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' { | | | ae Re eitiny: Say ac <ighbatmunehoe sate tgs ee Se ‘Ti@-Bits of News for Seandéina- viams. READ MINNESOTA PAPERS, Natives of Norwa Their Get Them From Friends Here. Minnesota nev pers are found ev- erywhere in Norway. They are taken by people who have friends in the United States, and are read with avidi- ty. This is the statement of William 2. Curtis, special correspondent for the c o Record-Herald, now traveling in Norway While stopping at Drammen, Mr. Curtis was entertained by the ‘station agent, who at first was inclined to be grumpy and sarcastic over the fact that the farmers of his country were so anxious to purchase American machin- ery that they starved themselves to buy it, and then left it on the platform of the station for days at a time to ad- vertise the fact and make other farm- ers jealous. Later, however, the agent insisted on Mr. Curtis’ going inside of the station office, so that he might show him a newspaper he had received from his son in Brainerd, Minn. The agent al expressed great surprise that Mr. Curtis was not acquainted with his son, inasmuch as, according to the paper in question, he was taking a prominent part in the church work of Brainerd. The Chic: Norway timber wealth. being diminished by saults of lumbermen and pulp manu- facturer So great has been the loss infliceted that the government, not long ago correspondent finds that being ra shorn of her The fores the savage as- s are rapidly | ago, appointed an e ission to inves: e. It w report | that three trees were cut down annual- ly for every one that grew by nature or was planted by human hands. A pe~ culiar fact is that in Norway it takes hundred years for a pine tree to grow big enough to furnish a log twenty-five feet long and ten inches in diameter, which is the minimum available for saw mill purposes. Mr. Curtis say “It was shown by the last census that the standing timber in the kingdom had been reduced to 68,179 square miles, or 21 per cent of the entire area; where- as, in 1855, 55 per cent of the country was covered with forests. The lumber- men are doing an immense amount of damage, but the pulp manufacturers are doing more, because they destroy the small trees only. There are now in Norway 382 saw mills, employing 12,- 073 people, and 196 pulp mills, employ- ing 7,720 people, with at least 25,000 other persons engaged during the win- ter season in stripping the mountains and turning the forest land into delib- erate wastes. They take everything. The big trees go to the saw mills and the little ones to the pulp factc-ies. It is estimated that within the next half- century the timber resources of Nor- way will be practically exhausted at the present rate of destruction. “Drammen, a pretty town an hour ania half by rail from Christiania, is the headquarters of the pulp trade. It ancient city, one of the oldest in , but, during the present gen- tion, has taken a spurt and doubled s population. It now counts 21,000 in- habitants, the greater part of them en- gaged in the pulp mills. located at the head of a beautiful fjord, which admits the largest ocean steam- ers, and is surrounded by one of the most fertile valleys {n Norway. <Ac- cording to the legends, the picturesque fjord was the scene of a tremendous battle, like that of the giants against Odin and Thor, as related in the elder Edda, and the result showed how ‘im- potent was the power of paganism zeinst Christianity in the early days of the kingdom. “The giantess Gy representing his satanic majesty, determined to destroy a church that had recently been erected at the little suburb of Steen, but was no more successful than other women who try to throw stones. She stood on top of one of the neighboring moun- tains and let fly, with all her might, but, of course, the church was miracu- lously protected by the saints, and she couldn’t hit a thing. Every stone she hurled fell short or went wild and fell into the lake, and now remains, a pret- ty, rocky island as evidence of the truth of the story. She is said to have be- come so exasperated and reckless that she flung one of her own legs, although that is asking people to believe a good deal. There is, however, no other way of accounting for an island in the fjord which is shaped exactly like the limb of a lady. Lots of queer things happened in Norway in ancient times, and this is only one of many, and it occurred long before the beginning of the wood