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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1912-08-01, Page 7ter MONTREAL THE STANDARD is the; NatIrmal eekly Newspaper of the Dominion Of Canada D. is national in., all ite It uses the most expensive engrav- ilngs, procuring the photographs from ell over the world. Its articles are carefully nelected and its editorial policy is thoroughly Independent. -Oubscription to The Standard boats fi2.00 per year to any address In Paned% or Great Britain. TRY IT FOR 1912! caontreal Standard Publishing Limited, Publishers. Synopsis of Canadian Northwest Land Regulations.. Any person who is the sole head of e, family, or any male over 16 year old, raay homestead a quart- er seabon of available Dominion land in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta. The applioant must ap- • pear in person at the Dominion Lands Agency or Sub -Agency for the district. Entry by proxy may be made at any agency, on cer- tain conditions by father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of intending homesteader. Duties. -Six months residence upon and cultivation of the land in each of three years, A homestead- er may live within nine miles of his homestead on a farm of at least 80 acres solely owned and oc- cupied by him or by his father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister. In certain districts a homestead- er in good standing may pre-empt a quarter -section alongside his homestead. Price, 3.00 per acre. Duties. -Must reside upon the homestead or pre-emption six months in each of six years, from date of homestead entry (including the time required to earn home- stead patent) and cultivate fifty acres extra. A homesteader who has exhausted his homestead right and cannot ob- tain a pre-emption tnay enter for a purchased homestead in certain districts. Price, $3.00. Duties. --Must reside six months in each of three years, cultivate fifty acres and erect a house worth $300.00. W. W. CORY, Deputy of the Minister of the In- terior. N.B.-Unauthorized publication of this advertisement will not be paid for. TIMBER FOR SALE Tenders will be received up to and lin oludiag -the first day of October, 1912, for the right tc; out white and red pine and ammo°, on two timber berths on the upper waters of the Jocko River east of the townships of Garrow and Lockhart, in the Diatriet of Nipissing, Provinee of Ontario, the berths being deeignated "jocko No. T." and "Jock° No. IL," each containing twenty-five square Innen More or loss. For maps and conditione of salo apply io the undersigned. -W. )I. HEARST, Minister of Lands, Forests and Mines. Toronto, July 17th, 1912, Canadian National -- Exhibition SOME FEATURES OF Imperial Year. Imperial Cadet Review Cadets from all the Overseas Dominions 'Exhibits by the Provinces Dominion Exhibits Band of Scots Guards From Buckingham Palece Paintings of the Year from Europe Paintings by best Canadian and American. Artists Imperial Cadet Competitions Boy Scouts Review Everything in Educational Exhibits Siege of Delhi Besses 0' Th' Barn ,Band Britain'a Beat Brass Band Dragoons' Musical Ride adustries in Operation Butter Making Competitions America's Greatest Live tock Show Canada's Biggest bog Show America's Prettiest Pussies Japanese Day Fireworks Motor Boat Races Hippodrome and Circus Four Stages and Arena all going Eruption of Mount Vesuvius Athletic Sports Ten Band Concerts Daily Acres of Manufactures imperial Fireworks -,60 Numbers A ug. 24 1912 Sept. 9 1" ONTO The, deal is de,clatedi off by which Sir William Mackenzie and Mr. E. R. Wood were to perchaso the Db - minion Power and Transmission line. DETROIT GRAFT SCANDAL Fourteen Aldermen and Secretary Involved in Grave Charge of Receiving Bribes A despatch from Detroit, Mich., says: Fourteen Aldermen and the Secretary of the Common Council Coinmittees are involved in a, brib- ery scandal that broke out in this' city on Fricfay. Seven have been arrested already, and the others are now being Sought by the police, The men now under arrest ase: Thos. E. Glinnan, President of the Council; Aldermen Louis 13rozo, Frank Mason, Alois