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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, ”21 WANTED) Thoroughly competen girl ‘for general house work. Good wages, , small family of adults _Phone 247. 11-12-3t “WANTED—Strong girl. or woman for general housework. Wages $36, Phoné 176." 11-10-1w SALESMAN SALESMAN—To ‘caver local ‘territory selling: dealers. Guaranteed salary of $100.00 per week for right man The; Richards Co., 200 Fifth Ave., New. York, is Y, “ 11- 1-10-7t FOR G4).t OR RENT ____ MOUSE! FLATS FOR RENT—B new _seven- room house, strictly modern in every respect. Only parties being able to: supply satisfactory creden+ tials. Others. need not apply. ‘Phone 987. 11-11-1w. MISCELLANEOUS ISON” SECOND HAND STORE We buy and sell-all and office furniture, highest’ cash price and guarantee what.. we sell to be as represented or no, sale, you to be the judge- We repair and rebuild furniture at the ,right price. Our prices and terms gre fair to-all. When you want to buy..or, sell second hand house or office furniture, SEE US. 7107 Main St.,..or. phone. 398,.A.. M. Garrison, ( Owner. ‘11-14-1m FOR SALE—Fur lined, overcoat bar- gains. See our east, window. [miele the Tailor. FOR SALE Canary female Mrs, L, ¢ For ee 9x19 Raye, tes | rug. Call 85 or 926, = ‘A1-12.w [AGENTS WANTED. WANTED—Gooa live agent for Bis- marck,; to sell an article pf yni- SS a ie LEGAL LEGAL NOTICES | NOTICE ‘OF MORTGAGE “FORECLO- SURE SALE having occurred in the the mortgage herein- after described, Notice is Hereby en, that that certain mortgage executed and delivered by Harry Ulfers and Henrietta Ulfers, his wife, mort- gagors,, to capital Trust & Savings Bank, @ éorporation, mortgagee, dated the 3rd day of January, 1917,-and filed for record in the office’ of the regtster of deeds of the county of Burleigh and state of North’ Dakota, on the 3ist day. of January, 1917, and duly recozd- ed in Book 90 of Mortgages, on page 464, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door’ of the courthouse In the city of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh, and state of th Dakota, at the hour of ten o'clock A, M., onthe 1st day of December 1921, to’ satisfy the aniount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. ‘The premises describe! in such mort- gage and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are situate in Burleigh North Dakota, described as The Fractional North Default conditions of Hundred Forty. Range Seventy-six. (76) Wes * containing 360: acres, more. or less, ‘according to the United States government survey thereof. The. mortgagee’ has heretofore de- clared and now. ‘declares the whole debt secured by said mortgage due and payable. “There will be due on aatd mertgage at the date of sale the sum of $172.83, besides the costs, disburse- ments and expenses. of this foreclo- Bure. Dated this 24th day of September, 1921, Capital Trust & Savings Bank, a. corporation, Mortgagee. G. F. Duliam and C, L, Young, ‘Attorneys for Mortgagee, Blamarek, North, Dakota, Sha TIsEwENT Notice is herehy given “that by rea- son of default therein, that certain mortgage made and executed by Andrew E, Anderson and Anna Ander- his wife, mortgagors, to the ‘al Land Bank of St, Paul, 4 2, body’ corporate, of the City of St, Paul, County of Ramsey, and State’ of Minnesota’ Mortgagee © dated ‘the 5th day of March, 1919, whieh mortgage was filed for récord in the’ office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on the 14th day of March, 1919, at 10 o’clack A. M., and recorded in'book 161 of Mort- gages on Page 102. Il be furclosed by sale ‘of the premises decribed In said mortgage at the front door of the Court House in the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, at the hour of one o'clock in the afternoon of the 10th day of December, to satisfy the amount due on said mortgage on the date of gale. The premises described’ in said mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are as follow! The