Newspaper Page Text
~i . -
our;
h PfflW
DEPARTMENT |
Sb anpplied with ail thn for doing
all kinds of Job and Book work in Fitat-
CLu»a Style. Prompt _v and at Bea-
HunaUa Prices.
WEDDING CARDS,
VISITING CARDS,
BUSINESS CARDS,
BALL CARDS,
POSTERS,
HANDBILLS,
PROGRAMMES,
STATEMENTS,
LETTER HEADINGS,
DODGERS,
PAMPHLETS,
ETC. ETC.. ETC.
FIRST CLASS—Grocers Keep It
<
hi '
s a * (t z /Vy ft«IJ
W nd
z\ a
:*h 'A I?**
glt« th?
1 *2 ■ g t. *• *< *
£a * o •< ©m £ 8
I fa s h <
55m
Wore washed with
ELECTRIC LIGHT SOAP
Without Knbbinfr.
First Class Housekeepers use it.
Ist. Waahtnv clothes in the usual
manner i*» decidedly, hard work; it
wear* you out and the clothe* too.
2d. Try a better plan and invent
flvc cent* in a bar of ELECTRIC
LHiliT SOAP. Naves Time, Labor,
Money, Fuel and I'lolhe*. line a* di*
rectcd on the wrapper of each bar.
OHDERN SOLICITED
ATKINS SOAP CO.
INDIANAPOLIS. IND.
“THE GIRL I LEFT BEHIND ME? 5
COPYRIGHTED HI? n
■■ ' '- ■ *'■ 7'--
I- '
Illustrated by the mo of a Buggy mudo by T. T. Hiydoek, which Is not only the Leading
Buggy in this pi.-iure, butTFME
llaydnek's ftatetv King Bolt and Fifth Wheal. A-k von dealer 're tho T. 'S’.
MAYnoOK MFGO'Y. with the Hnydock Safety K!::g Boil an<l Ihiih VioaL
i.fte is insecure riding over any tuber.
(Thl» plotuN will be farulkhdO on a terse caul, rrlnmi in «li-vint »ty! to csyvne who wi’’ nsres to frame I’.)
KKCLosr. otauf.i
C..rSe«<> fhr CatnluKuv su’d ’
WhaieaaU Price I tet. Cor. Ksa end Twelfth Ste., €IXCI’-SATI. 0.
ACEtfTS WANTED WRWR WTI PAVR KfIXEI KO ITVi:3TXE'’T Pf» PI'.OPITIIILi
■W. G-. ,
IsdZericlerk, Cs>xxxx. y
8OU& MANTI FACTUUEII,
8. H, AIDE & CD'S., Solid Cmfort Bwkterds ud Spindls Wagons, singli aid doable seated.
Riding qualitiee unsurpassed. No jar to tho feet. Durable and stylish. Priees reainn
table. Hbipuicnu mn#!/ or by carload to all parte of the United States.
Hea|M>riHtbln Agent wanted in every town. Send for Price List aud descriptive Catalogue,
rorreapoadi-neo oarncetly nolit-lted. A
vN. B. Every person acting as Agent for our Wagons, will have his name with adverttee
nient of Wagons advertiavd >u tbu leading paper of the county or town where Agent residea,
gratia for six luoulha.
The Brown Cotton Gin Co.,
NEW LONDON, Conn.
Manufacturers of tho Old
Reliable Brown Cottou Gins.
Feeders, and Condenser*. All
>' * i the very latest improv.-nn nl<
two brush Ix-lt.s. steel bearings.
a' improvisl roll box. patent wbip-
yKT> l v r - » xt>:i strong brush \
perfected Feeder, enl-iged <hv '.
priiof Condenser.
Strong, durable at d --pap'.'
JJL in eo’istrietion. Gin-, i ,>t : tin-.
.; light, and clean-- ?V<<- -vol n<
«?' *’ ?. I . feetiy.
•' &' '' ~ ’’rice
List.
». M. P.MiRY. irsK. T. H. PARKS. ASecy.
PARRY’S PATENT COTTON & CORN PLANTER.
