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Show Cross Stitch Charm For Lovely Linens if 6T ' I aa-r W r . . as VOU needn't envy your friend's 1 lovely linens ... for just see what the simple cross-stitch can do! The crocheting ia beginner-easy, beginner-easy, too! Pattern 880 rtaa transfer of a 6', bv 31, two i'h by 13'j, eiKtit 21a-lnch motlfa; crochet directions. Du to an unusually larse demand and current conditions, slightly more time la required In filling orders fur a (ew of the most popular pattern. To obtain this pattern tend 20 cents In coin to: Srwlnf Circle Needlecraft Dept. Boi SL'17 San Francisco 8. Calif. Encloie 30 cents for Pattern. Name- Addresa. More Commuters More than 23, billion people rode on the trolley coaches, itreet cart and gas buses of the nation last year, an Increase of 73 per cent above prewar levels. Bake In Skin In cooking potatoes the most food value ts preserved by baking or boiling boil-ing In the skin to preserve the maximum max-imum vitamin and mineral content. Largest Library The library ot congress ia the largest and most costly library building in the world. The original cost was nearly $7,000,000. , Spiders Nol Insects Spiders are not insects. They belong be-long to the Arachnids family, which la composed of mites and scorpions. Beware Coughs from ccBHfioa colds That Hang On . . ... Creomulsian relieves nmm !v be. cause it goes right to the sea of the trouble to helrj lown anri mul perm laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender. Inflamed In-flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell yon bottle of Creomulfilon with the understanding un-derstanding you must like the way It Quickly allays the cough or you axe to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coushs. Chest Colds. Bronchitis" Don'i lei the embarrassing, ajtoniiing tortures of simple piles threaten your ob or rob you of your fun when you're at play. 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But kidoen aaawtiaiaa laf la tack- wk aot act as Natata tntandaa-(ail ts ra mart Unpamxa taaa, U rtslnd, any paawa the aystsaa and apaaa taa waoai aody auehiBary. 8yapteaa u as aafttai batkaeaa, paniatsnt kaadaeia. attacka at dininaaa, fsttiat st aighaa, awili(, puffissaa asdar las eyas a Isstiai et aanrooa aiiaty and loaa ot psa and atnofta, Otbar aifaa ol aidaajr sr bladdst aMa-ardsr aMa-ardsr era aoaMtlaMs aoraias, scaatj at tea fisquest ariaattoa. Taara aaould b a doaat tkal p ran pa treatment la via taaa aealace. Use Desm'a Piila, Dara'a Iut beta winning aaw Irteada lo aura taaa (arty years, Tbsy have a aatioa-wida rasvtatioa. Ar isairai naaX by trataftd paopls taa -wmnM-y "w. m . an attfiworf mm 5H .t83o ES frlrelelSl l 0!ye0li': ' . Lack of 'Political Sense9 Leads Wallace to Oblivion By BAUKIIAGE fVetuj Analytt and Commentator, WNU Service, 1616 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON. Unless some strange shift in the tide of national affairs takes place between the time these lines are written and when they appear ap-pear in print, the name that once bristled in the headlines, made the Paris peace conference shud- & f der and com- it'3 , pletely confounded confound-ed the Truman administration will be filed under un-der "W" and forgotten for-gotten by most Baukhage people who aren't subscribers to the New Republic. I refer to the name Henry Agar Wallace. I have talked with a great many men who knew Wallace well. Most of them who liked him still like him. But many who supported him in the past follow him no longer. One of them said to me: "Henry Wallace has been drowned at last In a sea of ideas. He has gone down for the third time and there is nobody with s lifeline handy." han-dy." I think of two other men, one an experienced government official, a trained politician; another an ardent New Dealer who happens to be equipped with a mathematical mind sharp as a steel trap each of these men followed Henry Wallace a long way. But each man at one point in his career suddenly stopped aghast at one of Wallace's self-created misadventures, shrugged his shoulders and regretfully turned away. One of the first criticisms you hear from Wallace's political friends is that he has no political sense. As head of the department of ag riculture, Wallace, according to most disinterested observers, was a success as a policy-maker and an administrator. (Don't bring up the little pigs he did that against every one ot his natural predilections.) As secretary ot commerce he was dismal failure, Wallace did understand agricul ture, agriculturists (farmers) and agronomy. He believed that he had (and has) the correct formula