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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1937)
PGE six MEPFOBP It AIL "TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1937. I UNI itkoe Ui Mtm' Paolisheo er HinniBIl PRINTIMQ OOl tt-Ift N ru St- paeae II BUBERT W BUUU IllUf. WilT B. OILATAAR Nuipr. A iBoepeodool Newspaper. iafoA am uBd4li BlllUf At Med' fee, Oreeoo. aaaee Aol of Maxell a, HIS (UBacBIPTlUM BATE4 By MaU Id Afleaoeel Daily. eo rear . Dally, eta months. ,.. Dally, ooe month ........ Carrier, lo K'UM afediord, lasd. iaoaaoovllle, Ctllril I - rbeems. Taleat. Ool Bill aa blshwey Dally, on rear " Dally, ela naonlhe. ........ ....... Pally, ooe moDtb Jul term eaah lo advaaoa 11.00 MS ll.so lit MM Paper ( Ibe Otty of -liW Oltlctal Paper of eoeaooe (Moll MKMHKB Of THE aaWUVIATBU feltta) . aweeivia vou n wirv tftlo to in on (or pgblloaUoo of oil mwi aiapatenee ereollo to It of etkar Mm orodltoil a tola paper, end aloe to tat local newe paoiianon qar-iou glepeteheo hereltt aro aloe reserves. MEMBER. Or imiTBD PUN WBlaBCB Or AUDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATIONS Advertlstas Bepri Offloee M Now Tort CbleafO, OMCIU Prtleod. otLoola. Atlabto. Veaaoavar 0- 0 Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Ferry. m l lo well along In July. And fine weather for It. but tba Southern Oregon Nudist Colony rumored lt March, u yet has not staged the One Undreaslng. a o What the eeteemed Salem States men delgnated as "mayhem with malice,' wu It aged Monday eve, without a customer being nit with whiskey bottle, wber he should wear a On-bet. OOP H tba eltjr Is to keep on operating , the present relic there la but one thing to do. That la eend tow-car long to bring back tba ambulance." (Albany Democrat-Herald) -A dvlo problem la solved. o a e Jno. Anderson of 0. Ft. and Atty. O. Codding, former North Dekotens, net Tuea. noon, and discussed old friends and cyclone. o e P0UBLE-J0IXTED INDIGNITY (Oakland (Calif.,) Tribune) To Editor Tribune: When a Democrat, who has been an honor to hie party and a credit to hie country, object to a hand-picked Supreme Court, some admirer of the so-called Brain Trust tries to insult him by calling him a Republican and ana think they can Insult him by calling blm a Southern Gen tleman." From a Letter.) a o o The Portland ball team la acting like one, causing considerable local excitement and raptures. 0 o o The Older Qlrls who have eterted knitting things for Cbristmaa, are Bet eo smart. Pendleton hea atarted lane for a akl elide next winter, and the sister city of Ashlend ennounces a bigger Fourth of July celebration than ever next year. Time la often grabbed by the forelock, and occas ionally yanked. . e e e Rltch-hlkare are reported organis ing In TexAs. The veterans and sur vivors of giving them a ride should do likewise, and, for the sake of va riety in the newa assault and rob hitch-hiker. a o o DONT MENTION ITI (Fond Du Lao (Wis.) Journal) "Thanks. We wish to thank all the neighbors, friends and rela tives who so kindly assisted us In the recent destruction of our heme by fire. Mr. and Mrs. Bl ' mon Blrschbacb and family." a a o Fancy writers of the metropolitan are now discussing at great length, whether or not, as the result of hit defeat on the court pack plan, the President will be able to regain his lost popularity. Popularity la like virtue, and last wlnter'e Icicle hang ing from the depot eaves when It gone- It's gone. a s a The Mayor of Portland Is compli mented by the Oovernor for 'Tilt tlng-the-nall-on-the-head" In a die- ouseton of an administrator for Bon nevllle Dam power. On the other hand the Mayor In bis fury over the California border Inspection situation s&laaed-tbe-slde-ot-thc-bara. many claim. see "IDENTITY DOUBTED BY POLICE CHIEF" (Hdllne Red Bluff (Calif.) News) Coma on, chief 1 Be Yourselfl o o o Oltlaana will have an opportunity this week-end to behold a hypnotist at the O. Hunt playhouse. He per forms his wonders without promising the audience a corner lot In Heaven. free electric Ughte, government beans forever, and no end of pin-ball money. Nobody who la still under the mesmerism of the last campaign orators will be accepted aa a eub OVERLOADED TRUCK BRINGS $7.50 FINE Horbert Lee Troxler, driver for tba Farnum Truck lanes, charged with vertoedlng a truck, waa fined S7.IW and coat la Justice court yesterday aa a plea of guilty. Troxler drove a WW on the I'telfle Highway with law totaling 