'B3MEEie6ElßEsßemßE^^l^^raße^;m2B y !S s'i | New York Capitalists to Restore | | Yucatan to Its Ancient Place I as the World's Garden Spot. | -r" EW YORK capitalists are I about to attempt one of the 1 most extraordinary opera (J" tious that has ever been con templated by man. They Intend to try to restore In Yucatan a civilization dead these hundreds of years, to re populate the streets of its forgotten cities, to revive the past glories of a once famous country, to refresh its desert wastes with the water which ©nee made a green and a goodly land of tiiat which is now but a wilderness of sand and desolation, and to again eet flowing the tide of life and com merce which once profited by the nat ural resources of this old-world land. In its conception the project is as flaring as if an attempt were made to restore the life of ancient Egypt and people" again the palaces of the Phar aohs. The country upon which this re markable experiment will be made lies at the southeastern extremity of Mexico. It has been characterized by travelers as the hottest place on earth —Death Valley only excepted—but sci entists, who trust to thermometers rather than to the perspiratory remem brances of explorers, say that the cli mate of Yucatan has been defamed. They say that the average highest •temperature Is only ninety-eight de grees. while very often the mercury registers as little as seventy-five de grees. Yucatan lies twenty degrees from the equator—the twentieth de gree of longitude intersecting the country, Yucatan, like Egypt, is n country of magnificent tradition. That it was once a country of great wealth and of rapp rfi§ |J||l TOLTEC CROSSES. a high degree of civilization is thor oughly established, yet although it was once a region rich in agricultural pro ducts, it is to-day almost a forgotten corner of the earth, badly watered, lit tle cultivated and maintaining a place In the affairs of mankind only because its forest are rich in mahogany, rose wood, logwood and other valuable tim ber. Having an area of 28,178 square miles and a population of 275,500-- mostly Maya Indians the country possesses only twenty-five miles of railroad line. This railroad connects tiie capital, Merida, with its port of iProgreso, 011 the northwest coast. According to the official returns there are altogether in Yucatan seven cities, thirteen towns, sixty-two ruined cities, 143 villages, fifteen abandoned settlements and 333 haciendas. Scarce ly any of these places have as many 11s 10,000 inhabitants, the population of the great majority falling below 1000. ! This is the sort of country which New J JBE&UiNS.CF ' J .York capitalists confidently expect— i liy the help of American enterprise as much as by the power of money—to convert iuto n land of prosperity. There is a certain element of specula tion about the undertaking, but thej men who have entered into the project me emphatically not of thp class who i lend their names to schemes of doubt ful outcome. The ancient ruins of Yucatan and their meaning have really been the main reason for the interest in the country taken by the New York capi talists. It is perfectly evident that Yucatan at one time supported a very large population; that the country was well watered and that the practice of agriculture had attained a high stand ard. To-day Yucatan is very nearly a waterless desert, nncl yet It seems cer tain that neither the climate nor the topography of the country has changed materially since the days of the an cient civilization. It is for this rea son that some account of the known history of the former civilization and ruins of Yucatan becomes Interesting and pertinent at this point. Of the sixty-two ruined cities of Yu catan proper the most Important, or at least the best known and most fully described are those of Izamal, Mayapan, Ako, Acanceli, Uxmal, Tl kul and Kabah, all centred in the northwest corner of the peninsula round about Merlda, the capital, which Itself stands upon the ruins of Tiliu; Chiehen-Itza, about midway between OF PALACE: RED Tikul and the cast coast; Labna, Noh becan and Potonclian, iu the Campeche district. Most of these places were described and illustrated by Stephens and Catlierwood nearly titty years ago, and have recently been revisited and redescrlbed by Desire Charnay, from whose book the illustrations ac companying this article were repro duced. A more modern and productive in vestigator was Dr. do Plongeon, who, with his wife, spent many years in , Investigating "the ruins and inscrip tions found in Yucatan. To de l'longeon Is due the now gen erally admitted theory that the civili zation of Yucatan was allied to that of Egypt. He established the fact that many of the gods represented in the mural paintings of the inhabitants of Yucatan were identical with the Egyp tiou divinities. De Plongeon also pointed out the fact that the same | head-dresses were worn by the Egyp- tion kings and the Yucatan rulers. The value ot' skilled investigation of the Yucatan ruins can bo appreciated when it is said that they are recog nized as being among the most beauti ful specimens of architecture In the world. The structures, especially those ot Uxmal. Akc. Kabali and Cliicliea- Itza, excel all other American rnlns, There Is nothing comparable to them on the Mexican table-land. Uxnial, for Instance, stands alto- CARICATURE. gether unrivaled for the magnitude of its buildings, the richness of its sculp tured facades and the almost classic beauty of its stntuary. Its most spiculous edifice bears the name of the Nunnery, though there is slight evidence tlia'. nuns ever inhabited the building. 