.3 into a -, : :yn-ont. gt--i-sii'l,;ioints out-. cl sis income tax rates 5 the consumer in higher ppiecs and living ssosiroos .. . .. THE GUARDIAN sscssrisssnssssssssl-lultcsionss ossssisisstothln f'Ths Strongest Memory is Wsshss Thu tho Woshst Ink.” DIAILOTTETOWN SATURDAY. 0011)!!! II. 1350 Princess Am One hundred and forty-five yeiirs ago Lord Nelson defeated Napoleon's French and Spanish fleet at Trafalgar, ending the threat of invasion and placing the British navy in a position of incontestable super- iority Tor many years. Lord Nelson died of a musket ball from one of the tops of the Redoubtable. Today, Princess Anne, grand-daughter of the King and Queen, is to be baptised. it is fitting that it should be on Trafalgar Day. Her own family, father, grandfather and great-grandfather were sailors, and the Navy is the one great institution, apart from the Crown, which the British people, are unanimous in upholding. Britain has been loyal to seapower and to royalty although both have been out of fashion elsewhere, and that loyalty has proved the worth of both. The health of the little princess and the memory of Nel- son will be pledged today throughout the world without too much regard for na- tional boundaries or ancient rivalries. Rose-colored spectacle Trade Minister Howe is not the sort to divulge information if he believes that in- formation is not in the public interest. Nevertheless, he will probably feel called upon to explain the basis for the assertion in an expensive-looking promotional bro- chure published by the Department of Trade and Commerce, that the average Canadian family of tour now has an in- , come of b3,500. Even more difficult to explain is another assertion in the same brochure to the effect that "the average Canadian is now able to buy 50 per cent more goods and services in terms of vol- ume than was the case ten years ago." The brochurels buoyant optimism con- cerning family income and the cost of liv- ing is not shared by officials of the De- partment of National Revenue. The sober reticence of officials of the Dominion Bu- reau of Statistics is equally suggestive of the inaccuracy of the claim put forward by the Department of Trade and Commerce. Although prices in Canada, says the bro- chure, have climbed "to a level of 60 per cent above the average. incomes have risen about twice as rapidly." The brochure says nothing about taxes having risen too. Purpose of the brochure is to persuade foreign manufacturers to open branch fac- tories in Canada. The reference to the average family income of 33,500 is to im- press investors with the purchasing power of the Canadian public. Facts being facts, the claims of the Department of Trade and Commerce in this instance are unfortun- ate in being thus exaggerated. High pressure salesmanship of this sort is neith- er justifiable nor desirable. A Poet's Death , The poems of Edna St. Vincent Millay, whose death at 58 occurred in New York on Thursday, were known throughout the English-speaking world. Her sonnets took rank among the best ever written in Am- erica, but it was the following excerpt from her early poem ”Renascer.ce", written at the age of nineteen, which established her popularity: "The world stands out on either side . No wider than the hurt is wide; Above this world is stretched the sliv- No higher than the soul is high. The heart csn push the seis and lsnd Further away on either bond: The soul csn split the sky in two. And let the face of God shine through. But East llld West will pinch the host! 'ni.i. can not keep them pushed Iimt: And he whose soul is fist.-the sky Will cave in on him by and by-" Watching the Isiigst Grow The fact that Finance Minister Abbottis '1 "gsby Budget" did not hit Canadians on ipsrsonai income tax where it hurts the "most should not be allowed to lull people sen T of false security on the fiscal 1:6: - as ,"Buslness Review". a fmgnuily publication of the Bank of Mont- the 596 increase ill corpor- is bound to be felt by . bis-shout the "Baby B-zdset" is 'i ' g , ormoutlsys I-(viri . I,.... . and tough campaign in Sicily and Italy, . .. ;......"....g ilisuly ss.ooo millions for tho your sndlw March 31. 