<fe?; LIFE SAVEOlMRa ALLEN IS SUUN GOVERNOR SLATON OF GEORGIA DSATH SENTENCE^TO TUFT- TEM*. v" IS HURRIED FROM ATLANTA prlioMr Takin From Jail at Capital 4;^ 1 <•* Dead of Night and Rushed to *, Prison Farm Under Heavy Guard-- , - Governor Issues Statement. Atlanta, Ga., June 21.--The sentence °' ̂ <eo M' ^"ran^i' condemned to die for A*#* *-"e inurder of Mary Phagan on Memo- rial day two years ago, was commuted f, by Gov. John M. Slaton to lift 1m- prlsonment. f % The prisoner was at once taken out of the jail, under guard of Sheriff Manguin and a number of his deputies, ^ and carried to the Terminal station. §T-,.vt He was placed on a Central of Georgia • ' train for Milledgeviile, where Frank once begin serving a life sen- ivV'*;-.' tence. " The decision of the governor came ^ as a Complete surprise to many in the ; capital of the state. Governor Slaton • reached his decision Sunday morning ^•v an<*> except for a few of his most confi- ^ dential friends to whom he confided, ^^ decision was kept a secret until g i, early Monday. Feeling all over Geor ge vf^ gia was at such a high tension that It was deemed advisable to have the pris oner safely landed at the state prison I,; ' pvV. I IT ' "V. •i'V.f,. IB i-~ IV- f; > 1 . >v V V before giving out the news. The arrangements for removing Frank from the Fulton county Jail were made with the utmost secrecy. Not even the newspaper men who were keeping a close vigil around the jail knew when or how the prisoner left. The sheriff with his deputies guarding the condemned man left the jail short ly after ten o'clock Sunday night and proceeded to the Terminal station, where tickets were secured and the party boarded the train which pulled out two minutes after midnight. 6 Two policemen and several of the railroad station employees recognised Frank, and the news then began to spread. But before the general pub lic in Atlanta knew of the action of the governor or the removal of the prisoner, Frank was well on his way to the state prison, and the sheriff and his deputies had returned to their homes. The prison farm Is two miles north of Milledgeviile. It is triple guarded. The prisoners are kept during the night in a stone building under strong guard at all times. Frank will be assigned to his work probably this afternoon. Most of the prisoners work on the farm, but there are some who do clerical and other work around the stone barracks. Frank will probably be assigned to clerical duties inside the prison at least for the present On Saturday, April 26, 1913* a holi day, Mary Phagan went from her home in Atlanta to the National Pencil fac tory, at which she worked, to get some pay still owing her. She did not return to her home. A search was in stituted without success. At 3:30 o'clock the following morn ing her dead body was accidentally discovered in the basement of the pen cil factory by the night watchman. Leo M. Frank, the superintendent of the factory, who admitted having paid the girl her wages in the office at noon on Saturday, and Newt Lee, the night watchman, who had discovered the body, were arrested at once. Alongside Mary Phagan's body were found two illiterate notes in pencil, purporting to have been written by the victim, and, stating that the deed had been done by "a long, tall, si earn, black negro." The notes were manifestly a clumsy Invention of the murderer to divert suspicion. It Boon became apparent that the night watchman was not the guilty person. Suspicion fastened on Frank and rapidly intensified,' CAPT. STOREN FOUND GUILTY "H'l fr »' ?t f $ »fe- • V I * 1 WIFE OP JOLIET WARDEN KILLCD Jf^DROOM BY CQ^T.? ^jEx-Pellce Officer of Chicago Is Fined $1,000 and Sergeant Is Sentenced £V t to Three Yeara in Joliet. Chicago, June 18.--Capt. James ODea Storen and Detective Sergeant Michael Welssbaum, formerly of the Maxwell police station, were found guilty on Wednesday of conspiracy to commit burglary.by a Jury In Judge Dover's court. Sergeant Frederick Roth, who was indicted with them, was acquitted. Punishment for Cap tain Storen was fixed at a (1,000 fine Nathan Steinberg, head of the "mil lion-dollar burglar trust," his chief lieutenant, Isadore Wexler, and other members of the organization were wit nesses for the prosecution. They tes tified that they paid various sums of money to the police officials for pro tection while they were committing burglaries In the Maxwell street police precinct. < BURKED TO DEATH Woman Attacked and Then Cremated In an Oil-Soaked Bed--Negro "Trusty" Is Suspected of Having Committed Crime. Joliet, 111., June 22.