Tnt PeriannjEwisit &al la!, PAGE FOUR ffiEDLIFFOITIEWISII ff RON 1134 MICHIGAN'S JEWISH HOME PUBLICATION — - -- lawyer, voo0000 0000.00.00.000orzoono 1 seems to be a very interesting contradiction: a great . . M O (Our Tuntemporarirs on0000000-00, possessed of great wealth, and yet he now late in e c to affiliate himself as a leader of a movement which is filled with idealism—the restoration of the Holy Land. Published Weekly by The Jewish Chronicle Publishins Co., Inc. Joseph J. Cummins, President. illatered as second-class matter March 1, 1916, at the Postale(' at NOON, Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1871. ' Mr. Samuel Untermyer. Some bill, that Dillingham mess. Dillingham ought to draft another immigration bill as stupid ass the one now • law and then retire from Congress. No wonder that all the preceding Presidents vetoed that sort of immigration measure—and I am inclined to believe that it Harding had been • lotle longer . in office e would never have aigne such an unutterably ridiculous piece of legislation. If you hap en to pgr•nt fiv e in Europe and some one tells you that the quota of immi of your nationality permitted to arrive in the United States for the month of August is filled, then of course you don't sail. But it's up of never . p and q to you to find out that interesting hit -"de 'm - And one can well imagine what possible chance the ertent average immigrant t from Southeastern Europe has of learning about anything, except to get out of the country. • ln' • • It's no wonder that Presidents like Roosevelt, Taft and Wil•on restrictive meaa• . v n eto do ed, :lon n o rg f : futceh lines.The .ugge.ted re put e d l y re.ed piece c e it o.f, ea.p. r:-. yf o e r e r t hhe a lvoewbeen foe the past re. pu the kind of nonsense that now w ith several hundred more or less intelligent men, after ce r;:eiri er1,7hg le that :en t r s.uf bt je c t esimmigration for a long period 1 Tx io: tta o n d earl - a inei h. t ligent law. I predict unhesi• of Om n e , would be repealed, because it is an insult tatingly that the Dillingham bill wi n!' to the intelligence of the nation. • • . • . I wonder how many know that the strongest an ing ins i u ion in Roumania is owned by • Jew—Blank? The Blank banking house is a second Rothschild group—and in fact is second only to Rothschilds in sire and importance. And its standing is so unquestioned that it has the co mpletest confidence of the Roumanian government as well strongly I. the ruling statesmen of the other countries of Europe. It is other Eu. intrenched not alone in Roumania but in Paris, Berlin ropean centers. In spite of the strong anti-Semitic feeling in Roumania that bas shown itself in so many unpleasantt ways, the name Blank in of integrity and confi- s RoutoNinie stands for the highe t expression dente. A series of banks all through the country has made Blank the financial power of the Balkan.. Keep the name Blank in mind--...e day you will relict that they who bear that name hero superseded the and Rothschild.. The "congestion" of religiosity which exp resso itself so import. . lif els.iLlsehrol.idnrsnl:gasthn:abdreietihe 1 et .ion, o ng h o ttje7distt th.e sii:tlythtri w per iod ss:it.. • ran- example. ta lem g with synagogue and temple authorities. For burgh last year Yom Kippur services were divided into sections—an late service—and the members were given the opportunity arty and . ta,,,,tvi:dsetmivcikcestsiswhe.reid.act taciccaLt gll 1;e si,,,:,1;:zy,dzii,i.cd. benefit of those who are not directly •ffiliated with any temple or syna• gogue, in one of the Unitarian churches. These service• are conducted by • Rabbi specially en aged by the Temple Beth El Congregation for the occasion. It is surprising the religious fervor that is in evidence when those who do not belong to • congregation but, perfectly able t (financially) endeavor to obtain se•ts that properly belong to those who support the synagogue all the year round. They wait for •n hour, even two hours, before the doors open and will suffer all sorts of incon. ea people to vemences to gain admission. Of course, it takes all sorts of a community. Well, I trust that this holiday sson there make up wi ll be sufficient accommodations everywhere throughout the country to absorb the surplus religionists who break out like ■ rash two or three times a year. Canadian co•reli gion• I am gl ad th•t everything is so well with our d up a copy of the Canadian Jewish Chronicle and read 41 .