1952. Against this the annual yisldfroin the revised tax structursis,es- tirnstsd st 32.800 millions. tliiu suggesting ths pouibility of fisrthsr in wt- stion when the regular budget comes down in the spring." "Business Review" does not share Fi- nance Minister Abbott's belief that the new tax structure will be anti-inflationary. "Iii- deed," it remarks, "to the extent that the higher tax is passed on to the public in the form of increased prices, the conse- quences may be in the reverse direction." EDI IURIAL N01 ES h Sunday after Trinity. Tomorrow, 20t O O O O A movement is again a foot to abolish, as has been done elsewhere, the Grand Jury. B . Princess Anne, daughter of a sailor prince, is to be baptized at Buckingham Palace today. ' I The shooting season is about at its height, and with it the acid test of the hunters' training in gun handling and safety rules. Battle of Trafalgar this date 1805, vic- tory gained by the British fleet under Nel- son over French and Spanish fleets under Villeneuve, off Cape Trafalgar. Nelson was mortally wounded, but lived long enough to know the day was won. 0 O 0 To those accustomed to the constitu- tional forms of a limited monarchy there is something very strange about events in Egypt. The King is threatened with revolt and at the same time his Prime Minister, who presumably should be held responsible, received a ”gladiator's- welcome" when ne returned from a trip. 0 O The Indian weather prophet who pre- dicted the severity of winter by the size of farmers wood piles, now has a West Coast rival who'does the same with the aid of broadcast reports. 0 The withdrawal of Sir Stafford Cripps from politics will be a severe loss to Prime Minister Attlee and his Labour Govern- ment. Sir Stafford was a doctrinaire so- cialist of the type of G. B. Shaw, but very practical in the non-application of its doc- trines to current conditions of trade and commerce. The nationalization of the railways and steel and iron industries, while having his approval in theory left him pretty cold so far as financial revenue and expenditures were concerned. In that re- spect he was as austere as he is in eating beef and drinking beer. 0 O A price record of H600 (S-1,800) has been set up for a sheep of the Border-Lel- cester breed. This price was paid for the first of 20 lamb rams sent to Aberdeen for auction by Mr. R. M. Adam, Newhouse of Glamis, Angus. The purchaser was Mr. R. G. Murray, Spittal, Biggar. The new record sets the seal on the recent steady development of Aberdeen as a selling cen- tre for Border-Lelcesters - in which the backbone of the trade has always been pro- vided by men looking for good crossing rams. Now Aberdeen is the centre of in- terest for the pedigree flock owners as well as the commercial breeders. The S4,800 lamb ram is a son of Amalad, bred at Spittal, which was the top-priced rain of the breed last year, when he made 16900 (32,700). Six years ago, on the night of October 21, 1944, Pte. E. A. "Smokey" Smith of New Westminster, B. C., won the Victoria Cross for his part in an action while serv- ing with the Seaforth Highlanders in Italy. He became the first Canadian soldier below the rank of commissioned officer to win the V. C. in World War II. They didn't call Smith a "one-man Qrmy" for nothing. That night, holding a small but vital bridgehead across the Savio River, he almost single- handedly drove off a German counter-at- lack by a troop of three Mark V Panther tanks, supported by two full-tracked, self- propeiled guns and about 30 German infan- trymen. At a range of 30 feet and exposing himself to the full view of the enemy, "Smokey" knocked out one enemy tank with a blast from his Plat gun. "Ten German infantry jumped off the back of the tank and charged him with Schmelssers and grenades", the citation reads in part. "Without hesitation,-Pte. Smith jumped out on the road and with tommy gun at point blank range killed four Germans and drove the remainder back." Twice wounded be- fore the brilliant action which won him the British Empire's highest award for lgsl-i lantry, Smith had been in action with the Seaforth Highlanders throughout their-long, . with the exception of two months spent in hospital in North Africa. He received his V. C. shortly before Christmas from thii t city process could not be served his OUAIDlAN.