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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1922-3-3, Page 6Brouehitis is an acute infiemmation of the nmeous seembrane lieleg the air tubes of the limes, and begins -with thills fol- lowed by fever, tightness acres' the ehest, eifileultyi i breatheag, lueuseness, artel dry, harsh, croup'y cougi. vshieh is in eteased in wet weather, and by every slight cold. This cough cerne,s 011 SPaS, medically, is generally worse ia the morn - Mg. and is only relieved by raleine freely. nee matter raised is at first whitish end sticky, bet later becomes of a gremisli tir yellowish color and is sometimes streak - al with blood. On the first sign of bronchitis YOti thoted cheek it immediately by using DM WOOD'S CDRWAY PINE SYRUP thereby preveiltitlg it becoming e,hronie, and developing into some serious lung trouble_ Mr. John De Root, 40 Maple Ave,, Hamilton, Ont., writes was troubled with bronchitis., and had a very bad cough, I had it so long was beginning to get afritici of other developments. tried all kiuds of cough temedies, but without relief. I was adelsed, by a friend, to i'ry Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrele, so T got a boelle, It convinced me to believe that, I had,. at last, gotten ihe eight medicine. I used several bot- . tics auel am practically welt 1 have totoramended it to others since, and secal results followed. It is certainly a woaderfel "Brenchial Cough lleinedy," Price 33e, and 60c. a bottle. 1,14171 CONDUCTD EY „PROF, HENRY G. ELL The object of this department la to place at tho set. - Viet of our farm readers the advice of nn acknowledged authority on all sublects pertaining to solis and crops. Address all questions to Professor Henry G, BrU, in care of The Wilsort Publishing Company, Limited, 'Caron. to, and antwers will appear in this column In the order In welch they are reeehied. When writing .W..ndly men- tion this paper.. As space is limited it Is advisoble where immediate reply Is necessary that a stamped and ack dressed envelope be enclosed with trio question, when the answer will be moiled direct. Copyright by Wilson Publishing Co., Limite11. d E. Be I have a field that is plowed, and has never had, any lime bandy loam (some of it is quite light) applied, Hydrated lime is the enly on. which I lost the clover seeding lasti kind we can get here. I worild, like year, This field, will be pasture for 1. to know how touch lime I ought to two years so I am not particular about., apply per acre, the grass, only would rather hovel Answer: I would adyise you to lime clover. Row much seed do you sow? the soil in question with about 11/2 Would you innoculate for both seeds*, tons of `hydrated lime to the acre. aisle how do you proceed? This land; APPY this broadcast as soon as the is now planted to wheat. 'Would you, snow is gone and harrow it in as harrow the seedin or would it darn-, you are working down the seed -bed., ge the wheat too much? I Proceed as suggested in the answer Answer: I would advise you to sew; to the first question, 18 to 20 lbsof good clover seed per; R. II.: I sowed some field peas last acre. II you Wish to get a good catch year with oats, sowing thirty pounds of sweet clover by all means innocu-t,of peas to one and a half bushels of late the seed. The itnoculation mad oats per acre. I cut and threshed terial conies in bottle form with full same as other grain, but the peas with \Yalls surmounted by towers one Pierced with gatewnys. nese walls rose to -4 great height and WeTe in ireemileretee ltbout 714 milos. of three days' Ourney. The referene? i. 0 the diameter rether than to the circumferenee, lt tequired three days t4'0 through the city from one eed to the other, 0, v. 4. .A. dity'e journey, Jenah had penetrated alineet to the bear t of the city when he begae te preaeli„ Yec. forty days, etc, The Ntheeites Were not toid the reaeee for this startling announcement bet they would feel instinctively that the reaeon 1ny 111 their siefolness. "Veit this teeming humanity he elainee the ueiversal pos- sibility of repentance,—that and ,no- thMg rnoee" (G, A. Smith). II, Repentance, 5-9. V. 5. The peoPle of Nineveh believed God. They believed that God would carry out the threat and so they re- pented. 