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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Commisse Hyond wis maturally made inde The Bismarck Tribune ","’ | pendent. An Independent Newspaper But the THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER » With jls venture | vernment man- | a 1 ufacture, ownership and operation of ships, made (Established 18 jthe board, with its subsidiary, the Emergency & ~ i A A | ro 4 Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Corporation, an administrative body, which ought ty} c= : Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at have been attached to the executive department saree \ GAGA, BEA WaERE 1S Bismarck, ag second class mail matter. Pile aired had ‘ts iiog anata ; oes SPopt- Waal | Ws Heee le present method is iNogical, iuetficient and ir-, i ‘WORLD George D Mann. -sident and Publisher yea \) IF DINNER | poland aes ae — | responsible. If it can not cured hy good-faith Witt BE LAE | SéRious ubseription Rates Payable In Advance carrying out of an informal agreement, it should be } ne Dally by carrier, per yeat cs cured by law : Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck). Tally by tail, per ear A diviston of Secretary Mor riment should | So? RODS (in. state outside Bismarck)... 6.09 Tun the ships: WW there re 1 tory func gf SZ 5 Dally by mail, e of North Dako 6.00 tions, calling for an’ independen persons ert cz M not CT should be appointed to that board qualified for this 1 ee] Member of The Associated Pres« responsibility = ot. The Ass ed Press is exclusivel ntitled to the use for republi 1 news ches credited “To Tae Wife ed in this paper, and also | s origin published here: jon of all uther matter to it or not o| the local in. Bulldogs Rodgers Commander said 0 var and one pop herein are very unpopular thing, came ——— ——_________—_— When he said that there was something “vitally Forelgn Representatives rong” With the navy, that was popular enough G. LOG CHICAGO Tower Bldg. PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT ssge Bldg But when he added 1 what was wrong was not icular person's wickedness, but an unscien K AYNE, BURNS AND SMITH i snization, that ran counter to the most prev: | NEW YORK — - : Fitth Ava, Bldg.) stent of popular prejudice leave - a eh Angeratlen pe easy. ‘Thinking shout as (Official City, Courty Newspaper) ‘i ion ‘ : BIA nes ahone ial “Passing the Buck" So We prefer a personal devil 10 blame, Snarling | Commissioner El Mead Vie reclamation |" Sse i a Ho quality, ‘which © ervies denies thers “dle be nil opposi- | 1 NOt share ery bulldog, Anlyaing san in ; personal situ requires thought and lhor, both | n from his dey h he out reclama are ful. tion enterpri ; ; We wngyess, and recommend “better bure t yaild project n 1 a y Dros men to know what to do about that means 1 econ ae ent ds 48°) dy. Punishing somebody, or complaining be bause we can not, i j in congressmen ther And they What Enterprise Did There is nothing like doing an old thing in a new . ountry to find out new things about it. \ iti depressed by low prices fo tp report ir un to raise cotton, And now Otay ino it is discovered that the cotton blossom makes wil] al be: very white honey r the benefit of So we not merely cotton cloth, cotton constituents, it is Oi and butter substitute, and cotton cattle feed, but Congress COtton honey facts, Stalk, root, fiber, seed and blossom, all are useful, if we have but the ent rise to use them, ving them up possi- bus 7 ne * * PRES- ste Editorial Comment What Labor Creates d iy the done to - . (Ba of the eason of commur the sociali almost conservative. It is interesting to it Marriage scretary of, , low au of child ‘wel 100,00 Unions, in dise une < Iowans who are ligible to ma include mies and Ethics in Relation to Welfar been kinds o TL was much disap- t of nd all others “whom ceding that labor does not create eve! Gands came not the ca says that labor mi of wealth but only what it says, th ni fact naking wealth measur able nd Daehees 0 din perk but hu consumable. He says the other factors are in the tarted to my e the sea and the air and “to an extent not gen-| when I Condon Bu sey I open- erally admitted, in the efforts and applications of oh Bnewab ‘ the inconsiderate, tho intelligence He goes on to Say that the syndi-| ts very ugly manner te stupid,the lazy, the moody or the unclean calists took an untenable position when they de- a HieIag SaRCaH Not those who can not have a difference of opin- manded that the mines should be turned over asked jon without quarreling over it. Not those who tie imiuers. He denis that the miner has any more Re araiieani 3, ie stand too rigidly for their own way, or yield too vigl! in them than the people of the country in|. Seat oe ain weakl other's, which the mines exist. This is a large conce: | hreat to discharge her Not the too intense or the too placid; those who even if it implies nationalization of the mines, |} thought it, was time to interfere. » marriage wholly by happiness or wholly > real case for such socialization is made out.