7.: , tural Council holds a unique position in b to the public. PAGE FOUR TI-IE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN MARKm 1, 1-33, THE GUARDIAN Auhorised In Second Clan Mall Pool: 041;;-T Department. Ottawa. The Thomson Co. Ltd. Editor and Muuger. Ian A. Burnett. Associate Editor. F1-Ink Walker. CIRCULATION "Covers Prince Edward Island like the dew" -."The strongest memory is weaker than tho woukost ink". - 'cEXi.'.”.;.'i?Eom.-. MONDAY. MTnaIT:954- ” i A LIIIIO IIIIII British shipping companies recently C0ms piained that American naval cutters were shadowing their freighters from one port to another, much to the annoyance of Bril- ish skippers. It now transpires that the shadowing is a security measure applied by the United States to their own ships as well as to foreign ones. It seems that the gressive in Canada, achievements make a very impressive story. But this is not the point at issue. Council is rightly concerned, not with our success in specialized fields, but in overall planning for the future." It sees the need, if the industry is to be placed on a secure basis, of improving our farm fertility, ex- tending and improving our marketing serv- ices-particularly in such a commodity as turnips, where a made with the prices obtained by Prince Edward Island and Ontario producers-of restoring dairy farming as the keystone of our agricultural industry, with hogs and lpoultry as vital supports, and potato pro- gone by; to the need for expanding our markets in Labrador, Cape Breton and other Maritime areas military developments have taken place. where mining and Our farmers are among the most pro- and their individual in recent years would The Agricultural striking compo rison is Americans are 3 lime afraid thal Some duction relegated to its proper place in a Seemingly harmless fwighlef might be 0Tf',well balanced farm program; and lastly, gaged in sniuzlzllml Rmm bombs mm lllelrjof vigorous promotion of animal feeds pro- ports. . What American authorities choose to doi lduction on our Island farms. Since the Lattimer report, we believe for their OWN P1l0l9Cti0n is: 0f C0UP59- thehltliat nothing of importance commensurate own business. It does seem a little 0dd- i with Mr. Shaw's key address at the Agricul- nowever. that lil0.V Shfluld h'r1V'e the 51igh1tlltLii'al Council meetings has appeared in this est suspicion that a friendly and allied Pow- , pl-0,-meg. It is to be hoped that it will 91' might be (Iii-'l05Cd l0 blow ill) One m"serve its purpose in focusing attention more of their ports. One would SUDP059 on the weaknesses in our farm economy, to that Britain's interest. in America's In(IUS'lth9 intimate benefit 0: an Concerned trial and port facilities would be in the oth-E or direction, since a crippling blow to any of these facilities would hurt, not-help, -Britain herself. It may be that the American fear is based not on possible lethal action on theg part of some British skipper but rather on; the possibility that the agent of an un- friendly power might deposit a bomb in the hold of some ship without the skipper's- lcnowlcdge. This. too, seems hardly likcly.i for atom bombs are too big to hide below decks without some member of the ship's company knowing about it. Anyway, it would seem wiser and much more dignified to place the onus of inspectiorf on the skip- pers thcnisclves. Britishers would prefer that to being shadowed by sleuths, be the). over so friendly. Agricultural Diagnosis Composed as it is of top ranking of- ficials of both'our Provincial and Federal Departments of Agriculture, the Agricul-, It this Province. It is not an elective body, in the sense that it is directly responsible It does not make govern- ment policies, which is a niattci for our parliamentarians. But its views are of the greatest importance, as representing the best expert advice on subjects of the most practical concern to the largest number of. our people. ; It is evident that this organization is by no means satisfied with the trend of our agricultural economy. Mr. W. R. Shaw, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, was chosen: to give the key address at the Council's an-; nual meetings last week. This address, re-! leased officially by the Council after much discussion. and published in full in Satur- day's Guardian, challenges very careful study and attention. A There are, Mr. Shaw points out, almost 125,000 fewer acres of improved farm land. in the Province today than there were ini .1011, and 60.000 fewer acres under crops? Grain production on an acreage basis has not noticeably increased, notwithstanding zlmproved varieties and husbandry oppor- -tunitics. liay, clover and grass lands have gone down. Nor with all the improvement in glairy herds in recent years, has there been Cany impressive increase in milk production. Export of grains has practically ceased, and we have imported since 1941 25,121,-l, U00 bushels, well over one-third of our total- production. The cost in some years, in feeds and fertilizers, would be well up to 533,000,000. From 1900 to 1910 we export- ed large quantities of raw products and at the same time, on a comparative. basis. maintained a much heavier