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Every cough makes your throat more raw and irritable. Every cough congests the lining membrane of your lungs. Cease tearing your throat and lungs in this way. Put the parts at rest and give them a chance to heal. You will need some help to do this, and you will find it in From the first dose the quiet and rest begin: the tickling in the throat ceases; the spasm weak- ens; the cough disap- pears. Do not wait for pneumonia and con- sumption but cut short your cold without delay. Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pec- Biggest Camera in the World. Out in Chicago there is now in oper- ation the biggest camera and the strangest photographic apparatus in the world. The camera takes a picture 25x82 inches in size, and is mounted on a triphod fifteen feet high. For taking flash-lights the operator has a set of fifteen poles, from twelve to twenty feet in height. On the top of these, set up all about a room, is placed the powder, which is fired si- multaneously by electricity. So bril- liant a flash is made that people in conventions and at banquets are taken in motion, as in a sunlight snap-shot. But, queerest of all, is the fact that inventive photographer has devised balloon bags to suspend in rooms where the flash-light powder is burned to catch the dense and offens- ive smoke made by it. The bags close up automatically after the flash,—Ex- change. Diamonds in Street Rubbish. Street cleaners in London haye rich pickings. The other day a purse con- taining four diamond rings was found in a dust cart. A short time ago a 000 necklace was picked from a rubbish heap by a South London dust- man. He returned it to its owner and received a reward of at least five shil- lings— adelphia Inquirer. Where Boys Yeli in School. In Burmese schools, making the lads shout is the approved method of ele- menta education. The Burmese ed- ucationalists argue thet so long as a boy is shouting his mind is occupied. When he is silent he is certain to he scheming chief. Therefore, the best shouters are the best pupils.-Phil- adelphia Inquirer. The Weak and the Strong. In his anguish he moaned aloud. “You'll bring my gray hairs to the grave!” he protester. How weak is man in the hour of | trial, after all! toral Plaster should be i A Woman would have had all her over the lungs of every per- son troubled with a cough. Write tothe Doctor. Unusual opportunities and long ex- perience em:nently qualify us for giving you medical, advice. | Write reely all the particulars in your case. ‘Tell ‘us what your experience has been with our Cherry Pectoral. You will receive a prompt reply, without cost, Address, DR. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass, His Position. “Have you any doubt of my good faith in this little scheme which I pro- pose?” inquired Senator Sorghum. “No,” answered the young man, “You seem perfectly confident and free from apprehension. I’m the man who is having difficulty in getting up a supply of faith that amounts to any- thin '—-Washington Star. List of Patents Issued Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. Edward Brusseau, Jefferson, S. D., vehicle-wheel raper; John 'T. Fuhr- mann and E. Nelson, St. Paul, Minn., PF chment for flue or tube expanders; t Halm and G. Bodine, Minneapo- Minn., curryeomb; Nels Hockerson. Stillwater, Minn., knife; Frederick Cc. Johnson, Minneapolis, Minn., ship- ping book; Julius Leede, Minneapolis, Minn., acetylene gas generator; Chas. E. Patterson, Artesian, 8. D., pole and thill a George H. Rodenbach, Devil’s Lake, N. D., clothes pounder; J. Shepherd, Minneapolis, Minn., sale: ip book; John D. Wilson, Her- on Lake, Mian., sled attachment. Merwin, Lothrop 1B Johnson, Patent Attor- 910 Ploneer Press Building, Paul. Strategy. Jimmy—But what do you do when you git real sleepy? You don’t own up to it, do you?” Tommy—Naw—I go to askin’ paw fool questions and he makes me go to bed.”—Indianapolis Journal. Eepenest sale, $2 per acre Geena} 5 CFO} paid. J. Mulhall A Double-Action Wind Wheel. By one of the latest inventions, cyclists ean utilize the wind in propel- ling their machines. It consists of an apparatus constructed on the plan of a toy windmill which is attached to the machine and geared to the front wheel in such a manner that the foree of the wind can be utilized in turning the wheel—Phiadelphia Inquirer. gray hairs pulled out ere this!—Detroit Journal. Hero Worship. “Did you say he was a famous man?” inquired young Mrs. Torkins, “Certainly,” answered her husband. “Dear me! You wouldn’t think it to Jook at him. He isn’t heavy enough for a pugilist nor light enough for a jockey.”