'Notice that their repentance was immediate and all-inclusive. The Ninevites eouteasted favorably with the Israelites who had many prophets and a long term of grace and yet had not fully repented. One main point in the story is that tho knowledge of Jehovah awakens szt instinctive res- ponse even among the heathen. A fast . sackcloth. These are the outward. signs of grief and self-abase- ment. The people of the East show their feelings , with fee less reserve than we do. ' • V. 6. The report of Jonah's terrify- ing announcement penetrated into the royal palace so that the king also re- pented and abased himself. Sackcloth was a rough cloth made of the hair, of camels and goats. It was. veeen 111 times of great trouble such as mourn- ing for the dead, arid along vvith fast- ing was Visible expressien of peni- tence as here. (See 1 Kings 21: 27; Nell, 9: 1), Ashes; were also used to express mournieg and penitence. They were thrown up in the air so as to alight on the head and sometimes the penitent or mourner sat on them (see jab 2: 11)„ That the king himself should have repented so deeply shows the profound effect Jonah's preaching. had on Nineveh. Vs. 7, 8. Nbt content with merely setting.a precedent, the king, by his edict, commanded a national repent- ance. As head of the state he was in charge of the religion of the state and. could enjoin or modify religious observances. Even the domestic ani - islets evere to have a part in, the gen- eral repentance and were to be denied their fodder aisle drink. Herodotus alleges that the 'Persians: made their animals share in the mourning cus- toms. The Nin,evites were instructed by the edict that they were first to pray that the calamity should not corne upon them and then they were to amend their evil way—their general sinfulness --and the violence that is in their hands--; the social oppression that was practiced among them: au -ch as the maladministration of justice or the pilfering of the poor by the -rich. . 9. These people who stood ou - are to be used, or about four-mches it side the covenant with Israel had a conecienee, and that conscience, once the seed. is to be sewn directly in the awakened, told them that God was .soilt under no obligation to spare them Letthig the hotbed beat for several frem the deserts- of their wrongdoing. clays will cause weed -seed t t When the temperature gets down to III Forgiveness 1 0. Proper ventilation of a ponies -7 house mean s nimie than an opening. zhat will allosv cold ale to rush into im banding. Every faint fioek, to be healthy and profitable, must have proper ventilation. Each building has own problem sf ventilation. There is the beilding with the flat top; the ventilator gen- eralist being an open window in the side or end. Go into such a house on tOla day, and you wia notice 111-015- ture on the ceiling. That is proof tb.at the air is not circulating as it should, and the resulting dampness is very injurious to the fowls. Such a heilding snakes poor living quarters. If it is necessary to shelter your poultry in a fiat -roofed building, by all means place a ventilator through the roof so the used air and moistuee will be carried out promptly. A gal- vanized iron ventilator costs more than a hole slashe.d through the sid- ing, but it is, the only way to make! bonate of lame that they tairy such a building fit for poultry. Too much eentilation is as bad as JO little, especially in severe weather. Scene poultry houses are open so the wind causes a strong. draft throngh them, and in very cold weather this le pretty certain to cause frost -bites and ether ailment -a that aut. down egg Ts -eduction. A few minutes' work would make it possible to reg-ulate the Instenctioes. Write the 33aeteriologi-1 didn't grow over twenty-four inchee cal Dept., 0.A.C., Guelph, who sell the high, or ntalte a very luxuriant innoculating material at a nonlinal' growth. Neither did the oats, for rate. that matter, as the season was not Oa the land where the wheat isl favorable. These peas ripened a week now standing I -would advise you tce or ten days ahead of the oats, and sow the clover seed broadcast late in: consequently shattered badly in cut - spring just before the frost gees outi ting. I sowed 100 pounds of sixteen of the land. The era.claing of the soil per cent. acid phosphate per acre, in the springtime will allow the seed 1 would this cauee peas to ripen. ahead to be sufficiently buried , so that it of the oats'? MY oats are a fairly will get a good