4 KITSCH STRESSES 0. S. ADVANTAGES Firm Foundation Made Pos sible by Constitution Held Factor in Growth. The speech delivered by James Leon ard Butsch. St. Johns College boy who represented The Evening Star's area in the Sixth National Oratorical Contest finals in the Washington Au ditorium last night, follows. "The United States, a great Repub lic. land of freedom and opport unity, reaching from the roelcy shores of the Atlantic to the sunswept sands of the Pacific! Refuge of millions of foreign born, leaving their native countries be hind, leaving their homes and friends to come to this, a new and strange land, to be adopted as its citizens. "What is your appeal? For that rea aon in our country the greatest of them all. It cannot be our wealth. We were i not founded upon wealth alone. Our forefathers braved the cold and bleak New England shore, suffering hardship and poverty to make possible your birth. Prosperity is not the incentive that brings these people here, nor the reason for the success of the Nation. : There must be some greater influence which has caused our country in spite of civil strife still to remain a great republic. This is a cause, and it is that greatest document in the history of time—the Constitution of the United States. Cttes Advantages Offered. "Wherein is the strength of our Con stitution? The answer has grown hackneyed. Its strength lies in the happy combination of respect for au thority with training in individual initiative. "In America all men are civilly and politically equal, all have ihe same rights, all wield t.he same arm of de fense and of conquest—the Constitu tion. It takes from the liberty of the individual only so much as is necessary for the weal of the Nation. It gives to him inalienable rights which are his protection. It guarantees to him the right to liberty. This means the very right to life itself which cannot be taken even by the Government without due process of law. It insures for him legal rights which enable him to appear in the courts for his protection, regard less of his lack of wealth or position. The Constitution gives to the individual freedom of conscience to enjoy liberty of religion, of speech and press, that great power which has drawn millions to this ‘Temple of Freedom' —the Unit ed States. , J "The Constitution forms the mind and temper of its people. It trains them to habits of obedience. It strengthens their conservative instincts, their sense of stability and permanence in political arrangements. It makes them feel that to comprehend this su preme instrument of government is a personal duty. It familiarizes them with and attaches them, by ties of pride and reverence, to those fundamental truths upon which the Constitution is based. Public Opinion Govern*. "These are enormous services to ren der to the people of any free country, but above afi. to a country which, more than any other, is governed, not by men of rank and wealth, but by public opinion, that is to say. by the ideas and dictates of the people at large. In no country are political changes so keenly watched, because nowhere has material growth been so rapid and im migration so enormous. In none might the political character of the people seem more likely to be bold and pTone to changes, because their national ex istence began with a revolution which even now lies only a century and a half behind. "The Constitution of the United States has been amended and changed. The world is not so much advanced that in this age of laws, even the best and most venerable laws, will of them selves command obedience. Constitu tions which in quiet times change peacefully and gradually must in time of revolution be changed bodily, some provisions being sacrificed for the sake of others, as the mariner throws part of the cargo overboard in a storm to save the ship ltaelf. The original Con stitution was not received by all the people of the United States as a mas terpiece of statecraft. It met with ob jection in several States and was even burned by the howling mobs of Boston. Fearing it was written solely to rob them of their liberties, the people did not accept it until they understood its real meaning. They did not accept it until they comprehended its main ob ject, which was to insure to the Ameri can individual and to any other indi vidual who might seek protection and prosperity under the American flag, the liberties and opportunities which any free born person has the right to de mand. Foundation Declared Firm. “There may be nations which have great governments; there may be na tions which claim prosperity—but there is no nation that can boast of such a foundation of government as that of tpe United States of America. Our Constitution has rendered and renders now invaluable services to the individ uals; It sums up the best ia laws and customs and has stood the test of a civil war. from which it emerged with greater significance. In that crisis it proved to be the supreme law, the fundamental principle of our national existence. "The God-given