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Show Section Two he Jnter-Mountain Republican SALT Nation Builders May LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, Pages 1 to 10 DECEMBER 15, 1907. Yet Find Splendid Opportunity In Africa a famine.) the mahdi ruled his soldiers | robbed the durra pits, and the result| was that whole communities were| wiped out by starvation. "But if the bad years eat up pS food ones, where is the Sudan to get| its grain ay export?" IT asked. "That will come by irrigation and | better transportation. Ags it te now, the; people rely upon the rainfall, which is] not sure a the future that country | can be Irrigated by the two Niles, and| that Without: setafltrtente oe the supply of | water required for Bey pt Then the| land will have waterall the year round, | aS large as all Purope, and four times the size of any principality in jt excepting Russia. The sirdar has more power than the Czar, and he can do almost soya = to his country and pasos me of chief. officers in the wa with Ne Mahat and the Khalife. he on decoration after decoration for his bravery and imilitary norvices, and was in command of the operations which resulted in the death of the Khalifa in 1899. It was in that year that he took possession of this country as sirdar and eovernor general, and since ther Sid has been bringing order out-of the chi rf | this part of Africa. He has pac ied ‘the! warring tribes, has turned their ent through th province what] ‘ f ee ; ae cdlied; more vest rain are for 1e pient ad type. romurer country than is needed; and great areas fitted _stocteraising. ins ce the =wWlong the chyasinian order styles of art they . In the styles o : finished the showing tr are York art: en soe up i | ee ee se the Peer ve, 8 ered as Bey built manner as Egypt; and" .@ 7 eS yf) wy -& ; Dec. 14.-The which is FEove aris, an DE remarkable ee SAINT du e oe of the| gained of espionage, the respect put 2 very and esteem Sone oes Camille Maucls air nese Ww cee mn a oo oe preas cae hich h 2 . a Neen ight upon the attat ches ¥ Atatt poe Ville Sone a fr M. Mauclair, alluding: As he lived "ether to be. he to very poor private s se | soon he of his)i- rene be the the tt pit Mr PORN granddaughter of Sere long me oe ys tc Mt lady turn me great to the | & <2 | cpl | | OF OF ur of | Is the - BY walk were Yet greatly to gee age, her and Says etts ne Kaye SP a co : ple alarmed and powerful or " a vs ry the * |! rious 40 habits. day y, Tally" e of acifn tt time: to littleat ear | Janine greed enabled:>-him stories, tlie = Ata I ahi oe 2 absence fo . ro: i " wtas tr aC! ote We stage.' are fast SS children who have been born since wo the | 00K possession of the Sudan. The down furnishing |@ lot of small the the the ale éled off from. Niles that, the where gr rai no means only can axe ins aba optim daily E whole| White country you be rained? can raise e fairly swarm with little ones , re , mothejab ties ore eae ay trip through Kordofan I carried nods |recemt by as gr coin children. ond ahead, |Proached the with me to give to The news of this trav« 4as 4 and as soon we ap- a village babies > in we would-be force. "i Nearly = met every = funeral, innding. France He is astow eswas! eatton? reason whe three the meeting seed Q THOne the tax ‘ ni i is fi rood, the bi with are to be fou nd the oe more | the rs do a coat a: hard or "Jud Aico a5 S haa : a The you 7 March she TRE OTAS, eta since ; f rney PL eee a ete Seilieedioat ee § 1 ha Vs EY SPENDT HRIE oT v K ING OF eee i hé a tapa o POR the a Ee ' | « | attempt rus aie pet iiais © ae rut gee F. as a x cade 14.