~.a- i i f {rm afternoon, Mr. Speaker Strong cited flornliansaxdofldarehic thefol- lowing explanation o! the purpose cl the Dominion legislation, as made I: ii promoter, the Hon. Mr. Weir, Iinkter of Agriculture, “lane of the fundamental grin- dplnl of the bill", (Hon. Mr. Wdr awlained to Parliament) "are, first, yimiples that are embodied in the British Marketing Act, that if a re- presentative number of producers d any commodity have a sdseme which they think will be in lie in- terests of the marketing of their produce and feel that their number-s are sufficiently representative, they approach the Marketing Board or tbs Minister designated to adminis- tar u» Act, and submit med aalisme. In this respect the bill, like the British act, k flexible; it was felt that flexibility was essential be- aaims ot the diversity of the prob- lems connected with marketing of the products by the primary produc- orl in this country. "Second, it. will work in oo-oper- ation, where it is deemed advan- tageous to do so, by mutual consent with provincial boards or boards let up within the Province, thus marking more effective than st present the work of those boards. One part of the bill is different from the pro- vision in the British act in that op- portunity is given to investigate the various costs of marketing and to scpmt whether those spreads are considered fair or unfair. The bill is, as I statd at. the outset, flexible; it was felt that it should be because d the diverse nature of the prob- lems that are certain to be submit- ted to it." As Hon. Mr. lifarzPhee. in speaking Ii the bill in the legislature yes- terday, explained, the Act, when paned, will not only hind those re- presentative pr- applying to the Marketing Board, but all within flio Province engaged in that par- ticular lndust y, so that full control will be exercised with regard to the marketing of that particular pro- duct, in the interests of the industry generally. In the same way, there will be co-operative action between all the Province under the ternm of the Federal statute. The ' importance of this legislation to our agricultural fish- ery industries would be difficult to over emphasize. Naturally, the de- tails rnust be worked out as experi- ence dictates. The fact that there h general agreement so far as the princbles of the bili are concerned. is the essential thing at present. r hirther W081“! in the legislation at Ottawa will now be awaited with Qie keenest interest. l IN NEWFOUNDLAND the protection and preservation of .jflflflflnflllldOflfiflhllllll andthegame fiahandbinis. In VIII of the value attached to these reaourcesbythslioyaitioenmhsicn. aaindicatedbythelpacalivento fliematterinthdlNPWkltisbO- llvodtiistintbeir determination bhrrnlieasaehofflewfoundlmd ‘bis account. the 1% "i iv -e auggestsd that he and the leader of tbs House should viii tbs institu- tion together. "mat", replied Premier llacllii- lan drily, ‘will uisuro my hon. friend's safe return." Ir. lfeliiwre aoimd first he had no “come-back” to this sally. HEAT EXPORTS lfarsooimiinadatiou made to fierenoe between the northeast and southwest Pacific in this t. Just 1M years ago an nnperor of Japan was worried about the small- ness of his subjects and issued an edict prescribing the bastinado for Youths who had not reached a oer- agc. It does not, however, seem to have had much effect, and yet the Japanese have done remarkable things during that century. Argument for and against Amer- ican adherence in the World Court theSt-evensfllflflfytlommissionby thsfxnadianhivcsiock Oc-operat-i iva (Western) Limited I ..