--Mrs. Edmund M. Allen, wife of the warden, was mur dered in her room on the third floor of the administration buiidiag of the state penitentiary at Joliet early Sunday morning. It is believed that an attempt was made to attack Mrs. Allen before she was struck down. Then, when she was eltli^ dead or un conscious, her body was placed on the bed, a quantity of wood alcohol poured over it, and the bedclothes ig nited. Mrs. Allen was a young and very handsome woman In robust health. The man who slew Mrs. Al len. who was the only woman in that part of the prison structure known as the "men'B quarters," was an inmate of the institution^ and .' now within Its walls. There are approximate prisoners confined in tentiary, many of thei Warden Allen was ai< den, lnd., wbr^n. the crime w; mitted. Mrs. Allen had expected Join him later. --#4 RUSSO-GERMAN BATTLE L NE sat»V/< lltutl Kftifjeov p U»H tA>MC •Initv! rtiMnftf KG w '*n>t l.blc* yAkjLl KammlaU TrtlVf C«rnowi A Aim SEEK SUtirS LIFE ENRAGED MOB DISPERSED FROM GOVERNOR'S HOME BY ̂ i:'8TATl TROOPS.^^*^ roun own druggist wiu tbu tor autll Free. Murine Kr* Bemed? Co Citlciuo. WANT LEO FRANK EXECUTED Martial Law Declared at Atlanta-- Executive Commuted' Sentence of Man on Eve of Scheduled Ex ecution--Soldiers Stoned. EIGHT BATHERS DIE IN SOFTF Great Crowd Sees Men and Women Perish in Undertow at Atlantic City, N. J. Atlantic City, N. J., June 22.-- Lashed and beaten into helplessness by merciless waves while held in the grip of an undertow, eight persons met heroic deaths on the beach on Sunday, while other heroes, red- shirted beach guards and bathers, bat tled desperately against tremendous odds to save them. Thousands lined the board walk and beach, women wringing their hands and weeping bitterly as the heart breaking tragedy was enacted be fore their eyes. Besides the known drowned, three persons, one of them a young womanj are missing. The known victims: Miss Marian Rhoads Creamer, twen ty years old. student of Beechwood college. Charles Mattiack, Philadelphia. John Lisle, thirty years old, law yer, Philadelphia. Charles Green, fisherman. William Francis Crow, Philadelphia. Frank Brigham, sixteen, student/ Phillip Arnold, Jr., twenty-four, Phil adelphia, Mr. McCabe, Philadelphia. Paris, June 19.--Lieut, Reginald A. J. Warneford, the Canadian aviator who Won the Victoria Cross and the Legion of Honor by destroying a Zep pelin over Belgium with a bomb, was killed on Thursday by falling from his aeroplane at Due, France. London, June 18.--Word was re ceived here on Wednesday that the steamer Strathnairn was torpedoed in the Irish channel. Twenty-two mem- bersTH the crew are thought to have been 'drowned. The vessel was of 4,336 tons. The Dutch fishing boat Broskons has been blown up by a mine on the Belgian coast. Four of the crew were drowned. ALLIES' SHIPS FLEE TURKS W>; PIS * t- Cholera Spreads in Vienna. >'r Geneva, June 22.--A correspondent -at Innsbruck says cholera is spreading In Vienna and that the authorities , have adopted even more severe meas ures in their efforts to pre*£nt the Spread of the contagion. Michigan Hotel Burns - Petoskey, Mich., June 22 - pants of the Hotel Aril net, burned to the ground hero, lieved to have been a on the building and estimated at $250,0 Prominent ftockport, K jktoininent citi arrested ch, nectio; Fleet Seeks Refuge From Submarines --Sheltered In Bay Ten Miles From Galllpotl. Berlin, June 21.--A correspondent at Constantinople says that, permitted to visit the Galllpoli peninsula, he was reliably informed thai the British fleet has taken refuge from German subma rines in Kefala bay. on the northeast coast of Imbros island, distant about ten miles from the Galllpoli coast The British ships could be seen from heights on shore at anchor in the bay. 'LOT TO EMBROIL U. S AMBASSADOR BERNSTORFF DE NIES MEYER-GERHARD I9 SPY. TIGHTEN RING AT LEMBERG Capture of Capital of Galicla by Aaa- tro-German Troops Believed Imminent. London, June 22.--Announcement of the capture of Lemberg, capital of Galicla, by the* armies of General von Mackensen is hourly expected in London as a result of the continued victories of the Austro-German army, which Is striving to free Galicla of the* Russians. Former G. A. R. Head 1% Dead. Davenport, la., June 21.