Northeast Quarter (NE ) of Section Twenty one (21) Township One Hundred forty one (141), North, Range Seventy eight (78) West con- taining One Hundred Sixty (160) acres, more or less, according to the govern- ment. survey thereof, Said mortgage contains a clause authorizing the mortgagee to declare the whole sum @ue if there is a default, and the whole of said mortgage is hereby de- clared due. There will be due on said mortgage on the date of sale the sum of $2111.13. Notice of intention to foreclose was given as required by law, more than thirty days defore the beginning of son, ki of. house We pay the} . versal use, Industrious agent can make good money, Must be. res- ponsible, For particulars address Box 567, Jamestown, N. D. 11-14-lw mS FOR RENT FOR RENT=Two rooms on first floor and one single room on sec- ond floor, all furnished for light housekeeping, modern: house, Phone 672 L, W. 111 Mandan avenue. 1. FOR RENT—Two or ‘three rooms in modern house, close in, furnished for light housekeeping; also an ad, Joining room for sleeping Purpose ‘OR RENT—Three or four modern Tooms for light housekeeping, one room with Kitchenette and a five- room furnished house. Write 208, “in care Tribune. 11-14-84 room on FOR RENT—Large first floor, furnished for light house- keeping, 620. 6th St. Mrs, Ada Rohrer. : 9-12-38 FOR RENT—Furnished room by day or week, also three light house- keening rooms. Phone 877. nes 11-8-1W ‘FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurnis ed _roomg for light housekeeping. Bismarck Business College. 10-10-tf FOR. RENT- jadern furnighed hause- ‘keeping rooms, married couple pre- ferred. 1100 Broadway. 11-! 12-1w FOR RENT Furnished reoms, steam . heated-abave the Emporium Store. hong 974. 11-9-1w FOR RENT—Furnished room. in _.maderr, hause. 711 Front St. Phone IR. if 11-14-3t ~ ‘Banner House, board and room, $9 a week; rooms, 50c; meals, 35c. 11-14-1w FOR RENT—Five room house. Good Yocation. Box 1002. 11-12-3t atmortization Jeetainent { of = $65. 00, due on March Sth, ‘1921 ‘Dated thie 31et day a October, 1921. | The Federal Lana ‘Bank af St. Paul, : Mortgage. E. T, Burke, Bismarck, N. Dake ‘Attorney for Mortgagee. 10-31-11-7-14-21-28-12-5 BIDS WANTED Bids for natal ing: heating: plant in school No. 2 Lyman school district No. 18 will be received at the clerks office at Wing. North Dakota. Plans and specifications. may be seen at VanHarn and Richardaon: Bismarck, North Dakota sor ‘atthe office of clerk Elmer Josephson, Wing, North Dakota. The Board faapihed the right to re- ject enya or all bids. ELMER OSEPHSON, Clerk. 10-17-24-31-11-7-14-19 NOTICB All parties holding warrants or having “bill against’ Lyman school district No. 18 will please notify clerk Elmer Jogephgan at Wing, North Dakota. ‘Stating amount. of bills and warrants and the purpose for which drawn. By order of Board, ELMER JOSEPHSON, Clerk. 10-11-24-31-11-7-14-19 THE BISMARCK TRIBUND YES PM PRETTY BUSY RIGHT Now - ‘ALL RIGHT PLL STOP AND GET IT ON MY WAY HOME- > ALL RIGHT-GOODBYE | SOMETHING You, SIR $7.25. to $7/40 :a -barrel in . 98-pound cotton’ eacks.. Shipments, 57,059 bar- rels. Bran, $14. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK, Chicago, Nov. 14.—Cattle receipts, 25,000. Steady to 25 cents lower. Hog receipts, 45,000. Ten to 23 cents Jower-than Saturday. Sheep. receipts, 39,000. cents lower. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK So, St. Paul, Nov, 14.—(attle re- celptst 41, Killing clapaee weak +25. cents lower, - Bull-- grass meeiee $4.50 to $5.50. Butcher she- stock mostly $3.40 to $450. Bologna bulls $2.50 to-3.25. Veal calves most- ly.