'Aere is also a beautiful building known as the Governor's Palace, which possesses a wonderful frieze, 325 feet long, decorated with a row of colossal heads in high relief, divided into panels, and filled alter nately with panels of heads and pan els of designs resembling arabesques. One of the strangest and most signifi cant monuments in Yucatan is found at Ake, ten miles east of Merlda, where there Is a huge pyramid, with an immense flight of steps, presenting features different from anything else where discovered In Yucatan. This strange monument is surmounted by thirty-six pillars, each four feet square and from fourteen to sixteen feet high. At Izamal, a few miles east of Ake, there is another great pyramid, with a base 000 feet square. Near it are three other pyramids and a colossal head, thirteen feet high, which bears a strong resemblance to the Sphinx, as far as style is concerned. Unlike that great monolith, however, the Iza mal Sphinx is built up of rough stones which have been covered with mor tar. The interesting feature of all these ruins, from the modern and utilitarian point of view, is the proof they afford that at some time, not very remote, the country of Yucatan was almost as crowded with people as modern China. Wonder has boon expressed that such a bleak, arid and almost streamless laud should have ever become the seat of empire and the home of a flourish ing civilization, but from a geographi cal stauilpoint the absence of rivers on the Yucatan plateau appears to he due not so much to a deficient rainfall as to the extremely porous nature of the ground, which absorbs water like a sponge, and thereby prevents the de velopment of surface streams. It Is to this problem that modern methods will be applied, although, in their very application, they will have been copied from those of the ancients. Yucatan is not a dry and waterless land at all, only, like many onother country, it will only yield its treasures to those who will work for them. Be neath the surface of Yucatan the waters accumulate in such abundance that a sufficient supply may always be had by any one who will take the trouble to sink a well. The water is so thoroughly distributed, Indeed, that any part of the tableland may be suc cessfully tapped for water. In that fact lies the secret of the old time prosperity of Yucatan and its present day desolation.—Brooklyu Eagle. lieefeater With n Sense of Humor. Some years ago I followed a party of tourists around the tower, and heard one of the "beefeaters" who garrison that venerable fortress narrate the history of the various trophies. Ho was a man of humor and indulged ill frequent jokes, and as he came to a long row of dismounted camion he winked at me and remarked: "These 'ere cannon was hall cap tured from the Yankees." "When?" 1 asked. "In warious wars," ho responded boldly. "Then why do you label them as having been captured from the Turks, the Russians and other nations?" "To spare yer honor's feelings, sir," he responded politely. But 110 cannon or flag or any trophy among the thousands that may be seen iu tlie Tower of London ever belonged to the army or navy of the United States. If there were ever one even of the most insignificant character it would be shown with pride to every American tourist.—W. E. Curtis, in Chicago Itecord-Herald. The longest-lived people have gen erally been those who made breakfast the principal meal of the day. The stomach has more vigor in the morn lax tliuu at anv time. DP. T'ALMAGES SERMON SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. 6ui)Ject: The Folly of Eitravnennce Causes of tlio Great Financial l>ls turlmnces "Whlcli Take l*laco JKvery Few Vears—Wasted Wealth. I Copyright 1901.1 WASHINGTON, D. C. —IN this discourse Dr. Talmage shows the causes of the great financial disturbances which take place every few years, and arraigns the people who live beyond their means; text, .Jere miah xvii, 11, "As the partridge sittoth on eggs and hatcheth them not, so lie that getteth riches and not by right shall leave them in the midst of his days and at his end shall be a fool." Allusion is here made to a well-known fact in natural history. If a partridge or a quail or a robin brood the eggs ot an other species, the young will not stay with the one that happened to brood them, but at the first opportunity will as sort with their own species. Those of us who have been brought up in the country have seen the dismay of the farmyard hen. having brooded aquatic fowls, when after awhile they tumble into their nat ural element, the water. So my text sug gests that a man may gather under his wings the property of others, but it will after awhile escape; it will leave the man in a sorry predicament and make him feel very silly. What has caused all the black days of