& 1919 right on iroceries, he quick )he buying DATE y 10th ses 10.30 let this is ut Mt “hasâ€. ce S oods " "" to, 80 Electric Lamps Garden Seeds h. S. HUNTER & SON Martin Sellout Paint Putupineana: “his; .03.“. â€03.14.. “01.3.†Buy War Savings Stamps is too percent pure It will cover more surface and last longer than paint mixed by hand. used inside and outsido for all purposes. In a good "in (or the nanny. - ual in and“: to paint gold at "her prices. P-rt...........- Field & Root Sada, all kinds All Work Ptomptly Attended to. DURHAM. ONT Tungsten. 10 to 40 win 23?": John McGowan BOX)) tons of No. l Mixed Chop wnm mo BARLEY Wheat, Barley and Oats Chop-is Capital Brand Paint Sovereign, Eclipse and Pastry Flour Every bag guaranteed. If not tsatistaotorT bring It book and got your money. Low Grade Flour. Rolled Oats, Breakfast Cereal, Bran, Shorts. mugs, Corn Chop. Cracked Chicken Corn All kinds cumin beyht at 8. 1919 Prko (Ch-'- cal!‘ $130 £0.5- Futon. Farmer Need a Truck ? And his hG)iniearts him 1m ---in labor and money. ‘ _ A TR,h'tg,'tg1,t/,,ttee Truck practically liven next door 1 pmetheaitr live. next door to the market. He has 1 choice at markets. d H: become. more indepen- en . Be on market hhfgoodlwhon and when he pleases. - He " hichro tothevery bestadvtuttage. C"' __ _ fi iiriGTa aaa, to haul with I Ford "lrcit than with a ' team and wagon, it is quicker, lt ia easier wor . ' G. SMITH & SONS Consider the time and labor the farmer can save with a Ford Truck. With I team the trip to town takes the better part of a day. A Ford Truck mks the some trip in twoorthm, hours. CR'MPEO OATS tor Horse Feed at Fair Prices CHOPPED OATS at.... very reasonable rates THE PEOPLE’S MILLS Dealers, Durham I bought at whet price. Special Reduction on not! ad Pad In an lob. "tr. lik pkg. for 29c Sr Vincent Meredith Endorses The New War Savings Plan Sir Vincent Meredith, Bart., president ofthe Bank of Montreal. and than one of the fortune“ of Canadian financiers, endorm the War Savings campaign. ln I recent “element he says :- Presldem ot In! or new“! - of the “national Value of love- mom to Prom no suing: "War Savings Stamps are an absolute- ly late and remunerative form of invent- ment for the peoples' savings, and the habit of saving, which and: Inveltmcnu encourage. will serve " a sure lounda- tion for the future prosperity ofthe country. "The National War Savings Commit- ll "We must now more than ever depend on our industry and thrift if our present prosperity is to be continued." When labor is so mm, what farmer can "ord to waste day utter day of hi- valuable time? Ford Ono-Ton Trucks In new applied. if desired. with ma truck bodial In two type. tho sm- Body and an Expnll M. In both mndud bodie- thr all “my be “Applied rm: Ite without doorI " that“. Ford Trucks Complete with Body and En. See than complete Ford Truck. Connidor the nutter tron wary nulls: the cost of loading born! again†an tet ot running I Ford rug-tach- an. you_lou_ a": tu raiiriGGGG] - GiiNGViu Gi no far tron, Td but mum Thor. in only one condition you an gym to. You will I“: n "r-did" Trick. Sin-dud Ford “a “an. Got - wk“ Church too Monarchial. - Has Lost the Democratic Spirit- of its Great Founder Rev. li. IlImull4lmdias I Leaves Mditat WU: Rev. E. M. Hawkins, M. A., for some iime Room: of Trinity Climb, Durham, preached his farewell sermon on Sunday. 27th April, an Rector of St. June! Angli- can church. Human». He insignia; owing to his convictions. and he mnde a long anemone of his vie!" to the prose. which makes interesting tending. He any: ' I have cupped out owing-to the feet that I could not hold my View! and honestly retain a position u e minis- ter in an orthodox church. Among the important points on which I differ from the church. which would make it impoe- eible for me to stay in the pulpit ere tht' intellectual position of the church, the mortarehial form of church government, entirely ineornpatab1e with the demo. cracy towards which the world is Iwo- greasing. the social views of the church. and finally iteattitude towardsecortoruicp. From his 'hrtatemeut" We make brief selections ' "Everyone who thinks die- passionately upon the absorbing pro- blame of life and destiny must, in due course, arrive at a poiht where he in con- strained to make weighty and tar-reach- ing necieions. Sooner or later he must come to a parting of the way; and if he be true to himeelf. must choose which he ehall travel. This parting of tho ways is common to every important sphere of human experience. and marks a crisi- point in its history. To uttproiudieed