Deimel, Joseph L. Thies.en and Martin Ostrowski, and E. R. Schreiter, Secretary of the Council Committees. Glinnan and Schreiter made full confessions soon after being arrested and Glin- nan turned over to the detective who arrested him a roll of $1,000 in bills, which he had received but a few minutes before. The charge against the Aldermen and Secretary is that they ticeepted money in con- nection with the granting to the Wabash Railway the right to build a freight warehouse on Seventh street between Fort street and Congress. The 'proposition was strongly advocated by the Board of Commerce and others interested in the growth of the city, but was held up by certain 'Aldermen who de- manded pay before voting for it. To catch these Aldermen the l3urns Detective Agency was em- ployed to set a trap for them, and a clictagraph was used. This is the first exposure of its; kind that .has ever been made in the Common Council of Detroit. The arrest of Tom Glinnan, the Coun- cil leader, is most commented up- on. It is said that he has already filed his petition for nomination for Mayor in the fall,election. The detectives claim that they have caught their men not only with marked money, but by telephonic testimony and phonographic re- cords. The investigation which culmin- atedin the arrests on Friday has been going on since February, when rumors of graft began to as- sume serious proportions. Mayor William B. Thompson sought the services of detectiVes, and Andrew H. Green, a prominent manufac- turer, agreed to finance the probe. GREAT BRITAIN PREPARING 43 Destroyers in 18 Months, and 8 Small Cruisers to Germany's 2 A despatch from London says: In the debate on the naval esti- mates in the House of Commons on Wednesday Winston Spencer Churchill, the First Lord of the Ad- miralty, replying to the criticism that he had made inadequate pro- vision to meet the menace he had described, said, "We are spending £45,000,000 this year and we are going to spend more next year. We are raising the personnel of the navy to 141,160 by 1913 and to 146,- 000 in 1914. As regards construc- tion, Germany this year is laying down two new battleships and we four. Next year Germany is laying down one extra and we two. This year Germany is laying down two small cruisers; we are laying down eight. Germany in the course of the next 18 months is laying down 21 destroyers; we 43. There is no cause for panic or alarm." WHOLE WORLD PREPARING. A despatch from Paris says: That the world is not yet on the eve of the cessation of the struggle be- tween Great Britain and Germany for naval supremacy is the preva- lent opinion in France after careful study'of the recent speech by Wins- ton Churchill in the House of Com- mons. The continuance of the riv- alry betWeen those two countries causes a note of regret here but there is an inclination to believe that if it must go on France should learn a lesson from England's pro- cedure and herself increase her The Matin, commenting on the subject, says it is in a position to declare that Italy and Austria at the instigation of Germany, are about to build additional super - Dreadnoughts, in regard to which nothing has been permitted to transpire. Italy is to construct six of these vessels, each of 20,000 tone displacement and capable of steam- ing at a speed of 26 knots, while Austria is to build three, each of them displacing 26,000 tons. The newspaper continues: "The fulfil- ment of this programme will de- stroy the present naval equilibrium in the Mediterranean and give a big advantage to the Triple Allianoe." COST 01' LIVING IN GERMANY. Total Extra Cost for Beef Is $18,- 000,009 Per Annum. A despatch from Berlin says: While the total charges of the Ger- man army and navy, including this year's increases, is less than $5 per head per year, a German eixono- mist, Dr. George Goldstein has computed that each Berliner will pay 21 marks (or approximately $5) more for meat this year than he would have paid ten years ago. For the nominal family of five or six this represents an extra drain on the family exchequer of $25 or $30. Dr. Goldstein arrives at his figures by taking the total dressed