‘ ’. itmaybqsaystheflnanohlPclt. thstllwrouwillquicklybamade in devising a. Pmlhra d policies andpkmtogovernthsesportd Oanedianmeotindiiieltproduots. Remnant"... of the livestot raliserpsirggeat the calling ct a Oanadianli ofliforericewitb- inihenextbwomontlisaudthera- afteratleastonceayeariolnelude roprescitativea not only d the producalsbirtottmrailwaymthe pamerscousumers, etc. Lhswise. thewoltarii livestockmsn recom- naeridilieestabihbmentofaper- moment ‘ toworkforthe improvementand stabilimtion of thelivostook indusky. what the producers liavefnmindismre- movesomaofflieconditionswhieh have carried the livestock farmers of (hnsdaswiftly frmn ruin to Pwlpeflwabdfrwnilrvlvflrlt! t0 ruin in a constant succession of waves of enthusiasm and depres- sion. ‘rho livestock conference would be the first step in implement‘ thsnewlegisistioninavery im- ptxtant field where the opportunit- hsfm-iiacreasedsalointliskitish marhetanpartioulariy good. LEPROSY IN CANADA 800.11. lladann, lllsiistorof Hesitlrhasmadehsstatouientisi thahvuseofOmnmflisfliltlep- rcsyhdyingoirtlnOaiiadmThe mattarwasbrovlbtupwhau ‘I. '1'. IMOISUIA. albodif scientific modicinswasmakingl-hyllwrus iasnringflisdissasaattlnpres- enttiiiietheredreiloasasollep- rosyinthstwolanrotmcneat ‘rracadimandtheotbsratwilliam Head in 3.0." lid fr. Madmen. tenaerraoadiemlyfouraloam- diamihshistwyclllbmlylod baokaboirt aisistyyean in that aroaoltbaommtlmleanssoail visitingiracadislasaretio about Soyearsagmaswhiohtirsisflisra from the sea coast area, u- an connected with Nortliuniberiand and Gloucester. It b interesting tonotethsttbaiastoasefmmthe . "r-i ;!§.i rill} 1H1: was long since exhausted. It is eight years since the Senate by more than a. two-thirds vote ae- ‘oepted the court protocol, with oer- tain reservations. They caused a hitch which should have been quick- ly ended by diplomatic negotiations and by the forms of reservation and safeguarding which Mr. Root Ill lble to Obtain at Geneva. But the proivct has been sidetracked year after year. Both political have again and again in their platforms favored our join- ing the World court, but their lead- ers have done nothing about it ex- cept to make recommendations. The recent hearing before the Sen- ate Foreign Relations Committee niony about the duty and desirabil- ity of the United States taking its piece in the World Court. But ap- parently the Senate proposes to do nothing aout it at this session. Evidence continues lo pile up that the tuk which the stocky little French Premier, Gaston Dou- mergue, undertook when he emerg- od from his retirement at the re- quest of the French nation ts one of no ordinary difficulty. It is clear that the public has now a deep- rooted distrust of ofliciaidom. And as there are upward of three mil- lion ofilcials in the employment of the Government, it can easily be seen that this means that the pub- lic distrust the method of adminis- tration that has gradually been evolved under omcialdom. ‘file line of delnarkation between Left and Right is being more acutely drawn. Rioting is still going on in spasmo- dic outbreaks in widely separated centres of industry. And this ri - ing is in the provincial cities towns. Most dbeases " medial science has conquered. Smallpox once swept over the nations. ‘lio- dayitiss rarediseasea fewde- wdes ago tuberculosis was