University of South Carolina Libraries
i FORT MILL TIMES. VOL. XIV. FORT MILL, S. C? WEDNESDAY.'NOVEMBEIl 29,1905. NO. sr. I KILLED: 5 INJURED Result of Collision on Pennsylvania Railroad 25 FREIGHT CARS DEMOLISHED Two West-Eound Freights Were Wrecked on Pennsylvania Railroad Near Harrisburg, by Rear End Collision. Jiarrisbuvtt, Pa.. Special.'?One man killed, live injured and twenty-five freisrht cars, two postal ears, one bagCaee < 511 ami one Pullman ? ?? till oil V wreck'ul as t lie result of a rear end collision of two west hound freights, ami the subsequent collision of a passenger train into a wreck on the 1'en: -vivaria ltnilroad at Thoinpsontown. i>. (J. Huntsbee, brakoman of llan ishurg, is the man who was killed Branch Died From Blows. A n: apolis, Md., Speeial?The prosecution used its heavy artillery in the line of medical testimony during Thursday's session of. th" court martial which is trying M idshipman Meriwether for manslaughter in connection with the death of Midshipman Branch. Important witnesses being Dr. .1. M. T. Finney, chief surgeon of the John's llopkins University, of Baltimore; Dr. Henry M. Thomas, neurologist of the same institution and J. (I. Byrnes, the chief medical oHii-ei attached to the Naval Aeade111 \. The operation upon Midshipman Branch, consisting of lifting and folding over a portion of the skull in order to remove such blood clots as might In; formed, was performed by Dr. Finney. and Dr. Thomas, the specialist in that line, came to Anna|>olis at Dr. Finney'8 request in order to locate from the symptoms the proper place for operation. Dr. Tiryues was called in consultation with Dr. Stone shortly after Branch had been brought to the hospital. Much evidence of a deeply interesting. though sometimes technical character. was given by the medical men. One point of interest brought out in explanation of the fact that the skill! x\as opened on the right side, that the jH-m * niillioiiius; (l|U' SUIC ?1 1IH* hO?lV cross from tin* opposite of the brain, whih the nerves controlling !he *'a? ial nnt-h <- do not. It was furl her hroujrlit dii! that the injury, though on the nulii side, was occasioned by tlie successive tist blows 011 the left side of the head. The injury was of the nature blows to the skull on one side of the liea l having tiie effect of forcing the bruins against the walls of' the -kid! and causing compression in that way. All '.lie medical officers gave it a" their very positive convietion that Hvnuch died from III" effect of the medically known as "coiitrc cop. the blows he had received hi his fight with Meriwether. Big Tire in Cotton. A u just a, ?J a.. Special.? Augusta was visit"! by a tire which destroyed or damaged one thousand bales of ?ottou. and also damaged the warehouse in which the staple was stored. There is no possible explanation of the cause of the fire, as the compartment in which is originated bud not been opened for two days, ami there were n.i signs of fire before the blaze hurst, forth. The warehouse is owned by Nixon and DanJIbrth and the building and contents were fully covered by insurance. The io<s is estimated to he in the neighborhood of si.m 01:0 ti.~ *?? - ' iiiu iu?- it* now miner control. Lynched for Killing a Man. Coahoma, Miss., Special.? Dave Sim-. the liPsjro who shol anrl killed 1 k. I . .Tones (white), at his home one inile from Mautrh Station, iu this county on Sunday 11 iirht. was lynched by ; i armed mol> at the scene of his , cviiri'. Sims was captured Friday and immediately brought to this place. The pes;id is said to have made a full confession. i Fire at Indianapolis. Indianapolis, Ind.. Special?Fire caused damage to the stock of the j Bad.aer Furniture Company to the , amount of $75,000 and injured the- ' two seven-storv buildings on Wash- ' inuton street occupied by the company ] to the extent of $10,000. The Colum- j liia National Bank which occupied an i adjoining buildincr was dnmaqed by j watt r. Durin; {be progress <"> C I be fire ( seevrities to the amount of $000,000 t wer?? removed from the bank for < safety. ' ] RUSSIAN AFFAIRS BETTER Strike