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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1937)
"V WIRE SERVICE The Herald and News subscribe to full leased wire service of the Associated Press and the United Press, the world's greatest newsgetherinp organbuttione, Pop 17 hours daily world news comes into The floral& News office on teletype machines. Editorials On the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS OUNCE and England say to 5 Mussolini: "Take your soldiers out of , Spain, wheiv they havo no bust- knen to be, or wa'll open the bor- &der between France and Spain and , T let in the flimflamsor anybody ,I use that wants to como in mai ' fight on the Olio of the Spaithh loyallats." 4, , TOE point is that they probably , mean business. -- Franee, with Fascist Germany at her front door, doesn't want a puppet fascist state controlled by Mussolini at her bark door. Ens land -doesn't want both aides of Gibraltar controlled by Italy. so they are beginning to talk turkey. I r MUSSOLINI really believes they Inenn hinginella. he will probably withdraw his Italians from Spain. But if he thinks they are bluffing, he wilt run a still taller bluff. To date, Mussolini 1 has been the most successful bluff er in Europe. I , Arrlifli great nittiptut.pt the earth ' a that already are sifting reati ' onahly pretty DON'T WANT TO FIGHT. Shrewd Mittman, knows this, so he stepped in and stole Ethiopia. In Spain, he is moving cautiously to see just how far France and Britain will let him get Shrewd Japan knows also that the great nations don't want to tight, so she is stepping in and stealing China. . T pacifist's. who are well- In- tentioned but exceedingly silly. tell us the way to prevent war is , to disarm so that we can't fight That is fine in theory, but in pine' tics some bard-boiled realist is al ways stepping in and taking what 1 he wants while the surrounding 1 Idealists are too weak to object. ( That In what Italy and Japan are doing right now, and what IAGermany would LIKE to do. ' ROOSEVELT ROOTER FOLLOWS LOSS OF HAT WITH LOSS OF CAR ) , PORTLAND, Oct. I finTill ; ' madge Staley laughed when he inadvertently threw a new 010 bat into President Roosevelt's au tomobile here Tuesday, and the president kept It. He continued to laugh when ) some 50 "friends" called him on the telephone to console him after his misfortune received publicity. 1 But when his unintended gift ,led indirectly to the theft of his new car his sense of humor began to feel the strain. Staley overturned a pot of ten ( Wednesday, burning his leg so se Verely he could walk with diffi mculty. Thursday he drove his new ' car to the pootoffice to see if ' pow) member of the president's party had returned his hat, ' There was no hat In the mall, ) and when he left the poatoffice he I found someone had stolen his car. i.. GOLD HILL DEER HUNTER SHOOTS WHITE-FACE CALI i MEDFORD, Oct. 11 (AP) Blaine Bytes of the Foots creek district near Gold Mil is held in 1 the county jail on a cattle lar ceny charge by reason of shoot- ing a white-faced calf in mistake for a deer, while hunting in the hullo last sklunday. 'Brined in a aigned atatement sheriff and state police, ad ' 4,-' mite shooting the bull calf but ,s', 1 declares when he pulled the trig ger be thought it wan a deer. .-94 The statement further says .:)1.Althat Bylea skinned and used part lot the kill and threw the rest i4J or it in Rogue river near Gold 1 . Mill. ,IAEOW.01Mb..,A.,.,..A.,WWbW040.1OPAft.RIA00007401100100MWMI Klamath justices of the. Peace Friday fired hot retorts at the state game department, which disclosed Thursday it was going after some $18.000 allegedly due from justices over the state on game fines. Ears Bradfield. Chi loquin, pres ident of the Slate Justices of the Peace Association. declared that the game commission should make public apology for intintat lug the justices are dishonest. lie declared that in his district, where about $950 was declared uncollected, complete audits are made yearly and full reports filed with the county treasurer. Pines Often Remitted Loyd BOA who was acting Pride), in phtee of Justice W. B. Barnes of Linkvillo district, acid that apparently the game depart ment officials are basing their judgment on the baeis of state police reporte of fines "which do not truly reflect the flues col lected by justices."' , MLitt) said that it is often adviaahle to remit portions of fines. but that the state police do not, in their disposition re ports, make an attempt to keep II MOTHER, TWO CHILDREN KILLED IN APPARENT DOUBLE MURDER, SUICIDE ANN ARBOR, Mich., Oct. 1 (1P) A mother and two of her children died of bullet wounds in separate shootings which Sheriff Jacob An dres described today as .double murder and suicide." The bodies of Mrs. James O. McHenry. 