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Exeter Advocate, 1914-1-8, Page 2��API GQVEP?ME'IT MU2'ICIPAL AND C.ORPORATION BONDS More than twelve years of service to investors in Canadian Government, Municipal and Corporation Bonds places the Dominion Securities Corporations Limited, in .a. position to offer all facilities to aid in satisfactory buying and selling of such securities. We continually have a wide range of Bonds and Debentures suitable for t —The requirements 'of Trustees in the various , Provinces of the Dominion; —The requirements of Insurance Companies for deposit with the !Dominion Insurance ..Department at Ottawa, and the various Provincial Departments; —The reserve funds of Institutions, Business Concerns and Individuals, The investment of $100 receives the same attention as larger amounts. In requesting our services you are under no obligation whatever, and we may be of material assistance in- --Investigating or appraising your investments. Our rela- tions in this regard would be strictly confidential; —The replacement of investments shortly to mature; -The adjustment: of investors' holdings to derive the benefit of existing favorable interest returns from con- servative . investments. Our regular Quarterly List: January, 1914—is ready for distribution. AH bonds offered are purchased for our own account and are.,,submitted to investors only after thorough investigation, the outstandingfeatures of the ofi Brings being safety of principal and regularity of income. We ' invite enquiries. DOMINION SECURITIES E'RPORATiON LIMITED. ESTABLISHED I90I. CAPITAL PAiD UP, $1,000,000 RESERVE FUND 500,000 E. R. woofs • • PRESIDENT C. A. MORROW • VICE•PREstOENT J. A. FRA$CR • • SECRCTART HEAD OFFICE: 26 KING ST. EAST TORONTO MONTREAL BRANCH CANADA. LIFE BUILDING LONDON, ENG., BRANCH AUSTIN FRIARS MOUSE Z AUSTIN- FRIARS HOME t..190116,411411 Favorite Recipes. Black Pudding. One-half cup molasses, one cup seeded raisins, one egg, one cup hot water, one teaspoon soda, pinch of salt, one cup flour, Steam one . hour and serve with yellow sauce made of two eggs, one cup sugar, one teaspoon vanilla. Beat eggs light, add grad- ually the sugar and beat again,. then add vanilla. Individual Pumpkin Pies.—Three cups stewed and sieved pumpkin, two eggs, one ' and one-half cups brown sugar, one and one-half pints .sweet milk, one level tablespoon flour, two teaspoons cinnamon, one teaspoon allspice. Line gem pans with rich pie crust, fill with above mixture ` and bake in moderate oven. Serve with whipped cream.. Orange Cake.—Two cups of gran- ulated sugar, one-half cup . water, two teaspoons baking powder, the yolks of four eggs and whites of three, the juice and grated rind of one orange.. Bake in two. rilling for cake : Beat the white of. one egg stiff. Add the juice . and grated rind of half an orange and stir in enough sugar to make thick. as jelly. Spread upon top and be- tween layers.. Raisin Cake.—One cup of sugar, one-half of butter, two cups of flour, three eggs, Vee one whole egg and the yolks of two in the cake, saving the two whites for ic- ing. One 'cup of raisins (cut) and one heaping teaspoon of soda in a cup of boiling water. Pour over raisins, ' s s,'�cocl, cream, butter, and sugar. Add beaten egg's, then flour and water with raisins. One .tea- spoon cinnamon or nutmeg for fla- voring.. Veal and Chicken Salad.—Take the white parts .of roasted chicken and roasted veal cut in ..one-half inch pieces; take two cups of veal and ane cup of chicken, one cup of celery cut in thesame size pieces, teaspoon salt, one-half.:, teaspoon white pepper, one-half teaspoon onion. Salt ten 'stuffed chopped olives, one teaspoon 'olive oil; mix well in mixing bowl with one cup of mayonnaise salad dressing on plat- ter eovered with lettuce leaves and garnish with hard boiled eggs cut in slices. Ilcarth Bread.- •Two cups of table bran, ons cup• flour) one cup milk,: two tablespoons dark molasses, one 'tablespoon lard or salad oil, orae Or, Morse's Indian moot Pills exactly meet the need which so often arises in every fatuity £oC a medicine to open' up and regulate the bowels. Not only are they effective i bi tit l in ail cases of C`enstipation, but they help reatiy In breaking up a Cold or La ri lie by clexnang out the system and pi: rifyin the bleed. Th the'samn viva theyrelieve.cit cure Biliousness Indigestin, Sick Headaches, Rheu l.