Age is Spiritual Decay. str In en in 1al enorgy c the ional i1 to ivige reity vx of ¢. *The morning growing i leg in ties are to the 18 ma That Ar John Burroughs, the £~; â€" alist, died late in u;,d,‘,“‘o‘;,“’.":ï¬'n, en route to his N~« York home from ‘C‘H“':“- e was in his eightyâ€" :::‘l wear. No man loved the outâ€" «4 more thon ns 5 four per cent. of all the foodstuffs in the United Kingdom were controiled. Britain‘s present war debt to Canâ€" ada, end of 1920, of 3150,000.00‘}, o uie be paid off by April, 1%32, We can be quite sure that with so much ready to happen somethirg will come off in 1921 to make the old rhyme come true. The last time this occurred King Edward VII. died within the year. trodition warns, is an lllï¬a;n;;.- .. When our Lord falls in our Lady‘s lap All England will hqve great mishap. The calendar for 1921 reveals a feaâ€" ture which bas set the good folk of English countrysides to shaking theig heads. Good Friday fell on March 25, which was also Lady Day, and this, without was doubtless 'con'ta;x-t she had her share of beauty." ficiently beautiful. But the‘;o_;)d God is not so particular. He who can see the soul within so clearly as the nose Giuseppe, the Italian assistant of an American seulptor in Rome, answered a like question with equal truth and more poetry. He had told the sculpâ€" tor of his engagement, and after conâ€" gratulating him the sculptor had smilâ€" ingly asked, "I suppose she is very pretty, Giuseppe? The prettiest girl in all the world. Isn‘t it so?* G‘useppe beamed, but he shook his head. "Ay, no, signor! Not so! You and I, if we chise! my Paolina, â€" we make the nose different, and ~perhaps a little also the chin tn malkae haw mt stout. If I had the rolling of her, I give her yust one more pass." better of her people for feeting so. You go over at once and bring her home; I‘ll arrauge it." ‘Then he addâ€" ed, "I suppose, William, your sweetâ€" heart is a beautiful, tall, peachesâ€"andâ€" cream kind of German young lady." "Vell, Mr. Carnegie," said the honest William, who thought of everything in terms of his work, "she is a leetle ‘‘voied uerman employee of Andrew Carnegie‘s. Returning from a wellâ€" earned vacation in Germany, he sought out his employer and confided to him that he was engaged to be married. "But, Mr. Carnegie," he concluded in aggrieved tones, "dem people don‘t know no‘ting about businesst Her bruder write me dey want me to go dere again and marry her in Germany, and I can go away not again. I tought 1 yust ask you aboud it." At one time during the war ninetyâ€" able utili into 1 0 ECC CO2C0 HHZ TCCE Of Wned This material has been lifted into | your blood is impoverished, the nerves the sky by the power of the sun. The : suffer from lack of nourishment and warm air drank in the moisture evapâ€" you may be troubled with insomnia orated from land and sea, and the neuritis, neuralgia or siatica. Musâ€" pressure of cooler air surrounding it cles subject to strain are underâ€"nour caused the mass to ascend like a hotâ€"| ished and you may have muscular air balloon. . rheumatism â€" or lumbago. . If your (mne may observe the process in opâ€"| blood is thin and you begin to show eration when one sees a "thunderâ€", Symptoms of any of these disorders head" cloud mounting skyward on a | ty building up the bMood with Dr. summ~~ day. Its riging speed "".‘Wflllams’ Pink Pills. These pills have ages more than 100 feet a minute, but & Special action on the blood and as the cloud goes up more slowly when ltl it becomes enriched your health imâ€" reaches a point where its top is cooled | PrOYes. _ The value of Dr. Williams‘ to the degree of the surrounding air. ‘Pink Pills in cases of this kind is The cloud assumes varying shapes PrOVYed by the experience of Mr. D. J. as the transition takes place. Often| MCDomald, North River Bridge, N.S., t!~ top of the thunderhead bursts out : WYRO 8@Â¥s: "For some years I suffered j rprisingly beautiful mushroom | %%Yere!y with headaches, pains in the forms and stands in the sky like a| back and a runâ€"down condition, At vaporous toadstool reared as if py| times the pain in my back would be HARKC. so bad that I would sit up in bed all Within the cloud violent forces are}nkht‘ From time to time doctors at work. Cooler bodies of air rush | were treating me, but did not give me into the forming mass and the glob.