65. wife of a Detroit at torney, and of her 7-year-old son James. Jr.. both shot through the head, were found in an abandontel automobile near a cemetery a mile from Ann Arbor this morning. A daughter. 12-year-o1d Ruth McHenry, was found fatally wounded in the faintly home at Detroit last night, a .22 caliber rifle beside her. A fourth member of the family, 14-year-old Donald, was grazed by a bullet at the Detroit residence as he returned from school yester day. Ile ran to a neighbor's for help and came back, to find Ruth with a bullet in her head. Site died at a hospital two hours af terward. McHenry, who maintains a sum mer home at Ypsilanti, came to Ann Arbor at noon today. Sheriff Andres of Vashington county said he identified the bodies. The sheriff said he believed Ruth shot and killed her mother and brother some time yesterday . then returned to Detroit to take .lier own life. The abandoned .int tom obi I o was parked since Doofl yesterday in the spot where'dep titles found it. I , ASSOCIATED PRESS Price Five Cents P,ARmizo aFsk,siu va it 44 teteti 644 a Admiral Yarnell Condems Hankow Here's Dust (or Mud) in Your Eye 1Vhen a dust storm is in tho process of changing Into a rain storm. what gets In your eye? Like many another Klamath Ito. Marye Mitchell (left) and Clarice Holmes wanted to know tho answer to that one Friday morning. Anyhow, they're fol lowing the accepted method., of getting it Out of some darned good-looking eyes. Klamath Justices of Peace-, - NEW STREAM YEAR Reply HoflVfo ChTrg'es nnnun li vvt ITH SION Delinquency inquency in Fine Turnover urto 1 t track of such remission'. Cites Case For instance. Del..ap said. there are pending in Linkville court the cases of two men fined $100 each. Both have families to support. They. have started payment on the installment plan. Bek.,ap said that probably $75 of each fine would be suspended because of the family circum stances involved, yet the state police records will show each fine at $100. De Lap declared that apparent ly the game commission is try ing to "horn in" and tell jus tices of the peace how to run their offices. flo said it is part of the general effort, on the part of those in points ,of cen tral power. to reach out into the open spaces for more power. Brndlield's statement follows, In full: "The game commission has tried to accuse each and every Justice of the peace in the state of being either downright dis honest or criminally negligent." he said. "It is a sorry state of affairs in public government when a governmental body such as the game commission is resorts to the childish trick of insinuating that another public officer is dishonest, without first investigating the records and ascertaining whether or not Buell is a fact. Upon be half of all of the Justices of the peace. 1 resent such accusations. and hereby demand a public (Continued on Page Two) PWA FIELD ORGANIZATIONS TO BE SHIFTED FROM STATE TO REGIONAL BASIS WASHINGTON, Oct. 1 (1P)-- Secretary Ickes announced today the field organizations ot the pub lic works administration would be synod Novombor 1, from a Mate to a regional basis "to achieve ocono.mies." , Ickee, ?WA administrator, did not announce details of the new regional letup but said it would be patterned after the "natural geographical subdivisions of the nation frequently proposed by the national resources committee and embraced in pending conserva tion legislation." The PWA now has under way a 11.088,592.702 construction pro. grain , embracing 2980 prefect", either tinder construction, under contract or noted. The transfer- of work from the prgent state offices to regional he.idquarters I on November 1, Ickes