pulp business, which is as unpoetic 1s any modern invention, but is growing rap- idly. “Phe mills of Drammen now produce about 1,200 tons per day, or a total of 500,000 tons per year, made from logs that float down from the mountains to destroy the beauty of the rivers and the lakes that lead to the fjord. The pulp is loaded upon steamers that tie up alongside of the factories, and is sent to all parts of the world—some to the Tnited States, but the greater part to England and France Netes of General Interest. Herman Bang, the Danish author, is @zrgerously ill. The worst is feared. A mission to Congo, Africa, under the superintendency of A. E. Frederickson, 4s enrolled 700 converted heathen. Experiments are being made in Swe- fen to fire locomotives with peat. Sev- eral preparations of this fuel are being manufactured. Counting tourists and emigrants, 2,445 persons have departed from Trondhjem during the first six months of the vear, against 2,217 last year. ‘The oldest woman in Stockholsn is Beata Krisina Funck, 101 years of age. ‘The oldest man ts a printer, Axel Ce- d@argren, ninety-seven years of age. ‘The heat and drought im the moun- tainous districts of the northern parte of Norway are becoming serious this season. Several places ase devising plans to replenish the supply of water. ‘The czar has wiped out of existence all Finnish military organizations ex- cept two regiments, the Guards and —pragoons. The Finnish army is to be reorganized by 1903, and no Firm will be an cfficer unless he speaks the Rus- sian uage Auently. p. The city is | }/zer. DENMARK’S NEW MINISTRY. The Left Party Finally Victorious— The Offices and Men. The people are supreme in Denmark, and the Leftists indorsed their men as the new ministry made its appearance. Just what effect this will have upon the condition of the country is, of course, difficult to state. Suffice it to say, the king, on July 22, accepted the list with approval. It is: Minister-in-chief, or premier, and minister of foreign affairs, Prof. Deunt- He was born in 1 the son of a He entered th ewar in 1864, be- At the age mason. coming second lieutenant. of twenty-seven he was elected profes- sor at Copenhagen university. He is a director in several banking concerns and a member of the board of control of the East Asiatic company. He has never been in politics before. Minister of justice and minister for Iceland, A. Alberti. He was born in 1851, the son of a farmer. Highest courts attorney and judiciary candi- date. Elected in 1892 to the rigsdag, Minister of religion and instruction, J. C. Christensen-Stadil. He was born in 1 a farmer’s son. Educated at Grundtvig high school and Gedved sem- inary. He has held several offices and helped organize the Right—re‘orm par- ty in 1895. Minister of finance, C. Hage. Born in 1848, the son of a merchant; is him- self a merchant. In 1881 was repre- sentative from Copenhagen’s Seventh district in the storthing. Minister of agriculture, Ole Hansen. Born in 1855, a farmer. Educated at Hindholm high school and Tune agri- cultural school. He was a member of the local county boerd, and, later, its chairman; also, agricultural commis- sioner. Minister of public works, V. Hoerup. Born in 1841, the son of a school teach- er; in 1867 a candidate for the law. From 1873 to 1877 associate editor of Morgenbladet. Im 1883 he began the publication of Politiken. He is noted as a public denouncer of Krieger and former ministers. Minister of marine, Johnke. Born in 1887, son of a carpenter. Became a sea officer in 1857. In 1899 he was raised to the office of rear admiral. He is a sturdy advocate of floating fortresses. Minister of the interior, Enevold Ser, enson. Bern in 1852, son of a sea cap- tain. Is a scholar 23d editor of Kold- ing Folkeblad in 1872. A Things man, and president of the Union of Danish Left Newspapers. Minister of war, Col. V. H. 0. Mad- sen. Born in 1844, son of an armorer. Became an officer in 1861, participating in the war of 1861. A brilliant mathe- matician and formerly teacher in the officers’ school. In 1889 he became chief of artillery, and in 1898, chief of the fort ordnance. The Krupp artillery concern has made him several tempting offers. STATUE TO DALGAS, He Turned the Bogs of Denmark Into Arable Lands. Six thousand people of Aarhus and the surrounding country, together with many foreign guests, witnessed the un- veiling of the statue to Eurice Dalgas. His life's work was the redeeming of the swamps of