for solving the economic (business) ills of the country. But what he didn't realize was that he was handi capped by what is incorrectly called an "inferiority complex" when it comes to dealing with human be ings who made the wheels of busi ness go round. He had a strange and deep suspicion of the business world. Perhaps' that wasn't so strange for it reflects the natural attitude ot the farmer toward the "city slicker." Perhaps It was an-other an-other phase ot that "shyness" which characterized Wallace. Let's look at this "suspicion" business: busi-ness: On one of several occasions, Wallace Wal-lace as secretary of commerce addressed ad-dressed a prominent group ot conservative con-servative business men. His colleagues col-leagues watched the event with considerable con-siderable trepidation. They knew the group was unsympathetic to Wallace Wal-lace and that Wallace knew ft However, How-ever, It provided an opportunity to create a friendly atmosphere, it nothing more. Wallace made a swell speech. His colleagues were agreeably agree-ably surprised. His audience was almost eapitlvated. In fact, as the speech went on, one sfter another of the listeners showed that Wallace's Wal-lace's views were well received were anything but inimical to business. busi-ness. Many ot the Ideas he advanced ad-vanced were accepted as sound, sane and sensible. So far so good. Wallace reached the end of hia pro-pared pro-pared script and, then, suddenly overcome with this strange defen-sive defen-sive complex, this "suspicion," said something to this effect: "Tonight I have probably wasted your time and mine, for I realize that you couldn't possibly agree with me nor I with you." The whole effect was ruined. Intimate Admire Wallace' Integrity , ' Men Who know Wallace best agree that he is absolutely honest, that he ts unselfish, that he can be a very deep student ot a subject which Interests him, that he has a powerful power-ful ambition to be a leader of the forces that will preserve old-fashioned American tree enterprise and competitive capitalistic endeavor. BARBS Despite the Republican landslide, the old gray squirrel on the White House lawn hasn't lost his taste tor nuts. .as Charles Ross, presidential news secretary, held a press conference In a submsrine 300 feet below the surface. If the reporters didn't get the lowdown then, they never wilL ft 1 am But he is willing to adopt strange methods to achieve this. (Remember (Remem-ber the little pigs.) In making clear to his friends that it was his ambition to be secretary of commerce he convinced them of his belief in five propositions. They were that: 1. He believes the capitalistic system cannot survive another war. 2. He believes, the capitalistic system cannot survive another financial depression such as we went through in the early 30s. 3. He Is convinced that the country Is headed for another such depression. 4. He beUeves that this catastrophe ca-tastrophe can be avoided If certain cer-tain simple measures are taken. 5. He believes that this end the perpetuation of free enterprise enter-prise Justifies almost any means. As goon as Wallace became secretary sec-retary of commerce he attempted to reorganize the department along lines which had made the department depart-ment of agriculture so successful insofar in-sofar as co-operation between government gov-ernment and farmers is concerned. One of the first steps was to try to establish a system of "field agents" (similar to agriculture's county rgents). Good men were hard to find; it takes time to build such a system. The personnel recruited under such conditions and within so short a time would be bound to include in-clude many incompetents and thus open the system to immediate attack at-tack by an unfriendly congress. Nevertheless, Nev-ertheless, Wallace pushed the Idea as far as he could during his tenure of office. This, his critics say, showed his inability te perform in a field with which he was unfamiliar, showed his lack of "political sense" (or, if you will, his failure to grasp the complexities of inter-personal relations). Like many other men who have been thrust into high government offices of-fices without sufficient political experience, ex-perience, he attempted to absorb that experience vicariously. The very fact that he lacked an understanding under-standing of political and personal relations caused him to accept advisors ad-visors and counsellors who frequently frequent-ly led him astray. Perhaps it he had been less advised his conduct would have been less Ill-advised. see Nation Keep Jealou Eye on Antarctica Adm. Richard Byrd is about to take off again for Antarctica