thought it would seem ' that such a crisis has arisen in the his- I tory of the Christian church, and men are I being called upon to choose which way _ they shall take. This is my own exper- ienCe, and I have made my choice. One of these ways lead to the city of the statr tus quo, over whose gate theology has placed the motto, "Let things be as they were and are." This road is paved with the well-worn stones of dogma and tradi- tion. It is fenced with creeds and con- fessions. Its direction follows the straight and narrow line of conventional ortho. doxy. Its end is authority. Enthroned In the city to which it leads are popes, bishops and priests, who assume moral, Intellectual and, in certain cases, tempor- al control over the masses of men. The other way leads to the city of perpetual procress,over whose portal humanity has inscribed. "Let things not remain as they were and are." This road is paved with the yielding sods of intellectual freedom. It is fenced with the open award of relig- ious faith Its direction follows the natural wind of hill, plain and valley. Its end is libertf. Enthroned in the city to l which it leads are the Christs, prophets and teachers, who offer their moral and spiritual counsels to the wayfaring mul- l titude of humanity. It is this latter way I that I have chosen to follow." "Why has the church failed to satisfy these deeper longings of the human soul? Chiefly because it has not kept abreast of world advancement. Organized Chris- tiaruty, whether it be in the form of Roman Catholicism, Anglicanism, Luth- eranism. l’relbyterianism. Meltolism. or what not, reveals an obsolete philosophy of religion, metaphrsie, oosyoiur.v,psr chology. While human knowledge, in the manifold spheres of human activity has advanced beyond almost the power of the human imagination to picture. Organized Christianity has, in the main, remained stationary in its intellectual outlook. What alone it would seem. will save the church from collapse ie the renewing of the old wine skins of its organization, that they may be fitted to receive the new wine of advancing knowledge, which year by year, comes fresh from the vine. ward of God. The church must renounce its reactionary position, and look to the present and future for its inspiration, as well as to the past. "Our little "Items have their dey. They have their day and cease to be." The loner achievements of the past must give place to the meter eehieve- meats of the present. The great historical religions and churches that have been. and still are dominant in the world, come into being an expressive of certain great, absorbing ideals of the time. They are colored by the intellectual outlook of the ages in which they were being evolved. But this outlook has, in greet mature. long since passed awny. Therefore, theme great re- ligions end churches. if they would utter the ideaIs and minister to the needs of the present. must be brought down to date. Episoopacy. as n form of church gov- ernment in allied to monarchy u a form of political government Moreover, in function. the two are Iimiler. Popes, bishops and patriarch. ammo use gov- ommeneof their eccleeiostioel lubjeote'r alter the tumor political of princes. kings and emperors. The two lumen tiontt at government. hue been intimately ‘ueocicud down through “he mum-in. ( king: have proclaimed themed": rulers 1 by the Will ofGod, sad the church hasn't Gerutssd touch them." An auto truck has been bought by Col- “mood muncil,tobe used insmdol t,-inttteiiretirtment. . . The disease is usually tttat noticed I in the young growing crop when/the I ' plants are from tour inches to a foot ihixh. In looking over a lleld in which the disease is present, it will I be seen that the tops of certain plants ‘have lost their bright dark green I; appearance. having faded to a more or less dirty yellowish or brownish I color. These tops will be somewhat limp and drooping, and in some cases l where the disease is well advanced will have dropped right over. If a _ careful examination of the lower 'r stems of these affected plants is made 1 it will be seen that they are black- lened and soft rotting. This black- ening and soft rotting is more l noticeable below the soil than above it. By carefully removing the soil ‘from around an allected plant the ablackening and soft-rotting can us- I “ally be traced to the seed tuber. As a rule in such cases the seed tuber will be found to be in a soft-rotting, - slimy condition, the soil immediately beneath it being in a. wet, puddled condition due to the wetness trom the