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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1945)
ll FOUR HERALD AND NEWS Monday, May 14. 1945 Jfcralu attuJfcUrS News BehindU News ' ITAMt JENKINS MALCOLM rPLKT Editor Managlm IdlJor d.k Man. PubUabad enrr aiternoon except Sunday jMuSnl Co. aad the N.w, Publleluna Company. antared aa eecond clui putter at mo pottotflco at Klaraatbj ESIori Aurm JO, It. undw act et eonareea. March S. 167 By canter B earrler BUBSCMTTION BATISi monta T9o Bj nail . . swathe 93.19 , Mn W mail MBT PS.00 OuWdo Klamath. Lake. Mode. Slealyou count, -year ST 00 Member. AimiMod Pna Member Audit Bureau Circulation Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEV THE other day we re-printed In our paper s fine editorial by Henry Fowler, associate editor of the Bend Bulletin, describing the outstandine job done at the Marine Barracks in returning men to full duty status after they contracted malaria or filariasis. , Mr. Fowler was one of a group of newspaper men who visited the Barracks with Gov ernor Earl Snell a couple of weeks ago. Another member of that party was Herb Grey, advertising manager of the Medford Mall Tribune, who is also doing a fine Job as presi dent of the Jackson county chamber of commerce. EPLEY Herb has written an excellent report on the Klamath project for Medford readers. We be lieve Klamath people will also find it well worth reading. Here it is: - By HERB GREY . It wasn't until the war in the Pacific was well along, and the marines and GIs had fought malaria mosquitoes and disease-laden bugs as well as Japs all the way from Guadalcanal to Tarawa, that effective protection was devised for invasion forces. Beaches and jungles were not sprayed with deadly DDT and other meas ures discovered to hold down the casualties from disease in those rugged days of 1942 and 1943. Some of the best fighting men in the marine corps were laid on the shelf as a result. But Capt. Lowell T. Coggeshall, a navy doctor and authority on tropical diseases, had a solution to offer and the navy listened. The result was one of the most unique undertakings of this war the program at the Marine Barracks at Klamath Falls. - ' Here, men were brought with lingering tropi cal diseases, mostly malaria and filariasis. Capt. Coggeshall's partner in this undertaking and post commander is a chunky and capable ma rine colonel, George Van Orden, who has fought the Japs from Guadalcanal to Guam and is liked and respected by every leatherneck at the barracks. There's no pantywaist pampering at this post. The men are given the finest medical care when fever hits, of course, but when they are able to do light drilling, guard duty or even road work that's exactly what they are assigned to. There's plenty to-keep minds busy, too useful courses at ' the Klamath Vocational school, Instruction in military tactics and tech niques, opportunities to indulge in musical and theatrical activities, organized sports of all kinds. . The system workers wonders. Moderate physical activity under favorable conditions of climate and elevation, plenty of good food and finest of medical care only when needed, plenty to keep the-mind busy all combine to build up physical resistance. Relapses become less fre quent. The vicious circle on which the malaria bug thrives Is broken. Hospitable Klamath Falls people help in the cure by making the marines feel completely at home. That helps a lot to keep morale high. The proof of the pudding is the record of the Marine Barracks. Out of the 4700 men who have entered in less than a year with tropical diseases, plus wounds and battle fatigue, 3100 have been returned to duty. They are better soldiers for the training , they have received, fully cured and ready for combat, after a six months assignment to posts "in this country. Only three relapse cases have been reported. This isn't hospitalization ' or rehabilitation. This Marine Barracks program is one of "recon ditioning." Capt. Coggeshall and Col.. Van Orden deserve credit for a job well done. Their undertaking is no longer an experiment it is a proven success. Little wonder that other branches of the service are planning a similar sound and practical