-(;HANlXN'l1'lOWN 7:; WI. COIILOIOUFN SUAIONITNII -' hsnisllsltiu 1-o Old Charlottetown I (And P. E. I.) I Lord Inuis Moiintiisttcii ssys polo is s "good cure for s.rtl-iritls." And vice versa. we imagine that arth- ritis is a pretty good cure for polo. - Ottawa Citizen. Notes Bx CIVIC JURISDICTION ”We published last. week the law passed this last. session giving an increased jurisdiction to the City Corporation. As the law stood, the when s book is censored snd forbidden, everybody wants to read it. and when the ssls of margarine is obstructed. every housewife wants to try it out. But every com- modity will eventually find its lev- el just. as water runs downhill. The dsiryinsn have the best food, hence they will have the best long-term market. --stettler Independent. witiigut the limits of the City; con- sequently, if a person guilty of an offence. against. whom a warrant had been issued. 'stepped into a boat at the end of the wharf, or of. on board a vessel in the har- bouir. he might laugh at the City authorities; so in the same way if he got. beyond the bounds of the City into the Royalty. This is now amended and the boundaries of the City take in with them those parts of the Hlllsborough and the North Rivers. which are opposite. W35 Hned WV0 Dolmds this Week be- A W3...-mg 3150 whmh has new is. cause he had faulty scales. Not that sued by the Mayor will now extend he was short-changing his custom- into the Royalty and Counties on ers. mind you. He was slvlns every being indorsed in the usual man- 0llSi0mel' 17 1-2 Ounces 101' Ellery nor by 3 County Magistrate." pound they paid tori The court. nil- -Haszard's Gazette. April. 19. 1856. eattltiag inagwzuvpeilgier way con- are were mus de. s us "unus wag ". one's sus- riiigdhembofiixid lelgisslation extending P'”1”” 3” ”0""d W” "" ""5? civic jurisdiction: "Commencing at Jud” smmg cm the cu” m” M" the easwn and northern e)mem- been reading The Merchant of Van- M of Common Mt Na 35 known ice recently. that he may have been as Kensington Farm thence along thmkmg m ma t'wo'w”y n5"”c' the mm, of 3” me' any and of tions that Shylock faced in slicing that mm of me any called the one pound of flesh. - Fort. William Common, fronting on York or North T1mes"m"m”' River. to the northern extremity of Common Lot. No. 8, now in posses- sion of George Lewis; thence across the said River in s direct line to ii point, making out from the northern side of a creek known as,--MoKenzie's-Creek, -as--laid--down -. ' ' ' in Captain Bayfield's charrt of said some Fuh won I Blle Harbour. dated 1843: thence along the northern and southern shore of said creek, and the western shore of .. .. said river in front. of lands in pos- :3, ?:,0a';;, thfhinanglfiz zieccgijd B1: awn" M J” H” Petem hwb tinfes in netting, more than their D('ckend0”' Mexmder Mcxmieih share of hammerheads and suckers wuuam Wm” and ”m"5' '0 the outside Russia But they are hav- western side. of a point on the said mg ash gwubie an the same, The wuhm wmws 1a"d- C0mm0n1Y sturgeon in the Caspian Sea won't cal ed North Point. as also laid bug on me Moscow hook. Am; MW” in aid Chm?-2 thence along there's the rub: for without an the West or Elliot River to the ample supply or sturgeon the” Western b0U11d8Y)' of a point 01 is bound to he s scarcity of caviar land generally known as McKie's for the high priest; of commun. Point, thence along the shore of the ism. . West or Elliot. River to the western Why the sturgeon refuse to be extremity of Ordnance land occu- enticed to the northerly waters of pied by the Blockhouse, known as the Caspian, and therefore closer the Blockhouse Point. thence across to Russian shores, is just something the mouth of the Harbour to the else which Moscow attributes to southern side of I point known' as the baleful influence of Wall Sea '11;-out point, ghencg gong the Street imperialism. But that seems shore on the east and south side of to be the war of it. at any rate. the 1:55; or H111.bm-ough give, to notwithstanding tiist every lure the eastern extremity of land pur- and i""W39m h” he" "slid 90 chased by Government from James W” me "ick- xeny, go, 3,, Hospital nmonp .All of which explains the st- thence across -the East or Hillsboi-- mud” 9' Mum" in 9”de3V9”"l"3 ough River to the place of com- m wtam ”. renew” M ” twem?” mencemem,” the a. mum normem five-year fishing agreement with and esstem extremity of common I”"" ” land which the hm plump Lot No. 35' known .3, Kensmr Persian sturgeon seem to be fond ton Farm and over an the W3”! of and within whose waters they 0, the said Hubom and Dome-M voluntarily confine themselves. 