- atisni and other common ailments. In the fullest sense of the words Dr. Morse s lndiaziBeat Pills are 47 heaping teaspoon baking powder, one level teaspoon soda, and same of salt. Put the soda into the milk, which may be either sweet or sour; all of the other ingredients may be. put into a .bowl and well mixed, milkinich after which add e wh fix the . the soda was dissolved. Thoroughly blend all together with a spoon, then put into a well greased bread pan. Let stand twenty minutes then put' into quite a hot oven for the first five minutes,'theu gradual- ly turn off'the heat and let bake in a moderate oven for one. hour. Golden Muftis This. recipe is fora family of five and will make two dozen muffins, one dozen light biscuit, and three large loaves of bread. Ia a four quart jar pour two quarts of warm water, add thereto one large tablespoon each of butter and lard, one tablespoonful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of sugar; mix thoroughly until butter and lard are dissolved, then add about eight large teacupfuls of, sifted flour, or enough to make a stiff bat- ter, at ter, and stir vigorously for one min- ute; then 'add three well beaten eggs to this and stir again. Lastly, one cake of yeast, which has first been dissolved in two tablespoon- fuls of lukewarm water. Stir but little after eggs and ,yeast are in. Cover jar with a plate and place in a warm corner, free from drafts over night. In the morning grease a large pan •and put in two dozen well greased muffin pans, drop a large tablespoonful of - this batter in each ring,' Do not stir the bat- ter in the morning. After' muffins are on the way, add six cups of flour to the batter and mix and knead ib for fifteen minutes, then place dough in warm sheltered place to rise; when light, enough, hi probably -will be about two which ob bl w Iin p v. hours, make into light biscuit and h r loaves 'o bread,andl rise e 1 of e three av st again. Angel Food Cake. -Put into a good sized mixing bowl the whites of ten large eggs and a generous pinch of'. salt, ' Take one and one- quarter cups of granulated sugar and sift five times, one: cup of pas- try flour sifted five times, The oven and bakepan should be ready and one level teaspoon .of cream of tar- tar laid ready. Beat whites of eggs. about one-half, sift in cream of tar- tar, then beat again until it will make dog's ears when you draw the beater up 'through it.; Sifb in sugar and on top of eager put in the ex- tract, so the alcohol will not come in direst contact with the whites of eggs. toil the sugar in until batter is smooth and glossy, then; carefully sift in the floor and fold in, remem- bering every stroke of the beater after the flour is in toughens it. It is best to have the eggs and dish sold. Putting the eream of tartar in the eggs makes it fine grained and tender. Never grease the tin. The avers must be moderate enough so the cake will raise before it be- gins s ease the heat bake .ell n r h ba then to , cakeaces ' k„ Ifth;eb cl1 t it b.ai too quickly it will crack open in the. aniddle. Bake forty or forty -live Minutes, and when done take from. oven and invert the •pan until. the cake is perfectly cold; If not suf- ficiently done the cake will sweat and fall, but if set an the bottom of the tin the weight of cake would Amake it settle. Hints for the Rome. White paint can be kept in good o dition if whitin ismixed condition x to a g stiff paste with warm water and us- ed insteadof: soap.Rinse o with oft wateri duster clearand drywtha or leather. Boot lake tags sometimes come off quite good laces. In this case they may be replaced with impromptu: tags of .sealing wax._ Cut the tag, smear it over with sealing wax, then press it:to a point while the wax is still warm, If a lump of soda dissolved in a little hot water is added to the blue water on wash day it will prevent the blue from settling in the clothes and make them perfectly white. This is especially useful when the water' is very hard: Very frequently when separating the whites from the yolks of eggs the yolk becomes broken'and falls into the white. Dip a cloth in. warm' water, wring it dry, and touch the yolk with 'a corner of it, _ .and: -the yolk will adhere to the cloth and may easily he removed. When boiling potatoes try putting a cloth