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VOL. 3-No. 13. General Business Directory. #ORT COVINGTON. N. Y., THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1887. UCCAU CARDS. Archibald, licOonaiGk, Dados & fl&irchison, Selected Poetry% TajE FARMER. )nee on a time he poed to plough * ltd rt*> at dawn to milk tbe coach, nd drive with merry won* and laugh Mtait Brindle and her oaugh. ceipt. Now, Mrs. Mulvaoey, you sign this. Got* i>on and iiiicT* ~ .-BouldT-VfnicrjNtrtllr. Mngmre; Fve got;« pinaio. I aftiway* carry a ih 'Tis the w»y of a men of */ 1 * f*eneil won't do, 1 * »»td the carrier\; Katy hid her blushing face in her hands, sank into a chair, and sobbed in mortified angwah. Her father tapped his pipe on the arm of bis throne, u Fwin thot Ftneegan b'y nends yo another re^isther {either/' he said, (All U»e sufctfoioed reading waiter, aitboaxh of aninteresting eharaoter, waa crowded; oat of last weefc*» Issue.j APPALLING BAlLRQAD CA* LAMITY. OVER OJC* HUNDRED LIVES LOST &8B . IKHJBLS PHAT NUMBER IKJURSD. The most fearf ally fatal accident in the history of American railways took place about one o'clock on Thursday*! morning August 11th. on the Toledo, Feorift & -Western road. The scene of tile disaster was about three miles e*»t of Chatsworth, III. At this point there was a trestle over a marsh. An excursion train of two engines and sixteen coaches and sleepers was bear- ing a party 4 of , over 900 en route to Niagara Falls.* The train was nearly two heart behind time and was run- ning at the rate of nearly a mile a minute. As the trestle came into view the engineer of the first locomo- tive saw that it was on fire. It was too late te do anything, however, and thsnext moment the train v*as into owa and Missouri have escaped with omparatively light loss, aa have the more- northern states. The seven corn surplus states stand as follows:. Ohio, 12; Indiana. 64? Illinois, $5; Iowa, 0; Missouri, 80; Kansas, 60 j^e- braska7?57 The tonditton of sfotng wheat, re* orted very low last month from rav» ages of chinch bugs, is not improved Q the August returns, but has fallen ff very slightly, the general average PRICE FIVE CENTS. NOTE AND COMMENT. ~~~\~ BABNUM says*that he will pay $2ft r 00 for the l^ake Cfaamplata* st* serpent, dead or alive—»*ad the\ ooly ~~ \ ~~ * wnaJii hit I f- 1 Building, 181 SL Jan Sir**, Montreal. W ILL ATTEND THE CfOURTS iff the Dlstrlet* of B^auharoois, Bedford &ud St. Hfrari nthe. > J. ,S. ARCHIBALD, Q.C,,D.aL.; f>. McCoxx- icx, B.C.L.; C, A. DLCLCW, B.A..B.C.L., H. XJ. MCRCHISOK, B.C.1*. M ATT. C. RANSOM, an4 Oouasidior at Law, Fort, tk>vin« ton, N. ¥, MEDICAL CARPS- J AMBS MACPlti, PHYSICIAX AND SCiKJEON. Resi<*e*we aud office, Win- chester &ou*e, Fort Coviugtou^ N. Y. HAIR DRESSIER. B EtfJ AM IN FitENOH, UARBBB AND Hair Dresser, Water street, Fort Caving iutou, N.r. MIS CE L L A HEOUS. S. £, GROCERIES, FRUIT, PROVISIONS Produce, JLc, Ac- Center €hkteaugay <fc Water Sts. COVXNOTON, N.3T. Then for the frig* he'd fill the trnnith i tlie market he would 6e ougu : bis injure would braise her bongb a fence-post oea rough. nd then he ? d switch her with & bough nd teach her better anybough, [e planted wheat to make the doagh, Which, tn a drought, was hard to grough. n winter, when his work was through, K little sporting he would dough: He'd wander with his gun and sbooffh tod aim a£ crows tie couldn'tkiwogh. he'd hunt along the eloagh 'or birds that do not live there nough, nd shot a nea-gtm or a «ough Whfcfrhe with Joy would pfoodly stongh. From swampland, watere«l by a lough. He'd make good pasture for his stoogh ly laying here and there a Rough While perspiration wet bis brough. .Sometimes a snake that shed Its slough Would scare him no he'd run and plough Till stuck knee-deep within a slough He'd yell until ue raised a rough. Bat uouga work makes the farmer