0! the creek Iran isn't hsrd up for cash either. s and rivers within the what with its oil being in steady boundaries herein described, and demand and the N k t over all the whsrves. fenry slips, i mu e "- ining firm. It may or it may docks and lsndlng thereon u to ma ' ' the mghwawr m:rk-u) 9 not, renew thst fishing pact. As a matter of fact. it is being some- what cool about the whole trans- action. What must be gslllng to Mos- cow is that the Iranian sturgeon will not swsllow the Communist line. despite the circumstance that the greater part of the Csspisn Sea lies within the Soviet Union. More- over, isn't csvisr just food for the ssirsps snd rsishs of life. rather than the proleisi-isn mil- lions? The Kremlin is in s not. sure A fruit vendor in Sheerness, Eng- land. is looking sourly at the much- vaunted British scale of justice. He Bill Buchanan is sn advertising representative for Modern Power. At the moment he also is the accl- dental Marco Polo of Maclesn- (Hamilton Spectator) Those anglers in the Kremlin. Potato Ferry Wanted (New Glasgow Evening News) fslsnd fsimers are still asking for ferry service between Pictou and Georgetown-no speed up de- livery of their potatoes to central Canadian markets by refrigerator csrs. What bothers farmers on that end of the Island is the glut of traffic It the Tormentino-Bordon bottleneck. If they could be truck- ed or transported in bulk by ship to Pictou. they. could be loaded than and hauled over the shorts? no. They have been ssking for this 1 0011910 of yeus. but not getting anywhere. To give effect to their request would not csuss too much trouble. Both Pictou and Georgetown hor- bors iisvs nsvigstion lights soil the Wood Islsndsfsrriss srs iron in and mi! winter- both could be put on s shuttle sor- vice. using existing docks with pos- hsos minor sdlustnionts. , To Piowii sdoptiai of the pro- posal would mean s certain amount of extra sinployinsni. st ins whsrvss. so this port oi the instnlsnd will wish his Illlliilfli soaorsss in whst they-srs going s . enough. x SEGIIIIITY "i piss futon more scours. cidsni A Health Insui-price. hlIIdI.P”'lliMAiestytheKlng,sisip-ivs 9'.” Friend snd P. tcctor to millions of people in sll walk. of life, tho Life Insui-sncs Coinpsnlss ploy s vltsl put in the wel- fan of Csnsdisii citizens. and in tho Nstlonsl Economy. It II s privilege of the hits Underwriter to iislp ii-isk. pee Consult the Gust-Wssi mi. in". fur I lull-bio rim to mm nun Imkl miuimiienu, including Ao- niu"nnAgmsmgo. Lin. one-si oiissssrnsisiwn - sosisissssos - iioiri-sous The Way - ' She was an all-wood ship. Hunter. This. in his own words. is the chi.-oniclc of his precipitation lno World A1fars: "While in New York on business recently I was sitting in the lounge of the Waldorf Astoria. one evening about six-ish when it suddenly occuirred to me thst I had not hsd my sfterwork glass of milk. In this was nod con- dition I set out to find a milk bar. Walking through is narrow door at the end of the lounge I ran slap in- to a reception line. 4 "I turned to break for it. but retreat was block- ed by s group of. distinguisr d-look- lns foreigners who had asthma ' behind me. My only choice was to go through the reception line. I shook hands with Mr. Deon Ache- son. Mrs. Austin and warren Aus- tin. At the end of the line I was conflronted with a champagne cock- tail. Automatically my hand clos- ed on the glass and 1 found myself in the middle of I cocktail party thrown for Mr. Vishinsky who had arrived that day from Russia. "I wanted in leave. but I was fsr too LT"-'13'UGd by the people I ssw in the room. Maui: and Vlshlnsky, Bevin and Slir Gladwyn Jebb from BYHMH: Schuman from France, and many others. I stood in the lit- tle knots of people who were chatt- ing wli.li them and listened to their casual oonvtarsntion, and then. sites- a few minutes. I left. walking with the casual stride of s man in ii nightmare who dreams he is. stroll- ing down Yonse street with no clothes on. - Toronto Financial Post. , Z.