mission of the Re public of the United States is not con fined to its own individuals alone—it extends to all the peoples of the earth to whom the United States is a symbol of human rights and liberties and to ward whom its flag fl.utters hopes of future happiness. The United States ia honored and respected in every country as the greatest Nation in the world. It will continue so to endure as long as you and I. its citizens, obey and respect Its Constitution. The hap piness and welfare and prosperity of the American individual can be ascribed only to that 'famous document of 1789' —the Constitution of the United ed States.” LAWYER IS RELEASED PENDING DEATH TRIAL Texan Wins Freedom on $20,000 Bail—Will Plead Self- Defense. By the Associated Press. AMARILLO, Tex , May 25 —Aided by the testimony of the 17-year-old daugh ter he widowed, R. H. Hamilton, former i Texas Supreme Court commissioner, to day was released from jail on $20,000 ball to await trial for the slaying of young Tom Walton. Walton, bridegroom of but a few weeks, was shot to death in the law of fice of Hamilton three weeks ago. when he went there to reveal his secret mar riage to Theresa Hamilton. In admitting the former jurist to bail. Judge Henry S. Bishop rendered no formal opinion other than that the case was bailable under new statutes. Hamilton's wife, doughter and son. Bobbie, were in the courtroom today and waited until he was released. Several prominent friends, including four of his attorneys, signed the bail bond for Hamilton. Hamilton indicated he would plead •elf defense at his trial, claiming that he had been threatened by Walton be cause he opposed his daughter's mar riage to the .youth. ! WINNERS IN ORATORY CONTEST FINALS i Left to right: Be* Svvofford of Kansas Ctty. Mo., the national chump ion: Lee Miller of Maywood, 111., second place holder and official alternate, and Miss LuriHe Fletcher of Brooklyn. N. Y„ winner of third place. —Star Staff Photos. | TEXT OF SWOFFORD’S SPEECH KflFort Brings Championship In Sixth National Oratorical Contest Finals In Washington Auditorium. Ben Swofford's national championship | winning speech, delivered last night in the Sixth National Oratorical Contest finals in (he Washington Auditorium, I follows: Thomas Carlyle has said. ''Uni versal history, the history of what j man has accomplished in this world. | Is at bottom the history of the great men who worked here.” The names of many of these men are em blazoned for all the ages in letters of living light; the names of other men. whose deeds and influence sur vive. lie buried in the dust of time; but known or unknown, heralded in song and story or long forgotten, these world leaders are those who guided their fellow men along the difficult path of human progress. "The applause of list'ning senates to command. The threats of pain and ruin to de spise. To scatter plenty o'er a smiling land. And read their history in a na tion’s eyes.” Representative of Times. Open the record book of American life. Turn the musty pages of the past; watch the moving finger write the story of the present, and we read of events and the names of men who make events —men who create history, not alone by the power within themselves, but because they are truly representative of their times and of their fellows. Men who furnish us the inspiration to labor and achieve. Destroy this inspira tion and the world lies soulless and dead at our feet. The history of this beloved coun try of ours, like that of every nation in the world, is the record of her great leaders. The greater the crisis, the more vital the condition, the more certain it is that the very soul : of our people will find its expres sion in her great statesmen. The most critical period of Ameri can history followed the end of the Revolutionary War. Victory had been won and liberty secured, but all the hopes of the War for Inde pendence were threatened with de struction by a period of disunion and internal strife. The 13 Colonies, founded at vari ous times and operating under dif ferent forms of Colonial govern ments, were also separated by vital social and economic differences. The new-born national spirit, mutured by the Revolution, had swiftly changed to a feeling of hatred and jealousy, fostered by the absolute Inability of the machinery of the Articles of Confederation to establish a strong national government. Disregard for commercial regula tions, threats of rebellion, inability to meet financial obligations and fear of total disunion became so threatening that even those most hopeful of national success saw the danger of the impending crisis. The whole country looked toward the delegates to the Constitutional Con vention to afford the only means of egress from this disastrous situation. Frame New Government. During the Summer months of 17*7 the representatives of the States met for the primary purpose of bringing some order out of this chaos. But upon assembling, they discovered that mere amendment to the articles would not suffice. Ap palled by the