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•OUNCILMAN SCHELL objects to secrecy eople Entitled to K n o w What W e jre Doing” ‘He Says A fter Star Chamber Session—Ruling Against Doctor Sawyer’s C laim —Oiling and Other Matters Before Council I/ ' ; , «rinzer” than usual was put of the City Council •^aing'and nt times- it looked tore w»s to be a serious split m -finks of tlie councilmen; who so J w n unanimous on practically t'i»olntion presented. £°.unc‘1' i ■PSnk 0. Schell had something to r warding \star chamber legisln- WhSch, he stated, lie would not «, '.He declared that “the pub- , mofoced tlie councilmen iu office dentitled to know what is going K L u * 1 admitting that the couu- TwMld like to see the veterans 1 Clril War who went forth, from -.County properly honored, iim.n- Schell took exception to -isolation:.sponsored by Mayor A. Barthirt, ..which declared, in sub- jfr»;thit the city stood ready to aid L#rwtter of erecting a'fitting mon- nt for tbe‘Civil War Veterans. jjr. Sthell Aroused Ur., Schell' .protested against going rtie ’ heads' of a coinmitte of coun- jii already appointed to look after e wtter for the city. Mayor Burk- rf'; expressed ysnrprise th a t. Mr. leil had not objected in conference lUen it was that the latter made remarks regarding secret ses- things had quieted down and s conncllmen'had expressed their re- ; for the Civil War veterans aud desire to so.a fitting memorial d,\ Councilman Schell called for 1 on oiling tlie streets. The reso- ioB.nnder which oiling was carried t -year’’was brought before the Swift and Orchard Streets tt' omitted.. These streets nrb to be this year. John Street was among the-thoroughfares to be 'this segson.- - | Councilman Schell called attention ifact .that the Auburn Day Nur- r is asking for the sum of $1,200 in • to complete the purchase of the alienee in Cottage Street now ’eased i i nursery. He stated that, if the fir Nursery goes out of existence, it 1 mean that more children will hare (be looked after in some other way. lile their' parents are working. No station was introduced on the sub- Reports Adversely | Corporation Couucil William S. El- m\o t whom was referred the-claim '■ealth H Officer Thomas O, Sawyer *’$00 (or extra services performed hnpg the epidemic of infan tile par- ia, this city in 191G, reported sely on the claim. A resolution (riding for paying Doctor Sawyer 1 by the preceding Common ?V Te*° former Mayor *'I. Koon and was brought before *l!re¥?t Council a few weeks .ago, Tf. Elder reported that he found tiere was no legal basis for pay- me sum mentioned and holds that j, Council exceeded its , ”5 , *n ordering such payment • report was received aud filed. °/ Com'cil spoke in ap- !l® °t ^e work performed for „° y , 5’1 Patrolman Charles Mao !';™“.‘ook his own life Sunday - white on dnty Mr. Schell for Fishing and Outing Thermos Bottles Pints and Quarts Mis ■ Jeweler ?3 Genesee Street You lant Potatoes ?°“ will need FORMALDEHYDE or X 0S1VE SUBUMATE tases that”1 a2?,lnst common VoutV?1 Cr°p- ^lALDEHYnrn§.^° sow oats help you .\^1 be needed I u. L° Oat Smut. Z* have Fruit Tri BLUE VITRol called attention to the long anti faith ful service by Mr. MacMaster and ex pressed regret that falling health had apparently caused the rash act which closed his earthly life. A resolution was adopted. Schell and Councilman u illmm B. Haeffner questioned the 1 permitting the erection of a 10,000 gallon oil tank near the old Ex- cnange^. Hotel in Garden Street. The matter was referred to City Manager John P. Jaeekel.. Permission to erect and operate the tank has been request ed by It. L. Caduni, who intends lo cating a business in Garden Street. The councilmen made it emphatic that, V-Z. * they 'visheri to safeguard Uie city from accident, they did not wish ’to throttle business. Plans for operating tho city quarry were discussed. The matter of motor izing the Auburn Fire Department did not come up for action. Doctor Sawyer’s Claim. The peport of City Attorney Elder r’l 101?,., ' lons standing claim of Health Officer Thomas C. Sawver fol lows: “T° the Honorable, the Council of the City of Auburn. Gentlemen: On September 21, 1916, the Com mon Council adopted, a resolution for the payment to Thomas 0. Sawyer health officer, of $300; the resolution recjted it was in 'partial re-imburse- ment of his financial loss caused by the conditions’ therein stated,—tbat is, an epidemic of infantile paralysis which prevailed in the summer of 1916. “This resolution was vetoed by the mayor, with a memorandum opinion, and re-passed over the mayor’s veto. “I am advised, payment was refused by the comptroller, nnd that no steps were ever taken by