&(”v &maz 7? DIIGE WITHOUT MUSIC 1 lm 1305 realsned to the shutting WHY of loving hearts in the hard ground. so it is .snd so it will be. for so it has been. time out of mind; Into the darkness they go, the wise snd the lovely. Crowned With lilies and with lsursl they go; but I am not resigned. Lovers and thinkers, into the siii-th - with you. Be one with the dull. the indis. crimlnnto dust. A fragment of what you felt. of what you knew, A formula. 8 phrase remains,- but. the best is lost. The answers quick and keen. the honest look. the lsughter. the love.- They are gone. They have gone to feed the roses. Elegant and curled Is the blossom. Fragrant is the blossom. I know. But I do not approve. More precious was the light. in your eyes than all the roses in the world. DOWH. down. down into the dark- ness of the grave Gently they go. the beautiful. the tender. the kind; Quietly i.hev go. the intelligent, the witty. the brsve. I know. But I do not approve. And I am not resigned. -E dns St. Vincent Milisy. Octobor list out 7004' is significance is Iri of Quill ohoqissrod history. The sry of the nut nsvsi Isttis 'l'i-sfslgss in ION. in which the Royal Navy's grsstsst Mllnlrll but his life whilst directing Nspoisonis nioniontous us detail. it lsinude won more memorable by the con- tinued existence of in. very ship and by Lord Nelson as his fiss- shl . The famous 185-ycsr-old wooden wsll. H. M. 5. Victory. lies today permanently ashore in Ports- mouth Dockysrd. exactly as she wss when Nelson strode her decks. ii striking link with history and tradition. The world's oldest warship preserved in her original condition. she is in msnY WWI unique. the finest existing ' of eighteenth-century nsvsl srch- iteciure. and Britain's most inter- esting nsval relic. , Visitors may enter Portsmouth Dockyard to see her without clisrge. and inspect her all over. To see her squat. heavily-rlssed form lying serene amid cranes and whsrve. and modern buttleships is an impressive experience: to go aboard her is to step back nearly two centuries in time. 0 O 0 The Victory has had ii remark- sble career. equalled by few ships of her own. or any cther. time. Laid down in 1759. and launched six years later. she was built of stout English oak at Chatham, tier massive timber; being cunnlngly secured together with hardwood pegs and two-feet long copper b0lt5- Designed as s three-decker. She carried 104 guns and two carronadcs (which gave her the then record total broadside power of 1,160 lbs. of shot) and was recognised as one of the finest ship; of her day. Long before her association with Nelson she carried many fnmous naval figures. Hood. Howe. Kcmpenfelz and St. Vincent EH10"! them. and fought in a number of skirmishes and encounters in various parts of the world. By 1798 she had been pro- nounced unflt for further sea ser. vice and actually became s prison hulk. Many a ship's life ended thus in those days; but not the Victory's. It was In this dismal condition. lying In the Medway in 1800. that Nelson first saw her. He took to her lovely lines and proud shape at once. gave orders fo' her com- plete re-flt-wiiicli took three years-and made her his flagship. remaining with her until his death in action from ii sniner's bullet in the thick of the fray off Tra- faigar. 000 She wns than forty years old. the oldest vessel in the Fleet. and although sorely damaged. she re- mained on active ;ie.-vice until 1812. Striking -proof of her sound consiructlon,is afforded by the fnci that she remained afloat in Moths of on svsssg. mag w. It than she hsd sits-sets; o sttsntioii sport from in. routine use so s slgi-in gem”; m, s mist ' training ".