• I Picked ess of welcome to the Chief Rabbi of the British Empire on his an address arrival at Montreal. The spokesman in greeting the distinguished visitor mad: "You come among a happy, contented body of your co- religionists living in peace and harmony with their neighbors, respecting and being respected by all classes of the com- munity, proud to be reckoned as loyal Canadians, and de- voted subjects of His Majesty the King and of the British Empire." ---w e-wes e- din public and should be Those are fine sentiments to be yip encouraged. But it does seem to me that our co.religionists in Canada find the same severe prejudice (socially at least) •• in present in the dates. Then, too, it occurs to me that on several occasions I have noticed items that indicate that everything isn't so perfectly her- monious. However, if I am mistaken, I am very happy to know it. - Rabbi Joseph H. Bert:, who is the Chief Rabbi of the British Em- pire, was formerly connected with the Jewish Theological Seminary of New York and he arrived in this country • week or so ago on his way back to England after • 10 months' tour of English possessions and colonies. The Chief Rabbi is interested in est•blishing, either at Oxford or Cambridge, • Jewish college as • memorial to the Jews in the English army who died during the war. This college will standardize Jewish education and insure Jewish communities through- out the Empire • sufficiency of teachers and interpreters of Jewish life. A very laudable purpose, indeed, and I certainly hope that the Rabbi will realise his noble ambition. A Ton at a Time Saves a Run on the Mine its Puissance of the Jew •• '1* a h ' We are having considerably to say this week, editorially, about persons and personalities and one of the most interesting Jewish persons and personalities in the public eye is Samuel Untermyer, who has recently been chosen the leader of the Weizmann Zionist forces in America. But Mr. Untermyer has just sent a letter to the New York Times from Carlsbad, where 0 Q he is recuperating from the arduous labors as a public servant the recent months, to the effect that he is not and under no consideration would be a candidate for "the Court of Appeals GIVE UP PAY FOR of New York State, or for any other office, Federal or State, For, if we be not of the lost Ten Tribes, RELIEF IN RUSSIA in the gift of the people. for reasons that I have repeatedly At least we have procured them harborage— stated." Mr. Untermyer has risen far in the estimation of the NEW YORK. — J. C. B.) — The ' A shelter from the flouts, the sneers, the gibes Amalgamated Clothing Workers, an public because of his aggressive tactics in doing the honest 11 ' organization of some 80,000 mem- Of malice that befits not this fair age!— thing by the public in public investigations. Here we have 0 14 bers, concentrated largely in New one who has gained international recognition as a corporation Turn where you will, each blood-stained, guilty page, York City, have decided to give the lawyer, yet enjoying to the fullest the confidence of the people proceeds of one-half day's labor for The foreign hatred ever Both abide, the relief o fthe starving in famine- in his integrity and scrupulous fairness. He reminds us very The Jew is menaced still four every side. stricken Russia. The Amalgamated much of Hughes and Baruch—the one who for years was a is only now beginning to recover ' corporation advocate yet proved himself the advocate of truth 0_ from a six months' struggle through and justice in the strictest interpretation of the terms. And n Are there not signs that still God loveth them7— U which it succeeded in keeping the Whate'er they touch turns golden in their hands, O clothing industry free from the for- Baruch, a Wall street speculator. yet in whom the public be- ° mer evils of the sweat-shop system, lieves implicitly as a public servant. We are pleased that a And stone by stone the new Jerusalem and the new appeal for Russia finds man like Untermyer has achieved such signal recognition as a Is rising 'mid the waste of other lands, its treasury depleted and its resources representative of the principles of truth and justice and that low, but it has been among the first For as their Wealth, so, too, their Power expands—. to respond in a way that will net at he has given so much of his time to the interests of the public. From East to West the sky is all affame least a quarter of a million dollars And we want to emphasize deliberately the thought for the pl for the sufferers. benefit of Jew-baiters that here we have Jews who think of u With dawning greatness of the Jewish name! U Conferences continue in Jewish' public service more than they think of acquiring wealth. It's w ' districts of New York with • view of I organising a drive for Ruuian relief. good to have our neighbors understand and appreciate the C. W. WYNNE. , More and more organizations salon- Idealism that exists, though sometimes latent, in the hearts and jeer assistance daily. In Boston, , loInds of those who outwardly *so to worship only material I Baltimore and Philadelphia, activities' of the same nature are beginning. plots and material succtal, Samuel Sntermyer is, or at least CI = O 0=0 U • In some instances two ships have raced •cross the ocean, eah tlireoaori., •nts from the •ame