start If the wheat early strain. What variety would be has made a good firn1 stand. it may,' best to grow with oats for seed pur- he well to harrow the ground lightly,i poses and what amount should be setting the haerow teeth bacls. so that sown per acre? 1 prepe.red my seed- -they will not drag out the wheat, and, bed last spring with the disc harrow. ha,rrow with the rows and not across Should the ground be plowed? them. Do not do this if the clover Answer: In the matter of seed of 1 seed has sprouted. mixed grain, it is not advisable to . . . . I would advise you to applyeilibut attempt to gather seed. for a, succeed - 200 lbs, per acre of a 3-8-3 fertilizer ing year's mixture from the crop also as soon as you are able to go on grown this year. The proportion in the ground in the spring. Scatter this weight or volume that the various fertilizer over the top of the wheat grains yield is not the same proper - with the lime spreader, or broadcast tion in which they were sown, clue to it This soluble plantf-ood will give the different prolificacy of the -crops. the young growing crops of wheat,1 Therefore/ next year take your seed grass and. clover an especially strong; from a bin of good oats and from a start and will do a lot to ensure al bin of good peas, Mixing them in the good stand of clover as -well as to proportion desired. It is natural that increase the yield of wheat. the peas should have ripened ahead of -A. P.: Please tell me how to teat, the oats. They are a shorter lived marl to find its quality as fertilizer.; eroln Answer: Marl is 'not a. fertilizer ini The mixture of peas and oats is the strict sense of the term, neither especially -valuable when the crop is is lime. Both of these are soil core' cut green for hay. The acid phosphate rectors; that is,, by virtue of the ear -I would of course react on the eipening ' i of both crops alike and would not be ' ' ible for the eaely ripening e ram*RamlmoerAgAA*****.m.1..........****** Ow te Make a Hotb -The, framework eaulse:rnadetof onee regieire- more .bent inch, used er unused lumber; 01 if plante. permanent; 'hotbed feame le wanted! use concrete. Pet the hotbed where there is protection on the nett -the -a tightiboard fence UT grove. Plane it on sloping ground to permit dra,inage. 11 the boards; on the back of the frame are twelve inches above the ground, these in. -front should be See:- era.1 inches lower; thus giving a slant to the sashes, enabling vratew to run off quicitly, This -will allow, too, a better utilization of the enn's heat; the slant should be toward the South. Throw the Trienure (use fresh horse reanure) into the ,bothed pit, vrhich is correct the eourness soil. You could send a sample of yottr marl tol the peas. The varieties Dr. Zairitz any ehemist; who will tell you thel recommends for mixing with oats' are quantity of ealcium and magnesium' Multi hers Potter, and Golden Vine, carbonare that it contains. This will using a mixture of ,two bushels of give you an idea as to its -value as a peas and one bushel of oats peracre. soil eorrector. However, actual ap_ The oats -which are recommended are plication about two tons to the any of the early varieties, peeferably acre will ehoev you how thoroughly it some of those lightest in hull, which corrects the sourness of the soil equal- are Jeanette or Dauheney. air eerrent. 1 ly as well. and will save you the ex - The amount of air admitted should, Dense of the analysis, el' ceuese- vain" with the nornher of E. I want to plant sweet clover fowls. Since this numbee is a vary- to grew seed on a field of clay loam irg, one, there are worth -while ad- ! soil. It is alsike clover sod, fall - vantages in a ventilation system that allowe for regulation of the air cur- rents. A sieding door across the air inlet lc a simple and efficient method, and one that can be profiLably install- ed in new- buildings. It is more con- venient to have the door controlled Irani inside the building, as that en- ables the caretaker to regulate it when attending the fowls. Pedigreed steak beings big returns; 50 does pedigreed seed., : A hot brick in a eadd,ed box will often help bring through young pigs horn extremely eeld weather, A. prosperous, happy. contented, antelligent farnily in every far-ni home is the greatest need of the nation. Pruning is oee of those jobs which mazy be carried out during the fine days