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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1922-11-16, Page 2Try these a e s9 ve mil les king at hoe. rHERE are luscious rais- .1 in, pies just around the comer, at your groeer's or a bake shop. Baked to a turn—a flaky Crust filled with tender, temPting raisins, the rich juice forming a delicious sauce. Once try tnese pies that master bakers bakefresh daily in your city and you'll nevei take the trouble afterwards to make raisin pies at home. Get a pie now and let your men folks taste it. Made with tender,thiraskinned, meaty, seeded Sun-Maidltaisine, SU Raisins furnivIL 11560 calories of energizing nutriment, per pound in practically predigested form. Also a fine content of fo00.- iron—good food for the blood. T.Yse raisins frapleinaly, fore, which are both good and good for you, in puddings cakes; cookies, etc. You may be offered ether brands that you know less well than Sun -Maids, but the kind you want is the kind you know- n •good. Insist, therefore, on Sun -Maid brand. They cost no more than ordinary raisins. Mail coePon for free book of tested Sun -Maid recipee. Learn what you can do with luscious raisins, • -.- Suz4Viitid Raisin Growers Menibfrehip lasso FRESNO, CALIFORNIA ,Blue Packayre Di= 21,4131111 =UMW 321=4111rt MM. alma Wm. Is Oa eV =MN CUT THIS OUT AND SEND XTe 1 Sun -Maid %thin Growers,. , Dept: N-633-1, Fresno, California. Please send me copy- of your free book, 1 "Recipes with Raisins." — STREET . 1 CITY.- --STATE. - , 41,DVANCE ow Punch.r BY ROBERT 1T., 0, STNAD. Copyright Tho lelneson Book Co.) ,!•••• Yr, CHAPTER noW that his life load been empty and Dave hesitated is, 'few moments, as% Sitalloya! IffalS ratherdevident that he threw lite mind back tyVer talp TITLY on& life is empty and eballaw: . Tears that had, genelay since'the„datr-Nature ad made 'no .111i:stake in . when 'Con -Ward prpoeed ciea partherthip ereeing at hunians should live to him. He eaW aagin his little ofiaaatjz' Da" had 'never, thought much w,hero ,he ground vat hthiture for Th„ on 'that paint before, but tow it ccletryl,0,6tnhsleoillittliiereedw, atsa,t,thavibitiguesbie.a.r.,r, thsiti etruick.him ',a1 so obvious that none oeuld; fail 'to. eee)iliS logie. , The tharm waa a, Mytwhich and the pasteepot,--yee, the page:pot, ef haehelorheod 'h ' and ,the lock he had installed to only needed contact with the gentle tect it, and his select file -of time cepy, iitmosPhere of .feaninine affection to • from , depredation. And the smell of "Pc'sed• ' •'printer's ink; even Yet, when business The- Chinese boa' 'coughed deferene took Dave. into, printingeoffice, tae 'tiangiand Dave was-,reealleci from his smell a ink brought back those old,- reverie' Be took his hat'an4 e'eat and happy„.,d4ysh Ham;,,y day? whirs: he -Went int ot the street.; It Vves.this cus- worked; more hoar& than a Man should at a !modest • swh7,tijklid cw'sh's edea'tlahrYe ,otilniat'n.us" aoutt„o'maccnt! hheaolgtthirer th*The:adi:treetsrocafftnedlrbscil:saes:taevpThtlettthwbellt84,beet:ti, tom to take his meake doors called hiireand hie soul rebelled against the • des0c't'i'sn'i of fate! ,yeo wisdom in dressing for an 'event un- , less he was going to deflect has course Sameethat frim thedai1y ratline. The dining -hall VMS a 'blaze of light; the odor of early roses blended , With imported perfulnee, and strains of sweet, subdued! music , treinbled thaeugh- the, room -in accompaniment to the nterryemalting ef ,the diners. Dave paused fora moment, .awa.itin,g surely they were happy days. He smiled. 'a moment as he thought, of them; paused to' daily* with them on his way ta an answer for Conwarde then 'skimmed: quickly awn the sur- face of events to this present evening. More wonderful had the years been than any dream of 'fiction; no Wizard's wand had ever worlad/leI*he nq , aelet the beck of a waiter, but in that iino- "You remember, don't you? Con- merit life eye fell on Conward, seated ward repeate& at a table with Mrs. Hardy and Irene. "Oh, about the mei V: Dave laughed. Conward had seen Man, and was rno- The moment of reminiscence had re- tioning to him to join them. The stored his, good humor. "Yee. I sup- sit/nation was embarrassing, and yet •Pes-6 wasaa bargain' You haveheld delightful. Hewes glad he had dress - me to it pretty •,for dinner, "id ,et. it remain a, !bargain' to the ,,t-ein us, Eiden ,, Gottwald saidas appeared, to be nothing to gain from elltacifvVeiseeidderoaiGni:nedwtharst'hhecLuPsiu‘t1;bt.leotls .