--EL H Buck, past department commander 61 the Illinois G. A. R., died at the horn of hiB daughter Ler ^ Detective Agency Employed toy Eng land to Circulate False Reports* German Envoy Declares. Berlin, via London,, Jtine 19.--Dr. Anton Meyer-Gerhard, who sailed from New York June 4 on a mission to the German government from Count von Bernstorff, reached Berlin on Wednesday. He had a protracted conference with Foreign Minister von Jagow and Minister Solf of the colonial office. The report that Dr. Meyer-Gerhard is in reality Dr. Alfred Meyer, chief of the supply department of the Ger man army, was denied authoritatively. WashlngVcn, June 19. -- Develop ments which promise to make the case a sensation of some importance occurred in connection with the charges that Dr. Meyer-Gerhard, for whom the state department obtained safe passage to Germany, was in re ality Dr. Alfred Meyer, chief of the supply division of the German ajmy. The state department recjpiveSl from the German embassy at Cedarhurst, L. I., an official denial of the charges, and a statement from the German am bassador that the publication of the charges was likely to operate against his efforts to bring about a peaceful settlement of the controversy between this government and (Jermany In several other instances of late where publicity was given to charges against the German ambassador and members of his staff the view of the German government, now disclosed for the first time, was that the charges originated with a detective agency employed by Germany's ene mies. ' The state depsrtment gave out the following statement, including the denial of the ambassador: "The department of state has re ceived a telegram from the German counselor, dated June 16. calling at tention to articles appearing in yes terday's papers In regard to an al leged breach of confidence on the part of the ambassador in sending a secret German gun agent to Berlin in place of Doctor Gerhard, the Red Cross^delegate. In reference to these articles the ambassador states as fol lows: " 'It is unnecessary for me to as sure you that the story circulated by these articles ia untrue from begin ning to end. It contains a personal attack upon the ambassador and his delegate. Dr. Meyer-Gerhard, and is likely at the same time to nullify the sincere and earnest efforts of the ambassador to bring about an un derstanding between the United States and Germany in the Lusitania ques tion.' " MARINES TO MEXICO EXPEDITIONARY FORCE WILL RESCUE AMERICANS. RUSS ADMIT LOSS OF TOWNS Great Battle Along the San River Con tinues--Gains for the Teutons. Petrograd, June 19.--Occupation by the Germans of additional villages in the Shavli district and farther south in the region east of Mariampol is ad mitted by the Russians in a statement Issued on Thursday at the war .office. The great battle along the San In West Galicia is reported to be con tinuing fiercely with fresh Austro-Ger man forces constantly entering the combat. British Steamer Rammed U-29. Berlin, June 22.--The German ad* iui ra l ty officially announced the loss of the submarine U-29. The submarine Ysquis Take to Warpath and Threaten Settlers in the State of :,0 Sonora. Washington, June 18.--Six hundred marines and bluejackets have been ordered to proceed to the rescue of about one hundred Americans near Esperanza, state of Sonora, Mexico, where Yaqui Indians are again on the warpath. The expeditionary force of sailors and marines will be under the com mand of Rear Admiral Howard, now on his flagship, the Colorado, in To- bari bay. The Raleigh and the Bilf^ falo are watching the situatlpn at Guaymas. These vessels, however, have not sufficient force to deal with trouble to the extent threatened by the savages. Consul Hostetter, at Hermosillo. has reported Indians in Esperanza valley have destroyed crops and horses and are threatening the lives of the set tlers. The Americans are about twen ty-five miles in the interior. All Mexican leaders have been no tified the United States intends no territorial aggression. Galveston, Tex., June 18.