the health officer to enforce collection. The application now presented to the comptroller is based upon that action of the Council. “In examining such record as there is m this matter, I find that no claim, or petition, was ever formally present ed to the city for such re-imbursement, and that the resolution itself initiated tbe attempt to make this payment. At the time the health officer was a salaried officer of the city, receiving the compensation fixed by the Board., of Estimate and Control, and approved by tbe Council, the same as other officers “Ordinarily, no claim—if made- wili lie for additional compensation by an official whoso office carries with it a fixed salary. But in the case of the health officer, reference is made to a provision of the Public Health Law (Sec. 21), -which provides that when the services of the health officer are ‘extraordinary, by reason of infectious diseases or otherwise, tho Board of Health, (in our case the commissioner of health), ‘may in their discretion, allow him such further sum in addi tion to said fixed compensation as shall be equal to tho charges for consulta tion services in the locality, audited * * * * by the proper auditing board of a city of the third, class.’ “It is presumed that this furnished the basis for the original resolution and the present request, and also ex plains why no effort has ever been made to compel payment. “Falls Far Short.” “But the resolution in question falls far short of complying with this statutory exception to the general rule. There was no claim made upon the basis stated, that is, for a sum equal to ‘charges for consultation serv ices’_ whatever that may be; the com missioner of health had not exercised the discretion lodged, In him, and there is no pretense that anything was ever audited. In fact, the proceeding re sembles an attempt to make a disburse ment of public funds, not for salary, nor for a claim, but for re-imburse ment without showing a sufficient legal foundation, or following tho pro cedure prescribed by the Health Law. “.Regrettable as it may be that he houkl havo sustained the loss siated, I cannot sec any legal basis for pay ment under the resolution, and think the Council exceeded its authority in ordering the additional amount paid in the manner it did. “ Administrations have been criti cized by the comptroller’s office in making payments and disbursements like this for which there are no budget appropriations, and this matter would probably come in under tho class of payments which have been criticized. I am aware the matter was extraordi nary, but it is tho theory of the law, and our character, that in all extra ordinary matters a hearing be given the taxpayer before making an appro priation, or ordering a payment “I cannot see, therefore, how this Council can direct further compliance with the resolution in question.” FERRIS HEADS SCHOOL BOARD AGAIN Reelected to Board and Re elected President—Two Meet ings a Month System Dropped Miss Julia O .Ferris was re-e'lected president of the Board of Education at the annual meeting of the Board held Tuesday afternoon The meeting, which was attended by Commissioners Ferris, Hamilton, Painter, Nichols,, Thtachor and Rouse, was brief, last ing about 30 minutes. The election of Miss Ferris to head the Board for an other year was unanimous. She ex pressed her great pleasure at being •honored oncoi more by her associates ou the Board. The president, through her deep in terest in tho school work, lias become one of the most popular members of the Board and slid has proved her fit ness for the post Besides the election of the president the most important business was a switch to the old system of meetings once a month. During tlie past year meetings have been held the first and third Tuesdays, ibut it was thought by the commissioners that the business can foe taken care of at one session cjach month. There was some oppo&i- tieu to tlie new schedule but when the vote was taken those in favor of monthly sessions were in the rbajority, and henceforth the school board will meet on th<j first Tuesday each ■month.' A telegram was received by Henry D. Hervey, superintendent of schools, Tuesday nftemocta stating that Gov ernor Smith had signed the Lockwood- ponohuQ Bill providing for an increase in teachers’ salary in New York State. The bill was signed Monday night. The new salary schedule which is be ing prepared will provide the increases called for under the new law. On behalf of the promoters of the homo talent play, “Wialk This Way, Please,” which is co be presented Mon day, May 24, at the Auditorium under the auspices of the Ambulance Aid So ciety, Superintendent Hervey