with a horde of anxious nations worried to death lest he run swsy with the five million square miles of Ice-capped Ice-capped rock which covers the south polar regions as the dew covers Dixie (but different!). The foreign claims sre legitimate enough, for daring explorers have been nibbling at that piece of frostbitten frost-bitten plateau (bigger than Europe) ever since John Briscoe actually discovered dis-covered what was given the name of Enderby land in the early nineteenth century. Many others followed, but few took the keen Interest in the Antarctic waste that Admiral Byrd did, although he didn't turn in that direction until after he had flown over the North Pole. Which reminds me of a dull Sunday, Sun-day, May 9, 1926. I was keeping watch in the Washington office of a feature syndicate which had the rights to Byrd's adventures. We knew he was going to hop off tor the pole from Spitsbergen with Floyd Bennett soon, but we didn't know when. Messenger boys had a habit of dropping unimportant messages on the particular desk which I occupied and I hardly glanced up when one, still soggy, was tossed within my reach. I finished the last episode of the comic strip I was studying and opened the envelope. It contained con-tained one word, "polaris." , That was the code word that meant that Byrd had flown over the North Pole and was back alive. On November 29, three years later, lat-er, he flew over the South Pole. The flight was only a small part of extended ex-tended explorations made on two separate expeditions. Now Byrd is off sgaln. with Jeal-ous Jeal-ous competitors watching him with Jealous concern. His expedition probably .will be met with mixed emotions by the penguins who are the only human-looking inhabitants of Antarctica. Byrd's first visit was a novelty to those decorous birds who never go out except in formal evening attire but I imagine homo sapiens has become to tftem Just another an-other sap who has to go in when it snows. by Baukhage Pilots are aided by nearly 5,000 farmers who voluntarily make daily observations tor the weather bureau. bu-reau. A new prophet incentive. see Says a Republican: "We'll treat the Democrats the way they treatea us when Wilson came in and that wasn't good." Not so sweet are the usages of njinority. ODDS ON ODDITIES Gun-toting Animals Predominate In Roundup of Freak Accidents WNU Fpniure t It used to be news when a man bit a dog. But in 1946 a dog shot a woman. And that's not all. A kangaroo kanga-roo shot a man. So did a rabbit. rab-bit. A deer took a gun away from a hunter. A fish chased a fisherman off the road by sneezing in his face. A bee, a goose, a grasshopper, a mouse and a turtle got into the act, each in its own quaint way. And an ice cube knocked a woman cold. All this, and more, was turned up by National Safety council In its annual roundup of odd accidents. And if you haven't already begun to suspect that things were a little wacky In the year Just past, read on! The Ice Cometh. Miss Jeannette Esslinger was standing on the sidewalk in St. Louis when an ice cube fell out of a hotel window. It hit her squarely on the head and knocked her colder than the ice cube. At the hospital they treated her with an ice pack! Alice Martin, 52, and Emily Haus-er, Haus-er, 66, were zipping along the streets of Des Moines, Iowa, on a motor scooter one day, having a very fine time indeed, when what should loom up ahead but a corner. As they scooted adventurously around it, the scooter unceremoniously unceremoni-ously upset, depositing both ladies on the pavement with considerable force and little dignity. Sympathetic friends suggested the scooters trade in their vehicle tor an automobile or, it youth must have its fling, a kiddie car. Really Burning Up. As Margaret Standring was walking walk-ing along the street in downtown Philadelphia, she was understandably understand-ably bewildered when two women and a man suddenly began beating her on the bead. She was burned up a little at this. But not as much as if they hadn't. For the not-so-cold fact was that Miss Standring was on fire. A cigarette, tossed from a nearby building, had landed in her hair. No other cigarette can make this statement! Now, about the dog that shot the woman. It happened in Baltimore as Mrs. Ruth Patterson was enjoying enjoy-ing a bath. Her police pup, Toby, spied a gun on the washstand, put paw to pistol and let Mrs. Patter son have it right in the bathtub or more precisely, right in the hand. In Fresno, Calif., Leonard Gur-aro, Gur-aro, 21, was completing what he hoped had been a satisfactory test for a driver's license. As he nervously parked the car he