-25 cents lower. Practical packer top on bast lights $7.50. Good and choice’ stocks and feeders selling $5.25 up, steady;, others weak to 26 STRONG. OUTET FOR: FAT LAMBS, South St. Paut" Mian. -Nov. 14. With a falling off in general receipts of.sheep and lambs and 4 decreasing proportion of lambs in the: local run, the market. hag been active on fat lambs and closed about 50c higher. Bulk of sales at the close of $8.50, culls around, $4:50. With a. fairly liberal percentage of fat ewes includ- ed, the ‘market has weakened, closing weak to 25c lower, with bulk of best ewes Saturday, $3.50, Although cattle prices declined ‘materially at Chicago last. week, there Was scarcely enough of the_ better grades received here to meet current demands, and these cloged ut, steady. with plainer grades weak to 25¢ lower. A few small lots of gorn- feds have sold from $6.50 to $9.50, according to weight and quality. Beat grass,beeves sold from $6 up ta asound..§7, only a few.of these kinds coming; with bulk of: the grass beeves at the close from $5 to. $5.75 and com- moner gneg down.to $4.50. Very few grass. heifers. hay old-over $5, this week, bulk of the grass cows and heifers going from $3 to $>. Cannera and’ cutters. are quotable at §2.ta §3, Bologna bulla,. $2.50 to $3. At the ‘close, Saturday, some $3.25. calves declined $1.75 last week, bulk of best lights going to packers at the close at $7.75. Practically no stockers and feders were gold. over|. $5.50, although strictly choice kinds are quotable to around $6. Bulk of gales at the close from $4 to $5. Hogs closed 25c or more lower for the week, range Saturday $6 to $6.85, bulk $6,50 to $6.75; good pigs mostly $7.75. WHEAT TURNS UP. Chicago, ,Nov. 14.—Wheat prices turned upward today in, the early! dealings after a hesitat Opening quotations Were, from un-| changed figures tp “cents, moet B} cents cents lower. Commonest kind, around $325 to $3.50. ‘Hog receipts 14,500. Ten to 25 lower.’ Range $7.75. to $6.75. Bulk $6.25. to $6,65. Feeder pigs mostly. $7.50 to $7.75. Z Sheep — receipts ®:18,000. Fully 25 cents. lower. Some 50 cents lower. Early good, fat native lambs $8.00. Some Dakotas. $8.25. Good medium wejght:. ewes. around. $3.00; choice lights up ‘to $3.50. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapolis, Nov. 14—Wheat re- ceipts 450 cars compared with 609 a year ago, ‘Cagh No. 1 northern $1.24 to $1.26; Dec. $1.18; May $1.16 1-2. Corn, No. 3 yellow, 40 to 41 cents. Flax No. 1, $1.80 to $1.88. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russ< Bismarck, Nov. 14, NG. 1 poh nérthern (0, 1,'gmber ‘durum Ng. 1 mixed phe No, 1:'réed durum’. . 1 flax . . 2 flax . 24ye .. | Freckles and His Friends IF UD 1 WHERE ALEK. 1S, AN' THEN WHEN HE GOMES THIS WAY HESS GOTTA BE TACKLED— carloatl lots family patent quoted at. Mostly 25; i IS IT FOR Creighton university 26, Oklahoma >* ee pdatlaal A LIVE CHICKEN Aer Sind 42, Haskell 7. 70 POUNDS OF BEEF PER ACRE 5 ~ ISRECORD OF PLAINS STATION As high as 70 pounds of beef’ per, steer per acre can be produced in one season native prairie pastures of the on 640-acre field at Youngtown, y CO —Os + La- semi-arid district of western North|same county, with rather scant Bta2-| Cruse a a a oa Dakota. This fact. demonstrated in} ing a tramp of five and one half miles! ~ gouth Dakota State College 9; the six-year pasture exepriments at/may'be made to gather the day’s fo0d.| south Dakota University 0 ; the Northern /Great Plains Filed] The pasture experiments are con- eae cer ale ik Station, Mandan, js one of the facts] ducted cooperatively by the animal} re ‘ about North Daokta resources which} husbandry department of the North | ON THE | will be illustrated by ‘the educa! Dakota “Experiment station and the! al exhibit being prepared by the State} office of dry land: agriculture of the, | OTHER HAN | Agricultural Experiment’ Station,; federal department of agriculture. le PS Fargo, for the Grain and Hay Show}: The state can produce also the to be held in cdfhection with the In-|‘grain and ‘roughage to fatten the GLOBE TROTTING. ternational Livestock Exposition at Chicago, Nov. 26. to Dec. 3. Actual strips of sod from the field in which} these gains were, made, wili’‘be sent’ to Chicago. as_p; irt of the exhibit, ;The field which made this beef pro- duction record 4:'the 36 acre pasture at the Mandan tation. Ten