Jylland. The Jydake Hede Selskab, or Jylland’s Health soci. ety, as it might be termed—JyNand be- ing a province of Denmark—recogniz- ing the value of the man and his labor, was the promoter of this piece of en- terprise. July 16, amid the waving of countless banners and the singing of “Jylland Between Two Seas,” the veil fell. The presentation speech was made by Attorney General Nelieman. He re- minded his auditors that the statue had been erected by those whom the great man’s zeal had benefited. Here, in his home city, this work cf art was to be given to posterity by a people who felt honored in honoring the strongest type of a patriot. In behalf of the city, the statue was accepted by the mayor, Herr Meyer. Whereupon, the cry went up: “Long live the mem- ory of Dalgas!” Dalgas died April 16, 1894. Touring in Norway. The tourist traffic in Norway is larger this year than ever before. The largest number of tourists select the Valders and Telemarken route, Ottadal’s route is, perhaps, the next best. while the Gudbrandséalen journey is not forgot- ten. To Kengsberg the way is becom- ing more dificult, and the rea:on is ac- counted for by the raising of hotel prices. The North Cape season is over, although the berths of the last Tromso steamer were all filled. There was no | Spitzenberg tour this year. Ameri- cans and Germans had the call this season, the Danes and Swedes taking their way to the Norwegian sanatari- ums and spending their entire vaca- tions there. Altogether, Norway is en- joying a prosperous summer. Business is taking on a steady tone. Drammen will ship 7,000 tons of wooden goods to England and Germany. Norway has an abundance of costly woods and wooden implements. She is shipping building and paving stone and increas- ing the facilities for utilizing the large amount of raw material that she pos- sesses. The Border Commission. A Norwegtan-Swedish-Russian bor- der commission will assemble during this month at the so-called Prerigsros, a place where the three countries join. All evidence, facts and figures regard- ing the boundary at this place are to be gathered and weighed, and a definite line agreed upon. The Swedish com- missioner is Col. Melander, of the gen- eral staff. The Norwegian commission- er has been selected in the person of Capt. Eriksen, of the general staff. A Good Runner. “Ain't you most afraid to have John go to war? You know these far-shoot- ing guns will hit a man a mile an’ a half away every time.” “There ain’t no bullet that'll catch John, if he geas a mile an’ a half start.” Regarding the Nade Model. The question whether a male model must sport the equivalent of a fig leaf has been finally settled. The minister of fine arts, in conjunction with the school’s council, has decided to main- tain the covering in the girl's class, ex- cept during examinations, when the male model will be unadorned, so that the students of both sexes should have a similar subject. The school includes 400 male and twenty-four female stu- dents. Only two girls objected to the nude maie model.—Paris Correspond- ence New York World. > EVILS OF EATING ALONE. Osspepsia Shown to Be Increasing as Marriage is Deferred. At a time like the present, when the marrying age of the average man of middle class is being more and more postponed, the physical ills of bache- tordom come increasingly under the no- tice of the medical man. It is not good for man or woman to live alone. indeed, it has been well said that for solitude to be successful a man must be either angel or devil. This refers perhaps mainly to the moral aspects of isolation, and with these we have now no concern. There are certain physical ills, however, which are not the least among the disadvantages of loneliness. Of these there is many a clerk in London, many a young bar- rister, rising perhaps, but not far enough risen; many a business man or journalist, who will say that one of the most trying features of his unmarried life is to have to eat alone. And a premature dyspepsia is the only thing ever takes him to his medical man. There are some few happily disposed individuals who can dine alone and not eat too fast nor too much nor too little. With the majority it is differ- ent. The average man puts his novel or his paper before him and thinks that he will lengthen out the meal with due deliberation by reading a lit- tle with, and more between, the courses. He will just employ his mind enough to help and too little to inter- fere with digestion. In