stepped on the accelerator instead of the brake. The car leaped the curb and zoomed through the plate glass window of an office the office of the examiner who was giving Gur-aro Gur-aro the driving test. License denied. When the alarm rang in a Houston Hous-ton fire station this summer. Fireman Fire-man J. H. Skeeters threw on bis clothes and leaped for the quick-exit quick-exit pole. He missed and landed kerplunk on the first floor 20 feet below all 200 pounds of him. Sure, it was a false alarm. In Fairmount City, Mo., fire started start-ed in an auto from a short circuit, but thoughtfully set off the horn and sounded its own alarm. . Equally as obliging was a blaze that started in a tavern at Hugo, Okla., burned off the cap of a hydrant, released a stream ot water and drowned itself. . Even Squirrels Rebel at Eviction Proceedings WAUKESHA. WIS. - Indicating that the current housing shortage has extended even to the animal population, squirrel residents of a 40-acre wood near here attempted to prevent eviction from their hollow hol-low tree homes by tearing down their eviction nriices. At the same time they proved that they aie better bet-ter judges of timber than foresters. Trees In the area were marked for cutting last summer by Cal More understandable was the strange case of the kangaroo that shot the man. This happened in Australia Aus-tralia when Arthur Crosbie shot a kangaroo through the hind legs and it fell on its back. Crosbie reloaded the rifle and put the butt on the kangaroo's neck to pin it down. The kangaroo reached up, twined a fore-paw fore-paw around the trigger and shot Crosbie through the arm. Prompted by the same motive of self preservation, a rabbit that lived just outside Louisville, Ky., resented resent-ed the activities of William Humphrey, Humph-rey, a 16-year-old hunter. He stuck out a paw from Humphrey's game bag, pulled the trigger of Humphrey's Humph-rey's gun and shot him through the foot Humphrey now carries a rabbit's foot tor luck when he goes hunting. Guess what rabbit! Edward M. Brown of Beverly Hills, Calif., saw active service in both the European and Asiatic theaters the-aters without a scratch. He decided de-cided to relax by going hunting. A companion shot a goose. It plummeted plum-meted down, struck Brown smack in the chest, knocked him fiat, end inflicted injuries that kept him in the hospital 45 days. Many a bee has caused a traffic accident, but a super-busy one in Hammond, Ind., cracked up three autos by merely stinging the driver of one of the cars. The driver, Walter Sohl, drove into another car, which then crashed into a third machine. ma-chine. - He Gets Buck Fever. Back in the meatless days Del Halstead licked his chops as he drew a sight on a big buck deer near Buckhorn station, Calif. Just as be released the safety catch on his rifle, he was hit from behind and sent sprawling. Another buck had bounded out of a thicket and landed, ala the marines, in the nick of time. Halstead not only lost his gun he also lost two bucks! Same Old Story. , Put a mouse and a woman In the same car and something has to give. So when Mrs. Orson Rheingold of Albany, N. Y., found she was sharing her car with a traveling field mouse, she just did what came naturally. The car smacked into a pole and the field .mouse returned to the field. Gustav Riebow of Milwaukee is a kindly man. So when be and his wife found a turtle in their back yard, they put it in a box on the front seat of their car and started to take it to a nice homey place in the country. The turtle, confused or just plain ungrateful, slipped out of the box, crawled up Riebow's leg and bit him good and hard. Riebow turned turtle and so did the car via a tree. Chips Pay Off. After that, anything must seem dull. But the case of Pete Bird ot Shelbyvllle, Ky., may be worth recording. When a mere boy, Bird was chopping a log on a farm when a chip flew up and struck him in the eye, bringing a cataract and blindness. In 1946 just 42 years .later Bird again was chopping wood. Again a chip flew up and hit him in pie eye. tearing the cataract loose and restoring sight Then there was the case of the sultry pocketbook. It belonged to Miss Janice Peterson of New York City, who traced smoke to s drawer in her office desk and found a cigarette cig-arette lighter in her purse had flicked on. "And it hardly ever Stott, United States forest service employe. On each unsound tree-unmarketable tree-unmarketable and full ot hollows that squirrels like to convert into apartments Stott had stapled a white tag. Trees so tagged were to be cut down and weeded out On each tree that was ready for market, Stott