weight of cattle, sheep, swine, etc., slaugh- tered for Berlin consumption an- nuaAly and multiplying this by the increase in the retail prices per pound as shown by the official sta- tistics over the average price ten years ago. For greater Berlin the total extra cost is about $18,000,000 per annum. PP INFANT PARALYSIS. Twenty-eight Cases Discovered at Buffalo. A despatch from Buffalo says: Twenty-eight cases of infantile par- alysis were discovered by officers of the Health Department in a partial canvass of the city on Wednesday, and steps were at once taken to combat what appears to be a seri- ous outbreak of the disease. ' For- eign families on the east side fur- nished the bulk of the cases already located, although two children suf- fering from the disease live in Days Park, in the west side residence section of the 9ity. Three of the twenty-eight cases resulted fatally on Wednesday. PRECIOUS STONES FOUND Gold, Rubies, Garnets and Diamonds Said to Have Been Found Near James Bay A despatch from Fort William, Ont , says: That precious stones aze to be found in the country ad- jacent to the James Bay is made clear in a letter, dated Moose Fac- tory, James Bay, July 4, from Mr. Robert Swanson of Harold Street, this city, to Mr. Robert Wiego,nd. After describing his party's trip, Mr. Swanson says: "On our way down we did quite a bit of explor- ing in the river bed wherever we camped and when we would go ashore for lunch and in every in- stance found gold a,nd precious stones, such as rubies, garnets, and we also found a diamond, a small one, but big erough to be certain that it was a diamond. "We have an expert mining ma,n in our party, M that what I have told you is no guess work. Ple told me that he feels quite satisfied that the river bed is rich in gold and precious stones, once down to bed rock. What we got was just offthe surface, so that it is bound to im- prove as soon as bed rock is reached. "I feel satisfied that within the next two years the Missanabie River (commonly known as the Moose River) will be .lined with mining men. There are some good reports of the Whale and East Main River districts. One report is that a diamond was found in the East Main River valued at $76,000 and many emaller ones of less value. Another report is that two men on the Whale River panned out $360 of geld in half a day, and so on. "This place has changed ; so much to that I scarcely could find any of the old landmarks. There is ocarcely a dozen people alive here that were living when I was here in 1813." SQUINT-EYED MEN BARRED Dominion Railway Board Issues Series of Rules on the Subject A despatch from Ottawa says: Men who squint or are cross-eyed can no louger become engineers, firemen, trainmen or brakemen on Canadian railways. Following its recent judgment the Dominion Railway Commission has issued s series of uniform rules governing the determination of visual acuity,color perception and hearing -at railway employees, and among them is a clause banning the squinting or croes-eyed man. This is not the, only defect barred. Ap- plicants must not be, accepted if , .A Physical Wreck _ — Suffered Tortures from Nervousness. Miss Marguerite Lees, 91 Robert St., Hanillton, Ont., writes: "I NyaN wreck, reduced in body, and deispend- ent. I suffered tortures from nervous - nese, and was totally unfitted for work, A friend recommended Hood's Barna- patina. I cornmencedtaking it and by the time the second bottle was con- sumed 2 knew that I was mending. , Gradually I grew well. I have used Hood's since. I would not be without It on any account and do most enthu- siastically' endorse every word in Its laver." . Get Hood's Sarsaparilla today. Sold y all druggists everywhere. PRICES OF FARM PRODUCTS REPORre FROM THE LEADING TRADa CENTRES OF AMERICA. Mom of Cattle, Crain, Cheese and Other Produce at Nome and Abroad BREADSTUFFS. Toronto. July 30. -Flour -Winter. 90 ner •cent. patents, 54.15 -to 64.20. at seaboard, and at $4.20 to 94.26 for home (seaman - tion,.. Manitoba flours (these aubtations are for into bags. in cotton bass 1.00 more) --First patents. $5.70; second patents, $6.20. and strong bakers% 55, on track. Toronto. Manitoba Wheat -No, 1 Northern. $1.