approach to the problem of tropical disease casualties. Bv PAUL MALLON SAN FRANCISCO, May 14 The racuic coast has about the same postwar worry as the rest of the country but in more accentuated and positive form because of the vast expansion throughout the state in planes, shipyards and other war industries. The Kaiser shipyards industry, for example, has been losing about 5000 employees a month. The last four pages of their newspaper in its last issue contained want-ads of workers seeking ride-sharing automobile seats to return home. Their yards' payroll at Richmond near here has been cut from peak employment of 93,000 down to 49,000 already (and it has had 600,000 dif ferent persons employed in the past four years.) I met the emperor of this most fabulous accumulation of American industries during the war, Henry J. Kaiser, and talked with him for more than an hour.. His is not only the largest but most varied of all the nations strictly new war enterprises and contains 100 Industries. Thus he also has the biggest of all the problems of reconversion and I was inter ested in ascertaining how he would meet it. He is a crisp, heavy-set man with a knowledge " of what is needed and with unlimited ideas of how to do the job. He has both business hope and faith a confidence that the imagination of the American people will devise methods of carrying forward our industrial postwar system and faith that it cannot fail. U. S. Needs Competition WHAT he aggressive lone wolf Industrial fighter that he is thinks the country needs primarily is competition. The first post war industry to which he is turning his atten tion is, naturally, shipping. He was growling about another business ieaer whu . -speech a few days back advocating scrapping of the American merchant marine. We now have more ships than any nation ever had on the seas, (number is a military secret) and he thinks they should be used. This will require government subsidy in' his opinion because competing European lines have subsidies. I judge that he has in mind American acquisition of the trade which Japan formerly had in the Orient He did not mention a current rumor that he may build postwar ships for Russia, although I saw him shortly after he left Molo- t0The nation also needs 2,000,000 homes, low cost homes, and he sees in this field vast oppor tunities for postwar activity, in his opinion. Transportation should be entirely revised. A lower fare should be worked out on the rail roads. Speed highways should be extended, as the nation in the future will continue to move out from the cities. He sees opportunities for building lower cost cars in the automobile industry (which he does not believe is competi tive now) and great possibilities in development of health facilities for the people. He would promote health facilities in every possible way to a scope amounting to a national industry. Here is a man with, ideas and the kind of energetic imagination, which conceives new ventures when old ones fail. He is now in metals, conceiving a new magnesium alloy for steel, a new kind of plaster, gypsum, planes, chemicals. He is also In coal and steel, and In eacn Industry he attempts to maintain a competitive . spirit. He keeps three offices in Washington in stead of one and thus promotes greater work energy among -his own employees : and, of course, more production.- . . a ' a International Expansion I SUSPECT his own reconversion plan Is al ready well under way. There is much well advised talk, about him expanding into foreign production in Latin America and elsewhere. His enthusiastic spirit is. symbolic of the feeling among 'other business-men with whom I talk .throughout this area. In this respect it is somewhat different from the " east where the trend runs to pessimism or doubt. The San Francisco area, for instance, Is a war-choked settlement as short of everything (homes, meat, cigarettes, hotel and train accommodations but not liquor) as is New York. Although the labor Is going home in droves, no one seems par ticularly worried for these reasons: Everyone out here figures the Jap war to take another year (my guess is somewhat less than that) and sees San Francisco and the Pacific coast