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Show TREATMENT FRESH-AI- R . XL BAYSSOI PUBIISm Most Potent Means of Restoring Consumptive - Patients to Health OF VALUABLE A Former Dr, T. R, Walter la hit study on Urn various sanatoria for consumptive (Alls the open-ai- r life the keynote of moala. Absolution of copperas (sulphate of iron) will have the same result Lastl), the floor should be supsanatorium treatment, lie further plied a 1th absorbent litter, which aaya that the patient. Iniitead-o- f being should be removed when it Is soiled. kept In a carefully warmed room ven- Ventilation should be provided Is tilated from other part of the houae. such a way as to avoid cold drafts. according to the popular notions of Small openings, which may be eaally old, lives la the open air from morn- cloeed with a slide, may be made la ing till night, at all season and In all the outer wall near the floor and weathers. Lark of fresh air is the similar ones near the celling, or In greatest, predisposing cause of con- the roof, through which the foul air sumption; fresh air Is the most po- can escape. Pure air Is of the utmost tent means of restoring him to health. Importance to the well being of Now this prescription is very easy horses. to carry out In dry climates such as those of Egypt, the Alpine health reInsomnia. This very common condition Is sorts, South Africa or Colorado; but it requires special arrangements and most often due to six o'clock dinntrs special precautions in a damp and ir eating In the evening To secure raity climate. The credit of showing sound sleep, no food should be taken how this may be accomplished belongs after 4 p. m or at least nothing more mainly to Brebmenr, Dettweiler and than a little ripe stewed fruit, without their followers. The open-ai- r method cream, and with ns little sugar as posmay perfectly well be carried out in sibly, better with none. Oranges or any climate which is healthy for those somejDthei1 Juicy fruit are preferable who are not consumptive. As Leon for an evenings lunch. Avoid, bread . Petit, observes; Here- - the - climate eaft butter or milk, and stmttnr artimay help the cure, . . . there it cles which digest slowly. Fruit Juices may hinder It; but it only exert a and completely predigested food subsecondary Influence on the treatment. stances may be added In moderation. (1) Moreover, Just as the pleasantest Tea and coffee also produce sleepclimates are not always those which lessness. Sedentary habits conduce are best for healthy people, (I) so it to sleeplessness by promoting the acmay be that the most pleasant clim- cumulation of uric acid, which Is a ates for an life where the nerve excitant, and gives rise to restair la warm and dry and llttla rain lessness and disturbing dreams, falls are not best for those consumpBald the wise man, The sleep of tive who have later on to return to the laboring maaja sweet. Eccl. 6; If. a less favored place. It Is bracing Gentle fatigue produced by exercise climates rather than warm and equ- out of doors Is wonderfully effective able ones which have the greatest In- is a means of producing sleep. A fluence In restoring the consumptive prolonged bstb. fifteen to forty minto health, in all but exceptional cases utes, or even longer ..if necessary, at for the open-at- r treatment, a four" a temperature of 92 degrees to 9S defold shelter should be provided against grees F-- , taken Just before retiring. Is wind, excessive cold, extreme sun beat an excellent remedy for sleeplesssad rain. Wind raises dust. Increases ness. The moist nbdoinlnal bandage, coogh In consumptives, and Intensifies consisting of n towel wrung quite dry . tha chilling effects of cold. The forout of cold water and wound around eign sanatoria with few exceptions the body, covered snugly with mackhavs both natural and artificial shelter intosh and then with flannel In. sufagUnst wind. Cold within certain lim- ficient quantity to keep It warm. Is an its Is useful to the consumptive; but helpful measure In pn It should be a windless cold, and suit exceedingly sleep In esses In which sleepduring nd to the individual power of reac- lessness Is due to excess of blood In tion. At damp Intensifies ths the brain. Care mast be taken to effect of both heat and cold, the keep the feet warm. If pecessary, chilly consumptive will be able to hot' bag may be applied to the feet or withstand a lower temperature In a a moist pack to each leg. If the head dry than In a humid climate. Protec- Is hot, a cool