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r ee TF oe IS Tt ~§ ” SSRab a & * Paka re geek ReBRA we Food JW . PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Cribune Issued every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona) County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribune Building. BUSINESS TELEPHONES ......-.- scteesee: -15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments} Bntered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS J, B. HANWAY ....------- EARL BE. HANWAY ..- W. H HUNTLEY . RB. EVANS . THOMAS DALY Advertising B Prudden, King & Prudden, 1120-23 Steger Bldg. Chicago, Ili,; 286 Fifth avenue, New York City; Globe Bidg.; Bos- the New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitors) are welcome. j Sa SUBSCRIPTION RATES, By One Year .....-+--- Six Months ....-- Three Months .. | eocesees 3.00 —— secesecs 1.95 accepted for less period than Six Months ... Three Months No subscriptt three months. All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Dafly Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip- tion becomes one month in arrears. Member of Andit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C) Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Kick if you Don’t Get Your Tribune. CaN 15 or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m- tf you fail to receive ‘your Tribune. A paper will be de Itvered to you by speci! messenger. Make it your duty to Jet The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. Se ee A CASPER CITIZEN. 3 Casper is bound to feel the loss of a citizen like Herbert J. Peterson. He came before the days of our importance and, so to speak, grew up with the pres- ent Casper. To be a good average citizen is a title any man might well covet. Herbert Peterson, while possessing in life all the qualities that go to make up this ideal community man, wes much more. When rot a leader he was a staunch supporter of all move- ments designed for the upbuilding and betterment of Casper. He was honest, and his judgment was good. His business transactions needed no scrutiny. He was trusted and he never betrayed the confidence. No man of this type can pass beyond and not leave a va- cancy, and regret among associates and acquaintances. Honor was the cornerstone in the foundation of his character, laid down in the years of his youth. It was what sustained the superstructure in the years of its building. It was what made the completed edifice worthy the admiration of all who knew him. And as its architecture crumbles and the elements return to the original dust of earth, we are comforted with the record of an honorable life well lived, and an example end inspiration to make our own lives as complete. a WHAT IS A BONE — Allen Hubbell describes him as follows: ane language of chemistry he is a shovelful of a bucketful of water. pit Gus dsewoage of physics, he is a wonderful ma- ehine, a combination of various bands, cords and levers, adjusted in due relation, and operating for a specific purpose. In Galanguage of physiology, he consists of a bony framework covered with flesh and skin, and supplied with various organs whose functions are to preserve the life of the individual and to perpetuate the species. In the language of sociology, he is a unit in the or- ganism of human society and has his specific functions in the life of the social whole, just as the organs of the body have specific functions in the life of the In the language of psychology, he is mind manifest- ing various phenomena, all of which occur in - harmony with law. In the language of theology, he is the dust of the ground and the breath of God, a spark struck from the divine anvil, a life enclosed in a clod of clay, a son of the Most High, afar from his Father’s house, but, when true to himself, secking his eternal home. ‘ In the language of education, he is a being consti- tuted of body and mind, a bundle of possibilities from which the developments may be marvelous. He is torn in weakness, yet destined to strength; promising noble things, yet often falling short of fulfillment. He is the hope of the gocd and the great. eee BUSINESS CONDITIONS. Improvement, with increasing stability character- §zes general business conditions for the past thirty- day period. Prices of the major commodities have shown only normal fluctuations. Many lines of in- dustry give evidence of increased activity and there appears to have been some decrease in industri} un- employment. Retail