Fiasco and End of Polish Crisis Have Strengthened the Hands of the Government. St. Petersburg, liy (.'able?The present lull is giviug the government a slight breathing spell. The strike fiasco aiul the passing of the polish crisis have certainly temporarily strengthened the hands of the government. Practically all danger of the necessity for dealing with ah armed uprising in Poland is regarded as over and martial law will probably be abolished at the end of the week. The immediate question confronting the cabinet is the electoral law. Premier Wit to and his colleagues have almost reached the conclusion to base the elections practically on universal suffrage. A member of the cabinet who may be considered to reflect the views of the Premier said: "The extreme wins ?f the intelligent Liberals still insist on fighting a wind mill when thoy express fears of a return to the old regime. That has passed l'overer. T.ie Emperor's step ( is iirevocable. The reports that his resolution lias been shaken are abso-* lately without foundation. Nevertheless, the country must be saved from anarchy, and strong menures like i those measures instituted at ChernigolV. Sara toll". Tainhoff and l'en/a must be taken where the occasion arises. Neither in Russia nor abroad need then* be the slightest fears that the government desires to retrace its steps." Speaking of the Jewish questions, the member of the cabinet said: For the cabinet there exists no Jewish qmst ion. Tt is not what should be done, but how to do it. We are absolutelv of one mind that all the restrictions on the Jews should be abolished. but for the government to decree equality without action on the part of the Douma would lie full of danger. The prejudice against the Jews among the ignorant classes of Russia is not fancied. It is deplorable but true that people under the old regime were saturated with the idea that the Jews were their oppressors. If the Jews were granted equal Willi tln.-cinno *1." 1 - > ' accept it as confirmation of the suspicions tlioy already harbor on account of recent developments, tliat the Emperor lias betrayed them, and nothing tin; central government could do would prevent the most frightful massacres. Steamer Goes Down With 16. Clerks Harbor, X. S.. Special.?The Norwegian steamer Turbine, with her captain and crew of about sixteen men, ? thought to have foundered in a terrific gale which swept over Nova Scotia last Friday. The coasting steamer Edna 11.. which arrived here from Mud Island, brought the news that on Friday about 5 p. m. a large steamer supposed to be the Turbine struck Itlack Rockledgc, otT the south coast of the province, backed up in a few minutes, and then disappeared in the raging sea. Persons on the island who saw the steamer strike on the ledge were a considerable distance away, and owing to the tremendous sea running, it was impossible to launch a boat. Truckers Compromise. Wilmington, Special.?J. O. Cavr, counsel for the truckers association at Grists, X. C? in the Cliadbourne section, has announced a compromise of the suit recently brought against the Atlantic Coast Line for the recovery r>!" ? 1 15.70't '!!). tlu> B;iir?n lmiurr t lw. amount of' losses by members of the association by reason of the refrigerator car shortage during the last strawberry shipping season, the same covering days from May i to (5, inclusive, a part of which was not inclndeil in the com promise with the Armour line. The compromise was for payment by the coast line of $10,150 which is an average of $1.S5 per crate of ,Y2 quarts. It is understood the Coast Line, by tlie terms of its contract with the Armour lines, will have recourse upon that corporation for the amount recovered of them. Gang of Pickpockets. Valdosta. Ga., Special.?Seven alleged pielijsnkets were arrested here and are being held for investigation. They are said to he n gang that has won following Kingland Brothers' eir?ns through Georgia and Florida. The lames niul loea) ions jriven tiy tlie- | arisonera are: James Kinvr, of P?irTiincrhum: John Burton, Montgomery* E.l ( 'lie. Memphis; Frank Morgan, of