AGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD,- OREGON, THURSDAY,- OCTOBER 26, 1939.
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WEST-HOLD DA T COMPANY. INC
crfloM Id Now Tok. Chicago. Detroit.
: tn Prenelsco. Los Angeles, Seattle,
t irtlftnd. SL Louis Atlanta. Vancouver.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
T h i is National Hearing
Week, we hear. Same here! First
lime we heard of it, too!
Righteous indignation shivers
upstate Democrats, due to the
administration importing "Har
vard carpet-baggers" to assume
the fattest jobs, and the juiciest
hunks of political pie at Bon
neville Dam. Such diabolical
conduct leaves the wheelhorses,
the warhorses, and the colts
(Young Democrats) of Oregon
Democracy with nothing but a
mythical handful of presidential
coat-tails.
According to London dis
patches, it will be next spring
before inhabitants of an Arctic
province of Russia, engaged In
raising reindeers, will know a
European war has started. From
all reports and signs, unless the
combatants start showing more
belligerency on the Western
Front, the rest of the world will
find It out about the same time.
HOW LIKE THK LAIHKSI
(Tltuavllle, N. Y., Herald)
"The Girls' Sawing club met with
lira. Paul Blabee last evening, but
tha attendance waa small. Never
theless all present aeemed to en
joy the prlaeflght over the radio."
Gloria Meadow-lark was sing
ing like a church choir soprano
yesterday, and perched on a
fence-post, besides.
Commentators predict Col.
Lindbergh, due to the storm of
criticism directed towards his
recent speech, may never make
unother broadcast. There is no
chance any of his leading critics
will follow suit.
Publication by the Dies com
mittee of the names of 500 gov
ernment employees whose
names adorn the membership
end mailing lists of a "Com
munist front organization Wiis
promptly pronounced "most
damnable. "outrageous, ana
g e v e r a 1 other embnrrassins
things. It removed all the cute
ness of being a Communist, and
rntised cold chills among termite
forces engaged in gnawing at
the foundation timbers of the
American form of government,
and ere and anon, politely sneer
ing at American traditions and
democracy. Their predicament
comes under the head of too
bad, and paying the penalty of
getting caught.
so soititV!
I Kenosha, Win.. News)
"A woman who wb allied to
have been the victim of a hit-and-run
auto was not a womnn
but a man. and ho had not been
tilt by an auto but had fallen
at the aide ot the rond In the
village after partakliiR too heavily
of aplrltuoua libations."
...
A seven-year old boy hunter,
roaming the Idaho terrain in
search of deer meat, In one shot
wounded his Grandpa, killed a
cow, and set fire to a can of
kerosene. For this triple play,
he was spanked, instead of
praised. The law did nothing
about it. He seems to be a trifle
young for the toting of fire
arms, and might better have
been in school.
BOEING SEEKS LOAN
OF WORKING CAPITAL
Seattle. Oct. 2(1. (UPi The
Boeing Aircraft company today
announced It was completing ar
rangements for a five-year loan
of $5,500,000 through a group
of banks, most of them located
in Seattle.
Company officials said the
loan would provide "working
capilnl for production on a bark
log of unfilled orders that hnj
more than doubled since Sep
tember 1."
Editorial Correspondence
Bennington, Vt., Oct. 23. Our first visit to Vermont, but not
our last, if opportunity again offers. Strange one hears so little
about the state. It strikes us as one of the most attractive in the
country. The fault no doubt lies with the Vermonters. Like their
most distinguished son, Calvin Coolidge, they don't talk much.
Gee, Gosh! what California, Incorp., would do with this neat and
tidy little commonwealth! These rounded hills and this peaceful
rolling country; these crystal clear rivers and dashing trout
streams; the early colonial farm houses with their red barns and
neat colonial villages, we don't blame "Red" Lewis selecting this
state as his final "Main Street." (Wonder if friend wife comes up
here much, if our experience since we left Chicago is at all
typical, the most unpopular man in the country today is Colonel
Lindbergh and the most unpopular woman, Dorothy Thompson
Lewis!)