financial disasters for the last sixty years? Some say it is the credit system. Some thing back of that. Some say it is the spirit of gambling ever and anon becoming epidemic. Something back of that. Some say it is the sudden shrinkage in the value of securities, which even the most honest and intelligent men could not have fore seen. Something back of that. I will give you the primal cause of all these dis turbances. It is the extravagance of modern society which impels a man to spend more money than he can honestly make, and he goes into wild speculation in order to get the means for inordinate display, and sometimes the man is to blame and sometimes his wife, and oftener both. Five thousand dollars income. SlO,- 000, $20,000 income is not enough for a man to keep up the style of living he pro poses, and therefore he steers his bark to ward the maelstrom. Other men have suddenly snatched up $50,000 or SIOO,OO0 — why not he? The present income of the man not being large enough, he must move earth and hell to catch up with his neigh bors. Others have a country seat—so must he; others have an extravagant ca terer—so must he; others have a palatial residence—so must he. Extravagance is the cause of all the de falcations of the last sixty years, and if you will go through the history of all the great panics and the great financial dis turbances no sooner have you found the story than right back of it you will find the story of how many horses the man had, how many carriages the man had, how many residences in the country the man had, how many banquets the man gave—always, and not one exception for the last sixty years, either directly or in directly extravagance the cause. Now, for the elegances and the refine ments and the decorations of life 1 cast my vote. While I am considering this subject a basket of flowers is handed in— flowers paradisaical in their beauty—white calla, with a green background of bego nia; a cluster of heliotropes nestling in some geraniums; sepal and perianth bear ing on them the marks of God's finger. When I see that basket of flowers, they persuade me that God loves beauty and adornment and decoration. God might have made the earth so as to supply the gross demands of sense, but left it with out adornment or attraction. Instead of the variegated colors of the seasons, the earth might have worn an unchanging dull fcrown. The tree might have put forth its fruit without the prophecy of leaf or blos no'ii. Niagara might have come down in gradual descent without thunder and winged spray. Look out of your window any morning after there has been a dew and see whether God loves jewels. Pu 1 " a crystal of snow under a microscope and see what God thinks of architecture. God com manded the priest of olden time to have his robe adorned with a wreath of gold and the hem of his garment to be embroid ered in pomegranates. The earth sleeps, and God blankets it with the brilliants of the night Sky. The world wakes, and God washes it from the burnished laver of the sunrise. So I have not much patience with a man who talks as though decora tion and adornment and the elegances of life are a sin when they are divinely rec ommended. But there is a line to be drawn between adornment and decora tion that we can afford and those we can not afford, and when a man crosses that line he becomes culpable. I cannot tell you what is extravagant for you. You cannot tell me what is extravagant for me. What is right for a queen may be squandering for a duchess. What may be economical for you, a man with larger in come, will be wicked waste for me. with smaller income. There is no iron rule on this subject. Every man before God on his knees must judge what is extrava gance, and when a man goes into expen ditures beyond his mean's he is extrava gant. When a man buys anything he can not pay for, he is extravagant. There are families in all onr cities who can hardly pay the:" rent, and who owe all the merchants in the neighborhood and yet have an apparel unfit for their cir cumstances, and are all the time sailing so near shore that business misfortune or an attack of sickness prepares them for pauperism. You know very well there are thousands of families in our great cities who slay in neighborhoods until they have exhausted all their capacity to get trusted. They stay in the neighborhoods until the druggists will let them have no more medicines, and the butchers will sell them no more meat, and the bakers will sell them no more bread, and the gro eeryman will sell them no more sugar. Then they find the region unhealthy, and they hire a carman, whom they never pay. to take them to some new quarters, where the merchants, the druggists, the butchers, the bakers and the grocervmen come and give them the best rounds of beef and the best merchandise of all sorts until they find out that the only compen sation they are going to get is the ac quaintance of the patrons. There are thousands of such thieves in all our big cities. You see, I call them by the right name, for a if a man buys anything he does not mean to pay for he is a thief. Of course sometimes men are flung of misfortunes, and they cannot pay. I know men who are just as honest in having