—Washington Star. STORIES OF RELIEF. ‘Two Letters to Mrs. Pinkham. Mrs. Jonny Witurams, Englishtown, N. J., writes: “Dear Mrs, Prykuam:—I cannot be- gin to tell you how I suffered before taking your remedies. I was so weak that I could hardly walk across the floor without falling. I had womb trouble and such a bearing-down feeling ; also suffered with my back and limbs, pain in womb, inflammation of the bladder, piles and indigestion. Before I had taken one bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I felt a great deal better, and after taking two and one- half bottles and half a box of your Liver Pills I wascured. If more would take your medicine they would not have to suffer so much.” Mrs. JosErH RETERSON, 513 East St., Warren, Pa., writes: . “DEAR Mrs. Prinkuam:—I have suf- fered with womb trouble over fifteen years. I had inflammation, enlarge- ment and displacement of the womb. I had the backache constantly, also headache. and was so dizzy. I had heart trouble, it seemed as though my heart was in my throat at times chok- ing me. I could not walk around and I could notlie down, for then my heart would beat so fest I would feel as though I was smothering. I had to sit up in bed nights in order to breathe. I was so weak I conld not do any- thing. “I have now taken several bot- tles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and used three pack- ages of Sanative Wash, and can say I am perfectly cured. Ido not think I could have lived long if Mrs. Pink- ham’s medicine had not helped me.” Must Have Been in Mischief. Beth (noticing, the red combs of her grandfather's fowls)—Do all hens blush looking at them?—Judge. [vRape mare] SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO., 167 Dearborn St., Chicag: tle of “5 DROPS” received. It was for an old friend, Mr. TOO COOD TO BE FREE! But send 2icand we will mail you a trial treatment of “5 Drops.” cy CURED BY “S DROPS” TWO YEARS AGO fj «FROM RHEUMATISM AHD HEART WEAKNESS After Suffering 49 Years—-69 Years Old and Still Well. IT PROVES TO BE A PERMANENT CURE.—READ LETTERS. DEAR SIR—Your hot- Win. Edwards, of Martinstown, Wis. He has had Neuralgia in his chest, suffering a great deal of pain, so much so that it affected his heart, and he could not sleep on account of a smothered feeling. He had been under the care of the most eminent physicians, but obtained no relief until I gave him a dose of A “5 DROPS.” He rested wel e very first night, and has ever since, and is gaining CaES fy cl myself am 69 years old, and commenced taking “5 DROPS” last April for Rheumatism, w! has troubled me terribly for 49 Iwas 18. Since taking “5 DRO} ears; also for a weak heart, from which I have suffered since he Kheumatism has all disappeared, the stiffness has gone from my joints and my heart never misses a beat, In all my lite I have never felt so well, and I owe my health to “5 DROPS.” Lonly wish I could sound my bugle of raise loud enough i aim to be heard the world over, and could convince every sufferer that “5 DROPS” is all you cli it to be and more.—: D. T, Carver, Winslow, Stevenson Co., iL Sept. 9, 1896. STILL WELL TWO YEARS LATER. SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE Poze. years ago this present month I sent youan unsolicited testimonial of what “6 DROPS” now I wantto send you another, saying we have not had a return of Ne rmanent; but if it should return, I keep “5 DROPS” in t. ‘It is good for so many things no house snould be Sept. 26, 1898, the house and I know that would sto} tism since. I think the cure must on withoutit, Yours truly, Mrs. D. T. C irver. done for myself and friend, Mr. Edwards, and uralgia or Rheuma.- ‘The wonderful success that has attended the introduction of “S DROPS” is unprecedented in the history of the world, Think ofit! It has CURED more than One Million and a Quarter sufferers within the last ple cannot all be mistaken. If suffe for three large bottles of “5 DROPS” for three years. This must appeal to you. One miilion and a quarter we trust you may huve sufficieut confidence to send 60, which Will surely cure you. If not, send for @ 81.00 bottle, which contains enough medicine to more than prove its wonderful curative prop- erties. Prepaid by mail or express. This wonderful curative gives almost instant relie an¢ NT CURE Backach. is a PERMANE) for Rheumatism, Asthma, Hay Fever, Catarrh, Sleeplessness, Nervousness, Earache. Croup, La Grippe, Malaria, Creeping | there is an odor in the milk in any aches, Hi Weakness, Toothache, Numbness, Bronchitis, and kindred Sciatica, Neuralgia, Dys e. Nervous an feuralgic Head- “5 DROPS” i:itenmeptdose, Lance porrET, guy dose), 8.0, pre. | by us and our agents. Agents Appoint ited in New Territory. Write today. SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO.,-167 Dearborn St., Chicago Ill. “THE POT CALLED THE KETTLE BLACK.