oattgh, nd eareiess bough much people scougb, He lives on boarder*, rough and tough Whough voagh ibeigh dough note*t e»ougb. Selected Miscellany. A Registered Letter. WATCHMAKEE, AtG.BL Nickeiwn's Drugstore FT. COV IVtTOV, I. f. Fine Watches a Specialty. O O. A L. C. Pi VISION N AND AFTEH SUNDAY, JUNE>, 1887, and uatil will teava Brushtoa as follows'; i's a registered letter for Katy Mulvaney ! ' The letter-carrier shouted it on the op of Brady's big tenement, near Tompkins Square. The tenant* of the house caught up the try and pataed it up toward the roof, Tbe children in .he street echoed it: \ Ksty Mulvaeey!\ There WAS nearly a million children OD the block, at a rough under-es ti- nt ate, and from among them came six Katy Malvaneys, three of them with oungcr Mnlvaneys in their arms. But ' • Not the roles of the office ssy this has to be aisled in ink.\ • An* fWare will I get the Ink T de- manded Mr.. Mataioc/. dryiag the aa- u*v» from her eves with her apron rolled over her arm. \ Mutvao, ry s no poet, wad aa inkstand under his ana.\ • • ' * • Danno,\ said the postman; \ hasn't me of tbese ladies got > bottle of iak •$•*. * Sorra m bottle of iak in tbo bouse,** aid Mr Mtgaire solemnly, gating out pea the audience of children ia ;*he tre«*. u barrtn'my own/\ •• Well, fetch that the* \—the post- »n Was growing impatient. « I had i t whin I had me siventy-eighfc.\ said Mr. M squire, with ndiminn-bed nolemftity; *o I sold it ot wid me chattels the mortgage waa i-.'' • •-• . . • ^ ••• The postman glared at Mr. Maguire or half a minute. \But I kep' ate piotie,\ Mr. Ma- a ire added, as be drew bard on. his oipe ar.d leaned against the waft sad ooked back into the clorirem past. \ Pencil won't do I\ said the carrier; now you've got to rustle around and get seme ink. I can't stay here all lay, and its ink or no letter.\ And ie leaned up against the w»ll opposite Mr. Maguire and looked determined. Tbe crowd of sympathizers resolved itself iate a Committee of Ways and Means, and Me*d«u*esFiunegaa and O'Toole were • made a sub-committe with power to borrow the needful fluid. They set out bravely; but their quest was io vaio. The German tailor over * ^ in*** of tbe way was the fire. The first eogine~wWe*rrieff over by its impetus and remained on the track. The next locomotive broke through the trestle weakened by h fire. The nearest coaches ugust returns of last ye«r % Dakota has made a alight gain and stands * lighest in condition. The average for ViscoDsin is 73; Minnesota, 74; owa, 72; Nebraska, 17; Dakota, 88. n the extreme east and on the Pacific oast the condition of spring wheat is igh. There is no report of winter wheat ;he present month as it is too early to ;et results of threshing. In the oats crop there is no change, part of the breadth was harvested at the last report. Condition aver- ages 85.6, which indicates a crop (lightly under average. ThS barley orQp promises to yield rather better than was expected last lonth. The eastern, product averages tigher condition, but is reduced lightly In the west. The average is 16.2, indicating neatly an average ield. — __—— the wuy d«Hne<J tt> the ground that the Irish trade which eaa*e Iji» pot com m ennurate with the Q0IXO EAST. 7.93 A-M.—EXPKES8, for stations on O A D. ' C.B.B., connecting at Rnnses Point with G. V.R.K. for St. Alb*a4, BurUugton.Portland and all points ea«t, arriving at Boston at 7.15 P.M. ; Portland V.00 r.x Connecting at Mooer* Junction with Du A H- C. Co. for P>*ttnbatK8, arrive at 10.18 A.M. 9.49 P.M.—MAIt. stopptog at ill statlrmg on O. * L. C R.Reconnecting at Eonses Point with sleeping ear train for points on JD.&H. C. Go.'« R.R. Arriving at Troy 2.3S A-M. Albany 2.55 A.ir., New York 8.00 A. M. At Si. A bans with sleeping car via Central Vt. 1LIL for Tr«y, A lb *?.