failed as other men are honest in succeed ing. I suppose there is hardly a man who has gone through life but there have been some times when he has been so hurt of misfortune he could not meet his obliga tions. Hut all that I put aside. There are a multitude of people who buy that which they never intend to pay for, for which there is no reasonable expectation thev will ever be able to pay. Now, if you have become oblivious of honesty and mean to defraud, why not save the njer cliant as much as you can? Why not go some day to his store and when nobody is looking just shoulder the ham or the spare rib and in modest silence steal away ? That would be less criminal, because in the other way you take not only the man's g.iods, but you take the time of the mer chant and the time of his accountant, and you take the time of the messenger who brought you the goods. Now, if you must steal, steal in a way to do as little dam age to the trader as possible. .John Randolph arose in the American Senate when a question of national finance was being discussed, and. stretching him self to his full height, in a shrill voice hs crieil out: 'Mr. Chairman, I have discov ered the philosopher's stone, which turns everything into gold—pay-as you go." So ciety has got ';o be reconstructed on this subject or tl <; seasons of defalcation will continue to repeat themselves. You have no right to ride in a carriage for which you are hopelessly in debt to the wheelwright v\io furnished the landau and to the horse dealer who provided the blooded span, and to the harness maker who caparisoned the gay steeds, and to the liveryman who has provided the stab ling, and to the driver who, with rosettcd hat. sits on the coach box. Oh, I am so glad it is not the absolute necessities of life which send people out into dishonesties and fling them into mis fortunes. Tt is almost always the super fluities. God has promised us a house, but not a palace; raiment, but not chin chilla; food, but not canvasback duck. I am yet to see one of these great defalca tions which is not connected in some way with extravagance. While once in awhile a Henry Irving or an Edwin Booth or a Joseph Jefferson thrills a great audience with tragedy, you know as well as I do that the vast major ity of the theatres are as debased as de based they can be, as unclean as unclean they can be and as damnable as damnable they can be. Three million dollars —the vast majority of those dollars going in the wrong direction. 'Over a hundred millions paid in this country for cigars and tobacco a year! About $2,000,000,000 paid for strong drink in one year in this country! With such extravagance, pernicious extravagance, can there be any permanent prosperity? business men, cool headed business men, is such a thing a possibility? These ex travagances also account, as I have al ready hinted, for the positive crimes, the forgeries, the abscondings of the officers of the banks. The store on the business street swamped by the residence on the fashionable avenue. The father's, the hus band's craft capsized by carrying too much domestic sail. That is what springs the leak in the merchant's money till. That is what cracks the pistols of the sui cides. That is what tears down the banks. That is what stops insurance companies. Thrt is what halts this nation again and again in its triumphal march of prosper ity. In the presence of the American peo ple, so far as I can get their attention, I want to arraign this monster curse of ex travagance, and I want you to pelt it with your scorn and hurl at it your anathema. I know it cuts close. I did not know but some of you in high dudgeon would get up and go out. You stand it well. Some of you make a great swash in life, and after awhile you will die, and minis ters will be sent for to come and stand by your coffin and lie about your excellences, but they will not come. If you send for me I will tell you what my text will be: "He that provideth not for his own. and especially for those in his own household, is worse than an infidel!" What an apportionment! Twenty thou sand dollars tor ourselves and one cent for God! Ah, my friends, this extrava gance accounts for a great dial of what the c.i"se of God suffers! An<«.he desecration goes on even to the funeral day. You know very well that there are men who die solvent, but the expenses are so great before they get un der ground they are insolvent. There fire families that go into penury in wicked response to the demands of tl.is day. They putin casket and tomb stone that which they ought to putin bread. They wanted bread; you gave them a tombstone. One would think that the last two ob ligations people would be particular about would be the physician and the under taker. Because they are the two last ob ligations. those two professions are almost always cheated. They send for the doctor in great haste, and he must come day and night. They send for the undertaker amid the great solemnities, and often these two men are the very last to be met with compensation. Merchants sell goods, and the goods are not paid for. They take back the goods, I am told. But there is no relief in this case. The man spent all he had in luxury and extravagance