seriousness of the situ ation confronting them, but guided by a power stronger than their own wills or desires, they cast aside the original purpose of the convention and proceeded to frame an entirely new government. Did these men who had arisen from the people, who had been trained in the school of bitter ex perience and who had inherited that old Anglo-Saxon idea of human rights give up the task as hopeless? Did they betray this trust placed in them by the people? No! Here were stern and serious New Englanders, gay and romantic cavaliers of Mary land. rich planters of Virginia, poor ! lawyers of Massachusetts; farmers, | statesmen, business men and poll- j ticians; Catholics and Protestant*, and future States’ rights men and Federalists. Despite these differences an underlying bond existed binding them together in a common purpose. This bond was a dominant belief in the eternal ideal of justice and the i rights of the individual. With al most supernatural vision of the fu ture they saw the necessity of mak ing this bond effective in a govern ment truly representative of the people and in a strong union of the States. Call the roll of the convention! James Madison. Virginia lawyer, who came to the convention with a draft of government in his pocket; I quiet and unassuming genius, who has been called "the father of the j Constitution.” Alexander Hamilton, profound and original thinker; then 30 years of age and already a successful New j I York lawyer, who was to accept the j first Treasury -portfolio and in the brief span of two years lift the bank- t rupt Colonies to a place of inter- ! national credit. Benjamin Franklin, wisest man of i his time; ripe in age and experience; j diplomat-, inventor and philosopher. George Washington, whose name ! was revered wherever it was spoken: j the soldier and statesman; most im pressive and romantic figure in American history, in whose heart burned that immortal genius for leadership. James Wilson. Gouverneur Morris. Charles Pinckney, John Randolph and others who by their patriotism and devotion constituted so im portant an element of strength that leaders in other lands, surveying this group, declared that these ragged and war-torn colonies had produced ihe greatest number of statesmen of ! the first rank that was ever produced in one country in one generation. Constitution Completed. The Constitution was completed; and on September 7. 1787. the dele gates were ready to submit to the people for ratification a document the like of which the world had II never seen—a basic national law, ! unique In its construction and glori- j ■ I ous in its strength—a Government i which sets a new political standard j with its dual power and system ot 1 *L'd THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON. D. \C. MAT 26. 1929-PART T. ! checks and balances, establishing a medium of democratic control shared by the people, the States and the Federal institutions. Yet these men, whose biographies form the enduring foundations of our history, did not create this type of government. It was the growth ! of many centuries. They were mere ly the living expression of that spirit which gave the Greeks their ancient j democracy, the Romans their free dom and the English their Magna Charta. They were the link be tween {he old and the new and were therefore able to forge the 13 dis jointed and struggling colonies into a unified and cohesive nation, a world power, the United States of i America. * Today, this great Nation, after less than 150 years of existence, is just on the threshold of national life. Upon the basic law of our Constitu tion a unified nation has been weld ed. over a vast territory, encompass ing in its embrace the children of all races, religions, and older peoples. But In this new era we are faced with many serious and complicated j problems: problems of obedience and regard for the law, of honesty in public office, of greater opportunities for all our people, and of the allevia tion of poverty and human suffering. I To aid us in the solution of today s problems, we need the glorious in spiration of those men of yesterday. And that inspiration we have. For. in the words of Edmund Burke. “Civilization is a contract between three parties; the noble dead, the living and the yet unborn.” The spirits of those long-dead heroes are with us now; transmitting to our people and statesmen of today that love of country, singleness of pur pose. stoutness of heart, and spirit of personal sacrifice and devotion which enabled them to build for I themselves an everlasting monument to bequeath to us a glorious heritage, ; and to fix a bright eternal star in the firmament of political history— the Constitution of the United States. Medical Corpa Examination*. The next examination of candidates for- commission in the Medical Corps of the Army will be held July 8 at all; military posts and large cities in the United States. Applicants must be citi zens of the United States between 23 and 32 years of age and graduates of recognized medical