-The much troubled we ne by CHARD - | 1] dai is! is y > ‘ I rs of} call| auy;< not under J et," has| utter,} recel for form For of; account possible7 ved VA mericdeL NG. before oo the irch, fleet and have bro en at onc tim down there 7OKG. | his by 1 father lowe od ; that of the -s pout wit eer Th the: governor by e by ; the thay clvic} sons live to r mi ank ind 10t to it too, turnsis that she hae any who ; are TUGAL. flimsy an. the fo! modb; ‘ WiGLENee, evils which|COUBDIES: th reaten River f wy in exbattle In the the direction ES) Liffey, eca- of Constable Ronan, found drowned in and afterward hiding in an atte, days' wonder in the dis- has Irish been cap- Ronan, a stalwart member of Royal Irish constabulary, was a pene in the Stevens hospital. One been nee days sounds afte Wire hospital. the the m the paday answered, but his Abn hpensanne heard from the at- On. maging 1oOspila sta in oun Ronan alive, but quite mad and nearly starved to death. He could have had no food si nee he escaped from the hospital eae elg oe days :previously Another roy a1 mé Pring e-this time an alliance between the English and tuguese cro Sic Mane talked about in court circles. 16 crown prince of Portugal and Princess Alexandra of Fife, King Edward's granddaughter, are the ite ts of the present frossip, which seems rather premature, for t are both a youthful and have not : her. Anyway, the story goes and for ind fo Amelie of Portugal, who visiting In England been hope marriage yeen .a ae | (and a pretty nl urally clety, other, Mule how tO ople of | driving } "New Knocks YorkD! to market Out . Pichting patch with Peter a mule Bear. Brown, near Coc- Lert was knocked : out. wa 3 the prince SpE ‘ Merry , Monarch.' ' Prince brother, The » girl, Glan ch Norten), . has a match be- the Duchess who fs only resembling Alexandra. not no seenyet {s_ and English the Charles much out of 16, her Nat- In of sothe princesses do not make their debut until they are at least 18 or so. a revolu(unless who Louis, |- Prince tion intervenes) will one day be King lor Portucal,dis:not yet. 21, but a smart and intelligent young pr his Crown | interference and remons prance with his his father, ~ ]father's polley during the recent crisis n Portugal he was banished from the Ee aE, arene ne epere = eee to support the reform party which now threatens to drag his father from the curt by the Spartan king. The prince ives "promise 0of beine as portly as his fath having a decided tendency to- throne has been isolated by yp oy Sy Queen attending her asshe sheis schoolrom, of Portugal Pince Crown and King and the erown which has been pawned | a : : ~ = to pay some of the debts incurred by that has king recently « the Incidentally tween her. son saa Fife's eldest daug Ale xindea, Princess i Pann Seat Ey perpetuity of of Bourbon at jood opened negotiations for ri how! hecten Centre Y., was attacked by a nee Of | pcar andiintihe fight that followed beweal Me tweon'the mule‘and:-the bear the latter _ ‘the le rard "embonpoint, E : ae a * followed 5 ous ‘¢ : y s=e The queer case of who was apparently 1p} en ; hy pee oie of construction has eovered a nine | lis | our own country \ prog-|to ltve right through F rent RY anarchy, revolution, de IE UOat] U oiferCEAN Seneg Nene piece thedral, ( teach ° es } A NO the towers, and, In addition, has moved westward. ese pag ep are sufficient In themselves to jeopardize the safety of the two wide crcies of the portico between the towers, After considerable repair and much renewal the portico has been restored to its original ces and, assuming that existing cone ans = be maintained may be sald oe : ‘ e % anger pe ecan ae aid that ‘ og TD y ; > geve ee aa proved that eee oe as of "ondden. colis, no to saynee the Jeast, in a very unsatisfa ctory condition and. in need of = . r r , Ee which will cost many thousand : The about dome 30is feet Seah ddth oas4 on alent wel wrote pliers The ee} ae Pe superstructure "rests art a more on the inner ends of these eight plers PaO Este eee ana fe ainking of t 1eSC° sere has set. up movements overhea® The s two and are out of the perPee tle oar to eee ane 1@ Other to 1é@ south, an 1e po co which has been sald te be the only te OF ‘CDK Car a Impossible 7 corn. ABER ar ado! if DORigs « for re h ae Asha ae 300 oe . GUO the ‘ reecnt mi: livers the z é Neinee his ine aNneht wr cee aoe for ious which proved to be racy af = » be in poss so sible be elt ee that I it was barely lapse, isit until the was necthe flag a i A : since |after another, has proved itself was/cellent condition ready , to give noth i At wron ind é dieses ae |fense of ready her shores is anything but in-]the Russian (Aa al Rojestvensky's) ° erantly Baltic squadro One after another seven great battleIt:-{2 oupecinl iy galling