said, "will permit marked 0eavings in overhead, rent. Rug piles, equipment and personnel." He geld no new perions would be employed and regional staffs would be selected from present employes. eatwoue"Wel010400WOINOWAPPAPOWWW0 Al WEATHER enmg eratt Cloudy; more rain. , Maximum at 2:80 ...... ' '1 Minimum 46 PRECIPITATION 1 12 hours to 0 a. m.... ..... Tra. - MOROI to date It' t Last to date .00 I It...VA' IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND UNITED PRESS Normal precipitation .011 110 O'W , Alli IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1937 Snow Covers Park; 1936- 1937 Precipitation , Under Normal. October I ushered in a new stream year for the Klamath dis trict. and a light. misty rain which fell steadily during the day started to pile up precipitation for the season. The showers followed Friday's wind and dust, and so full of dust was the air that the first rain drops were virtually mud dobs. The storm brought five or six Inches of snow at Crater lake, ac cording to telephone reports, and It was still snowing bard early Friday abiernoon. Occasional Showers Forecast Forecast for the next 24 hours is for more cloudy weather and occasional showers, with slightly lower temperatures. Fresh to (Continued on Page Two) BRITAIN ROUNDS UP ARAB LEADERS IN DRIVE TO CRUSH HOLY LAND RIOTING JERUSALEM, Oct. 1 (AP) Britain struck with an iron fist today to crush a new wave ot terrorism in the Holy Land. In a sweeping offensive mandate au thorities outlawed the Arab higher committee and started rounding up Its influential mem bers. , With telephone communication f r om the city suspended and roads heavily guarOed, police carried out their large acale op erations before dawn. Silently they surrounded the houses of Arab leaders and searched t hem one alter the other. Dr. Hussien Khalidi, may or of Jerusalem, and Fund Saba. secretary of the higher commit tee, were reported to have been seised and taken aboard the cruiser Sussex at Haifa. The grand mufti ot Jerusalem, head flt the higher committee, was deprived ot his office and rumor was he had been arrest ed. (There was a report In Cairo, Egypt, that the mufti had fled to the mosque of ()mar and defied authorities to enter, and arrest him). The manager of an Arabian bank was taken into Owl tody. Leaders caught in the police dr a gnat may be deported to Perim Island in the Red sea. Terroriam In this trouble-riven land, sacred alike to Jews, Chris liana and Arabs, reached one of its most ferocious climaxes last Sunday when the British com missioner of Galilee and his bodyguard were assassinated last Sunday at Nazareth. NAVY MAN SAYS JAPS FAILED TO ISSUE WARNING Several Parties of Amer icans Not Given Time to Leave, Claim. SHANGHAI. Oct. 1 (A')Sharp condemnation of Japanese bomb ing of ilankow and the Hankow Canton railway on September 25 came today from Rear Admintl Harry Yarnell, commander of the United States Asiatic fleet. A Japanese spokesman bad sal:I the Japanese navy was informed by United States Ambassador Nl son T. Johnson that all Amer icans and other foreigners had been egacuated from Hankow and surrounding territory by noon of September 26. Mat Denial This Admiral Yarnell flatly de nied, saying Ambassador Johnson issued no such information, but instead told the Japanese foreign ers would be evacuated from Han kow and the surrounding vicinity after September 26. "The statement by a Japanese naval spokesman ..that ,,,Japaneom authorities had been informed by Ambassador Johnson that evacu ation of Americans and other for eigners from Hankow and there shouts would be completed by noon. September 26, was entirely In error, as no such information had been given out by the am bassador," Admiral Yarnell stated. Shanghai Lines Held "There were negotiations with Japanese authorities to withhold the bombing of the Hankow-Canton railways until September 26 to permit three small parties of Americans to reach Canton safely. Notice was given them. however, that there would be additional parties later. "There are in the Yangtze val ley several thousand foreigners one thousand of whom are Amer (Continued On Page Two) LONDON FEARS GERMANY, ITALY COMBINING TO BACK ONSLAUGHT ON MADRID LONDON, Oct. 1 (AP)Dip lomatic