schools with one year's service as internes. Information regarding the examination will be sup plied by the surgeon general of the Army, Munitions Building, on applica tion. German Cruiser to Visit TJ. S. The State Department has been In formed that the German cruiser Em den, now on a training cruise in the Orient, will visit Honolulu August 16- 23; San Diego, Calif., September 2-9: the Panama Canal Zone, October 9-16: Charleston, S. C.. December 14-2*. and j New York City. December 31 to Janu ary 30. Military commanders at all the ports named have been instructed by the War Department to extend the i usual courtesies and facilities to the j officers and crew of the German war- j ship. ■ • ■■■ Germans are to extend the Canton. China, waterworks. MS—I I I ■■■ ■ ■■■ —■ ■—■ Put your house in order i ! *I'H F words “Put your house in order’’ have been * ringing in our ears for years. At this season the uppermost thought in our minds ia the improvement of our home. Our house needs repairs. A garage may have to he built or rebuilt. A number of jobs have demanded atten tion for quite some time, but one or two of them can’t be put off much longer. Morris Plan is ready with a loan to take care of them. Your chief requirements are character and earning ability. You can make your home more of a home than ever by using the service here offered, which is convenient and has been of extraordinary help to thousands. MORRIS PLAN BANK j Under Supers i-ion U. S. Treasury 1108 H St. N.W. Washington, D. C. 1--=-; ILLNESS STRIKES HOUSE MEMBERS Eight Representatives Are on Sick List, With Several Recuperating. j By the Associated Press. Eight members of the House of Rep resentatives are on the sick list and several are recuperating from illness. Representative Griest is seriously ill at his home in Lancaster, Pa. He was administered the oath of office at his J home through permission of the House. 1 Representative McClinic of Oklahoma is at. Rochester. Minn., where he re centlv underwent an operation. Al though his condition was reported seri ous. his office here has received en couraging reports from the hospital. Chairman Wood 111 Three Weeks. Chairman Wood of the House appro i priations committee, whose home is at i Lafayette, Ind.. has been confined to his home here for about three weeks, but his friends have taken him for a cruise aboard a yacht in Chesapeake Bay and it is expected that the change w r ill improve his condition. Representative Curry of Sacramento. Calif , underwent an operation early in the Spring and has been confined to his apartment nere for several weeks. His physician recently announced that his condition was improving satisfactorily. Representative Taylor, of Glenwood Springs. Colo., has been receiving hos pital treatment for several weeks as the result of a cold. His secretary’ said Mr. Taylor would make an effort to be present to vote on the tariff bill in the House Tuesday. Kvale Fights Off Poison. Representative Kvale of Benson, j Minn., has been threatened with blood poisoning as a result of a scratch re ceived while being shaved. At the Naval Hospital it was feared for a time that the condition would threaten his life, but the infection was checked. Despite his condition, Mr. Kvale came to the House Friday to vote against the rule under which the tariff bill is being [ considered. Representative Lanham of Port * Worth. Tex., left last week to accom pany his wife to Austin. Tex. Mrs. * Lanham has been seriously ill for months. Friends of the family have said her condition has affected his health also. Representative Stedman of Greens boro. N. C., the 88-year-old Confederate veteran in the House, has been ill but attends the session of the House when his condition permits. NEW LAND OFFICE ASKED. Cutting’s Bill Would Create Boa well, N. M., District. A bill to create the Roswell land dis trict and to establish a land office at [ Roswell, N. Mex., in the center of a | large area of newly discovered oil land, was introduced yesterday by Senator ' Cutting. Republican, of New Mexico. The land proposed to be embraced in the new district is mostly In the public domain and administration of President Hoover's new policy of oil conservation would be carried on in the j new office. SWOFFBRD WINS ORAM FINALS 1 ■ Lee Miller of. Illinois Is Sec ond —Brooklyn Girl Takes Third. (Continued Front First Page ! contestant's voice prrtqeded hers in the , big ball, she launched out bravely Into , her speech on “The Constitution: a ’ Guarantee of the Personal Liberty of the Individual,” with a vigor that was unexpected in a person of such petite , and dainty femininity as ysas hers. Thtt first speaker chose not to ges ticulate, but saw fit rather to stake her j chances for victory upon a- voice tensity ! and vocal expression that\ commanded attention. Miss Fletcher developed her theme of personal liberty largely upon j the emancipation of the slaves during : the Civil War period, and ast, her con clusion she bowed gracefully As she left her contentions in the lap or her