called the white man's plague. The death rats in recent years has been rapidly declining. Typhoid and di- phtheria are no longer the dread diseases of formerly. But the death- rate from cancer keeps steadily increasing. ‘Ihday next to heart dileaie in Ontario it stands high- est in mortality. It is estimated that at least. one in every kn per- sons in Ontario dies from cancer. --london Free Prose. Oausda. m- in some other country, it will become generally realised uro of the nation's real credit will statement . . National credit should be available for all such na- tional purposes as the financing of of whether they are privately or be a national credit account to be l z coimky. Whatever virtue there ma! have been in earlier year-Lin the to abolish the Senatl. it is oar- taiu minimum height by a certain‘ brought out age-in impressive iestl-i lvoritusly is the United Skid. that the national credit is the real basis of financial credit. The moas-' be recorded annually in the budget‘ place to the natural reaction which publicly owned. Without borrowing system of Canada had stood the from private sources, there should strain placed upon it, in amazing drawn upon for the provision of-‘soutn of the line. The Ottawa agree- railwaynments had shown their worth both Rhine to the Tigris and hrphratu. The Canadian Pacific Railway! in this country and in Canada. loan of sixty million dollars shouldfrhere has been only a. small in- lisva been made available, without crease in British exports to Canada lime!’ and It. Meighen leader] It would seem that the matter of high blood pressure is now bringing fear into the minds of those who,| perhaps during a single or per‘ two or three examinations, were found to have high blood pressure. , Dr. Samuel J. Lang in the Illinois ilviedical Journal joints out that sin- gle or occasional blood pressure ex- aminations are unreliable; that there should be a number of exam- inations extending over as long a period as a whole year if the true condition of the blood vessels is in be found out. Differences in the readings in the one individual may be as much as 30 to 50 per cent. Thus an indivi- dual after a restful night might have a systolic pressure (with arm tightly compressed) of 130. and after cxciterncnt or a heavy meal, it might be 1'10 or 180. Sirnilafl? with the diastolic pressure (with no pressure from the arm band) there might be as much as 40 to 60 points difference at different hours or under different circumstances. The point of course is that high blood pressure-true high blscd pressuramearis that care should be taken if life is m go on for some years. It is a sifln that Nature hi8 had to increase the pressure to keep i m; going, owing to various obstac- les. However the fact that cue or two or even more examinations reveal nigh blood pressure should not need- lessly alarm the patient as may be due to excitement. u. 0r‘ drinking, or to infection souiewhere in the b01137. BT01“! CLOUDS Splendid like mountains made of misty pearl, Onward the oceans move in tbs in- land boume Of the vast and burning plains arid the little roots Of the thirsty corn. ‘Prevailing oceans turned into flying hills. Huge and thunder-freiglitad they drift and loom- And yet they bring to the roots of the little corn Life, and not doom. -I. Merrill Root, in The Ocmmouweai Canada's Progress (London Times) _ The Royal Empire Society enur- talnad Sir Arthur Bteel-rlaitland. MP. at luncheon yesterday at. the Cannon