But to return to Vermont. It reminds one of the Scotch High
lands without the heather. The hills are the same (Vermonters
call them mountains) fat and rounded, thickly wooded with bare
spots sticking through, like mange spots on a woolly dog. The
bare spots are mostly jutting rock, granite and marble. Like
Scotland there are bands of sheep grazing on the hillsides (though
not as many) and in the meadows cows reclining in the brilliant
sunshine, lazily chewing their cuds. In nearly all the villages of
any size there are two-story factories, mostly woolen, paper or
textile mills of pleasing design grown over with ivy, but too
many of them closed!
We came up here from Boston on the old Fitchburg line which
is now a part of the Boston and Maine. Never have we seen such
intense and sensational color in the fall foliage, as stretched along
the right-of-way all the way from Concord to Fitchburg, so
Intense at times, in metallic golds and browns and carmine that
with the sun shining full on the landscape, the chromatic blaze
actually hurt the eyes. No one else on the train seemed to notice
it, but to your correspondent, the show positively was breath
taking. The color has disappeared around here where they say the
season is two weeks ahead of Boston in the fall and two weeks
behind in the spring. Many of the streets in fact are bare, the
leaves that are left are largely dull golds and browns.
Bennington has been famous for its revolutionary war battle,
the manufacture of the "Kiddie Kar" and the largest apple orchard
the honor of halting the Burgoyne invasion on this famous
Bennington college, a very small and very new, but flourishing
college for girls. The baby of the family is a freshman there, and
is acting as our guide and a very good one. She didn't take us to
the Inn, but to the Huntington Studio, near the college gate, to
spend the night, which shows she is learning to be smart in money
matters, for room, bath and breakfast added up to exactly one
smacker.
And included in the breakfast were crisp golden waffles and
bacon, with maple syrup direct from the family "sugar orchard!"
Yumy yum!
Do you recall your early American history?
"There are the Redcoats and they are ours,
Or, this night Molly Stark sleeps a widow!"
That is engraved on the granite statue which ostensibly marks
the battle of Bennington but really marks where the Green Moun
tain boys, under General Stark, kept their munitions and supplies,
for the battle was fought and won in New York state, five or six
miles away. We looked over both places, and sympathized with
the skimpily clad colonials fighting in such a climate, until we
recalled the battle was in August. There was a 60-mile gale
blowing at the top of the hill, with the mercury close to freezing,
so we stayed only long enough to discover that three states claim
the honor of halting the Bourgoyne invasion on this famous
promontory, Vermont, New Hampshire and New York!
At the'Huntington" we had the honor of sleeping in the room
next to a famous hitch hiker, who looks rather like Robert Taylor
when he takes off his spectacles. His name is Will Parker and
he now has a job in the dramatic workshop at Bennington College.
Readers of "Life" will recall the five or six-page lay-out on him
when, with a photographer and portable radio, he' hitch hiked
from San Francisco to New York in 12 days.
Will has no complaint about the write-up it was great
advertising. There was one slight error. The story claimed he
won a little money at Reno and lost a little less, the truth is he
lost several dollars and never won a dime.
There arc two other lads living at the "Huntington" and work
ing at the college, on the side they take male parts in the college
theatricals, for the Bennington Dramatic club found making girls
us as men, was too much bother. Like every one else we saw they
are most enthusiastic about the institution,
Mrs. Huntington, a plump, pink-cheeked matron of perhaps 55
summers, was smiling hospitality personified, with a- delightful
New England accent, and a motherly interest in her "boys". We
ascribed her good nature to the fact she had no husband, but our
cynicism was rebuked, when, just before departing, Mr. Hunting
ton appeared and without any preliminaries insisted that we look
over his photographic studio. We tried to beg off but he practi
cally took us by the arm and lugged us in, the studio being a
room in the house made over into a sky-lighted enclosure, dark
room and all.
Please don't think Mr. H. is an ordinary photographer, he
will take your photo if you insist, but he prefers and makes a
specialty of what he terms photographic RETOUCHING, people
coming to him from all over the country, when they have a re
touching problem.
For example, there was a Mrs.
dropsy and refused to see anyone much less have her picture
taken. Her husband, knowing she wouldn't live very long and
wishing to have a photograph to recall her pleasantly to mind
finally flashed a "candid" snapshot of her while unawares she sat
looking mournfully in her looking glass, a rather horrifying
sight as the original ill Mr. H.'s possession shows.