quarters here are con cerned by reports that Berlin and Rome are planning to foster a "drastic onslaught" in Spain to capture Madrid and endeavor to assure insurgent General Fran cisco Franco a victory before winter. Agreement on this action in an apparent effort to evade the is sue of foreign volunteers in Spain. these quarters said, is believed to have been reached by Premier Mussolini and Reichs fuehrer Hitler in their talks at Berlin. Squadrons of German bomb ers, according to reports to dip lomatic quarters, would be given the task of razing Madrid in an attempt to crush resistance on the central Madrid front. A total of 350 Planes is men tioned, but there is no evidence to show whether these already are in Franco's territory or whether fresh planes would be shippedpresumably via Rome, the Balearic Islands and Seville. Italian troops would partici pate, according to the reports here, in an offensive on the Teruel and Aragon fronts where Valencia is considered weakest. , Potatoes 'SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 1 (AP IISDA),Potatoes: 1 California car areited 4 Oregon; 7 ears un broket.., 6 broken cars on track; by boat I California cars arrived: ynaret and conditions unchanged from yesterday. 1 I.L'S ANGELES, OoL 1 (AP USDA IPotatoes: 23 California cars arrived, 3 Idaho, 5 Oregon; 62 unbroken 35 broken on track; by truck 7, 'g diverted; supplies moderate, demand light, market dull; Idaho Russets, No. 1, 81.26- 1.35, Stockton Wisconsin Prides, fair quality, 21.15-1.26, ordinary quality 75-80 cents, bakers, fair quality, 61.20-1.25. The Da Iles-California Route Contributes 60 Per Cent of 1937 Crafer Lake Visitors The Da Iles-California highway contributed 40,695 more visitors to Crater Lake park in the 1937 season. which ended Thursday, than did the Pacific highway. This yas disclosed in official figures for the season announced by Superintendent E. P. Leavitt. A total of 202,403 visitors regis tered at park entrances in the year, setting an all-time record. Figures on travel into the park by various entrances from the basis for the computation which shows that about 60 per cent of the park visitors went in from The Da lies-California highway (route 97). 121,549 to 80,8E4 In the 1937 season, a total of 121.549 visitors went in by The Da lies-California high way en trances, as against 80,854 from the Pacific highway. The figure for No. 97 is based on all the travel through the south (Fort Klamath) and east entrances, and 75 per cent of that through the north entrances. Park rangers have estimated that north entrance travel comes BUCK TALK LOOMS AS 'FIIIESIDE COT , ... , Justice to Speak From Friend's Living-room; Content Guarded. WASHINGTON. Oct. 1 VT When Associate Justice Hugo L. Black delivers his history-making radio speech to the nation to night he will speak from the liv ing room of the modest home of a friend in Washington's Chevy Chase section. This was annonnced today us Black and his friends completed plans for the unprecedented ad dress. strategically similar to ra dio talks sometimes made by President Roosevelt. Black's talk will deal with the dispute over his appointment to the supreme court. The justice will speak Into microphones set up in the living room of the home of Mr. and Mrs. (Continued on Page 'Ivo) STATE INSTITUTIONS GAIN SLIGHTLY IN POPULATION; PENAL INMATES FEWER SALEM, Oct. 1 (AP) The population of eight state institu tions was 6406 In September, 12 more than at the same time last year, the state budget depart ment showed today. The state hospital increased 89 to 2536 patients, showing the largest gain of any Institution. The state training school's popu lation was 78, a decline of 87 from a year ago. This was the largest drop. The state tuberculosis hospi tars population jumped 66 to 325, while the blind trades school, only other institution to show an increase, had a popula tion of 42, one more than a year ago. The eastern Oregon tubercu losis hospital dropped from 149 to 147, while the Fairview home for feeble-minded declined from 949 to 947. The penitentiary foil from 990 to 975, and the school for girls from 54 to 50. The eastern Oregon state hospi tal dropped from 1330 to 1306. Baseball NATIONAL LEAGUE! - - R. H. E. , Cincinnuti 6 - 2 Pitt sin rich 14 2 Hollingsworth and I ombardt; Tobin and Todd. vi ' AMERICAN- LEAGUE R. H. E. Boston ...... 