-t'heTh°11erlYe exYttooeunte1,717171ranot.refiou7eyt'sO Strhattlirse.ate; lie rearlied their .iable. "Just a Ifttle • • pursuing it, 'further. They were In , Dave looked at Mitt. Ready. Had the grip of a 'System—a System Which he been dealing with Conward and had found them poor, had suddenly l\lr made them wealthy, • and now, vrihtli. ousse'Hardyd,hi inieloeafarbnnet. heilehMal1dto havetfiinex- koa equal iiiddennesa, 'threatened to matte Irene. • That is he had to justify her them poor again. It was like war— ay being corree4-an his /mufflers. And kill or be 'killed. It occurred 'to Dave as he looked from mother to daughter that it was even worse than was. War he realized that Irene had not in - has in it the qualities a the heroic; herited all herbeauty from her father. sPlendid braverY'l immeasurable -self- In their dinner gowns Mrs. Hardy was saocato rificea; vthaegtuebriacteaaeli. visphiricithrotofrd leave°1; daughter ravishing. Dave thought he sedate and even !beautiful, and hor ti • of abetter name, Is ;called:patriotism. bad not before seen so much womanly sYstem had none of that It was bin any figure. more like assassination. . . I "Do, join us," said Mrs. Hardy:• - It Night had settled when Dave 1 -eft was evident to Mrs.- Har-dy that it the °Mee. • The ehainPagne shy had would be correct forherto support deepens& into a strip of 0013Perl the Mr. Conward'e invitation. silhouettes were soft and Mack; street '‘oyou are eery i' aid studded the bank of foothills he seated himself. said Dave,, as A and vulgarity. So she noted Eitien's - ' t,0 the weet like setting stars, Della for this, pleasure.""i 11AanddikoYietuol?the'e correct 'deIPertment' 'veil to—a' it ' between the clay and the Rockme in :that Con -ward had outeplayed him. It the lap of Night, awl the great ridge was Conwiard who had done the, gee - stood laii clos.e,and clear, prodding its cleats thing. And Dave could net pre - jagged. edgeintothe ,copPer Pennant .vent' Canward doirig the gracious of the day' e faretvell. • A soft wind thing 'without himself being oe. bleve from the south-weett; June was e.racion,s • ;414rtel• 4•tittyotairerett " " r " a • ' Satisfies the sweet tooth, and —aids appetite and digestion:. Cleanses Mouth and teeth. A great boon. to smokers, relieving hot, dry mouth. Combines' pleasure nd benefit. Don't mi'ss the joy of the • new NIPS --:-the candy.coated peppermint tid. biti Chew it after every meat Packed Tight. • Kept Mohr— C16 nes,s had tucked the distance tha.t 19 pleas= e was -not unmixed. He felt in seeMed to her—hisi .correct modesty taking little part in the cenversa- tion, with: a sense that all thie was a disge*.e, and that presently he would, figuratiyely, buret_ forth- from: his -linen and broadcloth and stand .reeealed chaps and be:laden& But the meal pro- gressed -with no such development,' and Y- - le' Ilts,• :3Fouar21;g3rmalna wasa not dealing fairly Choosing Your Corset. many difficulties, to there thouldt be heart, as ihe walkedathetfew blocks to ek,se scrutiny H d . in the air.