stapled a red tag. When he returned to the woods recently to measure log lengths, Stott discovered that squirrels had works when you want it to." she moaned. A $50,000 boom hit the rural community com-munity of Plymouth, Wis., when 16-year-old Robert Marth shot at a sparrow perched on a farm wagon, missed the sparrow, hit the wagon and set off its 1,300-pound load oi dynamite. Casualties 650 windows, 1 wagon and 1 sparrow. Don't We An? Stanley Szot of East Ch.cago, Ind.. entered the dentist's office with a toothache and left with a headache. As the dentist reached for the forceps, lightning struck the office building and a hunk of plaster plas-ter from the ceiling conked Szot on the head, where the novocain hadn't reached. Three-year-old Ernest Liedemann of Chicago tumbled into the Chicago Chi-cago river from a bridge high above. As he hit the water, his clothing caught on a nail that protruded pro-truded from the piling and held his head above water until he was rescued. res-cued. Close runner-up for fall fashions was Abraham Wilson of New York. As Wilson was lowering a couch from a four-story shaftway in a warehouse, he tripped in the rigging and he and the couch plunged downward. down-ward. He caught up with the couch as they passed the third floor. The force of the impact wedged the couch against the shaft wall, where surprised workers found Wilson curled up cozily. Another Fish Tarn. Most fantastic of all, perhaps, Is the celebrated case of the sneezing salmon. James Mantakes ot La Grande, Ore., caught the salmon, tossed it in the rear of his car and started for home to show the folks. As the car chugged along, desert dust blew into the salmon's gills, and it sneezed. Yes, It did. This startled Mantakes. He glanced back, saw nothing but a fish and shrugged off the sound. Another An-other sneeze. Mantakes whirled around, this time to see an angry salmon on the back of the seat, glaring balefully at him with bloodshot eyes. As if that weren't enough, a grasshopper chose that moment to come flying In through the window. The salmon abandoned Mantakes, lunged at the grasshopper, grasshop-per, missed and fell back in the lap of the now thoroughly disorganized disorgan-ized driver. Mantakes gave himself over entirely en-tirely to subduing the salmon. The car went crashing off the road. The salmon sneezed spitefully once ot twice more and succumbed. Victims of AU Ages. Youngest victim of an odd accident acci-dent in 1946 undoubtedly was a baby girl who was shot before she was born. Her mother, Mrs. Arthur Laughton. was shot in a hunting accident at Winthrop, Me., and the baby was born, prematurely, a bullet bul-let wound in her left thigh. When most people were desperately desper-ately trying to find auto tires, Stanley Stan-ley Yanick of Chicago just stood still on the sidewalk and one came rolling right up to him. Unfortunately, Unfor-tunately, it had a wheel attached, and it flattened him. The tire was the wrong size anyway. When Mrs. Ralph Gilmore of Phil-adelphia Phil-adelphia heard a certain program coming in on her radio, she hur-ried hur-ried across the room to turn up the volume, tripped on a rug and fell, suffering minor injuries. The program Mrs. Gilmore fell for? A broadcast on home hazards by National Na-tional Safety council! removed aU of the white tags from their doorsteps. The squirrels also demonstrated that they are smarter than foresters when it comes to judging trees. One red tag also was missing, so Stott decided to check more thoroughly thor-oughly although the tree had seemed to be sound enough when it was originally inspected. The squirrels were right the tree was full of holes Christmas In Many Lands Early Christians did not celebrate the birthday of Christ. It was not until the fourth century that December Decem-ber 25 came to be accepted as the presumed anniversary of the great event In that year Pope Gregory V set this day officially. His intention inten-tion was partly to absorb the old pagan festival of the returning sun (the winter solstice on December 22) in a Christian feast." A number of pagan celebrations were overlapped over-lapped in this manner during the first centuries of Christianity. It is for this reason that the remnants rem-nants of ancient rites and customs have become inter mingled with genuine genu-ine Christian practices prac-tices and symbolism. The Yule rites of the Scandinavian, Germanic Ger-manic and British nations blended with the new Christian holy day in northern Europe. In Italy, France, Spain and other nations descended from Roman Ro-man colonies, the rowdy festival spirit and customs of pagan Rome hung on to some