overthem before putting on the lid. They will take ;much les's cookingand be much more mealy. A good -disinfectant for a sink is to put two tablespoonfuls of soda and a teaspoonful of ammonia in one gallon of boiling. water. Pour this down the sink. A new 'broom will last longer if the strands are tied together and put into a pail of boiling water and soaked for two hours. Dry thor- oughly for two hours. Marks that lave -been made on paint with matches may be removed by first rubbing the mark with lem- on and washing it .afterward with soap and water. '; To prevent glassware from being easily broken, put in a kettle of cold water ; heat gradually until the water has reached the boiling point. . When cool take out glass. • To extract the juice from an oni- on, cut a slice from the root end of the onion, drawback the skin, press the onion on a coarse grater work- ing with a rotary motion. Borax is one of the Best assist- ants to cleanliness. It should play a large part in 'every household. If sprinkled about: the kitchen it will eliminate roaches ;and ants, To remove hot water marks from tables. Maks a thin paste of salad oiland salt, .$.over the mark with this, and leave for one hour, then rub off with a soft duster. To prevent inferior potatoes from appearing watery whert cooked, scrub, then core the. skin lightly, lengthways and across, all the way round. Boil in salted water. They will then he dry and floury,. Johnny Uesitated. "What is an aneedote, 'Johnny V' asked the teacher. "A short, funny tale," answered the little fellow: rrriulte right," said :the teacher, “And now, Johnny, you MOT Write on the blackboard a sentence con- taining o- taining the word." Johnny hesitat- ed a rnernent, and then. wrote, "A rabbit hes four lags end one anec- dote," err*. iiinen Some engagements are annio(ilwCed by the rntibher ;incl denounced by the father. wieworimmIMIRIPPWRINSORINIIIRIONIBMISISIMINII„.,, Lord Derby. May be Premier of Great Britain. Healthful to Yawn. Yawning is said to have an ex- ceedingly .healthful function besides having a salutary effect in complaints of the pharynx and the eustachian tubes. ,According to investigations, yawning is the most natural form of respiratory exercise, bringing into action all the respiratory, muscles 'of the neck. and chest. It is recommended that every per- son should have a good yawn with the stretching of the limbs morning and evening for the purpose of venti- lating the lungs and tonifying the respiratory. muscles. An eminent authority asserts that this form of gymnastics has a •remarkable effect in relieving throat and ear troubles, and says .that patients suffering from disorders of the throat have derived great benefit from it. He says he makes hie patients yawn, by sugges- tion or imitation, 'or by a series of deep breaths with, the lips partly closed. The yawning is repeated six or seven times and should be followed by swallowing. 13y this process the air and mucus in the eustachian tubes are aspirated. UNION BANK HAS FINE YEAR. Quick Assets Over Thirty-four Per Cent. of Liabilities. The Forty -Ninth Annual Report of the Union Bank of Canada, approved by the Shareholders at their- annual meeting held i i m g e n Winnipeg on Decem- ber 17th, is the best' in the history of the Bank. The net profits pots for the year after making the usual deduc- tions for expenses "Fof management and making full provisions 'for bad and doubtful debts amounted to $750,- 095- or $44,000 more than was. earned in. 1912. Other evidences of progress are shown by a further `examination of the'Bank's statement. The note ,circulation throughout the year in- creased from $4,700,000 to $6,200,000. Deposits gained from $55,600,000 to $64,500,000. The' rest account was in- creased by ,$100;.000, making it $3,- 400,000. • Current loans increased from $45,000,000 to $46,700,000, while total assets show the large gain of $11,- 300,000, now standing at $60,766,532... .A. striking feature of the Bank statement is found in a further exam- ination of the -assets. The Bank pos- sesses an ,unusually large amount of gold, Dominion notes and other quick- ly available assets—these amounting to '$27,655,000 as compared with $22,- 790,000 for the previous year. This policy of maintaining a large propor- tion of the assets in a form easily converted into cash is a character- istic