• Rine, too, was in Dave's , He was aware of being under•the , H d that Honesty speaking, all women want to -look. their best, but to look one's br.b means something more vital "than the weaning of a corset that gives figure lines at the expense of comfort and-thealth. means,that the corset should be eheeen With intelligence, selecting the parfeular style which win not only give its wearer good lines, but protect the wearer's heath by the comfort obtained through wear- ing a hygienically comment support. Observation shows us emit at alocilut the age of ,thicrity there is a definite increase in the waist measure. Mae ts not leausell by excess fie& alone, but • also by a sat,gging of the -abdominal muscles. The sagging of these muscles causes Idle vtal organs to- fall, and •es soon as an 0trgan has 'let iba norm- al position ,there is danger of disease. This disease may be slight and cause • only miaow ilk—headache, nerves, a poor complexion, -wrinkles, backache— things that are not fatal, but things that make it hard for, us and for those who live with us. Or, it may cause some of ,our Meet dreaded diseases and the igreateSt of suffering. Thesel conditions are not confined to the un-' corseted. form; •the wearing of a poorly desig-ned incatrreet style of corset wuld produce equally hadt ne sults, An incorrect corset, one which is not firmly authored at the hip -line, • one which does not exert gentle wet, - sure over the back and ,give simport to the abdominal, muscles, will -riae op" on the figure and anchor at the 'mkt -dine (givIng Want 330eSSUlle there) and will exert 12t, downward presSure over the abdomen This sagging of the abdominal mus- cles makes it almost impowsibie for a woman to stand corradtly, 4oel•a alotrehing figure IlatateS, a loss of that graceful poise that is the very foUnda- ebb. a style. gorge Of •the•most ii0,41111011S dre.sonaters ger lie far aa IMY fif litpesaible to elatae Ve1, tgkientlitin beleroteingIV Wi'11111S0 fig111ft &2) 014 '111E TM- pertitell and toiho does tot atand oar- Yedly, Proper support 'MN. esteteliae greet core in the ,seleetian of on, s his baoldelOr quarters. a What 0 e °onward sought to montoPolize her scientiaaaat, destotea to tape. aone drab injustice of ausinessa Let him attentderd He liad., an i gr tiara with her. He was refasing to live np r /non sense gh us that a cerset forget that. now it was night . . h. . way with s t ra n g e r s ; he strilu1C a &inn! to her preconceived ideas of what his and she bud ..iledi him Dave. -Note, fidential note that ,quickly called, firth part "'id be. Had:Mra' Handy been climbed the stepo to his rooms. with. confidence in return, and Dave was t•ciaopnas,,Iceorrafeotalyti:aisyheeinwgouihder,hsovwenkneenewezl. energy and life tingling in his limhs / 1 chagrined to see that not only was his then hestoo.cl in his, 'Window and 'for a I paltrier creating the intended hmoese that Dave was undermining her belief long while -watched the traffic in the , slot, upon .Mrs. Hardy, hut his sallies in caste, and without caste there could street below, That is, his eyes were Ana witticfisons were gradually win_ .wbeagnenoctiy.ailizdeeteipensleifadritailv;$dt,s...HTzz directed to the itraffic, but what he nin o S I. And th g reset nee rom iene. e sa-se was' a, mei-TY 'girl in a hr(r‘vn more he was annoyed. at this tuen oil h i to tions,• brarneekge_sa•wixhesheettilelgs,ilaaast:lira ;tixionhwia'settso. tqhulearnirealr'k.anifd peisefnegaargoefdoivnerd-issteeptispsiineng classifying their acq•L'aintalree1 8°' It is one thing to design corsets to And Sim had even held that te be a atdaced, -a, aiience which mig.oh6 easily suit the individual type and another worthy ambition. She had said, "Per- have been mistaken for mental Mani - haps the day is emning When our tion. He contented himself with bea' thing to get the corset ion the type of 5,,,..an for ..4.1k4). At Irma ,(102..ae.d. par eguniaa . Will want men who can oho'ot ling punctiliously ,correet in his table practical purposes, women, are divided • and ride more than it will want law- etiquette. arrto ,Faaistaa type4 a figures: 4,,,, yers or professors." He smiled. at the •Perhaps he mild have foliowed. no „ „',17 .reconection of her words. The Doman- wteer eourse. Dave's manners had an short slend:er, the ,/.10'Ist heavy, the tail tic -days of youth! like the mirage of effect upon Mrs. I -lardy similar to that slender, the tall heavy, the average, sunrise they fade and are lost in the which sheallacl experienced from the Dye A:ryoGidarDn're:plery the large ,balvw the