4 3 2 New York 2 5 Newsom and Desautels; Gomez and Dickey, Glen. (Called. end Ith, darkness. Number 8057 closer to being 90 per cent off The Da Iles-California highway, according to the Klamath cham ber of commerce. Increase Over 1936 Last year, 56 per cent of Crater lake travel went in by The Dallas California, It was estimated. The figures for 1937 show that travel from the east side is gaining. Here are park travel figures, broken up for entrances: , South 22,258 automobiles, 75,476 persons. West-22,860 automobiles, 71,- 753 persons. North 12,568 cars, 41.008 persons. East-3025 cars, 9166 persons. Total travel into the park showed an increase of 12.3 per cent over last year when 180,382 persons visited. The 1937 travel season at the Lava Bends national monument in California broke all attendance records, Superintendent Leavitt reported. Some 25.157 people vis ited this summer, an increase of 102 per cent over last year, when 12,409 visitors registered. BO 'NEE-TROOPER GIVES ROOSEVELT Presidential Party Visits Primitive Regions of Olympic Peninsula. FORKS, Wash., Oct. 1 (AP) Stopping five minutes at the Ca lawa lumber camp, two miles east of Forks, President Roose velt got a thrill out of watching a logger cut the top from a 175- foot Douglas fir tree today. After the tree-top had crashed to the ground with a roar, the chief executive, on a tour around the Olympic peninsula, asked to have the man, Fred Wilson, 24, brought to his car. He wanted to shake hands with the man who had neatly accomplished the dangerous lob. "Out of Breath" "Did you get out of breath way up there?" asked the presi dent, while grasping the hand of the young logger. "It looks bad when the tree sways." Mr. Roosevelt and Wilson then had their pictures taken to gether while "Sistie", and "nuz zle" Boettiger, the president's grandchildren, dashed up from another car to examine the log ger's saw. They, too, were in troduced and shook the hand of Wilson. Thousand Cheer The president was cheered by 801110 1000 citizen, of the penin sula as he passed through Forks at 11 a. m. Re waved to the throng but did not stop. Lake Quinault, 70 mites south (Continued on Page Two) LOCAL Entrance figures show 0 per cent of Crater Lake travel in season just ended came from The Da lies-California highway. Lava Beds monument shows 102 per cent gain in visitation. Page 1. Wood River and Linkville jus tices of the peace crack back at state game department in game fine argument. Page 1. New stream year begins Coto. ber 1, with steady rain falling throughout the day. Six inches of snow reported at Crater lake. Pagel Three defendants found aunty In ease of state versus Embassy club, Barney Brown and James Pulver, on gambling charges. Page 4. ',Ward boundaries to conform ',ith lir precincts set by city ceon011 ' n adjourned session 1.'Stge.0:4 ight. Budget adopted. 1,,,N,, taak le ordinance repealed, undA.,4,..k.2,,, scussed. Page 2. ceoltell ' 1 1.84,4 :4 1 teNtlia Und t r ,r,o4c) GENERAL An ploiling war of invasion 0 m'bin SENIOR LABOR 1111101IS INVADE CIO TERRITORY William Green Expresses Confidence in Win ning Battles. DENVER, Oct. 1 (AP)WU Mani Green. president of the American Federation of Labor. said today the federation intend. - ed to invade CIO territory in ite battle against John L. Lewis. "We'll carry the war into the enemy's country where were go ing to win decisive battles." Green shouted in a speech before the AFL. building trades depart ment convention. Observers recalled that the AFL had chartered the Pro gressive Miners of America and interpreted Green's remarks sa meaning that the federation might intend to start a cam. polio' against Lewis United Mine Workers. Garment Workers' War 'The United Garment Workers. - an AFL union. also has been preparing quietly for a beta with the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, another CIG affiliate. Green repeatedly has said that the -AFL would not invade CIO territory until the CIO unions were expelled from the AFL. Ni. speech today was regarded as a broad hint that expulsion at the forthcoming federation convention was in the