*: BECAUSE ‘THE HOUSEWIFE DIDN’T USE SAPOLIO } tion of 3,200 feet. orchard is that the care of it is prac- { 1 i ‘MATTERS OF INTEREST. TO AGRICULTURISTS. Some Up-to-Date Hints About Cul- tivation of the Soll and Yields Thereof—Horticulturo, Viticulture and Floriculture. © Canadian Traveling Dairies. A report of the committee of agri- culture of Canada says: The mass of the people everywhere do not go to colleges, and if the women on farms are to be helped, you must carry the instruction to them. We try to make agricultural education available to all our people, and some of it unavoidable by them. We have what are called traveling dairies. A simple outfit for the making of butter is provided. It usually consists of a handpower cen- trifugal cream separator, a Babcock milk tester, a revolving barrel-churn, a butter worker, a pair of weighing scales, two thermometers, pails, strain- ers, dippers and a few other necessary utensils. The whole apparatus can be packed in boxes and loaded on a horse Wagon or sent by train. The weight does not exceed 500 pounds, Usually one traveling dairy instructor, who is an expert buttermaker, and an assist- ant go together. The traveling dairy spends one or two—usually two—days at a place. A local committee arranges for a suitable lecture-room, which is frequently the town hall, and also for a supply of milk and cream. Two meetings a day are held, at which practical demonstration of the test- ing of milk and the making of butter are given. The instructor gives ex- planations as the processes are car- ried on, and an hour or so is given to a simple lecture and discussion. Two visits of a traveling dairy to a place bring about a marked improvement in tne quality of the dairy butter. The women see the use of the appar- atus, watch the methods of handling everything and learn something of the principles which underlie them, The neighbors who may not have attended the meetings of the traveling dairy learn from those who did. Of course, in many of the districts there are farmers’ wives and daughters by the hundred who do not need such instruc- tion, but many of these are the keen- est students. Propagating Olive Trees. The method of producing olive trees now in vogue among European grow- ers is to cut limbs as large as a man’s arm from the trees, and from each of these start a new tree. An olive tree will not furnish more than three or four such limbs for propagating pur- poses, Another method is the old- fashioned one of planting seeds. This is the slowest method of making an orchard, and takes eighteen or twenty years. In California the plan is to use small cuttings. Olive trees for or- chard planting used to cost $7 and $8 each. They can now be had by the thousands for 10 or 15 cents each. The cuttings, which come by hundreds from a full-sized tree, are about the size of a toothpick, They are propa- gated and rooted in sand in conserva- tories, in the same way rose cuttings are grown into rose bushes and rose trees. When the cuttings are rooted ‘they are transferred in the warmer months of the spring to the out-of- door nursery, where they become trees three or four feet high in a year or a year and a half. The olive tree has an almost human gift of adaptation to jits environment. It flourishes in a ‘temperature that falls to 14 degrees ‘above zero, and in the inland valleys ‘of California, where the thermometer ‘reaches 120 degrees, it grows, irrigated jonly by natural rainfall, It finds in the California foothills just as favor- able surroundings as at its 4,000-foot level in Algeria and its Italian eleva- One joy of an olive tically nothing. Its fruit can be cured by simple primitive means, without any requirement of special experience, and the oil and pickles are easily kept or transported. Two Kinds of Butter. Prof. C, S. Plumb of Indiana says: Two women drive to town, each with some butter to sell. They go to the same store. One places pound prints, neatly wrapped in special butter pa- per, before the store-keeper. The oth- er puts on the counter unshapely lumps, wrapped in none too clean white cloth. That in the paper, on oe- ing unwrapped, is seen to be of a beau- tiful yellow color, of firm texture, with a flavor of the most appetizing character. The other, removed from its cloth, is unattractively