1I.7&0 pounds, the rnmfMDK stated. Be Jta now Neat tit, Meofoj isoms Trees' Give the Devil His Dae WE realize this will not please those who enjoy using John h, Lewis as s punching bag. He if a convenient symbol for all that ia undesirable in the labor movement. With his beetling brows, his bull-dog ohin, his aggressive and combative manner, he is the inevitable bad man in the unfolding industrial melodrama. (And as far as that goes in many directions, that is what he IS.) - Nevertheless we believe in even giving the devil his due. And when John h. shows good sense, a disposition to make a conciliatory' gesture -and calm him and believe he deserves a IN issuing a public statement, off" nor the "closed shop", Mr. Lewis, for the first time in a role. Coming from such a source, have far reaching consequences. For both the "check-off" and the "closed-shop" have been for many years, two of the chief stumbling blocks towards any working agreement between capital and labor. PIE "check-off" in brief compelled the employer to pay the union riuaa of hie amnlovaaa. rlodnnt t.ha nertoeoorv amounts,- each month, to keep members in good standing. The "closed shop" of course, is a shop where only union men can be employed, and the right of the individual worker to join or not join a union, as he might desire, is denied. The second is the more important regulation, but taken in combination with the first, it places the employer not only at the mercy of the union, but makes him an unwilling contributor to a condition, that ha regards servitude. To scratch them both from labor creed, clears the atmophere at once, and marks a long step toward, what all right thinking citizens in the country desire, PEACE instead of WAR, between the forces of labor and capital in this country. OF course it is well not to be too sanguine. The admission that these two proposals are not essential, does not mean that the' principles they embody will be abandoned. But coming from the "All the admission DOES make it extremely unlikely that in the future, any serious strikes will be carried on, based on either of these issues. For the C. I. O. would then be placed in the position of. an organization fighting over NON-essentials, disrupting business, creating disorders, causing destruction, be cause it refused to compromise bad declared not to be of supreme importance. And with these two sources area of potential trouble would be SO give the devil his due. When John L. wrong which is moat, of T.nA T.imA ob wo gaa it va ova oooinat Vi!wi Wkan he is right as he is in this instance we are for him. We regard it as PARTICULARLY important that the dis position to interpret this gesture, as a Bign of weakness, and therefore a signal to organized capital to press their advantage be strongly resisted. Such a spirit will get its advocates no where, but in trouble. I 'HERE'S nothing weak about a mHn. AftfiontiAllv ft firshtinrr gent one. He is intelligent enough to realize the time has come to reef the labor sails here and with the opposition, lest a storm of publio indignation be aroused, which will sink the labor craft entirely. He is acting in the interest of labor of course. But it is ENLIGHTENED self-interest. it bo so recognized. Failure to do so, failure to meet a conciliatory move on one side by a similar spirit on the other, would be to miss a golden opportunity. FOR. when all is said and done the only hope of peace in the labor-capital field is a spirit of give and take on BOTH sides; a determination to look at the other man's point of view, as well as your own; a working together on the part of all factions, toward the betterment and advancement of the entire country. CO when a representative of this direction, whether you like the cut of his facial jib or don't, don't be a fool don't kick him in the shins and try to tweak his whiskers, welcome the extended hand, and extend your own. This isn't Polyanna doctrine, citizenship and meeting enlightened self interest on ONE side, with enlightened self interest on the OTHER. For unless this industrial war is stopped, and only a dif ferent spirit on both sides can do that then it can only end as all wars in this modern age must end, in mutual destruction and disaster I Donations Not Income "Never, under any administration." h eald, "has the bureau of Internal revenue considered a Income the val ue or proceeds of services donated In good faith to charity." The Justice department