to the British ships used as flagships for the allo people that he German navy, one year » was wa there pow the : -: ations of the under government? centuries ort here om . s £Y have sed by mings for his conmry op ding one fae ' n Russia the. through passed on persecution£ A eel eee faith : hs LJ, y oe elght weird pow ers... ' navy, the . ug put such at heavily tase ite, ta ee ; eho 1 Gam are a ip Rie b u there seems to be' 3-6Good eason. to ad-| nism 3 and ‘say, publicity given to the fact that the so-| believe that 0 aaa of wast with a p ed Yr "instantly ready" fleet upon | great power the British fleet ight w hich England must depend for the de-| meet with tho ee fate that overtook conspl at usurpation bythe constitut no way ry k a eect ritution na @ rec pe ees x t conde ithin. 0 Ren: tsmt \! rica - : : ‘ i reports addi- should aes ithe | ( can b tral Ries : 0 of | Brit-| é ee ae I : at Port Sudan. haul of the} re : today, Aespaterane ans, : ADy : ~ Senntor Villman'x Sou an vara rs a Mrthis ze ONO) D ttch In : me rec heeTillman va" IkeSense inmoin ji x son I ti now a catia |r for to remain on board issouri district Sut were over, when it and after visit-| essary to hurry and transfer j Ww ¢ 2 cous ht f . (on e Lught oe the ne. "min-B heat to' thethat Magnifice eth and eae now Is; « this a . re : ian has min-| so badly in need ocking ing! "re, ou 1 son Will as-j ee have to be Tae. to ¢ HE sist in tak fg care_of them after learn-| da the ness Thi people of England, ee ee rig eee ee Nw whe have in a at you?whispered Copyricht. | tion the London, Dee. ed a the" very " ~ae attorney . . | miralty be is Whether « a ie ong Ue a WS Wwike 1" 10, 35 ls tees on ‘ a! uncommon can safely say that the Sudan could _ |Support tens of millions jf its lands pale properly Usa ; ak Ar yaa cemu Fie to hope for in the u on "s Senn f the Sudan?" L a ed. ne ropes the sird We Stat een reece x. nes that ae ‘United ates m goodsandere £ to w traders.6 and American American pas of might re Here x woman, 1is feel sorry er he in. prison home and assists my ie Bie = "We As it cotton There there, of Civilization. any changes in ft es ue days to the wor "observed the ‘district' attorclose oT an Arena. mesa ont to relish the privilege o man to the Work hous Qf . an Tatiana seem to_be not chars ac tee wa wase sentenced apress C not Afric ondition ‘Ot ne ish occupation "almost Judge. agtieg they is plain | any the worse for it. The Italians the | serve as mechanics. The chlef labor when | Will probably always be furnished by : Unjust great have endure heat some the pore fhere to are and {it pone tov hia samily. per yee "What is your present pauwiaiinn its ossible future?" of are abous the We the the White | least two millions in the Sudan. <As made one La the future [ cannot prophecy that the quality r th ae degree of accuracy, although theywe scem tohadthrive, have many "Do TE ee crops the admir } ‘ we 4, roe hem-of i auken not thewill sun. Of | they forms | Where wives Sudan | thing for a father to have several ‘ paeroel: d from his bed, and apparently from a building. Shortly afterward « body was recovered from the River Liffey, and was identified as Ronan's. The question of his fate seemed as f > om C - touebed whose | ;~of| human woe. ha afs ¢overnnient ] An nger of bes dia most the fe Wat ritllet Contre house den PETIT TATA LGA , to} many ‘time and eecepe ta ground ee ‘ which donkeys veén the White ana between ric that: if water »2ud Blue Niles might be will. produce four | §Teat cotton plantation, and x * through immediate there benefactor of the comwn of his life. | thing 8 some on to-come hmarked by only one unusual incide with diner the alacrity was that. and A, has re~ was mune. No oe ee in 1898 and speed-| He arrived ian to himself by his cu- | ily drew its {e used to take shea og of | ress 40 river it has | we would retain our place ; | aitena anes rian, progressive and nation, we must correct at once ‘ evils that have crept. into ind whic toda eme control, w ‘hile evignittul a ithor ty} idly by and sees the work of desti idily going on gst tine P "I. oue te mie ; ane eat mate a s "magnifice a been mn malaudmin- onatt Bre Ghee Behind | - t ue