Lonisvi!! ; J. A. Morris and Sam Aekvrman, of Memphis, and .lames Jliek?v, >!' Marion. Ind. (Srcus detectives spotted the men and local police i'olowe.l and arrested them. LEAVES_FOR HOME Prince Louis Ends his Visit to United States HE ENJOYED HIS TRIP GREATLY Cheering Crowds Y/itnesscs Departure of British Squadron From New York and Its Commander is Made to Write His Name in Many Albums and Pose For Many Pictures. Now York, Special.?About 200 sailors from llio British squadron commanded by Prince Louis of Battenberg were missing from their ships I when the squadron made ready to sail Monday. Several of those who had overstayed their leave were turned away when they tried to board their ships. As it was within a few hour's of the fleet's sailing time when they made their belated appearance, the officers treated them as deserters, refusing to let them step aboard. JMimy of the rejected sailors wept. Their uniforms in some eases had been taken from them in Bowery resorts and they had spent all their money before returning to their ships. Many of them immediately applied *o tha immigration authorities for their return to England. Before sailing Prince Louis paid an official farewell visit to Admiral Evans on board the battleship Maine. As the Prince and his party left this ship the American sailors cheered him. A big crowd, including many who had met the Prince in New York, gathered at the Canard Line dock, where the tlagship Drake was moored, to witness the departure of the Prince. The Prince wtfote his uauic in a hundred autograph albums and posed for twenty or more pictures. Finally the bugle sounded for the visitors to go ashore and the Drake was lowed into the stream while the throng on the wharf and the British sailors on the i?raKe ?;ave eaen oiuer a luiewell .cheer. Explosion in Vault. Columbia, S. C., Special.?As the result of ail explosion of gas in his ofliee here Monday, t'aptain AYade Hampton Cobb, probate judge, lies dying at the Columbia hospital, lie had started to open the vault in his office and struck a match to see the combination. The gas fixture had been leaking, and the explosion which followed threw Mr. Cobb across the office with great violence. lie was very nearly dead when picked up. The office was wrecked and the force of the explosion tore the door off its hinge*' and smashed all the glass in the court house. 128 Lost in Channel Wreck. London, By Cable.?One hundred and twenty-eight persons lost their lives in the wreck of the London & Southwestern Railway Company's steamer Hilda off the northern coast of France Saturday night, according to an official estimate given out by the officers of the company. This death, roll includes 21 saloon passengers, SO French onion sellers and 27 of the crew. $10,000,000 For Calnal Work. Washington, Special.?An estimate of $16,000,000 for continuing the work 011 the Panama Canal has been sent to the Treasury Department from the War Department to he sent to Congress. The estimate of sixteen million dollars is for expenditure lip to and including the liseal year ending June 30, \i)07. Against Greene and Gaynor. Savannah, Ga., Special.?Two additional indictments charging embezzlement and receiving the money oi' the United States that was alleged to have been embezzled by ex-Captain Oborlin M. Carter, were returned in the Federal Court against Benjamin 1). Greene, John F. Gaynor, Kd. II. Gaynor, William L. Gaynor and Michael A. Connelly. 39 Die in Fire. Glasgow. By Cable.?The most terrible lire that has occurred in Great Britain for many years broke out here Sunday in a cheap lodging house for men in Watson street and resulted in the los> of :?!? lives ami tiie severe injury ol' many persons. Missing Man's Body Found. Nashville, Special.?The body of P. L. Connor, aged .'10, a carpenter, who disappeared from his home a fortnight ago, was found on an island in the river. llr i> supj iscil to have wandered into the liver during tin attack of dementia. MORE LIVES 10ST Anoth< r fatal Railway Wreck Leaves Death in its Wake 15 DIE IN CRASH OR BY FIRE Massachusetts' Worst Train Disaster in Many