fact, he will provide that gentle mental accompani- ment which with happier people con- versation gives to a meal. This is your solitary’s excellent idea. In real- ity he becomes engrossed in what he is reading till suddenly finding his chop cold he demolishes it in a few mouth- fuls; or else he finds that he is hun- gry and paying no attention to the book, which he flings aside, he rushes through his food as fast as possible to} plunge into his arm chair and litera- {ure afterward. In either case the fonely man must digest at a disad- vantage. eat and drink alone. It is a sad fact of our big cities that they hold hun- dreds of men and women who in the day are too busy andatnight too lonely to feed with profit, much less with any pleasure.—From the Lancet. OAK STUMP AS A CANNON. It Fired a Projectile Through a House in Birmingham. The residence of Coroner Paris in the southwestern part of Birmingham, Ala., was badly damaged yesterday. afternoon in a most peculiar manner, a big hole being cut through one side by a shot from an old stump. During the tornado which recently swept the south side of the city two huge trees were blown down on the Paris place and yesterday afternoon Coroner Paris employed a negro to remove the fallen trees, which were 200 feet from the tiouse. The negro sawed the trees up leaving the stumps cut off short and partly buried in the ground. One of these stumps, a big oak affair, leaned over, pointing directly toward the heuse. The negro wanted to blow this stump to pieces, and to this end he bored a 2-inch hole in it from the side and then inserted a stick of dynamite. The hole was then closed up and the sharge exploded. With the explosion of the dynamite the heart of the oak stump shot from its place like a can- non ball and flew straight for the house, striking it broadside and boring a huge hole through the wall. The stump was uninjured, except that the heart was removed, and after the ex- plosion it stood pointing its “muzzle” at the house like a huge piece of artil- lery. No one was hurt, the room in which the oaken shot fell after passing through the wall being unoccupied for the moment,—Atlanta News. Ran Too Great a Hazard. A man boarded a Missouri Pacific train equipped with transportation which “Dad” Walsh, the conductor, thought was questionable. The pas- senger refused to put up the cash fare and Walsh called the porter and car- ried ‘him from the train, depositing him on a truck on the station platform. The man took it so nonchalantly that it occurred to Walsh that he might be making a mistake. He accordingly went back to the passenger and told him he might get aboard again. “All right,” said the passenger. “I didn’t get off the train and theoretically I’m still riding. In the nature of things I cannot well board a train upon which I am already riding,” and he sat on the truck as obstinate as a mule. Walsh called the brakeman and porter and carried the man carefully onto the train, put him in the seat in which he had been riding before the incident oc- curred and saved his road a damage suit—Kansas City Star. Hootless Monkey-Faced Owls. Three owls that appear to be part monkeys have been found near Red }] Bud, Ill, says the Chicago Inter-Ocean. Two of the birds are now in posses- sion of Phil Offerding, a hotel keeper of this city, and are viewed with great curiosity. _The owls are two months old now and so far have shown no signs of feathering, and this adds to the monkey likeness. They have large, staring eyes like the owls, even the beak being depressed, but the fore- head runs back like that of monkey. The hoot which has made the owl well known is absent. The vocal powers of these monkey-faced'h' beings are somewhat impaired. They, remain silentiunless disturbed, when they let out a hiss like that of a snake, They were taken from a nest in the woods near Red Bud about a month ago by George Carpenter. _ Men aud lemons are hard to know. « Certainly it is not good to; the || How Mail Beats Passengers. ‘The vast difference bee@een the mai) service and the passenger is well illus- trated by the following fact: “One of the Pacific railroads hauls a combination train, mail and passenger, over the mountains. When the level country is reached the mail cars are cut off and sent ahead. A passenger leaving the coast may mail a letter on one of these cars on his own train, and by the time he has reached Chicago he will find that the letter has already. gone through the Chicago postoffice, been delivered and is waiting for him at his hotel.