impler life o l There were ju 18 many i solve f he earlier years of } of the nation as now, bi because authority, con ils t of Druce RS given a Ankin ees con- m . " Ruse aE pe ople we upon the|heavy of Procurer fro permission re-| has dled a very nana. 1b) has no} Republic to permit of the name 1 1 s tt B rs | however, : the use Oe Ey PY ee ea , who, man, He iriette lis Tolstol| loyal, still known and, multiplied. scarcely ave was : will} troubles different | el ie present is their case. that yes > ' , ‘ gentleman's. fhis of the In the middle tame # =" rel Albeit s. nd. when society Oe ir stands of off-\| from that of a famous to be raging} was Revs discovere Bae night a fir -o It was soon put out by) cial inbricity hans ‘sulted. in|} are toda 1 ADRTY.. MUGS, . More jn his house. but M. Iteuille, who was | there belng x man site whol jutionary Zens ithiani ever Hi th inks the inkanitants, A ‘of oe . He has|has no Chi me ull, because} these orde may. be» necesss 1-| years itsSe that branching Sadu of the natives. I tp ro- | Khartum excellent hard wheat, and |4t work, bat ne At Darney, > old sarkay le ind been an May Racientenur? rulers of governme TLE | ramen' ArnRGGh ©) livion ; unawa eels . difference 5 Quentin Roosevelt Has « Romance. Washington, D. C.. Dispatch in Philadelphin Press: Quentin Roosevelt, the ON ' 2 ' fs se Perishine astonished "Mr. ue eee whieh CQNAPITACIGAs Heese, } the o yu is deathowever, ."Druce "She never 8: LW nim YOars BA Valette Mme. s she Is | now s anes rs Lo again of. was later into her shop, dead?" = a plied. nlive.! prove she months ‘ | idly estroying. re pe pub sic of America the tain- After lj MRS. | justice, | x : wanes aE ay. sash lore return his in ruf fflans Franco-German war M \ eee grandfathe her that news ceived some Del re tuntea : a sour ndlin on by ‘hardly nure= 8° L0syear-old, SOT, | Was, Ost ror for esident a couple of hours one afternoon, renew |ts cently te aa,Ou not 1sreturn. from oe n Whene® usua pare 8 ‘be- they a atrocities committed in think the destiny of "he Dope leas iar oe» : ak common eline stolen, aeek % ey fae. _sgpublic. th aak | fetration the from which ee Rept b p ; ] JOHN - piration ‘ t father, Valette's Mme. murdered was Paris, | ‘such' aa? Trey shit with . the to go ote dead. BuCN Paes Te 1 Mm¢ papers, of reac hing ‘ ‘ evitabls i ade. Inquiries and j wrong life,' may not the ae aad DUE igo Ss ny | take warning as to what m o. ee he | Sequences of the wrong. life i and If wo ud on *. | in this fair land of, ours are Were SORni. , tate' ad That avarice, discontent Australia and find the whereabouts of another son by another woman, Mme. Valette believes this son is George Hollanby Druce, the present claimant ing important AS 7 Cale : py op it aca ~ he 5 ve Mr Dru e ds stated tovhave paid frequent visits to Paris to see his son occasion one On gra nddi 1ughter. and to ae Bes Wee ci soll, -by nd cultivation , of thousands .of years, avent J | pk io} 1 sit oo | ed es {or LOGAN jnued } : é Bs wnd oh | ~ What ages bes atifal: an awe novel r - Wout been given by I e nove lanxie || the above to Ism who Was bemoanAg Be i Wott,f petterment i un} |} en"fot his: tral ‘T ling va 1e time of, bette 1 | of the to ‘Tolsto 7 ediction toand the. troubles Ww i! end omy) he jeft.ber. Che improves" i it ia mp ried Tolstoi, "God ha = PV 2 LY | f simple ‘faith the} ¥ . iny i n he destir of nation a ~aaches } sublime and proves from} | whence Tolstot.has derived the wonderful| Hy | ing Egyptian. watering attachment and even gr ntt- | mane white men, | cacti this civiliz sing WOODS far e times pits. only J anarc hy. include celved by men, yet he is future of tRussia from the almost RE a long conversation and instructed him of is that| The : gence far Bee or andvateenergy, of tha and Praney. voi characterized them, 2 ab nl ata he had former ea of prosperity re ‘ thrown ho rrew born clalmant, in "ai d of hi his ent Ok ae present ‘the and world. have given to the world an insight real life of his countrymen. He uffered excommunication and all the olatio dad. othe maspeak| fdrtin aes * { A ‘ t. i { ined vf faith in the Delty, he-has continued, vonderful oworkuntil--he"ha ulmost | the: great