TWO PERFZCT MACHINES IN ONE. ?° W!| an >’ de *
The Only Suceeskfid and Perfect Planter. sired quantity
made to Plant both Cvl-
urn aud Corn. to 3 bushels to
NObPklNtsS, I * FFAi d <vi /-u.
v. ve.'iwvi u athii Ckjk I They are < heap com-
NOTCOMILU AI W ■ Ll P*rvd with other Plaa-
Any body can manage ''/r-x u-ft r
aiui ruu it. N’T | ‘
Ptaats CattM S«H aa U bu y »“til you
Comas from sto Gia. iF_ kJA-ow. this Machine.
Addnw— C SPRING CART CO., *
RUSHVILLE, I ND.
HAYWARD QREMADE
Best Hand Grenade Fire Extinguisher ever produced.
Reliable, simple, economical; will not freeze or bent.
Resists the action of all climates, will not deteriorate
with age. Easily broken, can be need by any ond. The
liquid contained in it is absolutely harmless to flesh and
fabric. Everything it touches becomes lira-proof, for
whatever it falls upon will not bum. We do not claim
to extinguish conflagrations or to usurp the place occu
pied by the Fire Depsrtnients, but we empliatieally hold
that no incipient lire can possibly live where
I J® I
I s Mp ar- f ?
s W■ B i
the HAYWARD HAXD Cr.EMABSS are used as directed,
and thus conflr.grat'ons or disastrous fires are prevented.
Send to us for full and one of our new
pamphlets containing proofs of the wonderful efficiency
of our Grenades in extinguishing actual tires- No Farm
House, Bam, Private Residence. Hotel. Public build
ings, or Manufactory shou id be without their protection.
We want live, nrUre, reliable meu lor agents in the United
States. Address
HATWAHD I'AND GRENADE CO.,
407—109 Broadway, New York.
bl aißPfijrs of the IL - Hkin tad Hones.—Nervous Debility,
hnpfttenry, Crjickj A-GBoerham, Syphi'llic aiV
Herenrial Affections. dnenhfic treatment; Bale and sur?
runi'di- «. ZWornifcio* fronted. Cail or write for list v
]ue«:ion;0o bo r. raw red by those desiring treatment by mail.
<»Vr -»n . ‘uffrrsr.'’fron ITuntiir* should Head their
and learn nouiHhint? to their Advantage* It knot n trnss.Jl
Address Pr. V. I-. Lail ARCE. Pres’t and Pbfsiclan In Charge
Ventral Mod. f;Burf. Institute. 020 toenst at, St. Louis. 2K*
a^,- ~ 7»- r. Established 30
ATKIWS’ ~ GUARANTEED
band. FINEST
jaßßt and most
CIRCULAR TIRBIRTV
.... SILVER Oro STEEL B &
_ made.
CROSS CUT I WB? Write to us for Prices
I I and Catalogues.
SAWS. MlW.Fjik.i i.ii.Jli.L.lllll Mention this Paper.
E. C. ATKINS & CO., Indianapolis, Ind.
BUDGET OF FUN.
Y
HUMOROUS SKETCHES FROM
VARIOUS SOURCES.
The Neighbor’s ‘Wish—-A Woinan’a
Courage—They Always Bite —
Some Pangent Scotch Re
tort&a-The Prairie Chicken.
The other evening at a concert a long
haired pianist was accompanying his per
formance at the instrument with epilep-
I tic contortions. An old lady was carried
awav with admiration.
“Ah, how grand it is,” she cried,
“you hear the noise of the cannon!. The
city is taken by-assault —they fight in the
streets—the soldiers are pillaging the
houses I”
“Alas!” sighed a neighbor, “if they
would only carry away the piano,too!” —
i French Fun. \
A Woman’s Courage.
“War is a terrible thing. The first
' fight I was in was the battle of Shiloh. I
tell you, boys, my heart was in my mouth
i when the rebels commenced firing onus,”
; said old Tommy Hayfield to visiting
neighbors.
“You were a coward, Tom,” remarked
Mrs. Hayfield. “It would doubtless have
frightened me if I had been a soldier in
that battle; but it wouldn’t have scared
;me till my heart jumped into my
j mouth.”
j “Oh, I don’t doubt it.” retorted the old
: man. “You are a woman, and a woman
! never lets her heart get in her mouth.”
“Humph!” ejaculated the old lady, “I
i suppose you think that the reason a
; woman never gets her heart in her mouth
! is because she hasn't any heart?”
“No, my dear,” replied the old war
rior, between whiffs of tobacco smoke,
“it’s because if her heart ww> in her
mouth she couldn’t talk.”
