V THE nATPY DATS, Ringing of the happy dayt that's the way to sing! When the desert feels the freshness and the fullness of the spring: ftVhen the hills stnnd clear to heaven, and the bells of Hope shall ring Kinging of the happy days Oh, that's the way to sing! Binging of the happy days, when nil the stars above. In azure fields of glory, are but sentinels of Love! IWhen the ripple of the rivers, and the melody of birds Ehall only match the meaning of the sweetest human words! Binging of the happy days and let us sing 'em true Their symphonies of sunlight, their mys teries of dew! (The spring is wrecked by winter the withered blossoms fall; But Love makes bright the future, and God's above us nil! Atlanta Constitution. nJ MISS ABBIE'S LEGACY. Cy Hendry passed out the solid looking envelope with the Imprint of a law firm In one corner. "I guess you got a legacy, Miss Ab t)le," he said genially. "You ain't never had no letters from 'way out iWest before." Some of the "cracker cabinet," sit ting about the stove In the general etore section of the postoftice guf fawed at the suggestion, but they watched her respectfully as she hur ried past them with the precious let ter hugged to her breast. It was the first letter from a stranger Miss Ab ble had ever received in her life, and she could scarcely wait until she reached home to open it. ' By nightfall the news was all over the village, and the Clarion made al lusion to a fortunate townswoman who would presently become a Croe sus and probably would present the town with the library Mr. Carnegie had neglected to give. Miss Abble disclaimed the fortune, explaining to Hendry that It was just something about the Hossdale family that the lawyer wished to know, but the letters grew more frequent. There were long blue envelopes of a color that prevented even speculation as to their contents, and the belief gained ground that Abble Blair was a sharp one and that her disclaimers were merely for the purpose of throwing the tax collector off the scent. And now a second wonder, came Into her hitherto uneventful life, for Dave Grayling stepped up to her after church on Sunday night and drew her arm through his. "We're going the same way, Miss Abble," he said awkwardly, "let's be going together." Grayling's courtship was brief and masterful. He would listen to no denial and one afternoon Miss Abbie stood up before their few friends and the gray-haired minister spoke the few words that made her Mrs. Gray ling. That night they left- on the honeymoon trip to town, and a week later Grayling was back in his fields and Miss Abble was moving about the Grayling home with a flushed and . happy face, making It over from Its bachelor disorder to, the splck-span-ness of her own ideals? ? She went to the door as the wagon drove Into the yard, and Dave climbed down from the seat and lumbered up to the porch to hand her a letter. "From that lawyer friend o' yours," he explained with a kiss. "I s'pose I ought to be jealous; my wife gettin' letters from a strange man; bull ain't."-. - , '' He followed the horsos to the barn while Abbie went Into the house to read her letter. It was the first time she and Dave had directly spoken of the-lawyer correspondent, and more than once she had asked herself if It was not possible that his belief in the report might not have been respon sible for his proposal. When Dave came In presently he found his wife sitting In the rocking chair and clutching a slip of blue pa per In her nervous hands. "Got a check from your legacy?" he demanded with rough good humor. "I wish I had a legacy like yours." "It's not a legacy, Dave," she said wistfully. "It's a wedding present. Did you really believe that I had come Into some money? Was that why why ?" "I don't suppose that you want me to believe that you've been corre sponding with a lawyer chap all those months about anything else," he asked, still in good humor. "Let's hear all about it, Abbie. I haven't bothered you before, but well, I can get Cobb's twenty acres very cheap If I buy right away." The tears sprang unbidden to Ab bie's eyes, but they did not flow. "I told everybody the truth," she said simply. "Mr. Benson is the his torian of the Rossdale family. Some how he found out that I had Grand mother Rossdale's family tree and wrote me about It. He used to send me reports of the otbor branches and I'd look them up USv him. When I was married I wrote him, so he could get that down In the book, and he's sent me a check for $25 for a wed ding present. That's all." "And those big bunches of papers were only about the dead Rossdales?" acked Dave, with an uneasy laugh. 