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WILL BE $5,000,000, | LONDON, Queen Alexandra Reported to Have Burst Into Tears on Learning of the Decision Arrived at by Salisbury and Balfour—Another Rumor that Wales Will Take the Title of Edward VIII, in View of Dislike for the Name George. 1 — The June vre London to-day sion is broad in that the Prince of Wales has already been sworn in as Regent This step, it is said, was urged by Lord Salisbury and Mr. Balfour, the Government leader in the Hoise owing to the great accumulation of awalting the urgent documents King’s signature. The Prince, it is known, spent most of the afternoon in the King's chamber, and afterward had a long conversation with Queen Alexandra who had previously been in consul- LONDON HEARS tation with Prime Minister Salis- bury and Mr. Balfour. After leaving the Queen, the Prince conferred with Sir Francis Knollys and the Duke of Neweastle, Queen in ‘Tenrs. Queen Alexandra is said to have burst into tears when the decision of the Cabinet on the necessit Regency was announced to her, ofa Belng shelved in order to make way r her son evidently brought the wh ragedy of her Jot vividly before the Queen's mind the first time. MH devotion to the King # lilnexs has touched every one about the pala for it fs Known that she realizes keenly =. —————__ CORONATION LOSS 'N. FRE CHAMBE Empty Seats and Decorations | All There Is to Show for! the Vast Expenditure of! Money. LONDON, June 26.—It possible to form some the tremendous losses attendant upon the postponement and the| probable abandonment of the coro- nation ceremonies. Talk of thou- sands of pounds lost has now} changed to that of hundreds of thou- | sands, and a conservative estimate of the total losses, to say nothing of jewels, robes, renovating of houses of the nobility and the like, places the figure at £1,000,000 ($5,000,000). Two hundred thousand pounds have been lost by the Lloyds under- ‘writers on policies which covered the risk that the festivities would not take place on June 26 and 27. ‘They may lose half as much in ad- dition on the risk that the corona- | tion will not occur at all. Seat speculators, despite insurany must lose close to three hundred thou ‘sand pounds, Merchants who had thet © shopg-torn out to make places of van fuge for the parade will suffer great losses’ and many estimate this ic at fifty’ thousand pounds. ) Rallway companies had calculated o eirrying nearly & million passengers to London, and seats in every available @arrluge had been engaged at fabulous is now idea of Prices. Horses and es Were also bought up at top prices from all thy surrounding towns and c hd Duke B) of Russia A princes rt had arranged o-day by | monarch are permitted to enter the room, ‘The Prince and Princess of Wales ave in almost constant attend- Nurse's LONDON In the chamber of the dying King the one prominent figure which stands out strikingly in this crisis Is that of Queen the husband June 26 Alexandra, who is so engrossed in her royal that she cannot spare the time to think of her own welfare. But despite the great strain that she has taken upon herself she seems nut at all tired — or broken down 8 supreme, next to the physicians, in the .K-room, where during all her waking hours—and she has few that are not—she has been constantly since the King’s illness became so serious as to confine him to that apartment, No de- tail that can Inerease comfort or ac Wd the welfare of the patient Is ked by her affectionate and ehful eye. ‘0 one clae except the professional nurses and the children of the stricken dutles of nurse to HIS QUEEN REIGNS SUPREME. | exandra Bears Up Under Great Strain of | ance. The first direct expression of opinion m Queen Alexandra was recetved to- jay by the Lord Mayor of Leeda. Acknowledging & message of sym- pathy from the Lord Mayor, Queen Alexundra telegraphed All Classes Are United Good Fellow” LONDON, June 26.