9 Kit tkthl il lUi MUsV. I.wit syrup. 11m wouu. us in time. fctl nT anifirtiw CAT CANNOT SUCK BREATH. Old Baptratltloo I TJpeat by tht Ulsheet Medical Amthorltle-e. Can a cat really suck tb breath of a child? We bare always beard that It could. Away back in early childhood we dis tinctly remember of frequent warn ing! to look out for the cat Do not allow the cat to get Into bed with the baby, as it is liable to suck the baby's breath, which would cause the baby to die. Is there any foundation for such a notion as this? We never could dis cover any real meaning to the belief that a cat can suck the breath of a child. Indeed, the sentence Is totally unintelligible. What Is meant by sucking the breath? It may be true that the cat attracted by the breath of a child who had recently been nursing, might attempt to interfere in some manner with the child's mouth. In young cats the Impulse to nurse might be excited by the smell of the child's breath. It is barely possible that the cat might be seized with a desire to bite or to de vour the child's lips or tongue, lured on by the smell of milk. We are not In a position to deny these possibili ties. Maybe they are true. But not any of these suppositions furnish a basis for the statement that the cat is liable to suck the child's breath. We have always heard this statement with a shudder of horror. It seems to convey some weird, hor rible tragedy that can hardly be imag ined. But it Is a mere fancy, the ori gin of which is hard to explain. Tet we would advise mothers to be careful about leaving the infant with a cat We do not favor the Idea of cats sleeping with children. Nor do we favor the practice of children play ing with cats, handling them, mopping them around the floor, fondling them, dressing them up as dolls. It Is not good for the cat It Is not good for the child. Neither cats nor dogs ought to be treated in this manner. They are all right in their place, but they are not fit for playthings. If the superstition that a cat can anck a child's breath has operated as a preventive to "mothers allowing their children to play with cats It has served a very good purpose, but such childish notions are hardly compatible with ma ture reflection. It Is one of the old wives' fables which may have served a good purpose, but it is too ridiculous for repetition. There are other and better reasons why the cat and baby should not be left together than the vague, unintelligible fear that the cat will suck the child's breath. Medical Talk, wKeelevtlOUOR-MORFMINE-TOBACCC Vs MASTS. PERMANENTLY CURED asvuoro ruu. particulars Electric Light and Publto Speaking. Singers, actors and public perform ers generally ai able to speak with much greater ease and comfort In a building lighted with electricity than In one where gaslight Is used. In the former case the temperature of the - whole building is more equal and the risk of catching cold is consequently diminished. The speaker is cooler, does not perspire, bis throat is not parched, and his voice Is less liable to get husky. It Is said that since the Intro duction of electric light public perform ers are in much better voice than they were before. To Break In New Shoes. Alwayg shake In Allen's Foot-Ewe, a powder. Iteurei hot. sweating, aching, swollen feet. Cure corns, ingrowing nail and bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Canada's Monopoly of Asbestos. While asbestos is found pretty much all over the world Canada comes near having a monopoly In its actual pro duction. Twenty-five years ago only 800 tons, valued at $200,000, was mined In Canada. Now the annual export of asbestos is about 40,000 tons, valued at $1,000,000, and the industry is still growing. About 85 per cent of the world's product is mined in the vicin ity of Richmond, Canada. nrnnicninn iyM mr a siaa DISEASE. It is natural to rub the spot that hurts, and when rheumatic pains are shooting through the joints and muscles and they are inflamed and sore, the sufferer is apt to turn to liniments and plasters for relief ; and while such treatment may quiet the pain temporarily, no amount of rubbing or blistering can cure Rheumatism, because it is not a skin disease, but is in the blood and all through the system, and every time you are exposed to tbe same conditions that caused the first attack, you are going to have another, and Rheumatism will last just as long as the poison is in the blood, no matter what you apply externally. Too much acid in the blood is one cause of Rheumatism; stomach