officials waa chief of the International revenue legal unit when the rulin. in Mr. Roosevelt's case waa made In 195. Without formal rulings. Jackson as serted, the Internal revenue commis sioner for years haa permitted pro ceed of charity concerts, prtsefighta. basebaU game and aunllar enter tainments to be treated on the sama nasi as Mrs. Roosevelt's lecture end Mt fee rU4 K4P UxelH H W; CUE PRECEDENT IN EXPLANATION MRS.FJ.'S TAX (Continued tram Pag one.) the troubled waters, we are for hand. declaring neither the "check are essentials in his program, our recollection, assumes such this declaration can't fail to the union treasury full and the as little better than involuntary the list of imperatives in the Highest" in radical labor eircles, on principles, its own leader, of friction removed, a large eliminated. John L. Lewis. He is a strong man .Vint tie in aIqa on intolli- there, not to be too tough And it is highly important that either side steps forward, in its merely good sense, good performers personally benefited from them. Aside from f 1 to make the con' tract binding. Jackson said, the pres ident's wife received no benefit meaa. urabl in term of money from her breadcesta. Bureau Diligent Ha added the Internal revenue bu reau haa been diligent to see that It position on charitable perform' anoea wa not abused aa a cover for an assignment of Income, or an order to pay Income to third persons. which waa In substance an avoldano of taxes. Jackson said, however, It was not alway easy to draw the line. In each case, ho said. It must be determined whether the transaction actually was a donation of services without In come. "The precedent created In earlier caee and followed la the caa of Mrs. Roosevelt," he testified, "has not resulted In serious losa of revenue It I safeguarded against abuse aa I have Indicated. "Even her critic wlU hardly con tend." Jackson continued, "that It would be possible tor Mra. Roosevelt. after cutting herself off from all In come from her broadcasta. to also continue to be out of pocket for tt on iivsms dMai get." Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal ftealtn and Hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Ur. Brady u a stamped aelf addreeaed envelope is enclosed Letter should be brief and written to ink Owing (o the large number of letters received onlj a few can be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady. -265 El Canunu. Beverly. Calif. - PROPHYLAXIS AGAINST MALARIA Travelling from Mexico City up to i If chills and fever occur, of course. Orizaba recently, secure In the knowl- the treatment Is a medical problem edge that we were Immunized against smallpox and against typhoid and paratyphoid A! and B, much disturbed when ft medical friend obaerved In his berth mosquito of the Anopheles breed This Is the breed of mosquito that carries mslarla The doctor recog nized the critter by its ebaracter- lstlc POSltl'JQ. body nearly per pendicular to the surface on which the mosquito alights. We were un easy because we had not taken any quinine. Of course, not every Ano pheles mosquito carries an assort ment of malaria Plasmodia. Fortun tely for us this one apparently hsd no specimens of the malaria orgau Ism with her on that trip. I say her, for It is the female of the spe cies, never the male, that craves hu man blood. Residents In districts known to be malarial may take the regular prophylactic dose of quinine, ten grains dally, and remain tmmun. but they can't keep this up Indef initely. Travelers or visitors who stay a few days or a few weeks may and should take their dally ten grains of quinine as long as they remain In the district. Modifications or Improvements on quinine have been Introduced with the usual clstms of superior thera peutic effectiveness and freedom from untoward by-effects, but on putting these newer remedies to the test of actual practice the results, again se usual, have not borne out the prom ises made for the new medicine. One called plasmochln too frequently pro duces toxic symptoms and even phy sicians use It only with special cau tion. Another called atarbrlne may prove more effective In the treatment of some cases of malaria where, for one reason or another, quinine Is not applicable, but there Is some unoer- 1 talnty as yet concerning the toxic properties of this drug. The prophylactic dose of quinine, ten grains a day, Is merely the aver age dose suggested for adults. A child of ten yesrs