present ed a request that 40 children from •three different schools be allowed to remain after school hours to rehearse for the play. Kiddies Cannot Take Pari'. Some of the commissioners favored the idea 'because tho presentation of the entertainment is a charitable ven ture, but it was pointed out that tlie children would be kept late on a night preceding a school day, which was not advisable. It was explained that when Mrs. Alyce Brewer Siemans, who is producing the play, and Miss Isabelle McCarthy, head of the Am bulance Aid Society, understood tlie ■situation they did not press their re quest, so it was denied. A communication from Miss Flor ence Webster, teachor in the High School was read, asking* that she bo granted permission to absent herself from school Friday with no deduction hi salary. As Miss Webster is a dele gate from Cayuga County Chapter of •tho American Red Cross to a Red Cross Conference to be held in New Xorlc City the request was granted. A communication from E. C. Wixom, principal of the High School, requesting the Board to make a ruling ccticeming a trip the school track team is planning was read. It stated that •the members of tha track team want to take part in a meet which is to be held Friday at Sherrill and Mr. Wixom felt as long as the boys would have to be absent from school part of a day, tlie Board should act 011 tho matter. Tha commissioners voted that the boys be allowed to make the trip. Shortly before 5 o’clock the meeting was adjourned and the Board will meet at S o'clock Thursday evening to act on the school budget for the com ing year. STEAMER FREIGHT SERVICE Finger Lakes to Link With Barge Canal, Navigation Company Formed — Passenger Boats, Too HOME SERVICE APPEAL IN CITY 17 10 21 Salvation Army Will Raise Funds to Clear Off Debt on New Workingmen’s Hotel Here WATER TO FILTERS FLOW INTO BY JULY 1 - t -4 Initial steps toward the formation of a $100,000 corporation under the name of the Iroquois Navigation Com pany to operate a fleet of five passen ger and freight steamers on Cayuga and Seneca Lakes were taken yester day at a meeting of a hundred repre-' sentative business and professional men from various Finger Lakes com munities, at a meeting and luncheon held in the Gould Hotel, Seneca Falls. The project is one of the first of real size to develop as the result of the boom of the Finger Lakes region as a tourist and summer resort center. Tentative plans call for two large passenger and freight steamers to op erate on Seneca Lake, each of 125 foot length with capacity for from 500 to 700 passengers and 50 to 100 tons of freight. A similar steamer is planned for Cayuga Lake. In addition it is ex pected a steamer will ply the Cayuga and Seneca Canal connecting the two lakes and a tow boat to handle scows in making connections with the. Erio Canal at Syracuse will complete the proposed fleet Representatives from some of the largest manufacturing concerns in the Finger Lakes region voiced their solid backing of the project nnd repeatedly it was brought out that the present inability of railroads to handle ship ments has brought new possibilities for water navigation in this section. Linked W ith Canal. The main point emphasized by speakers was the fact that, contrary to conditions in the okl days when Finger Lakes boats had to depend wholly on short hauls, the opening of the Barge Canal will afford straight waterways from communities on the lakes di.-ect to New York and other shipping points. Wlaldo C. Morse, promoter of the enterprise, declared that arrange ments have boen tentatively made with the Inland Marine Corporation, which is the big corporation building up a fleet of Barge Canal steamers, to co-operate in a systom that would provide connection with boats going east or west on the Barge Canal. Chambers of commerce in certain communities directly affected by the boat service will at once name local committees to take up the matter of selecting directors of the organiza tion. The scores present j’csterday were the guests of the Citizens’ Club of Seneca Fnlls nnd the largest out-of- town delegation present was from Ithaca. The Cornell city sent along score of chamber members, as well as all its chamber directors, chamber residents and mayor of the city. They “Pay the Debt\ will be the slogan of tho Salvation Army in Auburn when tho Home 'Service Appeal is made dur ing the ten days from May IT to 2T, in an effort to clear off the debt still un paid^ on tho new Workingmen’s Hotel in North 'Street, established In Auburn for the man without a place to live, but whose employment keeps him in the Auburn factories, or other places of employment. Tho Salvxation