- 121-2. Bay ports: No, 2 at $1.09, and No, 3 at$1.05 to 61.05 1-2. Bay ports. Ontario Wheat -No. 2 white, red aud mixed, quoted at $1.05. outside. Peas -Nominal. • Oats -Oar lots of No. 0 ,Ontario quoted at 46 to 46c, and No. 3 at 44e, on track, Toronto. No. 1 extra, W. G. feed, 44 to 400. Bay north. and No. 1 at 43 to 44e, Bar Port,. Barley -Nominal. Cora -No. 3 American yellow, 75o, on track. Bay ports, and at so to 810, To- ronto. Rye -Nominal. Buckwheat -Nominal. Bran -Manitoba bran, 4124, in bags, To- ronto freight. Shorts. 228. COUNTRY PRODUCE. Butter -Dairy. choice, 23 to 26o; bakers', inferior. So to 21o; creamery, 27 to 28o for rolls, and 26e for solids. Effgs-Oase lots, 23 to 25o a dozen. Cheese -New oheese, 14,5.40 for large and 14 1.2e for twine. Beans-Hand.picked, $3 per bushel; primes. MA to 90.00. Honey -Extracted, in tine, 11 to 12a per lb. Poultry -Wholesale prices of onoice dressed poultry:-Ohieltens. 18 to 22o per lb.; fowl, 13 to 14o; duoklings, 16 to 17o. Live poultry, about Zo lower than 'the above. • Potatoes -Car lots of Ontarkm, in bap, $1.40, and Delaware, at $1.60. PROVISIO- NS. Smoked and Dry Salted Meats -Rolls - Smoked, 130 to 132-20; hams. medium, 171-2o to 180; heavy, 261-2 to 170; break - feet bacon, 181-20; long clear bacon, tone and oases, 14o to 141 -Bo; backs (plain). 20o. backs, (Dearman. Me. Given Meats -Out of pickle, lo. len than smoired. Pork -Short out, MA to $26 Der bar- rel; mess pork, $20 to $21. Lard -Tierces. 133-4o; tubs, 14o; nails, 14 1.4o. MONTREAL MA- RKETS. Montreal, July 30. -Cate. Canadian Western, N. 2, 46 to 45 1.2o; Canadian West- ern, No. 3, 440: extra No. 1 feed, Mo. Bar- ley. Man. feed, 63 to 64e; mating, 51 05 to $1.07. Buckwheat, No. 2, 76 to 76o. Flour, Ilan. spring wheat patents. firste. $5.80: seconds, $6.30; strong bakers', 116.10; Ma- ter patents ohoice, $6.40 to $5.60; straight rollers 154.95 to $5.00; straight rollers. bags, $2.40 to $2.46. Rolled oats, barrels, 8506; base, 90 lbs., 162.40. Bran, 222.00. Shorts, .926,00. Middlings, $27.00. Moonlit% Mt) to 934.00. Hay, No. 2, per tan, oar lots; $16.00 to $17.00, Cheese, finest westerns. 13 143 to 121-4c: lined easterns, 508.0 to 126.8,, Butter, choicest creamery, 261-4 to 261-2e, seconds, 251.0 to 26o. Eggs. aeloated, 26 14 to 261-60; No. 2 stook, 16 to160. Potatooe, per bag, ear lots, 8140. LIVE STOOK MARKETS. Montreal, July M. -Choice (mtge. 06.76 to MA; good, $6.00 to $6.76; fair, 29.00 to $6.- 00; butchers' bulls, $4.00; do., owes. alleles, 5600 to $6.60; common, $4.00 to 84.60. Old $9.00. Calves, fromto $2.00 to 5e111,0e.0e013., 4o per pound and lambs 70 per lb. Hogs 28.76 Toronto, July 30, -Butchers' oattle brought from $7 to 97.26, while good stuff grades from $7 down to 96.60. Medium staff brought from $6,50 to $6.60, Light heifers brought 164.60 to $4.80, and Moak- ers, weighing 760 lbs., brought $6. Good cows were firmer, going as high as $5.60 and bulbs were worth more, some bring- ing from 96.60 to $6.00. Common cows were worth from $2 to 53.60. Lambs brought from $8 to $8.26. Sheep brought from $3.60 to $4.76, and good °elves $7.60, with some common grades at 85.36. Hoge brought from $8.10 to 8010 f.o.b. The price for fed and watered stook was $8.30 to $13.- 40 per hundredweight they Use glasses for near vision, thongh when the distant vision of an employee can be improved by good glasses their use is encourag- ed. Color blindness is also 'barred, ansi good hearing powers are strin-' gently insisted upon. Applicants must be able to hear and repeat names and numbers spoken in a conversational tone 'air' a distance of twenty, feet. " Employees must be re-examined in all these particulars after • any illness or accident which might have affected them, as well as before promotion, UNITED STATES MARKETS. Minneapolis, July 30.-Whewt-Ju2y, 151.- 03 1-4, September, 94 3-8 to 94 1-2e; Decem- ber, 95 1-4a. °lasing cash -No. 1 hard, 161.- 06; No. 1 Northern, 61,042-5; No. 2 North- ern, $1:02 1.2, Corn -No, 3 yellow, 741-2 to 75e, Oats -No, 3 white. 