But not the retouched product, far from it! The likeness is
unmistakable but instead of a middle-nged woman in the last
singes of dropsy, one sees a plump, smiling, and rather a pretty
woman, daintily rearranging a curl before the mirror, for which
the grateful husband (and widower) paid Mr. H. $370.
There was another masterpiece, a Civil war photo of a young
woman in rather severe coiffure and attire which was
"remodelled'' into a modem debutante portrait, with low neck,
pencilled eyebrows and chorus girl "hair do" this was in memory
of a "dear departed mother." This brought in several more hun
dred dollars, according to Mr. H. Finally a millionaire nearby
gave the retouching artist a collection of stray photos, snapshots
included, and he proceeded to group them on the front porch of
the mansion, in easy and natural poses, with the millionaire sitting
impressively in the center this was captioned "Three generations
nt 'Maple Manor!' "
We hated to leave the Bennington "Huntington", someday,
the Lord willing we are going back there for a week or two. Mr.
H. assured us. ns he shook hands in farewell, that when we came
back he would "retouch" our latest photograph, putting in a heavy
head of hair (if we wished), any kind of mustache our daughter
might desire, and either hornrimmed spectacles, to give added
dignity, eye glasses, or no glasses AT ALL! And if we ordered
two dozen the charge wouldn't be more than $4 per! R.W.R
Plows Fight Snow
La Grande, Ore., Oct. lib"
(AIM Two plows kept the Old
Oregon lrail highway open near;
Mom-ham after a heavy snow I
florin bruke us morning.
H. who suffered terribly from
The United States army in
the Mexican war numbered only
100.000 men.
Aeschylus. Greek dramatist.
is considered the originator of
the stage tragedy.
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letten pertaining to pergonal health and hygiene, not to disease
dlagiioila or treatment, will be anawered by Dr. Brady If a itamped seir
addreued envelop la enclosed. Letters should ba brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number or letters received only a few can be answered.
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address
Dr. William Brady, 268 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
DID THE DOCTOR DO RIGHT?
- Perhaps there is, after all,
something in the idea that
everyone has more or less com
plex personal
ity, a dual per
sonal i t y, tho
not necessarily
an alternating
one such as
the J e k y 1 1-
Hyde fantasy.
At any rate
there is a
rhythmic peri
odicity in all
life processes
and particular
ly In bodily
functions. The endocrinologists
and the psychologists maintain
that a normal individual is het
erosexual only because his or
her homosexual tendencies were
arrested, displaced or overlaid
by heterosexual (normal) inclin
ations, tendencies and behavior
before they developed to a no
ticeable degree. That is the psy
chological view; the endocrino
logical or physiological view is
that there is a certain amount
of masculine ductless gland
structure and hormone or in
ternal secretion, and a certain
amount of feminine in every in
dividual, and the predominance
of one over the other in the
growth and development of the
individual determines person
ality, behavior and bodily form
ation and mental character.
Here again arises the question
of heredity versus environment.
Your ductless glands are your
inheritance. Still, environment,
instruction and example, early
associations, the type of persons
the child plays with in pre
school days and associates with
in the early teens, unquestion
ably have as great influence
upon the personality and char
acter of the finished Job. The
job is finished, as a rule, by the
time the child is 25 years of age.
"I went to our doctor, writes
the mother of a family, "at the
first sign of a discharge which
began several years after the
menopause. This was a year ago.
The doctor laughed at me and
said not to worry, that I had
worked too hard but it would
be all right in a short time. He
told my husband to take me to
a movie occasionally. . ."
It Is conjectural whether tho
doctor examined the patient.
The letter sounds as though he
did not. If so, then as the his
tory unfolds it will become ap
parant whether he did his hon
est best.
"I went back, and yet he said
the same thing and assured me
it would stop. After two or three
months it did, and I began to
feel a little better, though not
as well as I should, and the
doctor said this, was because I
was getting older.
"Some months passed, and
still I did not feel at all well.