'I guess dead Rossdales won't buy no twenty-acre lots." He rose and stumped heavily out of the room to hide his disappointment, . leaving Abble staring dry-eyed before her.: The tragedy she had feared bud come. - Abbie was oddly Quiet at supper time. She eyed him wistfully as lbs set out her best' preserves and watched the plate of biscuit to see that there were always warm ones at hand. She flushed with pleasure as Dave pushed back his chair and de-. clared the meal to have been a suppor well worth the eating . "Dave," Abbie's voice was low and pained and she fingered the tablecloth nervously. "I've been thinking about this afternoon." "I've been trying to forget it," he said with a laugh that was not mirth ful. "Sometimes they put people In Jail who get money, under false pre tenses," she went on bravely. "I was thinking thnt If we were to see a lawyer perhaps we could get a di vorce. It's worse getting a husband under false pretenses." Her face fldshed scarlet as she made the suggestion. She did not look up, but Dave, knew that the kindly brown eyes must be moist and troubled. The hair was still softly brown and the thin cheeks were un wrinkled. Miss Abbie had been deemed an old maid at thirty-five. His glance traveled from the bowed head to the well-set table and the tidy room, and then roughly he pushed back his chair and went around the table. "Abble," he said, as he knelt be side her and drew her within the circle of his strong arms, "I did marry you because I wanted that twenty-acre lot, and I thought I could get It with your legacy. But I don't care about the legacy now; I'm glad you didn't get one. I got more -than I deserved. I was marrying a couple of thousand dollars and Instead o' that I got the best little woman in the whole United States and she's worth more to me than a whole Stateful of twenty-acre lots." New Haven Register. CARSON CITY'S HIRED GIRL. She is Apt to Re a Squaw and nt First to Startle the Eastern Woman. Carson City, the capital of Nevada, is probably the only city in the coun try where the hired girl Is a squaw. To the Carson City housewife every Indian man is Jim and every Indian woman is Sally. Neither Jim nor Sal ly can ever be depended on to work regularly, but as other help Is scarce and high priced the occasional ser vices which they deign to render are always welcome. When Sally wants to work she al ways opens the kitchen door without the formality of a knock and says, "Mahaylie (woman), you want work done?" Or simply, "Me heap hoga dl," which means that she Is hungry and wants to work for meal. An Eastern woman Is apt to be frightened the first time this happens or the first time she looks up and sees a buck's swarthy face pressed against the outside of the window, but she soon learns that Jim and Sally are quite tame. Sometimes Sally comes shivering to .the door in winter with a baby under her blanket. She Is "heap cold" and wants to toast herself and the queer little morsel of humanity on her back at the kitchen fire. Sometimes Sally will bring an armful of baskets to sell at the door and then the Eastern wo man rejoices exceedingly, for she knows that she can pick up for a few cents baskets that she would have to pay dollars forln the stores. The housewife likes to get a Piute Sally to work for her if possible, for she is cleaner, more industrious and more adaptable than the Shoshone or Washoe Sallies. The remnants of these three tribes have their homes up in the high hills above Carson, where no one else wants the land. They come down to the city every day, but they never stay there over night. The Eastern woman in Carson nev er fails to looks from her window at the sunset and watch them making their way along the trail, Indian file. In and out winds the long line, across the face of the darkening mountain, always ascending, the last sunbeams flashing on their red blankets. Each Jim is invariably with his own Sally, the squaw always carrying the pa poose, but the father sometimes shouldering a tired toddler. Up winds the long file to the brush tepees at timberline, where each tribe in Its own place, separate from the other two, cooks Its scanty food at its little camp fire and goes to sleep among the moaning pines. New York Sun. Hard Roads and Horses. Tin has seen many a good horse go wrong, and no veterinarian was able to cure or help. Horse would seem all right as long as he was out In the pasture loafing, but once he was har nessed up or saddled and taken out on hard streets he was all "stove up." Now, a horse stands on his toes like a ballet dancer, for horse's heels never touch the ground, so it is strange that, shod with iron shoes, they stand stony streets. Many horses cannot trot hard roads without rubber shoes, and many a "stove-up" horse is about as good as ever when so shod, for these shoes seem to make a hard street as pleasant to walk up no as a grass plot or a Turkey carpet. New York Press. A Bookworm. "No one meets such various kinds of people as we do," said a librarian. "You see that little old man over there? He is going through the en cyclopedias, one' volume at a time. He comes in every day and begins where ha left oft the day before. He has read through an entire set and is beginning another. Pretty dry read ing, some of it, one would say." New York Sun. A Good Daily Cow. When you see a calf that Is every thing that could be asked for in the way of gentleness, there is every prospect that she will make a good dairy cow. A wild calf can hardly ever be made fit for the dairy. Farmers' Home Journal. Test the Cow. Keep a record and te3t your cows. In this manner you will find out the profitable cows in the herd. Since you cannot afford to keep an unprof itable cow the sooner you learn the unprofitable ones the better for you. Farmors' Home Journal. Cider to Vinegar. A short time ago I announced thnt we were having trouble in getting our cider changed Into vinegar. A subscriber writes that fifteen pounds of sugar should be added to every barrel of cider. He says that ho has made twelve barrels and that he has had good results In following that plan. Epitomist. Holds the Cow's Tail. A new and Improved contrivance for holding the switch of a cow when the cow is being milked has been de signed by a Massachusetts man. The holder is constructed, from a flat cir cular strip of spring motal, which Is clamped around the leg of the attend ant. To prevent it moving a number Protection For the Milker. ot projections are placed on the inner face, which engage the trousers of the wearer. On the outer face of the strip Is a spring clamp, one end ot which is riv eted to the strip, while the opposite end Is free and curved slightly out ward, so that the switch of the animtil can be readily entered between the strip and the clamp. The animal is thus unable to swish hor tail in the milker's face, protecting the latter from injury In this way. Wee'.:!y Witness. The Value of n Fnrin. Th ,., r, f,.,. ..,,.. who place a proper estimate upon The value of their farms; I do not refer to the salable value of the land alone. What does it matter to you or mo What our farms will sell for if wo do not care to Bell them? The question for us to decide is what is our farm worth to us for tho purpose of fur nishing a home and a livelihood? Sap pose you have a farm with comfort able buildings, which you can eell for $5000, says Southern Fruit Grower. This farm furnishes a house in which you and your family abide, a garden, a playground about the house, barns for stabling your horses, cattle, food for these animals and almost all that you consume In the family. In other words, the farm very largely supplies the wants of your family and provides you with horses and carriages for traveling wherovor you wish to go. Now suppose you sell this farm for $5000 in cash and move to the city. You can scarcely buy a house and a small lot without barns that are as comfortable as your own for $5000. In tho city you are taxed for city taxes at least one hundred dollars. Your expenses are Increased in the city for car fares, for cost of everything you have to do, since you find it necessary to wear better clothes which cost you more money; you also have your amusements and other expenses which are increased in the city life. In other words the $5000 which in the country almost provides for your living, in the city simply provides a shelter from the storm. But there is most serious one. Your $5000 is another trouble In the city, and a Tested In your house and you have no business, where as the farm has not only furnished a home but a paying business also. Live Stock Mnnuro Vtlue. It Is well known that such foods as clover, alfalfa, tankage, bran, mid dlings, etc., have a high per cent, of jjrotein, and that the manure of live stock largely fed on these is much the most valuable for the soil. An agri cultural writer touching this matter calls attention to the fact that "Chem istry of the Farm," by Warrington, Bays that when fed to oxen all except 3.9 per cent, of the nitrogen of the food is voided either as a solid or llq .iw excrement, that 73.6 per cent. is voided as liquid excrement, hence the importance ot keeping plenty ot absorbent at hand. We also find that 14.7 per cent, of the nitrogen is retained In the body when the food is given to pigs. Twenty-one per cent, is voided in the solid excrement and 64.3 per cent, voided as liquid excrement. There Is a marked difference be tween