head of cattle are pastured in it annually. As this is one, steer to three acres, the field does not produce enough grass to carry, the steers thru the latter part of the season. ¥ The largest pastures at the station, carrying the same number of steers, do not produce as much’ beef per acre per season, the experiment record show. The 50-acre pasture has pro- duced, as a six-year average, 55.6 pounds. The 70-acre’ ‘pasture has produced 46.9 pounds, while the 100- acre pasture has. produced 32.3. The 70-acre pasture produced enough grass to carry the steers thru the en- tire season in good shape. The 100- acre pasture provides more vegeta- tion than the cattle will eat, but the steers exercise so much in grazing this field that it is less satisfactory as a beef producer than the 70-acre pasture, A chart showing the distance a steer will travel in a day’s grazing in the different sized pastures. also will be shown’ at the Chic the 30-acre pasture, with fair grazing, a steer will travel one and five elghth miles in a day. In the 100- i WELL THAT'S GOT ME - I'M TRYING To OR A CASSEROLE | OR A DEAD ONE SIR! | WAS "To GET {the high school: girls, Halliday win- ago exhibit, In! acre field, with good grazing,:a friends. Organizing a Team Has Its Drawbacks 5 EES LCAN’T THINK: WHAT ae TOLD ME TOGET- A De LL LOOK AROUND AND | MAY:SEE SOMETHING | ~ THAT WILE SUGGEST IT SATURDAY’S FOOTBALL SCORES - —— Harvard 9, Brown 7. Washington and. Jefferson 7, Pitts- burgh 0. Pennsylvania 14, Dartmouth 14. Yale 18, Princeton 7, Oberlin 7, Case 7. Rutgers 21, New York university 7. Ohio univers:ty 23, Columbia 21. Miami 29, Mount Union 0. Syracuse 14, Colgate 0. Hamline 21, Carleton 3. Penn. State 13, Navy 7. Cornell 14 Springfield 0. Lafayette 44, Delaware 0. St. Thomas 7, S. Olaf 2. Washington 14, Tulane 6. Centre 21, Auburn 0. Vanderbilt 7, Georgia 7. Haverford 6, Trinity, 0. Rochester 7, Hamilton 0. Swarthmore 7, Johns Hopkins 0. Union 7, Wesleyan 0. Western Reserve 7, Ohio Wesley- an 0. Towa 41 Indiana 0. Marquette 7, North Dakota 3. Okio State 28, Purdue 0. Keniucky 14, Virginia 7. Wisconsin 7, Michigan 7. | Butler 3, Michigan Aggies 2. | Wooster 13, Akron 0. Chicago 14, Illinois 6, Missouri 24, Oklahoma 14, U. of Colorado 0, U. of Utah 0. U. of Detroit 24, Marietta 0. Nebraska 28, Kansas 0. Drake 20, Morningside 10. MacAlester 14, St. Johns 0. of California 72; .U. of Wash- Colorado School of Mines 7, Color- ado college 0. Eau Claire high 0, Chippewa Falls high 0. St. Cloud Teachers 0. Fargo high 0, Grafton high 0. Teachers “7, Winona steer will travel nearly twice as far,! three and one sixteenth miles. In a in the stock for the winter markets, the ex- hibit will show. It is being prepared| Penn State played its first intercol- at Fargo. | legiate football yame in 1887, just 34 B, H. 8, IN 1922 | successfully. "| Bucknel, about fifty miles away. That Eddie. Scott, tackle on the Bismarck high school football. team. has heen was a long trip in those days. Just | harken to the schedule of this same elected captain for next year. Scott won high praise for his, defensive Penn State team now? tizzo Bezdek an his huskies witli work, particularly in the two Mandan games. fall, The mogt lengthy trip takes them Washington, On this trip they will travel just aboyt 6,000 miles. Their and the jaunt to New York for the Georgia Tech game another 600 miles. The Navy game at Philadephia neces- sitates traveling 425 miles and the Pitt game, the shortest trip of the season, 350 miles. Won't be Jong before grid squads Halliday) :N:"Ds:Noy.: 14.