between now and spring. ,u E rif WALK TO NEIGHBOR'S ,sb.octucss el isreith is one .se the first risnie!ifteree heerfe treulele, and when tJig lisart Isecomes azi7"ala Abe rerve' work in sympathy, arid it is net:et-ea' when the heart beconles weakened and the nerves unstrung to sec that the heart 4s regulated anti stimulated and the -nerves strengthened and rested by 1VII LEVAN'S ART AND I4ERVt PILLS Mess Kate Cesey, Lepteatt, writes:—"1 have bee./ troubled with gny heart and tlerVeS for over -sre ars. could sot walk over to my neighbor's Whether you disc or plow your soil should -depend entirely upon the state of the soil in the spring. Speaking generally, it is best -to plow medium loam soil: Thc! Sunday School Lesson MARCH5, Jehovah's Mercy to a Heathen City, Jona.h 3: 1-10 Golden Text---Isa.. 55: 7. Lesson Foreword—It is difficult to say exactly when the Book of Jonah was written, but all. the evidence points to a date after the exile, that is, after B.C. 586. This book deals with Israel's attitude toward the heathen. The Jews seemed never to be able to adopt the proper religious attitude towards their heathen neigh- bors. They prided themselves on hav- ing the knowledge of the true God, Jehovah, and on being his peouliar people, but on the other hand, the heathen still ruled the earth This proved a etemblingeblock to Jewish faith and created a bitter and intoler- ant spirit toward other TlatiOnS, scalliel. „Stop the bleeding by bathing it with very hot water; then. dry the n parte and paint the woend lightly with tineture of iodine. Coat the teat with than. caPhage /sine tar and put on a bandage of anti- septic gauze, two inehes vvide, from After planting, spainkle wenn the eip ef. the teat to the'udder. Coat water over the bed to moistenthe layerlof gauee with tar until pRere'PaltaurceethbeetwZ.set6875anzu4sidk8e5'ePdethg.eFt!m.- soetev,enth:nr a!suigthtonill'aYeltsisna.13aveoe,atbe'oelfl pUf , eaci theWmIsei4e8yhouantg, epvleanxytsdayap 11 th' Igvievae,. alter stitehing the last layer of garize thee.al..;RyP'°47; tInloot,snemohAv°‘wa'adt,orw"IctoeursieTisg pot tlaGtetlitelte'mlbeabned1,0Qgwe' wIinthtwa°1cwohebelksaS:sidaturle'': root systems, as weaq as fa.aoafas dar move it carefully.. The gauze slemid be plants do not suffer for moist -we: ;On drawn snugly, but not tight enough ee, interfere svith circulation, The op- eateS. I -The "just enough water that. _bright, growing (lays, .u.,4oeveir the ecot.aewte 15 sei iliosIttyole,,,iii:41plgerafuoirnicsa.ed when the. beds and let the,eun-ishirre directly on - the plants. This makes hardy /Aerate. Never transplant directly. from a. warm hotbed to exposed coneditiens. two feet deep, in -successive layers, Elthar get the plants aeenstorned to continuously tramping. Fill the. Pit exposure' while in the„liotbea, or traens- to within four OD five inches of the pliant to a cold feel -nee -which is no- tispe;Of the frame -on' theeemith Side: thing,' more than a easliecoVe.reffraine The manure will settle .seVernal ,eladed 'on the ground; just no' a hots beforotinse for soiving the seed: Plaee bed essept there is no heat supplied sash on the framds inneediatele 'after 'exec& bY: the' sum ' When ready to transplant, thera The heat in a newly-matie *tided oughly wet the bed Containing- the' will rise rapidly until it reaches a temperature of at least. 120 'deg. • A. high temperature may be obtained for a week or more, but it vrill not do to sow seed over such hot material. Wait until the temperature drops below 90 deg., then place two, or three incl -see of good soil over the manure if flats f = One of the leading ideas of the book of Jonah is that -God, is fell of -coni - passion not only for Israel, hut also for the heathen. The faintest teace of repentance on the part even of the heathen softens God's heart and causes him to turn aside from the punighment that should have been meted out for their sin. ; Jonah was indignant that his preaching ,had awakened the Nine- vites, his nation's foes, to repentance, and that as a coniequence God Ilan spai•ed. them and in his anger he quit-theseity. God caused a gourd to grow and shelter `him where he sat but the gourd soon withered and died, and Jonah was thrown into grief atats decay. His foolish grief provided an occasion by which God could -teach him the real significance of his pardon of the people of Nineveh.