^ « nd New York, ar- rive 8.09 A.M. ; also all polote east, Arrive at Boston 7.45; SprlSf field 7.06 A.K. Ogdensburg and Cherobnsco local train— Gtoea east 10.45, aad west 4.S6 p.m. \\ r r OOfSfl WB8T. ' * /' 1. 10.02 A.K.—MAIL, stopping *t all st»Uon« Arrive at Ogdensburg 11.00 A.K. Cormect- lrfg at Norwood with R.,W.4O.R.R.,1B4Of. den*burg with Gt^-B. tor ajl point* west, and with St. L. 4*p: Railway. f .94 P. M—6xPKKSSi for stattoos onO.AL . C. R.R. Arrive at Morwood 11.47 P.M., Og- densbarg 1245 A. 1C Connecting with G. T. Railway for all points w«*t. p&F Tickets to aft points e^at and west on sale at Ticket Offlc«, AW. CUMMINGB, J. W. HOBVRT, Get*. F»«. Agt. J. C. JAM, i>n^\of—them was' old enough for a registered letter. . Mrs. Mulvaney dwelt on the top Sour; but at the moment che was io he basement getting water for the week's wash. Thence she emerged wiping her rosy arm*, molded and tint- ed like twin Westphalia hams, oo ner broad apron. • Fwat's to the fore?\ she 'txjuired 98 she caught the reverberations o** * ghter'siiame. ' There'H a registered letter for Katy Halvaoey/* said the good-natured carrier. »FwatV ttatr asked Mrs. Mul- prietor of the nAx^door beer saloon looked ufwn the request for the M of hw ink«tv>d as an iuCeadiary de- liverance, oovcrkig It dees 4onepiraey ^tn^ him^f a B d his ^ M h td it bi b ^tn^ him^f a B d his ^Dpety, M he retreated into bis b»ok room, »der cover of Hungarian ,«i&oity. The French lady who did up lace curtains In the who it was Mrs. b the yielded npon it. The second day coach telescoped the first the whole length just above tbe seats, and only four people in that car escaped alive. The IQSS of life in the second and other coaches and the chair cars WAS also serious. The total number killed is at least 118, with 50 seriously and j>erhap« fatally wounded, and folly 200 others more or less injured. None of the sleeping ears were wrecked. This seems to be usually the C*-HA in railway accidents, either because these ears are buflt stronger or Ufa on tbe rear of the train. 7 The cause of the accident borning trestle. There ia a serious difference of opinion as to how the fire originated. Sparks, fsom a loco- motive are held responsible for it by some. By others the startling State Prudent. Raw*. Agen Agent. R01E, #*TE«TOW» Time Table tn tff** M*V IK*. 1887. fllRAINS LKAVEltfA8SENA SPBMGJ X for points East, goath ao4 West. JS'fC 1 M »\^e«D«K»lbJanc. 8.44 a.m. V.I9 W.Wi. Og4en4burg f 8.00 a-m.; PWla- delphi*. «.W a»m.; Clayton, 10.2* a.m. Utica, i.4€ p,m. { Albany, 5.0© P-tn. New York, 9.00 p.m.; arrives Watertown 10.05 a.m.; Rome, 1.45 p.m.; Oswego, i.40 p-no. ; Rochester. U0p.m.; Buflklo, 12.1* a. ot. O Ofl D I I arrlvei De&alb Jane 5,06 O.OU r.lW. p. m . j Ogdeosbarj^ 8.10. j p. m.;Utlca, l«.0«p.in.; Albany, 2.00 a. na, ; New YQrk, 7.00 a.m; Boston, ».J6a, XXL.; arrive* * Watertown, 6.55 p, m. ; Home, 9.50 p.m.; Syracuse, 10.10 p. m.; Otweeo, t.^i p.m. j ^e»re Otwego, 7.00 a.m.; arrive Rochester. 10.05 a.m.; eo»p. Bridge, 1.05 p. n».; Iftagara I 1» p.m.; Boffalo; 8.OS p.ax. BLBEPING CAR8 are run between OoBKMsar/ita and New YORK leaviac ugdens- burg 4.» p. m., daity (Sundays t4> Arrive Mew York 7.00 a>a» paaaeogen Ing MA**ena Springs 3,45 >m, o*tt Bleep|*g Car at DeKaJb Juno, without leav Ing the train. 8pae» can be tmmrnd by applrjof IQ the <3ompany's AgenU. Poril»« table*, lufbrraatlan ao< through tickets to point* East, West and S©utb apply (a O, A* atowiU, S»pofc Ticket Ageat»Mi N. Y. ,H. ic BurrroN, TTBRTELD, Q*n>l O«n*l Pase*«f*r Agt. PA8- '• A registeredV letter,'* repealed the carrier, wearily. u> Ti«om4iie it bees, t Mrs. aey,\ volunteered Mr. Maguire, tbe superannuated licensed vender, who was smoking his clay pipe in the hall- way ; \ 'tis the govenaiot, an* the judigheary. an 1 the police, an' the dis- pensary om^hles as sen's them things: sure, I had wan wanst, whin I forgot to pay me license.