waist, the large morning of life. , . •. And their Young decent civilization :of the Western va,gue, sense which woruitd fit a slim., tall -woman, Would nob bp suitable for the etout -*amain, even though it were used in a larger !size. • Coesets .are designed to -use the right wienber of bones at the right place and have the right amOunt fullinZso to take:care 131 any who accept all distinctions, as due to, • laindf of figure and !gently pet -Suede it -sweater, she her glances of ad- e o t dt ,external causes ave no recces on affairs, the. deSe was be alai to correct posture and ideal prop?aorniration -upon a ra-w- the it. ' .As CIonwardts guest he could not any de:el) t:a 1.1.11)1 t„Y ls e n as• has .been stated, the impression ,created .uipoh her , mind by .Eklen's proper eoncbact was one of vague an. .noyance that proper ciaa,duct should he founa'M one not reared cwithin the charmed, circle of the elite. (Tobecontinued.) $ • ri -cco, p, lasop The tug !dun- , city. To herdit seemed inmossible in Diantaind yea mimed bock. A woman should, study the -dead calf; he had propounded the that a raw yeuth, red on the ranges _-__. herself and know to which group she wisdom that it is' always innecent cow Puncher—could conduct him. B belongs. The verage woman measures thiantgesHntic,itaturgearcatuhaghtt,• bbee-icirALitillatr 'fleslfhicTZtltYabibel elitt‘1,-a ndll'oe'r7 tahtena m -Pure "Ddilia'enelt7el'cnispYinez"evaleirdyft)pirkatgehe' eem 0 g00 Wasn't that impossette_at ws iteterodox; it was Donk -wonder whether You eon dye or eve feet fiNte inches in height, thirty- s; t h a twerilt-Y-5•67.011 ineh• waist anu what Conward had arguea to him ,this , defiance of the principles upon tint suceassfallY, bectause Perfe-ot thirty-seven inch an. very afterno.on, and he had found leo 'which caste as based, and be Mrs, home dyeing is guazanteed with Dia- - Benienber He wondered, what Reenie'S Hardy este was the one safe line mond Dyes even it you have never that t t protects the health, it makes the best cof the figure and; it weans well because it so follows the natural outlines and movements of the figure that there is no undue Strain *teed unon it, A corset designed to type will bring one to grateful proportion% *tie curve above the vval t -the She t isted h* ti T1 ht they1 experience heal been. .A.nd. then et' demarkation between refiner/a It the eornpact under the spruee trees.1 " , ",Coine to me—like that " the hadsaid, "and then—then we'll, know," And be -day. he ;had called him Dave. He dressed:with care. The Chinese boy Was never .more obsequious, in his, attentions,. and Dave never pre.eented growing out ,o1 another with no. part a morel'han.fr'aliPearance' until he was about to leave his rooxne • macie prominent, that he remerebered. he naust dine When. about 'to pixt‘thase a corset ,ga, alone; he had been dressing far her, to ,the !hest store within Tautly, ask for Unoonseiouslya-The realization brought e standard make and permission to him uP with selnething tif a shook. fitty it en hi' the elreSering event, lehich s IYIR neYe±' dein he sa;k1' "I can't et,,,,„aa! :et _..1044kied. d..t the, ourp„,,,,e, eat alone to -night. And l: ean't ask ',.1/`"UuU IP°14 Pr „, '''', ,„''' It, enie, go soot alter'the ireident with T110 01'8101;0M6'n 111 4116tori'•kli)e-e fm.14're he°r mother. 'I. 'know—Bert Morrison." knew just how to belp you select the Ite reached for thetelePharie and rang, tight t4e eta *ale. lf you are net her number. Ilad anyone charged . talithiti reachot swat bgip., fitting Dave With tieltleness in Ins effeetient ehatt4 ime now ptosid4 which ahe* he arauld!have lau,ghed a.t the absurd- PPP ,11141, abson very plainly and conclusively just the itY, 110.