the ox and the pig In this re spect, due td the rapid growth of the pig. As to the ash constituent of food, the same author says that 2.3 per cent, of the ash ot the food Is stored up in the body and that 97.7 per cent, is voided in the excrement when the feed is given to an ox, while a pig will retain 4.5 per cent, of the ash of the food and void 95.5 In the excre ment. The figures show that only 'a small per cent, of the plant food is sold off the farms when animals are fed the products, and that the rapid exhaustion of the soil's fertility Is a result of carelessness and lack upon the pnrt of the farmer of properly managing the various farm opera tions. By a Judicious management and the feeding of farm animals it has not only been possible but practicable to increase the production of the farm from year to year without spending large sums of money each year for commerlcal fertilizer. Succulence and Palntnbillty. We have often called attention to the fact that silage had the Important elements of succulence and palatabil lty so essential in feeding dairy cows. Referring to this matter Valancey E. Fuller, the well known dairyman, In a contribution to the Practical Dairy man says: The chemist cannot tell us why the water that is contained In all these succulent feeds play such an impor tant part in the well doing of the cow. Ho will tell us that pasture grass Is eighty per cent, water; that corn sl lage has 79.1 per cent.; sugar beets, 80.5 per cent.; mangel beets, 90.9 per cent.; carrots, 8 S.jG per cent; cab bage and pumpkin over 90 per cent, each. Yet this very wator, as we find it in tho various succulents, plays a very important part in the digestion of other food taken in conjunction with the succulents. It seems to act directly on the bowels and kidneys ot tho cows and maintains the cattle in that healthy condition which is es sential to the best production. Wo know that apples contain 80.8 per cent, water, yet we know also how bonoflcial that "Juice" as we call it, is to us as a regulator of the bowels, and how, if we eat an apple or two each day, It contributes to our good health. Corn silage Is the cheapest of all succulent, except pasture grass. Roots are exponsive to grow. They cost rr.ore per pound of digestible dry matter, than corn silage. Although, J bf 011 tho B,i!(l?0 lthat 1 "T6 feed my ws In winTtor n"1 tn thdorJ season of summer, I used to grow all the rodts I possibly could on my own place and contracted for 12,000 biiBh els a year, to food the cows. My ex perience showed me that cows would Co bettor when they had corn silage if they wore foil roots, especially man gels and sugar beets, than they did without them, and what the beets cost mo e :tra was more than saved In tho lossoncd grain fed each day. If ovory dairyman would put up onougii corn silage in the fall to feed his cows In the winter and carry over enough to feed them in the dry spell that comes in the late summer, his bank account would be materially ad ded to each year. Farmer. Poultry Notes. Don't overcrowd. This is a good time to plan the next season's business. Be regular in caring for anj feeding the poultry; regularity counts for more than many think. . Don't allow a scrap to be wasted; fre3h scraps of meat mean increased number of eggs; the cracklings, when well pressed, are good to feed hens, In limited quantity. Many families will make no use of the livers at all; it would pay to se cure these and save to feed hens. Much better give to the poultry than to leave for stray dogs and cats. If there is a north or northwest window In the poultry house, closo in-KU,P Vf1 83 VSS i I 1 ' V. ! 1 r, I f Alm-n nil 1. n wo n I u tan 111113 ab II. nil k 11 U V. 1 n II U . 1. 1 paper Is good for this if nailed close ly. In order to secure the good green growth, It is much better to have two yards,' or a partition fence through the yard, thus enabling the . green growth, rye or oats, or whatever is grown for forage, to got a good start, while the poultry Is confined to the other part. The size of the yard will depend quite a good deal upon the care taken of it, and the way It Is managed. If green growth is kept upon It most, or all through the growing season the yard need not be so large; it bare, it should be regularly and thoroughly cleaned of all refuse once each month. I RELIC OP FRENCH REVOLUTION Knife of Guillotine Used in Execution of Marie Antoinette. The knife of the guillotine used at the execution of Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette has been discovered in the museum of a private collector in Brussels. This gruesome relic seems well authenticated. From a note by M. Gustave Babln In the Illustration it Beems