Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, June 22, 1907, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. UATDUDAT, JUNE 8, 1907. |a WARNING TO 7HE SCHOOL-GOING PUBLIC | Gross Deception, in Many Cases, Being Prac ticed On The Young Men and Women of Georgia. Technical Commercial Education Dragged in The Mud. XTt had trusted that the day of Bust. I uss School fnklem was passing. That I.... overage person was becoming edu- Sied to the fast that success in any I Sne of endeavor was unattainable JJjthout corresponding eltort. Judging the dally press, however, such Is, umsrently. not the case. We notice outrageous and grotesquo promises to the unsuspecting of unqualified success ,. Bookkeepers and stenographers in i few weeks, no previous educational Qualification* being prescribed. Such statements are insults to the Intelligence of sensible people, and only the ignorant, unthinking, unduly eager snii easlly-taken-ln class of our peo- I ole ore to be even attracted by such skaurd and Illogical allurements. In eight or ten weeks, can it be pos sible to successfully train any one to h, a good bookkeeper or good ste nographer? The quallflcatlons of a good ste nographer are as follows: lie tnuBt bo familiar with the rules of punctuation and composition, as ob taining in commercial circles. He must bt a first-class speller. He must know how to die letters, 1 manifold, make letterpress copies, write telegrams, do mimeographing or neoityls work, and all other kinds of ofHce work. He must ba familiar with ordinary business and legal forms and able to write shorthand so well that he cap turn out successfully new and tecli- I nice I matter whenever desired to do co. Ills shorthand work must not be limited to mere routine business letter I writing. His typewriting work must be speedy, neat, properly arranged, even In appearance, free from typographical and orthographical errors, and in every other respect reflect credit upon the work of the house which employs him. „„I he enoJ bookkeeper must be quick Ilol!i?. ccurat f at "* ure8 . must be thor- 'ughiy up in all the modern labor- saylng devices known to the account- !£**• -'fost be thoroughly familiar with the best methods of bookkeeping, as practiced In our most representative business houses. He must have a working knowledge or Commercial Law and the more com. mon commercial legal forms. He must be a good penman, a good grammarian and a good speller. Can It be possible that the ordinary country-bred boy, or, for that matter, the technically untrained city boy or girl, expects to master the technique of his or her profession in eight or ten weeks? Such a proposition is absurd. It is preposterous, it approaches the fraudu lent and should be prohibited by law as Inducing the uninformed and unsus pecting youtli of the country to Invest with unscrupulous business colleges, the proprietors of which care more for money than truth, and are actuated by anything rather than a love for the ethics of tile profession, and stop at nothing, hesitate at no promise which will be sufficiently attractive to entrap the unwary into their clutches. THE DIXIE BUSINESS COLLEGE stands for thoroughness of prepara tion for earnest, sustained and Intelli gent application, for careful training and adequate preparation, whether it takes ten weeks or ten months. It makes no promises. inconsistent with this position, and on this basis it will pursue the even tenor of its way, se cure In the consciousness that merit and standard sterling qualities will win out in the end. BERNARD C. AN8TED and H. L. BRIDGE8, Proprietors. FINANCIERS PREDICTING Jd$ BROTHERS BUSINESS READJUSTMENT New York, June 22.—In ita editorial column this morning, commenting on the speech of Frank W. Vandcrlip, at Jamestown, in which he foresees hard times ahead for the railroads of the country, The Times says: "It Is no longer needful nor Is It wise to beat about the bush, or to veil in guarded phraaes an opinion held by n great majority of well-informed men In thli country. The center of agita tion against the railroad and other ccrporatlona, the source of the influ ence that haa stimulated legislatures, politicians and' demagogues to outdo each other In intemperate appeal and ill-considered measures of restriction. Is the White House at Washington. ws consider it merely momentary. If we have to have a readjustment, we are In a better position to stand It now than to wait until the sore becomes too | severe." > HELD ON CHARGE OF I Cree Attempts to Prove an Alibi at Preliminary Hearing. Evolution of the Fl/ing Machine IMHMMIHIMMMI ••••••••••••••••••••••••< IIMIIMMIHIHIHIMHIHMI ONE 8AY8 COUNTRY 18 VERY PROSPEROUS. Indianapolis, Ind„ June 23.