Army\lias abandoned the tambourine as a means of financing its work, but still will continue this year the policy adopted last year ot making a short campaign during the spring, to secure funds for the work of the Army for the entire year. The Auburn campaign will be cen tralized ou the effort to raise (lie debt now resting on this hotel which was started on the strength of the 1010 ap peal. The beginning last year was so successful that the hotel is now being hurried to completion so that it can be used for the homeless workingman who wants a cheap home while he endeav ors to find a permanent home. The plans for the Home Service ap peal will be hurried to completion, with some well known Auburn business man in charge, for it will be a home campaign by homo people, for money for use at homo in Auburn Plans will include the early preparation of a bud get which will give exactly tho sums to bo raised, and tho purpose for which they are asked. Tho aptje.il will in clude the year’s expenses for the work ingman’s hotel, and army work iu Au burn, as well as clearing the debt. Home Service Appeal describes the manner in which the year’s campaign will handle all throughout tlie country. Syracuse for instance, will use its funds for a working girl’s hotel, and other cities will do similar work, the funds raised by the appeal going large ly to the home work iu the localities where funds aro asked. Auburn Will Begin to Get Purified Supply on That Date—Board to Complete Filtration Plant, Total Cost Not to Exceed $250,000- Engineer Ackerman May Leave Initiation Dcgnte. Handenburgh Lodge, No. 74S, I. O. O. F., last evening worked tho initia tory degree on a class of 11 candi dates. The lodge will work the first degree, known as tlie degree of friend ship, nuxt Tuesday cyan ing. NOTICE. Dance at Lakeside tonight Webb’s Jazz Band. Admission 75c plus tax. Special car from city at 8 :30.—Adv. Dance at Lakeside tonight. Webb’s Jazz Band. Admission 75c plus tax. Special car from city at S :30.—Adv. with water transportation, they be lieved their goods would reach their destinations far quicker than by pres ent rail service and at chcaper rates. “I can’t see why this new company can’t do a tremendous business if, as Mr. Morse says, it gets connections with New York City by water.” said Mr. Pomeroy. ‘‘In the old days ship- WILL OBSERVE ASCENSION DAY ees, you ^RDEAUX MIXTURE _______ Package V nere m conven- NOTIOE, Special meeting Auburn Council, 207, Knights of Columbus, tonight at 7:30 to take action on tho death of Bro. Michael O’Brien.—Adv. Thursday, the 13th of May, is the 40th day after Easter and therefore is ‘'Ascension Day,” a church feast kept from very early times in memory of ■the day 1,920 years ago when Jesus Christ withdrew His visible presence from the world. On account of Rector Houser’s ill- neiss there will be but me service in S t Peter’s Church on Ascension Day. At 10:30 o’clock tbe Rev. Ralph Bray of St John's Church will celebrate the Holy Communion. The singing will' be led by the St Cecelia choir. Immedi ately after the service there will be a box luncheon in the Parish House which all the women of the churtih are expected to attend. At 2:30 da in formal meeting will be held, followed by an address by Mrs. Robert Dey of Syracuse on women’s work for the church and community. The offering at the service will be devoted to the untied thank offering from the women of St Peter’s for tho training and sup port of women missionaries at home and abroad. The luncheon and meeting are under tlie auspices of -the Woman’s League of Ohurch Service and every society nrriwr? in -T Pers llncl to get the! rown barges and with hnnn»r v f.r l / o od then hire them towed to New York.” with banners reading: “Ithaca Cham- — ---- ------ „ , bcr of Commerce, Finger Lakes re gion.” Survey Has Been Made. At the conference it wns revealed' that a careful survey of the lakes, early rail connections, amount of ship ping and dock facilities has been quiet ly made. The survey was conducted by Expert George T. Ellis, who. like his ancestors, has naigated the Kenue- beck, has piloted the Rockaway ex cursion boats near Boston, the best equipped excursion boats of their kind! dwelt upon by C. A Barker of Ithaca in the country and during the World division passenger agent of the Lehigh Similar views were expressed by Frank Cavenaugh, of the Westcott Valve Company of Seneca Falls; W. C. Damon, president of the Waterloo Woolen Company; E. G. Could of Seneca Falls. Passenger Service. The matter was also taken up from the standpoint of passenger service and, possibilities for entertaining the Influx of tourists expected as a result of the boom