| out. He left without saying a word Sy Dal How the World Looks Just Now aS Be The FARICIPATING PLAYERS. ng and making me. with thought the girl would co,” continued, “when I gave he at she would hold! ued to weep. » might if she re en nothing since ‘T have | Mrs, Ath on make questioned. | Bp auneee women’ T nervous, is one ‘of t I hea soft voice. | you, tha is some do not deserve.” and wash the tears out of little one,” I told her,” to in town to buy chemicals. Ne was CHILD NEEDS QUART !MMING | rice, puree of bermuda onions stew- j BepR HUGH 5 os ed wort. with milk, peas baked or Surgeon General, United States | mashed potatoes and spinach, mac- we Mublic Health Service aroni_ and spaghetti, in milk may Diet 1 proper nutrition for! be added. children of importance at all! Desserts—Apple sauce or baked times. Approximately one out of | apple, cup custard, junket, orange every five children in the countr, stewed prunes, rice pudding, is undergourished, according to the joca, jello or sirup on bread. best inforn lable at the fallowing foods should he present tim of forbidden. to children between the pse poorly are ages of 3 and 6 years: [tate Poeieht ire. “Meats—All". fried meats, corned : much as 20 per cent below beef, dried beef, barins, kidneys, Their flesh is flabby livet, sweetbreads, duck, game, ve very little resists | goose, ham, pork, sausage, meat Relatively few children | stews and dreseings from roasted much overweight. mi Every child, to keene wall, needs! Vegetables—Fried vegetables of | regular meals so planned that some all varieties, cabbage, green corn, |time during the day the child ob- cucumbers, pickles, all raw articles | tains all the. elements essential to, such ag raw celery, raw onions and | health and growth, k is the one food of childhood cannot be replaced by other Svety child should hie | foods. from one to two pints of milk dail | Besides this he needs cereal in the and necessary morning bles | essential | ment. green-leaved to ‘supply mater to growth and dev One egg or a slice’ of meat a day with fruit for dessert pletes the food requirements of the older chid. Children from 3 to 6 vege 1 They should be allowed no food between given Milk meals. «They should be water. frequently should be the main article the diet. Cereal—Must_be cooked three or four hours, oatmeal should be given of several times a week. Brei Dried bread or sweiback and toast. Soups—Beef broth with vermi- rice, milk soups and vegetable soups. should be rare yn not more than once a day. Roast beef, lamb chops, broiled tenderloin, minced white meat of chicken well cooked and | minced, and broiled or boiled fre: ifish, Crisp bacon, ezgs soft boil- ed_ or poached. Vegetables—All_ vegetables should he thoroughly cooked and mashed. Meat—Generally and should be celli, beef stew, chicken broth with| {olives | Bread and Cake—Griddle cakes, hot bread, rolls, sweet cakes, also bread or cake with dried fruit or sweet frosting. Desserts—Store candy, pastry, pie, preserves, salads, tarts, eal should not be given to any Id under 5 yearw of age The diet of older children should ‘contain fat, -earbohydrates, protein, water and certain food sub- nees_known as vitamines. ats are necessary for nutri- J are most readily converted jinto heat and energy. In addition to cow's milk and cream and butter, cotton seed oil, peanut, butter, olive | oil and bacon are all rich in fats.. The salts are necessary for the growing skeleton. These are sup- | plied by milk and are found in green | Vegetables und soup. | It is now known that a diet com- | posed only of meat, potatoes bread | lel © ion a and cetedl does not. promote the and health in children. a diet should be supple- mented j butter, by an abundance of milk, green-leaved vegetable such as Spinach, kale, lettuce, sw chard, onions, cress, beet_and turnip tops.’ These articles vof food are rich in growth stimulating vita- mines, Growing children should partake of them freely. Sleep is essential ¢0 growth and child needs at least ten sleep each night. He needs fresh air day and night and a mod- lerate amount of outdoor play ‘ i carroth snbined to 2 they had turn- | ASParagus, string beans, carrot), ed halt of the pare facet to re- tomatoes, stewed celery, steamed tailing radios. But he was more j— — surprised when he was able to pur- 4 a second-hand radio set for} e which would make h JAMES W. TOM SIMS “SAYS ve cost him $15) DEAN, Miss Hamilton, dean of women in the University of Michigan, says ther too many girls inc lege,” and that many of them “have Re no deep-rooted respect for learn- ing.” Our prediction of the coldest win-| "Fo be sure! The same might be ter eve is based on the fact that all! said of college bo There are winters are that cold jtoo many of them in’ college who Ihave no deep-rooted respect - for It y of dreamy eyes to learning, and who might get more keep a man awake, education by going to work, = | “The only error these complain- Some men tell their wives Cvery-i ants make 1s to assume that this sit- thing that happens, and some even uation is new. continged nd’ we wifl take tell them some things that don’t! In quantity, of course, it is, There ,osnin’ “happen. 2 ) were never so many college stu- “] didn't have a moment to think -—-—— { dents, good bad and indifferent. or I should have gotten’ A+ man is a person who gets mad! put’ don't imagine that the out of the ent before the when the barber doesn’t guess how; days when students —w a girl was b: d we were driving he wanted his hair eut. th the studious els along in my roadster. I had. ex- -—— + aie lucationsio® ‘Hunry changed the’ town r it about Perhaps a third of our cuss words, Adams.” Or ask any old) “gra an hour before, for I had suddenly, remembered thit I had promised the r to Mother. \ t Draco's I was inex- | were invented: by men while it was payday, If you only knew it, the man at ishing} who remembers his college life of i thirty, forty or fifty years ago, and ! perhaps recalls what his father told him of conditions of a still earlier es as harectoo-aii Foeonot oe thee | Son hen 1a case sand I turned to the pressibly bored by Miss Stimpson, the bottom of a lot of things spends |-generation. by duty; those who are too alike or too unlike—not, Wut for the intelligence and knowledge, won by | RS ee eee ee MoE Tibelts aE ioieee OMA eS iain: in fact, most of us. self-denial, which originally discovered the mines, troubles. und chattered and Prinked | an ke a| stupid. students, "useless students Indeed, it is doubtful if anybody is fit for mar- found a market for their product, showed people and finally ed me if I could pos-; All you need to know to make @/ boozing students, then as now, und riage but the ungels—and ti Pee ‘ how to utilize that product Mor heating, fore ae aibly, Keep: from: dancing when “Ti suceessels all yeuldenie er jaar dotee 2 ourhe carnest heard that heavenly ‘ For us, we must get along as best we can. And. and coke and all the derivatives of coal tar; found "A promised, Copyrights 142, NEA Service, Ine.) sidering the unpr iz “Of @) ikeveanl ? ee : ‘ nothing to do with S ‘rom considering the unpromising nature of most of the the capital to support labor before the profits ¢ sdig; has nothing) to do with) sige resent ctodthe auttle Marsdice material, we do surprisingly well. in and even when the mine did not prove productive Atherton groaned, but I do care of the Secret Irawer—Con- Selene to any profitable extent, the miner would be work- not think Jack heard her. He was tinued. i" " ‘ ing at something else. In fact, tracing the problem ; i : Russia Goes Wet back to its origin, he would be scraping a bare Porcedstoapubvun.at a city “he: Eleven 3 of prohibition which aid not pro- 28° : rie : nthe opened pages of the, hibit ive. atnerionoeJéteRind WhItn returns to.