-snsbilsiimeiit snii concern bogsn to be felt to. her future safety. The nv-senor um Ind laii Inter ovuituslly pi-and too mine: for hot uk constitution. and . d, cision as to her future was hsiien. ed when the run-swsy ii-o..c.,,, Neptune smashed s treat hole 1.. whilst under low to 1... O I 0 At first. the old flii shl .. doomed to be broken lisp ?.e,;:.;',' but intervention from intei-ester, parties secured her reprieve, , national subscription fund w,,, Owned to meet ths.cou o( he, preservation. and eventuslly ai enormous expense she was bi-ougm "h0"- let "ii in concrete in what happens to be the oldest EMVUIB dock in the world (it wa. built iii 1656), and after six ye.,,.s. continuous work. was transformed back from a neglected blsck.,,,.d, white painted hulk into n lDWerlng ship of the line. as she is seen today. Since 1928. H. M. S. Victory ha; been is national memorial to Nelson and the Royal Navy or 1.... day. and countless visitors from all over the globe have inspected her. To say "countless" may sound an exaggesatlon, but it is actually true that the Ellthoriileg have lost count of the numbers of people who have climbed up i.,.. HIHOW zanswsv. ducked gingerly at the low-beamed entrance door, walked her decks, seen her can. non. marvelled at the intricate network of her lofty rigging. cor. rect In every detail to the 1305 specification. stood in her cabin. and paused reverently in the tiny cramped cock pit where Nelson died. the men removing their hats in traditional homage to ii great sailor. Some 200.000 people. (our. fifths of the population of Ports. mouth. visit the ship every year. 0 O O t Although she survived fire and storm, collision and explosion. ihi Vlctory's struggle for existencd was by no means over when !h( left the water for good. During the recent war I-litlei-'s bombi rained down all around her, lev- ersl inflicting quite serious dam. age to her hull and dock, non safely repaired. And for many years anoilier enemy has been attacking her. the tiny death-watch beetle whose unseen hordes find her dark hold with its venerable timbers an in- resistible dttroction. The menaci of these insects reached danger- ous proportions until modern DD'l' sprays and other counter-measures defeated them. Still in regular use as the headquarters of tho local Commander-in-Chief for con- ferences, receptions and courts- martial, H. M. S. Victory is a living ship to this day. part of the Portsmouth Harbour for the next 110 years, more than twice the -PROFESSION A..L.....CA RDS fabric of British sea power. M. Aibun Former B. A.. LL ll. BABIIISTER. sOLlClT0li.. Ito. MONEY To LOAN Chsrlottetown, P. E. I. J. S. TAYLOR Optometrist Eyes examined. gissses'fiti.ctI Corner Kent A Queen sis. Office Phone I956-Ilosu liilil ..:.....m.m.... MucPIieo iii Iniinor ll.l'-'. MsoPllEE. B.A-. K.C. E. SOMERLED TIIAINOB. B. A. Bsrristcrs, Etc. Palmer & Hosloin A. J. HASLARI. ILA. I.s..B. Bsrristsr. Etc. Bank of Nov: Sooils Gismbcn Charlottetown. P.l:.l. MONEY T0 LOAN Joseph it. Mocidiliun. LL.B. - BARRISTEB, sOl.ICl'i'0ll. Bio. '15 Queen direct A PHONE 7'16 Money to Losn Collection Frederic A. Lorqc. i(.C. BABBISTEII. S0l.l0I'l'0Bi NOTAZW iloysl Bsnk of csnsds Olisinbu-s Charlottetown, l.l.l. J. A. OARRUTIIERS OPTOMIWRIST PHONE 2872 123 Kent Street ' (Next to Simpson: Agency) John P. Nicholson. Ll..I.' BARRISTIR. SOLICITOR. Etc. 154 Prince 88.. Ch'town. Phono I83! Dr. 'W. R. Carson Chiropractor Palmer Grsdiisie CliABl.0'I'l'E'l'0wN 201 Prince L Phone loh Boll & Moi-hiesoii BAn.ii.l6'l'lltS, SOLICITORS. M kit. BELL. M.LA. DJ. MKTHIISON I.. L. 3.. inc- Attorosn st Lsw EOANB ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES , I30 llioiimonii St. p ciisriomiown. P. i:. l. successor to ?--------r George J. Twudy. LC. 61"” & HISZGM Tooisibs Bldg. in Queen SI '- , ou.ssn-r A. GAIJDET. s. s.. 1-H , Bsrrissts on: Solicitors Los cMP' R' Osnsdlsn Intro! Comirierce Bill I 3.5, ' --r-j .iisniiisrsn. soucrros. .N,,...,., . J. Mcfiuigon -sum-ii sine Iutldliig nouns. irw. CllAl.l.O'i'I'I'l'0Vni' ssssissss. soi.ioi-roii , """" "" cvssis suisnino M, U"-8' i 0P'I.i0MI1'nls'r sAssis"i;::."soi.iivI':os. Its. nm 3,... mm. in orsms sm'u "WM '7' , HIM: to Ian Osliscilsin Adjoining North Aincrlcsn He" 4-4 . ' O '-l5"'"MWI II. I. DIIANI: I 00. :f,'''',' u some iii-in-siiisnis A. :3 i missi.o'rriri-owii n" mnmw Isndoipl H. Ilsnninsdtl. A sum - ' wwiggu all I-Imus .nos-i ass Kim 4 3" "" IIol)0NAl.D. s oo. . . ciisii-i-sssn soooim-imis nsotvill. Qsehvo. (iiisws retools sslui Vsiisoiivsr. Iirligl I-IM.”lIosuII.' .'.. Jobs lbofl"'W"' .. hdlisl. (ibsri-nlewn i