countries, and it remained • queatio ing. imrnigr n this country firs t as to whic h which ship wo uld reach the port of f to l and. Can wo u lmitted m of imigrants farce or • greater tragedy then that sLI"or:haliit'llgY? imagine • area the month of August say 500 Greeks are permitted to enter this noun- e en r r fteteDilli tngi ham law. And if there are 800 Greeks on tie o tr,y..unnd bec o mes • question of who will he :n.d.daroe applied rnecre y •viell twianita ev w tic l ' e untrY i ntd the first 500 to g t:t l b to the September quote. r7ncal there ack, for the quota for the whole year`c,:t ti: h ore be sentd when they will the en of the ye•r. filled up bef the "Schrifften." Small wonder that chapters from the "Zohar," that mys- porting the Jew to localities where such unstinted praise has been lay- tic and sacred volume, to little known he can work and earn a livelihood. fished upon the merits of their produc- even to Jewish scholars, will call Employment bureaus are maintanied tion. Writing after the appearance forth the greatest interest. Mr. Zet- for the purpose of enhancing the op- ' of some of the earlier volumes, S. zer's rendering is skillful and his portunities of the Jewish brawn.' Neger, the noted Jewish critic, who choice apparently judicious. Not less Very little is said and done, however, was then still in Europe, declared excellent are the translations from to make the highest degree of de- that to the Jewish youth in Eastern Rabindranath Tagore and !tenth! velopment possible for the Jewish Europe the "Schrifften" proved "a brain. Here the poor Jew and the revelation of a new America." Even BeIngstohne. songs and verse there is par- immigrant have to fight their battles more commendable was that other titularly much that is rich and not unaided and often unguided, while eminent Jewish critic, Baal Machsho- without permanent value. Here con- the rich Jew does not think it worth voth (Dr. Eliashev) and men nearer tributions are to be found from Zisha his while to acquire Jewish learning home such as P. Wiernick and M. Landau, rk, and d ir is becoming more and more in r et trcshe, n H. in l, eedtaeur,, illnetc h i3R o m o Tr It freggrn egiel g dt et d o altiv nair L.:: in nesercen Olg in, were equally appreciative. I n many respects the "Schrifften', of the "younge 'r" school. Essays ;nit k are unique. Primarily intended as a literary criticism also make a bid for Jew or Judaism, one mightask, if medium for the expression of the honors. In this connection, the work all our laborers had enough labor and more gifted of the "younger set, of Zelig Kessnes is especially note- all our merchants had enough mer- those. responsible for its publication worthy, showing as it does every chandise while Jewish and secular', have brought together writer and promise of brilliancy and originality. learning weakened and vanished from obv Iruslin t among our people? Are not, after artist, and, by y The Work of Artists. a nor- have su cceeded The book is not without its miner all, our dignity and distinction as a ' passing all past attempts in stimulat- eople, people, as a race or nation really Of these, some of the, pendent upon the number of savants ing the creation of Yiddish litera- deficiencies. Of work of the artists is most striking. end scholars we foster much more ture. More than 20 illustrations fill the , than upon the amount of agricultur- ' Holds Wealth of Song. Comparing favorably in form with book and while the greater number ists we furnish, the laborers we place' are fittingly conceived, their repro- , or the traders we raise? the best that-this Faring has put out, the new volume in itself holds a duction is often very poor. As the people about us progress Without doubt each new volume of and the world gains in wisdom the be- e ne-- laenndt d ran , and e b 1t h. wealth "Schrifften" marks the advance of translations excellent need of Jewish learning becomes many song Yiddish literature, but is there a cor- more and more imperative. Until re- contributions of rare merit. Perez Ilirschbein's three - act drama, responding advance on the part of in- cently the dead letters of his books I Shadow of Former Genera- telligent readers of Yiddish in Amer- alone were cherished by the world, - - In il,le. ice? An announcement in the volume , the live spirit of the Jew himself was this author's t t( yls, is i r w ierirtnt n i n ,A. .,i under consideration is enlightening. , despised. He had then done all that The seventh volume is the 1921 , he could do for the world. His Bible him the title of has justly earned ior the . "Jewish Maeterlinck," depicts an spring issue. Making its appearance had become the source of instruction well in the summer, the editor ex- , and inspiration to hundreds of thou- in which (ri d;,nr arfyr Jew sha i plains that financial difficulties made sands; he himself was not called upon fli ht from