Years Occurs When Sunday Night Express From Boston on Boston & Maine Crashes Into Rear of a Local. Lincoln, Mass., Special.?The most disastrous rail mud wreck in t i i i -- State for many years occurred at S:13 o'clock Sunday night at Kakev's Bridge station, a mile and a hah' west of Lincoln, on the main line of the Fitehburg division of the Boston Maine K lilrnad. The regular Sunday express, which left Boston at 7.T~j o'clock for Montreal via the Rutland system, era-led into the rear of a local train which started fmtn Boston at 7.13 for points on the mai l line and the Marlboro branch. At least 13 persons were killed outright burned to death or snlVoealed, and .30 or more were seriously in jured Many passengers sustained minoreuts, bruises and burns The wreck was primarily due to thick weather, which apparently obscured signals set by the forward train, which, at the time of the disaster. was standing: in front of Baker's Bridge station. The Mont ilea train, drawn by two locomotives and consisting also of nine ears crashed into the rear of the Marlboro litaueh local, demolishing the two rear ears. All of the passengers killed and seriously injured were in these. The j passengers lived in Concord, West Ae! ton, Maynard, Hudson, Marlboro and several smaller towns in the A sabot Valley. None of the passengers on the Montreal train were seriously hurt but the engineer and !ireman of the leading locomotive were killed. The wreckage caught tire and some | of the passengers were incarcerated. Few persons live in the vicinity of Baker's Bridge station and no lire do pa it ment was available, so that the flames practically humeri themselves out. Uninjured passengers ami an umber of train hands, assisted by villagers. went to the aid of the injured and many persons were rescued. A s|H'eial train with doctors was sent from Iloslon at 0..'5."> o'clock, and reached here in half an hour. Many dot tors from Wallhain and otlier places in this section were sent to the scene in carriage and by other trains. Bank Clearings for the Week. New York. Special.?The following table, compiled by liradstreet. shows the hank clearings at a number of the principal cities for the week ended Nov. 24. with the percentage of increase and decrease as compared with the corresponding week lasi war. Sevenly-two other cities are included in the totals; New York *2.024.787.17:1, increase 1 ">.! ; Chigcao *21 *,71 (5.400. increase l!c>toii .*l.">:i.!)(>(4,*!)0. increase 21.0; Philadelphia .*l.">0,(>SO.OtiO, increase .iti.7 ; New < (cleans $2<>,*40.?MO. increase .57.7; l.ouisville .*12..V?9,20(i, increased!.(>; Memphis $7,S.'5S,7!)2. increase 2">.">; Richmond $.">.412,decrease .">.7; Atlanta *4. (>.">7.1 til. increase :>(>.!>; Nashville *.">,(>S 1570, increase ; Norfolk *2.4.">7.42t>. increase 2!l.-">; Augusta, (ia., $2,.">80.(!22. increase 71.0; Knowille ^$1,421.*! 1. increase i liarleston.'S. (.fl.70'2,4dl?. increase -10.7 : < 'hat tauou<;n $1 ,!>1 increase 7">.l ; .Jacksonville, 1'la.. -^1 .'JDT.n^D, increase 7<>.7: Macon 47.44JJ, increase 7'2..">: Savvaiuiiih $7,tl.">!>.!)!?0. increase 07.1. Tefal Coiled Si ales $d,OJ)1,(?dS,741. increase '2lt.~>; outside New York f 1 Oliti.H.'i 1 ,.")(iS, increase ilO.li. Big Lumber Deal. Nashville. S|M?cial. 'A Bristol, Tenii.. dispatch says: .1. \Y Wilkinson ot' Bristol has closed a deal for 17,000,000 iVei of luinher and timber in North Carolina. The land lies aloe.' llie Southern railroad near A-diovillc. Tii amount reported to be involved i i the deal is ahull million doila i s. Heresy Trial of Dr. Bradley. Newman, Da.. S|H>einl.- At tlie meetim: of tin* North (ieoraia t (inference ??I" the Methodist Kpiseopnl t'lmreii, So:i!li, her" Bishop \\ . \V. Duncan appointed a committee to invesliual chanres of heresy against ]{ev. II. S. Bradley. I>. I ol Atlanta. These chajvc;' preferred l>v Key. ?l. N. S'.nnv, i.i Atlanta. The commit t<" ai>;?oiat"d by BDhop Duiuan b composed of Dr. <\V. 15;. iof \u ptMn, (!a.; Dr. I.uhe (I. John on, ?.