— Thursday will be traveling around the world to night, between the home teams and teams from. Killdeer, Halliday won ™¢et Opponents. i =e both. The first: was a game between Mary had a little lamb, Oh, lamb it must have been ning by a score of 16 to 6. ‘For when she got her dinner check, In the second game between the It was a dollat-ten, high school boys Halliday was again. tiaras successful in a 28 to 16 score. M ta ir Pe A large crowd was present, visitors he poxine game Is setting. bs a a2 being from Dodge, Golden Valley and much Sh gawombns sport aac it isa Killdeer. , man’s. A few years ago, very few, the} After the game Halliday served lady who sat at the ringside was the 0] “par bon, comra‘c” among the tea lunch to the visiting teams and thelr sippers, But today—well the pine boards look like a well-fed bridge par- ty. At the featherweight champion- ship match between Kilbane and Frush, a third of the audience was made up of women. s * & A man named Kingston has offered Pres. Baker of the Phillies, $500,000 for his baseball club. That’; goin’ too far with kiddin.’ Dontcha think? * HALLIDAY WINS DOUBLE-HEADER By Blosser | | He “sicked” his ai on a bevy of quail, And they flew up over his head; And when he got through, with hi blooy-bla-bloo, They looked like an old feather hed. It teok Jess Guilford, the new ama- py ALLMAN ||GRIDIRON CRITICS HAY HARD TIME T0 PICK WINNER OUTSIDE BIG TEN TERRITORY Both games were with) trayel approximately §,500 miles this! to Seattle to play the University of, Harvard trip was about 1,200 miles; PAGE SEVEN TIA iw Paper Battle To Prove Best Teams in Big Ten Is Going Merrily On A LOT OF “MIGHTBE’S” Football critics living outside of Big Ten territory are going to have a hard time proving a football team outside that teritory is the best team in the country this year, unless it happens to be a critic living further West. Warther West myst always be added after the results of the Ohio State-California football game of last New Years day. The paper battle royal to prove the best team in the Big Ten is going merrily on. The best team might be Ohio State univer- sity, but then Oberlin, who defeated the Buckeyes in the opening game of the season, must he considered. It might he Wisconsin if the latter team passes the barrier of Michigan and Chicago, It might be Iowa, hut, with the exception of Notre Dame, the teams Iowa has defeated have no shawn. strength. Starting toward the coast, it might be Nebraska, but that team failed to defeat Notre Dame, and lost a single touchdown battle. West of Nebraska there are some great teams, but Col- orado is the only one the middle west has seen, and it did not look impres- sive. On the far coast, the teams are {having a merry title race With Califor - nia showing the most class to date. Other teams inust still be considered, however. Removing all possibilities of figur- ing a title for the east is comparative- ly simple. The process brings the title somewhere to Big Ten territory. Chicago defeated Princeton and the Tigers defeated Harvard. Notre Dame defeated the Army and Nebraska de- feated Pittsburgh. Taking it for granted that comparative scores are worthless but that football fanatics will wrestle with thém, the following series of games are of interest to the middle west. Towa defeated Notre Dame. Notre Dame defeated the Army 28 to 0. The Army defeated Middlebury 19 to 0. Middlebury defeated Williams 7 to 3. Williams’ defeated Columbia univer- sity 20 to 0. Columbia defeated New York university 19 to 0. New York university defeated Wesleyan univer- sity 7 to 0, and tied Colgate univer- sity. Another litle journey into compara- tive scores starts with Oberlin. Ober- lin defeated Ohio State 7 to 0. Ohio defeated Chicago 7 to 0. Chicago de- feated Princeton 9 to 0. Princeton defeated Harvard 10 te 3. Harvard de- | feated Georgia 10-7. Georgia defeate Virginia 21 to 0, and Auburn 7 to 0. Or take Detroit university, which. is \in Big Ben Ten territory, but which ‘has. played few of the teams in the territory. Detroit university defeated Boston College 28 to 0. Boston trecked way down into Texas and de- feated Baylor 23 to 0. Then Boston ‘took on about all of the teams it could find in the east and except for @ tie with “fighting Fordham,” it won all its games. Detroit also took in some other Southern territory when it defeated Tulane and Tulane had to its credit a victory over Rice