—Frank D. Stalkner, president of the Capital National Bank, says: "I don't believe a word of Mr. Van- derllp'a statements. He is all wrong so far as I can see. The country Is in splendid condition; trade Is good: I _ ’ _ . . manufactories all running; merchants s P*cl*l to The Georgian, report fin® business! nothing! like n Eatonton, Gjl, June 22.—The com- panic In sight, and these are some of mltment trial of Porter and Cree Jones the reasons why I bellevo.he is ail was conoludod Friday evening at w !n*»n O ' clock - Porter Jones claimed he killed perlty confidence has been Impaired, If olllu , u - National ^ank- ' Adams in self-defense, waived trial and men nave become cautious In commit- ..j ^ inclined to agree In tho main demanded an Indictment, ments, ir the country's business cur- wlth Mr- vanderlip, that a poriod of Cree Jones attempted to prove an ">■/•»» ** ■« ™ « depreseion may come at any time. It alibi, claiming he was at work In a field la simply the logloal outcome of a three-quarters of a mile away when the long period of prosperity. If occurred u , M , n _ . in 1892 and It wilt grow Inevitably out “l" 1 "* °“ urre<J ', He / ald , h# ul put ,* of similar and present conditions. In-15?ff2L. 0 h, " =»« tellment is to succeed expansion, profits art to shrink end loss and disaster are to be visited upon us, the responsibil ity rests chiefly with Theodore Roose velt. • "Going far beyond the application of needed cures to abuses of privileges, beyond the devising of remedies for rccognixed evils, evils that Mr. Van- deriip la at pains to point out olaarty. the president by insistent barping upon subjects on which his knowledge Is by no means large, hie Ideas confused and for the consideration of which no busi ness experience has ever qualified him, lias brought the greatest business In terests of the country Into the center of tho field of polltlce, where they are an object of harrsasment and attack rrom every politician whoso ambition has been stirred by the example of the president and the boundless popular success of his poliotes.” LET UP IN BUSINilii IS CERTAIN TO COME. Pittsburg, Pa., Juns 22.—O. P. Coch ran, vice president of the American National Bank, said today: “There Is going to be a let up In business. There has been a formative period during the past six month! In which financial affairs have been re adjusted. The financiers of the coun try who make a practice of lending out money to investors have been hauling their cash gradually. Talk of ad verse legislation, changing conditions for corporations has scared (hem. hut terference with buslnese by those high £,,52?,„22 « to ** e wno WM Kl , , in law-making causes uncertainty and » "W? woman, a girl and must oroduco unsatisfactory results." a *mall white boy as witnesses, who must produco unsatisfactory results.' PROSPERITY OF COUNTRY NOT TO BE OI8TURBED. Chattanooga, Tonn., June >2.—W. B. Mitchell, capitalist and were In the field with him. Their tes timony was conflicting. The prosecution Introduced witnesses who swore that Cree Jonea did not go to his field In three-quarters of on hour formor proal- after the kllllm dnel Bank, a Mr*. Adams' testimony wae un- flnanclal writer of note and author of shaken, and she bore the ordeal brave- "Dollars_or What?" wjien ahown.ajiy. Hsr husband, sho said, told her twlco after she reached him that Cree Jones *hot him, and that they had no clearly the policy of Sir. Roots- words whatever. Mr*. Adam* said she velt to prevent etook watering end was asleep when the shots aroused fraudulent manipulation of railroad her. She saw her husband's mule properties, and thereby protect the standing In the field, rang the farm shippers and sections from rat* dls- bell for an alarm and found her hus crimination and save people who buy band near the rear garden fence, railroad securities In Walt street from Cooper rested the defense on the loss and ruin. It looks as though some evidence submitted. Judge J. S. Tur- of the big Wall street manipulator* ner and W. B. Wingfield secured Cree themselves havo combined to create Jones' committal