while he lived, and then he goes out of the world, and has left nothing for his family, nothing for the obsequies, and as he goes out of the world he steals the doctor's pills and the undertaker's slippers. I was reading in a New York paper an account of the obsequies in a family of very moder ate estate, and the aggregate was $.'5000. A man in New York of moderate estate dies. He has lived in extreme luxury. He departs this life. The family, desirous of keeping up the magnificence, orders the following things. They were produced and never paid for to this day: Casket, covered with Lyons velvet, silver moldings SSSO Heavy plated Jtandles 60 Solid silver plate, engraved in Roman letters 73 Ten linen scarfs lo!) Floral decorations 225 Music and quartet choir at the house 40 Twenty carriages 140 Then fifteen other important expen ditures amounting to 330 Making an aggregate of SIS 76 And all that to get one poor mortal to his last home and never paid for! Swin dled his family. Swindled the world. He is swindling it now. It is one of the great curses of this day, the extravagance, the wicked extravagance, of the country. And then look how the cause of God is impoverished. Men give so much some times for their indulgences they have nothing for the cause or God and religion. Twenty-two million dollars expended in this country a year for religious purposes; but what are the twenty-two millions ex pended for religion compared with the hundred millions expended on cigars and tobacco and then two thousand millions of dollars spent for rum! So a man who had a fortune of $750,000 or what amount ed to that in London spent it all in in dulgences, chiefly in gluttonies, and sent hither and yon for ail the delicacies and often had a meal that would cost SIOO or S2OO for himself. Then he was reduced to one guinea, with which he bought a rare bird, had it cooked in best style, ate it, took two hours for digestion, walked out °" Westminster bridge, and jumped into 'he Thames —on a large scale what men are doing on a small scale. Oh, my friends, let us take our stand against the extravagances of society. Do not pay for things which are frivolous when you may lack the necessities. Do not put one month's wages or salary into a trinket, just one trinket. Keep your credit good by seldom asking for any. Do not starve a whole year to afford one Belshazzar's carnival. Do not buy a coat of many colors, and then in six months be out at the elbows. Flourish not. as some people I have known, who took apart-, ments at a fashionable hotel and had ele gant drawing rooms attached and then vanished in the night, not even leaving their compliments for the landlord. I tell you, my friends, in the day of God's judgment we shall not only have to give an account for the way we made our money, but for the way we spent it. We have got to leave all the tilings that sur round us now. Alas, if any of you in the dying hour felt like the dying actress who asked that the casket of jewels be brought to her and then turned them over with her pale hand and said, "Alas, that I have to leave vou so soon!" Better in that hour have one treasure of heaven than the bridal trous seau of a Marie Antoinette, or to have been seated with Caligula at a banquet which cost its thousands of dollars, or to have been carried to our last resting place with _ Senators and princes as pall bearers. They that consecrate their wealth, their time, their all, to God shall be held in everlasting remembrance, while I have the authority of this book for announcing that the name of the wicked nhall rot. THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLINC FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Dmnkenneii Is Not Hereditary T.ato Conclusion? licarliflit by n Committee on Inebriety Selected by the lon •lon Medical Society. The drunkard can no longer lav his in ebriety _to bibulous ancestors. The man who arinks to excess cannot claim public indulgence on the theory that he inherited H taste for alcoholic stimulants from his parents. A craving for drink, in fact, cannot be transmitted from parents to children. The;o are the conclusions of a commit tee on inebriety selected by the London Medical Society to investigate the rela tion of heredity to inebriety. The com mittee was composed of five physicians, two surgeons, a professor or bacteriology, an army surgeon and five general practS tioners. After eighteen months of inves> tigation of all phases of drunkenness un der all sorts of conditions and environ ments the committee has made a report which completely upsets many of the fa vorite notions of temperance reformer# and sociologists. It has been stubbornly contended for a century or more that inebriety is heredi tary in many instances, that the tend ency to drunkenness is capable of trans mission to offspring. It is true, however, that this contention has been always vig orously combated by the highest medical authorities. The report just publisl J declares that there is no evidence in the history of the race that acquired charac ters of any kind are heritable. The last word of science, as declared by teachers of physiology, biology and botany, is a very definite assertion that 110 