of this Bank, and the present holdings of nearly twenty-seven. and three-quarter millions bear a high pro-. portion to the Bank's total liability to the public. The fact that deposits increased during the year also calls for comment as duringthe past year there Were unusual demands for funds and depositors were more inclined to withdraw funds then to increase their holdings. The fact that deposits in- creased is an indication of the in- creased confidence onthe h e part of e public in the ...management of the Bank, The Bank on its side has been doing its full share in catering to the business needs of the communities in which its branches are located. Dur- ing the past' year the current loans show an increase of $1,780,000 'while loans' and discounts outside of Canada amount to $1,640;000 or more' than double that shown` for the previous year. • The Bank.has now on deposit in, 'the central geld :reserve $1,300,000 while its tbtai assets have attained the very large sum of $80,766,000, an increase of over $11,000,000 during the year. The address of Mr, John Galt, President of the Bank, was an able summary of thea ;conditions ; prevail- ing in Canada during the year• In the course orf his address he touched on the trend of trade dining the year, the crops, the increased importance of inixed farming and briefly reviewed the varimis great basic industries in the several Provinces, General Ma1ra- ger Balfour, in kis address, pointed out that the Bank has now a total of 313 De also took 'occasion to 1 ran sdtes. ? c remark on the excellent manner in'. which the railway companies had handled the western grain crop. The aid Board .of Directors was re•eloeteil, and at a subsequent meeting of the Beare, Mr. 'W nal, Price was elected I:lonor'ary President, Mr, .7clia Gait, President, trnd Messrs. fit,, T. 'Riley; and 0, II, ',l'hoinson, '\'ice'Presidouis, 0I°1ltUs In Europe, Suiaido Attempt May Se Cure. giul alar as it ntiay .alapear, a patient, . wLLrho }lrtentod himay.lf at ilio Nt. Aiatatnra, Ifosliital,. Duras,, last, week eau, atto.hifie,i to e maait suicide whi,e waiting for h.n b3rescriaition,, took the euraeitt, way to env, unselt of tuberculosis treatywinch he sui• fara- `Tao man, a barber's assistant, entered the hospital and ai,ked Dr. itanionti 10 'ave barn, something to relieve AIM eouah, winch nti.litt,ed agi iust Inn getting work. Dr, Itatuond nae making no a mixture 'when the patient, Trouaaat, by name, oul_- ed • to a hospital ass.e.ant wno was pass• in^ and: said to Irina: 3*ou'Are e Sou to fon seedie oftiat tiaosly?then”.tro? Would ok W ithout waiting fox a verily, Troubat took a kaiife from his pooket and Plana' ing it in h.e breast tell, hie -diol; to the floor. Inquiries. showed that 'irpubat, who had only roo„autiy been disenarvd frena the coavalepeezit .uomo at Itrevaii i'e, batt pievioiie attempted to asphyz ia.e himeeit by pas, According to Dr. Ramona. if 'i'rou'bnt recovers from the knife thrust whi.oli pene- trated his leftlung, he will be cured of his tnberou.oeis, the wound setting free humors which oa torwico would have ne- cessitated a surgical operation. Chea, Electricity for Berlin. J 1eotr«city will soon be so cbeau ,in Ber lin, lsormauy, that the poorest tiIpEte s Wu t,ed iG for tiy!nuuaa." b•.r,.oatas in .uu'e: of petroleum. it even for o0Alinwet suit ho, iid of futu Wali be able toingcompetepotence YvtbAa kin Chia material r•.tiutttiou in nrioo is y the ooanpui y vvh_ch Y3 ipplit:s that' ally 'with its eA44.t.cal warrent I,0,. 0 tiu:o ago it aogtuxed latus with extea.savo deposits of lignite' orprawn c.cml at u,:t• terlu ru, 8t muss south ec Boram, and ne, , cided to build a power plant there to gen• dep erttte ultxtrioity :for Btrun, ueouosit fur - of ther eipiorataon, 'however, t.ho lignite turned out to bo so'.arge tab ta,o 'company determined to build a plant largo enough to supply all the towns with- in a radius of about it0 miles. Phis can• braces'tte greater, part, of Saxony, whore manufacturing towns are very numerous, and the Thuringian states as far west ea now p0otba.. 1'he Dlaut will Rc aR far' as is ossible in turning, ooal t itOotiy and economically into electricity. The ..it[n..e. which will be mined largely by era,' will ho hoisted- from the abaft di -1 reotly to the boilers by automatic alone.' tore and fed into the fire boxes