as gateways to the newly opened island empires of the Pacific and the Orient. This is really the gateway to a new era. As surely as we have been drawn in this war closer to China, the largest postwar oriental power, just as surely may we expect a doubling of our trade westward and perhaps more. Shrewdly, Mr. Kaiser has picked the right industry for his No. 1 postwar priority. All air transporta tion and communications as well as shipping will be routed through here. ' There is much remaining of the forty-niner gold strike ambition among these business peo ple and I would not be surprised if they meet their postwar problem which is heavier than any other section, as well as any other. 1 Telling The Editor Lattere prlfittd hen mutt not ba mor. thin SOB wordt In length, muet be writ ten legibly on ONI (IDS of the piper only, and mutt ba signed. Centrlbutlone following theee rules, art atarmly ret- REFUTES STORY KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (To the Ediior) I read where two of our city police officers hero ically saved a young student from drowning in Upper Klam- tth lake on Monday morning, heir story is that they ran out tn the boom. That is a lie. I Im that student. The boom is on Link river fcelow the bridge instead of The World's Two Beit . InreitmentK - I 1. War Bonds 2. Life Insurance I tS&e YOUR I - BEPBEBRNTINO THE . ' EQUITABLE LIFE I Assurance Society 111 N. 71k reue mi I above it. I was walking on it trying to cross the river. About half way, I slipped into the river. I climbed back on the boom and straddled it. Then I started moving forward toward the shore. The two officers climbed on the motorcycle, and came down to where I would land. They stood about 20 or 30 feet from the edge of the shore, and waited for me to come in. I stood up and walked the last two logs to shore. Arriving on shore, I wrung my shirt out. My companions, who had been on the other side, had come over by the bridge down to where I was. One of the of ficers who was on patrol in the rear of the paddy wagon took me to the station.' He wanted to take my companions who, he said, were on private property. The funny part is that a few minutes after I was taken to the station, several people were fishing on the private property and children, younger than my self, were playing on the boom, and the officers didn't bother to say anything to them. In my opinion, they had to bring" someone in, and I , was the sucker. JAMES CROSSLEY, 318 East Main. If it's a "frozen" article you need, advertise for a used one In the classified. DIAPER Soothe, eool, reltera Uiapvr laau mm. " vent it with Meiaana, the aoothing medicated powder. Get Meieaua, RASH From the Evening Herald May 14, 193S The . lurv in the - Marlon Meyerle murder case presented a maplewood gavel to Circuit judge js. a. Asnursi. - Marion Meyerle, acquitted of murder charges, has left for ban .Francisco. From the Klamath Republican May 18, 1905 Mr. Whitcome, an experienced bricklayer of Ashland, plans to start a brickyard at Keno. It is expected brick from this yard SIDE GLANCES cowtiw areata eivM. me. r n eta, a. a w. or. ..... u lini if.reB turn- .d eoUwhat Tpot.y In tod. V . Kd." baollSt Into IwTni territory. Inurlgin Peatl Am car ray Am iei - - Cll( Packing fit Tractor ......... Commonwealth Bou mrui-wnirii Cieneral Ilactric (.antral Motor Ut Nor By pfd IlMnoii Central - Int lurvee.er a,- Kennecott I .futlt ha.e.d ...uHl.Hi.e. Long-Bell "A' Montgomery Want -...a.-.. Man-ivfiv N Y Central Northern Pacific Packard Molor - I'enna n ..... .(public steel m.r-li4 nil Safeway Store "My son had 24 bombing missions in the Pacific without half as much trouble as I've had with this bikcl W . m -m mil- III MuMje Women Count on toothing Resinol for amazing relief from such periodictorment. Medicated for quick, gentle action and IonelaitinE comfort. RESINOUS Some Still Reject. Belief That Earth Is Round By J. HUGH PRUETT Aslronomrr. Orneral Kxt.n.ion Divlllon, University ol ureion That the earth is round, rotates daily 6n its axis and revolves yearly around the sun, has prac tically 100 per cent acceptance today. But occasionally we find a sincere person who still re jects all or part of this doctrine. A