instance of the hereditary transmission of an ac quired taste or characteristic has ever been demonstrated either in the animal or the vegetable kindom. If a man having no inborn tendency to excess, yet acquire drunken habits, his progeny are no more in danger than are those of his neighbor, says the report. The whole question of drunkenness is a matter of environment and an innate ca pacity to enjoy the exhilaration that comes from alcoholic indulgence. It is not denied that drunken parents who be come thus mentally and physically weak are liable to have children weak in body and feeble in mind. But instances of in ebriated fathers having sons who found no pleasure in alcoholic indulgence are numberless. If the conclusions of the society are ac cepted they relieve the ancestors of drunkards of a heavy responsibility and brush away the only claim which the in ebriate appears to have upon public in dulgence and sympathy. A Xew Point of View, Listen to the appeal of the late Dr. John Hal): "Fathers, do without it for the sake of your young sons if for no other reason. How can you tell but that their swift feet may trio to that destruction 011 this side of which your slower feet have been able to halt?" The Christian prin ciple should nersuadc you to leave off drinking for the sake of the weakest and lowliest, and certainly for the sake of those in your own household. Let the young men of your families do as you may think it right for you to do. and what fearful probabilities loom up before you! l>r. Nott used to remark how those young men who at college persisted in the use of intoxicating drinks soon sank into ob- Bcurity and often into drunkards' graves. It is hazardous, then, to form habits which are so frequently fatal, and it is becoming ill all Christian and well dis posed people to exercise by their example a commendable, salutary and restraining influence over men generally. These ara the principles which make the early tem perance reformation so mighty. These are the principles which have swept the use of intoxicating drinks out of three fourths of the pro.-perous. respectable and intelligent families ot America. Eev. John H. Barrows, D. D., in Christian Work. A Ureirer'# Object T.e»?on. A remarkable lesson is taught by the ?xample of the great English brewer. Lord Iveogh. Eleven years ago he placed 81,250,000 in the hands of trustees to build mode! tenements for the poor in London and Dublin. In the seven large buildings completed for London there ire club rooms, reading rooms, music ■ooms and minor theatres are supplied, »nd various shelters for children whose mothers are out at service. But the Strang ;st thing of all is that in these beautiful homes (for such they are, artistic, com fortable and inspiring self-respect in the 5000 or 9000 nooulation they shelter) not 1 drop of the brewer's own beer can be sold. Mineral water is on draught, but svery form of intoxicants is banned. There are plenty of baths, but no bars. A Sham ltefonn. As an evidence of the way in which the svil of intemperance seeks to gain popu larity, it is said that Lord .Grey, who owns i public house at Broomhill, England, ha . adopted the Gothenburg principles. He ievotes the profits (less ten per cert,.) to schemes for the benefit of the inhabitants jf the village, and has addressed .he mag istrates in various divisions of Northum berland urging them to give preference in the case of new licenses to applicants who would adopt that principle. The London Christian comments on this by saying: "It is no use to benefit a community with one hand, if you demoralize it, from little :hildren upward, with the other." The Uest Way. A poor woman stood near the magis trate who was hearing the case. "Drunk; third arrest," against her hus band. It was quickly decided, but some how the pathetic face of the woman touched the judge, and he said to her: "I am sorry, but 1 must lock up your hus band." She did not seem one who would be a deep thinker, but was there not deep wisdom m her sad and quick reply: "Your Honor, wouldn't it be better tor me and the children if you locked up the saloon and let my husband goto work?" —Tem- perance Cause. Necessity of Temperance Hospitals. The Archbishop of Canterbury, presid ing at the annual public meeting of gov ernors of the London Temperance Hospi tal, said that he considered the hospital to be of great importance to the cause of temperance. It was doing a valuable edu cational work by proving that alcohol is not necessary as a means for the cure of disease. Drunkenness 111 Scotland. In the matter of sheer, overmastering drunkenness we stand without rivals ni shameful isolation. —Dundee Advertiser. The Crusade in Brief. We arc foremost in liquor legislation. While the pulpit resolves, the saloon acts. When people understand what alcohol is, and what it docs, they will put it out of existence. —Willard Parker, M. D. Nearly i>oo saloons have gone out of business in Cleveland, Ohio, within the last six months, according to the report of the city treasurer. The Toledo police judge who has a sym pathy for plain drunks agrees with nu merous sentimentalists and pseudo scien tists when he says that they are the vic tims pl » du»eMe.