—Ireland for the. Prin once is singing “God Save the Ain't wake, King,” for in his eritical illness all classes seem to bury for the time all feelings other than manager ¢ feat and box in the 4. special what will be the money The checks for t K M y night alone a 1 000 $100,000) bee tt fo: A, (s2tv), whhic PY) were all » and il ($5360 Th guine Ber, ull of ago” WOULDSTOPPARK AVE. TUANEL WORK w Justice Giegerich Hears Argu- P ment on the Application of Barney Charles T. Injunction. jor an Tusthe G 1 me th Y Ba Rap) eoding 7) Park ay id had heen 4 hanged us 40 bring the tunnel within seven intend of thirty-five fect o Mr. Barney's residence eighth street and Park ave of ‘the pror fected. Mr gino a stockholder and dire Bubway Construction Comps #he Interborough Railway Company Which 1s to 2 Angunes operate the road for the {ngunoti rthur H Masten, of fohola, Opposing the inju Edward M. 6) Ak wise) for mission, and F the Bubwa 1 Jonni. M was rd (0) Wrd dented that the Heard had id. tee tho wubway pinlt aflidayity sient of the ( He sald Alexander Masten & | hi Ing Wega 1 fixing the exact | ng ihe i the exact | friendly toward the reigning mon- urch and to think only of “the good who is dying and to sympa- with him fellow Irish ically on the Kt News says it h. political edt Pr ‘comment sympathet- 8 illness, ‘The Dublin caused a cessation of and all classes are pape turmoil, man's Journal pays « tribute » Kings bravery as a man, and ar yerhaps for the frst time dn his’ Irejand breathés the prayer of God § © King His “Saecessial Heigu.’’ T 1 HUSBAND OF 18 SEEKS DIVORCE Remarkable Suit Brought by Mother of Boy Who Mar- ried at Fifteen—Wife Is a} Year His Senior, ependent is equally sym. NEWARK Kmery nea Daum is 6 The sult 4 mother H band, The wife tr f 1 i foen years old. Before her miartiage sie Miss dna 3. Mra, Daum alleges that her 1 Kk WHE, OF Ue the wedding, ino Geramanus, In August ti sult of an ardent courtship Mire Daum was in court to-day and marshalled the witnesses in ber son's bel n the boy Was put on tho crogé-examined in regard 10 His momory proved exceed- xi greatly annoyed appea confused as when the boy became en he attended school, Dates wei Pathetic. It expresses the hope thet the King's present serious condition ts only @ passing obstacle to @ successful reign, Nationalist, writes to the Associated yer astitude seaarding the asrange: | fv t oration greatly: tn ' whlch contributed | to the King It is hell Pe of} Wate uw ts avcesslon, | would take the we Vio de Nested with that {othe cer-| tainty that it would be unpopular tn the country Vath of “idward VIrL It Is w’ready ed that $: would be better if he shonid style himself ware VOL nplimenc to hls roeven Albert 1 his lier, although the importation rman name nto the Hie of Ene xish om Is Would yrobaoly not be R OF THE KING Duties. aii! Masesty 18 progressing tavor- | Among the telegrams received was one from Gen. Booth, who fs In Berlin, to] the Queen, In which he says the Sal- | vation Army all over the world will| pray for the recovery of the King. Ever Her Majesty is not allowed to | talk ut length to the patient, whore hervousness she endeavors to sooth! ‘The King wishes to read the new vavers, He bites immobility and con- | #tantly Inquires about the people. “What are they saying?” he asks. | “How do they bear up under the dread- | ful disappointment? ‘Try to let them | know how sorry I am for them. I do| Not care for the pain myself. but whee 1 think of them my heart falls me." Queen Alexandra answers with a gen: | tle emile: | “They love you, and they who love! will forgive. ‘They are only impatient to see you again, and the quieter you Keep the sooner you avill oe with them," Miss Knollys doss not loave her royal mintress for an instant, THE WORLD: THURSDAY PRI EVENING, 3U 26, 1982. 8 oe Princess Henry of Prussia has begged hand to be allowed to help nurse the King, but this permission is reftusei oven to Princess Helena and Beatrice, his own sister. The dostors declare the personnel about him must pe as limited as possible, IRELAND TO-DAY SINGS Ens le raniee satisfaction to official “GOD SAVE THE KING!” a enon ue Sine questions, and has expressed his wo! in Sympathy for “The Who Lies III. T. P. O'Connor, M. P. leading Irish Pres “There 1 a great deal of reat sym.|' ¢ssion for the life of Hdward the pany: Peacemaker followed the roll of “There are certain circles in which the d's drum beats around the King has uot kept hie hold. out by the |. 