troubles, bad digestion, weak kidneys and which bring on this painful dis ease, because the blood becomes tainted with the poisonous mat ter which these organs fail to carry out of the system. Cer tain secret diseases will produce Rheumatism, and of all forms this is the most stubborn and severe, for it seems to ( affect every bone and muscle in the body. The blood is the medium bv which the ooisons and acids . X . . V r. , 7 V- are carried throueh the system, Rheumatism you have, it must be treated through the blood, or you can never get permanently rid of it As a cure for rheumatic trou bles S. S. S. has never been equalled. It doesn't inflame the stomach and ruin the dieestion like Potash. Alkalies and other strong drugs, w . ita a tid tho unrf and tender muscles are immediately relieved. Boariai wir nn T?rieumati9m will be mailed free to those. desiring it. Our physicians will cheerfully answer all letters asking for special information or advice, for which no charge is made. mS SWIFT CFECffiO CO.m ATIAXTA Spring Medicine There la no other season when good medicine U to much needed as in the Eprlng. The blood It impure, weak and Impoverished a condition Indicated by pimples and other eruptions on tho face and body, by deficient vitality, loss of appetite, lack of strength, and want of animation. Hood's Sarsaparilta and Pills Make the blood pure, Tigoroua and rich, create appetite, give vitality, strength and animation, and cure all eruptions. Have the whole family begin to take them today. "Hood's Sarsaparllla has been used in oar family tor some time, and always wlta good results. Last spring I was all ran down and got a bottle of It, and as usual received great benefit." Ursa Bsclas Botox, Stowe, TV Hood 'a Sarsaparnia promise to wire and keeps the promise. . Character of Oar Immigrant. Prior to 1SS0 the nations of western Europe, Great Britain, Germany and the Scandinavian countries furnished over 60 per cent of all our Immigrants, the highest class that we could hope for. Hungary, Italy, Poland and the other countries of eastern Europe fur nished less than 1 per cent From 1SS1 to 1S99 the ratios changed slightly, but stW western Europeans were greatly In the majority. From Germany alone we drew 1,900,000 cttiaena Inside of 10 years. Lately conainona naw cuang ed. Eastern Europeans and Asiatics send us T5 per cent of our Immigrants (so-called Europeans), while western Europe sends us but 24 per cent in 1001, for Instance, Austro-Hungarlans, Slovaks, Croatian, roles ana Magyars to the number of 114,000 came In, while 136,000 Italians honored us with then transfer of "allegiance," In July of this year 67,533 people of all nations Immigrated Into this country. la the Spring. Lowndes, Mo., April 4th. Mrs. H. C. Harty ot this place, says: "For Years I was in very bad health. Every spring I would get so low that I was unable to do my own work. I seemed to be worse in the spring than anv other time of the year. I was very weak and miserable and had much pain in my back and head. I saw Dodd's Kidnev Pills advertised last spring and began treatment of them and they have certainly done me more good than anything I have ever used. "I was all right last spring and felt better than I have for over ten years I am fifty years of age and am stronger today than I have been for many years and I give Dodd's Kidney fills credit for the wonderful improvement. The statement of Mrs. Harty is only one of a great many where Dodd s Kid ney Pills have proven themselves to be the very best spring medicine. They are unsurpassed as a tonic and are the onlv medicine used in thousands of families. Pa's Expert en oe. "Say. pa," Queried little Johnny Bumperniekle, "do actions speak louder than words 7" "Civil actions do, my son," answered the old man. "A judgment is wore than a dun." How's This? Wa nffir One Hundred Dollars Beward fox any case of Catarrh that cannot be cored by Hall's Catarrn cure. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Propa, Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, hare known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him nerfactlT honorable In all business transao- ;ions and financially able to carry oat any ob- ligations made by their firm. Wist fc TCaX, Wholesale Druggists, W 4 loin a, Kihmam t Mabvik, VV hota Toledo. O. holeaale Drug' Kail's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces ot me system, rnco uc ir uutuv. Bold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The population of Ireland, which fifty years ago was over 8,000,000, is now less than 4,500,000. For coughs and colds tnere Is no better medicine than Piso's Cure for Consump tion. Price 25 cents. The so-called oil of roses Is manufac tured from the graBS Andropogon schoen anthus. USABLE TO BLEEP AT NIGHT. Sidney, Ohio, Angust 26, 1903. A few months aso I was feeling; weak and run down and unable to get sleep at bp at h&d ml irhfc. I felt extremely bad. and alao rhetunatio paina In my joints svnd mus cles. Tne meaioine i usoa kts mo oniy temporary relief at beat; so seeing 8. B 8. highly reoommended for auoh trou bles, I began its use, and after taking- it for some time was well pleated with the result. It did away with tbe rheumatio pains, gave ma refreshing- sleep and Vinilt n n mv arenaral system, srlvinsr ma strength and energ-y. It is a good medi cine, without a doubt, and I take pleas. ure in enaorting it. K. P. D. No. i. 8. 8. BOTJOHTOIT. and it doesn't matter what kind of MM but tones up tne general neaiin, genuy Stimulates the sluggish organs, and at the same time antidotes and filters out of the blood all poisonous acids and . - s 111 effete matter of every kind ; and when S. S. S. has restored the blood to its natural condition, the painful, feverish t unnnnnc nn I NAVAL WARFARE Few as are tho people who can Im agine a battlefield on shore, they are vastly fewer who can picture with any certainty the scene of a uaTal conflict Terrible, too, as are all scenes of warfare, there seems something akin to sacrilege, to destruction of God'a own realm, in man daring to carry his bloodthirsty, destructive animosi ties out upou the stainless blue of the pure sea. Yet here, no matter how ter rific the slaughter, how widespread the destruction wrought by man upon his fellow man, the merciful sea, lmpol lutable, reticent immediately effaces ail trace thereof hides man's mis doings from the gase of high heaven, nor allows the poor remains to Ue and fill the air with pestilence. And this, ot course, more so now than ever has been before. In the days when Britain became the sover eign power at sea, and her wooden walls were handled and fought through whole days In closest proxim ity with their enemies, it often befel that ships hulled through and through with shot drifted for many days, while the handful of unwounded sur vivors accomplished tasks such as make the mind reel to think of. But modern sea warfare has changed nearly all that For more terrible, but mercifully far more swift will be the conflict between hostile fleets In the future. There will be scarcely any such thing as the lingering agony, long drawn out of the otd days of sea fighting. For one thing, modern iron- ciads and cruisers going into action will choose the lesser of two evils con fronting them. Because of the deadly peril of splinters and of fire, every thing of wood in their fittings, even to the boats, will be cast away at the beginning of the fight Then, when the battle is joined, the seaman must needs have a heart of brass incased in triple steel, a mind that refuses to meditate upon the im mediate possibility of one of those ter rible twelve-inch projectiles plunging down upon his vessel's deck, and out amid the disintegration of all her gang lions of energy, through the bottom, rendering her an easy target to an un injured foe, and her sinking a matter of minutes. And when she sinks, stone-like pumping being, if possible to a yet un damaged engine, a manifest absurdity in that rent fabric of steel with her must go all her crew. It may sound cruel and hard-hearted to speak of their end being mercifully swift, but in view of the horrors of the old wood en ships floating on, veritable charnel houses, when the battle was over, there was hardly any other term appli cable. The modern man-of-war will not at any rate, prolong the agonies of her crew when she is scuttled. She will go down quick Into tne pit in a halo of steam, a whirling vortex of waves, and IN THE WORLD'S When a soldier or a sailor is told a gun is of a certain caliber he knows exactly what the words mean, but the ordinary layman does not, and, there fore, when he read some time ago in the newspapers that the biggest gun In the world had just been finished at Watervllet arsenal It Is very doubt ful if he was able to form any precise Idea of the magnitude of the new weapon. If so, he will surely be interested in the picture which accom panies this story, since it represents two children sitting In the very breech of this monstrous gun and thus shows at a