Street Hotel, Oolonel Sir ‘Weston Jarvis presided Sir Arthur Bteel-Msitland refer- redtohlsrecenttourinNorthAm- erica, during which he spent one mouth in Canada». he said that. al- though it was a slow and painful process, Canada w clearly recov- ering. This was d in the first occurred after several years of de- pression when purchases for re- placement of exhausted material the Canadian railways, irroapemive liad to be made. A second eiementl was the way in which the banking contrast to the state of affairs l No generation has paid more heavily than our own. in blood and democracy.” these endeavours, with disappoint» inents more bitter. ‘In China. rival military forces still batten on W110i! provinces. hi Cuba. Spain and Aus- tria the civil authorities are arm- ed against subversive movements on the part of their own citizens. France is removing the scars of re- cent street fighting, s. reminder of it'll. In Germany, direct fascist rule has not only government, but also the trade un- ion movement, with its millions of members. strong dictatorship exist in Italy, the Soviet terrlioriu and Turkey. The sword has established a new kingship in lla-achuquo. Two south American armies, battling yup menstrual-Instr. vu-auna-ssmbaentmss, QiJibanaQnLsa/rssya "fig , tosya wlthfranoaastetbamb- “i. man-awareness. .ouna. ' abierseuifsofsre-armamantraes, rFnuuusalneeeaauamisuapunenuaanaerasl-q. wilhflfllllllrlllllvf-hgifiilw ssnscra-u-ev-mues-euoe-es-esaaease-r. respond-limb matters " e woltrw wnelfliamarlnaiase ~ v "nwmlymhé ' um‘ l1 .kQ JCpIdusbII i‘ hudartimdaliatyow Isa-menus»: imnwm-ws-w-iggufag"? e "'" mai-ufff-uu-Wmmus-‘rifei-susus-um . _....... nguqeuqutuaeemauewpuuhuufiuum-w taaseapereeaiermwsuoruqgwnqq-"gugm aanunsaenuusaemamuwesaupeasnnuintnsesgqmnrnarmuuumuupsm “Walogvlaolam QIIQIIVI’ Ive "Vzamgtmordmyaddsb bdIa ti» - Jmunt-a,‘ FIIIII-l Ihathalsalstlo wu ymeaiuouavaiesuraessrwere I-l-I- me-mieueiutaeueieistunyu-ursnnuaeieeezupneeiievu uwmeisynem i "ma" mmulngmhflu-‘mu eneamsisstasurwpnestimaudmise-esauemsseaseaiee» g"“§"fiav'fl=m%l'°° lmnayeafl ‘u, w muuaeuepspsrwiiiireurtmbmmwufl m_.h_- n‘ lnsasorodtslegieistioenintroduoad eiLIfimr-paneapcimsa numb-M". maximum lmu.n'|o‘l°"nfi¢lhlilllfllisdabmrtmur- HINDI?!“ "Ilfilllilfli- lyoureadtheidoa It! Asseqflagqiamqmedqnllwvbl. ummmmsuouvuumuzaiasniaumevieem: treatiesaaiflaudthlyaresuoirgh figiy rdam mlz-emdguifxgagz_mpamuhnrumoyalmm hkm-“qu-“ihfiu nonriotakaadvmtassormno- iuuiatwaI-monflimlmvehlh “qwmmngw "m" queasy‘; 3'9"" "°"ummfiflu_.qumu oesasesahghsfltaieeessutmaeuranreneaie. nhgnqqygmmgngmmgmmq Goon 8U%|s1'oN tbswllhid . 23pm esmuchas h fife» hesmssflmadas eifuifiukiasmgmmum, Ieatkmgmsterlynlaaaaalaailh. llllwflllolwlflimlnlli-Oti-Iwl. ' - n-‘dnh-kdbd m_:g:hglrwhfllaoutlookou be-hsvoatihshahdllflfllfllwlhcohsaivaintegrstingaganoylortba Iaianaaleahalllreltaldlnsasooaahlillrel- FIIQIIIIV-ll lelwrll IPDNVBIBWI This morning tbs members er sraIahaldatlIba-rtfllissrnaniqa whéquLggmu p; “lg”. ? th:;aestiieminprint ma" u-mmmmfimmm hassIaIaasaiI-Iwsittnapaadllsd. _ idhthowwrvefl“ we liberal flislngillalsre will bavaan ep- “Wmfllvalinupeourrwtaesau-xeurissroreeiariiaiuvnseuisw llindhsrleaworth knewbetterthan anaemia-requiem made aste- um: and partymembers. ‘rrueiiisaicng pqmmy‘mmwuu ‘bun, m tgntmsbowmnmmdmpumuwim isbiametbsreporter. m“; h“ 3.95m, “alum menu. Ibis which mishi- bl 0011MB"! oeenmsudeastwingstlaiocwood height ct a ,,_ ..., 7 ..‘h°‘“.m'f.“.‘l“'.