that M. Dubois, director des Halles de Brux elles, acquired It by purchase In 1843 from Mme. Roch, widow of the exe cuteur des hautes oeuvres. Up to this time Mme. Roch declared that it had never passed out of her posses sion. The late M. Deibler claimed it, but as he would not pay the widow refused to accede to his request. He complained to the Minister of Justice, with the result that the widow was desired to take the blade to the Ar chives. But as the State seemed to emulate M. Deibler's parsimony the widow stuck to her grim souvenir and sold It to M. Dubois. The humorous side of this relic fol lows, hut we must first complete the title. M. Roch received the knlfe from his predecessor, M. Hemdereich, who himself had obtained it from Henri Sanson, the last descendant of the dynasty of this name. Now, Henri Sanson was the grandson of the exe cutioner of the hapless. King and Queen. He was dismissed from his high of fice on account of a scandal. The exe cutioner, suffering from the "res au guBta," had to raise a loan, and his fertility of Idea succeeded where most men would have failed, and to tell the truth he pawned the guillotine. And, adds a Paris contemporary which re- lates the story: "La Veuve chez la 1 Tante;vcette rencontre parut lntoler ! able." As an Instance of morbid hu ' mor this Is "facile princens." The recent sale by auction of the guillo tine can only be classed "proxlme ac cessit." London Globe. i Ctilinnry Fame. iMme. Lydia Lipkowska, the opera singer, has brought suit against a Boston hotel because an admiring chef added to the hotel bill of fare a mellifluous drink called the "Cup Lydia" and a delightful gastronomic aria denominated "SofHe aux fraises a la Lipkowska." Could anything be more ungrateful? Could anything show a more absolute disregard of the true foundations of posthumous fame? Where now would be the memory of Nesselrode, that great statesman who once dominated Eu rope, but for the delectable pudding by which an inspired cook perpetu ated his fame? Where would, linger any recollection of the Imperial Charlotte of Russia but for the wide flung Charlotte Russe? There is also the Peach Melba, immortalizing the Australian diva. Surely the canta trlce cannot be ignorant of these and many more Instances wherein the cook book has become the -record ot a fame otherwise lost in oblivion. The only explanation Is that the singer tasted the "Cup Lydia" and the "Souffle Lipkowska" and found them wanting in the elements ot greatness. A good cook, as has often been proved, can hand down a name to the admiration and gratitude of unborn generations; but a bad cook can only hold it up to the execration ot a fleeting, dyspeptic moment. However, let the Boston chef be not chagrined at the lack of appreciation on the part of Mme. Likpwska. If he has really achieved something great his work will live and the singer's name be perpetuated in spite of herself. New York Press. I Kuthnnnsia Again, i nother of those peculiar philan thropists who propose to benefit the world by summarily removing from , It all who cumber -the soil has ap peared this time in Missouri, where he holds.nd has held, Beveral pub- He offlces. These drastic reformers I "arise to remark" every now and then that the way to make the world better and happier is by poisoning the derelicts. Some want to asphyx iate old people; some to knock the I cripples on the head, and some toi cause incurables to cease from trou bling by an overdose of morphine. Dr. Hudson, the latest to demand at- i tention for the euthanasia system of reform, proposes merely to adminis ter large doses of prussic acid to the Insane and idiots. He is a county physician, and has offered to put his theory in practice at the county farm. But evidently his proposed reform is not thorough enough, for greatly to his disgust permission has been re fused him to administer his "mercy tablets." There is alwayB just the ghost of a suspicion, in spite of the incontrovertible logic with which re formers like Dr. Hudson advocate their plans for the relief of mankind, that the people who go about clamor ing for permission to kill their fellow men are in need of "mercy tablets" themselves. New York Press. 1 Discovers Them on the Sly. At a dinner recently Professor Per cival Lowell told an amusing story of an old woman he once had as house keeper, to whom he made a sporting offer. "Janet," ho said to her one day, "the very nest planet I discover I will make you a present ot $5." "You are very kind, sir," she re plied, "and I am sure I hope you will soon discover one." Several months went by and no planets were discovered. "The fact of the matter is, ma'am," confided the old woman at last to tlrs. Lowell, "I do think the professor goes, out at night and discovers plac ets on the sly." 