trade over the counter is re- ported as unsatisfactory, but mail order houses gen- erally show an increase in business, attributable to the improved purchasing power and mental attitude of the farmer, due to the rise in agricultural prices. Wholesale trade is generally reported to be better, rithough a considerable degree of caution wisely pre- zils. The rate of iron and steel production has in- creased, but the volume of forward orders still re- tains restricted. Immediate demand for boots and shoes is less active and other sections of the hide and leather trade continue to lag. The cotten textile sit- vation is handicapped by strikes in the New England cotton mills. Wool manufacture is operating at a fair rate, although the demand for woolen and worsted fabrics has been disappointing. There has been a marked increase of activity in the manufacture of automobiles, tires and accessories. Car loadings have increased materially during recent weeks. Exports are at a low level, but this is normally the season of a light export movement. Business failures have de* clined in number since the beginning of the year-The| past month has shown improvement in fundamental) conditions, and consequently in business sentiment, as has been the case each month since mid-summer of 1921. The period of extreme discouragement in the} United States has now passed and there is widespread and justified confidence in the long future. 2 eae THE THREE-MILE LIMIT. The origin of the doctrine of “the three-mile limit” comes from the days when the territorial waters of a * nation extended that distance sexward and vessels were beyond range of the guns of land batteries, at such a point. The right of nations to control and regulate these adjacent waters has been generally| recognized among nations in settlement of fisheries end smusgling disputes. The rule was violated by Germany during the war just as she violated all other agreements and understandings. She considered the distance her guns would carry with effect as the only limitation to be recognized. We are having a lot of trouble at present which is! likely to become the subject of international con- troversy“in-the-near-fature, with smugglers: of-liquor. | amazing rapidity of growth. What size it will attain | horse is still an important factor in American business. | the development of new types of trucks how long that | condition will obtain is problematical. Already it has twenty miles or more with precision and damaging re- sult, and swift motor boats, hydroplanes and other water and air craft that travel many miles an hour the theoretical limit should be extended to accommo- date the range of the guns of the land fortifications and to give the rum runners a run for their money. A BILLION TONS BY TRUCK. “Freight hauled annually by motor truck in the! United ‘States, as estimated, reaches a total of 1,200,- 000,000 tons,” says the Boston Transcript. “To trans- Sa sig when moet axtioee have ween ee ear) | | | Port this great volume of business requires 1,000,000 |trucks. Added significance is given to the figures by the fact that the number of trucks in use is increasing year by year. Here is a business that may still be de- scribed as an infant industry, but the infant is one of when it grows up, no man can say. “While the motor trucks move in endless procession through ‘the streets of the cities and mingle with the pleasure cars on the highways in rural regions, the For many purposes he is still to be preferred, but with been proposed to bar the horse from the business sec- tions of New York City by 1925. That proposition may not be acted upon, but it is indicative of the trend of the times. In many unexpected ways we learn of the supplanting of the horse by the ‘notor-driven ma- chine. Not only is the tractoy used on the farms, but tractors chug through the great Maine woods in the dead of winter, keeping open the roads which link to- gether the logging camps. And the tractor may be described as first cousin to the truck. “The appearance of the motor truck as a means of ecnveyance from city to city has given rise to much discussion of its ultimate relation to the railroad. It is not altorether a question of comparative costs, al- though that has perhaps taken foremost place in the discussion. In many ways, the advantages of the serv- ice given by the truck are so great that expense be- comes a matter of minor importance. Take, for ex- ample, the transportation of the furniture when a fam- ily changes its