“"‘hh‘°'“** “AQPI-lfmlv w“ V" W“ ,1 czonimio, etslwasampiias- rdcumtmmbungnlomvwflodfiu‘uxuuimhuwlhuu._dmwmmhmddqmuhuwu dmfirhafifiumltim atmtsy mhmlwievaluadofths Hflaallblllbllamlainhollilrsiol. ttou that radical steps are ns- mmdmmimn-Lnucm, tramss-roioolowformanymeufllsnowtheybsdtbs murmur, p“ °“ °"'“m p. IIIIPIONIWII. "l"! Wemmlm" ‘he °"u‘dm° tyrewaswhessbsallsgadtbsslpn- ‘inhuman ‘hvfmcmhmbd UdIhUnmWEMFItmI ,m|dmu“umn“h°an' . Rkliaoefitflfiegasglwuu ‘Viéaiguv. ‘nu-nun: 575mm "id Mill?! hld bfili MINING “IQ IC‘ g lqggfrme Ihgvg ha: dawning way glad ggldlgggm ch53“- lnd 'u“s”d m“ u! erflewwhlmwfliflflfvvffflu- roofing." at-tboamslngheightofouradol-lmumlnbotharmieawereablsto "in especially ina podiion where mud”! wohbmughnbuh escmtgat fourteen, fifteen and sis-‘doalltbshardships of fruit line All ECONOMIC BAOKOBDUND “"111” mum on!“ “tn "m‘hh"°°“"‘“'°'““""'“" .98. it iaotlieqlielglliutt o‘? $.32? iiiffeiirifiufifi $1, fii (Monthmw The km*°3°"‘~ fos-bhmiltateuamtsintlalsau- gygrngndghmgm gufpflg-l§¢l—WGNDO$l0lmD°11-lDR Tb BankofNovaScotia) Purina the discus-M“ Yemrdev motion. w. Iclntyn yestezfly ingfihereaeemgtope agreatdlf- important mint w the ability M tears and money. to banish warfare " destroyed popula- 111s lJt8.iQiiiNhistcrssoos ZZI-i fillllll I 1m E. ‘R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond Sh, Charlottetown of one partyorariothertotte pro- greuive and ststesmanlike action inthe public interest forfearof its opponents, I was only expressing the iflieqiroad feeling of numbers of brioadminded and forward-look- citisens who have grown weary of the childishriees and futility of partisan politics in ps-rliamnet and out d it. i I am Sir. etc. ‘ . J-W-A. racuorsoa HOW T0 Vote In Italy North Bedsque (Our correspondent h apparently‘ still of the opinion expressed in his rd melted the hearts d the grim Charon and the terrible Gerber‘ land brought 10f"! an lovely via (Ottawa JOUIDID) from u” ‘loom. of Q Ml‘. Mussolini knows how to win Bu", againstonesnothertillafewweaks ago, now nurse their wounds snd keep watch against a renewal of hostilities. Military concentrations are occurring ori several frontiers in Ina-ope, and in the Par Inst.‘ merits from dsy to dsy remind us that the lands in which democr securely functions are now not many; and that there is acute tension over a large pert of the world's surface. All of the recovery plans which the deprqsion has produced are predicted on a. re-estsblishment and continuance of peace. But even these, involving keen rivalries for attenuated markets (with tariffs. quota systems and currency mani- veiled farm of warfare, and in- crease the tension. eaasry condition of recovery. Th b- ‘down of our present pm-axy stimulus to certain indust- of shiwhls services. time to be the gainers, if a break- down occurred. But its upshot would inevitably be to weaken further the foundations of our civilization. Our main objective ta present is- or should be-ts strengthen these f- ‘ ‘i and assure the perman- ence of peace. As everyone knows, there are seriousthreststopeaoeontwooon- tinents at present. In Mia. there is a sharp clash of interest, of which the new kingdom of slan- dhuquo forms the focus. ln mirope there is a network of conflicting interests. It is with lmropc. prin- cipally, that these notes are con- carried. l Conflict in 1014 was precipitated by the murders st Sarajevo. Two deaths on a June morning were a prelude to the slaughter of eight and a. half million man Ind