7910}:meng Sheep Manure For building up garden soil nothing really takes the place ot welt-rotted manure. but in the towns and cities it is almost impossible to aerate this. Too often one is only able to get very strawy manure. which will take you! to break down and become of much value. The ma wlth the small (an den can get round this dlmculty try purchasing pulverized sheep manure. which every dealer in seede carrlea. This material will add that vitally menu: human to the no“. and in which the ordinary tiosrtrrs will not do onâ€. In the fin-rag.) backyard the problem of hrightcnlng up these spots is even mom (limoult because tall (cum-s and closely planted trees add to the shade. However, there ere many flowers which will do well in these dark corners, and some ac- tually prefer them. According to the following list is recommended tor growing in partial shade: Alyssum. Candy-tuft. Clarkia. Godetia. Lark- spur. Lupine. Marvel ot Peru. Nemo. phlla, Mentions. Denothers drum. Inondi. Pansy, Phlox. Verbons. The tuberous rooetd tregonin is also re commended. and Is usually " its best when almost completely shaded by foliage. It is not the simplest thing In the world to grow. but will mete sec! s display of brilliantly colored wu-ille ftowors that the ours tron- ble necessary is well worth while. The Importance of Early Fall Ploughlng In a new country such as northern Ontario, it is imperative that seeding bo done early in the spring to ensure good maturity. and unless a part of the necessary work in the prepara- tion of a good seed-bed is started early in the fall. there is always dare ger of some of the work belngieft tor the next spring. The first step necessary is; natural. ly, that of ploughing and this opera' tion should, whenever possible. be done in late summer as soon as poa- slble after the hay is cut. At the Dominion Experimental Sta. tlon. Kapurskasimt, it has been found that land which has been ploughed early in the fall and given one or two diskings works much better in the spring, with a liner and more friable seed-bed, and gives better yields than land ploughed into in the fall or in the spring. particularly the latter. Weather conditions. such as wetting and drying. freezing and thawing. etc., appear to have is very bettefteiat " feet on the physical condition of hvnvy Madamâ€. it was found that land ploughed early and receiving one or two disklngs in the fall gives 15 per cent. more yield. Considering the advantages of tall ploughing. it is imperative that the farmers take advantage ot every op- porliinily during the late summer and autumn in order to compete this important feature ot the work before the ground freezes and winter sets in. Flower. For Shady Corners tn even the larger gardens there Ira always some shady Corners ln which the ordinary ttoqrtyra will not do well. In the average backyard parts of bran. Tttla ls started in very small quantities and gradually ite crvased up to two pounds per day when the calms reach the use ot from four to tive months. They are also taught to eat hay. preferably lea†clover or alfalfa. T The teen - “I MI: - ol ttmt nod. -tttr kettles not only that the stock he veil trod but that theeelveehereeredine'eytoetr more“ I - end my rapid growth. At the Control - mental for. the real-l at the eat. van is nurded es s matter of greet importance. end they ere so fed end handled on to keep them thriving un- until they develop into good cows. Do. tails of the manner of feeding ere contained in the Report ot the Do- minion Animal Husbandmen tor lost year recently issued " the Depart. ment of Agriculture It Ottawa. The call gets its own mother's milk tor several do" and whole milk is con- tinued for from toar to eight weeks. depending on the strength and vigor of the calf. The change from whole to skim milk is made gradually over n period of one to two weeks. To replace the tat of the new milk In the skim milk ration calves receive I porridge or gruel made from ingredi- ents or different kinds. A favorite mixture consists of Bax seed meal 1 part; ttruundsifted oats 2 parts; and tinely ground corn 2 parts. The meal is prepared by stirring " into a veil of hot water, care being taken to avoid lumpiness. Sufficient is made up at one time for a day's feeding and alter it becomes cold it is warm- ed up when added to the skim milk. The calves are started with about a tattlenpoontyl ot this porridge or unit-i at a feed, gradually increasing the amount fed until they are getting a good sized cuptul at a feed at three or tour months of use. it is ted in the skim-milk, which is given in quantities of from twelve to fifteen pounds [ii-r day. Great care should be