—Gunton’s Magazine. The Weather Man’s Precarious Job, The business of the weather bureau is to keep a careful record of meteoro- logical phenomena and to note “prob- ® bilities.” This is all he is expected to do in return for the millions he re- ceives. “Meteorology” is at best only @ pseudo-science. There is no ground for confident prediction in its vague and constantly-changing data, and long forecasts of ‘the weather will not be made by more scientific persons He Saw Too. Police Magistrate—The charge filed against you is obstructing the side- walk. Are you guilty or not guilty? Tipsy Flannigan—Pardon me, your honor, but they wor two sidewalks. Are You Using Afien’s Foot-Ease? It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corns and bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad- dress Allen 8, Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. The Reason. He—It’s strange you members of the Vassar alumni don’t hold class re- unions. She—Not at all. You may as well ask a woman her age as to ask ker to ac- knowledge what year she graduated in.—Philadelphia Times. Two of a Kind. “My daughter,” said the city visitor, “has a fine touch cn the violin.” “I duno how that may be,” said the than the compilers of almanacs until } country relation, ‘‘bi some one has measured the influence of | jg ate Columbia’ pela phan ee the Japanese current, the spots on the sun and the habits of the ground hog. —Collier’s Weekly. For Women’s Troubles, Too. New Baden, Ill., August 12th:—Mrs. Anton Griesbaum, Jr., has been very ill Female weakness had run her down so low that she could not do her housework. She tried many things, but got no relief. Dodd’s Kidney Pills, a new remedy, which is better known here as a cure for Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, Dropsy, and Rheumatism, worked like a charm in Mrs. Griesbaum’s case. She used three boxes, and is now a new woman, able to do her work as well as ever she was. Her general health is much im- proved, and she has not a single symp- tom of Female Trouble left. Dodd’s Kidney Pills are making & wonderful reputation for themselves in this part of the state. A Shrewd Fellow. Swiggers—That man Killtime is a shrewd fellow. waggers—Why? wiggérs—He gave a lawn-mowing party yesterday and had the guests cut the grass.—Ohio State Journal. STATE OF OHIO, Civ OF TOLEDO, Lucas Country, ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney &Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid. and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. [Szax.] A. W. GLEASON, . ‘Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the systém. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Drugaists, 7c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. Too Many Wives. Miss Makeahit—It is my highest am- bition to marry some titled foreigner. Mr. Jester—Why don’t you try the sultan? Miss Makeahit—S-i-r!—Ohio State Journal. Ladies Can Wear Shoes One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. All druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Trial package FREE by mail. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. ¥. It Surely Was. He—I got up against a trolley acci- dent coming home this evening. She—You don’t say? He—Yes. I got a seat.—Philadelphia Press. PATENTS. List of Patents Issued to Northwes Northwestern Inventors. Thomas J. Chappell, Grovelake, Minn., neck yoke attachment; Fred Clark, Clearlake, Minn., fish hook; Jessie Her- itage, Minneapolis, Minn., case for fish- ing rods; Charles J. Johnson, Minne- apolis, Minn., machine for manufactur- ing compo-board; Fritz A. Sandberg, Brighton, Minn., rotary plow; Charles §S. Yarnell, Minneapolis, Minn., work table. Lothrop & Johnson, patent attorneys; 011 & $12 Pioneer Press Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. Every person and every animal on the farm ‘is benefited by the use of Wizard Oil, for accidents and pain. The dealer in kitchen utensils is one sort of pan-American. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as cough cure.—J. W. O'Brien, 322 Third Ave, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900, Nearly all the tram conductors in Valparaiso are women. Mrs, Winsiow’s soothing Syrup. For obfidren teething, sottens the gums, reduces tr Gammation, allaye puin.ct ses Windcolic. 