women in the five years that ensued. But more important than the Sarajevo killing, which determined the morn- ent of its outbreak, the racial hat- reds accumulated in turope during fifteen hundred years were the real cause cf the struggle. In a sense, the Warwas the grandclimaxofthoee however, does not reconcile the nations. It intensifies embittered feelings. The racial hatreds of which it was an outcome are obviously not yet eppeased. lh order is survey these racial haireds, it is necemery to go far back into the part-to review very briefly those fifteen centuries. la the beginning, the Roman Em- pire had made for solidarity. One citiaensiiip mu extbrided from the But when the barbarians emerged from wiisedasolutioueouidbaf 2 5 ii i 25gb. i: 5g. {it iii b- E F . rig thigh u» ' I J I I 5 2e‘ i‘ i pulstioas as weapons) are often a- Of this strain the world must be relieved. Beans is an obviously neo- e unstable treaty system might give a tem- ries in all coimtries. The producers armaments, and foodstuffs might seem for a fifteen oenturiu. Such a cllpies, control ‘address that one political party ‘hesitates to do risht for fear of crfticiln 0f the opposition and for idreadof be turnedoutol power ‘at the nut e ction, and that it is the duty cf the schools to overcome such partisanship and political div- ision. Id. G.) Recovery In Caanda (Rom ilie Malasine of Wall St). Canada seems to have made fully Is much advance towards business 3lOCt%l hi!“ ‘bat sound; ’ "l5 5 m 99mm ' When Ycliudibeganto ,tl's mu. hundred mo»: candidates bow M no, mm u, wit,’ m, <11‘ fllfifllim- 1195"‘ b? Ml" m5‘ strings at all. Ho was inoanting the nlini himself. and the result was sound, ‘mm than.‘ o, ma,“ m", "an u-erwwmlnl I-flmiib" ‘>1 mu u» all in mu world except him- appiobation." In the cit-ks 08 Der "m The mud ‘n. an.‘ w‘ vent o! the WWI wit“ "W" (Milt as the last faint susurrus a KIWI 1°’ "w 1W1“ ti» fading tide 011 faneyh peeri- The result will be declared a pa], mo"; mm‘ m ma,“ Wmmdmll W" °T °°“M'n°° m streams of harmony as of seraplie the Fascist administration. Properly scatter,“ u, ma“ 50w“, ileum‘ '0 lllwfill“ m llinumnu- Mm‘ in the delectable meadows of til W". all" ll m" 1"‘ 9° b‘ wn’ blest. The names of the pieces bad sidercd: T11!‘ 110 ODPOQU-ou and‘ no meaning, one m“ 50mg wag“ d8"! "F" ifimlu“ w “m- vm" about a chaconne by Bach, a Cui- had the fllhl "Y0 “Milt 0i‘ NR9‘ “no m D 111.”: gm" g’ w p“, official candidates," and no other amnL and mmemm‘ u, other _ right. The pen. maioritv WW8!" a person Ila-med serum. but what ltthcmrtvfvllflwwll!" "lulu thesethlngsmattsflfllhe pmgrel if had not tried so hard collectively m attain it. There is some“; to be 3 a“ 91mm‘; ge-dugwunérwgil‘: Young Yehudi. and the two - ms in both sides of u» question. n, ivsequifo ;mu um. He... no: muff} ",‘,“§‘°,,““" “Pnfimfd ° ~ LtmustberuriembeaedthstOaiia- hgwbqmyymmanoverpowering Qtmxénd‘. "ma a "" d1 is profoundly affected. mw-I-llvyuiargiu as ninety-eight to two. m n, m you,‘ m,“ ‘h, fact it is doubtful if any nation ever 1mm‘ 3.4m” mud, ma,“ its lic that p vulouniiodw W’? mhthelieartwiththetipofliersa the" wmwtmgrvihw “glue wingforageand the griaf "nufihm" “m” °u$wmenottheretolosdthe --. argnahdeflw v! minim"! with shadow. m tragedies will "WWW- gininl ran mm the . (oiieofowarti-ficialmeasines iowh M uh‘ P] ed mxmukulmm“ "H" implore business) have divertedi en en ‘n 8y often wondered, listenim to called opuses being performed, ~ suinmercapriceqiili