823 are great public, which knows ttle of the | World to-day. Ask tattle of courts, the King is liked, and| To many gods, in almost every ho ts regarded as a good fellow with a Sensible head, “The sympathy for His Majesty {s perhaps stronger in Liberal and even in| W2 At the have been crowned 4 great and dist Irish circles than among the Conserve tives. He has always shown a certain ning—he has certaiily never shown |gulehed gathering, almost identical with any hostllity—to Liberal principles, aid | that which would have sat in Weat- he stands @xpectally well with the - | minster Ab gathered in Paul's erals juet now because he Is supposed | Cachedr to have made peace with the Boers over | phe approaches to the Cathedral wer Chamberlain, the Colonial Secretary vavent thranwe, ‘tiiroust while! The Irish’ have a secret feeling that) lined bys re ri | His Mateaty ts tigt unfrlendiy’ to Ie. idrove peers aiid pect sonia and wr this, TP believe, there 1 | ypemie foreign cavoys mt som sundation premiers. etaiiee fas alt "You Ought to Be Spanked, | Both of You," Said the Mag- istrate to Runaway Couple of Tender Years. [ Mugistrate Devel at Yorkville nked with amazement it a youthful couple who described them-| as Philip and Marla McMahon cen and seventeen years old re tively, ‘Their mothera were present Court yediay selves da tho mtylishly ate d worried When the cour | adjourne: SAID HE WAS POPE, Babel Taken trom His H areOns, ihe fing ‘wetuatty nly one by which the h of ‘Tremont to the Insane Pavil Ww n Habel, Afty-right yi “1 thougit he was the oply «irl for me,” said Philip, ‘And he @aid he loved me and would never love any one but me," maid the «irl wite. “How much do you cern, Pailipt' progress in convalescence occasions gratitude over the evidences of the ber of telegrams with his own hands, Tats action LONDON, June 26.—Prayers of in- | tongue, euppli.avons were offered at high noon for the dying monarch on and members of |choat Henry White, a of ie | ter, Becond Becreta the Embassy, aud Mrs, Carter Vhitelaw Reid, special embarsador of the United 8t to the coronation, and M Reid and Mra. J. Plerpont Mo the the nave about a tho the last adminietration pursued was to swell the payrolls by al dus. wo day’ ot LONDON June 26.—King Edward's) caused some night and aroused some trifling sollel tude on the nart of the attendant doc- rid's solicitude by opening a num- him slightly, INT excited SOLEMN ose dominions the sun never sets. hour when the King should the in sombre clothes Many Americaus Present. n the ohanvel were Josep) Choute wading Members 0 THRO’ PAY ROLL FRAUD (TY ROBBED ms QUEEN ALEXANDRA AND HER FAVORITE VIGS restlessness tors. All this really the whole, rested satisfactorily his convalescence. ot Connaught at Buckingham minster womel Abbey were seated, before noon were swung din, and the leaning heavily rry the big open, Duke ¢ on Shortly Moors anu the respon A Doturesque Kneeling cong dd Mm the uf the clergy 1 the —<——" {n court and each bewatls the fact that! warer Commissioner Douxnerty has Hild was married | . tn y's mother, who lives at No. 42 ean at work for eame Ume uneanih nd avenue, sald, "Judge, 1 didn't] ing, what ie Meged to be, crooked work my boy to marry this girl 1 al-|on a larweyscale 11 dopar in way told him no good would come of It,! prookiyn but he ren away with her three months| 10 and was married,” | me Commissioner, renest has it. has Maria's mother resides at No. 9 Hast| discovered a — furlwifloaiin of — the k nd Ay nw She then spoke: boruueh's department payr A oven My girl | ry bit ae good as Philip, | " ra um of the olty’s money is I didn's want her to marry him, but ahe| w2ee!® M did. Now he discards her and she Is) sleet: has been paid ous fraudulently back home with me again, ‘The falwifications, it Is said, were dise “What on earth did you get married | covered through aa aooident for.” eaid the Magietrat You are| it wae learned to-chay fr b BOUTCE both children aud ought to have been| #pparentiy authoritative, that — the spanked for having had such an idea." | @ullty persons are “hold overs’ from lt was learned als that the meshod owing more time whan wae aotualiy . One instance cited is of a men ad right along doen allowed woven ‘9 work @ Wook, Bs a meatier = he ad only from four *eapies ANE 2 weatern | * sunlight | of re Caan during was unimportant Ilis Majesty soon quieted down and, on Improvement in the King's conditio the Palace | ERCESSION FOR THE KING. ticket-holders, mainly | bers the arm of} walk+d to the chancel. o'clock struck there arose from | the far end of the nave the clear notes | 7 ning sentence of the Litan anted by four of the Cathedral ¢ r tones were In such uslson seemed, ty emanate from one ful volce. The cholr took up the! responses, AL each supplication the prove headed by the cross, Vanced » few sleps and then stood s! © Was completed. Processional. tion low Lowlt Hes J the Lord Mayor, sir] ile, the oorporauon in « up the rear fevling the choir sang | r 4 of intercession, afier | the t Wf Stopary, che Right Comm Girdon Lang, read the lex son, salah, chapter 38 Verse 10; "P sald in the outting of ot ny days | shall go-to the gate ihe gave, deprived of the 'esi lie of sny» ears. Mexrams frat Ge Of the Bm rom Hong-Kong, Simla, Johannes | Commissioner Dougherty, of the Water |Deparimont, to-day heard furt test lthony in the case of Engineer John M Smith, Superintendent of ¢ duits and h rvoirs, who |s coused of neglect f duty in failing t+ keop supply ponds lean, Sinith war represvnted by former Cor- poration Counsel G General Secretary Branson the olty Byiden K. Bmith of Brooklyn. peared £0F Jin these two o adduced showed that Harry | son of Engineer Smith, is on OFFICIAL LONDON EXPRESSES HOPE. before the doctors’ morning consultation, and which the subsequent official bulle- tin conipletely contirmed, occasioned the liveliest satisfaction to all persons co!- lected ot the palace, the Mansion Houso swhere awaiting tidings from the amber. absence of ambiguity in the this morning was most marked. Every-|janguage of the medical bulletin, which, body in Buckingham Palace is delighted |ynjike previous statements, has no and high hopes are entertained there for} qualifying phrases, has done much to restore confidence Jn the publle mind In he good news given out by the Duke|rogard to the outcome of the King's Hines, and Sidney told of the postpone- tof coronation service and the sub- m of Intercessory prayers. + Kegiving service announced me for Sunday in Westminster Abbey has r | changed to a service of Tntere cesston. ‘The same ritual employed to- day will be used. Hishop of London Ofictated. hop of London, the Right Rev. Arthur R. W. Ingram,’ from the. al Jatens read the pruyers, “O. Lond, Bate the King!" rang ‘out to the furthest jome and brought a whole-souled re- sponse from the cholr and the congte- anthem and the singing of the Thine Arm, O, Lord, in Daye of 1 Was Strong to Heal and Save,” and No. 81 concluded the short ger- whereupon the Bishop of London, ounded by the archbishops and ps from the altar steps Imprea- Y pronounced the benediction. 4 fow moments complete silence ed and all heads were bowed In after which the almost blind hop of Canterbury was carefully fh the steps, the procession ré- and the congregation went out sunlight, gladly discussing the ording of the” latest bulletin trom Huckingham Palace. Private Service at Weatmiuater. Simultaneously, a similar service was mducted at St. Margaret's Church, Westminster, It was largely attended by Cabinet Ministers, peers and mem- bers of the House of Commons and was concluded with singing "God Save the K Prom, India, Australia and Africa, everywhere Wi Britons congregated, grams announ: ding of im- pressive supplicat ENGINEER SMITH [SOFT COAL USERS AGAIN ON THE RACK! MU ST PAY FINES, ¢ Health Department scored a num- + of Mines torday for violations of the soft-coul ordinance, T Assistant Conpora- ‘lon Counsel Cosby appeared for the Jty before Justice Joseph in the Bev- nth District Court. Among the cases called were com- plaints against the Ringler Brewery and Jleupsel Brewery. On promise to abate the nuisance adjournments were granted 8 wnt! next month. The Riverside Cold Storage Company, of One Hundred and Thirtleth street and Twelfth avenue, was fined $0, Au- ‘the city payroll as « laborer, and Hives, | gust J. Patterson, lessee of an apart- rent tr cMy at Massapequa. learn his pay, according to Mr |i# “cleaning around the place.” some days . in a house provided by the All that he does to It was shown, alao, that some of the supply ponds have not been cleaned in four years prior to the recent cleaning | «pne condition of our streate 1¥ horrl+ ago, Testimony was wiveO | bie, Clothing ls Ip on Smith, polnding to a laxity In the methods ot iooking after wer 9. meld do 4 a NCE IS ALREADY REGENT. MEDICAL AND SURGICAL OPINIONS AS TO RECOVERY. British Authorities Hopeful—French and Amere While the British medical jour- nals and the great physicians are making every endeavor to view the King’s illness in a hopeful light. and to make the most favorable prog-| nostications possible, there can be een running through all of them a serious doubt of the monarch’s ulti- mate recovery. The German -uthorities seem to look more cheerfully upon the state of the royal patient, while the French specialists present a gloomy | aspect. Here in America, where