white, some- what soft, and with a flavor that but few people enjoy. One person receives 20 cents a pound for her product, the other 14. The store-keeper desires to buy the one of fine flavor and attract- ive to the eye, for such is always in de- mand. The other he can sell only as an inferior article, with a slow sale at that. Why should there have been so much difference in these two lots of butter? If you can learn how to make such butter as the woman received 20 cents a pound for, then you need not be ashamed to show it to your friends. Odor in Milk, While it is often true that what we call odor in milk comes from the filth of the stables, it is also true that ease, even in the milk of cows that are kept with the greatest of care, It was long ago discovered that every animal throws off a volatile oil, which evaporates about as quickly as it comes to the air, and this fine gas, produced by the change of the oil from a@ liquid to a gaseous form, is what assails our nostrils and is what we denominate odor. The pores that carry this volatile oil to the surface of the hide seem to be numerous and to be distributed well over the body. This is what makes scent in dogs of value. If it were not for this oil be- ing constantly evaporated the dog would be of no value as a tracer. Many of the lower animals have their sense of smell so developed that they are able to detect a very small amount , of this odoriferous oil. { Some of the tubes that carry this ofl © from the internal organs of the cow, where it is elaborated, have their ori- | fices in the udder. This volatile oil , thus gets into the milk, and the only j way to get rid of it is to aerate the | milk. The oil evaporates so rapidly ; that the exposure of the milk to the : air, especially when it is exposed to the air in the form of small sheets or spray, results in getting it out of the ! milk. It also shows why the milk should not be at once covered and left covered. It is not a certain sign that the milk is dirty if there be an animal odor connected with it. But it is a+ sign that the dairyman does not know } how to handle it. da An Exhibition Coup. Farm Poultry says: We have sev- ; eral requests for directions for build- ing coops for exhibiting fowls at fairs and shows, and give above an illustra- tion of such a coop. The illustration explains itself so well that but little ; by way of explanation is necessary. This coop is thirty inches high, thirty | inches wide, and twenty-four inches deep—but these dimensions are by no Means obligatory, as coops are built of various sizes, to suit the taste and purpose of the builder. We would urge, however, that exhibitors who supply their own coops make them roomy enough for the birds to be comfortable in; nothing is so certain to make the birds appear at a disadvantage as too close quarters. We would make a frame of one and one-half inch stuff —the ends, back and top being covered with stout serviceable duck, the floor being of half-inch matched boards, and the front being made of half-inch rods set into top and bottom of frame two ! and one-half inches apart, excepting that the two or three center rods are Set into a sliding bed piece at bottom, | and pass up through the top frame, giving access to the interior. The bed piece of the gate should slide upon the j rods on each side. Short rods are set in the front, upon which to suspend cups for food and water. A curtain for the front, to be let down at night, and in day time be rolled up as in the illustration, adds to the neatness of the structure; and ornamental brass headed tacks to secure the duck ends, etc., improves the appearance. The rods in front look best if round, al- though eight square rods are very neat. Many owners of private coops keep them neatly painted, Adaptation of Strawberries. The great diversity of soils renders it exceedingly difficult to recommend varieties. Those which do well with me may not do well with you, If two varieties are set side by side, one fails, the other succeeds grandly; remove them both to another field and their | success will be sometimes exactly re- versed. It often happens that the same variety from another part of the coun- try will do better; this has often been found true of the old standards, Cres- cent and Wilson. The only way you can determine definitely is to experi- ment with different varieties, bearing in mind that those sorts which do we!l over the greatest area of country wiil be the safest to plant largely, and that exhausted plants cannot be made to succeed anywhere. I do not believe there is any soil on which large crops of corn and potatoes do nicely where some variety of the strawberry will not do equally well, and this can p2 definitely settled only by testing.