its timely appearance impossible. The to talk or teach, and he would not ng, ali n ra e s n op forpo itsom wai, geo the rsuhPov hat sun - kissed land which has played reception given earlier numbers en- have been listened to if he had at - o potent a role in Israel's tragic his- courage(' the publishers to increase tempted to do so. Today, the rely-' Hirschbein shows how the the edition from 1,000 to 2,000 copies tionship is changed. Today, with the ory. hadows of the past overcast the path with the result that it had to be hand- freer commingling of ourselves with ' f the new arrivals and Israel's tor- ed over to distributors for special, others and our fuller friendship and ured sons and daughters rise in pro- marketing. One is constrained to ask, fellowship with others, the world has , est at their disregard of the Cherem where is that vast intelligent Yiddish become ready to listen to us and has reading public of which one reads so accustomed itself to calling upon our - (ban) placed upon Spanish posses- sions. Refoel, the leader of the little much in the Yiddish press? people rather than upon our book for an interpretation of our prin., miles and practices, of our thoughts 10=01=10=0=0=0 1:= 0 = 0 and teachings, of our customs, sere- 1 monies and characters, of our lives and our labors. It is highly impor- tant, therefore, and truly imperative O that we have in every walk of life men capable and conscious of repre senting the Jew and Judaism worth- ' ily, wisely and learnedly. Representing the intellectual radical is Mr. Walter Lipp- mann, who has just resigned from the editorial board of the New Republic and will go with the New York World as one of its editors on Jan. 1 next. Mr. Lippman is one of the best thinkers in this country on economic and political questions. He is, however, a different sort of radical than the average mind has an idea of when thinking of Jews who are radical. Mr. Lippmann has written some marvelously illuminating articles on the great national and international questions, and yet in a way that must appeal to the progressive minded and sane minded men and women of the country. There is nothing erratic about Lippman ; he doesn't give any one the impression that he is half-baked or that he goes off, as the saying is, "half- lions. " He is a keen analyzer and knows people and condi- tions. The fact that the New York World has taken Lippmann serve to allay the uneasiness of those who have feared that Lippmann is so radical that he must not be discussed in polite society. He has the mind of the Jew who has been in the forefront of progressive and revolutionary movements, but not necessarily the character of revolutionary movements of the I Trotzkys or the Len:nes, but intellectually revolutionary. 'And yet after all Lippmann has only the well being of society in I taint mind. lie is seeking the truth and when you read him you are impressed with that thought of him. We have heard dis tinguished non-Jews discuss Lippmann as a radical who does . not deserve consideration from the thoughtful. On the con- trary, they are just the ones who are in the position to give him consideration. lie is no man for the unintelligent to read : those g who are swayed and influenced more by emotions and preju- wends dices than by reason and argument. We are sure that Lipp- mann will prove a valuable contributor to the New York World, one of the world's greatest newspapers. (Copyright, 1921. By Chas. II. Joseph.) (The Ilebrew Standard.) It is suggested that the Bolshevist leaders of Russia have We think that , the community and at large do not fully in mind capitalizing the terrible famine that is now existing in world-Jewry realize the grave crisis through which, General Offices and Publication Building Russia to win political recognition of the de facto Soviet gov- our people, in no far as Palestine rep- i • t rca • 850 High Street West cerement by the United States. That through is sum of rtnheir hopes and ee sei l i s tsthe Cable Address: aid the destitute of that country this nation will of necessity ideals , present time. at Telephones: Chronicle be boli ed to have political contact with the Soviet government. We ere e not here and now concerned Glendale 8326 with the subject of British polity; Be this as it may, it seems that Hoover has evaded the neces- nor do we consider the fortunes of LONDON OFFICE 14 STRATFORD PLACE sity of doing any such thing. The only contact he had With Zionism as a movement vis-a-vis of LONDON, W. ENGLAND ment in the Holy the government was to issue a peremptory order that before the latest evel dops Land. Our concern is only with the 13 . 