of (he Finger Lakes Region. Tho passenger aspect was War was captain of one of Uncle Sam’s big trans-Atlantic convoys. He also served on. a cruiser and saw ser vice throughout the war. Expert Ellis’ survey of the Finger Lakes Region as well as all state navigable waters, shows that 73% per cent, of the state’s population lies within two miles of waterways; 77 per > cent, within five miles of waterways;' 82 per cent, within 10 miles and 87 per cent, within 20 miles. Steamers with a seven foot draught can be used on the two largest Finger Lakes. It was his contention, and that of Mr. Morse, that the fuel used in water transportation tod/iy costs just _ one-tenth of that used for rail trans-1 g portation of a like amount of freight. I s Emphasizing tlie low freight rates pos^ j p sible, E. C. Tramain, formerly super- §[ Valley Railroad, who declared his road would gladly co-operate in map ping out schedules, and Harry R, Ma lone of Auburn, publicity director of the Finger Lakes Association, and, Judge C. H. Blood of Ithaca. Filtered water for Auburn will be a fact on July 1. This announcement made today following an all-afternoon conference yesterday, in which mem bers of the Water Board, the city at torney, the Water Department super intendent and, engineer, nnd Allen Hazen of Hazen & Whipple, New York consulting engineers, took part. The filtration plant will not lie quite complete by July 1, it was stated to day, but it will bo in shape to furnish filtered water by that date and before tho summer is over will be finished in every detail. The entire cost of the plant, which is calculated to answer the city’s requirements for tlie next thirty or forty years, will not exceed, it has been estimated, $250,000 or thereabouts. The original contract provided, for an outlay of .$200,000. Soaring costs of labor aud materials practically put tho contractors out, of business eventually; but tho work was far enough along before the contractors quit so that the city can now go ahead and complete the plant with n mini mum outlay. About ?220,000 already has been spent, it was figured, and ap proximately $30,000 additional prob ably will be needed to complete the work. Foes of filtration had insisted, when tho fight was on hero that the esti mates made by the Water Board were entirely too low and that a plant suit able to Auburn’s needs could not be installed short of half a million dol lars. Actcd in Time. It is figured that owing to a fortu nate turn in affairs and the fact that tho contractors stuck to their job as long as they did, the city will save per haps $100,000 on tho plant, which if built at present prices would cost at least $350,000. When the contract was let, before the war, labor was com puted at $1.75 a day. Now labor com mands $4 a day. Materials have soared in like proportion, until the cost today probably would bring the filtration plant cost if built now con siderably above the estimated $350,000. Following yesterday’s confcrence, which closed, at 6 o’clock last evening, tlie Water Board announced its inten tion to go ahead with the work at once and that July 1 would see filtered water for Auburn. Tlie reason work has been delayed was because City At torney W. S. Elder held the city could not legally take over the construction until formal notification had been filed, with the Bunting Company of Flush Ing, L. I., and with the company’s bondsmen. This was formally done, and tho time expired yesterday. Con sequently tlie Water Board can now take up tho work and push it to com pletion, without danger of legal com plications. Whet’aer Chief Engineer ,T. W. Ackerman will continue in charge of the department and of tlie filtration plant construction is open to some doubt Mr. Ackerman has received overtures from the Water Board of Watertown, N. Y., to become chief en- giner there, nt a handsome advance I 11 salary. It was reported today that the City Council, at its oxecutive ses sion last night, decided to extend to Enginer Ackerman overtures to re main at an advanco in salary. But. this was stated to bo only till the end of the year, and whether Mr. Acker man would consider the offer wp.s not known. It was understood that his proposition at Watertown covers a period of years, at a very large ad vanco In salary. Mr. Ackerman said he had no com ment to make when asked today | whether he might go to Watertown) next Monday morning for a conference with \fliciais there. Should Engineer Ackerman take up the Watertown position it probably be ou June 1, and in that event the con sulting engineers, Hazen & Whipple of Now York, probably would be engaged as engineers in direct charge of the completion of die filtration