| DMRS out of the soil with a bent stick. His labor iideon Bible on the dresser he no-; Fal i : s (is not worth any more now than it was then. His ticed a scrawl of penciled notes. a wet ba Whiskey which s sixty per cent > 2 ; The first three pages of Genesis | Ricchol has mada 4 nf a th the |° im that he shall confiscate the le rewards of were covered with figures and tab-| : oh eae cians ppearance along With Te intelligence, learning and self-denial ig preposter- ulations on the cost of some fan's | forty per cent vodka. ‘The stuff is selling at from new radio set. ous and only a little more preposterous than that the whole community shall dispose of the results been the rule i a8 : i F ‘ "at its pleasure. Intelligence is essentially stimu in Russia. ! government found that the nation ssi e F lated by reward, whether that reward is in power, was not ready for complete prohibition and revised | 3 : N : i tte in cash or its equivalent, or in a degree of freedom ita rules somewhat and placed the manufacture and pat 5 ; mats acess ‘i unfettered by responsibility for earning daily bread Piadnaeeen Ci snirils inthe nanilasot lhe gover) ntability to socialistic offeials. It will government. The government's need of revenue, by -accountaper’. cleo a jin “sightseeing busses, seeing the never develop in a communism which implies noth- | sigh not the issue of public health or morals, was the 7 ; Haire ee ae ing more than the equality of common destitution, $1 to $4 a quart. Partial prohibition, however, hi York, Oct. 9—The employees New York si ng bus com- were given a holiday the other And what do you suppose y id? I happened to notice a} }long parade of them, riding about o 4 . determining factor, Under the government scheme Visitors from the various Main private stills were active and the improvident us eae Streets of the nation often com- PEC i eRe Were. er ond e rovidel se 7 ment, upon coming to New York, of wheat and rye resulted. The peasantry continued Another Humble Hero Wins how ree the average street is from] Fe iaficnire vodlia when gover agate ii. Ba |the raucous shouting of new moeanutacture-yodke. when government. regulation (Louisville Times) One can walk avenue for miles| made it harder to get a supply. Abandonment of prohibition was opposed by many influential communists Nohing could be have been more in keeping with as meeting a news the eternal fitness of things—as seen by fiction | boy und, with the exception of th among whom was Nicolai | writers—than was the victory of the $8 Ford in the | tively few “extra” shouters to Lenin. In the face of treasury needs, however, argu- | ‘Times What Price Glory race for decrepit cars at | found on Broadway or elsewhere, 7 ile a ae ; CR epcpaes ; f And on Sunday morning when meat was futile and Russia is on a wet basis solely | the state fair. It was like the old story of the milk- \ practical! Pama oan anil for revenue. wagon horse winning the Kentucky derby. For ; Ame: 2 ; all boys in the ie eas . . Ri he Pee guise of town criers shouting, “Sun- ithe §8_fliv was taken from the junk pile a | day paypers!” one can stro!l’ across | are | pitted against some “thoroughbreds” that once had| the heart of Broadway and, drop-| Conservation | some, pratantions to. “clase.” ping a_ pin, practically ‘certain aoe ; ‘ of hearing its echo. \ All of the inspirational writers for the magazines | hould have the benefit of this remarkable per: Diet. titel cetonconsy duland, formance. It shows what can be done by pluck | after the season has ended. I am and perseverance by a go-getter with $8, an am-/ reminded of the morning after the| Oil and gasoline are cheaper. Whereupon every- body but the few owners of oi] stocks -rejoices. But there are those who argue that we would all be better off if the price of gasoline were perma- nently twice as high. Ka nea | circus in my home town in Ohio. | Engines could be devised which would give twice | bition and an imagination, What could be m | ‘Arriving upon the circus plot] hopeless than a junked Ford with a cracked | which had, just the day before,’ the mileage to the gallon, so the “gas” cost per mile | seemed a land of enchantment, we would be the same. der block as a prospect for winning, the finals in| vo nosters would find only a few The only reason it is not done now is that such an automobile race aganist a Stutz, a Studebaker, | deserted pop stands, some sawdust i 4 fy ;3 and two Fords with sound, if resounding engines? , circles of almost magic signifi. engines’ would cost more, and at present prices it is | canee, and endless scatterings of: But there was an clement in the $8 car’s preparation | paper and boxes and other things ‘This is one of the most pressing of conservation ‘Mt appears to have been lacking in that of the ee ee ri re oldie ong iropleme, : gies contestants’. The owner. ila, ples at pte Ba fn the