We elwrt budnus UriitedStItestoOaneda-Part offlrlltintiiewinnivqhesrreslwhnmwm "$3.3m" w iélnmlCa-nadian improvement is‘ on Wednesday nights know o emduetogoverrimentalpo-iotlis dlo plsyingof Yehudi An'opmhm.wndmu* licyregardmgforeimtrade, Menuhinwerealisedosaeor two PM,“ phndmm. on“ ' notably in the effects of Empire tariff ue- matters which have never been and m, ‘on o; mum, ferences and , ‘ The situation quite clearto II before about mu- "m" u m,’ Th, m1“ p“ hereayesragowasmoredesperafesiczwemeauthesymbolismofit. d“ on‘ m‘ H than in Canada. Canada bad no‘ About three thousand years ago gills” m” ogmutu‘ J" I problem or banking collapse. But the musical critics had a serious hum, mm, w, d", ,4. . therapidityofour afisrproblsmcntlseirhandsflrbeyhadtmn ' u» bank holids of refuel-tn their 1m usician whose “m” '““‘“'B,M"" m” ' suflesfs that natulral IBCUPQYIUVGJSIMO refTsed t: slzooriiodaie itself m the 1??“ “t m Tgorm l pass, an orm aga . e w‘ forces were ready to go to work. to the technical ll-rllilll! 0f fir": gg-g’ u“; m", y. m, ma,‘ w niillv- 121w?» ‘Tdbefgrvvv iohfiicim '1» $11k abort his ‘priory; hudi ins-king nu awkward um , . .. . . ances in rrns o arpcggos. a - m, swung into effective actimi — great-ill“. and so on, looked simply silly ggerrhuorm’ u m’ “d progress was made. lit is an openlwhea the words wt 0" W PIP" We came WHY Entirely pe qgeelct-lonwwiicther getheretardatcry , and no idea at afllhti: :0 ed u u, ‘m, on "m, u, u’ ,, e some reoovorysyunds heame outo -‘ h 1, _w _ measures were not equal to the ac- strument. fir: rfiagyilgbeforelm right oeierative effects of others. So the critim gave the matter u could "m --———— dsqp thought. and decided to throw the whole thing into straight sym- bolism. instead of talking any more __ about their musician's marvellous! ~783Mb 301m Gm!!! "W" handling of the s string, they said! chaplains. windbum and all instead that when he played neuroses caused by weather wndltiw became gentle. rocks melted in pure K999! the complexion clear ml eutacy, clouds fled from the hoe of 3:218; mmigetely lzbeorbeddbyl fir: .__.______._____.___;_____ m ‘w, yhjgh mum, blue gnd - "If "Hill! Q turies the mantle of the Cass-rs wit... and man forgot his “built-Wm”- minim"! ‘m ‘u’ was worn b successive Germans. m4 m. sorrow-ail of it except that "l"! l‘ "W “Wm "d 5"“ shadowy claims M "nl-‘bltterrweet pans which new-s irfllgerzsletryves a: rm ~ But despite the» the recesse r our hearts. remind- - claims, at no time was the wholelm‘ u. nut‘; u, mmh md m‘, vlsoratas. lakes hands soft . fll lessl hiik. I that Si! of the 06ml" MOP“ ""1994 l" \ from the fairest scenes and love- chrm a‘ m", hand and are not stocks. replacing their iadby W!‘ ‘thsirbeauifulgardensonths abovell Well, makiisiaitsiudependenoe, inner... milrlwsrpawieeeesiminly hvtobeeouesnoveruaiav thsnoriofweracmwhetharflar- yghmg 91"; “yum 11g; lhlltllavonktliakisborlllilf-jeryfinestvaawsinilis gii Special lix. 315 FE -3- ofallan ,, tiomsouroes weaknan “m; tilnasiotbsdolninant ‘g assraisakikths a‘ wodilibytbaal. *5. ltlswasthaaeafusim n. wliiabtbastatesdmodsm “a; eiacpsdzaadithuot d.‘ tbailiropeaahistsry, 3,‘ Attilatotbe i‘ Jsareoeruofoosstantwarv u; us. i i lather. supine hthem?lor‘:z‘”ysa:'qgg|nrm4.m¢ “"'°"I Moran-n whkhfm-aninslnt. Idiom i" M BnihM-mumsamaenaeanaa‘ mswr.s:i~ "- - - - ~1- w l-III-sseoudsoutbi II 1 "t." 1"" ("Wemnsiwaasaatwu an, wfilsibutthlf Q"‘§@q.t"""""¥sl'*eq“ titanlthh. i. iii‘ g1‘ ‘ if’ l ii} H: ll v