00 Per You aid would be forthcoming from the United States that the Subscription, in Advance Jews of Eretz 1 isro el aM Soviet government should release the Americans imprisoned. Intest turn in their ortunes"reacis complied with through o n n the condition and position of Jew- To insure publication, all correspondence and news matter must reach this and we find that this order was q week. office by Tuesday evening of each the magazine in this country r y throughout the world. information that was received hy E ..v ery one knows of the incipient Editorial Contribute. that pretends to be the literary mouthpiece of the Soviets. And RABBI LEO M. FRANKLIN t, or small-sized p ogrom, or call Of continual occurrence , rio f7h'lt you win, whi ch o ccurre d a t to the We are told that these famines will he jt l The Jewish Chronicle invites correspondence on subjects of intefr of this year ' e* because of the economic failings of the Bolshevist system. But ' l, dire Jewish people, but disclaims responsibility for an Indorsement of e tvl thsfar,hAnof th u "ringproduced s and aw lil thh cia late after all we must consider these questions somewhat impartially a conseque' ,i4f. expressed by the writers. nees s fur not be deluded into becoming too biased, even though we knows, or one ' er tine. But not and Ab 22, $681. don't approve of the Soviets. As stated last week, Lenine and : he knows, seems not to be fully cog - , August 26, 1921. nesituation, that the riot. Trotzky, plus Nature, were responsible e for the present severity e not contritely prom- . of this famine. There have been constantly famines in Russia, , inzganAtrItl part ,, is,t a •d yst o de part rom the error of their The Roumanian Jew. but more localized even in the days when the Czars had - Con. the con rary, they are thft f fair nor IN •• Ise t o attri1, ute• flushed with their "victory," and now i s neither air The Roumanian J ew. Did you ever stop to think ver y much trol of the government, so it The thing to do now is to fzice : 6 1 (.07 01, Je in ni , addition to the sdspen. i •Soviets. everything evil to the nbout.him? Especially in t is country. Of course we h ve weh inninm s igir3 oetinon ro into heard of the Portuguese Jew, who became sup lanted by • th e the situation in the hope of relieving the possibility of millions country, e immigrant; ri away tio tt h i e of men, wome n and little children starving to death, as they . thr e d portation of recent German Jew and the German Jew w ho is giving o ia , c n aei.. the establishment re Palestine, l f ie is f o rthcoming. It is with supreme t t r am Y surely will un l ess re years will a o rn y Russian Jew and who for a number of yea parli ament, and the re of satisfaction that the world witnesses the prompt measures, e oumanian So dominate the situation. But how about the Roumanian? moral of S i r rife mt lel. the' S3 taken by Secretary Hoover, who is equipped as no other man few of him that we don't pay much attention to him. But don't legalard ' ('i\ f elor mmis s oner h co n secretary:In s Be Be ntwich , hi underestimate him. And don't think he is the same Roumanian to handle such a situation. Let us for the time being forget • . and think only in terms of starving humanity who are short their de ment i'l s are equivale nt when the so-called ' politics who came over here around the year 1900 wh to the. entire scrapping of the Bal. exodus from Roumania, by reason of persecution, arouse d the holding out their arms in silent appeal to us for aid. I foud Declaration, the elimination of all ideas of a national Jewish home ire of John Hay, our then Secretary of State. The Roumanians from the government of Palestine, came over by the thousands and for many years they did noth- and ft renewal of the conditions there ing but work. And now we begin to see the fruit of that labor. Jewish Joint Relief Commission. which disfigured the land while it was under the control of the Turks. They are becoming big business men and big bankers. Do This is the grave, present crisis IL is gratifying to know that one of the two organizations you know that one of the most powerful banking groups in confronts Jewry: the total dis- Europe, speaking from a Jewish standpoint, is controlled by conducting relief work in Moscow is the Jewish Joint Relief . which of all Jewish right in and to regard a Roumanian? Do you know that it is second in strength only Commission. The other is the American Friends. There will , ' Palestine by Great Britain, the man- claims shoul d the n to the Rothschilds? And in this country we find the tendency probably be a complete reorganization of relief work under el tertaed, much m e be entertained, on the part of the Roumanians to take up banking. We feel the direction of Secretary Hoover in order to relieve the terrible less t h conceded. It may be true that famine that has come upon that unhappy county. One writer sure that within a very few years that we shall have further says it was only a figment of the imagine- that the Russian famine approaches in vastness the greatest , t!on evidence of the important influence to be exercised in the world Zi of