| "°¢ than temporary relief. And then of water are compressed into| * Elay when I was suffering terribly ps of rain, which may be carried | * neighl‘)or came to see me, and urged It is made up of minute globules of water, each one of which has for its nucleus a particle of dust. The weight of a cloud measuring 10,000 feet in diameter would, it is estimated, be something like 200,000 tons, if its maâ€" terial were condensed . A cloud, though composed of water, is so light that it floats in the atmosâ€" pheric ocean. Superstitious Fear Year 1921. U Here Of course ‘riction between the vioient eleâ€" is of disturbance produces fields static electricity, and lightning ‘hes from point to point in the nds. It is thought that the electriâ€" energy is due to the rupture of the ndrops in the clouds. n explaining this interesting matâ€" a science publication says the ver employed in lifting the weight the material of the cloud has put > the mass of condensed moisture t exactly that much energy, availâ€" e for work if only we knew how to Vithin the cloud violent forces are work. Cooler bodies of air rush ) the forming mass and the globâ€" ; of water are compressed into ps of rain, which may be carried \ into the region of freezing> temâ€" iture and congealed into ice. The ps of ice fall, and we call it a hailâ€" ze it ere, indeed, is an inexhaustible ce of power, if we could but harâ€" 6 36 We have learned how to e use of the energy of falling ‘r, one cubiec foot of which dropâ€" nine feet represents a horseâ€" or, but the waterfalls from the is offer opportanities which as yet tin beyond our reach. Ensrgy Hidden in the Their Sweethearts. ‘ are usually either unwiliing e to see defects in their sweetâ€" But truth is truth; there are leroic fibre who will not palter even when they are in love. nan was William, a tried and tierman emplovee of Andraw rse you can go again," Mr. assured him. "I think the her people for feeling so. css * * |MUCH ILL HEALTH ©% icw is w sme:| â€" DUE TO BAD BLOOD VEVO IOF Ieeling so., once and bring her that o on us colgs. The Irish clansmen were known as the "MacDunshleibhe" or "O‘Dunâ€" shleibhe." This clan came into being some time in the eleventh century, under the leadership of a chieftain named "Dunsleibhe," who was the son of the famo haidh," brother of "Maolruana This _ "Maolruanâ€" aidh" was t yseventh king of "Ulidia," or Ulster, and was slain in the great battle with the Danes at Clontarf in 1047. * "Donâ€"Levi" was the peculiar Engâ€" lish translation of the name adopted by a branch of the clan, but it. was never widespread. The name Donleavy occurs as native to Scotland, and as the name of a sept in theâ€"Clan Buchanan.â€" But while it may have originated from the same given name as the Irish family name, its source is more or less clouded in obscurity, and the only thing certain is that it had an origin independent of connection with the Irish clan. The older form of the Scottish name is "Macâ€"Donâ€"Leavy." f "A great fortune is a splendid serviâ€" tude," wrote Seneca, the great milâ€" lionaire of the first century. In the f twentieth century Carnegie expressed | the same idea when he said of rich | men, "At first they own the money | they have made and saved. Later in ili.fe the money owns them." This group of family names had its origin in the name of cne of the anâ€" cient Irish clans, from which all of the foregoing variations have been deâ€" rived in the process of Anglicizing the name. Variationsâ€"Dumleavy, Dunlevy, Dunâ€" lief, Donleavy, Donâ€"Levi, Dolip. Racial Originâ€"Irish and Scottish. Sourceâ€"A given name. F fet ts ABrvint ic m ns aciaicietst W i4 2. O c the bottom of a plane flying at a uniâ€" form height, takes overlapping picâ€" tures that later are fiited together to form a continuous picture map. The delta of the Mississippi River, hitherto only inaccurately surveyed on account of the extreme difficulty of travel in its swamps and marshes, will be photographed by the U.S. Air Service. The aerial camera, fixed in Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Distemper cine Co., Brockville. Ont me to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. After taking two boxes I felt relief. I got five boxes more and before they were all gone I feit as though they were giving me new life, as in every way they built up and improved my bealth and strength. I am now workâ€" ing as a barker in a pulp mill, ten hours a day, and feeling none the worse after my day‘s work. I say with pleasure that this condition is due to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills." You can get Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, from The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" try building up the bMood with Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. These pills have a special action on the blood and as it becomes enriched your health imâ€" proves,. The value of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills in cases of this kind is proved by the experience of Mr. D. J. More disturbances to health is caused by weak, watery blood than most people have any idea of. When your blood is impoverished, the nerves suffer from lack of nourishment and you may be troubled with insomnia, neuritis, neuralgia or siatica. Musâ€" cles subject to strain are underâ€"nourâ€" ished and you may have muscular rheumatism â€" or lumbago. .If your blood is thin and you begin to show symptoms of any of these AlenrAars If the Blood is Kept Rich and Red You Will Enjoy Health. DUNLAP. Surnames and Their Origin Public offices in tiose days generalâ€" ly were ‘.eld for life, as the most usual and effective way of removing an ofâ€" ficial from office was to remove him for life. Thus in many instances these titles stuck long enough to the indiâ€" vidual, and were even handed down with the office from father to son, to become family names. There was a Robert Clavynger on the medieval parliamentary lists, but the still older forms of the name are to be found in such entries as "John le Clavier," "Henry le Claver" and "John le Clavour." He was the custodian of public moneys and documents, the official who was responsible for their safeâ€" keeping, though not for their collecâ€" tion or expenditure. The "claviger‘" of the middle ages, under the Angloâ€"Norman system of government held a position similar to those of the modern city or state treasurer and custodian of public doâ€" cuments combined. Technically he was the "keybearer," for that is what the word "claviger" meant. And the key he bore was that of the public treasury. The original meaning of these family names had nothing to do with the word "cleve" in either the sense of cutting or clinging. The source is entirely different, and lies in the now obsolete word "claviger." Variationsâ€"Cleaver, Clavenger. Racial Originâ€"English. Sourceâ€"An occupation or title. Here is a good one: If you had a dollar for every kind thing you have done during 1920, how many dollars would you have? Judged from the standard of speed, our own sunâ€"which would appear as a star if it was far enough away from usâ€"is a comparative infant. Its speed is only about twelve miles per second. It has been found that the average velocity of faint stars is much greater than that of brighter ones. Twentyâ€" eight faint ones have been found to have an average velocity of 138 miles per second, whilst the speed of nine very bright ones averaged only eighty miles per second. In the case of the train, however, it is a matter of a few minutes only; with a star it isâ€"millions of years. The speed of the fastest star is about three hundred miles per second. This celâ€" estial racer is invisible with the naked eye, but has a number of other means of identification for the convenience of astronomers. One of the most interesting of recent discoveries in conection with astronoâ€" my is that the older a star grows, the faster does it move, A star, like an express train, takes time to get up speed. Most poor sleepers are of nervous temeprament and should practice selfâ€" control. They should not take the frets and annoyances of the day to bed with them. To go to bed angry is the worst of all. Much sleeplessness is on‘ly a form of indigestion. When a person falls asleep quickly, but wakes in an hour or so unmistakably suffering from unâ€" digested food, he should rise and slowâ€" ly drink a cup of hot water in which a quarter of a teaspoonful of bicarbonâ€" ate of soda has been dissolved. Anyone who is subject to insommnia should make sure that wher in boed his head shall be cool and his feei warm; he should use a hotâ€"water botâ€" tle or a light pillow at the foot of the bed if he cannot keep his feet warm otherwise. He should always make his evening meal nutritious but light, and if it proves to have been too light supplement it with a little more light food at the end of the evening. One sign that a man has‘ had insutâ€" ficient sleep is finding nnmself drowsy at odd hours during the day. There are many simple precautions that a man so affected can practice. He will often find it a waSte of time to lie in bed obstinately trying to get to sleep. The wise course for him is to rise, put on warm slippers and a dressing gown and read until«his brain grows quiet. Te may find that eating a light lunchâ€" eon will help; one