glance Its great dimensions. Tbe children are 9 or 10 years of age and there Is ample room for both of them. THE DEADLY TORPEDO'S METAL BRAIN It has been stated that much of the Japanese success in naval fights around Port Arthur was due to tbe gyroscope, xnis is a delicate appar atus for keeping a torpedo straight in its course, even through a distance of 2,000 yards. It Is a small, weight ed, wheel-like ob ject, carefully sus pended on gymbols In the buoyancy chamber of the torpedo. Attached to Its axis Is a steel spring connected with the tooth gearing. A rod to the air lever actuates it When the lever Is thrown back the spring is released, and the gyroscope spins around at the rate of 2,200 revolutions a minute. In his book on "Torpedoes and Torpedo Vessels," Lieut Armstrong, of the British navy, says: "The gyroscope works a servo-motor, actuating a pair of movable vertical rudders placed in recesses In the ver tical nns. xnese rudders, be It re membered, are therefore supplement ary to tbe small adjusted vertical rud ders ordinarily fitted, but which may be discarded If a gyroscope is being used. If, now, the torpedo from any cause, external or Internal, be de flected out of the line of fire, the gy roscope, by maintaining its axial posi tion In the line of fire, acta on the K jiinnnnM In Ave minutes from the commence ment of her downward plunge there will be no sign that she bat ever been, and only if other vessels be very near will there be any possible chance of saving a handful of stalwart swim mers whose superhuman strugglee hav wrenched them clear of the de vouring, down-dragging eddies. More than a mere handful there could not be In any case, since another tremen dous difference between past and pres ent sea fighting Is that the steel-clad monsters go into battle with hardly a man visible, almost all of them hid den behind massive walls abut In from the devastating impact of large pro jectiles, as well as the horrible hall of Hotchklsa and Maxim bullets. The pomp and pageantry of sea war fare In Nelson's day, with Its stripped crowds of men swarming about the Incumbered decks, and streaming flags from every mast have gone with the towering ranges, of sails and nimble sailors who leapt about aloft handling them even during the height of battle. The new man-of-war goes into the fight grim, unadorned, and apparently proceeding by her own volition, like some unthinkable marine monster be gotten of the elder slime. Nor will the elements Interfere either to retard or accelerate the Issues as once they did. Whether It be calm or storm, bine sky or fog, night or day, the battle will be joined. To a landsman, and even to a mer chant seaman, there is something pe culiarly terrifying in the notion of a sea fight In a fog. It is a time of terror even In peaceful navigation, since the great eea breadths seem to have contracted, and one's faculties are kept at their utmost tension In case of running across another ship. Fog la the only elemental condition that suc ceeds In making the great tde see look a little place, where not merely navies have no room to float but It seems impossible to avoid colliding with the only other ship that was In sight before those fleecy walls of mys tery closed In upon the seafarers. Tet the modern sea warrior among us Is trained to welcome that terrifying con dition of things, to dash at utmost speed through the thickness and burst upon bis enemy with the sudden nn expectedness of the lightning stroke. And to add to all these terrible con dltions of modern sea warfare we have now the submarine. ot content with the mighty arena of conflict afforded by the open surface of the sea. In gale, or fog, or calm, the sea fighter must now descend Into darkness and si lence. the realm of tne utterly un known, in order that he may haply burl, at one fell blow as from a burst ing volcano, Into blazing, boiling ruin and death, eight hundred Uvea, and the revenue of a principality. For man has even extended the battle ground of the sea. Frank T. Bullen, In Lon don Dally Mall. LARGEST GIN. servo-motor, and by means of the ver tical rudders steers the torpedo back again to its original position." Thus the torpedo is endowed with a brain, so to speak, that directs its course through the waves on its mis sion of death. l iked Shorter Miles. The late John R. Proctor, president of the Civil Service Commission, was a student of the University of Pennsyl vania in 18C3 and 1804, and In his col lege days liked nothing better than to set out early