may take five grains a day. An adult taller or heavier than the average may take 16 grains a day. 1 NEW YORK, July 38. Artists take residential root more than almost any other class. Seldom do they move. Joseph Cummlngs Chase has had his studio on East 33rd street mpre than 30 years. Dean Corn well clings to the Qalnsb ouough overlooking the vast breathing space of Central 'park. Rube Goldberg is a confirmed West Slder. Since he came to New York 30-odd years ago he has made several changes hut never moved eight blocks away Finally he bought a private residence on West 73th street, a stone's toss from the Schwab mansion where he is parked for life. Gordon Grant, the marine painter, has been 30 years on East 66th street with a pent studio. Charlie Falls, the artist with bangs, Is faithful to 33rd street near Oth avenue. Le Jaren HUler. photographer, is nearby on West 38th street. Denys Wort- msn, cartoonist, is loyal to 13th and finds many types in Washington square. But the real artistic loyalists 11 vo in the block on West 67th street run ning oft Central Psrk West. Among the old settlers are Howard Chandler Christy, F. Graham Cootes, Arthur William Brown. Bob Brlnkerhoff, W. T. Bend a, Wallace Morgan, Tony Sarg. Walter En right. 0. D. Williams and others. Lowell Thomas haa become the Wonder Man. physically, of the writ lng trade aside from the admiration he elicits for enormous and varied output. He broadcasts, fills score of lecture engagements, presides over banquets, snd once a week stays up all night registering his descriptions for the news reels. Besides writing many magazine articles, he alwaya has & half doeen books on the fire. Yet somehow he looks fresh, rested and unhurr.ed. He has all of hi thick, brown hair and could pose for an ad for hair tonic, a dentifrice or complexion cream. In fact, he's had off era Among the many Inconspicuous WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE rfilboat bleawl-Aa Tei 1 Jm 0.1 sf M h IbsMsteiai Raiia'laGs Tea Rm ihouia r"' out two peenof of Ihruld bllo Into Tfur bow.u dallr. tf Uila tU Unotrtowinefralr.TOurtxld,n, tdlson It Jutt aoray. In the bowrta. O.t Woe" nur ltmtti. Ymi ft tomtlr-attd. Youl Mo y.tem Is poUonoil and TOO foal soon sunk and th. world looks punk. lAxativo. aro onlr makeshifts. A mere bowal moTflMnl dcoao'1 tt at th. eauM. II take, thow rood, old Carter's Utile Llrot PUIa to S't theot two pound, of biU flowtn froel,Y and make jrou feel "up and ur' . Harm. k. senile, yet amatlna In maMt Ml flow fwly. Ak for Carter 'a Little Lir I'lUe h BAMa JilalisaiBil ti" aajthitw ia M i-l ulu, jjjmmif aNt-''., f M Brady, M. D. and should be prescribed by the I physician who see the patient and knows the conditions. Where no physician Is available, perhaps the best plan Is to glva the patient iu grains of quinine every three hours for three doses dally that is, 80 grains each day. as long as chill or fever continues or recurs. When the acute symptoms subside, the quinine should be continued In smaller daily dose for a period of six or eight weeks, say ten grains a day for AO days. Although a dally dose of ten grains of quinine will prevent the develop ment of symptoms of malaria It will not necessarily prevent Infection If one happens to have a run-in with an Anopheles female who carries ma larial organisms. For this reason It Is wise to continue the daily dose o quinine for a month or more after leaving the malarial region. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Tuberculosis. What are the symptoms of tuber culosis, both externally and Intern ally? I have had a peculiar feeling. -(V. M.) Answer You are going at It In the wrong way. Instead of trying on assortments or job lots of symptoms, you should recite your symptoms to your doctor and leave it to the doc tor to decide what, if anything, may be the matter. I'll send you a mom graph on Tuberculosis If you ask for It and Inclose a three-cent-stamped envelope bearing your address. ' Anoxia. Saw your ad on lack of oxygen causing headaches. Have all those symptoms. Where can I get the oxy gen you speak of? (Mrs. E. M. M.) Answer One-fifth of the air of all outdoors Is oxygen. Help yourself. For more concentrated oxygen you have to go to a physician. Eruption. I am ashamed to go anywhere with the ugly eruption on my face. (B. A.) Answer Send three-cent-stamp9d envelope bearing your address, and for Instructions for treating blackheads and pimples acne. (Copyright. 