physician used to advise his patients either to heat a cup of milk and sip it slowly or to cat an apple slowly, skin and all. Spinach is a Persian plant. Something Like Speed! The Poor Sleeper. CLAVER _ Men employed in driving a new galâ€" i lery in a mine at Charlotte Plains in }Victoria. Australia, have made an asâ€" tonishing discovery. At a depth of 800 feet below ground they have come upon pieces of timber, perfectly preâ€" served, which have every appearance of having been sawed and shaped by the hand of man. This timber lies in the bed of an ancient river now being worked for gold, and the timber is oak. Now oak has the peculiar property of lasting for centuries when buried in water or wet sand. Oak piles have been taken out from under old wooden bridges constructed by the Romans and found as sound as when they were put there nearly 2000 years ago. Oak known as the bog‘ oak is found buriedâ€"in peat bogs and is perfectly black, â€"intensely bard .and very valuâ€" able. At present there is an absolute famine in seasonedâ€"OGak wood, but if we could suppress bolshevism and open up â€"Russia to frade, that famine would soon be ended. Just before the war it was discovered that the bed of the river Moksha, for a length of over 400 miles, is simply full of magnificent old oak trees bedded in sard. more of the first molars missing o; defective. The trouble seems to be due to imâ€" perfect enamel. It is merely one manifestation of the progressive deâ€" terioration which the human dental equipment is undergoing. Sometimes these teeth actually start in to decay before they are fairly through the gums.. The inspections showed that nearly 5 per cent. of them acquire "cavities" during the first year after hey are erupted. In children eleven years old (five years ofter erupâ€" tion) 9 per cent. of them have been extracted or appear merely as decayed roots. Fiftyâ€"four per cent. of the 6,388 children examined showed one or The study made by the United States Public Health Service comâ€" prised inspections of 6,388$ mouths of children of both sexes, from the age of six (when the teeth in question first arrive) to seventeen years, Four of these first mt;larsr -a;c;'i;ro- vided by thoughtful nature for each human bemgâ€"two in each jaw. The service of this tooth as a food grinder 1! needed throughout life. It is the soâ€"called "fArstmolar," and upon it falls the job of doing most of the heavy chewing while the temporâ€" ary teeth of early childhood are being replaced by the permanent and final set. It is the largest of the teethâ€"the big grinder. It is the first of the perâ€" manent teeth to make its appearance in the mouth of the child. Yet it does not rebhce another tooth, and it is not replaced by anâ€" other. The matter is of prime importance, because the part this particular tooth plays in the human economy is peculâ€" iar and conspicuous. The United States Public Health Service has been making an intensive study of a tooth. i name?" _ "Selvidge," answered the woman. _ Tossing her a half dollar, the generâ€" al asked: "Will you keep that pie unâ€" til I send an officer for it?" "I will," said the woman. The general and staff rode on, and scoon a camping ground was selected, and the regiments were notified that there would be a grand parade at half past six for orders. This was unâ€" usual, and neither officers nor men could imagine what was coming. The parade was formed, however, ten columns deep and a quarter of a mile in length,. After the usual review, the assistant adjutantâ€"general « read the following: "Headquarters, Army in the Field, "Special Order No. â€": "Licutenant Wickham, of the Indiâ€" ana Cavalry, having on this day eaten everything in Mrs. Selvidge‘s house, at the crossing of the Ironton and Pocahontas and Black River and Cape Girardeau roads, excopt one pumpkin pic, Lieutenant Wickham is hereby ordered to return, with an escort of one hundred cavairy, and eat that pie also, U. S. GRANT, "Brigadierâ€"General Commanding." Soon after, General Grant, who had halted his army for a short rest a few miles farther back, rode up to the same door and asked if they would cook him a meal. . The woman, who grudged the food already furnished, replied gruffly: "No. General Grant and his staif have just been here and eaten everything in the house except one pumpkin pie." "Ah!" said Grant. "What is your In the rapid marches of Grant‘s forees in southern Missouri their raâ€" tions were often scanty and not very palatable. At length, however, they emerged into a better and more cultiâ€" vated section, and