--Villa's forces occupied Monterey after a des perate battle lasting 12 hours, accord ing to advices received here. The battle began with fury in the morning when the outposts of the city were stormed. These advices received in Villa circles declare that several hun dred of Carranza's men were killed in the battle and that large supplies of arms and ammunition were taken, it Is also declared that several hundred of the defeated forces have joined Villa's army. In Carranza circles no report of the battle had been received. BRITISH FORCE IS WIPED OUT Berlin Reports an Attacking Column Virtually Destroyed by the Ger mans--Attempt to Break Line. Berlin. Germany, June 21 (via Lon don).--Official announcement was made here on Friday that a force of the allies which attacked German po sitions north of LaBassee canal was destroyed, only a few succeeding in retreating. London. June 21.--French forces op erating on German territory in Al sace renewed the terrific offensive movement along the Fecht river, crossing that stream and capturing the outskirts of the important city of Metzeral and bringing up artillery to a point where the German lii^e of communication to Munstern. the base of southern operations, is now under bombardment. The official statement of Sir John French claims new advances for the British east of Festubert. TURK TRANSPORTS ARE SUNK Five Thousand Troops Drowned In Golden Horn--Vessels Torpedoed by British Submarine. London, June 19.--Nearly five thou sand men lost their lives when three Turkish transports were sunk in the Golden Horn, in tbe harbor of Con stantinople, by a British submarine, according to a dispatch received from Tenedos on Thursday. Only a few of the soldiers were saved. Auto Bandits Hold Up Care* ' Chicago, June 22.--After stealing large automobile J^longing to Carl*, Ames, from in foul Atlanta, ,, G&.» Juno 3^.--Bayonets 'fixed, & khaki-clad battalion of (Georg ia's National Guard surrounds the home of Gov. John M. Slaton, standing off a mob of thousands which Is crying for the governor's blood. The entire Fifth regiment was called out Atlanta itself, it is expected, soon will be placed under martial law. The governor proclaimed martial law at exactly eleven o'clock and by Bhortly after midnight the crowd was gradually bang dispersed. There was no firing. Following are th* Bbldiers se* riously hurt: • Lieut Arnold Packer/ , Major Catron. v , ' ' - ' Private Popper. The first troopers reached the es tate of Governor Slaton, six miles from Atlanta, at eleven o'clock Mon day night. Word had been sent to the executive by telephone that a mob of seven to ten thousand was descend ing upon his home, shouting for ven geance for little Mary Phagan, for whose murder Leo M. Frank was to have paid the pensJty on the gallows an Monday but foi' Slaton's interces sion. Governor Slaton immediately or- lered out the troops and proclaimed jnartial law for a distance of half a mile On each side of his house. The entire Fifth regiment waB called to arms. One battalion waB rushed in automobiles to the governor's coun try home. The crowd had a long start on the troopers, and more than seven tiundred were in front of the govern- >r's gates when the militiamen daBhed up. Bayonets fixed, the troops began to move forward in a circle, of which the governor's mansion was the cen ter. Muttering, the mob gave way. On the porch, despite the pleas of his wife and friends, the bright moon, light sharply outlining the white of his linen, stpod Governor Slaton, un afraid in the face of mob violence. Staunchly he stood out, a target, Jie cries of the mob beating in his ears: "Give us Slaton. Give us Georgia's traitor governor." He wanted to address the crowd, but his wife and friends dissuaded him. At first the'mob otltside rapidly re treated before the steel of the sol diers. Then it re-formed. Several hundred gathering near a pile of bricks began to bombard the troops with the heavy mieisiles. A brick struck and felled Lieutenant Parker. He fell to the ground, seri ously if not fatally Injured. Other soldiers were struck, and some pain fully injured. The troops swept forward, prodding the ranks of the rioters with their bayonets. This angered the mob. and- it kept up its attitude of defiance. Frank's death sentence was com muted to life imprisonment by Gov ernor Slaton on Monday. Announce ment of the governor's decision came several hours after Frank had been taken secretly from the jail here and hurried to the state prison farm at Miliedgeville. Frank was sentenced to be hanged here today for the murder of Mary Phagan in April, 1913. "Ir. was a plain case of duty as I Raw it," said Gov. John M. Slaton, dis cussing his action in commuting Leo M. Frank's sentence. "If I