plant Engineer Allen Hazen. who joined in the consultation yesterday , went over tho entire ground with the Auburn ollicials aud pronouuced tho work done thus far satisfactory. He approved tl.e plans for completing tho work, nnd said filtered water is possible by tho first of July. Mr. Hazen stands high in tho engi neering world. Ho was one of five en gineers selected by the Taft adminis tration ou Tanama Canal lock con struction, and ho lias figured in many of the foremost public works of large citics all over the country. Mr. Hazen is now supervising con struction work at Providence, R. I , Montreal aud San Francisco. Asked regarding tho .effect of tho high cost of construction on work throughout tlie country, Mi;. Hazen said it does not seem ' to bo deterring municipalities from undertaking large public works. Within the last few weeks tho firm of Ilazen & Whipple has been instructed to draw plans for a filtration plait at Saginaw, Mich., to cost $5,600,00. This project was approved In a referendum to the people of Saginaw. It Is said to bo tho largest filtration contract con sidered in recent years. Should Superintendent Ackerman withdraw from his Auburn position, Mr. Hazen would be in direct charge of tlie work of completing the Auburn filtration plant. Others May Resign Considerable uneasiness was de clared today to exist iu the AVnter De partment owing to uncertainty for tite future. George EL Moke, assistant bookkeeper at tho water office in Ex change Street, has resigned. It wns rumored today that Mr. Moke’s resig nation might be followed by others, be sides that of Mr. Ackerman. Eugenio Wj-ant. Weds. Mrs. Cora B. Strickland of 52 1-2 Mary Street and Eugene Wyant, a well knokn employe o ftlie McIntosh & Sey mour Corporation, wero married at? 5 o'clock Saturday afternoon by Ren’. John Edwin Price, pastor of the First Llnivereallst Church. The wedding took placo at tlie residence of Mr. Price, 1 Campbell Place. Mr, and Mrs. Wyant will mako their homo tit 04 Wall Street [Hand SappUo-The] Supolioffoilct^oup Ideal forToiiet and Bath FOR CLEANING SILVER Oso CROSMAN’S SILVER CREAM 35c the Jar B . P . S . works in Ithaca, j g tor women and girls in the parish has some part in them. Ascension Day is observed by the Catholic churches as a holy day aind masses will be said tomorrow. At St. John’s Church. Ascension Day, the feast kept esach year by the church in commemoration of the Lord’s ascension, will be ob served tomorrow at St. John’s Episco pal Church with a celebration of the Holy Communion at 10 o'clock and with evening services nt 7.30. A meet- *t.ig of tho vestry will follow the even ing service. intendent of public _____ , declared that it costs only one-third as much to move a ton of freight by water as by rail. “The railroads today are swamped with shipping,\ said Mr. Morse, \and would be glad to be relieved, of the more bulky freight by boat service.” Ithaca to Build Dock. That Ithaca Is one of Uie staunchest backers of the project was indicated by action of the Board of Directors of the Ithaca Chamber of Commerce at a special meeting called Monday after noon. It was then voted to defray ex penses of building a dock at Ithaca and, even to pay $500 for a dock at Taugbannoek Falls, several miles down tho lake. “We in Ithaca stand ready to do all things possible to bring back those old- time ships to the blui> waters of Cay uga,” said E. C. Stewart, mayor of Ithaca. It was stated that, as soon as tho company is formed, boats could be put into operation within two weeks. “I feel the necessity of real service to tho people,” said Mr. Morse. “We could get along with one boat, but that would be a public nuisance instead of a public service.” W. D. Pomeroy, vice president of tho Goulds Manufacturing Company of Seneca Falls, spoke on the project from the standpoint of tho large manu facturer and was followed b.v other 1 factory magnates who declared that. B E S T P A I N T S O L O P a in t D e m o n s t r a t i o n MAY 13th, 14th, 15th W e w i l l h a v e t w o f a c t o r y r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s a t o u r s t o r e o n t h o s e d a y s w h o w i l l b e p l e a s e d t o g o o v e r y o u r p a i n t t r o u b l e s w i t h y o u a n d g i v e y o u e x p e r t i n f o r m a t i o n a n d a d v i s e a s w e l l a s d e m o n s t r a t e t o y o u w h a t c a n b e d o n e w i t h B . P . S . P a i n t s a n d s p e c i a l t i e s . P. M. H e rron H d w . Go. I 34 and 36 Genesee St. A u b u r n , N . Y . 1 rf,iiiiM,M:i'i,i.i-i.iii!Mii m iw n iim iiiciuncM ^ ^ iiiiiiiiiiiiii . ; ;! |'|:,, iiiimh imii'i;;n m«mm iiiti . run uimtimi iiiiiii;iiiii!Ei:iiiiin;tf,.>»l