com press may be ap tion against rain and snow will seem pile!. to most people an obvious necessity, although at Nordach rain Is often Still Saws WoAd at 91. It is not enough to provide The Rev. Jacob Chapman of Exetei, resting, places lo the sanatorium N. H., la the only nonagenarian, and which are protected against rain. At one of the few in N certain stages exercise Is Imperative, Hampshire who aawclergymen all the wood nstd and sheltered paths and open covered in their stoves for cooking and beak corridors are needed for exercise In Ing purposes. The amount of wood rainy weather. At Falkensteln them used by a family during the long New is su h a corridor fop feet long. Hampshire winters is something enort fa places where the sun's ray are mous, yet Mr. Chapman goes out Into very powerful, as at Canigou In the the woodshed every day and taws alPyrenees, direct exposure to the sun most enough to keep the parlor afld Is found to Increase the tendency to bedroom stoves well supplied, s Well aver. Even at Hohenhonnet on the as to furnish what Is needed for Ike dine, which Is not far aouth, a large kitchen. verandah has been provided which In Mr. Chapman celebrated the dkot weather can be artificially cooled of his birth this week. anniversary a stream of water. Protection Though never robust, Mr. ChapmanS by against wind and weather is afforded physical powers are remarkably well ,la most santoria by large verandas. preserved. A day seldom passe Is (Which may be fitted with movable which he fails to cut little wood, s glass screens, as the Adirondack an exercise which he consider very Sanatorium. In our own climate beneficial. Ia good weather he takes 4t would be useful to have n veranda long walks. His mind Is alert and with a hollow floor, which could be his memory very retentive. warmed, as cold and damp can be He was born In Tamworth, nnd 1 nort feaslly borne If the feet are 182? entered Phillips Exeter academy, kept warm. Other simpler wxys are of which he la the oldest living grnds the provision of hot bottles and warm ate. He was graduated from Dark Recumbency also helps a mouth college in 18SS, nnd from And clothing. chilly patient, the blood circulating over Theological seminary In 1839. with less cardiac effort In this posi- For many years he was a teacher. tion, According to Dr. Welcker and Since hie retirement Mr. Chapmas Dr. Jacoby, the recumbent position has lived here, devoting himself te also favors the flow of blood to the genealogical research. He has writpices of the lungs. In most foreign ten n number of family histories, and sanatoria summer houses or sun contributed to secular, genealogical boxes are also provided; at falken-stei- a and religloua publications. Exchange, some of these can be rotated according to the direction of the wind. Why the Body Needs Water. in his expert-mentDr. Burton-Fanning- , Someone hat asked: What would be sanatorium Bear Cromer, has the cause of death of a person whs This subject haa shelter of drank no water? .modified the Our seaside resorts by providing them been studied considerably; animals have been experimented upon, and with reversible glass screens. It is found that without water they I 1) I xv!. ett., p. u (1) Hermann Weber and Michael O. lose their power to eliminate the natFoal-T, art Ida tat Allhutla 8yat. f Matt. n "Climata In tha Treatment of Dla- - ural poisons; they must have water la order to eliminate them, otherwise the secretions become too dense. ' Stable and Conditions. Without water, the amount, of urea The condition nnd health of a which should be secreted becomes dihorse, says the National Builder, "de- minished, nnd so with the other sepend very, much upon the kind of cretions. We need water, not only to table It is .kept In. There are horses dissolve the' food and carry It along, which suffer from disease of the eyes, but we need It to dissolve and carry from coughs, from scratches and out of the system the poisonous nnd other akin diseases, all of which are worn-ou- t material of the body, after It produced by the pungent, foal air In haa verted Its purpose. Water form the stables. Farmers and others who a circulating medium for carrying subhave horses will take pains to keep stance back and forth In the systheir carriages and harnesses protect- tem, conveying nourishment to the ed from the strong ammonical air of various parti of the body, bringing the stables, lest the leather may be back the used-umaterial nnd carryrotted or the varnish dulled and spot- ing