the treatment of the trouble has ad- vanced more quickly and much fur- | ther than in Europe, the highest authorities openly doubt the proba- bility of the patient's recovery. ‘The British Medical Journal says: “Should the Ki symptoms pursue the course they have hitherto followed there 1s good reason to hope for His Majesty's restoration to health. Owing to the nature of the affection and the character of the dressing used, it !s in- evitable that his convalescence should | be somewhat prolonged, but we believe that, {f no complications arise, there ts| no reason to fear his recovery will not be complete. Conditions Assure Surgeo: “The condition of the parts made clear &t the operation was @uch as to assure he surgeons that the abscess was due to ‘one of those unexplained inflammations which occur with remarkable frequency in the neighborhood of the vermiform appendix, and that it was not due to any organic disease of a more serious nature or to any malignant growth, as rumor has suggested. “Up to the present there 1s no indica- tlon of the ocourrence of any complica- tlon, and should none arise His Majesty may live for many years. The Lancet, while declaring that it ts impossible to disguise the seriousness of the King’s condition, say! “It 1s our Joyful privilege to be able to contradict flatly some of the sinister rumors which haye been prevalent for the last forty-elght hours throughout the world. The {dea that some dreadful news is being kept back ought to be dis- pelled, and the absolute sincerity of every bulletin {ssued should prevent the public from heeding these wild rumors. His Majesty is suffering from perityph- litis ind nothing else. “Unfortunately, the symptoms of perl- typhlitls may be entirely masked, and this it was that absolutely prevented the necessity of an operation from being apparent unt!) yesterday.” No Symptom of Malignancy. ‘The Lancet states also that at present there {s no symptom of malignancy In the King's case, ‘The following statement is the Mehest medical authorit: «until the tubes now draining | the cavity of the abscess have been withdrawn it will impossible to feel certain that the King will pull through, What his physicians have now to fear fs that peritonitis or hemorrhage may supervene. There must always be this danger in such cases. Again, it 1s fact that an abscess due to perityphiltis may have fatal Issue with- out any warning symptoms. “All the indications are often masked until the post-mortem, and there are many cases on record where the dis- ease was only discovered after death from an extraneous cause, 6usn as an accident, Whatever the outcome, the made on ican Physicians Not So Optimistic. King’s grave til y King’s, grave lines must invalid him —-—_ WHAT SIR FRANCIS TREVES HAS SAID. LONDON, June %.—By a sad coinci- dence, says the Times, the British Medi- cal Journal publishes in its current issue a lecture which Sir Frederick Treves, who performed the operation on the King, delivered last week before the West London Medico-Chirurgica} So- clety on "Some Phases of Inflammation of, the Appendix.”” Sir Frederick anid 1 “An immediate ope manded in every exa: there in reasonable suspicion that suppuration has taken place.” “Those who advise the very dangerous process of scruping the walls of these Rbscesses whould remember that these walls, on one side at least, are made up_of loops of intestines, which have become glued together. “Tt will also be noticed that only about 4 per cent. die within forty-eight hours, according to the hospital statis- ties, and only 22 per cent. before the arth day: “The highest death rate comes between the seventh and eighth days,” this lectar: min je in which —_a GERMAN DOCTORS ARE OPTIMISTIC. BERLIN, June 2%.—German: medical men take a rather optimistic view of the | condition of King Edward, and say th | it the bulletins present the case cor- | Tectly,his chances for recovery are more | than even. One specialist refers to the experience of Dr, Sonnenberg, of the Berlin Charity Hospital, who has operated most suc- cessfully upon 1,80 persons with mal- adles similar to that of the King, and a prominent medical authority of Berlin sald yesterday that a statistical study showed 8 per cent. of recoveries, Regarding the reported removal! of an abscess a specialist, writing to-day in the Frankfurter Zeilung, says: “If such abscesses develop for several days, and then partially open Into the surrounding parts, as has apparently occurred in the case of King Edward, the chances for the patient's recovery, after the operative removal of the = scesses, are very favorable. The fact that the heart and lungs resumed their normal activity immediately after the operation warrants ex- pectations of recovery.” —-—_- PARISIANS ARE NOT SO HOPEFUL, PARIS, June 2%.