They Always Bite.
A good-looking, well-behaved stranger
had been stopping in a country town in
this State for three or four days, when
one day, as a dozen men were hanging
around the hotel doors, a humble youth
with white eyebrows and lowered head
passed along, leading a calf. Both
traveled as if it were an every day thing,
but no one thought of this until after
wards.
“Boy!” called the stranger from the
hotel steps, “what do you ask for that
calf?”
“Won't sell him.”
“How much does he weigh?’*
“Nigh upon IL-) pounds.”
“It can’t be. Gentlemen, I’d like to
wager that 1 can come nearer that calf's
weight than any of you.”
A dozen citizens got up and walked
around the calf and squinted their eyes
and mentally estimated. Then a sort of
pool wai formed to scoop the stranger,
and $25 was contributed. There were
eleven guesses to his one, and they ranged
from 147 to 158 pounds. He guessed
and when the anim«! was placed on the
scales the Stranger was only two ounces
short. As he raked in the pot and the
boy and the calf passed on, a man drove
up in a buggy and called out:
“This ’ere game has been played all
over the county, and it's time to move on
somebody! Where’s the villain?”
“Here I am,” answered the stranger.
“1 arrest you! Get in*o. the buggy.”
His satchel was ready and he got in,
and it was a whole day before the
villagers found out that the man with
the buggy was a confederate employed to
do that very thing.— Detroit Free Press.
Punjreut Scotch Retorts.
Scotchmen are fond of an argument,
and delight to pick flaws in an opponent's
logic. Two blacksmnkr. were once con
versing «s to which was the first trade in
the world. Oile insisted that it must
have been gardening, aud quoted, from
Genesis, “Adam was put into the
gat'd -.i of Eden to dress it, and to keen
it.”
“Ay, John,” retorted the other, who
had stood up for his own trade; but whae
made the spades?”
The reply recalls an old story illustra
tive of the pride of a Highlander in his
dan. A MaePherson at.d a MacDonald
wore disputing as to which of their re
spective clans was the oldest. The Mac
pherson, waxing emphatic in assertion,
said:
“Why, mon. a Macpherson went ashore
with Noah from the ark!”
“Well, th it may be; but he found a
MacDonald there to tak him by the
hand!”
The Rev. Mr. Campbell, of Selkirk,
I was much annoyed by the uirty water
’ flowing from a brewery w near the manse.
I He sjioke to the brewer,’ a Mr. Haldane,
! about the nuisance, saying it was con
i trary to certain acts t f parliament.
“Acts of parliament!” exclaimed the
I brewer. “Acts of parliament, indeed!
I It would be more like your profession if
1 you were expounding the Acts of the
' Apostles.”
n.e minister, no: unfrequently, when
reproving an offender against good
m orals, drew forth a repartee which
: nmused him by its witty evasion of his
censure. Among th ■ parishioners of the
Rev. Dr. Campiivll. of l ife, was Janet,
an old woman who spun yarn for a liv-
• lag.
One evening, on returning from the
market-town, where sh,- had sold her
yarn, and* drank too much whisky, Janet
encountered her minister.
“Oh, Janet.’ said he, “I see yoti’n*
rather re.ling.”
“Be u ay, sir,” she promptly retorted,
“ye kea wo canna aye be spinning.”
The Prairie Chicken.
The prairie chicken is th: leading
game bird inhabiting :lii< n gi-m. It is
. iomwhat smaller than the ordinary do-
• m'“.tie hen found > ratch.ng in the gar
den ami flie> faster when you are shoot
ing ;;t U. B<» e '..s to have acquired the
fly habit early in youth and it hangs on.
After a hunter has shot $3 worth of am
munition into the limitless vpid from
whence the prairie chicken recently flew
he is seldom adverse to stating, for pub
lication if necessary, that in his opinion
io fly education has Uen far from ne
glected.
Bering this season of the year the
pniiie chicken is engaged in looking the
ground over and chanting its low, capti
t vatiug melody b?forv breakfast. As soon
as the weather will permit, the hen will
w lxlrm from the whirl of social life
\agd lay seventeen ashes-of-gum-shce cob
pred eggs in a nest in the grass. Seldom
awaiting to be asked she then takes her
seat and for the space of three almanac
weeks seems to be lost in meditation.