It out by way of excretory ducts. ted; and at the sma time they will The amount of water dally required wonder why their horses cough, or is from two to three pints. In very or hot weather a larger amount la needhave weak eye or suffer from other diseases which, if ed, as much water la loet by perspirathey would only think for a few min- tion. If one's diet consists largely of utes they would readily perceive are the Julcea of fruits, the quantity of due to the foul air the animals are water may be considerably diminished. compelled to breathe every night In the year while confined In close, badly la Water n Fee df The remedy is ventilated stables. Hutchinson, an English authority, very easy. The stable should he kept who has published the latest and beet clean; this will prevent the greater work on foods. Includes water among part of the mischief, and It should be food substances. Water enters the wen ventilated. The floor should be body, not only as a solvent, but as desproperly drained,- so that the liquid tined to become a constituent element wiU not remain on It. washed off at of tho tissues themselves. Water ndda least twice a week with plenty of wa- to the energy of tbo body by increaster, and the a liberally sprinkled with ing tbo power of the heart, nnd In finely ground gypsum (plaster), which other way contributin' to activity yrIB combine with and destroy the am- of the tissues. i Cot-'tag- well-know- -- p moon-blindnes- s, - 'll a A rruMscM la BESULJ3 EXPEEIE3CE. DrapepUe Ha jrpa Fr(om frsa SlwriM ef IMImUi, Thousands of 'sufferers' know that reason why they are irritable nnd pressed and nervous and sleepless is cause their food does not digest, bnt h to get rid of the difficulty U the puzzhhg 1 question. Good digestion calls for strong digestive organs, and streugth come front For ths supply of good rich blood. reason Mr. took Dr. WUliaiw Piuk Pill for the core of indigestion.) They have been roy best doctor, he I was safferiug from dyspepsh. iys. The pains in my stomach after ine)i were almost unbearable. My sleep ww very irregular and my complexion w sallow. As the reenlt of using el git Imxes of Dr. Williams Pink Pills, abqit the merits of which I learned fron friends in France, I have escaped ill these troubles, and am able again to tale f pleasure ia eating. A very simple story, but if it had D been for Dr. Williams Pink Pills it might have been a tragic one. When discomfort begins with eatiug, fills up tie Interval between lueals with pojn, and prevents sleep at night, there certainly cannot be much pleasure in living, k filial geueral breaking down must Is merely a qneatiou of time. Mr. Joseph Baysson is a Viativs 4. France, but now yesida at No. 9439 Larkin street, San FranciaoL Cal. He ia one of a great number win can testify to the remarkable efficacy d Dr, Williams Pink Pills in the treat meA of obstinate disorders of the stomach. If you would get rid of uauaea, pain ff burning in ths stomach, vertigo, nee voosneas, insomnia, or any of the othg miseries of a dyspeptic, get rid of ths weakness of the digestive organs by ths dm of Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills, They are sold by druggists everywhere.' Proper diet ifot course, a great aid it forwarding recovery once begun, and I littls book, "What to Eat and How tt Eat, may tie obtained by any one wh make a request for it by writing to tin Dr. Williams Medical Co., Schenectady, N.Y. This valuable diet book con tail an important chapter on tbs simplest xaeoas for the cure of ooastipatkn. ; ' cool-heade- An Unfinished Ode. The moonbeam on the water dances Somehow I can not think. 0j;.h.10,h''r- - whv these donrward glances , let s have a drink! WeU, The moonbeam on the water glances. Did t write that before? Never mind M faney dances, Fudge one more. th. nat? Well-J- ut The moonbeam aa. thins typewRlter Is running aal to seed Jt drives me not; to what 1 want. But whart i think I need the moomhame W as 1 said hefOi & la knocking on the door 1 3 O wll you Iota me when Im bald And WUlie why did . . you do It..? no more. No more? Ste'le I e i say no more zzs at ThE door Oak dOor moon bunk O willle we have mixed you Feed the cat zzzz. New York Times fewol-len.to- Hid His Money In the Oven. Chief Burgess John Doll of Pine Grove. Pa., before going to the circus, put nil hla portable wealth, f 1,000 la currency, in a cigar box and deposited in in the oven of his cold stove, which be believed would be out of eommlaaion surely - till the Sutjzy baking should be done. But Mrs. Doll concluded to get the Sundty baking out of the way before her husband's return. 