- If Jonah had shown so Much concern for a short- lived and cornnaratively worthless gourd, would not God show a far greater concern for a whole city of livingamen and women, even though they were heathen.? Jonah typified his narrow, prejudiced, Jewish race „who were anxious, to keep the knowl- edge of their God to themselves, but God shows him -here that his com- passion is not tor Israel only, but ex- tends, to all men, even to the heathen and to Israel's enemies.. The book of Jonah was, therefore, an ancient mis- sionary tract. Application., - 1. The sad fate of the Book of Jonah. This marvellous and tender book of Jonah has suffered', ridiciile and contempt because it has been so pitifully misunderstood.. It has been thought that the chief -value of the book lay in the amazing story of the Sea monater that swallowed the pro- phet, but this is dike setting a-higlser estimate on the box or ease eontaining the jewel, than on the jewel. itself The jewel in the book of Jonah is the truth that God, the Creator of the ends of the earth, was concerned not only with the ,Tews, but with all men and nations, regardless of their ,be - lids and customs, Ile takee up all men in his fatherly and loving .ern - brace, Ninevites ae well as the chil- dren of Abraba,m. Read the last toughing verse in the book. 2. The book -01 Jonah is thus an anticipation of the wide sympathy of Jesus. Luke has preserved for us the immortal pareble of the Good Samar- itae. Whom did Jessie commend in this parable? Certainly not the "priest," or the "Levite," but the outcast "Sa- maritan." Thus the Master protested against the neer° wness, in teleraneei northward of the Greater Zab. Under. Sennacherib the city was greatly en- larged, strengthened and beautified. "All the spoils of Asia'were lavished on its adornment and fortificatioe; pure drinking. water was introduced into it in place of the rain water on which the inhabitants had depended; and stately palaces arose in the neigh- borhood of the Tigris." "Its markets were thronged with merchants and tradere, and its library was stored with thousands of clay book" (Sayee). Nineveh fell in B.C. 607, before the Medes. V. 3. An. exceeding great city. The Hebrew means literally "great for the .story before es Jonah a/spears as God" that is, great even according to the type of his narrow and exclusive- a divirie standard. The city occupied nation, as a good Jevv who refused at about 1,800 acres and was surrounded first to preach repentance to Nineveh. because they were his heather!. eeemies, but when in the end he wae forced to do so he saw that the gospel "works" in Nineveh as well as in lerael. Thus the purpose of the hook was to lift the Jewish nation to a higher viewpoint 'where they coeld see that the one God is the creator of the heethen as well as of Israel. I. Warning, 1-4. Y. 1. Jonah; is the hero, but not neseetseata the wither of the, book. .§zIP (test Joeab. bile- , . eeetealaa pf e follow. ON FEET ALL DAY„ BACK ACHED AT IGE-11 Woznen try to bear the daily burderis of the household, but being on etheir feet all day long with the continual stooping, bending and never-ending strain it is no wonder that, sooner or later, the back gives out. All weak backed, suffering women should use Doan's Kidney Pills on the 11 first sign of any back- weakness and there- eelf -wrote the ettsaee - .teere was a by ? 10 revent some seriotte kitlede trouble rs prophet by this name m tee -d. r. e, _ _ _ney <Tenho-am (2 Kings 14:25), but as re „It-Ittila.,,Mtli..7..',.'''.1.91!, North, !id . 2 in this hook, he coUld not have been pain in my back I did not lutow ivuo, • ,e- - jived long hef°retthe e1701118 de$Cribea Na, W- ritesi---.1 4,;see atradasettbeleglaadWittli, .411.1d. h)iiwness 01, his own feilow., the hero of our st.oey. The second to do. ' colititrYmetii ''....?'4.-- O.,1-1.de..":°nYeedodtetrit;hat time. The fleet cOrurnamd to Preach to b ck ahem that C4od eared xor I was on my- feet all day and my a , , diseoeyed tins commana beeauee ee ep one flight of stairs. A friend aid- jonah himself was petulant, bitter, wherever he foendat, Nina:veil i s given iti eh, 1:2, J°11,ah ached so at night I could. scarcely walk mom all service heesewithotit stopping le get my If 1141 leal-ed th° effec't ()-e Preanhing 'relY6TY.t.; Tied Me to try Domes Kidney rtPillas, actuallY sorry that the foreigners— ti went to my drIiggist :,.,..a.fl Asked bira ance to Nineveh.; the 1`43-a!Silte'S vVolltri and after taking three boxes I a c i the Ninevites— were repenting under de t sl lea r 7G Vile rePent and f bi-' 'Ara would have coin- wen as esree ane .ea,n. work from inormig, 1-ilisi ptv:exhing. The Lord, Was, cdotrYinets and as ,.