The
Capital
Parade
By Joseph Alsop
and
Robert Kintner
Released by The North
American Newspaper
Alliance, Ino
Washington, Oct. 26. A com
mon form of wartime wishful
think. nc was exoressed by Al
fred Duff Cooper, former first
lord of the British admiralty,
when he landed in this country
the other day. The fighting ban
tam husband of the beautiful
Lady Manners predicted that
German conservatives, disgusted
with nazism. would depose Hit
ler and make peace.
You hear this one often in
Washington, the lead role in he
coup d'etat always being assign
ed to the German officer caste,
the only people who could con
ceivably do the Job. American
experts' refutation of the story
is unusually revealing, as a com
mentary both on wartime think
ing and on the nature of the
nazi state.
According to thr shrewdest of our
officials, the first thing to remember
is the tremendous change in tli
German military leadership since
Hitler too power. Many of the A
generals and lesser officers were cer
tainly deeply affronted at the char
acter or their new m.al masters, and
chilled to the marrow by such in
cidents as the gross murder of their
crony. General von Schleicher, and
Fran von Schleicher. But he old
generals are gone, in a welter of in
trigue. The crucial incident of the unpas.
Ant story w as the decision of tlx
, forniT .ir nuniftrr. Pit. ::il von
t Blomivrs, to ignore aimj c.wte tulea
Brady, M D,
Then I read in your column
about changing doctors. So I
did, and to my grief found that
I had fibroid tumor which had
become cancerous. I had an op
eration immediately, but it was
too late, as the cancer had
spread so far that nothing can
be done."
The correspondent does not
criticize the doctor. Perhaps the
doctor knew from the first what
the condition was. If he did
know, perhaps he did right. It
would be the best course in any
case to leave it to the judgment
of the family doctor and any
responsible member of the fam
ily whether to tell the victim
of cancer the truth or to deal
with the problem as the fam
ily doctor did in this instance.
At least that is my opinion.
QUESTIONS AMI ANSWERS
Three Guesse
Receiving treatment from local
physician for condition diagnosed as
"persltls" (phonetic spelling). Please
advise whether this can be cured and
whether It would disable sufferer
from working If not checked. (L.C..)
Answer If you mean bursitis, yes.
that might disable for a time. De
pends on tho bursa affected. There
are many such sacs or pads In the
bodys. Inflammation of a bursa about
the shoulder Joint may disable a
worker for a long time If It Is not
diagnosed and treated properly. Often
It Is necessary to anesthetize patient
and manipulate the shoulder In order
to prevent permanent stiffness from
adhesions, after the Inflammation or
bursitis has passed. Dally diathermy
treatment gives great relief In the
first week or two, the most painful
stage of bursitis.
lodln versus Corpulency
My sister writes that -several of
her friends have been using your
lodln ration and that they all say
It keeps you from getting too stout.
I would like to try it, but I notice
you aald one, two or three dropa of
ordinary brown tincture of lodln In
a drink of water every day. I do wish
you would make up your mind about
It and let us know exactly bow.
(Mrs. Ft. H.)
Answer I've been trying to do so
for 20 years. I'll let you know as
soon as I do. Meanwhile I take what
ever comes out 'of the via! or off
the dropper one, two or three drops
In a good drink of water, two or
three days each week. Making up
your mind to do something and do
ing It are two different things. If
the "poison" label on the tincture
of lodln bottle frightens you, at least
use Iodized salt Instead of ordinary
salt in your home for cooking and
table.
Saccharin
Kindly Inform me if the saccharin
tablets used as substitute for sugar
In tea or coffee are injurious to
health. (T. J. F.)
Answer Up to five grains of sac
charin dally may be used by any
body without risk to health.
(Protected by John F. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Or.
William Brady. M. D.. 263 El
Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
and marry a secretary. The caate
had been giving trouble to the nazis.
Von Blomberg persuaded Hitler
not only to approve the marriage,
but also to signify his approval by
attending the wedding ceremony.
Thereupon. General von Fritsch.
then commander-in-chief of the
army, demanded an interview with
the ruehrch, bitterly protested what
von Blomberg had done, and ended
by making the statement that this
Insult to army caste snobblsm would
demoralize his officers. Von Blom
berg. feeling the pressure too great,
went on a honeymoon to Italy and
stayed there.
Meanwhile, however, von Fritsch
and the other top-ranking generals
were Involved In a violent palace
struggle with Helnrich Htmmler.