age. of four-score | shment wi is kept by a lady t is alleged, Druce 1 in ntimate raleiiaits followed and born, -wh« ; ‘ " When 7 the daughter up| provinces Bd ° | also melee As it is now, that s the chief granary ef this part | world. It raises So much that, have made . the Lower of. the, granaries of oF. y aligns ite La show ' mek fant tude a Maree simply and .seemec than rich, 1 ne a hyo 1. i TaN ge at er ETAT a |} duces . , o tuxes are colTekte ed ee pe ee aa : amount a BEES a eegeen: while there ia more inlUative shown. ‘The natives Sy TG | dis Nig o ria cit aw eeninte of Intelli- Era : nen with love ms gon nears. x The ‘ character he maak aut Seiya d disease ( ich one of the to have inh er our d from him), ; ut} the great I Re neh a ra ; whom hej quotes and who evident knew something of this cas showed in many clreumstances markable prevision of contemporary events French lady living in Paris, named claiming up turned has F Valette, | Mme. Duke of Portland. She says that the. middle of the last:-century. jor durra, the chie . the wa perfect Noiben" strife |Internecine »D to and way, best fertilizing should not ‘eventually be ‘one ot' > @ azir chief cotton countries of the globe. eeoees ziren. | are experimenting with it in all | auec Hip ie wae ean the 18 now Bro | Gezireliiis aire: 1dy growing a great deal tne le On fertilizing \ ave new NO- ‘the the portrait ae rich me been yenrs no poor past, owing to him, round ther | ; os ting to in the country of the ret One day he gave $2,000 to a philanthrop-| tructed railway line from | ical society vq| the Niger was over $388,00 letter the coincident e which 1 author. points out Druce? is a noted, the Porcaa Ne iContes Crusle" . ae n 1 ich! wae piblt hate "y eooh iad a NIL Darlrmittesr ; itt tea" ELEAAS ‘it 1€ 1) ) shed | veeneen resources wien more than 26 years ago, relates. the} nerous. Then the old marl ex : oie, a ae SO. Generc uBLOry he ADU = of Portland,. who,| eeeAS con Brack ed y-with Cprosy |) vear end, as he never spent more than) through having during 05) on a: himself, i and PCat heeenes ta a journey CHEY Waidin|, ) ecentimes a dzlay Oe eM never is dierl ri maining ¥ otrb stin: itely rin had done vo for n ae LI oe wi a al é able to £ iy e awa e majo " o oe ae hi ; Sana { which'{ he ions to appear to his neigh1 ory, ihe o whic s 12 . Duke of Bema Portland," wo alth: of) wheat, h eats ive Meesfurther ett alug es - toa d-econ sisted ( 2 2 which s ag y rround. in coffee mil Queen Victoria who burned md fruit M. Reuille reports of the history of » Alsac wa very. er itti we are told oof a h great mts Vine Munication from the queen him' an unpublishe the rights of the family,: mueh Wich is said Ito to) have now disputed ; ead : : in' of ‘the ' i ent 1 Solutioer oan V ee s de vsteri ~ AK eaee enc Preble anything of this mysteriou rir ane . 7 * would his story confirm the contention} - , , f King Leopold It. of Niger, LEO. jand RENE. Druce } suspected ccc a left is advocate of the impressiontsth Chase, was forced out of the J Sie r aa fascina ting, two | neighbors by his kindline Be ee M a a rekon sed reat y is | j ity. Never did a poor or un oF rance, where a myste is | sen knock at his doors in yain, tne the he ree aie Sr nlon Nile..valloy, one) a ee terasts in : and [Robert Henri, showing portraits On . which Mf, One| fe ee RAOUL has ithe season 1an an 0 &a longgs bat- schools ; ou y raved wage all * aN ; Tee Snge .for in for r BY M, Chase are side advocate. style is a portrait by .ir- Henri, who is an "the. new movement and Mr. Henri led the new me : New } who - of The artists are William: either On center. in the he cts artists noted two and art Wa l has land climates andof all sorts of~solls.