for trial at the Sep- oondlttons of distrust and panic. These tember term of the court. Justices fellows may easily overdo their game Mark Oortey, Charles Btubbi and John and smash things about their own Dance presided at the trial, heads, but the farmer’s pockets and the country banka are full of money and general conditions are as sound as dollar. Tha conditions the Wall street eradicate Is trying to produce would only transfer the money back from the country banka to Wall straat banks." REFUSED TO PERMIT By E. L. DRAKE, A. B. In a recent Interview In London, will bo able to rise from the ground Professor Graham Bell emphasized the point that high speed was essential to ■access In air navigation, and stated that an American Inventor had design ed a construction with this object In view, which, when perfected, would be able to make the trip from New York to London “between breakfast and supper.” He did not give the name of the person, but doubtless referred to the work of a Tennessee scientist and inventor, Dr. Edwin L. Drake, of Winchester, who was the first to em phasize the specific value and Impor tance of momentum for reducing gravlc pressure on a body In the air, and by so doing sustaining and extending Its ran?) of flight, which he did last year in a small brochure, ”The Evolution of tiie Flying Machine,” citing familiar Il lustrations and calculations of the amount of reduction 6f pressure to the yard. In un interview' he gives an In teresting account of the evolution of the flying machine and Its fitness for Its work, and contrasts it with the un- fltnci* of a bulky or unwieldy body for operations In the air. "A fortuitous discovery,” ho says, "untie several years ago, enabled mo to trace accurately and for the first time, the specific w|ng movement In birds and beetles from start to finish. niul dearly understand its rationale. My analysis of Its technique has slnco b^cu confirmed explicitly by numerous photographs of birds on wing, made by Professor Mnrey, of Paris. Out of these discoveries % flying machlno has been < volvea which puts air naviga tion on a rational and practical basis md i* revolutionizing prevailing Ideas in airship construction. Maxim has abandoned the aeroplane, Dumont, the ball>iij, and rrofeMor Bell the teraho- dr»| Jflir, No fact If better established than the unfitness of a bulky or un wieldy machine for practical air navl- fistloj. An open umbrella Is ono of the least miflstbls •>{ bodies, but when dosed It can be propelled to quite a <*lstince. A balloon Is an ‘open um brella;' & flying machlno proper is a 'closed one.’ *Tb# const ruction of a machlno that and sustain Itself In the air without the aid of gas or extended aeroplanes and develop a speed of 200 or more miles an hour, Is a simple mechanical proposition, when the conditions and requirements of success are clearly understood. “One of the requirements Is to reduce bulk to a tninlmun*and thereby dimin ish head resistance accordingly. A bulky body, like a balloon or one with extended aeroplane surfaces, Is out of place In the air. It is at the mercy of the winds. It Is an unmechanical proposition, and no amount of Invent ive effort, with millions ut command, can enable it to overcome the natural obstacles it has to encounter continu ally In its course and make headway against them, even with powerful mo tors. * An eagle, with a bag of gas or aeroplane attachment on 1th back, would soon break down in the effort to fly against the wind and go adrift. “Another condition pf success is that the machine should have a wheel equip ment cupable of developing high speed currents and a body formation adapt ed to make the currents actively up bearing and at the samo time propel It rapidly on Its course. This is pre cisely the principle employed so effectively by winged creatures. The act of blrdflight is the resultant of sim ple? mechanical forces that are well known and in common use in the arts. “By getting rid of the bulky gas bag and unwleldly aeroplanes my machine can be made small und trim, presenting but little surface to frontal friction, which enables it to be driven at high speed, one of tho essentials of success In dealing with such a light and mobile body as the air; momentum In Itself being a most useful factor tn distrib uting the effect of gravity and sustain ing a body in the air. Wild ducks and pigeons easily make. 125 miles