place of residence from one ciy to an- other. Up to distances of one hundred miles or more, the goods placed in the truck in the morning at the old home are in the new by evening. There are here advantages so obvious that no consideration will be given, in many cases, to transportation by rail, with its attendant delays, the requirement that goods must be crated or otherwise packed, the use of trucks at beth ends of the rail route and the additional hand- ling involved. This is one of the cases in which the trucks have the advantage as distinct from any a‘van- tage in he matter of rates. There are others which involve the transporation of goods in much larger volume. “Clearly, the trucks have a place in the transporta- tion system. It is not a question whether we shall have them or have railronds. The question that is puzzling a great many people today is that of deter- mining the proper scope of activity of the two agen- cies. In many ways they will be competitors, but in many ways each will give service that the other can-| not as satisfactorily perform, and would do well not) te attempt. Among the problems waiting solution is! that of the extent to which the trucks should contrib- ute to the building and maintenance of the highways.| On the pert of the ratirvads, there is the question! whether, by making changes in equipment and meth-| ods, they could not the better compete where compe- tition is feasible. Just now there is much confusion concerning such matters, but it does not indicate that the problem will not be solved to the advantage of all concerned.” aed BS Nn BREEDING OUT AMERICANISM. “Is the Americanism we have derived from Ply- mouth Rock, Jamestown and the earlier immigration such a pestilent thing that it should be systematically bred out of America?” asks the Methodist Publication Board. “The stopping of immigration, and that immediate- ly, is the only thing that will save the American race from destruction. And there is an American race; make no mistake about that, “It is folly to say that all of us were at one timo immigrants. A nation cannot receive immigrants un- til it has a national life, and the people who are the agents of achieving that nationality are, so to speak, charter members. They constitute the stock upon which later immigration was grafted. “And the earlier American immigration, having the same racial characteristics, soon became an integral the American race. “A well-defined character was in process of forma- tion. What variations there were, were all of the eral direction. A standard of conduct was being es- tablished. “The present immigration fs breaking up this type which was forming and is making the formation of any other type very difficult. The national character, its rules of conduct, its laws, its customs, are being de- stroyed by immigration which is not being assimilated and which is to a consiserable extent hostile. “What is so despicable about the Pilgrims and their children; about the eariy Virginians and their chil-| dren; about the stalwart men and women who, drove prairie wagons over the western plains generations ago, that calls for such eager efforts to obliterate their blood from the American stock? “We have had a great deal that is valuable from latter-day immigration, but we have had a great deal} more that is anything but valuable. A very large pro- portion of the immigrants who are poured from the third-class of steamers today is hardly human in ap- pearknce. These men and women have been brutal- ized and almost all but de-humanized, by centuries of oppression. We may well pity them, but that is no reason for letting them destroy us. That European ccuntries are ‘dumping’ their undesirables upon us is an undoubted fact. -At least Europeans say so frank- ly and calmly. “If the country is to be saved, now-is the time to save it.” ages Gold imports are reported on the increase. Wait until the foreign lecturers now touring the country take ship for home and then tell which way the gold is flowing. SsEeo es ee Victor Berger says he will run for congress again this year. That is the best things Victor does—run. He doesn’t seem to do much sitting. Be They. are still capturing half million dollar liquor! supplies in and around New York. If it is regular liquor we would be satisfied with much smaller stocks out this way. EADS ee It is said that there are 75,000 more words in the English language than in the German, French and Spanish languages combined. Senator Harrison of Mississippi, has them all in his vocabulary. See S/n ah LR aS The absent-minded citizen is recognized as the one who can pass along the street without developing a twist in his neck from looking back at the lady in knickerbockers. 