\ \ O, miliia aiurthur V* wailed Mrs. Mulvaney, with startling suddenuesft i( an fwat have I done to have disgrace frown upon me, an* me the mother of eleven?** Her apron went over her beid. by way of sackcloth, tad her choked lamentations came from under it: VO, Katy, tjhe mother I've been to ye,-an'ye to_bring «h*me oa tbe name of Mulvaney! Sure, no wan would never have thought it, ne'er lime! 'Tis a hi along o* thim picnics, ao' the foreign Dutehmio from Italy tnfestio' the warrd, eo it is! Fwal have ye done—f*vat have ye done! An ne'er a Mulvaney was iver io ooort, forbye th' ould mon, and him oa: whin he clared out the saloon oa the Square, which 'twas btiia' be was, aa o a New-Year's, like a jcintlemau should, and the boss came down himpelf »n bailed him out, and give security | Aa a daughter of mint to be brought the likes of thia-a register'tetther— O, M«ry, M»VO ttt| M By this time there was a crowd sympathising women about Mrs.; Mai vanty. trying to console hot w tefts Uen different brogue*. Mrs. MoGarr^ hto, who was a trifle under 100 old, and who keeaed at all tbt o] wakes in the ward, took tbe ktj» 41 8ure she do not ooodersiand dear soul, she do not, Tis *s tat govermint dots yc, dear. Tit swppeny—'tis a dipkHay, more Cbterup, there's a darlittl f she #ipls|ned to the postman, **Ka the good girl, se sat It, an* 'tis into factory at Broome itreet she workt» t* 1 brings hooie her wtM» rtfttUr, am 1 aim the wtrrd ttld tfio her, ovrit 1 the young »in It shlAher W, ta' proud her motht* aaouid be of ' aa»e, forshebtfn't 4*rint-«- 1 \&$? Inltrrutted the glc.« \ wbo'» tfoiof to fiaii (or that Wtter t with a ball of bluemg half dissolved in a stone-china uuoer, which yielded a |oid near eooaKh to ink to satisfy the requirements oLfne govenuae&t of the United States. And when the poor, patient postman, with a tooth-pick which he happened to have in his pocket, had written '•$aty Muivanef, by Bonora Mul> vaney (her mark),\ tad wheo Jlrt. Mulvaoey had traced h^r idea of a oi-osa in the proper platse, he marched off on his weary way. to be «oWed, probably, at Sution Z\ fir the delay caused by his oomplyiiig with tat most idio4H) reg»Ution ever lamed by the United States post-office. , Mrs. Mulvaney and a tdoet deputs- tionfrom tha crowd of eympathiiers took the letter up into the Mulvaaey apartment and bid it on the table. Then they eat around tad looked at '11 be this Toe buckwheat area appears 4»4>e^ tactically the same as last year, and verges about 03 in condition. There is a great reduction in pota- toes sinoe July I in the condition, al- most entirely the result of drought. There is no material decline on the Atlantic coast, but tbe injury is se- vere in tbe west. The loss during the month, as reported, is fully 20 per cent, of the prospective crop. Fruit.— %he fruit crop is very poor. There will be few full ripe appl< yields outside of New England and New York. There will be a partial rop in Michigan. Jn the Ohio rive: (states ^&e harvest will be nearly t failure. Hay.—The hay crop is also greatly roduced in the west. The general av- **geis§0. that.the lucky eapters of thi» lively • uriosity «hon,W £ra?Wi»stQ&3j—by methods best ksown to themsoIveM, nd immediately notify, by telegraph, *of. Ward of Hocbestei, N. Y., who ould be on hand at once asd attend his snakeship—if snake he be. A 80M1WHAT eurious ease has come before the pengion bureau, that of a m who after enlisting in the Union rmey, wan captured and sent to An-- rsonville prison. Offered Via freedom he would joio^he eonfederate army, e yielded' and enlisted under the rebel flag, but deserted as soon as possible ami again joined the Union ssak«. The pension bureau undoubtedly did Tight in rejecting this man's application or a pension. Ir mi^ht have opened he door to a good many deserters and renegader*. A YEBMONT exchange remarks: It would once have been incredible that in the higVtooed city of Boston such an event could have taken place as occurred there the other night Almost the. entire city government, including the mayor, attended a slug* glng match, which wound up with a presentation of an $8000 belt to the \ champion.