taken in prepare the food properly and to sin that the calves get sufllci- ent hut not too much. Alum! the time that the feeding ot skimmilk begins the calves are given a little dry grain mixture cach day. A favorite mixture consists of one part each of ground oats. distillers' grain. and oil rake meal. and two parts of bran. This is started in very small quantities and gradually in- Raking Holler Oahu. l Flowers For Winter Bouquets The first killing frost which turns la garden of beauty into a drab, tang- Hed mass of twisted. blackened stems (always brings a sharp pang of regret 'to the owner. No longer will he be ‘abio to gather a generous armiul of (bloom tor indoor decoration. This 'rogret. however, will be tempered it Eprovlsion is made now tor the grow- ling of certain flowers, the blooms of which can be dried and will last in- Bridegroom (tenderly): But I am here. darling, Inn on my shoulder. ---Pele Mole. Brido( on honeymoon): This climb ls diMcult, cotfd you [at me I. don. key? By tho use. at the Lennoxville Er perimental Farm. ot males that had the power to transmit higher produc- tion to their progeny. the average pro. duction has been raised trom 121 eggs to 179 eggs per hen, while the use of males from dams known to be producers of large eggs, a number of which have bad the power to endow their denghtere with this desirable character. the average egg size has been improved very much The lay- ing that "the sire is halt the fioek" in very true. and especially is this so when the sire is a tested bird possesy Ing a number or desirable charaeteria. tics. 'lolita'). Chief among those is the hulichyrsum or straw-ff-r. This is a hardy annual about two feet high. producing large. diftereua colored blooms. though mainly yellow, until late in the season. Another one is tho ltlmdanthe. which bears silvery, rose tinted fhywers, The Statics comes in manuve, white and primrose and combinations ot the three. A fourth is the Acroclinium, which may be had in a white or a bright rose. All these annuals in addition to their winter bouquet qualities will make a splen- did show in the garden during the summer and early tall us well. For preserving the flowers with long stems should be picked Just before opening and hung in some darknwerm place to dry. The Chinese Lantern. Plant. which is sort ot an ornamental variety ot Winter Cherry, is nine grown tor permanent indoor decora- tion. " the pods turn bright red end putt up like Chinese Lanterns when dry. The perenniel end ennuni Lark- spur can also be dried, and will more I feir bouquet. although it is inclined to be e little more round than thou regulerly recommended for this one poee. . Value of a Good Sire in Poultry 1 Work 1 The ttrst step in the breeding of poultry is the selection of birds to and. up the breeding pen. The kind ot birds to be used. depends upon the aim or ideal which the breeder will be the individual birds that will " considered suitable for the breeding pen. No matter what may be the ideal of the breeder, all agree that a good male is the main essential to success. While ti is very important to hare vigor and active health in each individual ot the breeding pen, it u even more important that the; male be exeeptional1y strong in virori and constitution. It is necessary that the breeder should bear in mlndl that the various characters of a bird may be transmitted to Its progeny! separately. Certain birds may have the ahhity to transmit several desira- ble characters, and may likewise transmit one or more very undesira- ble characters. The more desirable) the characters which ‘the breeder wishes to develop in his flock ot poul-I try, the more particular he must be in the study and selection ot the in. dividuals which he uses tor breeding) purposes. Therefore it is plain that! the tiret essential is the selection of individuals having the characters wanted and the next step is to test their ability to transmit those char. acters. As an example of the Jii'i'i! ot good males in transmitting the: ability to produce a large number of eggs, three males used at the Lennox~: ville Experimental Station may be. taken. No. D240 mated to individuals! with an average production of 175; eggs each, sired " daughters that,' completed their first year ot laying', with an average or 211 eggs each,', while No. but: sin-d daughters that' tin-raged 198 eggs each, and No. 0238-, sired daughters that averaged 180; eggs each. Another character which' is highly important is the size ot egg: produced. In the transmitting Mi this desirable character to the female! progeny. the male may be either a; help or a hindrance. An outstanding; example might be taken