0. The official opening of the spring season seems, to ell intents and purposes, real. corporation of New York and the American Ef:cnomic association. Kemmerer sent me a set of the pamph- lets up to June 1920. pose of deflation is to double the debts part of the nation, not affecting the homogenenity of of the people and the wealth of the few in control of money and credfts. rapid and frightfully destructive, but, same type, and all tendencies were in the same gen-|the volume of Federal Reserve notes increased to the maximum of $3,405,- 000,000 December 20, 1920, of which vanks and the people. Then began rapid deflation that by December 20, 1921 $996,000,000 had been gathered in and retired. The report of March 16, 1922 shows that $1,216,407,000 of these notes have been wiped out. The re- maining volume is mostly in such large denominations that they can’t circulate and might as well be de- stroyed. September 30, 1921 shows but $430,- 000,000 of all $1 and $2 notes, which are by far the most useful, and $565,- 150,000 of $10,000 notes, which are of !no use whatever, except to pad the re- ports. Aside from general wreckage of bus- In the mirror of my heart a Iittle A simple little home, with flowers gay, The little home I love ts far away. ‘The long, low, living-room, the softly With books beside—the restful easy chair, ‘The glowing fire, warm and bright. Happy were the hours at the end of Events discussed, plans made, a tale ‘The quiet atmosphere of home about Content shut out the darkness and The Tittle home fs empty now, Save for the precious memories’ of And strive to reach our Heavenly Please God, our Iittle home, with ‘Win merge into our Eternal Home There waiting Ioved ones. we shall greet, Where all is joy, and peace, and love! the cold. the past. ‘To God's Holy will we humbly bow, Home at last. Seale temo Ne er hg aod Ses glia? re €he Casper Dally Cribune THE USUAL CASU ALTY ’ A Chapter on American Finance Editor Tribune:—Your editorial in| inese and the incomprehensible aggre- dictment of William G. McAdoo last Friday was absolutely correct. He {s responsible for much of the ills that have been visited upon the na- tion, and no man of his class should) Financial crimes should be charged be eligible for any public offic. His|to the administration under which they reputed close relations with Kuhn,|occur and corrected by its successor, Loeb & Co., should have barred him|but they continue. President Harding from the treasury, but that firm, be-|in his speech of acceptance, advocated ginning with Paul \Warburg’s ad-|“intelligent deflation,” and in his first voccy of the Federal Reserve act,/message to congress, “further defla- and continuing with Otto Kahn's con-|tion,"" no doubt speaking as advised, ference with President Wlison, seemed)and as innocent cf monetary knowl- his favored financial advisors. edge as his’ predecessors. During the The National City bank of New Past year the presidgnt has been urged York engaged Professor Seligman an¢ PY many leading bankers and business another Teutonic economist to con-|men t6 remove Governor Harding and struct arguments for financing the! his associates on the Federal Reserve war by a bonded debt, and circulated|b0ard responsible for the gargantuan the argument in its “Primar of War|cTimes committed against the nation Finance.” McAdoo advocated bond|8nd the world. ‘They insist that there issues of $125,000,000,000, and it must) ©@M be no confidence in the I’. R. sys- have been a bitter disappointment to|tem while these men are in control, the'master banks that the war didn’t 294 that their ‘retention indicates en- last long enough for him to attain his @orsement by the administration. Al- amistion 1h’ Baadage: so that the system will be the chief is- Deflation was planned before the *ue,i2 the next presidential election. enormous inflation of bank credits aa gree coc sthiey ergo) .of, banks based-on war bonds, During 1918 a CoMtrolling the F. R. board may well “finance conimittes" of collego econo- | P° hikes! EA Tea eee pak ae: mists headed by Prof. E. W. Kem- ELEM eer ee ! akes the laws.” merer of Princton, wae employed to; “"° makes the sap CEES manufacture propaganda for deflation) gate of human misery by ruin of mil- lions, the national wealth, figured at a maximum of $500,000,000,000, has been reduced by over $221,000,000,000. for the express purpose ef forcing| pmeineds Caxper: down prices. Kemmerer predicts red | long period of hard times as‘a result, ° * but said it had to be cone to force| Tip to Advertisers down prices. This propayanda was) published by the banking statistics) peooig and things—these two com- prise the whole world. Advertising is the art of persuading people to buy | things; and in my opinion, this can The chief PUur-| best be done by talking about people, rather than things. ‘This is a revolutionary idea. It has seldom been done, and then it was dono by accident, instead of by de- Deflation of credits during 1920 was It is difficult. ‘There are many dan- venture to give this tip and to say chearer and more effective if you talk about people, rather than People aze more interested in them- selves and in other people than in anything else. Is not every newspaper mainly about people. In this morning's paper for instance, there are the names of 173 people in the news col- umns, without including the sporting page. Also there are thirty-three illus- trations of which twenty-nine are of ‘The treasury report of paper money The other four show a war- Pigeon, a motorboat race, tree, and a monster mushroom. In the same paper I find forty-seven | display advertisements and only three {of these contain the names of people ‘These three are. “His Master’s Volce’—giving names of -great singers. Tyne Brand Herrings—giving name of Sir Ernest Shackleton. Pinnace Cigarettes—giving name of 4 Pineapple, sliced, per can. . . .$1.65, or 2 for $3.15 ‘These three advertisements are easily the most interesting and effect- ive in the paper, Is this not a fact worth thinking about? Fully 75 per cent of the news |is about people. The illustrations, too, are 88 per cent about people. But 94 per cent of the advertise ments are about things. 2 Is this not a mistake? Isn't it one # of the main reasons why the news is so interesting and why advertisements | are so dull?—Herbert N. Casson. Sentiment in Industry pare “In the treatment and control of 1a- bor it has seemed to me, large corpor- ations have been governed almost en- tirely by cold logic to the exclusion of | sentiment. Industrial life ‘cannot run | smoothly without sentiment any more than can political, or home life. Men are creatures of sentiment—or why fH are there swecthearts, wives, homes? And if this is correct, then the soon- er we exert our efforts towards hu- manizing industry the better for all “The trouble dates back to the days when large organizations sprang up over night. There wasn’t time to work f out all details. The one measuring rod of ability and efficiency was the net corporate income. Since the labor cle- ment could not be segregated and al- located in dollars and cents in the monthly income account and balance sheet, its importance to ‘ultimate suc- cess was at first not fully appreciated and consequently it was overlooked in # the scheme of organization. It is: im- possible to even hazard a guess as to what the lack of adequate provision for the proper consideration of labor has’ cost us in industrial efficiency. That many of the dangers of the var- fous ‘isms’ in industry and_ politics may, in part at least, be attributed to this neglect of the human equation, ”"—John. Ritchie. Pyfieciesee rar | _Meet me at the Smoke ffouse. gers and libel suits lurking about for| that your advertising can be made| none will deny. SY The Little Home \ Kw house I see. Smooth lawns, tall oaks and climbing vines. Ah, me People with Shaky Nerves "Twas a cheerful little home, with ‘every comfort there. shaded light, of the body. Incons: cnt aes ancien re-told, us lay about eneesten tant kent ates who deal in personalities. But I/ : : | memories sweet above Ware QW WIG ] r--TORIG The Master Rebuilder lation and nourishment to the hungry nerve cells equence, it naturally relieves the tension of undue strain and thus promotes a quiet and restful ¢ondi- tion of the whole nervous system. usted will find in FORCE its treatment tigue. Commence ‘and refreshed in body and mind. FORCE ts sold by reliable druggists everywhere, and % of equal bencft to men, ‘women and children, “Ie Makes For Strength’’ rebuild 3 s Always on Hand at John Tripeny Co. 241 S. Center. St, \Y, MARCH 22, 1922. | PAY DAY SPECIAL At Casper’s Finest Grocery Store Prices Good for Thursday, Friday and Saturday PHONE 13 SIZE “1” DEL MONTE CANNED FRUITS Apricots, per can. ...... .-....-. -.