Probably one of the most pleasing
sights in naivre is a female prairie hen
thus buried in thought and speculating
as to how she will probably feel after
waiting three weeks for breakfast.
At th? end of the time seventeen
young prairie chickens come out of the
shells and commence to fly while the hen
gives up her sedentary life and swallows
a young and unexperienced grasshop
per.
August 15th the local paper announces
in the first editorial that “prairie chick
ens are now ripe.” This means that the
minions of the law will not talk about
arresting you if you shoot one on or after
that date. The prairie chicken is now r
much wilder than before. As soon as
the sixty-dollar bird dog sits down vio
lently on the short and stunted rose bush
the chicken flics up. The experienced
hunter at this point shoots and brings
down the bird. The one who isn’t quite
so seriously charged with experience
blazes away and kills the dog. Also he
frequently arranges to have his
gun explode and blow off three of his
fingers.
I Prairie chicken, properly cooked, is
: much sought after by the epicure. Also
Iby the man who is pretty hungry. As a
humble representative of the latter class
we have frequently overpowered large
and satisfactory quantities of cooked
prairie hen with the best of results.
The thoughtful student of current
j events has probably noticed that this is
: a far from perfect hie. There are draw
backs even to prairie chicken mastica
-1 tion. There is the bird shot which it
I brings on to the table concealed about its
i person. AVheh coming down on to a
; piece of prairie ch cken spare-rib with
, both feet, figuratively speaking, it is
very uneomfortab’e to have a shot shove
a tooth into your jaw bone about an inch
and a half. ’ After a protracted engage
ment with roast prai’i? chicken seasoned
with No. 6 shot we have had oar teeth
become so over-loaded with lead that
our under jaw has hung down like an old
boot sole ripped off clear back to the
heel. — Estelline (Dak.) Belli
Couldn’t be Caught Any More.
“No, you can’t come any o' your
j dodges on me,” said a grangerfied passen
i ger,as the. man with the big, jingling ring
I full of ’bus checks accosted him with the
I inquiry if he was going any further than
Chicago. “You can’t play me for a sucker
I tell you. I’ve had my eye-teeth cut, I
have.’ Why, I’ve had three lightning
reds put up in my place, everyone of
i which cost mo seven prices. I’ve been
; stuck on Bohemian oats. Russian oats,
i Australian oats, hullcss barley, gold dust
: wheat, Seneca chief wheat, red line
i wheat, and all o’ them things. The last
man who caught me on this scheme said
;he represented a big company, and that
! he was only allowed to sell ten bushels to
one farmer, at $lO per bushel. Binieby
( he cainc around and said he'd sell me fifty
, bushels on the sly for cash, providin’ I'd
j sign an agreement not to tell on him. He
! said he’d takin’ a likin’ to me, an’ would
l just as soon see me get ricß as his own
’ father. 11 ok the fifty bushels, paid him
‘ SSOO, and signed the agreement.
: Three mouths later I found that
agreement in the bank a prom
i issory note for SSOO more
I which I had to pay. I've been caught
1 on worthless fruit trees an’ fertilizers, an’
j other claptraps by the dozen. One time
1 ordered a new revised edition Bible.
' an’ the blank order which I signed turned
jup a promissory note for SIOO. ’Bout a
i rear ago a stranger stopped at my house
just before' dinner tim?. Os course I
' asked him to sit up and eat with us. He
said ho was an agent for the Bible society,
and was not pcirn’ite,] to cat meals with
out payin' for ’em, but would be pleased
to sit up if I would take pay. Os course
I agreed, an’ you just ought to have
heard that man pray. His was a prayer
from way back, an’ my appetite nearly
| made me*sick before he got through ask
ing the b’ess'm’. After dinner ho asked
I me to sign a receipt which he could show
i the Bible society as a voucher that
!he had paid for the meal. Three
I months later that receipt turned up in
| bank as a note for $65. I had to pay it.
i Last summer I built a new barn, and, of
■ course, I wanted lightning rods on it.
; A man came a’ong with his wagon and I
i dickered with him for a contract. He
’ praised the barn, and said he wanted to
I do a good job in my neighborhood, scein’
jas I was a prominent man an’ my
! recommend would be valuable to
! him in his business, an’ drew up
plans for an elaborate system
of rods. which he agreed to
j put up for $lO. It was dirt cheap, and
so I signed his contract. After the work
was done I paid him the $lO, s’posedfhat
| was the end on't. But it wasn’t. The
j $lO was simply for putting up the rods.