from thei experience of a contestant who had] a pen of birds, entered in the Third Quebec West Laying Contest. which were producing under-sized eggs throughoutthe year. By the pur- chase and use ole male which had the power to transmit the ability to produce a good number of large eggs this contestant has been able to build up a Mek noted tor egg size asl well as tor production. l particuiarly advisable in the use of, garden. which have received regular; applications of chemical fertilizers for none years. Puiverized sheep‘ manure haa another advantage in that. it in heated whiie being processed. which hilla any weed seeds. Where; one gets a load of the ordinary matPl are, " must he prepared tor a fresh I crop ot weede. Sheep manure used for enriching the soil and adding humus with nitrate of soda to hasten growth in both the vegetable and tto-rdttrt makes a good combina- tion. A. Cardinal Bourne and procession passing over bridge " the abbey during the Ciltorciau. Remington Kellogg, government bi. ologist, says such abuse is not right. He insists an active interest in the conservation of toads must be taken it these useful animals are to escape extermination by the draining of their breeding places, by the burning over of fields and woods, by the careless operation of automobiles and farm machinery and by other perils ot their present-day environment. Common Toad Hero of the Night Plant-Destroying Insects Are the Nightly Diet of Bufo Boreas, Expert Declares washington-Butts is the tarrner'g friend-a hero ot the night. What, it not heroic. is he who meddies with a termite in the dark? To say nothing of coracious caterpillars, poisonous spiders, the damp and daring sowbugs and those "thousand-legged worms" called miliepeda. He eats them and a host ot other insects that destroy the farmer's crops. But his efforts are not repaid in kind. Bufo is only a toad, usually thought of as squat, tat and warty. The four-letter word is his family name, and as toads go he may be a Bufo boreas, the common toad ot the Northwest, or he may be the ordinary garden variety that gets kicked around, run over, plowed under or left to the teeth or talona of preda- tory -eptiles, birds and whatnot. Within the short space of titty years the pioneering spirit inherent in Canadians has resulted in the develop. ment ot resources until now Canada ranks second in the world in per capi- ta wealth in value of mined, wheat growing, factories, production ot paper and extent of railroads. The prosperity of Canada. is shown by the tact that 82% of the country’s national debt is held within Canada, yet since the Great War, Canadians have invested $1,250,000,000 in other countries. At the same time there has been an increase of $000,000,000 in bank deposits. and the some amount spent on automobiles. The northern sections of Canada. far from being the wilderness com- monly pictured, produce from mines, Merry bathera troliclng In the brlny surf and enjoying a swim at Mar. gate, England. The toad, Kellogg says, Is a great irom an Addregg by Hon. Vincent Massey, Minister to the US., Speaking to the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, March 27, I928 The Canadian Pioneering Spirit Well Known Seabide Fun in Engtmd ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO SHOOTiNG THE CHUTE CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS AT WAVERLEY ABBEY forests and fields unlimited wealth. ‘Tho Canadian Government paid the :Hudson Bay Company $1,500,000 for ‘Western Canada fifty years ago. and ,one Province of that territory last iyear produced $0,000,000 worth ot poultry products alone. ' to Canadians Who Trained at Witley Camp Change Spark Plug Urged Spark plugs should be changed after each 10,000 miles. Worn spark plugs cause missing by the engine. which results in expensive complications. Never be ashamed to learn. even trom less men than thytselt.--K. Ellazar. Learning makes a good man better, and an ill man worse.--John Garth. gourmand of plant-destroying inserts. He is mainly terrestrial and noctur- nal, prolonging into the night the gen- eral welfare ot itPtctlv.orous birds at- ter they hare called it a day. Some, times he may get a good insect, one that preys on other insects, and there- by do damage. But the harm is out- done by his law of average. While he is less susceptible to stings than other vertebrates, he makes no denial of discomfort and proceeds on an im. mediately different dietary. The tempt Locke, Learning passes for wisdom among those who want both.-Bir W. Temple. It Is not wise to attempt to make I slave of a man ot learaing.