461-20, Rye -No. 2, 70a, Duluth, July 30. -Wheat -No. 1 hard. 3l.063•8; No, 1 Northern, 51,042.8; No, 2 do., 91,003.8; July, $1.04 bid; September, 960; December, 062'4a asked. AEROPLANE CARRIES GUN. Twenty Rounds Fired at 400 Fed In a Stiff Breeze. A despatch from London, Eng- land, says: Experiments with a quick -firing gun in an aeroplane made by the Royal Flying Corps of Farnborough on Thursday proved entirely successful and are regard- ed as another step in the advance of the aeroplane and waterplane as a means of land and sea defence. The test with the qulck-firing gun was made in a stiff breeze, at a height of 400 feet. Some twenty rounds of ammunition were fired at imaginary objects on the plane directly beneath the aeroplane. The result had little effect upon the machine, RAILVVAVS ENTER APPEAL. --- Against Order to Provide Safe- guards Against Fires on Lines. A despatch from Ottawa says: The C.P.R., G.T.R., and C.N.R. have entered an appeal to the Su- preme Court against the 'order of the Railway Clotnmission under which they are directed to provide expensive sgeguardi against fires along their lines in the west. The companies in a number of cases al- lege leek of jurisdiction. is certainly one of the most disagres- able ailments which flesh is heir to. Coated tongue -bitter taste in the mouth-- nausea - dizziness- these combine to make life a burden. The cause is a disordered liver -the cure Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills. They go straight to the root of the trou bit, put the liver right, cleanse the stom- ach and bowels, clear the tongue and take away the bitter team from the mouth. .At the first sign of bilious- ness take Dr. M orse.'s Indian R.00t Pills THE NEWS IN A PARAGRAPH HAPPENINGS FROM ALL OVER THE GLOBE INA NUTSHELL.' Canada, the Empire and the World in General Before Your Rtes. CANADA. Four valuable colts were killed by lightning near Kendal. Harry Littely was seriously burned by molten metal at Guelph. Alex. Scott was drowned an attempt to shoot the Sault B,a,pids in a canoe. Capt. George Dick, a well-known mariner of the upper lakes, was found dead of heart diseam at Kingston. Two thousand members of the In- dustrial Workers of the World went on strike on the Grand Trunk Pa- The plans are ready for the build- ing of the C.N.R. Toronto -Hamil- ton line. Nelson Cope, aged eighty-one of Copetown, 'broke his ,neck by a fall from his' rig. Twenty thousand harvesters are wanted along the transcontinental line of the C. N. R. A. McCormick, farm laborer, was run over and killed by a fast G.T.R. freight train at Trenton. Mitchell Siwatis and Charles Leaf, Indians, were drowned in the Serge River, near St. Regis. Finlay McGibbon, brother of the Mayor of Sarnia, dropped dead when about t,o go for a walk. Fifty cases of blindnesa miracu- lously cured are reported from the shrine of Cote des Neiges, Quebec. Harry Gilmore, awaiting trial for assault on his four weeks' bride, committed suicide in the Hamilton Police Court. Wm. S. Bryant, .jun., of Plain- field, N.J., was accidentally ohoked to death at the Ardamnrchen Club, Central Argyle, N.S. GREAT BRITAIN. Fifty thousand strikers paraded London on Wednesday. There was a fight between strikers and "black- legs." Mr. Lloyd George announced in the House of Commons the inten- tion of the Government to intro- duce a bill to deal with labor dis- putes. Mr. Asquith in a speech in the Commons, emphasized the peaceful relations existing between Britain and all the powers, including Ger- many. - The La Follette wool bill passed the U. S. Senate, The Senate by 37 to 26 votes canied an amend- ment to the excise bill for repeal of Canadian reciprocity act, UNITED STATES. Rev. Dr. Griffith John, for over 55 years a missionary in China, is dead. GENERAL. The Albanians captured Pristine and Prisrend from the Turks. .Norasmormk* tiorporal Iffortimer, of the Army Service Corps, Ottawa, who won four matches tut Bosley and made a world's record. FIFTY FAMILIES HOMELESS. Cloudburst Does Great Dainage in Pennsylvania. A despatch from Connellsville, Pa., says: Fifty families are tem- porarily homeless, $100,000 damage was done, buildings and bridges were