widely-known Chicago leader taught that the earth was nat: nor was he shaken in his belief by a trip "around" the world shortly before his death. Two Flashes of Life STRICT CONFORMIST WILSON. N. C May' 14 W) The ration board was puzzled when a gasoline application en dorsed by them, "Sign in place checked with red pencil," was returned with no signature. But. when it came back the second time signed in red, the applicant s explanation cleared up the confusion.. He wrote: "I can't find a red pencil in Elm City. I borrowed this one from the bank." a GIVING SHEEP WOOLLIES. BRYANT'S POND, Me., May 14 (fP) Farmer Claude Cush- man sheared his flock during a March warm spell. The recent weather upset found the crit ters shivering. Cushman dashed around to his neighbors to ap peal for cast-off sweaters. The flock baa-d approval as the shepherd fitted on the handy hand-me-downs. . NO ENCORE MILWAUKEE, Wis., May 14 (JP) William Geisheker, direct or of the Marquette university band, hopes the city's noise abatement committee has made an error. He received a form letter asking cooperation in eliminat ing "unnecessary din." a SEE THERE DENVER, May 14 (IP) Pa trol m a n Henry u. uooae launched into a lecture on the harmlessness of bees when sum moned by his wife to repel a swarm which had gained a beachhead on the front porch. Just to show her how harm less they were he picked up one. The lecture ended aorupt ly when the bee jabbed its stinger into his thumb. - a TOO YOUNG EUGENE, Ore., May 14 Two tecn-aeed girls enviously eyed passing student couples in tnis university ol uregon town. "I'll be glad when we're fresh men in college," sighed one, "then maybe we can start going out with those high school sen iors." CHANTICLEER II SAN FRANCISCO. May 14 (VP) Chanticleer, the folk-lore rooster wno was convinced ms crowing made the sun come ud. has a namesake in a rod-riding rooster reported by crewmen of a South. em Facmc train. They named him Chanticleer II beaeuse he crowed every time the train emerged from a tunnel in a trip here from Los Angeles. will be used in construction of the new high school building nere. H. W. Kecsec has resigned as deputy prosecuting attorney. Wonderful for Skin and Scab Irritations 'Invisible liquid Promptly Relieves Torture Aids Healing To quickly soothe the Itching, burning ol eczema, psoriasis, akin and scalp Irri tations due to external cause apply IfyufdZemo a Doctor's formula backed by 85 years' mceess. Zemo also aids healing. Being stainless, Invisible you can apply Zemo any time lor prompt relief it won't show on skin. Over 26,000,000 packagea soldi aaiaamajaa. In 8 aims. AU drugstores. rMIJ Market Quotations Seer. Roahuck Southern P.clfle a..n..nl Rranif.- Tr.n.-Arri.rl Union Oil Celll Union P.elfle 11 s Hleei Warner IMclurea ....... am. IMS I.'. .. M . SI'v IS !' 41 nev SJS . us . Ji'I ' 10 nn'i , io'. MS JUS US II'. M . MS US n -..1M s :ia - US nas I w. , MS 3S Potatoes corrcsDondcnts in the northwest writo they still cannot accept the annual revolution ot tne earth. , The ancients in ccncral con sldercd the world was flat, and perfectly stationary at the exact center of the universe. Accord ing to the Greeks, completely surrounding this "earth-island ' flowed the great ocean-river, Occaiuis. on winch the sun night ly was floated around to the east. Beyond Ocennus, night and gloom dominated the myster ious .Immensities. A spherical world was advo cated by many ancient scholars, A very few believed in Its rota, tion and revolution, but not un til after Copernicus' teachings in the 16th century A. D. were these notions generally accepted So irrefutable seem the proofs of the present views that it is hard to believe anyone capame of average reasoning and willing to study into the subject with open mind can believe otherwise. without explanations, the lead, ine Droofs are listed here. 1. Proofs that the earth is a sphere: Ships have sailed around it. The nun or a depart. ine shin disanocars below the horizon first. As a traveler goes a considerable distance north or south, stars rise above these horizons which were never seen before. The shadow of the earth on the moon during an eclipse is circular. Navigation of ships at sea works perfectly by assuming the earth is round; not otherwise. 