an hour all day long, and the Bed Throat, a bird that winters on the Mediterranean, re turns to the Baltic at a rato of 177 tnlles an hour without halting. The average gravlc pressure on the body In these cases Is infinitesimal. That on an ounce rifle bullet, shot two miles, only l-76th of a grain for each unit GOV. TERRELL'S UMPIRING BREAKS UP A BALL GAME; BECK'S BOUNCERSBEA TEN Fttblonsbl* Me LaeiM nr» aesssi ThisbirdV eye view shows what w e can do. Reliable goods, reasonable prices, back up our claim that— •It Pays To Deal With' ED. CRANE CO. & g’^lEsieB SR \l\y vu' Horseman’s favorite and Farmer's friend. FRONT NEW DEPOT lightens rmr burden, ensss your conscience end Is a necessity on every wagon. Tills sr.I.Jsck save, (be driver's back. When the big red sun sank behind the horlson Friday at dusk and the wielding of the willow and the boom- boom of the awatlete and tho grown swats died in the distance, there was mourning end groaning and gnashing of teeth among the ranks of tho Boek'a Bouncers. For they had been snowed under an avalanche of big tallies by the demon* of the Evan* Eatemups. The final tab ulation was 23 to 13—skidoo to hoodoo, It was alleged to be a plain case of robbery, thievery and bonehead work on the part of tho gents with the Indi cators. It may not havo been a sell out, but It certainly smelled like one. and the scent was something awful. All "by way of preface to the state ment that tho team of Judge Beverly D. Evans met the aggregation headed by Judgo Marcue W. Beck, on "Cap” Joyner's ball field, In Cobb county, Friday afternoon. It Was a Hot Game. Governor Terrell and Bam Jones were tho alleged umpires. Thoy are In hid ing Saturday. The work of "Joe" Terrell was par ticularly on the bum, and but for tho fact that tho Eatemups are dead game sports and not cold quitters, the Ten Club, which was holding its monthly meeting, would have bust Into aa many splinters as Mary's cat had fleas. Tho game was colled promptly at 3 O’clock. Following were the line-ups: Beck's Bouncers—Judge M. D. Beck, captain and first base; Dr. John E. White, catcher; Dr. M. L. Troutman, pitcher; Dr. W. W. Landrum, third IN SANJRANCISCO Gen, Funston Said They Would Be Jeered by Un whipped Mob. base; Walter O. Cooper, second base; J. T. Holloman, shortstop; Dr. E. L. Connally, center, and H. A. Maler, right. Evans' Eatemups—Judge Beverly D. Brans, captain and shortstop; Mayor W. R. Joyner, pitcher; W. W. Orr, San Francisco. June 22.—General catcher; Will Davis, first baas; M. L. Frederick Funston, In command of the Brittain, second base; F. J. Paxon, can- department of California, hoe Informed ter; Dr. John D, Jordan, third baas, the Fourth of July celebration commlt- nnd Hugh M. Wlltet, right. tee that he la opposed to having his Curves Deceived Him. troop* "parade before an unwhlpped When "Rube" Troutman sent the first m “ b '" ... _ , j ...... fh . ... .. n ,_ The committee had written Funston twister across the platter ana utg tha . h . u , ( - n ,, vera i battal. John" White swung hi* mighty blud- fon* to form WTof SieTs JE pra,! Boon at the horso hide and missed, a slon. In reply aeneral Funston ad- blg whoop went up. dressed a letter to Chairman CSi a.r.iv.H said Dr. White; of the parade committee. In which ... •aid ha was loath to have his men There’s a good deal of satisfaction to us in sell ing Hart, Schaffner & Marx and Rogers, Peet & Co. clothes; not so much for the profit we make on them, but chiefly fqr the profit our customers make on them. You know how it is; if you can do somebody else good, and get a benefit for yourself at the same time, you really feel pret ty good over it That’s the way we feel about selling Hart, Schaffner & Marx and Rogers, Peet & Co, clothes; every time we' sell a suit from these famous lines we’re doing good to our fellow men. Honest, all-wool fabrics; hon est, clean, sanitary tailoring; the best style; the most perfect fit; clothes that will render service —all under the Hart, Schaffner & Marx and Rogers, Peet & Co. labels; ready here. Daniel Brothers Co., 45-47-49 Peachtree St "Fine him 35 and oosts." Bicycles, sundries and auto supplies. Despite the continual poor work of I Largest wholesaler* In th* South, both the referee*, *o alleged, th* game Southern distributor* for Pierce, Yale, hape^excepHiT tho^Mond^nnlng 0 when Snel > Brul Hudaon bicycle*, besides car- I Trust Company Takes Over Walter Cooper accidently let a fly boll I rylng a large line of our own nam* | _ hl A h plow n e*rved for flrit bast, a tree j p,ate *~ be * t on the market 1907 cata. for second, a hole in the ground tor logues sent to dealara on application. third, and a piece of paper for home B2 Department, Alexander-Elyea Co. I JJUUix. „ t Tho pteco of paper flew away In the oYTT r T» TYD A MW dffd fourth and th* game had to be called. CHILL) Hit AN K BLER; The haseballlst* ware to go in swim- MfVrHffiB TO T?r\rTrr» I Special to The Georgian. MOTHLRIS FINED Marietta, Ga, June ..