( Home, an i K v. J. A. Sharp, oL Dahlonejja. I Painful Life often seems too loi H fers from painful period: B down, headache, backache H dizziness,'^griping, cramp dreadful make life w I Vfine if 1 I ItlEases Wo nfl It quickly relieves lnflammatii 3gj strengthens the constitution and pe 9 ditior.st'rom which weak women su Ml It is matchless, marvelous, re jfil At all druggest's in $ 1.00 bott ; jj WRITE US A LETTER . '"Ij freely and frankly. In strictest confidence, telling us all your symptoms and troub es. We will send free advice 0n plain sealed envelope), how to p? curat hem. Address: Ladies' Advisory k??| Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co., mjy Chattanooga, Tenn. personal gossit. J. E. Klrgye is president of Drury College, Springfield Mo. J. M. Bnrrie is said to lto contemplating giving up play-writing. > Railroad magnates James J. Hill is sixty-seven, and A. .1. Cassatt is sixtysix. Otto GoPNcliinidt. the husband of Jenny Lind. recently passed liis seventy-sixth birthday. Bishop Mora, of Hidalgo. Mexico, recently celebrated mass 1300 feet below the earth's surface. Marconi has the good taste to dislike the word "Marmnigrain." used to describe a wireless message. Sir Alfred Ilannswortli. the London newspaper man, has added another to his long list of publications. General Litis Terrazns. Governor of the State of Chihuahua, is probably the largest landowner in the world. John Gully, grandfather of the exSnonkof r?f tl?o s--.?? * ? -. " ? , .v. VI *? *- XltlUM1 111 LOIUnions, liad twenty-four children. Spiridion tiopeevie. who lives in I.ussinpiccolo. has written newspaper articles and books in nine languages. Professor \Y. I>. Miller, of the Univ.v-sity of Berlin holds the golf championship of Ceriiiany and Austria. Professor Frederick Starr, of the University of c'l.i ago, has been granted leave of absence of utore than a year. One of the youngest A neriean Mayors elected Xovcntiier 7 is City Patrick, of Spencerville. o . who is just turned twenty-three years old. .Toliu S. Bilhey. of Mitman. Mo., is the largest la r low tier in this country, his property in seven different States aggregating lsn.ono acres. Major-tlcnn i "Willie" Mcllcan. V. C.. was in his day perhaps the best known "ranker" who ever rose from a private soldier t?.? lake cotumand of tt division. To Per.:4-': For S.ifoty. Columbia. S. 'Special. The negro v.Iio made a '-.infes-i m to an assault III ll ill -i >' ' > ' " i "MI,in in \ {in:tlen J'ltiil \vI <i i> v..is l'?*si* * ?! v. uti'l he Ivnelied i)V '*u . 4> " was quit1!I\ remove:! tr.uu the ('.iirulrii j:iil r. ill I?n >!! _ 141 *' jx'iiitci.l i.ii*;,' here for sale lie: jii 1 (inventor I !< . V. ;i 1(1 had liccii nsi.i-fi 14.i* | roups to ^roloct lli" negro, Ir.i . . *r 1114? a:)rtv action it was not i r s'iry to order tliem 1 out. I Tito hurglnrs nrr stod in Now York claim to h:?v r thhod 40o homes in two years. That's nothing, comments I the Wn-hlngton Post. Three life insurance cpmpanios in New York con- 1 foss to having mil! ted 4,000,000 policy holders every year for the last two decades. ^HII Itww ? |j We tar Disappo y We Fulfil! Every Promise and H jjj UiC OIIQtl Nirloturo without tti? knl H V# U tfUilu puin or (Itti-lltlun from I 0 curoit never to r<;uru, without mercury f| VI gl?r I?4?,l tt Vr ly I* A Th? Dr Kins M.v (t j?44 fVu. VI laws nf iti* ?i?i4! ill it] ncrruuaandetaront [MtMEfc'f? \ tiiUinstliuMon.ini I; 'X< iiid; \ by a a'alt of t.mlnei {' '/mMt w Oursucroii In th ?' iSBr .*? <w\ ?crt: wrusoboihm ' I Mi'.' " _ \ Our oBli-cs nre c<| ' \sSBK. Im. X-ray, ylolet r i \SB> c>nlrl?anc? fcnov.n . " I nvidcrn In ovary i . fv ) triil;i9<1 and rfllcle )* A \ and licensed pbyaU } '?- '' V?"o employ no i \ ^ pnironape-nnC.O i , \ \ by (lili Iiivtnllon \ \ -T' lo 110 00 per nion'l i J s& t.yk\ ancaof a cure mi i MY BEST REFcRENCE IS. CHRQMICR1S r"\N.^iOiJAR ^idjjcfy/h liuivturo. ViV'lVi - UNTIL CUMD. Ut^iSnr,. N. K. KINp, M D Chronic lila<?s>> r: tnr c omvjioiai. Pur,mural I)tv:mr ' \B r*\tr r> 1 '?dav'o^ahlnzyoarcond mot v/ C7 I lit? 1 T ' far liiera'-uro, InrlndlitT' *mmh i.l'ATIOS', XXAMINAT iicaiGO..:: -tT?