| stops net far from Kharand beyond that {s a region where| is peer nian t rther south the | penses it | or five crops every year, and that. for |Of the crop would be excellent. many years in ‘succession.» We have |!8.no0w,. we are raising excellent | millions of acres of such soll:'and they | 0M. the Red sea near Suakim, only await the hand. of man.to bring | 4r&, 2bout 30,000.acres planted | them. into the \ markets' as*live and the crop is a profitable one. ommerecia etors tan Caucasians live there?" "What'\k ind. ofc rops can be raised in "Not as day laborers to en) your excellency?"" I asked, conte and winter,Soalaiatie They dvaraehresandstn ot AS summer wthi cat | that country, si tut a . vast difference by Mr a0, a of styles different tle in New York at the top former desert cee : over stirs ACP Ne many um, The the ero is . Two together, | on as and und¢sert. The empire truth fsas theto Sueveloped it | resources. to ‘the ae oe Es deed, the plain Blue Niles. is so jis put ‘upon. it, | és pu ttins he 5 country the upon mee | bas been leached of its elements: while e a } as. the Peciaa Enos. 2 | . 7a Nile Sasa look they and country on the northern edge A ehildren r an ‘ ; out of such tents as Congo watershed, will-ralse grain, and | we passed on the way. ane uaadeee | there are many regions along the rivers} are naturally fond of children, and in the north which wtll produce enor- |] especially so when times are good and ola crops when the water Is put upon) conditions settled as they are now. the hey want as many children and grand" children as ee tl Where Cotton 7 Re King, wa e ani oa eo y Hale the possibilities, of the Sudan, saying| that most people looked upon it as} nothing eise than va ! He replied. | "That iden comes largely from the| bleak and barren sands through whieh| the railroc akes travelers on their} way to Khartum. They have also read; swamp walks rain in nearly every province, . "Rhee lareit om eee Rens forward with a rrafn -areas the south and in the | all dozen or more little naked blacks west. The Bay el Ghazal, an immense |and browns hanging about her, and An Undeveloped Limpire. | During my conversation with his ex-] cellency I asked him something as to| dan is an material brought the sy whole i - ‘ merely a Nile on ers at cy froleit. We hope | to soon bulld a railroad into the Gezireh, which will give It an outlet to the Red sea, and there will be other roads ae eve hve and 5 Hiern tatiice after transportation facilities, for country But isthe region netwcan has spent in the nordbeen traveled ove nly shee Egypt and the Sudan, on diplomatic missions and now holds close per with King Menellk and ficials The sirdar spends RUSSUIVeRTIITE CGI els wa the gfpind with a stick, while his wife and child come behind dropping the seeds and A Great Baby Farm. covering them with their. feet. After yam your native population increasplanting nothing is done until two ing months la >i r, when the crop is ready ae for reapin Very rapidly," replied the sirdar. "I As to ne ansportation, everything Is|am surprised at the larga number of lances! and his better far doing are They "Yes. than In past. They Wear more clothing, they have more wants, and are working to supply them. Formerly many went naked, and, as there was no security of property and few wants, ae had no Sacantiin to save, When Wwe came here the taxes were levied at dna will of the rulers, and the rich native was sure © persecuted. w taxes are fairly levied and the natives are learning that thelr savings will be respected. They are comin have faith in us. Our first business was to make them realize that we Intended to treat them fairly and honestly, and I believe we have succeeded. Improved methods of cultivation will | We had also to organize the country so enormously inerenase the crops, At pres-| that it might be able to pay the ex- and guns into plow shares ¢ shepherds' crooks, and is now er | ized conditions where have always heen ee injustice li war... An xplorer of note hecame avant rene his prospectors ae ling ihrou gh every part of this vas gion, and is laying oul and starting ine railroad, canal, irrigation and other movements which will open it up and make it one of the live parts of the r | The sidar is now In his prime. He has} seen perhaps 50 years of hard working life, but he does not look over 46,. and were It not that his hair and mustache j are mixed with silver, one would think him mue younger. His face is fret from rinkios and his comple: lon roay sare full of ight pe eee A ancnerat strength. A: great pat times are} Kept full of grain at ordinary STYLES ART IN DIFFERENCES STRIKING e J, 7 a is Gi s [aren ae |