-- Moelmud. The progress of the country is steady and without boom features, even bankers being optimistic re- garding future growth. Of all learning the most dfttieult department is to tmutual.---'). Wheat can now be grown within 400 miles ot the Arctic Circle, an eighteen hour day during the summer compensating for the shortness of the season itself. All the mines now M. veloped in Canada might be encom- passed in an area ot one hundred square miles, although the known mineral-bearing area of the country exceeds 260,000 square miles. THOUGHTS ON LEARNING chief art ot learning is to at. but a little at a. tlme.-J. in landing trom [use canoes pu- sengers usually were carried from the canoe to the shore. Sir George's guide, Bernard, was carrying the Governor ashore when he fell into the water. Since that day, it said, the river has unomcialiy borne the name of Bernard. All that is known of the guide is the manner in which he fig- ured in this incident. Isolated, Indeed. " Kingston for about tour months In the late spring and early summer. when the lone road ig submerged by the waters trom Kings River. The community protect began eleven years ago when Elmer J. Bouher, etrs cuit-riditttr parson "from up on the Dry Creek settlement.†firtrt rode into town and preached his initial sermon before a "brash arbor meetin'." Six-Shooters Pop. The natives did not take kindly to this stranger and Ms tirtst sermon we: preached to an accompaniment of dis- charging ell-shooters and Ill-suppress- ed whoops. But the strange things the person said In his talk interested the natives. The name of the Bernard River has just been approved by the Geomphlo Board of Cnnnda. The manor In which the river came to get its name cuts an Interesting aldellght on the liven of the early explorers. in 1828 Mr George Simpson, Gover- nor of the Hudson's Bar Compsny. was crossing Cumin from out to west. On the Peace River, one Ban. ttar evening. the travelers hid uide their puddles to camp tor the night It the mouth ot a small tributary. Kingston. Ark.--A tiny village of 175 population, not even listed on ot. ttcial maps of Arkansas. is a model rural community. Located in the hills ot Madison County with the only way of approach a single mountain road. this little village is receiving nation- wide comment. "We must live by the doctrines of neighborly love. We must respect the nobility of honest labor. Creeds and denominations are but slight things. The being and spirit ot Jesus Christ, our Saviour. in the great thing." Another widely known name that goes back to Indian story and legend is Crow's Nest, in Alberta, where a mountain, a pass. a lake, a river and a village all bear the name. Accord- ing to the Geographic Board of Can- ada, the first mention of Crow's Nest is by Captain Thomas Blakiston ot the Palliser expedition, whose report of Dec. 18. 1868, refers to Crow's Nest Pass and Crow's Nest River. The map accompanying the final report of the expedition, published in 1865, shows “Crow's Nest Mountain." The mountain is located in latitude " de- grees 424 minutes, longitude IU do. Parson, Teacher Develop Community Center In Lost Corner of Arkansas Mountain Fastncss What Kingston needed most. he said, was more love and less liquor. It needed a. tree church. school: and hospitals tor every one, and a road to Join it with the world beyond South Mountain. A few years later a younglsh schooi- master, Otto Ernest Rayburn, drifted Into town. He had Just returned from the Wogld War to BfanMum, Mo. He had used his last dollar to buy scrap lumber. nails, tour empty beer kegs Canadian River Name Recalls Mishap of an Early Explorer elicion. Education. Health Ariz'av‘red by Two w orkers celebration to the memory ot the Carry On 3 Publications Create Model Ozark Village “M... a...“ New.“ nu ran out TB. rouon m that the Intern! over the Red Beat icondmon ot the " place of glut In Bmatl Bor-Pie-m, he Hugh: {revealed " Plum beams ot In! "tt.-aieharsee. :thron‘h It III then studying the put- 0 'lPmedeuorstGGGii. New Where the women are (Honda. tho " dogge "tuueteeiir only " . M Ion won't "ht.