automata. tally. The oompany thinks' that it hx s. an ample, supply of lignite for nearly 100 v.ea e. Able to Isolate Microbe of Cancer. Fresh interest in the experiments of Dr. Bost processor of pat'helogioal eaateuir at the (TniTersitsr of Montpelier regard- ing oanoer was aroused last wee it by tne announcement that he had isolated tne microbe of the disease. it is .said to be of the Drotozo typo and to be . noun princi• }hilly in water. Prof. Boeo is understood to have an- nounced that he has traded it number of cases to insect bites and to pricks of fish- bonea. Hs: also has found intestinal cat' ser prevalent in villages. , wbero ensiles are eaten in large Quantities. Prof. Beau, who .has studied cancerous tumors for mere than twenty years, has observed that when such tumors were scraped and the results of the scraping placed ed bloodoinfnitely of s 1 all. mice beebe- longing to the Protozoa group were visible after fifteen to fifty days. To those Prof. Boso attributes the pro -1 perty of engendering cancer, but he has not yet made inocula.ion experiments which wouldprove belief. This para - site,he says, excites the cells of the or- ganism and makes them proliferate with morbid rapidity and oause s them to lose' their for and function and turns them to the profit of the parasite. Bence the constituted by" the proliferationhe t t tumor may be considered as the organ-, ism's mode of defence, searching by the aid of this nro.iferdtlon to inclose the parasite which produced it, but owing to the emigration throughout the organism, of the cells of the tumor, which carry the parasite algin with them, the prolifera-' tion is manifested suc:eeeively in evehe organ and the organisui dies from generalization of a• method of defence which if utilized only in one placewould have been excellent, These protozoa are found especially in I water,particularly in stagnant water., Many insects and fish carry tbem. Can, cer is very common in villages bordering on rivers. Dr. Bast cites one case of cancer of the tongue which deve-oiled whore a trout. bone had penetrated and remained. He cites a ease of cancer of the law which developed exactly where an insect had stung. the person. Rare Old Gems Unearthed. The development of the Main drainage system in the town of irlayence, Germany, - neeessitated ..excavations in the neignoor- hood of what was formerly the Jewish quarter. Some^workmen engagedin re- moving the walls of an ancient cellar there dieeovered in the crevices twe.,ty gold'ornaments. Then men kept their die- oovery secret and .divided the jewelry anions* themselves. 'The circumstances leaked out, however. and two colleetore succeeded in buying up nearly every article the men had' found. The Jewelry ecnsists of • a newsy lace, pendants, brocches, pins and n:ne finger rings, all of pure gold, while a gold coin with an inscription of the Byzantine Emperor ,R,omanos I11 and a golden pen- dant set with precious .stones were found later in the same cellar walls. Dr. von Falko, director of the_ Berlin Museum of 'Industrial Art, has sub.iected the, whole of the ornaments to an lye examination •examination and has come to the eon- cicsion that they belonged to the beauti- ful Burgundian Princess: Gisea, consort of the German Emperor Conrad IL, who rel promised as MOST PERFECT IVIA 141 -IS INCREASED NUTRITI OUS VALUE OF BREAD MAIZE IN THE HOME WITH ROYAL YEAST CALCES SHOULD' 131 SUFFICIENT INCENTIVE TO THE CAREFUL, HOUSEWIFE TO GIVE THIS IMPOFITAN? FOOD ITEM THE ATTENTiON TO WHICH iT 10 JUSTLY. EN- TITLED. HOME HR$AD'SAIrING RE• DUCES THE HIOH COS' OF. WINO BY LESSENING THE AMOUNT OF EXPENSIVE MEATS REQUIRED TO SUI., PLY THE NECESSARY' NOUR ISHMENT TO THE SOW,. E. W. GILLETT CO. LTD. TORONTO, ONT. 1WLNNIPEG MONTREAL when he asserts that La Presna is the world's ,greatest journal. La Presna was founded on Ooto• her 18,1669,bythe late Dr. J'ose0, Paz, a statesman, diplomat and warrior, and is now conducted by - his son. For many years the news• paper celebrated its birthday by issuing a special eclatlon.. The home of La Presna is a magnificent strut• Jure which cost over $6,000,000, a veritable palace. In addition' to the newspaper plant the building( contains a beautiful salon where all guests of the nation are received,. and suites of rooms, handsomely furnished, for the occupancy of such guests