real nis, £ 7 ‘ plaining the victory, said: “I welded the cylinder, And so with the Coney Islanders! There will, to be sure, be oil and oil products at Be mM overhead vaives, jazzed wp the motor, gave {EAs Sunday I. saw. thousands’ of some price for at least this generation and the next. i i g 2 them picking and kicking around ‘But the end of cheap oll is in sight, it a kick in the slata and sent it out on the the remains of | the aiiaer Play- , ok ee” land. Gates and loc! an ars Conservation now would double or treble the ‘rack . ; he | block the entranceways “und the Sime. ‘The more oll we waste now, for cheap uses, Obviously, the kick in the stats is what gave the wind had lifted papers and small ;the more it will cost later, for necessary useg. * cheaper to waste gasoline. 8 car the power, tue speed, the stamina to win. | boxes and tossed them dirtily into Cars that were not equipped with a kick in gue’ the | glossed lobbies of the gilded slats had al! sorts of trouble. They fouled their Here and there a hot dog stand _ The Shipping Board Problem | spark plugs, gummed their carburctors, blew out stil held out against the season, | President Coolidge is reported as astonished to | tires, skidded on the turns, lost compression on the | dren, had to create a circus of thejr ‘discover that the Shipping Board.ia an independent | straight-ways, and therefore chattered and wh “ody, responsible to nobody, He proposes to make) to ignominous defeat. Fi $ fe |own. But they had grown up and | forgotten the simple play instinct; A ‘bolish it, | j BTN. 3 So they seemed to me terribly rest-j “4t responsible, or else to ask Congress to a’ ish {t,| Putting thought into action Is one of the grea pew: and lost—and, hence, quite} Ae secrets of success. Millions of drivers of $8 cars, | 'ragic. oe { put something responsible in its place. fee ‘The reason for this anomalous situation is that | priced ahové $8. have wished to kick their cars in, , ? Shipping Board was originally intended to be 2 the slats. But very few have ever literally carried can Be stopped by neither deity nor fee Alin tet inaiselalinn,\ onidiacnabnetheiiatnlssesdnemeenmatue The dyed-in-the-wool radio” bug, A friend of mine, AE Arthur Felig, a photographer, tells me that yesterday he went into th largest, photographic supply house’ Ift you have dollars the world| ** thinks you Even Amer made in Ps u seem a bit more beautiful. ime must wear rubber heels. up on us so quietly. oe. sli o——_— If ye love me, keep my command- ments.—John 14:15. ¢ He who cannot command himself,! command! tis folly to think to others, —Lubertius. ivorces are being now, but they dont It secu lites A THOUGHT udents as toploftically as now. In fact, there was more drinkinz, more immorality, and .more snob- bishness in the Colleges of the last generation than there’ is in the universities of teda’ The evils complained of are real. | Bui they are not new. . They are merely supposed to be i new because the enormous increase | in attendance has brought in agen. | eration of students’ most of whom ‘| have no family tradition of college | | <Because they and their parents come in contact with these things "| for the first time, they suppose chey exist for the first time. | fer THe Way, MR. uk ' an/T AGAR « WHEN HE 'WAS agg itr ACL RIGHT THEN, —QPON tt! | EVERETT TRUE 'BYCONDO | WHITMAN, HEARD THAT MAHONEY TONSILS TAKEN OUT. } f IWS Now , fCORRECT To SAY OPER ATED ON — IT’S OPERATED | Ay iin A ? io Ny \ \ AY) Jd Ss. i x | ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS i] BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON “Where are you going, Cracknuts?” asked Chirk Chipmunk one day when the squirrel gentle- to fill up his automobile tank with gasoline, “Where are we going, Ma?” ask- ed Daddy, who had gotten into the habit of asking his wife everything. “Wq are going to get nuts,” said Mrs. Uracknuts from the place she was sitting in the car, to know, Daddy. You told me you had all the best nut trees picked out, and we've been waiting for the first frost. The first frost came last night, so here we are, baskets and_ all.” “That's right, Chirki E dy Cracknuts kindly. m getting a little absent-minded these days. Why ‘are you asking?” “{-—] like to go to the buck- wheat field,” said Chirk. “It's all ripe and brown and I like it better than anything next to pop-corn. I'm going to the pop-corn patch, |too. I like to eat pop-eorn before | popped. It tastes like delicious nuts—only better.” “Well?” asked Daddy. “What jabout it?” : j me along.” said Chirk. “It's a long way to the buckwheat field and I hean’t go. so- very fast,” wheat and p-corn, Chir! said Daddy Cracknuts . severely. “They belong to the farmer and he has a hard time raising them. With nuts it is different. They grow wild, and. we—" Nick and, Nancy had been’ listen- Nick brake in, + | ing and no “Listen here, Daddy.” he. said. “It’s all right for Chirk to take a. | little bit of buckwheat and an ear | or two of pop-corn. Money wouldn't jis glad to pay him for what he has done for him.” “Who? Chirk?” laughed Mrs, Cracknuts. “Why, he’s too little to ‘do anything for anybody. I’m sure’ | IT -don’t know what you can be talk. ing about.” 3 Daddy} man stopped at the “Twin Garage” | “You ought: ” said Dad-! “I was thinking mebbe you'd take} | “You shouldn't touch the buck. do Chirk any good, and the, farmer! y ing about the way the grasshop- pers were eating up his grain and he said ‘Really if- it were not for the chipmunks and '’coons I don't know what I should do. They eat up the grasshoppers by the hun- dred—-and if the chipmunks do take a little bit of buckwheat and hard corn now and then they are wel- come to it, They are the greatest helpers I have.” “Well I declare!” said Mrs. Crack- nuts moving her baskets over to make room. “Hop right in Chir- kie and come along.” So Chirkie jumped into the lit- tle automobile as though he work- ed on springs. And Daddy Crack- nuts paid for his gasoline and climbed back into the car and away they went. “Don't you think we'd better stop and get Mister Coon too!” said Mrs. Cracknuts. “If the farmer ‘owes Chirk so much he owes Ring- | tail something too I'd say.” | Chirk Chipmunk laughed. “Don’t ; Mrs. Cracknuts,” he said. er Coon has been having sweet every night for dinner ever since the middle of August. He and his nephews go corn hunting every day. Only they like theirs | soft’and young while I prefer mine harder. T like it in the. spring when it’s sprouting too when it's j been in the ground about a week. I like to dig it up and eat it—like the crows.” “You're a very bad boy!” said Mrs, Cracknuts sharply. “ I don't ; think the farmer would like that. i “He doesn’t,” admitted Chirk, “But it just seems that I can’t help it I love it so. But not any better than buckwheat. There's the field now. I'll be getting out thank you.” “We'll meet you here on our way back,” suid Daddy Cracknuts, “So .be ready,” To he continued.) (Copyright 192 ” NEA: Service Ine.) ¥armers’ Cream Association Formed at Glen Ullin Organization of the first Farmers’ ‘Cream association, organized as a stock corporation in North Dakota was announced here today by John A. Husby, director of the dairy divi- sion of the state agricultural de- ; partment. The new company, which has a nucleus of 135 members of a non- stock concern which it replaces will have its headquarters at Glen Ullin. Need for a new plan of organiza- {tion arose, Husby said, when the old corporation found that it could not legally distribute to the mem- bers $1,500 which it had accumulat- ed as a surplus. permit distribution of the money. Although the main object of the company will be the cooperative marketing of cream, it also will mar- ket poultry, eggs and similar pro- duce, Husby said, | ‘The new company marks the first ;step in a development which ma; Mist corn ; mean much to the state, Husby said, as it “puts cooperative marketing on a sounder business basis than i herstotere:? ie men responsible for th idea, he said, aré William J. Lance j and Peter Cartner, directors of the company, A, Ghee Uleeee -Northland Company i Is Given Permit to Operate Busses St. Paul, Oct. 10—-()—T1 \- land Transrortation Crushy, Baie operates 53 busses along lines be- tween Duluth and the Twin Cities und in northern Minnesota commun- ities, today was granted a certifi. {ite of conventenee and necessity by [the Minnesota Railr = jana commilaaion, nad and Rare he order granting the je operations eonstititen ohereaieate jing'routes; Duluth to the Twin Cities’ | over highw: y No. 1, St. Paul to Tay- ilor's Fails Duluth 'to Virginia; Vir- H o Ely;) Duluth ¢ ; [ind Duluth to Port Arthor oer i nia ty ‘ China invented the art of 1,000 years before it. was known ie other countries. i_ For Zapp Coah, Gall 1051W.- EE. p O51. r Cereals—Ready to serve or dry The new plan will ’ . 2 "ely “q > gelinh “vy