Lieuterart Wickâ€" ham, of an Indiana cavairy regiment, who with two second lieutenants was in command of the advance guard of eighty men, halted. at a farmbouse. Pretending to be General Grant, he demanded food for himself and his staff. The family hastily brought forward the best their house aiforded. The lieutenants ate their fil, and went on their way. Cereral Grant once called his army into grand parade,*and issued a fcrmal order that had as its sole object the de:truction of a pumpkin pie. â€" The story is told in a biographical work by L. P. Brockett, M.D. Preserved Timber. Grant Made Him Eat Uncle Sam a Dentist. caught sight of them. A race of white canmibals, recently reâ€"discovered in South America by an American explorer, have not been eeen by. any white man simce 1753, when The handle of a new electric tool for tamping railroad ties is made of spring steel so that the vibrations are not transmitted to a workman opâ€" erating it. * Cancer has been assigned to the folâ€" lowing causes, among others: Eating overâ€"hot food, excessive smoking or Em IG, CCVORC DRUTE IT and hurrying over meals. Minard‘s Linimsrt for CandruR®. MONEY ORDERS. Dominion Express Money Orders are On sale in fire thousand offices throughout Canada. "Oh, yes," she replied, in a delightâ€" ed tone; "they haven‘t laid a bad egg yet!" During one of her animated descripâ€" tions of her success a friend inquired: "Are your birds good laying hens?" A young married woman who moved into the country considered the keepâ€" ing of hens a pleasant and profitable undertaking. As she grew more abâ€" sorbed in the pursuit her enthusiasm increased. to children of all ages. Concerning them Mrs. Joseph Therrien, St. Gabâ€" riel de Brandon, Que., writes: "Baby‘s Own Tablets are the best medicine I know of for little ones. I thought I would lose my baby before trying the Tablets, but they soon made him healthy and happy and now I would not be without them." The tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from the Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Thousands of mothers state pos!â€" tively that Baby‘s Own Tablets are the best medicine they know of for little ones. _ Their experience has taught them that the Tablets always do just what is claimed for them and that they can be given with perfect safety THE BEST MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES "Well, sis," returned Willie, "when he was saying goodâ€"night to you last night I heard him say, ‘Mabel dear, I‘m â€"I‘m going to steal just one.‘ " "Oh, Willie," she cried, "how can you say such a thing?" Mabel, â€" the beautiful grownâ€"up daughter of the house, blushed crimâ€" Little Willie looked up at his dad. "I ‘spect Mr. Smith took it, father," he said. Unreliable Evidence. ‘"Where is my umbrella?" fumed father, just as he was ready to rush off to the office. "Somebody‘s taken it!" Give the Fire a Chance. It was a sleepy village, and its fire brigade was anything but upâ€"toâ€"date. One night a fire was announced by the violent ringing of the alarm bell, and the sleepy brigade arrived at the scene of action to find the burning building a mass of smoke. No flames were visible from the outside. The captain made a careful survey. Then he lit his pipe and started to smoke. "We‘d better leave it alone an‘ let it burn up a bit," he said. "Then we‘ll be able to see what we are doing." "I am, positively; no use arguing, now, I‘mâ€"â€"*" "Well then, all I‘ve got to say, you put on your rubber shoes and wear you raincoat and take your umbrella, that‘s all." "John." ‘"Yes, dear." "Are you really going down in that submarine ?" e "Yes, Harold. I know she answered sweetly. cepted one of them toâ€"day "No, Harold," said Miss Goldie, "I can never be yours.‘ "Never?" he cried in despair. "Never!" she answered coldly. His mood changed. "Oh, very well," he sneered. "There are others." "Well," said an old admiral to one of the youths, "what must an officer be before he can have a funeral with full naval honors?" Members of the Naval Board were examining younrg applicants for apâ€" pointment to A Naval college, Topperâ€""Did anybody remark on the way you handled your new car?" Gogglesâ€""One man did, but he did not say much." Topperâ€""What did he say?" Goggles â€" "Twenty dollars â€" and costs." "Dead," answered the bright youth, Good Laying Hens. What the Judge Said. She Knew It. Caution. Quite So. to have there are," "And I acâ€" ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO of Salicylicacid. Warning! Take no chances with substitutes for genuine "Bayer Tabâ€" lets of Aspirin." Uniless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tabâ€" lets you are not getting Aspirin at alt. In every Bayer package are directions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheuâ€" matism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelre tablets cost few cents. Drugâ€" gists also sell larger packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Salt spread on the paths is used to kill weeds, yet salt in smalled quantiâ€" ties is a splendid fertilizer for carnaâ€" tions and pinks, and all plants of that Charcoal, while not a true fertilizer, has an extraordinary good effect on most pot plants. Especially in the case of hyacinths, a little powdered charcoal mixed with the potting soil makes the flowers more brilliant in color than any fertilizer. A drop or two of ammonmia tm a tumâ€" bler of water is a specific for some plants, especially those with soft stems, such as primulas. But the mixâ€" ture must not be too strong, or it will kill instead of cure. of weak tea, and nuny (;(h;r ‘1:); plants are benefited by this mixture. Plants, like animals, have curious appetites, and very different ones. Most tqm seem to appreciate a small dose more or less for five years. My physician said he could not do anyâ€" thing for me and suggested a change "This condition made me very neryâ€" ous and I could not sleep at night. Frequently I would lie awake most all night and was in that condition Only ‘"‘Bayer‘‘ is Genuine "About five years ago I suffered a | general breakdown. . My principal | trouble was nervous indigestion. My | appetite was very poor and my food | seldom agreed with me, and I had to live on a very restricted diet. I sufâ€" fered a great deal from headaches and dizzy spells; I had severe pains across | the small of my back and was badly | constipated most of the time. In fact, ! I was so weak and rundown I was not able to attend to my duties. | said "Uncle Parker," as he is more faâ€" miliarly known, came from fine old rugged Quaker stock, and there is not a better known or more highly reâ€" spected citizen in that part of the state. In referring to his remarkable restoration to health by Tanlac, he A full half century has devoted his life and talents to Sunday school and organization work for the Society of Friends or Quakers. Nearly everybody in Southwest Missouri, U.S.A., either knows or has hearg of the Rev. Parker Moon, who for , Aagain, a fertilizer which will Medicine for Plants. Quaker Minister Is Grateful to Tanlac ASPIRIN Rev. Parker Moon Fishermen and Campers, Quick Relief. PUT A BOTTLE iN Your outrir Mexico has a tribe of Indians whose language is limited to about 300 wordq and who caunot count more The giraffe is the only animal that is really dumb. It is unable to exâ€" press itself by any sound whatever. kill some planis, is one of the best things possible for the onion bed. Potatoes and cauliftowers are partial to seaweed, hops flourish on groundâ€" up rags, while there are some greedy plants, fike strawherries and roses, which seem to appreciate any form of food which may be given them. Tanlac is sold by every where. "I take great mending Tanlac a good system | with stomach t mended Tanrlac friends and n others by givi publication ." * "I kept on tak fully regained my is splendid; I en do not find it no any laxative me I can sleep muc nearly so nervon "I had rea had been v. to me, I de bottle and h: until I could ment in my pecially that more with s which was a of climate. 1 then : and went back and f but did not get the r« for, Finally 1 got so I able to get around a of comfort. 1 was heart trouble. "Our baby was two weeks old lcï¬u‘bw.m I found the free sample so good that I bought more and two cakes of Cuticura Soap and a fifty cent box of Cuticura Ointâ€" ment healed him." (Signed) Mrs. Lilian M. Taylor, Box 99, Braceâ€" k&t.hkoh.Om..Dac.:a.'u. Cuticura to cleanse = rlfy.&lia::-&nm to o& and soothe and Cuticura Talcum to powder and perfume are ideal for Mrs. Lilian Taylor Tells How Cuticura Healed Her Baby IS8UE iwo. 21â€"â€"®+ YARMOUTH, Ns d about ery higl cided to ad taken got so bad of 1 was not iround with any degrese I was also told I had nd ki fNourish on q re are some wherries and preciate any 4 e given them. §â€"â€"â€"â€"~â€"._.~ n( Tanlac and, as it ly recommended try it. I got a only a few doses marked improveâ€" n. 1 potived es not troubled any ach after eating. tter and anlae satil I . NMy appetite y meals and I y now to take Of any kind. r and am not 1 had hoped 1 to Texas three times rugg ri e my for