soft-rotted seed tuber. In such cases the disease in the plant has developed from an affected seed tuber and pass- I ed up the young growing stems. caus- ing them to discolor and rot and eventually to tall over dead or dying. Sometimes all the stems in a hill will L be affected and the whole plant die . down. Sometimes, however, only a ) few of the stems will be anected and i the remainder will appear to develop I normally. If the season is a dry one , a number ot tubers may be produced l on such plants which may mature and appear alright at harvest. bat if ' the season is a wet one the disease . will spread to the tubers and cause a them to rot in a soft, slimy condition ' before harvest. or it they are har- , vested before the rot is very notice- able in them, they are liable to rot ' in storage or to carry the disease l over to the next season.~ " It is tubers from such affected V plants which are mostly responsible for carrying the disease over trom season to season and spreading it r from district to district. Such tubers. 9 if used for seed purposes, will give . a. considerable percentage of black- t leg-attracted plants. Consequently. - the greatest care should be tal'ten in THREE DISEASE DANGER Blackleg Decreases Potato Yield Thousands of Bushels. Advhu Ono Brood Bow for Etch Ten Cows on Average Fm. (oi-tub ted a .' am Donna t , 'a"fS,'lftflr't Toma , " o q"%LACKLEG of potatoes I: a dis- mum; Pork " a Wble Sideline _ use that ha been cousins heavy losses to potato grov- ers In mmy district: damn the past few "ON. As the name of the (“mu implies, there in a black- ening of the lower pom ot new: of the potato plant “looted. Accom- panying the dueoioration there is a soft rotting condition followed by shrinkage and death. -iGai; GGiie. we reeominend one brood new tor eaett ton cows nupMy- t lug milk to u ch95. funny, tnd one _ sow for live or six cowl where cream ‘or butter ia sold from the tum. "t I now reared 10 or " use etch 'rear, this would work out at trom ‘one to two pm per cow on I. "irririg Inna. There ere times when 3 much ‘neeter number then this would be :on the term. " the pic would be :In "riotts stages of maturity. The Jenner and yucca-eta! pix-rah†aim- ,to leg) up a regular procession of was: from the with the been lut- ‘cory. This pm: tend. to sublime \mnrkets. prevents the nuts which (requently demonnxe the bacon bus]- ‘neu and come- nl'lun to - In _the box - instead of junta-in and out" which in not nod (at my tn-...--. a. ll. been. o. A. ibulloce. Gm. the selection of seed tubers. If any Indication of rot, either wet or dry, is found on a tuber, or any brtvHt discoloration ot the potato tissue when out Into. it should be discarded and not usud for seed purposes. To prevent the disease developing, plant only sound, healthy, well-selen- ed seed and do not plant on land that has produced blacklng plants the previous season.--) D. H. Jones, o. A. College Guelph. Though spraying with Bordeaux Mixture will help to control fungus diseases. such as late and early blight of potatocs, it is of no use in controlling blankleg. Blackleg is a bacterial disease that gets into the plant either from an affected see-d tuber or from the salt. It works from below upward and by the time it gets much above the ground it will usually have killed tho plant. Con- sequontly. spraying the tops of po- tatoes will not prevent the disease. How Many Pigs to a Cow? Pigs and cows work very well to- gether as the hog is one ot the most economical meat producer: on the farm, and does elpeclally well on dairy trr-tproducts-Fun", butter- milk and whey. The number ot pigs per cow will depend on the kind of dalrylng the farmer is engaged in. It selling milk for direct consumption, tor the milk condensery, or for the powder milk factory, there is no by-product, hence it is doubtful it hogs. under these condition, will pay at nil, espe- cially with an uncertnin market. Whey. irom'the chemo factory, will not support so many pin per cow to will skimmN anti buttermilk (tom the farm dniry, or Creamery. 1'33 DORE“ REVIEW ONTA runner: Wtrnod In!“ moonl- Tonglod “out! The Experimental Farms are tending out warnings against fraudulent denim inseedgrain. Here are9oateofthede. vices used : l-Same take a high yielding common variety och as BunnerorO. A C. No. 21 at“, given anew name and claim it is I new variety. 2-Sume have developed extraordinary heads. god mike cranium: for it, before It! qualities are known. 