80 she heated up the kitchen stove, piping hot. When she thought it about right she opened the oven door, only to find inside the smoking ashes of a cigar box and something that looked suspiciously like money to burn. It fairly crumbled as she touched It, but she got it out of the oven and smothered the remaining flames as best she coaid. The Burgess will ask Uncle Sam to put on hla best specs and see if he can, decipher enough of the ashes currency to redeem it, whole or in part - Shocked by Parrots Profanity. The residents in the vicinity of fashionable Avenue A and Fourteenth street here will take steps to capture a cussing poll parrot that for several days has inhabited a tall tree near the house of Charles E. Aanett, says a dispatch from Bayonne, N. J. Mr. Annett was greeted yesterday Normal Boy, with, Hello, under Hello, unde! at all A Topeks boy Thinking one of his nephews was dishes of ice cream and finished if on four bov s of chill soup. Tbs do up the tree, he cried back, Better tors thought bs bad appendicitis mat come down before yon fall and the operated on him. But he didn't bavs parrot answered. Go soak your head, you blankety blank, blank." it Kansas City Journal This angered Mr. Annett apd he deAN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR. rided to ehaae the boy from the tree. When he found that h had been Covered Head, Neck and Shoulder fsoled by parrot he said things. DurSuffered Agony for Twenty-fiv- e ing the day a policeman and a score of Years Until Cured by boys tried te capture the bird, but she Cutlcura. flew to the topmost branches. There the was stlB cussing For twenty-fiv- e years I suffered agI Hadnt Netlced Bird's Absence. ony from a terrible humor, complftt-- ' ly covering my head, neck' and shouA curious Incident t happened "In matter of such lder, discharging EngOrad recently during a , wedding. to eight and smell that X The vicar, supposing the party to became an object of dread.- I conbegan the service, quite unsulted the most able doctors flar and conscious. of the fact that the bride near, to no avail Then I got Cutlhad not arrived. Instead ef stopping, cura, and in a surprisingly short time him the bridegroom, best man and I was. completely cured. For this 1 others1 remained silent Grom sheer thank Cutlcura, and advise all those nervousness and presently, when the suffering from skin humors to get tt bride and her father, who- - had been and end their misery at once. S. P. delayed, hurriedly entered. The father Keyes, 149 Congress Street, Baton, quaintly apologized by saying: ExMass. cuse me for interrupting; some mist take has been made. Explanations Would Aid Palestine Jswse. was- begun Archibald Forder, known as the followed' and' She service "Arabian Livingstons for his exteas-tv- again. travels In Arabia, la In tha United Cat Helped Her Mistress: States In tbe Interest of the poorer f A Dover, N. IT. woman of very reguJews in Palest". to the lar habits Is accustomed to-gcellar for potatoes at exactly 11:20 : a. m. each day. Tbe other day a caller Interrupted her usual routine money somewhat. The family cat easily Why throw-awa- y showed' uneasiness and after a ttme and comfort in buying poor disappeared. When the mlstreea later went to- the stairway In response to tea? unusual sound from that locality, fn i yw mm is f emmr i im , she discovered that the cat had alhe Schilling's Bi ready brought three moderate sized When a man regards himself a Ir- potatoes from the cellar and was then resistible It la tjme to do some quiet struggling wffft a larger one which Philashe was trying to carry up the stairs thinking nnd by grasping one of tho sprouts In her delphia Bulletin. (to-nigh- - - e TEA - Tr teeth. TEA .. Maple Sugar in Ton Some ides of the magnitude of the If we know anything, we maple sugar Industry as carried on In Vermont nay be bad from the fact Jcnow tea. Jlold us responthat at the single station of East sible! Berkshire Herman Chaffee loaded twenty-tw- c tour of the sweet and A. KfiKrvWdffO freak, ftH faff i J. Croft eight. At the some time one buyer alone haa gathered up Servant Girla Have Money, . over forty tons of sugar and two carIa Germany ths number of servant loads of sirup. The banner sugar girls who have savings bank account maker of tQls section Is Norman Hogs-boois nearly three times as large as that of Booth Richmond, who baa of shop girls who have them. 639 pounds