had failed to commute Frank's sentence I would have been guilty oi murder, as I see it. Of course, I care for the public appro bation," ho continued, in explaining his course, "but 1 could not have that man's blood on my hands under the circumstances." Governor Slaton, who coratmitud the sentence of Leo M. Frank, was hanged in effigy at Marietta, Ga. A life-sized dummy strung up to a telegraph pole bore an inscription, "John M. Slatoh, Georgia's traitor governor." Mary Phagan, the victim of the pencil fac tory murder, formerly resided at Marietta. Wbon reports that Frank's sentence had beex> commuted began to circulate crowds gathered on the principal down town stre3t corners. The arrest of a man who attempted to dismount a po liceman by grabbing the horse's reins aroused one crowd to eicitcment. Many persons followed the officers to the city hall, a block away. Speakers started to harangue the crowd from the city hall steps, but were stepped by an extra force of police. It was said that a delegation was coming from Marietta, the forncr home of Mary Pbagap. Undoubtedly.'< J < .Little Lemuel--What are cobble stones,' paw? ^ ( Paw--They are the kind kre hard on shoe leather, son. ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE for the TROOPS Orer 100,000 packages oi Allen's Foot-Ease, the fcutiseptlc powder to shake into your shoes, are being: used by the German and Allied troops at the Front because it rests the feet, gives in stant relief to Corns and Bunions, hot, swollen, tiching, tender feet, and makes walking easy. Bold everywhere, Kc. Ttj It TODAY* £WS *»r tubtiiiuU. Adm. Quid His Inspiration. "What inspired this dainty spring poem?" babbled the romantic girl. "Daffodils and violets, I ween." "No," said the matter-of-fact poet, "w;hen I'm going good all I want Is a cb«w of tobacco." ^,5 • LADIES! LOOK YOUfeG How Thousands Have Restored Natur> al Color. Dandruff Removed. Gray-haired persotis will be Interested in the reports of druggists in town s-egurding the suc cessful accomplishmen is of Hay's Hair Health. rhio unique preparation causes the oxygen in Hit air to so act on the hair that the brilliant color and lustre of youtU is i-etiuued. Not a dye; absolutely harrclese. Removes dandruff. Cleans and tones scalp; revitalizes and beau tifies hair. No one knows you're using It. 26c, EOc and .00 bottles <it drug stores or direct; if price and dealer's name are sent to Philo Hay fecial ties. Co., N«w«rk, N. . Prtefri'gfuqtlad Missing Pianist la Found. June 253.'--Grace Stewart list, for whom a nation- had been Instituted fol- ;r mysterious disappearance lays ago, walked into the home Irs. Scott Durand at Lake Bluft Gentle Insinuation. 1; "What I object to," said the thought ful young woman, Vis the idea of tax ation without representation." "If I were a married man," respond ed the admiring youth, "I'd be glad to take my wife's advice on how I voted. How would you like* to have me represent you at the polls?" ROTTEN COFFEE. When your coffee is harsh and nasty, you may know that the berries have fallen from the tree, and have been swept up from the ground after a certain amount of deterioration. Remember, then, that there 1b one line of coffee that Is all hand picked and pure, and buy a pound of Denlson's Coffee for trial. Denlson's Coffees are always packed In cans, cartons or bags. None other Is genuine. If your grocer does not have Den lson's Coffee, write the Denison Coffee Co., Chicago, 111., who will tell you where it may be purchased.--Adv. Where Soap Is of No Use. Lapland folk never speak of them selves at Laplanders, or Laps; they are the Samelatsh, they say, the un known people, the people of whom no one knows anything, not even whence they came. If any mention Is made In their presence of Norwegian, Swedish, Fin nish or Russian Lapland, their feelings are sorely wounded, for there is only one Lapland, they hold, and it is their land, the land of the Samelatsch. These folk, as other folk, have their whims and fancies, their little peculi arities, too. They regard soap, for instance, with profound mistrust, and have no great faith in washing; no faith at all, in deed, in washing in warm water. As soon as a baby is born they bathe it in cold water; and they bathe it again, alwkys in cold water, every day until, should it live so long, it is two years old. Then the end comes. The child is pronounced clean for life and has never