-Announce- been engendered they might catch cold. Mr*. J, R. Steele, of 69 Smith BtrMt, ment Is mado of th# consolidation of JudgeBeck retorted that the Eatemup* whose toinlly^hae heen aided eev.raj Marietta Trust and Banking Com- New Savings Bank. could not catch anything. yard of tho distance traveled, and on a 1,000-pound ball, at fifteen mllea range, only 30 grain* per yard. The value of momentum is not sufficiently appre ciated by airship designer*, but on it turn* the solution of the problem. In my machine motor energy le conserved to tho utmost, by being directed only on productive lines, and not diverted and wasted a* in the strained efforts to keep an aeroplano afloat or maneuver a balloon in a moderate gale. My con struction will develop more net uplift from a 2-horse-powor motor than an aeroplane with 13-horse-power, and give five times the speed. I use specially constructed wheels that are adapted to develop a paddle current of 3 to 5 miles a minute and this energy Is conserved to the utmost and directed along lines that make it actlvety upbearing and at th* same time propels It at high speed. A current of this velocity, when con. fined within narrow limit*, ha* an ex plosive energy comparable to that of a charge of powder In a gun. A pressure of 2 to * pounds to the square Inch can be readily developed from it. "I have now gotten the mechanical, or operative, details In satisfactory shape, and, from the construction shown and described In my application for patent, and on which I have re ceived a favorable report, there should be no difficulty, In th* present state of constructive art. In building a machine that would develop ample bowers of maintaining Itself In the air, without the use of gas or *xt*tuled aeroplanes, and have a speed capacity of upward of 200 miles an hour. "But to insure safety and Increase carrying capacity, I have worked out the detalla of a plan for operating the machine captive, on a track, which would greatly extend Ita usefulness and value. -You can appreciate the advantages of an air propelled conveyance of this kind for the rapid dispatch of persona, malts and express matter, and especial ly for the quick, distribution of the dally papers and to parts not otherwise accessible to them. The expense of building the track would be compara tively trivial—Just a line of poles, dis posed In pairs, and tall and strong enough to contain two or more light tracks suspended on cables, cars being operated by electric motors or light ■as engines. A line of till* kind should be able to reduce the time from New York to Han Francisco to twenty-four hours or less." times bv charitable people, was flnsd, 125.75 Saturday morning by Recorder I petty and th* proposed Commercial I ord/riV^u^^L^r^^; 1 Bank ' ^ ,rh •«■** I within five days.' Among other things, tor * charter. Jame* T. Anderson and ^ton V We*cM7d* d of , Sf..°StMte Tf ^V 0 "' Been to come out on the porch drink-1 trolling interest In th# Marietta Trust Ing from a bottle of beer and that It be- and Banking Company* have sold the | came Intoxicated to aueh an sxtent R L ontro|lln , ln ur M t te Dr. J. D. Moioue. Crab Orchard Bsltxer Is handed you I A. M. Dobbs, Alban Gilbert, J. J. Dam In a bottle with the trade-mark, "A T „ „„„„„ . Woman Astride a Horse” on each pack-1 le1, J ' "• Hornes, E. O. Gilbert and flwlin.ti.. +/» p-nni-t. €!{„« age—do not be imposed upon with stuff others. Ordinance to Regulate OIZO that haa a similar founding name. Th „ , 1 All druggist* 10c and 25c. 1 lne Southern Dry Goods & Shoe Go. f (Incorporated) PIERCE'S BUSY DEPARTMENT STORE. 80 Miiretia Slrwf. OpposHi Potl Met. E. PIERCE, PrtsidtnL ISADORE WORMSER DIES IN NEW YORK New York, June 22.