Institute. Taking up the Iowa-Notre Dame- Nebraska angle again. Nebraska aft- er traveling two thousand miles and playing on a strange. field 10 to 0.. Pittsburgh is kown in the east as Glen Warner's team. Pittsburgh de- feated West Virginia 21 to 13; Syra- cuse university 36 to 0, and the Uni- versity of Pcnnsylvania 28 to 0. Syra- cuse defeated Brown university 28 to 0, and Maryland 42 to 0. Thus the tenacles of comparative score victories reach out to the east, the South Atlantic seabord, the south and,the far sout:west ina rather com- manding w.y. Cornell university in the east, now coached by Gilmour Do- bie, who started his coaching career with the North Dakota Aggies, and Lafayette, a little colleze at Easton, Pa., and Vanderbilt in the south are the teams in the scctions that at pres- ent the middle west cannot claim supremacy over. The war is on for that leadership of the middle west which the comparative sccres indi- cate. Westward, except for the mem- ory of the last New Year’s day, the strength of the teams is an unknown quantity. FARGO-GRAFTON TEAMS IN A TIE |teur golf champion, 16 years to come to his own and win the title. Of ail sports there is no other game where a fellow has to work so long and hard for his reward, and work hardcr tet of eithor teams The - these. proceedings. The default con- | with December $1, it! f° the’ non-payment of th after he gets to the top. “Long” Jim sists: je" Barnes can sympathize with Guilford for he had the same long road to ‘travel before he won the natiqnal open championship last spring. They both went through a long, monotonous i grind, getting into every match pos- sible for the sake of competition and ¢ improvement. Golf is the most un | is selecting 28 fhe ghamnion. ot ae certain of all games for the very next| eastern section. Mandan hgh school, HOW CAN T,WHEN : day after a fellow has won the cham-| which refused to abide by the sched. “OMY MAMA. WON'T LET. ; i pionship he may be defeated by some ule planned by the state hoard, will ing Willist ‘on ‘for the a eieneiorahts of the state high schools, played score- less on the Grafton field Saturday, the game being played with tempe! below freezing and an icy gale sending swirling «ldies of snow down upon the warriars. Wiiitston will meet whichever te_m $1.113 1- all around, MINNEAPOLIS Pate Float Consultation mn Free Minneapolis, Minn., —I Bale 9, 11—Egess Rlock—Phone 263| unchanged to 10 cents "i bar. ig S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. ” Chirepracter HEV! WHATSAMATTER. WITH You ? WHY DIDN'T 9 play Williston on Thanksgiving Day OU TACKLE” HIM ! ME PLAY WITH HIM Hl | | doh, with a dink ut % inch in Mandan, according to’ present HUA! WHY DIONT a plans. ;A mighty cheer rose from the stands As the substitute, with outstretched YOu, WUH:? : WEBB BROTHERS 7" hands, JAMESTOWN BOY - ee Undertakers -Embalmers -. Funeral Directors Revelved the ball and took it on a FOOTBALL STAR balmer in Charge: rege stold it: erat ‘ DAY PHONE en NIGHT PHONES 246-887 For the coach had told on rei'taid | Jamestown, No Ds ‘Nov,’ 14-“Joha Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Tt!” ERR I N A K ORS". |He did. He's got it to this very, very Thomas, of Jamestown, was the star P » DERT ING PARL day. of the Chicago-Illinois universes s 8 * football game Saturday. ae =e ree There is such a thing as doing your | playing fullback, drove through the salle as Night Foeee tet ee ot werk ton.well. Take the case of the| Illinois line winning victory for his | heavyweight champion, Jack Dempsey. | team. Thomas also starred for Chi- SMARCK past ath COMPANY He has fought everybody there {s to| cago against Princeton. BI fight and strung them up like so much RT CER 220 MA STRE Ocean insect. i ver e se eae Nowe ae toystarval 2 The sea bug holobates is the only : i : insect living on the surface of the TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS | ocean, and what it eats ts unknown, Upholstered Furniture Made to Order © qo ? , « =) ' ‘