audi ence and her judges. Applause Greets Butshb. The announcement of the name of | James L. Butsch, Washington's own en try, was the signal for a wild burst of applause that interrupted the introduc tion that Mr. Leigh later completed. Once upon his feet, Butsch was a, mas ter of poise and manly bearing. His voice boomed out across the audience to carry the orator s message to every! cemer of the hall. 1 < Butsch's oratory last night was ex pressive without recourse to excessive j gesture; determined add commanding without trace of bomba,stics. and sin-1 cere without studied dramatic effect. He neglected no section in his audience,!] but, by facing first to one side and them I] to the other, included every one in his address. J Prolonged applause, which threatened 1 ! to delay the contest, greeted the Wash- * ington orator. In a few minutes, how- j) ever, Mr. Leigh gained sufficient silence U to present Lee Miller as the third speaker. Miller was dramatic in voice and in expression, but he, like the speakers preceding him, avoided gesture. There was little of the 17-year-old boy In the Chicago orator, while there seemed much of the trained adult speaker. He held his audience tense throughout his time on the stage and bowed to give way : for the next speaker. Mis* Marshall Is Fourth. Miss Marshall, the girl who made a [ flying trip across the continent to reach ' Washington only this evening, was the fourth orator to face the audience. Parading the unsavory allegations that the United States is fast becoming a lawless nation. Miss Marshall pre sented these charges as a challenge to Americans to revive and abide by tra ditional principles of the Constitution. She forecast a "golden dav" when the United States would head the world in a union of peace, and bowed her con clusion amidst vociferous acclaim. The oratorical tenseness was broken following Miss Marshall's conclusion by an orchestra selection. The music per mitted the rapt audience to relax and after the brief respite the contest con tinued. Ben. Swofford was the fifth orator to take the stage. Something of military bearing characterized the young Missourian s Initial stance, but as he got into his speech he relaxed Into an easy manner typical of the veteran I orator. Speaking upon the writing of j the Constitution. Swofford reviewed the conditions m the colonies which gave forth to the new Government in 1787 rather than to the reconstruction of the old. He cited the contributions of each Far cnrrtrt lima tuna In on Station ffMAL at 7:30 P.M. «irh ermine. Marine tba day trlephona Franklin 009 JEWELERS PLATINUM SMITH 3 I DIAMONDS AND Other Precious Stones i Members of Amsterdam Diamond Exchange Q&.QjKafin o/nc. Thirtv-slx Ttan at ! * 935 F Street I mm %ar fr! j 1 That on Monday * 1 ||||d| May 27th I | Many J. Sanger \ s Announces the Opening of \t i His Own Store J S Displaying Floor Coverings, Curtains and i|| Bedwear, of nationally known and reliable S makes, at prices as low. and in many instances : g lower than those quoted elsewhere. J It : I 1 Floor Coverings—Curtains—Bedwear k ft “We Are Pleased When We Please You ’ «£ I Opposite Public Library | of the Constitution’s framers and laid at their feet the glory which today Is America’s. The Missourian’s oratory was similar In type to the examples which preceded his. and his conclusion came near the end of his allowed 10 minutes. Finch Uses Gestures. After three attempts to break in upon the thunderous applause which approved I Swofford's effort. Mr. Leigh Introduced 1 Howard Finch as the sixth orator. Finch, like Miss Marshall, proved a rapid speaker. He chose gestures to j add emphasis to his speech and used | them plentifully. But If his arms, rals i ing and sweeping before him. punctuat ed nearly every phrase. Finch's gestures were graceful and actually a part of his forensic being. The Battle Creek boy presented a mass of history in his 10 minutes of speech. He characterized nearly every event which plotted the way of Amer ican development as in some measure an illustration of the embodiment of the Constitution. His speech ended with a religious note lhat brought reverential silence before applause approved his contentions just as the 10-minute whis i tie of the timekeeper sounded, i But if the expiration of time nearly ! brought Finch to & premature halt, it j served to bring him additional tribute jin applause. Miss Corey followed Finch j to the center of the stage, and the j audience visibly swayed forward with i the first sound of her low-pitched con i tralto voice. Miss Corey was poise it j self and. with her timely subject, the audience sat expectant as though con vinced that a “placer’’ was on the stage. Girl Touches on Prohibition. The diminutive girl gripped her audi ence more tightly when she struck out into a consideration of prohibition. When she cracked her forensic whip over the heads of “some of our legis lators. who, sworn to uphold the law. are among its most flagrant violators.” a murmured wave of both approval and opposition swept the audience. When she declared that these same law vio lators were particularly numerous In j|"our National Capitol” a burst of ap llplause shattered the restraint which !