-atttttertm, we. Rhos-m Inn-um Inna-o. Red Sea Anollnu _ Sunday School Teacher-And now who can tell me win: hlppenod when Mole. Itretched " rod out over the Red Sea? medical library 011m r'J'i',1'Mdt'it been donated to this, the only V . ih center in the county. The qualitUd nurse. who has charge ot the hospital, nlao work- in surrounding neighbor. hoods. Supplies tor expectant moth- era are lent (teem! charge to needy hill bullies. in the community building nt King- ton no found the only tree library. the only pipe organ. the only hot-nit furnace and the only lighting system in Madison County. That was live yesrs use. Just re cently the community building, a thing of permanence std beauty, was ttuiBhed. After Bouher and Rayburn undertook the tots they cot together a few carpenter's tools and called for voluntary labor. Slowly the hill folks began to respond. A sswmill thst bad been discarded wss rigged up and pine. oak. wild cherry, el mend asses- trss were brought trom the neighbor- ing hillside and sewed tor the build. ing ot the his house. Merchants in neighboring towns contributed nsils and window glass. l Plant Is Worth 840,†A large church in Rochester bend of the enterprise ot the struggling hill town and sent 3 donation of 89,000. When n protessionsl con- tractor, on vslustiu the building. in- spected the completed structure he declared that the lumber used alone would have cost more than 840,000 " the lowest current market price. and the loan ot a saw and hammer. With these he built e raft, boarded it and tiotgtad down the White River. Trader Hike. In. Alter days of drifting he landed at the village of Cotter and hiked six- teen miles over the mountain to King- ston. When autumn came Rayburn opened a school. Forty-tour pupils, with ages averaging a little more than twenty years, answered roll call. The pupils were orderly, intelligent and very much in earnest. The first two years of school the teacher livei as did the preaz'hn-r, arm the bent-vol- truce of the muu‘rysl-le. After talking the situation over the p2rmn and tho schoolmaster called a countryside mass meeting and dis- cussed plane tor a community build. ttur-schoolhouse, church. bookroom. meeting house, all in one. The hill people were hard to convert to the idea. but these two lenders. not to be outdone, chucked " theid coats and started digging the foundation. There nre other things besides the school system that helps Kingston to receive nation-wide comment. Some ot these are the library of 6.000 vol- umes in the tar wing ot the cons. munity building, the print shop in the old schoolhouse. where practical training is provided in the printing arts and where “The Kingston Mir- ror," a weekly newspaper; “The Onark Lite," a month] mama, and "The Thinker." I J'ilfoi'l','lfr'l,'lf Him?- The latest addition to Kingston la I community gleam: centre, located In the old 2tturcli. your thousand dol- hrs' worth ot aiirurisenls, ant I terly, are published by Otto Ernest Rayburn, superintendent of schools. About twenty years ago an aged Blood chief. Ermine Hons. guided R. N. Wilson. " indian agent. to the scene of the murder of two white miners try the chief and some com. panions tn his youth. He stated that it was “a crow's nest." but, to Mr. Wil- son's surprise. headed tor a high. iso- lated and prominent hill standing be. tween the Porcupines and the Rockies several miles north and east of the eastern entrance ot Crow's Nest Pass. The Indian said that this place was what " ancestors had called crow's nest, or, more literally the raven's home. Answering the agent's remark that the white man called the other mountain “Crow's Nest," the red man said: "That is perhaps the white man's talk. We Indians know but one rrow's nest and that is it. All in- dians refer to this locality as the 'crow's nest country'." This would ac- count for the name being extended to the neighboring river and pass. After the are years required tor completing the building Kingston now had a Iully equipped high 'school, one onering thoroughly modern instruc- tion In printing. maul training, blacksmithing, farm management. ag- riculture. Smith Huge- vocational, health and domestic service. There are now 225 students and eight teachers. During the summer a peo- ple's college is held and preparations are now being made to open a junior college. While Crow’s Nest may not occur elsewhere in Cumin u n place name. Peter Fidler’a mp. 1816-17. shows I piece of that nuns on the Nelson River in Manitoba,' and John Long. the fur trader, who described his in. vein in the region north of Latte Superior in a book published in 1791, mentioned two Crow's Nest lakes, one near Lake Abitibi end the other wait of Lake Nipigon. (not " minus, but the hill to which the Indiana sue the male would to be Ibzvutvelxhtoen miles tur- â€ignited In searching tor visible law-a ""im any objoct. but tho seventy-Inch I that of optical alas: recently mad. at We» bum at standard: tor the an [an 0W?! " Ohio “re-lam â€lunar-12y “a aubjechod to In most ad em m In daring-a. m Tho - was that ma lam-nu ', in“ . ' 7 krtiriiarT. {$193351}: 9733*; I an}?! Autumnal-o To“ Glam Lem In Room of Tout Badman. Light And plenty ot it, In unutlly re quired In touching tor viable In" in any objoct. but the uvcnty~luch disk of