wind. Without mentioning Lewis by name. Green assailed the CIO leaders as an "absolute dictator' of the rival labor movement. "governed by no law and no convention, but ruling by edict and instruction." - "Democratic Basis" Much as the AFL loved the ' late Sam Gompers, its leaders never thought of giving him the Powers that Lewis has, Green "We want to maintain our labor movement on a sound. democratic basis," 'Green assert- "It ill not e one-man organisa tion. - It is controlled from the bottom up, not from the top Green called on the building , trades unions for continued sup- port in the battle against the , "We ,' will go out ' and fight them during the coming year 2, just as we have during the past year." Green shouted. ,. " "No foe from within or with- out is going to destroythc great - labor movement represented by : the AFL." - - ' Green predicted better days for ', building tradesmen. - " The outlook is better and brighter," he said. "Construe- tion is going forward with ao, celerated liPerd" PORTLAND, Oct. 1 (AP) The CM gained the support of the Marine Firemen of an Fran-' deco today ' in its efforts to (Continued on Page ,Two) TODAY'S NEWS DIGEST against CM. Page 1. - Rear Admiral Harry Yarnell sharply condemns Japan for bom bardment of Hankow and Hankow railway, claiming no notice given and several parties of Americans stranded. Page 1, , ' President gets thrill in watch. ins tree-topper during brief, halt in swing around primitive Olympia peninsula country. Page Justice Black's nationwide radio speech takes form of "firesile chat." Content of address kept close secret. Page I. - Metals belp steady warding s stock market. Page 11. - IN THIS ISSUE City Briefs Page Comics and Story Page 12 Courthouse Records Page 3 Editorials Page 4 Family Doctor Page 4 High School News ..... Page 4 Market, Financial News, Pass 3 Railroad News Pas. 0 Recreation Notes Page Sports Page 10 II la watch. g brief, halt ' ," tie Olympic , Page 1. onwide radio of "fireal,le iddress kept ... , ItP)--Wil , :, , r' ; of ths of Labor. ,', ';.,," on intend.. ; ,, '. , tory in ite , , ' . Lewis. . ' r into the ' , - , were go- -, battles." - . '. ech before :, ... -,..- Ms depart- ,- ; - ' , , , ' that the .. the Pro, ', series and marks ma - : tederation . I a cam. .,- ' nited Mine . - , , , - :: , .. , t Workers. -1 . has been ' - a battle, .. ' 4 Clothing', :: , 1.affiliate.,. ; :.... a said that nvade ,CIO :. 'IO unions 1- - , the - AFL. ' I regarded ' , expulsion ; : federation ' wind.. , r 'Lewis by , - . the. CIO . I dictetor''. ' ' , '- movement., ' : v and no ' I by edict loved the '. ..- ta leaders . g him the... As. Green - '' - .,. :. ,ntain our : ... a sound. ,:, ' ten assert- ' I organise ,,. . from the ' ' , t, the top . , , , - , .. . e building , , , ' inued sup- -, . , geinst the ' ',, - . , , .-: . and fight " - ning.year - " ' g the past. ,, , It or with..., : ,,, . thc- greet , 'seated by ' : - ...., tr days for - , letter and :,- "Construe- - : with so. t - , . , . , til SfutiPon(ricbtairrt of 1:'..'::.::. .1.: . ',Two). , ' ; ,. , ST . . . ' ;.''.' '; . - . .. . . y Yarnell .. ,. a for bora- , td Hankow II 1 )tire given , .. . Americans ' . : 0100,1001001000,101011110WANAWARP4111 HEATHER V N '4 It ' Cloudy; more rain. sum at 1:30 ...... 541 A k 0 1 I TOM 441 ' PRECIPITATION , i ' urs to e ra. m.... .Trace I 4 . .A., It to date ..........--.. 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'. - - 11-!,' . ...:';"- ..1"hv,,1 ,,,,,f''',,t.,.,L0001 Akk. , '. lk,' .':,"'' - r N ''.,71''',:' '.., ,-,:-.kr , , , ,,, , I ',';',,,--r':-. t':-,' ,'4'-'7:!---:- .,.--. 1 ' ', - : -,-, ; :... - . f'..,,-'.. ,-; ' ---,...i.,7,:,,i-.5':, 770", --;:--,,', '...;,,,,i-14'; ,,,.,e. ,;:x.....:,,,,,,,,,,...' ",................,4,,,.. . ...,,,,....:. ' 1,::::!::;',1,,...,,,,,f,:-,,-".,.,,, 11;4,r:et i' ,.....:.,,,:-.7::,;,,N.e1,'..,':::7,,.:,,,.,',,-:,.: ',, . ,e.. . , . t, ,. ,, ,,. -.xi, t'-,,t-'1( L' ..,..,,,,,,,..,,,4,,.,.,,,N,,,,.,,,,,,,....,, ,...,...,...,.....,.,,....,.., ,.........,....,,.,,,,... Number 8057 1 I Price Five Cents KLAMATH ALLS, ORE., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1937 Number 8057 - , ! 1 , 1 ( 1 1C ,L ,f , , . ,.. , . . . . Th p I H: . " A