-..25¢, or 2 for 45c Black 3 ee tel, per can........ anberries, per can. ......---.- Peaches, sliced, per can............ . .25¢ ,or 2 for 45c Peaches, halves, per can......... .. .25c, or 2 for 45¢ Pears, per can.. oo e eee .30C, oF 2 for 55s Pineapple, sliced, per can.........25c, or 2 for 45c Pineapple, grated, per can... .. .20c, or 2 for 35c SIZE “2” DEL MONTE CANNED FRUITS Apricots, peeled, per can. ... .40c, or 2 for 75¢ Blackberries, per can. . . .40c, or 2 for 75c Gooseberries, per can. -40c, or 2 for 75c Loganberries, per can... 40c, or 2 for 75c Peaches, halves, per can. 35c, or 2 for 65c Pears, Bartlett, per can. 40c, or 2 for 75c¢ Pineapple, sliced, per can. ... 35c, or 2 for 65c Pineapple, grated, per can. . -30c, or 2 for 55c SIZE “214” DEL MONTE CANNED FRUITS Apricots, per can. .. 45c, or 2 for 85c Blackberries, per can... .50c, or 2 for 90c ‘White Cherries, per can. . -50c, or 2 for 90c Black Cherries, per can... ........50c, or 2 for 90c Grapes, per can.......... -40c, or 2 for 75c Peaches, sliced, per can. ........ . ...45¢, or 2 for 85c Peaches, Melba, halves, per can... 45c, or 2 for 85c Pears, Bartlett, per can .+....55¢ or 2 for $1.00 Plums, Green Gage or De Luxe. .40c, or 2 for 75c GALLON CANS DEL MONTE FRUITS Blackberries, per can..... .......$1.65, or 2 for $3.15 Pears, Bartlett, per can ..$1.75, or 2 for $3.25 Peaches, halves, per can..... .$1.25, or 2 for $2.40 Peaches, sliced, per can....... .$1.25, or 2 for $2.40 All in Heavy Syrup All in Heavy Syrup All in Heavy Syrup EXTRA SPECIAL Qt. can Vincent’s Leader Syrup______50e ¥,-gal. ean Vincent’s Leader Syrup_$1.00 Gal. can Vincent’s Leader Syrup___$2.00 Loose Wiles Assorted Cookies, Ib____35c DEL MONTE CANNED VEGETABLES No, 1 Asparagus Spears, round cans, per can— 25c, or 2 for 45c No. 1 Buffet Pork and Beans, 8-oz., per can— 10c, or 4 for 35c No. 1 Pork and Beans, 16-0z., per can— 15c, or 2 for 25c -30c, or 2 for 50c 35c, or 2 for 65c - -40c, or 2 for 75c 15c, or 2 for 25c -25c, or 2 for 45c No. 21% Pork aril Beans, per can. No. 2 Baby Beets, per can. ...... No. 24% Brussels Sprouts, per can. No. 14 Peeled Green Chili, per can. No. 214 Pearl Hominy, per can... No. 21% Kraut, per can. . «++... .-25c, or 2 for 45c No. 14 Pimentos, per ca: weee ee » -25¢, or 2 for 45c No. 24% Sweet Potatoes, Asparagus pack, per can— 40c, or 2 for 75¢ 25c, or 2 for 45c -30c, or 2 for 55c 35c, or 2 for 65c -10c, or 3 for 25c No. 2 Pumpkin, per can...... No. 21% Pumpkin, per can. . No. 21% Fancy Spinach, per can No. 4% Tomato Sauce, per can. ... _No. 2 Tomatoes, per can....... 25c, or 2 for 45c No. 214 Tomatoes, per can.. . -35c, or 2 for 6G5c DEL MONTE. CANNED FISH No. 1 tall Fancy Red Alaska Salmon, per can— 3 40. 2 for 75. No. 1 Oval Sardines in Tomato Sauce, puted ei ee 25c, or 2 for 4: No.\1 Oval Sardines in Mustard, per Gen 25c, or 2 for 45c EXTRA SPECIAL Loose Wiles Krispy Crackers, No. 4 caddy, each ______ eielioer et 2 60c Luna Soap, new large 10-0z. bar_5 for 25c Bread] = 62.150 jee A Sa He 3 loaves for 25c DEL MONTE DRIED FRUITS Extra Fancy Large Santa Clara Prunes, per Ib.— 30c, or 2 Ibs. for 55: Extra Fancy Medium Santa Clara Prunes, Bee ie zs 20c, or 2 Ibs. for 35. Extra Fancy Peaches, per Ib....30c, or 2 Ibs. for BSc Extra Fancy Pears, per Ib -45c, or 2 Ibs. for 85c Extra Fancy Seeded Raisins, 15-oz. pkg.— 1-Ib. pkg. 30c, or 2-Ib. pkg. 55. DEL MONTE SPECIALTIES itil ss Apple Butter, 15-oz. glass jar, per jar— 35c, or 2 f, Orange Marmalade, 15-oz. glass jar, per pres sy 68s : 50c, or 2 fo: Preserves, any variety, 15-oz. glass jar, BS ae ee 50c, or 2 for 91 Berry Jam, %-gal. can, per can. .$1.40, or 2 for $2.68 Dill Pickles, No. 21% tin, per can .35c, or 2 for 65c Dill Pickles, gal. can, per can $1.35, or 2 for $2.55 Sour Pickles, No. 21% can, per can.... Sc, or 2 for 65c Sour Pickles, gal. can, per can. . . $1.75, or 2 for $3.25 Sweet Gherkins, No. 1 can, per can. -35c, or 2 for 65c Sweet Gherkins, No. 21% can, per can. 45c, or 2 for 85c Olive Oil, per glass. --80c, or 2 for $1.70 \ . -85c, or 2 for $1.55 + ++--$1.60, or 2 for $3.05 45c, or 2 for 85c -40c, or 2 for 75c + sees .25e, or 2 for 45c 35c, or 2 for 65c Chili Sauce, large bottle. ae Tomato Catsup, large bottle. . % Tomato Catsup, small bottle. Ripe Olives, per can........... Maraschino Cherries, small bottle... 80c' oc : 2 fi Mustard 6-oz. glass Sent .20c, or2 for ee The Grand Grocery Directly Opposite Telephone Building on Seco, PHONE 13 ‘ond St, We Deliver to Any Part of the Ci Money Back If You're Not Satishex,