For the rods themselves I had to pay
S2BO. I’ve paid rovalties on patented
farm machinery which fellows would
come along hnd find in my possession,
and. claiming that by using the machines
; 1 had infringed on their juitents. threat
ened to prosecute me if I didn't settle
up. I’ve bought a half dozen receipts
j for the manufacture of fertilizers, and as
i many sure cures for the bog cholera.
I’ve been taken in on freight receipts,
lotteries, card games, insurance frauds,
patent right venders, widders, bogus
ministers, spurious charity agents an’ all
sorts o’ skin games, but I've got my eyes
open at last, stranger.
“I’m goin* farther than Chicago, but
of you think you kin git a half-dollar out
o’ me for that little piece o' pasteboard
J and that brass check, yer barking up
j the wrong tree. Do you take me for a
man who*has had no experience in the
affairs o’ this world F’— Chicago Herald.
The Summer Programme.
Tue time is at hand
[ When all in the land
Reflect on a summer vacation;
When snow won't abide,
I They hunt up a guide
For seaei le resort information.
Clorinda has now,
I To circle her brow,
j A charmingly clever new bonnet:
j Quite stvlish and neat,
I And dashingly sweet.
5V ith feathers and birds upon it.
! She'll stroll on the sand.
And hear the brass band,
• Thrvu-jh August, July and September;
i And flirt will she then,
, With a «?ore of young men.
Not one of whose names she'll remembar! I
i TtdßiU
JOHNSON ANODYNE
CURES —Diphtheria, Croun, Asthma, Bronchitii, NeuralgSa, Rlipumatism, Bleeding at the Dungs,
PARSONS’"" PILLS
• These pills were a wonderful discovery. No others like them in the world. Wifi positively cure or
relieve all manner of disease. The information around each box is worth ten times the post of a box of
HENS LAYss
AVERy
xSw 'sSW SWIFT
SURE
Ws SIMPLE
I SILENT
11 STRONG
yVi’LJ’ High Arm,
Hew Meshcmhoal Principles
ar 2 Botary lAaccments, Auto
matic, Direct and Perfect Ac
tier, Cylinder Shuttle,
ting Heedile, Positive Feed, ITo
Springs, Few Parts, Minimum
Weight, DTo Friction, I'To Moise,
Ho ' Wear, Mo Fatigue, Mo
■ Pantru/rw,” Cdpauiy Unlim
.’.od, Always in Order, Richly
Ornamented, /Tiekelplated, and
Oiecs Perfect Satisfaction.
Send for Circulars.
—Address—
AVERY MACHINE CO. ;
812 Broadway, New York.
EXTRA LICHT DRAFT
o Mule Sulky Plow
TJ&e Bluegrass.
BREAK DEEB
AND DOUBLE YOUR CROP/
Thelifth', (Ire.ip.lißhf-rnnningri.uEOJiAßHSriy
r.x ynow. which anybody can innnago without in
struction, does all the work of tho expensivoand
cumbrous machines, cud reduces plowing to an
aniusenjcut. Cunuotbc set wrong or gol.cn outuf
cider. Can bo driven by anybody, a boy, a girl, or a
cripple. Bottoms 8, 10 or 15 inch cut for two
mules. Bottoms 14 or Ifi inch cut for three
Junies. Ask your merchant to order one on
trial if he does not have it in ttoc'j. WriisforDt).
scriptive Circular aud Prices, , ....
THOS. MEKLE & CO., M’s rs cf Plows & CultivatoK
LOVISVILLE, K¥.
LSFFEL’S
IMPROVED
IRRM
inUIW Exigixxe.
/ lO 111 i- '*
f w? Wil
ALL THE PARTS MADE OF
j MALLEABLE & WEOUGHT IP.OH;
Ns Shrinking, Swelling or Warping.
i TnE LntHTFST Rmnw, Easiest
. Ry.Gvn.4TEt> Wj\o Exoise in tho WORLD. The
BEST is CHEAPEST. Send for Circulars to the
SPRINGFIELD MACHINE CO.
- Springfield, Ohio.