—Intervftws with the leading appendicitis specialists here are published. The majority of the physicians express the opinion that King Fd- ward’s chances of recovery are very doubtfal, not owing to the nature of the diseane, but on ac- count of His Majenty’s age, obesity and constitution, which is believed to be undermined, and other in- firmities, One doctor suggests that the disease is complicated by cancer, a HIGH PREMIUMS ASKED ON THE KING'S LIFE. LONDON, June 25.—Steady increases in the premiums demanded to-day at Lloyds on the King’s life tend to show that the genera! bellef is that there is little hope for his recovery. The figure quoted for insurance to the end of the current month was thiny uineas (about $160) for every £100 ($500) sured, while for policies covering a isk until’ the end of July Atty guineas (about $265) per £100 was asked. "YOU ARE A HOUND, ‘SMD COURT TO MAN Magistrate Brann Severe in His Denunciation of a Pris- oner Who Spoke Offensively of His Wife. who says he is & Jacob Beckford, metal polisher, was severely reprimande: by Magistrate Brann in the ‘West Bide Court to-dey and then held in $94 bonds to pay his wife §T a week for @ year. Beckford earns $1 per week when em- ployed, Beckford lives with his wife end four children, two by a previous wife, at No. 283 West Bixty-alxth street. Yeaterdey his wife left him and went to her mother's home, During the afternoon she went to the West Side Court and secured @ warrant charging Beckford with ngn-support, Last nigl it Beckford, thinking his wite had run away, went to Pollpe Headquarters and asked the police to send out @ general alarm, Beckford was arrested to-day by Policeman Cavanaugh and taken to court, He told the Magistrate that he had been married to his present wite four years. The woman said that since thelr marriage he has not given her one cent, “{ married this womefi out of & dive in Sixty-sixth etreet,"” Beckford told the Court a 4 Magis xolakened : The remark get te Brant, ® A tou are & hound, You are not fit to ment house at No, @ Weet Forty- seventh strect, was ned $9 and had to promise that he would buy smoke con- eumers. In imposing the Anes Justice Joseph id bil houses, ne wb ne! yoody, Now I’ give you to decide whether or not your wite #1 per week for 00K out fF rey ; you will aganult will be taken by 4 Rtorney, SYRIANS VS, POLICEMAN. Petition to Jerome to Take Action Against Bluecont. Polloe Commissioner Partridge and Acting District-Attorney Rand received petitions to-day signed by the most tn= fluential memberds of the Syrian colony, ‘asking that the conduct of Pollosmam Keenan, of the Church Street Station, be investigated. It 1s charged thet Keenan and other policemen in arroating ix Syrians in Washington street leet month were unnecessarily brutal. The Syrians were discharged in court the met. Waa fale that is, Won alt te wha! @ Polloe Comminale Wer teSicesnan is placed on Uial and found guilty, action agelngt i ~s SUMMER FROLIC. Get Ready Now. Give the brain and body food dur ing the summer that does not over tax the stomach and heat the body, Grape-Nuts ie a crisp, dainty and delicious food, selected parts of the grain treated by heat, moisture and time to slowly and perfectly develop the diastase from the grain and transform the starch into grape suger in the most perfect manner; the small particles of phosphate of potash found In certain parts of the cereals are retained and these ele ments vitalize and nourish the hods. brain and nerve centres. In {ts predigested form, it tur nishes the necessary and energy in an easy way for the sye~ tem to absorb without undue exer tion and removes the genera! feeling of heaviness usual, to weather. | Grape-Nuts and cream, a little truit and possibly an egg or two cooked to sult the taste, ls an idea! breakfast and will fully sustain the body until the noonday meal, Delicious desserts for luncheon and supper can be uickly made and have a flavor all eir own from the peculiar, mild but aneaeying, aweet of thi augar. lute will gave the heat of food; will make y ton fi 1 ogler you and the exertion of prepar- ¥