1837, John F. DUle Co.) Bd Note; Persons wishing Co communicate with Dr. Uradv should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D. 2 OA. E) Camino. Beverly mils. Cam eating places with a select clientele Is Chris Cella'a In the East 4.0's. Without pretense, decoration or menus. The waiters merely bubble with enthusiasm for dishes of the day. The patrons are regulars who do not mind leisurely service. The trouble with such restaurants Is that eventually they are "discovered." crowds rush In and charm flies out the window. These spots are fre quent on the lower East side where Mamma or Papa does the cooking. serves, acts as cashier and for good measure tosses In a full-throated "Sol Mia" with all stops out. One reason for New York's appar ent coldness toward the stranger Is Its suspicion bred by many yeara of having been victimized by petty shakedowns. In almost any medium sized city or Oallpolls, for Instance, a pull at the bell and a request from a stranger to use the phone would The Important Facts ALout the Difference in Gin The important facts are these: Cordon's Gin has Liqueur Quality and High Proof, 94. J, That means richer fla vorvelvety smooth ness drinks that never taste thin. And that Is why more and more thousands of people are Insisting on Gordon's when buying by the bottle or by the drink! DRINKS NEVER TASTE THIN WITH (GWdloinfe (Cnnn MSTRIIUTORSi Parr),, ft Convsny. ten Prniu. Ui A-.t-l-i, rrtlan1, SmhI CWtM OWe.'. tWQii C 1tJ . U -, H J. IN OREGON-130 not cause alarm. But In New York such a request might be answered with a door slam 1a the face. Too many who have acqulsced have found themselves suddenly looking Into the buCness end of a blued steel revolver or coming -to later all trussed up In a dark closet with valuables missing Along the street, too. they have found that what might be a simple query elsewhere Is here a prelude to some come-on racket. The seasoned New Yorker asks questions only of poUce men or uniformed attendants. He has found this the safe method and Invariably the most accurate. I am a push-over for Ice cream blobs on a stick 'and sundry lndl gestlbles hawked by white uniformed lads on Riverside Drive snd along the countryside. For a time I would glance about before purchasing a trifle ashamed of sudden juvenility, But not any more. I find it an adult weakness quite general. The sellers ssy most of the patrons are men past 40 and biggest sales are after dark when, one presumes, no body la looking . . . And one summer evening I saw a figure resembling Chsrles M. Schwab emerge from the great mansion across the street to a white wagon with a bsnjo torch and return nibbling at sn Iced lollipop. Al Smith la also a lolllpopper. Resting on a psrk bench after a walk with the dog the other afternoon, X felt something land on my shoulder. It was a friendly squirrel. I shrieked something that sounded like "Scat a mighty squottaml" and walked off stiff-legged all the way home. Some how the knee Joints simply wouldn't work. (Copyright, 1937, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) 4 , Comment on the . Dan's News By FRANK JENKINS MOST astonishing development cf O.I.O. SHARPLY CRITICISES the Roosevelt administration for Its labor policies! ' HAT did C.I.O. expect the ad- mlnlatratlon to do? Call out the army and navy to close all plants and force all workers Into C.I.O., whether they wanted In or not? IS these words are written, which 1 several hours before they will be read, both the lnsurgenta and the loyalist claim big successes at Ma drid. - The point la this: Censored new CANT BE BE. LIEVED. wr TTH all their fault (and they have many) American newspa per are the most accurate In the world. But they will no longer be accurate If a censor ever get his fingers on them. A HEADLINE worth reading and hMfllnff! "Pair Slug Samaritan. Kindly Mo torist Victim of Hltch-Hlkers; Auto Stolen by Two Ingrate." npHERE are few motorists so hard. boiled as not to have felt thi kindly Impulse to pick up somebody walking along the road and take him In the direction of his destination But, aa newspapers somewhere or other tell us almost every day, obey 100 Neutral Spirit, Oittllled front Grain Jl. 85 PINTS Cede NO.S35C r" feail lng that Impulse Is dangerous ANOTBER Interesting headline: Muaaollnl. In Editorial. Predict War." (Mussolini, you know, Is a Journalist, a well aa a dictator.) When dictators PREDICT war, there 1 apt to BE war. faJUDISTS of the west, we read, are nlannln to hold a convention You wont be surprised to learn that It la to be held In Lo Angele. Sooner or later, everything that la silly find it way there. ) Flight 'o Time Hedford and Jack wo County history from the rues of the Mail Trtbon to and M rears ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 28. 