during their stay in the city. The philanthropic work of the i the off ,r is carried' on inmost newspaper e iThere is free ho a 'n fashion. d I moa clinic where poor patients may re- ceive treatment from one of the dozen ,'physicians employed by the paper, and, . in serious cases, from. the best specialists in the c'tv, who are called in consultation. The in- digent may also receive, gratis, le - gal e gal advice.from the. best attorneys' of Buenos Ayres. The paper •also onnduebs a scientific . byread, ay school of music, a museum of ',na-� tional products, --a weather byre,' an art school and an aericultur. research department. In the buil ing are several halls for pomi ar semblies. La Presna also malie annual awards of hero medals and: engages in 'a thousand other move- ments for the public weal. As,a newspaper, La Presna is by far the most cosmopolitan in the new world. It maintains eetxresnondenco . in all the capitals and no `North American journal approaches it in extent of cable news. 4 NEW YEAR'S IRESOLII*Ia °I' S. No more . important resolution can be made trlian the. determination to systematically save a proportion` of one's earnings. And not only save it, but keep it saved. For that goad from 1024 to 1039. reason it should be placed an ianimt• To Use'Aeroplane In Arctic. safe place. where• it tan only be According to a Copenhagen message withdrawn by making', a distinct, printed i the h d Paris,Capt. Am, t n e Tic o e Dp conscious effort. better. nor r ff t. N o n orithe discoverer ofthe south pole,. ads su intends to learn aviation and hopes to .safer place, for such a 'iirpose can nasal's$ its diificulties ,fn three or fou; e months. , be found than with the Union Trust On his nb t 'Arctic expedition lie pro Comtiany, Limited; Toronto, w'hb noses to take with him two aeroplunes of the Christofferson type I'neeiaUy bulli for pay interest at 4% per annuen, comp the• purpose,' and he. w1l be aceomparied by. two friende, who,willl. learn flying.w. th pounded quarterly, .and allow with' him, ,itis new expedit'on will leave San drawal by cheque. They now hays n i o next year,an 'it x o a ad is ect< Fxp d t , J ,�us tom a large number of sail,, ed c. occur four or flys ears. ,A special study �. wi l be made of polar aerology and ocean- ography. ' Paris, Dec. 16, 1913. A .GREAT NEWSPAPER. La Presna of Buenos Ayres Is ` a .., National Institution. South America's greatest news- paper, La Presna of Buenos Ayres, has just celebrated its forty-fourth When they are aocurnalated for'the: birthday. In. Buenos Ayres, La gratification of avarics;: osj are aisee, for obtaining personal aggrandize- ment, respect, adulation, or fain, they are very badly applied, an/ may be a curse, to a natl. stI u len, a guide, Counsellor and wayward young 'roan, broket9 friend, a haven of refuge for those in heal'y g south th, was sent to the Who are sick or in 'trouble, Mind a west to recuperate. IIs lyse n.ja1 university for those who seek know- in Arizona for stealixig a hirldquer" ledge, "La Prcena is Buenos ter of beef. Ile wrote' hof r Ayres"is a snying`tllati meets with 'Dear Father, ---I've . picked u popular acoeptanee. It is unique some flesh. knee I came here, l among the world's newspapers, and am still confined to my rot the Argentine is not so far wrong ''lease send me $100." ere, and. we suggest that von write for -their free descriptive booklet. Hay Be a Curse. Wealth may be either ;a blessing or a curse, according to the use; made of it. Riches only••bring htz`T piness to people when.tlrey are ac• eumtlated for the good. of others. iP Presna's, birthday is a semi -holiday, for to the 1,500,000 people of the beautiful Argentine capital La, Presna is more than 'a newspaper. It is a municipal and national in- stitution, 11- t t• 11 7°/ INVE$T ENT' High' Class 3 -Year Rondathatare Profit•Sharin q. Sones SIOi1,$SODrWO b: iStrESTMtifiT Irtey he withdrawn any:tfuae atter ottee'at on 60 clays` nntiee.. Ihedees3 to back of these a nil, estab' bribed 08 years., Seed for ipeeial folder aorl full partleu tsrs, NATIONAL SECURITIES CORPORATION 00NFEDEItaTIO$l LIFE SIRLOINS . .TORONTO. CANADA • •, u h the M; tie ma liar :�►h nio rlal Or 1 fee 'hes aft,t he ref Iasi)) �rri'I ,wa rl q,ue pea ;lb 0 fon that wou r4•1 .ail ;idi I ng osil tiluzil who ;ey 3 on • : both pis tune: r0' whol erste M<s tl 'ATn