perfervid, impractical on- s n et s Jeenwri:hneaw of business and finance in this country by the Roumanian Jews. historical calamities which have fallen upon the human race. t B ut The extent of the area involved, the multitude struck by death,1 How many of him are here in this country we don't know, but in danger of beholding he other side if a careful tabulation will be made we shall discover, probably the attendant phenomena of whole populations fleeing from - 1 f he medal, the i a situation w out- hish to our surprise, that we never dreamed that the number was hunger and plague and hurling themselves blindly and des of r rit,rism all en h per 6 pa t - perately against the barrier of bayonets which the instinct of s tlict, g endere ril:rind d so large. had ga t righr e War. Sur e ly, self - preservation forces other populations to set up against a att some degree of permanent .. I tt ch h them — all this gives, says the writer, a certain majesty of weight to the living hope of the Bal• g Declaration. Or, was it but a horror, such as forms the inspiration of De Quincy 's flight of four a Tartar tribe. The imagination is inadequate in face of a scrap of paper? "The Mirrors of Washington" calamity such as this, and our brethren will suffer as they have JEWISH LEARNING This caustically written criticism of fourteen Washington never suffered before in Russia. (The Jewish Ledger.) notables attracted our particular attention because of the article Jewish learning is now more than on Bernard Mannes Baruch. The anonymous author has not ever imperative and there is at pees- much good to say of any of his subjects, but he does come out ADVANCES IN YIDDISH LITERATURE ent a crying need of Jewish tdent most emphatically and say that Baruch is absolutely honest One can hardly estimate the great A Review. good that would come to the Jewish and was honest in every transaction during the war. Money cause and the Jewish people if we doesn't mean anything to Baruch, who has made and lost and By SAMUEL. D. WISE. had more highly educated and truly made again several fortunes. He delights in public life and he Jewish representatives in the press, group, who protests that he fled his SCHRIFFTEN, Yiddish Collec- hopes—so the writer says—that maybe some day he will occupy in politics and public life generally. I native land of pogroms and disease to tion (seventh volume), New In our endeavors to cope with the a far higher position in the councils of the government. But save his old mother rather than him- York. Feriae; America; bound what we were particularly interested in was the high tribute self, finding peace impossible, finally physical problems that confront our $2.50. National Jewish Press people we are often in danger of to the integrity of Baruch, which is quite gratifying when one takes his Sopher Torah and resigns forgetting or ignoring the mental Association, Inc., 15 Park Row, himself to the mercies of the ocean f New York, sole distributors. remembers the ugly campaign that was instituted by those ea I ' is . A great d needs of the waves rather than spend a night in being done, and still more is being unfriendly to the Jewish people who have tried to insinuate To those familiar with modern Yid- the accursed land of the inquisition. said, about caring for the immigrant that some of us haven't been 100 per cent clean or unselfish in dish literature, its advance has been Translated Works. phystcally. Societies have been or-, our war relationships, governmentally speaking. greatly enhanced by the advent of Of translated works, S. Zetzer's ganized for the purpose of trans - Mr. Walter Lippmann. — THE PALESTINIAN CRISIS The Famine. l‘tib0 . 71. Col51413, 3-r _AS. - H-. JOSEPH- - 1 Soon the North Wind shall blow, And we shall have snow— And what will Coal Buyers do then, poor things! They will all stand in line, And will cuss and repine Because they didn't buy sooner, poor things! Prophets—no relation to the senior member of the well known firm of Profit & Loss--are again giving us timely warnings about the weather. An Ontario trapper says the beavers, martins and even the white birch trees are preparing for a long, cold winter. Wisconsin corn growers say the husks are unusually tough and thick—that the snow will fly early, long and fast. Then, Uncle Sam himself adds a cheerful note. Ills latest geological survey says soft coal production is already 85,000,000 tons behind 1920. This decrease Is more than 15 per cent. So, by and large, with the supply promising to be scarce, prices higher and demand great, it looks as if right now is the time tobuy coal. Of course, even later on, we'll always try to take care of you, but there will bedanger of delays that we can't prevent. And you are assured of both qualityand servicewhen you buy U. F. & S. brands. Swairapfafrmv, NITED fu EL & UPPLY SensAine" Yards in AN hsrto el Ike aty Ours it "Hotter Then