— M. Kellogg. z Blackberries for Indiana. In the list of fruits recently prepared by the Indiana State Horticultural So- ciety, made up from lists sent in by more than 100 correspondents, repre- senting every county in the state, the Snyder’ blackberry appears in more than three-fourths of the lists. In the southern counties, Early Harvest, Early King, Taylor, Ancient Briton and Erie follow closely after Snyder, while in other counties, Eldorado, Aga- wam, Kittatinny, Minnewaski, Stone: Hardy and Lucretia Dewberry are quite largely grown. Judging from their behavior in our experimental grounds, the following varieties are recommended for general cultivation: —Agawam, Ancient Briton, Early Har- vest (with protection), Eldorado, Erie, Snyder and Taylor.—James Troop, Horticulturist Purdue University. New York’s Milk Bill—The monthly statistics of the retail milk business of New York, as given in the Milk Re- porter of Deckertown, N. J., for the | month of July, are: Total number gal- Jons for July, 1898, 8,199,640; for 1897, 7,827,580. Cream, 1898, 389,070; 1897, 212,530. Condensed milk plain, 1898, | 70,140; 1897, 56,360. Daily average | 1898, 264,500 gallons milk; 12,550 ° cream; 2,260 condensed milk; 1897, 252,500 milk, 10,080 cream, 1,820 con- densed milk. Price, 1898, 2 cents per | quart; 1897, 1-15, 1%c; 16-31, 2 cents, | —Exchange. The Danish bacon pigs are raised - largely on dairy farms, | . — Oh ener A FATHER’S STORY. From the Evening Crescent, Appleton, Wis. A remarkable cure for a disease which has generally wrecked the lives of children, and left them in a condition to which death itself would be rare has attracted a BS amount of attention among the res- ents of the west end of Appleton. The case is that of little Willard Creech, son of Richard D. Creech, a well known employe of one of the large paper mills in the Fox River Valley. The Jad wasattacked by spinal disease and his parents had given Ks hope of hisever being well again when, as by a miracle, he was healed and is now in school as happy as any afvhis mates. | Mr. Creech, the father of the boy, who resides at 1062 Second Street, Appleton, Wisconsin, told the following story: He Goes to School. “Our boy was absolutely helpless. His lower limbs were paralyzed, and when we used electricity he could not feel it below his hips. Finally we let the doctor go ashe did not seem to help our son and we nearly gave up hope. Finally my mother who lives in Canada wrote. advising the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale Pedple, and I bought some. “This was when our boy had been on the stretcher for an entire year and helpless for nine months. In six weeksafter taking the pills we noticed signs of vitality in his legs, and in four months he was able to go to school. “It is two years since he took the first of the pills and he is at school now just as happy and well as any of the other child- ren. ‘It was nothing else in the world that saved the boy than Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People.’ ” . Punishment, “The id f sending children to bed early to ish ‘em!’ exclaimed Mrs. Corntossel, who was discussing her city relatives. “That ain’t any way to c’rect em.” “Of course it ain’t,” answered her husband. “If you want to convince ‘em that.you mean business, make ’em get up an, hour or so earlier in the morning,)’—Washington Star. * ‘What Cuba’s Loss Means to Spain: The loss of Cuba means to Spain the loss of the very sustenance of the na- tion. In the same way the loss of your appetite means starvation to your body. If any reader of this notice wants to fully enjoy hearty meals, we can recommend Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. It cures indigestion, dyspep- sia and constipation. He Couldn’t Understand It. “Pa,” said the alderman’s little son, “is there any truth in the story that George Washington never told a tie?” “Well, I guess there is,” was the re- ply. “Well, I don’t see how he ever got his pull in politics.’—Chicago News. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinire Tablets. AIS druggists refund the money it it fails to cure. 2c. The genuine has L. B. Q. on each tablet Contrary. “Yes, I see him. What is there so peculiar about him?” “He’s the contrariest man alive. He has started a ‘We'll Worry All We Want To’ club.”—Chicago Tribune. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the cums, reduces in- flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25¢ a bottle, To Be Sure of An Audience. Parishioner—Doctor, when are you going to preach your sermon to the wheelmen? Rey. Mr. Fourthly—The first rainy Sunday.