1827. (It was Tuesday.) First home-grown cucumbers ap pear on the market. Raymond Mlksche and family move Into their new home on South Holly street. Toggery Bill ha a force of men at work on hla home on Rogue river- Hopes for cooler weather seen, but It Is still hot. Mercury goes to 101 mark. Northern lights are seen from Cra ter Lake lodge. Accident on Paclflo highway is blamed on "back-seat driver." Half of local Bartlett pear crop sold to canneries. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 28, 1917. (It was Friday.) America to build huge airplane fleet; Russian revolution gains, with soldiers surrendering to Germans In large numbers.. Prospect forest fires continue men acing and out of control. Elks lodge purchases picnic grounds on Rogue river. Judge E. E. Kelly leaves Saturday to take a physical examination for an army officer. Pair who robbed Phoenix postofflce sent to prison. More American troops reach Franca. -A- (Oontlnueo uom Page On.) this attempt to sell Puerto Rlcan lure to the world, one pertinent ques tion. Are the charms of Puerto Rico worth their salt? The people dont know It yet,. but the way the proposition is to be paid is by a tax on salt, since the island STUDE BAKER'S LOW PRICE GIVES YOU STARTLING SAVINGS IN GAS AND OILI FROM the tailoring of the up holstery to the paint finish twelve coats deep, every detail of the 1937 Stude baker gett a full meas ure of the painstaking care for which Btudebakeris world famed. ' It's the world's first car with doors that clicklighty, tightly and silent ly I It's the year's standout car in restful riding and simple efficient ventilation I And with its built-in Frsm oil cleaner and automatic overdrive, optional at slight cost, it delivers the gas and oil economy of l lowest priced carl SANDERSON 207 S. Riverside Feel at Home in "The Heart of Portland" Comfort Con rrnl en os Conrtaey gemot Attractive Rateat Hotel Cornelini KJ 8.W. pari Detached oath Hit bath BEJI O. Portland IN THE HEART produce It own aalt. the levy win be a domestic affair and not offensive to any American producers. Hence the protests are not expected to carry too much weight. In spite of the ruckus raised over the alleged breach of confidence by Representative Maury Maverick who, besides reporting what took place tt the famous Jefferson Island party, bootlegged photographs to the press. It seems he has a rival. The photographs of the gathering, which now have a real collector's val ue, are those said to have been taken by Representative Jennings Randolph of West Virginia. They display graph ically the extent of the Island hospi tality.. The prize snap, however, wa not taken by Mr. Randolph, but shows him in all hi glory quite dominating the scene, although the president, among others, Is one of the group. The latest ruling of the post office department has given Chairman Ken nedy of the maritime commission a few more knots to untie. The postmaster general say that the United Bute mail must go on the fastest ships. Since our liners can't compete for speed with boats like the Nonnandle and the Queen Mary, it means that foreign bottoms are tops as far as mall carrying goes. The rule, the post office depart ment says, isn't being enforced to the letter, but It's still quite a blow when Mr. Kennedy Is spending millions In government money to shoot some extra pep Into our own merchant ma rine. But business Is business and the malls must go through. TOP-NOTCH TASTE -WINNERS IN EVERY ROUND OlDiTYMI DISTILLERS. INC., N.Y.C Distilled a Illinois Trademark Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. - avI Let us install Outlets where you need them OLSON ELECTRIC Phone 115. 8 N. Bartlett But see this Studebalcer and drivt it Try out the automatic hill holda and the dual range steering that halves the turning effort of parking. Very possibly the value of your pres ent car will be all the down payment you need for a big new Studebaker. MOTOR CO. Phone 1385 Park Ave Hotel S23 S.w. park DROMON. M(T Portland OF THE CITY 7ilnt YT"" Tnis'whls- 10b pi. kev w I ' Code Xo. I month 183-C 11 old 9 0 J k. proof Ms! TAB SHI fiuif IUg fllljjj