3-Artother is gallium a few customers ogly_! grain“ product}! try. a seam was of tttef 'or else has him groin from seed“ ad in the tombs ot the Pharoalu! Theaecortdttsanmaybehonest,but lat and 3rd man are fakirs or sharks. A. Imp-the {when in buy' mi {akin wil sell. Qonsultiug the nearest Exper- imental station is always safe. The Provincial Road Department re- quire estirnatm each year of the proposed work in the various counties which have adopted the good roads scheme and Sue: Johnston bassent estimates for Grey . The total estimated expenditure on Coun- t y and Provincial County roads, machinv cry. etc,, in 8202.000. of which the prov. will pay $94,000 and thecounty, 8107,6004 For maintenance and repairs of Purity roads 842.000 will be expended, o which the government pays 88400. County Bridgettrill cost 820,000 and the govern- ment will pay $8000 of that. 880,000 willbespent on Pro-County roads and the government's share of that willbe $48,000 and pro-county bridges the ex- penditure is estimated at '30,000, of which the government will pay 318.000. 830.000 willbe spent on machinery, for which the government grant will be 81?.- 000. The program iean extensive one, but not " much as some would desire, considering the great mileage of the county. Probably not more than 20 miles of provincial county highways will be constructed at a cost of 84000 per mile and of this. the road between o. S. and Meaford will use half. ‘ The Kingston Whig passes on some sane advice to those desiring to stops _ subscription to a newspaper. it says there is probably no man engaged in the l newspaper business in Ontario who is not i acquainted with a man whose excuse for idiscontinuing his subsciption is that he ialready "has more papers than he can} iread." It is only an excuse offeredto) ameliorate the presumed lacerated condi- I tion of the editor's beings. It has no such effect for in the first place an editor 1 never worriesover the loss of a subscriber l except when he leaves the country with- ;out paying up arranges. But why not . be truthful and say to the Imest news- (paper man just what you feel in your i heart ?Go into his den and ask him how I much you owe, pay the delinquency and I tell him frankly that you don't want his F disreputable. blackguard sheet any longer. ', Say to him in a sorrowful tone of voice ', that you deeply regret his inability to . publish a newspaper worthy of the name ' and advise him to sell his plant to some , man with a thimblelul of brains and seek 1 some occupation that does not require 2 much wear and tear of the mind. Do this _ and then you can go away with the com- farting assurance that the newspaper nPn respects you for yonr candor and Will cherish no hard feelings because you choose to borrow hispaper instead of buy- ing it -Simcoe Reformer. Economy is a constant source of reven- ue.-Cicero . The world has always been divided into two classes-those who have saved and those asho have spent-the thrifty and the extravagant.-Richa_rd Cobden. Wise Words on the "Prudence, fragality and good manage- ment are excellent cobblers for mending bad times. "..- Samuel Drew. "A store of savings is to tht working man " a barricade against want."-Aiam. uel Smiles. "Thrift is the surest and strongest foundation of an empire-so sure. so strong and so necessary that nearest empire can long exist that disregards it." -Lotd Roeeberry. If all these wise men could speak they would urge "Buy War Savings Stamps," help yourself by helping the government. This " Day will no 818,000,000 paid in interest to the holder: of View Bond: hound in ISIS. This will be by far the largest single interest payment our mule in Candy Incidontally, it in only one of may for 03:11th wilt draw over 870- 000.000 in wu- bondo‘ inure-t thin your. ' - Tho quution aruos, how much of thid mom will be and t Will the' our MOM00 holdm of Victory Bonds in the Dominion become â€stomach-cm an" helping themselves nd the country. or will they duooettimt. saving t A’ lug. portion of was 818,000,000 should be invested ilt War Suing- Stamps, which an Government bond: 24M:- woure u View PM!!! arq. Victory Bonds "CM hundred. of thou- ndl of people saving. who should con- tinn- the was. which in and. any through War Saving! and Thrift Shun. Big Victory Bond Interest Payment TORONTO Good Roads in Grey Co. Fake Grain Varieties Tell Him the Truth Virtues of Saving aa MIXTURE VALUES 'aitg WATER SYSTEMS. Oats 34 Lbs., Barley 48 Lbs. the Best Combination. (Conn-"wad 5‘ Ontario Depart-Ion! ot min tun. Toronto.) Bro-tet-f-tOrt-et"" - LARGE amount ot expel-l- mental work bu been con. . ducted It the Ontario Agrb culturnl College In tenth; grains both “ugly and