Leader of the 8. 8. corps and chieftain
of the Gestapo, who wished to put
political agents to spy on the of
ficers and had established four S. 8.
regiments of his own. Von Blomberg s
disgrace created an uncertain situa
tion, of which Hlmmler took prompt
advantage. Following the usual nazi
pattern, he trumped up elaborate
morals charges against von Fritsch.
Von Fritsch demanded trial, was ac
quitted, but found himself dismissed
from command.
More and mora people are
serving this grand mellow
whiskey to their guests
11,1 M i;.
OM QG? P(f0)m)LT BRANDOS!!
The last heard of von Fritsch waa
when he was killed In Poland. The
authorities disagree as to whether
his death came by murder by 8. 8.
men, suicide, or slmpls over-dating.
He had been without power since
January, 1938. when he was replaced
a commander-in-chief by General
von Brauchltsch. ,
Von Brauchltsch, with the chief
of staff. General Keltel, the cold,
steel-minded strategist. General Hal
dren, and the half-Jewish air tech
nician. General Milch, are now the
Important army figures. All of them
have been vith Hitler from before
the Austrian anschuluss. All except
Milch, who la Goe ring's man, are
Hitler's personal appointees. They
owe much to him. are devoted to
him and would support htm In any
but the most extraordinary circum
stances. Furthermore, these generals at the
top are not unrepresentative of the
army caste as a whole. The caste
Itself has been diluted, under the
nazis, by a tremendous recruitment
of low-rank officers of non-army
background. At the same time, ev
erything possible has been done to
conciliate the obstinate caste feeling.
Army pay, considering the German
standard of living, 's remarkably
high. The army gets first choice
of whatever It wants, for Germany
has been a military state since 1933.
Hitler shows immense personal In
terests In the army's needs, gratlfy
lngly leaving strategic problems to
the Judgment of the generals, but
constantly conferring with them on
technical matters concerning equip
ment and the like.
The army has direct access to Hit
ler, not only through members of the
high command, but also In such
forms as reports of the German mil
itary attaches abroad, which are rout
ed straight to the retch's chancellery
without dlplomatto censorship.
For all these reasons, men who
know them will tell you that von
Brauchltsch and Heldern, list, von
Wltzlehben, Blaskowltz and the
others who might possibly lead a
conp d'etat have now become Hit
ler's strongest supporters. After all,
If a purely military state cannot
command Its army's enthusiasm. It
must be doing a pretty poor Job.
4
:r In The
n:
Day's
By Frank Jenkins
'TUESDAY'S big news was the
- seizure of. an American mer
chant ship (owned by the U. S.
government) by a German sea
raider.
TODAY'S BIG JOB is keep
ing our shirts on in the face of
that news.
DEMEMBER, in reading of
what has happened, that a
WAR IS ON. Supplies are es
sential for the conduct of war.
Each side tries to keep essential
supplies from reaching the other
side.
With that going on, neutral
traders are in for grief. We are
a neutral trader.
(We want to stay out of the
war. If we permit ourselves to
become unduly excited over in
cidents arising out of the effort
to prevent supplies from reach
ing the other side, we can easily
GET INTO THE WAR. Hence
the necessity for straight think
ing). 1
AN interesting point is that
the neutrality law, now be
ing debated in congress, would
have forbidden the City of Flint
(the seized American ship) from
entering the war zone.
Another interesting point Is
that the City of Flint was seized
not by the familiar submarine
but by a German warship, said
to have been the cruiser Emden.
If that is true, the British block
ade around the North Sea isn't
so tight that German ships can't
slip through it from time to
time.
A THIRD interesting point Is
the fact that the Germans
took the seized vessel to a neu
tral port (if you can call Russia
neutral) instead of taking her
into one of their own ports, to
be disposed of by a prize court.
That is slightly off color from
the standpoint of international
law (which, of course, is only
a sort of gentlemen's agreement,
One of these days
be served to you
known to ill ruiNBi as "oof")
Old Oscar Pippek Is ail whiskey-a imooth-ind-mellow
combination of nvrnl fine straight tthiskies. Try itl
fmkjert PistiUtrin, ImtrforaltJ, Lminillt anj Baltimore.
based upon a long series of prec
edents and open to the present
grave weakness that war is no :
longer a gentlemanly business.