from 2,000 produced trees and sold the whole for KVX. TO. ; m TEA M Forty Years On the Road. Herbert T Brooks ranks well up to Do you use Schilling's toward the lean of New England com merclal travelers, having entered Best? upon the fortieth year of continuous time What a pity we dont all service on April 20. Duringbutthis two dip be has been employed by of us I ferent companies, the first engagement having lasted for over thirty yearn Japanese Burial Custom. Mr Brooks proposes to retire at ths Japanese dead are burled hi a end of tve current vear. squatting posture, chin upon hues. re, What Fatigue Really la. Tiredness Is as natural a condition TWO OPEN of life as la the ability to perform work, write Andrew Wilson In the Illustrated London News. It la na- IflTORTAflT TO MARRIED W0MER ture's signal that rest and repose are necessary in order to recuperate the Bra Mary Dlmmick of Washington tails How Lydia B. pinkham'a Vegetable vital powers. Think for a moment ot the supply of nourishment (which Compound Mad Her WalL means the giving of energy or the It in with great pleasure we publish power of doing work) to any part the following letters, as they convino-ingl- y frame The healthy receives its due prove the claim w have so many quota of food materials, and out of times made In our columns that Mrs, them builds up Its substance and obBut the tains its working power. supply of energy is not constant. Hence, after a certain exhaustion of the store It originally possessed, the human engine demands more coal and water. Fatigue Is the ) which authorizes the fresh supply. LETTERS sign-manu- : Favorite Remedy lr.w Pavld ot BlightRnndyt f Haras aa4 Or rot Ablophyalrldhno ; f Mrs. fr. P. MUner. BurghiU. O 11 ;A rnfc 1 $ w a bottle. Death to Unmuzzled Cattle. Close to the frontier of Nepal Is the mountain of Sandook-Phu- , which means in the Thibetan language, "The bill of the Poison plant, or aconite. This plant la so abundant, and so deadly In Its effects, that all sheep and cattle passing over the mountain are muzzled by their drivers. Curiously enough only those cattle that ire newly Imported from the plains are fatally affected. The natives believe that the sheep of the district learn to shna tha youngest leaves, which are the most virulent. A more likely explanation la that they grow habituated to the drug by taking b ht small quantities. Stray Stories - AlrsAiary Dimmick Pinkbam, of Lynn, Mass., ia fully qualihelpful advice to sick women: Bead Mrs. Dimmicka letters. ' Her first letter;' fied to give . Dear Mrs. Pinkham ! I have been a sufferer fhr tJte past eight years with a trouble which first originated from painful menstruation tbe pains were excruciating, with inflammation and ulceration of tbe womb. Tbe doctor eay I must have an operation or I cannot live, I da not want to submit te an operation if lean possibly avoid fa. - Please help me- - Mm Mary Dlmmick, Washington, D, C, Her second letter; Dear Mr. Pinkham s You will remember my condition whin I Red Cron Bell Blue. Lanre peekage 9 last wrote you, and that the doctor said I Tha Bum Company, South bead, lad. must hare an opera tioa or li oouM not lire. I received your kind letter and followed year Lack. 8ur to Follow. advice very carefully and am- bow entirely , I fear, said the lady of the houae well. As my earn was so serious it seems a that I am cured.. I' know thus I ow as she gazed across th street on miracle not only my health tmt-mK. life t moving day, that th folks who have Pinkham s Vegetable Compound andLydia t your over miles out moved walk there advice. without acne wont or an have lean just much lhck. They have taken away a pain, and I wish every suffering rrnnun would read this letteraM' realise what yon th cat and ths broom, the two things can do for them. Mrs. Mary Dimmick, S9th nd East Capitol Streets Washingt, ix C. that should always bs left la a vacataaw Mr. Bnorg bring the ed house. I How easy It waa forMra. Dimmick to broom out to th van and 1 aaw the write to Mrs. Flnkham at Lynm, Maas., - rzt th rinort - eldest boy carry away the cat under and bow little it- eoat her a two cent his coat. If the cat hod followed stamp. Yet how valuable was the reply! Aa Mrs. Dimmick says it saved her life. voluntarily to their new home It would haaon file- - thooaands have been all right But when one of Mrs. Pinkham such letters- aa the- above, just moves there Is no way qf transferring off era ailing women, helpful frliian - - broom without bringing New York Sun. 01 luck. TEA