on a frosty morning and walk twenty-five or thirty miles through the country. Once he met an Irishman on tbe road to Morristown. He and the Irishman plodded along together a matter of six or seven miles. They stopped and read each milestone, and Proctor said: "I think that milestones cheer a road up wonderfully, don't you?" "Faith, an' I do that" said the Irish man. "I find them a great comfort. It would be an Improvement, though, if they was nearer one another, wouldn't itr Court of Arbitration. "The reason I can't get along with my wife Is that she wants to submit all our differences to arbitration." "To arbitration r "Yes. 8he always wanta to refer disputes to her mother." Town and Country. 'Women Have tbe Better Record. Seventy-seven per cent of the womec and but 63 per cent of tbe men taking the civil servlve examination are able to pass it Many a man, like the moon, shines with borrowed light 110 APPETITE Many Women During the Spring Months Suffer From Extreme Lassitude, Loss of Appetite and Nervousness What They Need Is PE-RU-NA, THE GREAT TO NIG. Miss Bertha M. Rush, 5435 Kin- rarde street, Fittaburg, Pa., Superln tendent Junior Society ot Methodls! Protestant Church and leading soprano of the choir, writes: "Woids cannot describe my thankfulness to you for rerun. I was a suflerer from sys temic catarrh for years and was in a very much run down condition. I wss extremely nervous and had the most foolish fears over nothing. I was thin and emaciate!. "My physician advised me to leave this climate but as it waa not conven ient to do so at this time, I took the advice of a friend to use a bottle ot P runa. I took it faithfully and when the first bottle was gone I felt so much better that I booght six more and took them faithfully, after which I looked like a new woman. "I gained in flesh, my appetite re turned and all my old symptoms had disappeared. I am more than thank ful to Peruna." Miss Bertha M. Rush. I AM TIRED. Everybody Is Tired Spring Weath er Does It tvery One bnouid Be Cautious. Depression ot the nervous system at the approach of spring is the cause. General lassitude, dull, heavy sensa tions, continual tired feeling, with ir regular appetite, and sometimes lose ot sleep. Peruna meets every indication and proves itself to be perfectly adapted to all their varied peculiarities. Pe runa invigorates the system, reiuve nates the feelings, restores the normal appetite and produces regular sleep. That tired feeling which is the nat ural result of the depressing effect of warm weather immediately after the invigorating cold of winter, quietly dis appears when Peruna Is taken. Thong ands are daily testifying to its priceless benefit. Mrs. H. Kassatt, 1309 W. 13th street, Des Moines, la., writes: "I am happy to give my endorsement for your valuable medicine. Peruna, as I consul er it a valuable medicine to take when the system is run down from overwork About two years sgo I felt that I must take a long test as I had been unable to work for over a month and could not reeain mv strength. I could not sleep at night and was in a very ncrv ous, high strung, condition. I decided to try what Peruna would do to build up my strengtn, and am pleased to say that I began to improve very shortly, and in less than two months I was able to take up my work, and felt better than I have tor years. I take it now twice a vear and find that it keeps me in perfect heatlh." Mrs. Kassatt was foi over ten years the manager of plant furnishing ladies' wear and em ploying hundreds of women. Those that dare lnse a day are dan gerously prodigal ; those that dare mis spend it sre desperate. llisliop Hall. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of S Fac-SlmlU Wrapper Below. uiwwr assmgaa. FOI HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR RIUQUSRESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATIGR. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION ticStx I Purely YefetaMv& CURE SICK HEADACHE. ...I . . . ( i . . i . i rank as first peer of the realm. When the nerves are weak everything goes wrong. You are tired ail the time, easily discouraged, nervous, and irritable. Your cheeks are Sarsaparilla pale and your blood is thin. Your doctor says you are threatened with a nervous breakdown. He orders this grand old family medicine. Tor mors than M years I he nted Ayer's Sariaparllla In my family. It la a grand lonle at all tlmea. and a wonderful medicine for Im pure blood." D. O. Holt, West Haven, Conn. JI M s bottle. All diwglntci. J. O. ATIR CO., T,owll. MnM for Weak Nerves Keep the bowels regular with Ayer'e Pills, Just one pill each night. ITary aasall . to take CARTER'S Avers - HlGlflTED MISS BERTHA M. RUSH PITTSBURG. Miss Rush Suffered With Systemic Catarrh Was Nervons, Had No Appetite, drew Thin and Emaciated. She Now Looks Like a New Woman After a Course of Pe-ru-na. ' Tired, Nervous Women. There are thousands of them every wliere. A few bottles of Peruna would do them untold lK-nefit. As a tonic and nerve invlgoratcr It has no equal. It builds up the nerves, it gives strength to the circualtion and at once restores the appetite and digestion. No feeble woman should be without Peruna. Folly Occupied. She Papa's chief objection to you Is that jou have no occupation. Ho No occupation! Hood gwsrlons! DocHu't he kuow tliut I am waiving s mustachet K Q rrmnnuy enrea. woiunor nrroun 0 aftr tlnU dny's w of Dr.Klinv'suraat Narva toror. Ht'ud fur FrrcBS (rtnltxilttrnnri IraaUa Irt. M. U. Kllua, I.Ul.-tO.- An M . 1-liltMlelpbla, ta Dinks They say that there are tens ot thousands of faith curists in this country. Winks Yes, and there'll he tens of thousands more, if the doctors don't come down In their prices. Mothers will rtnd Mrs. Wlnslows's Soothing Byrup the best remedy to use tor thuir ohlMnm during the teuthlug period.. Tho Why of It. Green You and Short don't seem to be as Intimate ss you were. Does he owe you money? Biown No, indeed; but ha wanted to. KILLS Moo and nil mm1n thnt tnfttgt horwurattl. pmil try, etc. Lou ay htni will not Ui noroMcka if row. LICE! lira upon th blond whlrh tmtlla KO t .ti.tnln llf vitality. PRUSSIAN LIC POWDER kill. tlifli, thu. It 6AVCS FEED .itra rations mti.t m (riven on tjwourtt of vermin. 25anilftOo dealer. By mall uo A 76o pauasiAN ac mcov oe. BT. PAUL, MINN. 6s pair Hand Hook Fras rOBlXAND BRED CO,, Portland. Vsaai Agents. Or., W. L. DOUGLAS 3.3 & 3 SHOES UNION MAUt W. L. Douglas shoes have by their excellent style, easy-fitting, and superior wearing qualities, achieved the largest sale of any shoes In the world. They are lust as good as those that cost you 4 to SS tho only difference is the price. Sold Emrywhtrt. Look for name and price on bottom. rinniflu hmi tfnrnna Coltskiri, which isevery wliere conceded to he the finest ratent j.etner yei iirmiuu. Fatt Color utltt$ used. Khoeabymall.Soc.exlra Wrlfs for Catalog, W.t.Dooglas, Brockton, Mas vgULTir'? The improved Alvord Sage Brush Grubber and Land Cleaner Takes out all brush by the roots will remove Sage Chlco, etc, lor seeaing limn nf n leaving same In piles at regular -i not to 11 Intervals. Teeth are automatically cleaned. No clogging. "Will work on stony ground. Our booklet describing the machine in detail, J5s: 118 BavaniagBU, cum., buijjiu weight, etc., sent free on application. THE BURTON MFH. bU. 16ZZ AHArAnyt sr. uenveh, -"SV. svV - tlEllVflllS. If you do not receive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, wrlto at once to Dr. Hartman. giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbur, Ohio. During leap year every eligible young man should be equipped with a chaperon. Perrin'sPUe Specific The INTERNAL REMEDY No Case Exists It Will Not Com AUBNTS WANTKO Fur our New (iamilitne Utng Haw. We set en nine only otx'e fur each lug. (Hie man can move saw. We handle the only Malleable (irulittlnif Mai-hlno. Write us your wautsla tbe machinery line. KK1KUHUN MACHJNEKY CO., Foot Morrison Ht, l'orlland, Oregon B U I 'ROM Dr. C Gee Wo WONDERFUL HOMH TREATMENT This wonderful Chi um doctor Is oallad great banauaa he auras Cple without opera that are given up to die. He curve with those wonderful ('hi neae herhs. roots, huila, barks and vegetables that are entirely un known to medical sci ence In this country. Through the uae o' those harmless remedies this famous doctor knows the action of over M0 different rem edies, which he successfully oses In different diseases. He guarantees to cure caltarh, asth ma, lung, throat, rheumatism, nervonaneaa, stomach, liver, kidneys, eta; has hundreds of testimonials. Charges moderate. Call and see blm. Patients out of the city write for blanks and circulars. Hend stamp. CONSUL- tation runic. Awmitba The C Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co. 2S3 Alder St., srs-Menilou papsr. PnrllanJ, Oregon. P. N. U. No. 15-1904. WHEN writing- to advertiser pleas I mention this paper. I Brush, Rabbit Brush, Grease Wood, .Leaves the ground in perfect condition wunout me nlnw at a r.nflt : ,?' exceed mmSK per jaodt, ocre . mPSr .yd T vwlu Y 5