opucul glu- recently and. a mma-mmtormom than 05mm" at Ohio Wuhan 'T-a---, -- _ _ "President Coolidge had In estate of no more than ten thousand dollars when he entered the White House. and some people, realizing thut he would leave it a relatively poor man. onered a fund of two million dollarn, the iaeotne.ot which was to co to ex- Presidentn. When President Coolidge heard of it Ito 'said: "All rub! for other Prey down. but not tor me." There is a nipuilr impreulon in :hls (wintry that when Preeident Coolidge retiree he will be under some kind of a Carnegie pension fund. Al I matter or tact, there in no Carnegie fund for ex-Presidvnta. either in the Carnegie Foundation or by the will of Andrew Carnegie. In his will Ir. Carnegie provided that ex-Prelident Tatt ahould be the recipient ot 810,000 per annum Ind In. Theodore Boon volt and lira. Grover Cievelnnd $5,000 each. The presiding omcer ot tho Home at Commune of England in now retiring with the custom "one per annual pension after a few you! service. but the Presidents of the United State- 30 out of tttBee to work tor a living or to sell their -." lettuce lanes. "will; it- aiii' pn- prlh and tter" it u the min dish for luncheon. titiceir itt: Hot Gingerbread “ Dusted with Powdered Sugar Iced Ginger Ale Milk Luncheon Cottage Cheese ' One pound ot (real: cottage cheese. Add enough plmento pulp to tho gluon to mm It I light salmon color. â€been It with melted butter. - Alt her earthly lite In" June Today her luring butch um In; dust upon the them. Neodhu mty, uncle-I than. an nrdauck In In corner I--. And what cu: the be doing now to occupy herself? With tolded heads she'd never be con- tent st w to Mt nomad. Or with the Blessed Denote!- to throng the Golden Butt; Her fingers would be Itching tor the sci-eon and the cutting bound. To keep on making pretty clothes tor other folk to veer. Luncheon Cottage Cheese Sundrichen ot main Brown or thet Bread and White Bread with Red Curran; Jellr Between lube the Heavenly [unions have a shining little sewing room, And it so. while the other- m their hum and sweetly In... I know 'tia there Min June will In. still sewing saintly samite robes Or stitching shifts with loving out for baby cherubim! m-tEt=ie V. Carathers, in New York Times. tario teacher- who have come to an. bee to learn Punch. the medals tn he awarded to the two who show the grate-t pragm- during the course of the four weeks that the] will he hen. One of the medal: in the gift of the Department ot Foreign mm. while the other has been given by the Que- bec Department of Public Instruction. The teachers have arrived in Que- bec tor their course at the Billery Gon- vent, and were ottictor welcomed by Hon. Cyrille Deluxe. superintendent of public instruction for the province. There were 60 assembled in the con- vent when Mr. Delage arrived with P. There were 50 Assembled In the con- vent when Mr. Dense arrived with P. C. A. Jeanneret, of Toronto, to whom he headed the mednlI. to remain In his custody until after the (our weeh' course In completed. Mr. Pennneter gated that the cm ot the models would further help cement the good relations existing be- tween the two provinces. and would be an additional rymbol of the Ivonne entente between the people of Quebec and Ontario Coolidge Refuses Pension Fund President Coolidge in not in tho mnrket for gratuities to and». hill to retire comfortably whoa he leave- the White House, an" n wrlmr in the current issue ot “Burma's Pinon- clnl Weekly." He expects to (at out Ind work for a living. Quebec Departments Donate Prize for Progress in Frenéh Quebec.---') med-ll hare been . tered tor competition unions the On- Offer Medals to Hot Bouillon or Chicken Broth Edam 011m and titted, hemmed And shined. Sewing Foe Saints Hot Weather Luncheon ‘3 in I77 in I [10307qu - m wuklkl. th will be W ttttate) â€(with 0. that In"!!! G You! Aro, Wilder, H I." ot "I! a. one of given for mom o tbe terrtto The plat of n "I" homo! we“ "ed for um". I . canoe. Itetrtpte' “chum: Sudden " won. tt anâ€. “4 throw um {to Brill! . In" no Anode-n m on 1 an“! . “HI wht, “in the Intern- Make Inc to tbroe BM ted SUI tmtu wt the erect navigator Morris “mun Canada - Hon try. Dd 8 tary, IIIII( Penny! " the l, tn the v Nations Won. Huston Hon-tor "I, a - In Three qmtqer a. null and the 1 will rad August “null". hemory (ml. 1: It. 177ti HAWAII. l February I"! ta, mm; Den! er blind , ton I'll Donor“ Ichl pa Melon tho rlw h 1815. Of the “on wil Tho we I the [m we " â€10d broe1ro. and n In. I able! “In l mun Big I ttrltt t (know [all othe om " 2“!" Uh It! Hol Ilsa Kin! Ullu .n, " u (I All Ar m, m be N or the of the In " Tht Tht Ot " ted itt .n the