washed away, and railroad traffic was suspended at Dunbar as a result of'a cloudburst on Wednes- day afternoon.. The lower streets of the town were'rivers, and stores and residences were surrounded by from four to ,six feet of water. There was a reign of terror in the town about one o'clock in theafter- noon, when it was rumored three dams about five miles above Dun- bar had burst, and a repetition of the Austin disaster was feared for a GUAR DE D EVERYWHERE. -- British Premier Has to Have Escort Even at a Wedding. A despatch from London says: Additional police guards have been detailed to guard the Cabinet Min- isters against Suffragette assaults. It was rumored on Wednesday that the Scotland Yard authorities have been warned that an immense dem- onstration is being planned. Prem- ier Asquith's life has been made un- bearable for him. Ile cannot stir without heavy police guards. He attended a wedding on Tuesday at St. Margaret' 0 Church, Westtnins- tielaran,yrdaiidmw, ,:eelthol:gpuedt hetlninvoaxited,Gohmis. I ic 11' ;11,111 re,ian"g eVerage 4°0, CI' ell FOUR THAN S CONTINENTALS. Brandon Branch Grand Trunk Pa- cific to be Begun at Once. A despatch from Brandon, Mani- toba, says: The Mayor of Bran- don has received a communication from J. A. M. Aikina, M.P. for Brandon, to the effect that he has been assured* by Mr. Chamberlin, President of the Grand Trunk Rail- way, that the work of constructing the Brandon branch of that road will be 'commenced at once. When the Grand Trunk Pacific comes into Brandon the city will have four transcontinental railways besides many branch line. Stant a Pear Surely you can spare a dollar or two from your pay envelope this week: Open a savings account and get 3% interest, payable half -yearly. Keep up the saving habit and you will soon have Sioo or more, when you can buy our debentures and get 47, on your money. Issued for Sim) and upwards. Terms one to five years. Do this with a safe and well-known Company—with the only loan com- pany In Canada having a reserve fund equal to its paid-up capital. Incorporated 1869. .roan ana Servings Co. Over 13 Million In Assets 29) WESTERN FAIR September Otto to 14th, 1912, London's Great Exhibition Liberal Prizes. Speed Event $ each day. Instructive Exhibits. New Art Building filled with 'Magnificent Paintings. , ATTRACTIONS Programme Twice Daily. Live Stock. Parade Daily. BESSES 0' TI1E BARN BAND of Cheltenham, England. One of the greatest Brass Bands in the world, 'and several ethers. AERIAL ACTS, _COMEDY ACTS, TRAMBOLINE and ACROBATIC ACTS, SEABERT'S EQUESTRIENNE ACT, and others. The Midway Better Than Ever. Fireworks Each Evening. SINGLE FARE RATES OVER ALL RAILROADS FROM KINGSTON TO DETROIT Special Excursion Days, Sept. 10th, 12th, 139h. Prize Lists anti all information from W. J. REID, President. A. M. HUNT, Secretary. CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY UPPER LAKES NAVIGATION ...... leave Port MoNiooll Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays at 4 p.m. Tor SAULT STE. MARIE, PONT AIIIIIIIIR AWN EMU IVI/LIAAPI The Steamer Manitoba, sailing from Port MoNicoll wednosdays will WI at Owen Sound, leaving that point 10.00 pin. ' — STEAMSHIP EXPRESS loaves Toronto MO p.m. on sailing days malting aired connection with Steamers at Port Moliiooll Nom ese kers' Excursions Every Second Tuesday until Sept 17, inolugye WINNIPEG and RETURN - $34.00 EDMONTON and RETURN - $42.00 Proportionate rates to other points. Return 1905 03 days, TEROIDGEI TOVEIST STEEPING: CANS Aek nearest O. P.11 Agent for Romoseekers' Pamphlet -- W. .JACKC ON, Agent at Clinton TICIC09YOS AND 101.1 T. INIPUTLMATION FROM ANY C.P.R. A(.4515T AllifinallerdNPUNIKPM=122sessii 1l, Lager is the ideal varann weather drink—invigorating, refreshing, sat- isfying. Try a glass wnen you feel fatigued. You will appreciate its beneficial, health -giving properties. Keep a case of iV in your home. it will pr ve a source of constant satisfaction. JOHN LA ATT, LIMITED LONDON, cANADA,. 4 4 4 0 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 A • 4 4 4 4 ttrA 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 1 4 4 i 1 1 4 4