Whoever you are, wherever you are, our tea is for you; our moneyback money too. 3 JVv FOR WOMEN treaties with te tbsir eex, ease as a Sosch is atarreUraelr IM-csee-tsl. TtorestbkrsIssneee.kiUaeiseaesssnae-ste- Londons Garbage. About 80,000 tons ot dust and refuse la taken away In barges from London-everyear. son clesuwinft, healing, m water, and is far and economical that bqoid innipncz ine alt Paaoiaa Coumuiv ,ur EvsnriMatS a. Lowest Belle Photo like Co. Svppljr Every pound package of Schillings Best is a free tefroUUief'efrNt. hue. iom N TEA year bobm Smtos, ta phrinS rapkp. Oar stnek is nvw sad wde-dat- It hurts a womans pride to have another woman share with her a mans attentions. Tw frair reform lid r TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES Faf mlftet draggias, SO cents box. Trial Bex end Boric ri tsstswcMeas Prem Good tea is better th&n most of us know. You may as well know Schillings Best sample, if you don p Sisctarses, heals iameirina aaS soteoess, cersalsecerrbuaaoA sasal catarrh. PjLXtlne is ia pewder lorm lo be dueahvS hi pars Ymc A. TEA ; Tame Ruffled Grouts. t wo broods of ruffled grouse of Out Ve take the risk of your hatched last spring by Prof. Hodge Worcester, Masg, four have winter finding our tea as we say, at of ed and nr apparently healthy birds. In spite of the fact that they were your grocer's. ' raised In captivity. They are tarns Tow fa.-- , Mans fwt MMI U and have the run of the Hodge place am ScftUUse's M. like hens. They like nil kinds ol Center of Europe. fruit nnd ba tries, nnd It la hoped that Moscow is situated almost la ths they will mate and a second generaeenter of European Russia. tion of tan e partridges be raised TEA " Keep gsrene.' When you com to think of tt, moat Eugene E. Larlo, of ?5l. Twentieth of us do have a hard time keeping avenue, ticket seller in tbe Unlow Sta- ourselves in order, proper, nerves, tion. Denver, Col., say: You are at selfishness, and longings, ambitions and desires, all Insiting to have a liberty to repeat what I first stated through 4 our hearlng. and down steps wisdom nnd Denver order control. - Qt course (here are about papers Doan's Kidney Fills in the Intellectual people to the summer of 1899, for means nothing, whom I have had no reason in and little they know of the fight pU the interim to change my the other passionate half. Ill health -and discontent are the fruits Of th opinion of tbe remedy. I was subject to severe atbattle. Keep serene, say I shall contacks of backache, altrol myself and be a cheerful and all a 111 go well. Now ways aggravated If I sat York a Post. at desk. Doan's long Kidney Pills absolutely Ministers Arc Healthy. stopped my backache. I In bis book on Nerves in Order, have never had pain Dr. Schofield, formerly examiner for or a twinge since. Foster-MilburCo., Buffalo. N. Y. the British National Health Society, w For sale by all druggists. Price 50 gives a Uble of longevity hich shows that the Christian mlnlstty la th cents per box. most healthful of callings. His Perilous Experience. A.( Your Dealer hr Allens Foot-EzzWhen the steamship Wellington arrived at San Francisco recently she A p wder. It rests the fret. Cures Hot.Calkms, Achiog.S westing brought a Japanese whom she bad Feet and Ingrowing Nails. At all Drugpicked up at sea after he bad been gists and hluw stores. 93 cents. Accept standing four days and four nights, no s b&titute. Sample mailed FREE. without food or water, on the bottom Address, A S. Olm-- , ted, LcKoy, N. Y. of a capsized fishing boat. He had Effect of Diet on Silkworms. held to the center board, though the Bilk worms fed on different leaves sea was rough. produce silks of varied colors; thus MVW Wtnstow-- s Soothing ft a diet of vino leaves produces a bright Trap. For children teething, (often Hi (tun., reduces gp red. and lettuce an emerald green. emmnna, suss peln, con triad vuitg. feeneutUa. AFTER. THREE-YEAf- lfi HIMES BEST OOCTU Salt Lake CHy. Address Mall Orders Dept. M. it U ytm In every man there Is a disposition to do th grand where women are concerned. -- ' - TEA People think spices and extracts are always dishonest No; they are not VMM- - bid aftrtuau( rM , RELIABLE ASSAYS J .TV Stlrer. ..... tone .a Bold, (nd Sllrar. I. riaear Oold. Briorte and Sleh OnsCopper.. BonehC. F1 Ogden I ftssaa Co. HEW PENSION LAWS Andy Sa RATH AW BICKrORDp Washington, When on man sneers at another It la fair to presume Jealousy ta at the If afflicted with bottom ot it hors syea. ft a, R5 PUTM, Itapssn'sEji Water . |