-,,ace-i a=,'„ Y. h".. -al teem Iwo ,,,,, - ,pag et oti them, whereas Jonah me- et io reprove lien fel his rIsf,htfui 'r MilbUril'°' I 'ar a" . \ ' ' 1 '' s'i ' t 11' ,nis - Isiends ' 85 cleg..Fs rak,e the -seal with a garden rake; then level, the Soil. Firm the e -t - tire surface4. bi the soil. Use fOr a, niarker a pieee of four - Mich board as long as the inside width of the hotbed. Make one edge of the board V-shaped. Pressethis edge into the soil every four inchesto make fur- rows for the seed. Drop the eeed and co -ver lightly with soil and sand mixed: Plants requiring different ternp'er's ature should not be in the same see - tions. For instance, tomato plants that anybody whe IS trot:bled ssay leas will take burifu'leseset and Nervo Pills." - Oc, ea. box at all dd'alets, 'or nettled, detect leieelpt Of priee by 3\433bvsn Go., Limited, Toroeto„ Cat t:11 iiiglit. orn always c nib s forred to see there deetroyed. The of what "Doan's" have done for me.'" intolerance and pettiness/and to show d punishment recorded it th. 1, however, see teat our trade mark 4i1> “latole him that there «5410. wisleness h-r°ught him to 1 is nes) andl tills Lear' appears mi the oblong erese)bms, mere17 lik-e 311> wiclelleso of the time 3to oheed, ' , None genuine without it, sea." ,Thes the book , of Jesiali is a poweefel 'missionary book, its abn arel , V. 2. Nieeveh; the capital of toe geeat Aseyrian. 'Etripire was sittated en the eeetere gide of the Tigris, 'Price 4506 a box at all dealers, o mailed direct on receipt of pi-rec oy 111 'I% Milburn, Co., `Limited, TorontoeOnt -purpose iStto reVeal: Gas leve for all ations and. peoplee, SastiOsifile Plants to he Moved. ,The plente will go into another sec -Lion of tlie.hotbed, into a cold frame, into flats, or to the field.. If they are moved directly to the field ren a shovel Orr trowel under the planets, deep enough that the tap root will not be cut off. J. C.: have -a cosy which has a hole in the middle of, her teat and it is very troublesome: Can you advise me Whether there is any treatment that will cure . her? „. The fistula of Inc teat can be done away with, leve the following method of treatment.; Restrain the sow, cast- ing her if nece,ssary. Soak the teat in hot watel- containing.all the beeic aced it will diesolv-e, then ineert 'a railkingttebe that has been boiled •for 'fifteen ;minutes. Mabe ne-tv freels idteretind of the-false'openingdby outtine edgee oweY -with- a sharp -~^^ When a farmer inve,sts farm earn- ings in. another enterririse of Which he knows little, he proves that he has small faith in his own business. HEADACKES -FO TWoti'llEA S ides. Ernest .Parceihar,- Rose Ste have -been. ironbled for two years.witie bad head- aches and tried many different remedies, but found no relief. I was telling a frieiad of mine about the bad pains in y d and she told me to try Milburn's Laxa-Liyer Pills. had tried many pills and powders, but I thought I would give your pills -a trial. I took one vial and was quite pleased with them so 1 took two snore, and now- I don't feel any headaches or diziiness. I am very thmildul to Lara -Liver Pills and I can recommend them to everyone." lifilL URN!S gently unlock the secretions, clear awo all effete and waste matter, and give tone to the whole intestinal vack. Price, 21c. a vial at all dealers, of mailed direct on receipt of price by The 'I'. Co, I,imited, .1'orcnto, Ont.' ,,,23F.,mmusiarzustammizo=05- law-mattetumavartaramy.._ s-A,V.A0ASPAL.AS *failV5-49 e Leadin e g 1921 THE MOST PROFITABLE YEAR IN THE HISTORY OF THE COMPANY Results fa Year Ended 3ist,December 4.. , , $129,37211273 year 1 e) 14,532,682.5 „ 31,107,149.,16 ASSETS I n cre a se fo CASH INCOME - Increase for year SURPLUS ever all Ilabilltiee and capital Increase lor year PROrliTS 101ild or allotted to policilioldets' -PAYMENTS:io Policyholders, beatb.CialLas, etc, ASSURANCES IN FORCE Inciease- for iear. - NEW ASSURANCES iMiiied cesh P,TvAlriggIT HEAD OPPlie MON TWAL ;54,yre 1,,355,570,73 10,383,909.10 5,0)9,241.95 1,849,089<95 11,967,069.62 536,718,130,53 0,076,895 6- 90,030,035.66 *,` Oasis A '"(