The Germans can s n e a k
through the North Sea blockade ;
frnm timp tn time with surface i
vessels, but they are obviously
afraid to try to take a vessel
seized as a prize through the
blockade.
THE really BIG POINT is that
Americans should refrain
carefully from becoming excited
or angry over the incident,
which is merely a part of the
risk that must be assumed by
those who trade with nations
at war.
Doughboys to Keep
Olive Drab Uniform
Washington, Oct. 26. (AP
The doughboys will continue to
march in olive drab. Those
pretty blue uniforms some of
them have been wearing on trial
could be seen too easily by an
enemy.
The test of the blues has not
been entirely without result,
however.
Secretary of War Woodring
announced today while retaining
the olive drab color the army
will adopt the design of the test
ed uniforms to provide greater
comfort for tho men. Long
trousers will replace breeches,
and shoulders of shirts and coats
will be cut to fit more loosely.
Steele Reverses
Comeback Decision
Tacoma, Wash., Oct. 26. (AP)
Reversing an earlier decision,
Freddie Steele, former world's
middleweight c h a m pion, an
nounced today he will not at
tempt a comeback.
"I've reconsidered my plan to
return to the ring and have de
cided it's not in my best inter
ests to do so," Steele said after
a lengthy conference with Eddie
Miller of Tacoma, who holds a
five-year contract to manage the
former champion. The contract
does not expire until 1943..
Notice
Have searched the white house on
Valley View Drive. Two cellars and
attic and all of the house. Pound
no alcoholic beverages.
Chief of Police McCredle.
Closing time for Too' Late to Clas
sify Ads Is 1:30 p. m.
'TRIANGLE' Bar-None Egg Mash Msk.
Phone 833
SPECIAL
2-lb. can Johnson's Wax,
Wax Applier and
weighted Polishing Brush
A $4.00 VALUE
FOR
Hansen Hardware
Sixth and Bartlett
it will
...
But why wait?
TRY IT TODAY!
i.oo si 1 1.95 X yyp
Flight 0' Time
Medlord and Jackson County
History from the flies of the
Mall Tribune 10 and to jtmn
aeo.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
October 26, 1929.
(It was Friday.)
Vallev Boscs prove best sellen
on New York markets.
-!.,.. i inn cars of fruit have
been shipped so far this season.
County Granges and Chamber
of Commerce to cooperate.
Trapper fined in justice court
for being cruel to coyote.
Local airport to be ready for
air traffic and business Novem
ber 1.
Albert B. Fall, former secre
tary of the interior, found guilty
of accepting oil land bribe.
Move made to establish sta
bility on Wall street, and ballt
threatened stock collapse. Local
buyers report "confidence."
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
October 26, 1919.
(It was Monday.)
Bolsheviki revolt plot in
America unearthed, and spon
sored by alien steel workers.
Lloyd-George cabinet in Eng
land near fall.
Coldest day of fall arrives,
with mercury at 36 degrees.
Ohio troops called for strike
duty; general strike in nation
threatened.
Carnival company on Front
street folds its tents and departs.
Medford police seize 23 gal
lons of moonshine.
Will Wrap Turks 4
With Cellophane
SALEM, Oct. 26. (AP)
They're even wrapping turkeys
in cellophane now.
Capitol Dairies of Salem Is
preparing a carload of the cellophane-wrapped
birds for an east
ern food concern, the first time
it's been done. The turkeys
are all ready for the oven ex
cept for the stuffing.
Use Mall Tribune want ada.
TRIANGLE Bar-None Egg Mash Is made tip of:
Ground Corn, Mlllrun, Ground Oat Groats, Meat
Meal, Fish Meal, Dried Milk. Poultry Alfalfa Greens,
Minerals, Cane Molasses, Salt and Cod Liver Oil.
When you feed BAR-NONE Egg Mash you can
lower your feeding cost and yet experience satisfac
tory egg production.
Bar-None Egg Mash, 80 lb. sk f 1.83
Hen Scratch 4 grain mix cwt J 1.85
F. E. SAMSON CO.
229 N. Riverside
$169
Phone 35
'" Slrolohl WhliMx 0 Po
.
J