-d'ade tot remained tree td Oho b it, • -wade of his life? A man always cotst,6 a woman ethouid ,w,tax, to ,stiat re. passion -through the d'angerons ea guts, 0 maize her ge�dPOin 1 ,bhinirn of the decade just ended as end make herottecolo., the dangeroUsrleeade. And Nrt atauti t0e. II ot00i.0k0. Imo ,aaagood friond. As he waited at the telepleend ho recalled the im. ptflata ealtielt had seized ,hitn when they had Teat parted.. But -the recolleetion breught billy a glow of friendship for flat, There Was no hint of danger `iti It. Her nerriber did not answer. He thought of Edith, Damian. But Edith lite& at home, and it was natell too la.te to extend a formal dieher invita- ldeii. There Wee nothing or it but to eat along, • He suddenly becatile on eve teiteas of the great lonelblese of r, bachelor life. After all, he tvae (-mite as much ,alone in the eity as he bed heart in his boyhood in the bills. He begot to moralize ,on this wah,ioct or 1015411485, It wao very evident te him sIttett roc R E UM Alric SUFFERERS Teetimordalt, Dear Sire—After eufteaing faym, Sciatica for over 15 years and spending money on Median% • bathe, eleetrie belt% eta, which. did me ad good, I was cured by using one bottle of your NEW LIFE laitIMEDY. `rot= 'truly, Gietay, Gerrard SL East., Toronto SOinxebbattelse 10°rr Fthrlivee Mailed direct to customers. TN 1 — Fr 0,t1111/1,14!i ant 511 Adoleldu Toroeto Cie nada , dyed before. Warn; faded &ages', , 1t'' , 'Skirts, waists, `note, sWesten% ssoc tnge, .draperies, hangings, ,everything, become like new a,gairt, Just tell your druggist whetter 'the material you. -wish to dye is „wool or eilk or whether te : is linecotton, or .mixed geode. Diamond Dyes' tever streak, 'spot, fade, OT 'run. Telegr,ame were first sent ander the soaV,s, 'cable in 1850 between England Mal Rt./lee. iainard's Linimeet for Golds, etc... 610 4tter$ cpngestion kii get quick relict froie s combs, ree qtyieg,...$1,,,Ao'g. By etookuniiiectrootee tan of blood the cot) geetion isbrolaau, Mflhiiis baat also forted in Sloan s. weicemeYelief from 1'1)(10110'01, 1<ten It bandy for sera bruised Mixeclee, babk. aches gad nettralgla•, ' Made in Cetried4 Unit11014041 ,,Pand ••••••,04•04004 mrit, ' 1411omniarsnacetraszazia, HE postman or express man will bring Parker service right td your home. Whatever you Send—whether it be suits, coats, dresses, lace . cartainst' tapestry draperies, !'etc., etc.—will be! beattifully cleaned by the Parker process and speedily re- turned. We pay carriage one way orrall orders. • Waite lox gen eiiitielders. Parker's.. Dye Work, s Llinitea Cleaners and Dyers • 791 Yonge St. Toronto 9815 'Thursday, 1/Ovegober 1,94, r`• How to Atka, Your Dreams Come PrIttit • Our heart leaginge, eiir seul spiratiou, are Protheoles, pre- • dict:1one, tore-runnere of reali- ties. Thor are ladicatote ot our notafitilities,, of the thinge we can aecomptieh. Tho moment you reeelve to make your lite dream come true, you have taken the first stop to- warde its realization, hut you will stop there if your efforts cease. Keeping algal after • your ideals, reaming your-visionp, cul- tivating your dream's, -visualizing tho thing you , long for -vividly, interteelY, and striving with all your might to match, it with reality—this, ie what makes lite • count,• Our dreaming canacitY gives • us, a peep into, the glorious renal - ties that await us, filthier en.— • Sueeess. • Provizidal. •'Before you came I got the paleere read So I could talk to you of diplomats, And I could say just vallile:t the papers said. A.ad then you ,askedi about tho tiger cats, And geld you liked, my waving novae of hair, , • And eeid the old town, had not changed: a bit. It's nice and restful for you, ,ien't it? I knew • just how Mies Mary in her One of man's first inventions, was the net for catching ,fiele His idea was obtained front studying a spider's web. Dr, Lucien Cueatot, famous French bielogist, claims that the wheel is our only invention not found in nature. The Chinese are optimiatic; they believe they ,ttre going to get their present difficulties strghtened- out. •Their total debt is consideaably less than two billion dollars, whielh is less than "fivet, &Matta per tapita for the population of four hundred—millions, a position that compares favorably with that of most other nations,. Minard's Liniment for Diphtheria. Infants, have