon." mm lltL ;. I lassBBiBsmaiawaanisssBSsssaasnBsaasBaBii I ) - -