in combination tor the production of grain. The results ot "trerimertta lndlule that there In proctleuly no adv-nun in growing In camblntlon two or more vurleuel ot ml: of the lame elm. Quite derided “nausea, however. hue been obtnlned trom certain com binnions In In experiment which extended over . period ot live years In which onto, barley. spring when and peel were grown semi-Italy end all the dil'erent eomttittatiott which could be obtained by lining two, three and tour grains in each mixture. it we“ found that in about ninety per cent. of the experiments the mixed grain: ("e n greater yield per acre then the tune grains when grown separ- eteiy. Ot the dillerent combittatioM. ont- end barley came at the head ot the list. giving slightly over two hundred. pounds ot min per were _ ,L __ -JAL-.. nun -m- more than grown alone Guelph Drainage-either surface or under- groumi---is essential It farming is to be protitable. With the dearth of ditching machinery, the depleted lsbour msrket and the increased cost of underdrainin'. progress is re- amed somewhat. Everything. how- ever, bu been done which manning conditions permit. Yet forty per cent (40%) of Ontu'io is in urgent need of damn. The unaerdrsinue ot so much cannot be accomplished in 1 short period ot time, hence that which renders timely servlco, even though only of mammary duration, must be taken ndvantnze of. Surface draining must be resorted to, Several lines viil be necessary. Indeed. if the majority of firmer: would leave all "tlnuttintr" furrows open in the ploughed ground and connect them by opening up cross chnnneis through the tower-lyitut parts of the tie1d-cletusittg out all the furrows thus traversed-a system would be formed whereby the water could be carried to outlets quickly, emciently and satistactorily in the early spring. Not alone to level tieidtr or farms does this apply. Large. areas ot On- tario are quite rolling. henna natur- ally drained. Yet, a small open ditch or deep furrow will pay far the trouttur-tteeett'aary to make a channel by the greater ease with which water can escape, thus permitting quicker disposal of the same, home hastening the drying of the land. These surface drains should he opened at least once per year. The beat time to do no is in the late autumn after the {all work is done. Labour can be chained then with less dimculty and gtt lean coat. The work may be done by hand or by the ule ot a team if water does not prevent. . "iid/tdee draining, however, Is not recommended to take the place or ttuttgc--Thot, _Cooper. B.S.A.. O. A. Colle'ge. Guelph The starting of early celery should be done immediately as the seed is slow in germination: requiring about tour weeks before ready for the first transplanting. The seed should he Iowa in data in a soil vety sandy in nature. This soil is pressed down about % an inch in the box and then the celery In Iowa broadcast over it. The box is then watered through bur- lap and is left covered with burlap or brown - until the seed germi- natea. When the plants are showing two or three leaves they are trans- planted into hate, , inches each way in at)" that in aandy in nature but 'reu..tutod with good manure and commercial fertilizer, auch of a ni- trogeneoua nature. Good tertiliper is neeeuary at thin atue so that the plants will not receive any check. The manta mould be thoroughly - with Bordeaux Mixture when they tint break into third or true leaf. ao that they will he kept tree from Might, and every week after icing let in the tuid. Another method in use email; [rower- II that ot loving in hot beds. The seed is planted in to" lbout 4 inches Inert; in making these row: they teke . piece ot wood about an inch wide and press " down on the loll making a furrow about % of an inch deep in which the seed is sown. " in then covered with burlap or - a stated before. Celery to germinate properly should be kept at I temperature " " degrees ultil the you; plant? no will; in good/chem. nen I is well to lower it to " or " - ---A. H. mm. alum Vege- uhie Specialist. Give- metediatq Shah; Dd! 