—Isadors Worm- ser, of th* famous tanking firm of I. ft 8. Warmasr, died In his bom* hero last night from old age. Mr. Wormssr waa presidential elector In 1812. llu was a member at the stock exchange. LAW FOB BAKERS of Loaves of Bread. , ’ (WATER GETS MUDDY; RESERVOIR CUT OUT The bank will be run under the char, ter of the Marietta Trust and Banking Company and will occupy the present quarters of tho Marietta Trust and Banking Company until their new room* In the Frtyer building are fitted up. This will leavs Marietta with two banka Instead of three. The new bank will Increase Its capi tal stock to 195,000. It Is understood the following will be the officers: Dr. It Is probable that an ordinance reg ulating the weight of loavea of bread will be Introduced jn council at the next session. ' I think one ought to be Introduced, slated Aldsrman A. J*_ Curtis Saturday | Darfc grown Drink Apt Tol Pv. MsioSI pnsIdMt; aTh. Qlibwt morning* ana I am • thinking seriously | * I nrasMant • (Iaapm u aasainna of doing It myself/' Other members of council are said to favor such an ordinance. The idea of the councilman Is that the same regu lations should be thrown around th* sale of bread that ar* now being *n forced In regard to tee. The report that the bakers are con' tsinplatlng making their loaves lighter Handsome Outing Suits for Men at $3.00 to $10.00 at the Slaughter Sale of Sum mer Clothing Saturday and Monday, at 62 W. Mitchell St. NASHVILLE" MAN RECEIVES PARDON Washington, June 52.—The sentence j of W. A. Lea, of Nashville, Teon., bank clerk, who got fire years for embea- slcment, has been commuted by Presi dent Roosevelt. REGIMENT TO CAMP AT HUNTSVILLE. Bo in Fashion Next Week. vice president; George H. Sessions, I cashier. I BAN ON OPIUM CLOSES ALL SHOPS Atlanta Is suffering now with dsrk| brown walsr. As was threatened by General Man- Shanghai, Juns 22.—Following on th* recent Imperial decree against the con. - - - - , _ . _ . ... . . sumption, sale or cultivation of opium, on account of the Increto* In th* pries sgsr Psrk Woodward, the water now I opium shops In tho native quarter of flour te responsible for th* proposed being pumped Into Ihe city Is practical. I o( (h , ctty w(re c i„ ic ,i today. Borne regulations. I ^rffPrmrenir has now ontv a tner trouble wss expected and precaution- p . lan n ’U?. , h A T * f T d, ;“ nC ! faSSS ”er7x°}Set “w n ater. The wafsT Unr measures had been taken, but which will prohibit tbs sale of loavea of I from the river Is being pumped direct [ there was no disturbance, bread below a certain weight and which into the coagulating basin and th* will make the retullqrs carry standard reservoir Is getting lower and lower scales, on which Cm customers can « T «X September It Is be- make the merchant weigh his loaves. I Ue ” d «“* *1? r **? rvo ! r . *mpty. Special to The Georgian. Anniston, Ala., June 22.—The Third J regiment of infantry. Including two J companies of Birmingham, Woodlawn | and North Alabama will go Into camp j July I7th, at Huntsville for ten days. Colonel MrElroy is still IU at hie reel- j dence hero and th* matters of arrang ing for the encampment trill be cared I for by Major D. II. Smith, Captain W. F. Johnston and Captain B. C. Pelham. Building 1* Sold. Tha building at 116 Peters street was sold by Mrs. Martha P. Htnkley. for merly Mrs. Martha P. Babb, to Joseph Loewus Thursday morning for 810,000. The lot Is on the northwest side of Peters street between Haynes and Mavrum streets., It has a fmntage of 24 I-l feet on Peters street. The situation 1s this; When the water goes into the reservoir a large part of the dirt and sediment settles In the bottom before It goes to th* coag ulating basin. As It te now tha water Have a Real Vacation and read The Georgian and I »^ u «h*;uc t h h %4S ,, Tap‘. n d?ty ?h°S, News every day while away. J* om° unt * practically to no nitration Sent everywhere 45 cents a \W:? h «oTh'. n ^S: “ onth ’ 1° cent ? a ;aw WSttSW Phone 4928 or write circula- keep the necessary supply up, tha water ,. , , , ~ must go through the cosgulattng basin tion department ixie Geor- I and the filtration plant so rapidly that gian and News. No trouble th wh*t u most urgently needed i* * to change address. I SR m * ln from lh * rtT,r ““ re “ r ' 4%- Interest Compounded, Allowed In Our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT On and After January 1,1907 TH E NEAL BANK E. H. THOENTON, President. W. F. MANBY, H. 0. CALDWELL, F. M. BERRY, Vice President Cashier. Ass't Coe hi «r.