extent, and merged with the observation of Christmas. In the main, however, the birth of Christ was a religious holiday joyous, joy-ous, but restrained in mood, in the early centuries of the Christian era. Gradually, however, in the Middle ages, the feast became more robust, as peasants and lords made merry in the baronial halls. Nativity Plays. On the other hand, the Nativity plays were purely Christian in origin having arisen spontaneously in many parts of Europe in the early Middle ages. In one form or another an-other they have been enacted all over the world, with additions and embellishments. There are puppet versions, elaborate pageants, music scores, all treating of the birth of Christ In Spanish countries the "Posadas" is the name given to a combination procession and party with religious overtones, that covers the nine days preceding Christmas Itself. The Polish Christmas play is an intermingling of the Nativity story sto-ry with elements of Polish history and legend. The Santa Claus tradition represents repre-sents the combining of a number of widely differing relics rel-ics of old supersti tion and beliefs. The northern Europeans L. in pre Christian times believed in a spirit of woods and fields who had to be placated now and then, or he would ruin the harvests. This being was known in Norway as the "Nisse," and by various names in other Scandinavian Scan-dinavian countries. It is still a custom cus-tom in rural regions for children to set out porridge and beer on Christmas Christ-mas eve to please the Nisse. In Britain the character known as "Father Christmas" is supposed to be a Christian version of this ancient an-cient spirit of the fields. The Dutch Sinter Klass, or St Nicholas, is still recognizable as the good bishop of Myra in Dutch plays, but he too is being absorbed in the more popular version of Santa Claus, the fat, red-coated red-coated little man with the big bag of presents. This idea ot Santa Claus is a south German interpretation. interpreta-tion. In other parts of Germany the dispenser of gifts is "Dame Bertha." Ber-tha." The custom of hanging up stockings comes from Italy. Switzerland has developed the custom cus-tom of parading from house to house and singing carols in a picturesque way. Costumes' are remarkable. re-markable. Young men and women wear headdresses representing houses, ships, mountains, and so forth. Huge sleigh bells, tinkle waists and shoulders. from their These Swiss carolers also have a peculiar dance used only on Christ. mas eve. In Switzerland, as in other oth-er southerrhEuropean countries, the gifts are brought to good children, not by Santa Claus, but by the Christ Child, who comes from the North Pole In a fairy sleigh. Members of the Orthodox Greek church, who cling to the old style calendar, celebrate Christ's birthday on January 6. Many people in Greece, Serbia, Romania and nthof- TallFnn n. "HUi D ia tea, 7u as well aa manv K S"; Russians, belong to'o tne Orthodox church. Their Christmas feast traditionally begins with a bowl of "kutya," which is a combination of wheat, honey, ground poppy seed and pecans. Mushroom soup, fruit, fish and nuts are also served. A small layer of hay is spread under the table cloth to show humility for Christ's, hirth in a stable. So every country and every district dis-trict often has its own special ways of keeping Christmas. The United States, being composed of people from everywhere, has received customs cus-toms from every people, and has adopted those it liked, and altered them to fit the American style. So. it has been with Santa Claus, the Christmas tree, holly and mistletoe, the Christmas plays and carols, the luscious menus everything has been gladly taken over, with thanks to the many nations and peoples that have bequeathed them to us. ill Kb aaosi n i 4 tV A m w CLASSIFY DE P A ti. as. nam St. . . '-""'Tt I : Wfi,f MISCELl7T4 riurji WE BiiTTrr- Ins MachineiTsafc-VtBi J 8ALT LAKE DESK i? . EE poaf ijisg. i f ' U Jo t to dditl iirds ion. I u u. o. aaving-; --aV-aV-aV .O- j. . . Gas on Stow When aiena .tomach add aaaJZ IT "J IWgaaournomaco.Mh.uS'iaV to 6a. III ,,."e.' NtaTilT NYLONCI , , 1118 Sneat DnPoat a M in tie crDa," Prices and in any qnanu., a ... SAMPLE ORDER WIJ, ttxtagt utra. tloC.O D'. rma LIST A M. ERECCO, Dept S.T.W. Siaa Quickly ReGevesDistrtat i A little Ta-tn.Mi. 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Scott's at rottrdroOBl'1''1 pn in change to Wlfcw' forthecWJfjr on vnur smil 1 Heir remove fi to-" b , til die natural lustre smile. . . . riles 2 A anedal ingredient encourage m.ToaeaPTl"aux Calox! . ., 11) rrt a saw -BBaBjaaaaw WNU W mAmifmM' i |