'ar Ttum efthev one Wu Starting Early Celery. Your Hurnro Dralus. ot grain ot diner-em to use In comtrin- 't A Summary of Best AvaiiahV Types for stables. I’hen Pasture- Fall the Milk Flo. Bil-go was Auto My In"... Ink Yield " not s_er. (Co-tribune by Oauno o-re-t i Attic-Aztlan Toronto.) tt u an vial: among the turns. of Ontario in Bttttmst out? county you would run sen-- quite n lumber ot stable. "tttP- trod wlth some form or other t qmter Intent tor supplying the “In. stock lore or lea automucnuy m utter etch day. With few exceptions every new burn [will now in no 'tded VIII: a wner Iyulem. Among the Ivulnble systems [re the {onw- Ing, when. in this short nude. as. receive only a very brief description: Ot than probably the most com- mon ll that continua; ot a wnler II)- ply nut la the. hay or an: [on shove the table. trom whlch the Inter run- by [rally Into a regula- lu an on the cable ttoor, whlch Inppllel the ludlvlduul drinking hull“ with "tet- nutorttstieaiiy. no “at In usually built of concrete and the use depend: upon the kind of Power mod tor pumping; ll windmill be used then the tank needs to ho large enough tor three or tour days' supply as the wind does not bl" every day. Under these condition a tank 101414 feet, or its equiva- lent would be required tor 30 has! ot stock. Sometimes the concrete tank is built Just outside the stain wall and underground enough to pre- teet it agnin front, or in one corner of the stable, elevated enough ol the Soot. to feed the regulating tank by gravity. In use pumping is done try gasoline engine and a smaller tank is audioient. s metal one is sus- pended from ceiling ot stable. In every use an overtiow is necessary. Many provide means for collecting the rain water ott the barn and rot- ning it into the storage tank so that in wet weather very little pumping is required, especially where 11 large tank is used. Another method of filling the storage. tank in by the hydraulic ram installed at the spring. Still another is by means of a one- inch pipe leading trom a spring or other source at an elevation at least. as high as the storage tank. Some- times where hydraulic ram or gav- ity "atom is in use the storage tank is dispensed with, the water, in the 1 one ot the tanner, running through the drinking booin- or trough all tho l time and escaping to a good outlet mmmnuemtnmu piped directly to the regulating tank which in turn supplier the basin- or trough entomntiully. min the water is pumped directly to tank in the attic of the home. and the over- tlow trom it. supplies the stable wtth water. And since the advent of the compression water system we and n few cues where it is used to aupply the stables as well as the house, tho installation being proportionately lower than it would be tor the hon-o alone. Probably no one system, how- ever, can be absolutely rerorumettded as beat for every case as the cir- cumstances pertaining to the source of supply. amount of water used, position and elevation of the farm buildings, etc. always have to he carelully considered in planning the ideal water system tor the farm house or Bttutie,---R. It. Graham, B.Â¥~‘.A.. o. A. College, Guelph. Sailing (1min for Court Most Ontario dairy farmer: depold on the pasture crop tor the feeding of cows during summer. " the pu- ture fails, there is no remedy. the emu so dry. the creameries and cheeserieu tsutter Ins of patronage. the city milk plants are sham of milk. 1nd the whole dairy business in mom or less tuutdieapped. The time has come when dairy farmers should tahe out In insurance policy in tho form of a summer silo. titted with corn from the previous yar'l crop. "ttiag this, “We in the bottom of . winter silo is good feed, but the surface exposed should be reduced onehult by cutting the muse do" the centre with a hay-knife. It this in not “nil-hie, the “use in one» in]! the lilo any be dug down with . fork, but this laws an irregular edge which muses etceuive spoiling of the allege. Great care is need“. in feeding summer allege. clue they. in danger of mining the milk. 11.. strong Advent“. of silage for .u.- piuleliinc poor venture. _ia the new. that t mun an get food out ot u we tor a herd ot can In thou! one- "it the tune required to cut I loll- lu crop In I Sell and bull this to the stable tor the em to .4. Bone meal. or what bun. should be added to the III“. tor but with. It any." in not swam. for not ing during tho union of '10. a. coiling cropl like clover, an. - um vetchen. com. com, shank! be provided, no tint the cow my not not tor nseaho nuke mite.----. H. H. Dan. o. A. College. Guelph. , Interest in ttrm tumors in In- armed rapidly In Onano In the tut two or three yarn. In the only an. of this yen the ontario Dennaâ€: of Agriculture In“ " course. on hm power In iiiiiih'i parts ot the province. sud thorn no I and nt- tendsnce of 12,870. No grater tgg- terept hm! been “ion in mm on may other subject, m such and-I “national work w done. Potatoes should be handled on.- fully m not " though an m autumnal. The - h s um: “in. with a man in. v“; num'ummunmq " onâ€. d