'Washington Star, , FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEV1 BRADSTREET'S WEEKLY REPORTS Conservatism and Caution Feature Trade Movements Because of Prices. ' i "Trade and crop prospects win De tray irregularity. In the Northwest on the Pacific coast and In Texas where needed rains have fallen trado a,nd fop reports are alike good. In the Southwest, the central West, parts of the South an on the upper At lantic coast there is conservatism. In I uujiu tcigiag u)JUJi uauiiuii, auu i there is more evidence of the repres sion exercised upon trade movements I by crop uncertainty or because of the high level of prices discouraging buy ing except for absolute current needs. Where outdoor activities such as buildV lng or active preparations for the ' crops, favor, the movement of sup plies for these branches of industry" are active. . "Iron and Bteel, except structural material, are rather quieter; produc tion is not eo heavy and resales of earlier purchases cause some weak ness in prices of cruder forms. In the textile trades conservatism in buy-. ing or Inability to make high raw ma terial costs and manufactured goods prices accord has made for a disap pointing trade. Curtailment of cot ton goods production la still In evi dence, and lower trade in worsteds at Eastern markets. j "Reports as to collections show that payments are better than fair here and are slow at many centers. A really new feature is the evidence this week of a loss of strength in a great many lines of commodities, which may have Important consequences upon both domestic and foreign trade if these tendencies continue. "Business failures in the United States for the week ending with April 7 were 240, against -229 last week, 227 In the like week of 1909. 258 nn 1908, 194 in 1907 and 101 in 1906. MARKETS. PITT9BURc Wheat No. S red f Kyo No. 2 Corn No 2 yellow, ear No. 8 yellow, shellod Mixed ear . Oats No. S white No. 8 white n 72 7 61 71 7 8 62 61 6 31) 21 0) 11 60 8 no SM 00 28 .) 9 6) 60 60 Flour Winter patent 6 23 Fancy straight winters Bay No. 1 Timothy 20 51 Clover No. 1 17 6) Feed No. 1 white mid. ton 82 00 Brown middlings 27 J Bran, bulk 2:il Straw Wheat 90) Oat 9 JO Dairy Products. Batter Elgin creamery t Ohio creamery Fancy country roll CheeBe Ohio, new Now York, new Poultry, Etc. Bens per lb Chickens dressed Eggs Pa. and Ohio, fresh. 84 8. 6 18 18 81 86 23 19 1 17 24 19 22 26 75 14 0) 4 25 Fruits snd Vegetables. Potatoes Fancy white per bu.... 60 Cabbage per ton 12 J i Onions per barrel 1 8 BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent t 6 60 i 70 Wheut No. 2 red 1 W Corn Mixed 70 71 Eggs 7 88- Butter Ohio creamery a) ., f PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent 9 J HO 3 75 WhnntKn 9 rert . 1 14 Cr.rn No. 2 mixed M t- Oats No. 8 white 44 Butter Creamery 26 Eggs Pennsylvania firsts.., 27 47 m 0 NEW YORK. Flour Patents i 70 6 80 I 2j . 8 40 4. Wheat No. 8 red Corn No. 8 Oat No. 2 white I Butter -Creamery a so ttggs state anu rcnnsyivania.... LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yardi, Pittsburg. CATTLI Ultra, M'O to 1X) pound. 8 2". R4) rtlms, MH to 1W0 pounds '-83 ' Good, law to loot) pounds 7M t 7 8 Tidy, lmi to 1160 pounds 7 -,.r) 7 6 Kalr, WW io Uiw pounds o 5: . i 25- Couiiiion, ?Ju loiuO pounds. 6 2 Hulls 4 m . Cow 2Uiw a Ik. 0i BOOS Prime, hoary 10 91 Prime, medium weight 10 9 J Um Ut-avy Yorkers 10 9) 41111 tight Yorkers. 1" '. 1 '90 rigs i07 . 1 7 Houghs. i ii ilr. blag D M t 2 0j SHEEP Prime wethers 9 HO 7 0 loou mixed 6 41 6 6 Italr mlxeu ewes aud wethers iU u 2 j Culls and common 2)j 4 4 60- BUSINESS CKRDB, E,:NEFF JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, Pension Attorney and ReaUEitaU Ag. RAYMOND E. BBOWN, attorney at law, Brookvtlls, Pa. (j. m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Rnal estate agent, patents secured, eol ections made promptly. Office In Byndlcas viildlng, Keynoldsrllle, P. 3MITH M. MoCRElGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW , Notary public and real estate agent, f 4 lectlnnt will race va prompt attention. Gme in the UcynoldsvlUn Hardware Go. building, taiu street EoyuoldsvUle, Pa, QR. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist. In the Hoover bulldla Maiu street. Gentleness In operating. )R. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST; (iffli'e on second floor of '.be Firs Mattoaak bank building, Main street. dkveue kino, DENTIST, nmV nn second Door of the Syndicate aU4 tig. Mala street, Keynoldivllle. Pa. HENRY PHI ESTER ' UNDERTAKER. Black and white funeral cars. Male, sirs HejnoldivUlo, Pa.