-. r-~rMmrss~L Periods I rig to the woman who suf- H s. The eternal bearing- H leucorrhea, nervousness, H s and similar tortures are H orth living, take H {araut i men's Pains I Dn, purifies and enriches the blood, :rmanently cures all diseased con- BB liable. [B ^B "I SUFFERED CREATLY." H writes Mrs. L. E. Clevenger, of Belle- BB view, N. C., " at my monthly periods, all my life, but the first bottle of Car- ^B dul gave me wonderful relief, and now ^B I am in better health than I have been hB foralongtime. I thinkCardul thegreat- HB est woman's medicine in the world." NEWSY CLEANINGS. Eugene Field day was generally observed in the Missouri schools. The schoolgirls of San Francisco. Cul.. have taken kindly to the bareheaded habit. The taxpayers of Eastern Londdli are complaining bitterly of the rigor of ( the assessment. Great plans are being laid in England to make the young men of that island good rltte shots. The eost of completing the elevated, railroad in Tokio will be included in the next Japanese budget. Mme. Maxime Gorky protests against the story so often told of her husband that he was born in poverty. The blueberry canning factory nt Island Point. Vt.. lias just shut dnwu after canning iJtHMXH) gallons of produet. The Italian Government oilers a liri/.e of for the plan of a dwelling best suited to the climatic conditions of Italy. Fifty thousand acres of alfalfa were raised in the Greeley district of Colorado this year, three crops being cut during the season. Percy T I'ratiter, of Clearspring. Md.. who died a few days ago. provided in his will that his cotliu should not eo<i over and his tombstone but S'jo. At the conference of naphtha producers at St. Petersburg the loss of property at ItaUu during the recent revolution was estimated at $2U.<MK>.(J< 10. Captain Simpkins, of the sloop Toirri A. Warner, caught with ninety-one bushels of ttneulleil oysters on board, was lined at Annapolis. Md., ."SK.V1P, including costs. Austen l.eigb. an authority on all matters pertaining to Kton, has discovered tiiat Thomas Lynch, one of the signers of the I (coloration of Independence. was an Ktonian. Half of City Destroyed and GOO Soldiers Killed. Toyk?>, 1Sv Cable.? An eye witness of the recent t int at Vladivostok, who has arrived at Kagnski, reports that nearly hall' of the city was burned and that tiOtt of the garrison wore killed, that the jail was thrown open and that Cieneral Knppok is missing. Tho damage is estimated at 001),<)()(). Soldiers front llarhin are rcnortcil to have joined the rioters. Don't make homo irksome, admonishes Woman's l/fe. If yon would not have your children lost to you in after life make home happy to them when they are young. Don't force tho children io look el-ewhere than at homo for pleasure. int Our Patients. 1 ever Hold Out False Mopes. Ife or IxiukIii ??d Vnrlcocele wuhont bualneaa; CoiiI*kI'>u' Itlooil Poison or mineral nuture; I.nsa of Manly . ciirril; no stimulant tint permanent. Ileal Co. 1* an Institution organisedunder tho r Georgia for the treatment and cure of all r dUeanca. I>r. H. K. King. the founder of he chief consulting specialist, being aisUted it physicians imd -urceom. e Irsainieiit or chronic dl-rases l.i unsurpss?dn-*l and electrical agencies, nipped with a I the galvunlc, furadlc baltcrny.niid Klnnenray; In fact, every electrical to the tried lea I prufettlon. Ourrnullarlum la e. pec!, mid we employ none hut the boat nt attendants. regularly qualified graduate* ilnna being In charge. misleading means to secure patients and . i?. n ui uiin-?m mr iiu-riiiur? nrn M-ni om Our ti-rmx lor I rnutmci.t nvonu'o from to Ou B < madlcinas iiiciiitlotlj and wn^lvo tbi; asnur- K tiln n xiioclCed tlni'i. p?pro WV ?ncc<>*nfully ircil and poma- H Er.Jtu' ncntly euro all chronic dUnaara B y and U!:?i!?lor trouble.*, Uheuumlliiin. wr M-olr. Drains Louon, CIC.. mid all l'rlvitlo H and mall/mint Iroubl'S. Cntnrrh of the B id and Iain.". UiwistM f * Kyo and ISnr, B e>s ?>r Women, m: -Ji ?< i>is;>lai em nta, jw ?< *. mid x'U-b vrcaknn -.<?.* of w.ioi'-n. |3 i If yon are -.Irk or ii'Mced On r.'oueat wo H irniptom blank* for lionn trenirticnt. EH ION AND AIIVK I.' I IlIiK {9 g^^?ijaBkb8a^ jlll \ \