*had held her listeners, i The girl brought further expression (from her audience when she charged | the Federal Government with violation i of the present policy in South America. I When Miss Corey resumed her chair aupon the stage, acclaiming applause B followed her while a hum of comment [linspired by her oratory and its conten tions set up over the audience. Thibault Speak* Skilfully. •Wilbur Thibault—rich-voiced and mrtnly—entered the contest with oratory which maintained the unusual stand- which characterized the whole pro grant Comparing the Constitution to a sh|p. Thibault accomplished a pur pose often attempted, but rarely accom plished, with the skill which marked his efforts. Drama with earnestness marked his bid for victory as the contest ended. Last Year's Winner Speaks. While the judges wrote down their ballots, James R. Moore, Somerset, Ky., boy who *was last year's champion, took the stage - of reminisce. Recalling his successful .participation a year ago to night. younp Moore paid feeling tribute to his parents, who, he said, had sat in the audience at every contest in which he participated. He found '“something queer” in their absence last night, and asked his hear ers’ indulgence while he said "hello” to them as they listened in over the radio. He expressed .his own appreciation to the contest for the pleasures and bene fits he enjoyed in it. Today, the champion chosen, the smoke of forensic opposition Is fading and the eight young orators who came to Washington -.trained to oppose one another, are entering upon their new status of traveling companions Each of the five boys »nd three girls on last night’s program will sail from Jackson ville, Fla., July 4. for a three-month tour of the nations In South America. I and they are to be launched Into com > panionable association this morning at r 10 o’clock, when they leave the Star i Building for a ground and aerial tour of i Washington and its environs l Scheduled to assemble at nations 1 contest headquarters in The Star Build ing at 9:45 o'clock, the party will meet I Col. C. Fred Cook, librarian of this newspaper, who will be their official host for the day. The party will go ‘ directly to Hoover Field, where the eight contestants will be carried aloft ' in two big “New Standard’’ , for a jaunt over the Capital ils the guests of International Airways. Inc.. 1 for whom John S. Wynne is local man- . . ager. ; Following the flight, the party will: go to the Pan-American Union, which, j although closed to the public on Sundnv, ' ’ j will be opened especially for the young r . orators by Dr. L. S. Rowe, director gen- ; | eral of the union. Dr. Rowe will greet j 1 the orators and he will take them on j 1 a “flying verbal tour” of South Amer- J i | ica. following the route the contestants! 1 ! will take in the Summer and illustrat- j , ! ing his descriptive lecture upon the big I scaled relief map of the South Ameri- | | can Continent. From the Pan-Ameri- I ■ | can Building the contest, party will: . swing out on tour, halting at Alexan- ! dria for an old-fashioned Virginia din- 1 ' ner of chicken and ham. Dinner to F.nd Day. \ The day and, in fact, the official visit to Washington will be brought to a con- j elusion with the formal and official din- i ner at the Mayflower Hotel, where the' party will be the guests of Mr. Leigh. The executive session of the National Constitution Club will be held and the national president will be chosen at that i time. Most contestants will leave for their —■ This Week Only—mmmmm— Dry CleaningSpecia Is Women’s Long Coats | - / Silk or Fabric Scarf 'I Cleaned FREE with each Coat JL r*^ed Automobile Covers • . $1.95 Complete for 1 Car. Thoroughly Dry Cleaned. Furniture Covers .... $3 p " d X Dry Cleaned and Hand Pressed At these special prices we give our customary high-grade workmanship. We call for and deliver DISTRICT CLEARERS & DYERS, Ik. Franklin 2406-2407 630 G Street A’.IF. 1734 Conn. At*. I 811 Vermont Ave. . I 123 B Street S.E. 503 C Street N.E. I ammmmmmmmmmmmm—m—mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmb \ Neglect.your eyes, ' • you punish yourself! Throb! Pound! Pound! liict Throb! A thousand sledge ■ OjT hammer blows of torture on your head! £ Yet —do you know’ that JB your own neglect may be the cause of your headaches? Seven out of ten headaches A lA/fhkhlf V are “caused by eyestrain. ft seCfla Have Your Eyes Examined Now! Castelberg’s r- ■ AT ITS NEW OFFICES it is more convenient than ever to ask CanadmEidfic 14th St. and New York Ave., N.W. Washington Ror your Vacationing, we suggest — Tfie Resorts in the Mile-High Canadian Rockies Bult lake Louise, Emerald lake, the Yoho, the Bungalow Camps. t The. Alaska Cruises The North Pacific Coast On "EnscMi" liners. Stopping at the Vancouver or Empress Hotel. Co by) the "Trans-Canada limited" or "The Mountaineer". Fsst,