an exceptionally lteen, sense of ta,ste, which is, dulled as they develop. For Nervous 1-leadddieg I S THE RELIEF from head- • ache or neuralgic parte worth one cent to yoet Viet's an it costs for tin applicatioe of "Vaseline" Mentliolated jelly. With the first indleetien of a„ heitdaohe rub a Oman amount of it gently on tile forehead and ternpleS So conVenient, effec- tive aneeconornical 1- CHEStSIZOTJG1-1 MAran1PActul1we ociallearea • toavetaitatt , 1880 Chabot Ave. liteetteal deeaee,„ ;ay eat vagelln TratIts 'Mark NTH C LATE Ostttli alalY Feels; when folks eall—and, now you've gone again. - '- If y04 lived there a,ral I lived over ,there I would come back from dealing with greet men To see you and the, "dear old town" again; But I'd not talk to you of tiger cata I dreamed last night ars angel puehed With both hands on theapple tree tXmder iny paltiw, till he crushed - Tale black bark, and the ringe, of wood Split at his touch, and there you stood Inside; your eyes danced, merrily As YOU reacb.ed, out yam. arme to me. But now by. day the tree looks just the same " ' As it did before you came. • . e I lad more sense th,an, you bad, any-'' way:. - When we stood laughing at ,the but- ting lamb, , Ansi wlienwe lett.the ,pail clown in the speing, „ And When, we raced be:side the beaver d,ani, I'M. glad Inever heard your whisper. mag,l'in. 'glad I' never let yon play' with ine And se,t the neighboesi tongues a- gessiping.„ You'd be as distant ae. you are to -day, And. I'd be that mu -ch worise off theft I am. --'-'Skola White,' '•.:Alpha.bet. for the:Blir4d. ..uchtleso is a marvelous' language," • said Mode La Pallee, "bat only:people wit -A) know it ean snake themselyee un- derstood in *LP The same could •he said ef ,the Brailo alphabet, since „ Only .the initiated can decipher •it. Fiera tiole results a great difficultfor • the blind to correspond with the see- ing; for it is in general, only In immediate surrounding that bile- owe. ventional Writing ie. known. In order to remedy this. inconvenience writ- ing in the -ileum]. •claaractere has foe a. long time beet. sought which can he reed by ail. , 'Tito first -who had this icle,a was Braille himeeff, but, not stioceecliag in obtalataia satisfactory result, he re- •nounced it. Ballu, Cle aad M. Itoya, profeesor of philos,aphea the College of .Epernay, also made interesting at- ' tempts in this direction. Father Cantonnet hes now perfeeted a -writing method in relief, inethe usual, cliareetere, which seeme definite and WI -doll has been approyed by the inter - Allied congress of the mutilated. • His alphabet follows, as near as, Possible the Romen, thare,eters and retains, theie synthetic form end 'appearance so much so that they can, be easily de- eiphered. Osetain letters es, "T;d, "IP or "I" are,absolutely identical -with tetra, exeeptieg that they are.forrned by ti sucoeseion or points, instead of a continited etroka , Thts m.o.tibO'a dOes not pretend to de- throne the Braille wilt& remains ex- cellent for thleirtitiated, but it will per- mit the blindto correspond with any o,tue. Canon, Nouet,' who bee found a simi- lar method, has had it blended with that of t'ather. Cal:dot:met .a.nd was ahle to adapt 41 to the Greek, Slavic and Hebrew. , It is to bo added that the congrese for the ean,elIforation of the, fate of the blind at Ile last meeting, of •„,laily 21, adopted -the. Cantonnet-Natiet writiug. . ea. jOhin was learning to dress himself,. "Mamma " he paitsed to inquire ^ "Why overea't we mud, eith fur like kittie,s Se WO Weeldn't Imre te dress?" Observing the tiooty with which a cow !licked the eaten out of a boll, an inventor got the idea of What Trona ises to he a realty suteeseul ootbon picker. His .eleetrieal ,ebelt has a TOtif6 tongue o' revolving bruliesy the ,stie., tion of a ihigh-potWored vacuum eloan- er, and a grotip f lotg, flexible maths. The machine, 'operated, froth a tnactOry ertablee foal' pleitot to .00vor rowei ,at OfiCe, ana to pioic elOgri 0101 aloot five timos as 1!ast as by tura