2ca It is proposed to increase the strength of the Belgian army to 180.000 men. It takes a level-headed man to sur- vive a stroke of good fortune. ames; Woodward & Co., Grain Commission, = ORDERS FOR FOTURE DELIVERY EXECUTED IN ALL MARKETS. ta Constitution. Down With It. “There is one thing that King Ed- ward tolerates that should be put down at once, and for good and all.” “Eh! What's that?” “His 1820 sherry.” FITS anently cured. No fits or nervousness after Fret day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Hestor- er. Send for FREK 2.00 trial bottle and trative. Da. R. H. Kiing, Ltd., 931 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa Knowledge bereft of reason is the most miserable of widows. A Full-Sif $1 Treatment of Dr. O. Phelps Brown's Great Remedy for’ Fits, Epilepsy and all Nervous Diseases. Address 0, PHELPS BROWN, 98 Broadway, Newburgh, | Don't Cut Corns Don’t do It ¥ Let. Anybody do ft for You. ‘What man or woman suffering with painful and annoying corns will not give 25centsto | have them removed? For 25 cents you get LEGHARD’S Hamburg Corn Remover sent to your house, postpaid, which ‘will remove every corn you have, no matter where it is, how Icngyou have had it or how torturing it is. Razors are dangerous; pastes, salves and plasters are worthless. eran: for thi ie \Ctean, Palatess,| merit—the only one that'will ap. Certain and | the work. qe, ‘and re | GUARANTEED. } Acts, Like Liphtaing! Wagga the Joints, between tho toes, or om the ; ‘our mnoney refunded if Sent prepaid on receipt of 25 [ti a de LEONAED & ©O., 88: ae 20,000 "ARXES™ required to harvest the grain of Wee ern Canada, The most abund> ant yield on the Com tinent. are that the aver yield of No. 1 Hi wheat in Westerm - Canada will be over thirty bushels to the acre. Prices for farm help will be excellent. Splendid Ranching Lands adjoining the Wheat Belt. Excursions will be run from all pointe the United States to the Free Grant Landa, Secure a home at once, and if you wish se! purchase et BEOTssing: prices, and secure! the advantage of the low rates, apply tow; literature, rates, etc., to F. LEY, Superintendent Immigration, Ottawa, ada, or to the nearest one of the lowing Canadian Government Agen’ Ben Davies, 1541¢ East Third St. Bs. Peal,| Minn., or T. O. Currie, No. 1 New Ins Bldg., Milwaukee, Wis. When visiting Buffalo, do not fail to the C: jan Exhibit at the Pan-Ameri an"! SKIN TORTURES And every Distressing Irritation of the Skin and Scalp Instantly ~ Relieved by a Bath with | And a single anointing with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. This. treatment, when followed in severe cases by mild doses of CUTICURA RESOLVENT, to cool and cleanse the blood, is the most speedy, permae nent, and economical cure for torturing, disfigur- ing, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted, and: pimply skin and scalp humours with loss of hair: ever com lions of Women U= CUTICURA SOAP, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, fox cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stop- ping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafings, in the form of baths for annoying irritations and inflammations, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women and mothers, and for all the purposes. of the toilet, bath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion can in~ duce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beau~ tifiers to use any others. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate. emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refresh- ing of flower odours. It unites in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, the BEST skin and complexion soap, and the BEST toilet and baby soap in the world, Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour, Consisting of CuTICURA S04P, to cleanse the skin of crusts i scales, and soften the thickened cuticle instantly | itching, inflammation, and heal; and CuTicuRa RESOL' THE SET |, with loss of hair, ‘when allelse fails. Sold throughout the world. humours, with joss of hay’ and 28, Charterhouse 8q., London, F. NEWBERY & Sons, (CmEM. Corr., Sole Props., Boston, U.S. A. ; CUTICURA OINTMENT, to- nd irritation, and , to coo] and cleanse the blood. A SINGLE SET is often sufficient to cure the most tortur- ing, disfiguring, itching, burning, and ecaly skin, vealpy ‘and blood ish Depots: E.G. POTTER DRUG Axi» SCALE AUCTION 08 BY MAS LOU ONSET: N. U. —NO. 38.— 1901. ESTABLISHED 1879. PISO'S CURE FOR ERE ALL LSE FAILS CONSUMPTION e o A | | { so een ree