Highest Honor
J FBf’M TH«
J World's Exposition
LLIUUIIIIUII COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
Kentucky University, Lexington, Ky.
, Students can begin a:iy week-day during the year.
‘ No vacation. Time to oompteto tbo rail B«Une»s
! Coarse cks'- wret». Average total cqst, nieladißg T«i
tiM>. Set al Books, sod Board In a tsaulj. t9o. Telocraphy,
Phonography m>4 Type Writing specialties. Literary
Course tree. Ladies re-eiret. Ores 0000 Successful
Graduates. Over repils last year frsuu Ju to years el
j see, ftoio H States, tnstrarlios is fracMeakr sod iadnel-iafly
, imparted tw IS leaeleers. SneeUl coarse fer Teaebers aad Ksd
nossXea. University XHplotaa i-r-sMUed toil* nates.
This teaatifsl city i> t-nteu for lu HeaiUif-Aaets and »a:iety, and
I lieu leading raifrta&i.
I TV- Text-Book eoich nveired the Mgfcesr aa-ard st the
World’s Exposition So i“ Estenaiw, Practical, and Ca<a
; tMThetniie rrvm of Bwslnea* Kdueatlon. is need only at this
! College. U Is the eiiear**t tollene w<th the hi|QH.i eadwta-
SMat, aid raersatera wtww i« hasiaeas tn its ins erada
■tes. >"o» jtacsJsrs a» t f-H »4dre--s is« Pre.-Mre’.
SMITH. Lexington. Ky.
irfex iIM
H «
\ MM
RsjgSSi /
SWbh
Tile Old Rf Hrible nnd Rest One Spoon
KSaklii"; Powder ??lade.
(Ouc Teaspoonful to n quart of Flour.)
On the ninrl.-'t for 10 yen;-s and recommended
by prominent physicians as healthful.
Warranted to be Free from Araonia
and nil injurinw.e iiivreiHenta and to give j>er
fvet vcitisj'iction.
Isk yci’r for a fres sample for trial.
MADK ONLY BY
CH&RM IWIFWIRINS GO., *
, ALie. man«if;v.'ti:iv-rs • . TnbleSauce, J«fa-
Les, l'reserv»-s, M'lrVe Syrims, Flavor
ing Extracts, etc., etc.
&r. NFO.
BEWARE
OF IMITATIONS.
XStarPasteX
WnEW
The Housekeeper’s Friend
ASK FOB,
AND TAKE NO OTHER.
Sold by the Grocery Trade
6iLYS2O.~
PHIL.MIA
SINGER
Is the BEST BUILT,
rINEST FINISHED,
EASIEST RUNNING
SINGER MACHINE ever offered the public.
Th<> aU> >ve ent represents the most popular style for
the iieopie whh-h we offer yon for the very low nriett
of Remember, we. do not a.-k you to ) ny until you
have seen the machine. After having ixiitniued it,
il it h not all we represent, return I: to us at onr
expense. Consult your ir.tor-3*,s end order R f vuce, <»•
<iet>d l->r cip ulur- :|iH l-ytTtf.oi.l.ils. Addrcsi
CHAKLES A. WOOD & CO., "
N.> 17 N. Tenth St., Philadelphia, Pit.
Favorite Carriage Co.,
CINCINNATI, OHIO,
WBOLXBALE MANUyACTUKEnS OF ITWE
BUGGIES, SURREYS,
PHAETONS, CARRIAGES.
Best in the -world at the price. Ask your
dealer for them. If not handled in your
place, write us direct. Will send Cata
logue and Lithographs.
SCALE Oft
■ S TOS WACOM SCALE, S4O. 3 TOK. CS3.
i’fon SWO. Beam Hnx £»»«-luflef2,
300 OTHER SIZES, t-ekured >'Ki< E l,tS I EBgg
FORGES, TOOLS. &c.
BfST TOIiCE BAM FOB LIMHT WItUK, 01
40 lb. Anvil and Kitof Toola. »1<
i arman s»w> Joe •»<! «u>ney Mur odd Jab».
Blower®. Andi*. Vice* * Other ArttcW
HEADS
uid ail Biticus COKPLIUMTS are relieved by taking
WRIGHTS INDIAH VEGETABLE PILLS
tsnlT Vsritiil:: "3 C:'r : -y. 2Zz. AH LruzzisE,
5