\ Tbe presentation Speech was made by an altjerman, and one of the leading bruisers »nt in the box with tbe mayor. But sine* the \hub\ became a hibernian hive, they have learned to expect these things.\ THE Brockville, Out, Times of test week said: «* The township of Cardinal, below tfea town of Pretcott, is in a grea^ state of excitei^ent now OTOr a search whfeh is being raent is made tfcat the trestle was fired and the train wVeked for the purpose A THRIBLK DBOUGHT The Chicago Journal, in on for King, who is wanted at Malone, N. Y., en H charge of murder. King is supposed to be hiding in the vicinity just now, and the reward of $2,500 for his capture has brought country bsiliffa and local detectives hotly upon the trail. The alleged criminal has been seen several times this last eon pie of ^Bj well armed and is of robbery. It thati hardly possible could be so lost to* the or- it. <» It's a proud girrl Katy '1 day. 9 * said Mrs. McOarrahao; i ^iplojny will be in \I'doo't rightly ktow,\ venttred Mrs. Mulvaney, with a sense of tiuwr- eas inferiority; \fwat that'll * ~ diplomy V* » *T» fwat th«y jrits when a job o' tachin' in the pooblis replied MM,\* Inodly. bat y A gret rise from the fact ry'tis,'to be rare!\ said Mra, jkulf.ney, with bated breath. ' > It was 7 o'clock wh« H«ty MmW vanet got home ftatt tht \ftctVy With rosy cheek* and wondering hlatk eyes, she cam* itto te ttrck f^lbe dinary feeling -which animates breast of the human race, but i% nevertheless true that some hmnan hyenas did rob the dead and dying, but they may hare been only of s party of thieves such aa might natur- ally aoeompasy so large an excursion. The passengers in the sleepers ap- pear to have done beroio work to pre- vent the wreck from burning. The ears were repeatedly on fire. There was not a drop of water to fight the fire. Earth was* the only weapon with which the fire could be fought, sad so the attempt was made to smother il out. There was no pick or shovel U dig it up, no baskets or barrows to carry it, tad so desperate wert they that they dug their nails off in some cases to get earth to stay the progress of the fiancee. Finally the victory was won tad the fire was put out. TWO HUKDRKD KILUtD. Further advices say the number o killed will meb 300. The wounded, tt far as can be ascertained, will num- ber 150. Tfce bridge through which the ca*rs want was a small one. It had beet partially burned, which had weakened ft Ten coaches bad either gone through to the bed of the stream or were piled up in a promiscuous heap arostwise and lengthwise of the track. AUGUST CROP REPORT. Tat August crop report, juat issued from tfa* dtptrtment of agriculture at Wtshington, rWokbes the follflwii iafprmation aegarding the different staple products of the tountry. Foi corn, we art told, the protpsdt nonth ago was for a very heavy cro[ aad a rate of vield about the arerage. lit condition io til the sUtes of the Atltatit states is BOW wBiapatrtd and the drought situation in Illinois,Iudiana, Iowa and the southern portions Miehigaa and Wisconsin, ssys that the visitation to which these territories have for fourteen months .been sabj is oae to which a parralled cannot be found*within the recollectioo of.the oidest living . inhabitant. So arid waste is there around Chicago that fo many miles in some directions aot mr of grass is visible, a»d in : exbteoee of green vegetation painfully minute. Ia meny places the fields are tbsolntely and hopelessly burned out. The public parks are devastated with dryaess. Grass Itad* have probably auf^red most. The des- tructioo is