another bath. Honseworkb a Burden It's hard eooagh to keep house if In perfect health, but a woman who is weak, tired and suffering from an aching back has a heavy burden. Any woman In this condition has good cause to suspect kidney trouble, especial* ly if the kidney action seems disordered. Doan's Kidney Pills have cured thou sands of suffering women. It's the best recommended special kidney remedy. "Xwry flt- i TtUtm An Iowa C^ae Mrs. jr. Oreen- field, R. F. D. No. 3, Webster City, la., says: "I suf fered from bearing down pains In my back and my health waa\all run down. Defers did me little gfoo'd and when I heard of D o a n ' s K i d n e y Pills I used them. The pains all left and I rained ia was completely cured.'r Get Dean's at Aay Store, BBe • Bos DOAN'S ViVLV FOSTEfbMIUUBN CO. BUFFALO* N.Y. w Is r- That's Why You're Tired--Out of Secfr •--Have No Appetite. CARTER'S LITTLE. LIVER PILLS will put you right in a few days. J They do. their duty. CureCon-P stipation, 1 Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headaclji SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICt. Genuine must bear Signature CARTERS ITTLE PILLS ^BSORBTNE At the Wrong Desk. Caller (In newspaper office)--Hello, old man; anything new today? Paragrapher--Well, I'm • surprised. And so many free schools in this coun try, too! Caller--Why, what do you mean? ' Paragrapher--The idea of any man possessing ordinary intelligence com ing into the humorous department and asking If there is anything new, ________________ N*.". In Disagreement. "Can you remember when ~yon were a happy, barefoot boy?" "No. And my idea of a happy boy to one who wears shoes and doesn't get stone-bruises." | STOPS \LAMENES9 Uoca a Bene Spavin, Ring Boa* Splint, Curb, Side Bone, or similar trouble and gets horse going sound. Does not blister or remove the hair and horse can be worked. P&f* 17 in pamphlet with each bottle teBs how. $2.00 a bottle delivered Horse Book 9 K free. ABSORBINE, JR., antiseptic liniment for mankind. Reduces Painful Swellings, En larged Glands, Goitre, Wen», Bruises, Vari cose Veins, Varicosities,heal* Old Sores. Allays Pain. Will tell you more if you write. J1 and $2 a bottle at dealers or delivered. Book "Evidence' * free. Manufactured only by W.F.Y0UN6, P. D. F.. 110 Temple St.,Springfield,MaM. Activities of Women. Kenlowna, B. C., schoolteacher* have been put on three-quarters pay. Women will be barred from wit nessing boxing bouts In Wisconsin tn the future. The Pennsylvania state senate has pasBed a bill providing for woman watchers at the polls at the coming November election. Twenty-two girls near Winfield, Kan., have organized a canning club and each girl will plant a tenth of an acre of ground on her father's farm to vegetables suitable for canning. Although she 1B past 80 years of age, Mrs. Rebecca Smith continues to work every day in a Hagerstown, Md., paper mill. Of the nearly 17,000,000 families lit the United States, only 1,000,000 can afford to keep servants.; Every female property owner In Bronxville, N. Y., will be allowed to vote on the question of changing the name of that town. • ' A Peanut Millionaire. Oyer--A man in our town who mads his start as a peanut peddler, with n capital of 7 cents, left over a million when he died. ( Myer--Dollars? Gyer--No -" peanuts. Accounting for It. "Many marriages are simply blun* ders." "Perhaps It Is because there Is such a lot of miss-taking In main-lag*.* Gen. De Wet Found Guilty, oemfontein, South Africa, Junc 38. Christian de Wet, the famous ldier, who was leader of the South African uprising, was lty on eight counts of the in- charging him with treason. eel Plants Busy. Pa., June 23.--The Car- mpany, in addition to or- ents at the Homestead, dgar Thompson plants ons in full, has klso on, Pa •ng. Five mur- |6 August court. Triply Protected First, the inner container of paper, next the big yellow carton, and then, the outer wrapping of waxed |>aper, sealed air-tight and^ dust- »roof. Superior protection im Superior Corn Fwkes-- Post Toasties ^liese delightful flakes are mado j#f the finest white Indian Corn, fteam-cooked, daintily seasoned, polled and toast§dr--cri§p &odgo!4* ^en-brawn. " .post Toasties reach ydu fresh arid delicious, perfectly protected and feady to eat. They are migh ;ood with milk or cream, or wi iy kind of fruit. ft* •The Memory Lingers' --•aid by Orocws everywhere. i I 1 Wi H ahr-r