'Photographs from very high stratosphere bal loons show the horizon curved. A level line extending some dis tance is curved, not straight. 2. Proofs o rotation: The Foucault pendulum. Deviation to tne . ngnt in the northern hemisphere (left In southern) of horizontally moving projectiles. Deviation to the east of objects dropped from a tower. The Compton wheel. Earth s equat orial bulge (diameter is 27 miles greater through equator than through poles.) Fact that Mis sissippi river flows south. (Daily rising and motion of stars show either they encircle the earth daily or earth rotates. Copernicus thought the latter the more reasonable although he had no positive proofs.) 3. Proofs of movement around sun: Aberration of light. Par allax of stars. Spectroscopic shifts of light from the stars. (These require considerable ex planation. The annual apparent movement of the sun among the stars shows either that the sun encircles the earth; or earth, the sun. With the other proofs, the latter becomes apparent.) The earth has still a third motion. The sun with all its planets encircles the center of our immense star system in about 225,000,000 years. Courthouse Records Marries. Licence. BARISON-MlNlE. Albert Amldlo Berl eon, 21. U. S. army. Native of Califor nia. Reeldent ot Dorrle, Calif. Kather Ine Elcanora Minie, 18, electronic, teat, er. Native of Maieachmettf, Reeident of Chlcopee Fall., Maee. Jnatlee Cenrt Joaeph Blea, drunk In a private place. Thirty daya auepandad to leave etata. Ih.tanrM 10 tn Is ranla Inwer, larfoly ate.r run; lulk H l 17 ixi; no ateeia anin early above SI7.n.1. tint rltoli-a In prime li.evy heller, tomied at VITRO nelfore sei'.rellv aleeitv; rowe week, atipply email; bulla about In line Willi U.t wvrk downturn, e.ueaga bulla tnon down anil u-rlahly I.I bull IH.aa down! vpalar. ate.itv at aitl.OO down. rl.lalile ahar-p A.lllOl npeulna .low bill ele.tlv; two Inada mined medium In I'ltiilt-e fed woulril wealent lamha'IIA.ltft; aeveral load, held allalilly hlsher; Hint. In.de in.dlum to nioally fond fed laiulia llftM: parkeaa snod and choice clipped lamha full No. Tt pell. Slfl.00; H3 head medium and gnod around TJ-lh. Call, foinla enrlng l.ntbe elViS, aood to choice held Mltove Sln.1; ei-.lterina ahum nallva ewea al.ady at an 00 down. WHEAT k riUCAflO. May 14 CAPi-Orlti rrtkr kU were (rrtftilT tortey, dipping aherp 1 efttr n opening bulge. Ilien rallying during the (in, hour. I'n.NVnrauie rmi rvptirm iniiowini wtvki of reiiiy weather tn Urge areas Lof tne art in i I Ill xatl -i-i.- '."Una. tft7! ii;it cm,;, ,y;," .I ,'..!,1" I'm mj re Irnm I "fl 7' . 'I'll. I ) . Ill.rl... .. At ,.,! I'oinu ' ' m? wVV:w,.s!5!..kl M.V II M',..,c '.' if,! May QT'.c. "lll , need, arivertfi, J ii ma c ah r .j " -tUTO. MY MODES!; WITH THE PROVED DEODORANT toie: arrlv.ia uJ. on track IPS. tot.l ll. 1. ahlnmanU Saturday N, Sunday 43. Old elocke: no trecic aaiae. New alocae: buiipii. sood. merk.l firm at wllms.. Alabama loo-lb. a.cka of nine Triumph.. II. MO-4W; Loulalan. loolb. eack. of Rllaa Triurnpna. u. . ' fornla 10O.b. aecke of Long Whllee. U. S. NoT 1. -. so; Marine Chlppewae. U. S. No. 1. u.u. LIVESTOCK SO. SAN rrlANCIBCO. May 14 lAP-WrAl-Cattle; Salable 4S0. Actly., ful y ataedy. Two car. fed al..re held up lo ai.7J. Tew medium sreia ateer. "" youn'a- cowe and helfere' ale 00. eorled I ne.o iov- '" "-"- .,. mixed cowa ihijj. rmi.ra torted. cannere T.OO S.OO. Calvea: SO. ... a .l..a. aavuut 9 HA lh calve fti5.00. sorted common and me dium lPOUI3.W. . Hoga: Salable 60. Firm. Few part-, aarwt Art la. karMBH nrf stltla gCKKj tuu.jvu IU. vis. e - e 13 73. Odd good MWi l 11.00, Sheep: iiauDie ww, mtoium w v... lamba quoted 13 .VMXOO Cull lo good thorn awaa quoted eW.50-g.S0. PORTLAND, Ore, May M fAF-WrA Salable cattle 1600, total JIM; salable and total calves 300; market active. in erally tlaady to alrong with (ew open fng tales of good hoi ce fad ateere Mf higher; extreme ton 10 cents lower at 1T.M; several good-choice load I ft. So il. M; good grades down to gift .10: com mon. medium ia.O0-i.o0: helfera gil.w 14.00; good fed helfera upward to I 00; load good 110 lh. fed wi 1.1 50; other medlunvgood beef cowa fll.MMt SO; cenntncuUer cowa gT.0f.