—Chicago Tribune. Soreness and Stiffness sets in. St. Jacobs Gil will CURE it after a few applications, and make the muscles limber and strong. Disagreeably Literal. The Sentimental One—Alas! a smiling face conceals an heart. The Literal Idiot—It seems to me that an aching tooth would be more likely to be there.—Indianapolis Jour- nal. Many aching A Genaine Freak. Diggs—You should visit the museum this week. They are exhibiting a hith- erto unheard of attraction. Biggs—Indeed! What is it? Diggs—An Ohio man who declined an eppointment to a federal oftice.—Chi- cago News. Could Not Keep House ‘Without Dr. Seth Arnold's Cough Killer. Barton. Bova. Wis. 2e. a bottle Mrs. U. J. No Cause for Alarm. “Look here,” said the barber to the restless man in the chair, “if you don’t keep still I’m liable to cut your throat.” “Oh, I’m not afraid of that,” replied the helpless victim, “as long as you continue to use that razor.”—Chicago News. Piso’s Cure for Consuniption is the onl: cough medicine used in my house.—D. C. Albright, Miffinburg, Pa., Dec. 11, ’95. A Good Guess. “Widows wear morning from one of ; three motives.” “What are they?” “Devotion, remorse or diversion.” H —Puck. i ITS PormanentlyCured. Nofits or nervousness after rst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for FREE, $2.00 trial bottie and trestise Da. R. H. Kirvg, Ltd..931 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa, The Patriotic Taxpayer. “You didn’t go to the front to save your country?” “No, I am one of the fellows who stays at home drinking beer and draw- ing checks.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Veteran. “Call youself a veteran, when you | ‘were never out of the country?” “Well, anyhow, I was doctored by a} veterinary.”—Cineinnati Enquirer. i] Of Course They Were Hard. An Irish lady one morning took her servant girl to task for having boiled ihe bre: t eggs too long. “Why, Biddy,” she said, “they are as hard as stones.” “Sure, ma’am,” replied Biddy, “it’s not the boilin’ that made them hard; it's. the fault of them new hens—the Plymouth Rocks.’—Answers, She Sized Him Up. “Madam,” smiled the doctor, “your husband is well again. His liver is in perfect condition.” “I know it. He paid the bill for my new fall hat without a protest, and then asked me if I didn’t think I would better get a nice winter wrap of some kind.”—Detroit Free Press. If You Are Looking for a Home, Don't waste time and money—don't “wander into the wilderness,’ but secure land close to schools, churches and rail- ways. Come and see us and let us show you the beautiful ‘‘Red_ River ley,” where crops never fail. We sell our land on the crop-payment plan at very low rate of interest. For full informatton, circulars, list of lands, maps, etc., write us at once, and you will receive prompt reply. GRANDIN & EDWARDS. Mayville, D. e Where Babies Can Swim. The Sandwich Islanders: are so foné of the sea that they actually teack their children to swim long before thes. are able to walk. The tiniest mites play games iri water well out of their ‘ depth.—Philadelphia Inquirer. Read the Advertisements, You will enjoy this publication much better if you will get into the habit of reading the advertisements; they will afford a most. interesting study, and will put you in the way of getting some: excellent bargains. Our edvertisers are reliabl; they send what they adver- tise. Tommy—Maw, I don’t get enough butter for my bread. Miss Figg—All right. I'll give you less bread.—Indianapolis Journal. A PL SECT BAKING POWDER. The constantly increasing demand for Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder, the standard cream of tartar powder for forty years, is due to two causes, FIRST :— The extreme care exercised by the man- ufacturers to make it and of highest leavenin: pure, uniform in quality g power. Skilled chemists. test every ingredient as to purity and strength. SECOND:—Recent State investigations show that the majority of other baking powders contain alum, and consumers are giving such powders a wide berth. Nothing is left to chance in the manufacture of Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder It is pronounced by all authorities as free from alum or other adulterant. It never disappoints. Each can is like the other. The CHEAPEST. Awarded Highest Kenors World's Fe! BEST is ALWAYS the , (CLicago, 1893) Special Gold Medal California Midwinter Fair (1894). 4 ? Jee in aspesteipasnnccimacaisbimosannatieat ; ( ee meen _ PS