aot anifbna, though where crops were planted late in the tbe owaers will probably not realiae die cost of planting. Where the seed was pat into the ground early enough, a toajewhat teas disastrous result may be hoped for, Of necessary food f» live stock there will be aa appalling dearth, and thus the prtoe of meat, butter, cheese tad other farm products may be expected to rise to ai altogether unprecedented height. During the past fourteen months ooly 3J.28 melees of rain have fallea i the neighborhood of Chicago, supposed to be hiding in the swamps of that township. It is thought that he will be unable to escape. He has already paid secret visits to farm houses and compelled the inmates to give him JoeiPH W. B&XXKL, the $ew York btnker, hat done a very handsome thing in presenting the Grant cottage oa Mount McGregor to the Grand Army of flit Republic. It is fitting that the spot where their great com maafer breathed hia last il^ouJd be in the possession of his eoaiiades, * ^ • Step your horses health —fgr this purpose there is nothing any better thin ghepard'a Coqditioo Powders. They eleanse the blood tkm. and give pew Hf exchange remarks that it is uodonbtedly true th^f many railroad accidents are caused by the cheap an4 defective watches oarrfed by employee who have the responsibility of starting and running trains. Recognizing this fact, tho Chicajto snd Northwestern railroad has made t rule that all superintendents, tnin despatctiprt, gpQ, ductort, engineers, |re»an and yari masters in its en ploy shall have their watches examined once ia every three moeths It also orders that the watches earned by pueh employee shall bo at feast of a standard equal to tbe ** fifteen jewel\ timepiece, tod that they shall contain regulstoss to guard against variation from heat tad told, sad also aati-inagBetie shields. We believe that it would be economy in the ead for railrosd eomptsies to furnish their responsible employes with reliable watches. This is doaft by B«gfi&a companies, with the most satisfiwtory results. One sekiom hears of aa aooidoofott an Ehglish road due to, difFereaoe io time between tjto F«tcto of employes, Ir it asserted that the foreign trade of the United States for the fitcal year Utoly eu4e4 was larger than thai for t^e year before in all cjiroodona. ] a oU»«r words, we txported mofe domestic, uwohandiao and importea more fbreiga hd Ijaoladinf the %mt of ema, il of very high promise. In T Tennesaw the condition has detuned trill I th tl oor& re jtaterUUy. In the oentral cora te- \ however, ia the ttfieyt of tt* tad the Missouri, where t of tae crop » grown tad ^sl supply it procured, a\ rtd^ction hu ttken . atsmtde the uUiontl T ilitUtd of 97, s* itat month. __ Ksatts Kebm toottMontnt toutlura border, ani ei»ergy to horsea, old OF young. Try them, they tost but |& cento ~a package, tad are soli} every where. Sold In Fort Covin«t)o Centre by Heary 4 Ordwty, gtneral mcrchtnts. Tat beat medioal aathoritiet aok aowkdnt the vtfet of Ayer • Pills, tac preecfifee thew with with the utiao* ooa^doaae, tt theawstoffsctutl remed lot dittttet otustd by 4eraagtinttttt thtttotMwh, livor v aod bowelt. If you dttue to possess t betatifa take Aver s 8twaatriUt, I o snd puriies the Wood, tad rettom btgiohee tad pia^let, mtk^ur the tkb smooth wtd oW, tad giriag it t Wigat tad hetltby f fbuftd that the totals of imports tad expoitt, a»reaftad»t» aad mooey, b«i- •noe witaie »bout $«40,<K)0, tat eztest being to the aide of the imports. T^e tatioaaoditt aocouRt ikti shows thai we teat tbroad prodaets, goods tad wares valued tt tbottt f 24,000,900 more thta (he imported trtieW. Aa tatijtlt of tat expert tttouat aVuwa that about teventy4lv% par teal warn Hl^ arodoot^ io^udi^ dairy d twenty per ft iJdi N petraitam. A rtvltw of fee Input thovt thtt *e*riy **% i tf ittwmilofalt titta\> in IftOtt |ft' te MiOnatl tjf