-l 0; medium good sausage bulla 10 M-lJ M Includ ing one 1770 lb. Holsteln at gia.SO ion of biggest ever on sale, here'; good beef bulls gtTOO-79; good -choice, vegleri t IS 00-1(1.00: few to gift SO. Salable hoga 300, total 13O0; market active, steady at celling: barrow and gilts, all wetghte. $18 75; sows gisoo; stag up to 010 Int.. $14.50: good-choice m.i lb. feeder Diss $13.00-10.00. Salable sheep 1000. total 3050; lambe round 23 came lower; tur good-choice spring I em be 113.75; good rhAlM wool ad old cron lambe gl3SO lion: mixed shorn lambs and year lings $11.00-1300; good ewes g.00-S0; woolad ewes gg.00; common thorn awes down to 9i.w, CHICAGO. May 14 IAPWfA Salable hoga 5000. total 0A00; active, fully statdy: good and choice barrows and gtlta at 140-lbe. up at $14.75 celling, good and choice aowa i i.w; compiaia clear ance. Ma If hie cattle 14 000. total 14 000: sal able calvea 1000. total 1000; fed steer and yearling very alow, aicaoy to wean IMAGtNEl. A DEODORANTS m eVcRY M0D$S ii'l MPMNtANO LA J SHOWTSASTONISHlHi FFCWl TRUCKS AND PICKUPS FOR RENT You CiIts Long, Short Trip. Mot Yourself Sit STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phon 8304 1201 East Main BEGINNING and ADVANCED CLASSES for the SUMMER start June 4, and continue through July r and Augutt. That speedy, snappy easy-to-learn THOMAS natural shorthand, or a brush-up in GREGG. W teach typing, fceokltMp. Ing, and ofilea machines also. Arrange now lor enrollment Junt 4. Klamath Business College 733 Pin Street Corner ot 8th WHY BE FATV Get sfmmer without exercise i Yea msy !Ht pounds and have j more sUndcr, graceful figure. No ear rddng. Nouxalivte. Nedntf s. With this AYD8 plsn you don't I cut out any tneali. starches, po tiloet, mcata or buttir. you sim ply cut thorn down. It's eaifcr when ymi etilny drlldous (vita mln fortified) A YDS before meals Atwstnialif ri.ranlaaa I Try a lrt siw tw of AYM. MT t"Ptf onlf ai.js. Hwry ktk m taa very Orel boa ft yea ewe t m muite. raoee Carrln'a far Drags, Waggenar Drag Ce, MODESS t$ $OfTR AND SAFER, TOO ME FOR TNAT6& BAROAN BOX" QUCKl SAVES Mi f EXTRAORDINARILY IFriCTIVE-acco,dtn. t. M tt.titJ partial laboratory. PRAISED IY THOUSANDS after ye.r'i tryout TT14,J NO BOTHER with separate powder, no fun. SOfTIRI SAFERI-3 out of 4 women found Modeattsf touch In nationwide poll. 20? nunee, In hoapitat ton U Modeu safer, teat likely to itrikc throuth than nelioeijjrjj layer-type napkins. COSTS NO MORE. Bi( Barain Box even uvei you Uital my GermeeG bargain m 56 SOfTCK-SAft. SANITAW MUCINS CONTAINHI A PiOPOMNT ONLY ft m Kltr.53 w Jffi& pRl SUtlf New Analgesic Tablet ' Pln Rallal) :. now released to public Thousands find ii gives quicker; safe relief from headache from pains of sinvs, neuritis; neuralgia and arthritis TOR MANY YEARS aiplrln h been accepted by both the medical profe.iion and the public ai a eafc, aura way to nlicte pun. But many people who had complete confidence in aiplrln did not find it save ai fuick relief from blindina, maddening pain at they hoped for. Hence in deiper alion they aomeiimea turned to other xemediea leu well proved. . Tj awat thla trhiatlsn a group of medical research men let out to lee what cou d be done to apeed up the aoalgciic or paln-killin" acUon of aipirin-io make it bnna their pailenn quicker re Jief, wiihout heart or itomtch upiei. Out of then reietrchea cama a really new kind of analgetic tablet, a combintt tloa of aiplrln and calcium s'""1"'";, ',. . thia new tablet, aiplrin does ii old, Job of relleln pain. Bui ihrtwsh W combination with calcium atluiarnaia, ai temiv , by phyilcian. ahowed i moitpaoplebothfeirlifnd"'" rtlltj from pain. Attar thla aKtaailva faillni by members of the medical profeii ' a preicrlpUon remedy, this new '" tablet bas oow been rele.ied for prescription tale by aeery druajiil. ' called Superin (from super-aipmn). can get its blessed, quick rcU.f from P' by asking your druggist for a bo'tla ww -30 tableis for 9. Ask for Sopi Sup,r.in. Prepared by CuiM Pndeo' Ioc, New York. CtCrttn, . . . Qukk refel- from poto-wilh wfahf awl!lis! bvV yOstd Hen ishsttinf Good Heuukitp'wt Matazlm Sid