livestock pop- ulation with the use of little or no com- mercial fertilizers, or importation of feeds. ' . "We have failed in our conservation 1 methods. In barnyard manure alone the figures are impressive. The Council esti- mates 3 loss of 60'per cent on the total manure valuation, which 'means 9,460,200 ipounds of nitrogen, 2,918,280 pounds of Eptipsphoric acid and 7,609,440 pounds of l tash wasted annually. with a monetary 533.! of at least 52,167,000. This loss has fluid to be' made up with imported fertil- Iizeii, in the application of which there has also been a very definite wastage. Other points noted are the neglect In handling potatoes for hog and cattle feed; disregard of weed control and grass land Improvement, wastage in the use of farm machi'qory.' and faulty marketing methods. ' Shaw claims EDITORIAL NOTES St. David's Day. I O I It is most satisfactory that a new agree,- ment has been reached continuing the North Atlantic weather network. One sta- tion, "H", off the United States coast, will be deleted but the other nine will be con- tinued for at least two years. I O O A member of Toronto's Board of Con- trol charges, amongst other things, that police were tagging motorists indiscrim- inately. Anywhere else that would be re- garded as conscientioiis performance of duty. The one bright. aspect of the nation- . wide scarcity of housing and serviced land is that it will provide a very large amount of work indeed for materials and construc- tion in order to house Canadians as they should be housed. I O Q The cultivation of poetry is a perennial source of delight, and our esteemed con- tributor in today's Poet's Corner, Mr. H. R. Lockerby, of Fortune Cove, can testify that it is conducive to longevity as well. fine poem, written to celebrate his nine- tieth birthday anniversary, will be appre- ciated by all our readers. 0 I 0 I It was, of course, a woman writer who decided that the laziness of women is one of the chief assets of industry. Surveying the many labour-saving gadgets being mar- keted, mechanical, electronic and dispos- able, she has concluded that the top brains of science and a major part of industry are employed for that reason alone. 0 I O The serious housing condition in Char- lottetown reported to the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Canadian Legion indicates that. :1 great deal of housing construction is still needed at a cost that people can afford to Day- Association could make recommendations as to the most satisfactory approach to the problem. 0 O I Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin, Eng- lish architect, was born this date 1812. He was the pioneer of the revival of Gothic architecture in the nineteenth century, de- signed the furniture of Windsor Castle, de- tailed drawings -for the Houses of Parlia- ment. and many Roman Catholic churches. In two publications he set out his ideas of the close connection between Christianity and Gothic architecture. The fierce Vikings of song and story are being changed into a civilized and culti- vated people by research promoted by Norwegian and Belgian teachers. The sea klngs' reputation may be improved by the efforts of scholars and researchers but the loss will be that of the youngsters who wil not readily dream dreams of Norsemen who were handy with painter's brush and potter's, wheel. ' A notable feature of the automobile in- His i Possibly the Community Planning Point Of View 8 . PUBLIC FORUM This column II open to the 1 discussion by correlpondentn 1 E of question: of interest. The p . Guardian does not necessar- Ily endorse the opinion of p correspondents. 1 SERVICES AI'I'RI'l('IATEII i Sir,--With regard to ri para- graph printed in the report of thei lmonlhly meeting of the Charlotte- town Branch of the Canadian, .-gion. in Friday's paper, concern- iz Ilie scale of wages being set by the local U.l.C. for outside con- gtiactors. I may say that the C.'in.i- dian Legion does not necessarily cndorse the opinion of its indivi- ldual members. In so far as ilils illranch is concerned. it has ni- wnys found the local office of the. lUl.C. most co-operative andimillim-..g of doum-5, pv-'ht'fIN'PF P05511110 hnW'- IZIWH; As a remedial measure, India VFii'”"” "'0 P''919”'"f0 "1 "m'-I135 foundrd the National Mal- il'10.V"i0'll- aria Control Progriini. designed I am. Sir. ctr. STANLEY G. BRY.-'tNF,l President Charlottetown Branch 1 Canadian Legion I'l(OGRl-ISSIVISTS. F.'l'(,'. I . . Sir,-The author of "Let! Tiilk it Over" says that his friends are input to refer to h-im as "small d".- ,I hasten to assure him that I didl mot. use the other sobriquet with; i.-iiiy design to classify myself as an enemy of his. Not being conversant , with the intimate predilections as- sociated with that. "traditional" cogn-omen, I was motivated solely by the fact that it. seemed to give: me more happiness. And since DfOgl'8&SiVI5l..S make liappinessl among school children their para- mount. preoccupation. I assumed that. they would not. begrudge a modicum of that invaluable coni- modliy even to an adult. who has undoubtedly incurred their ana- thema. Besidcs, it. seemed to me that. the epithet "small" had over- tones susceptible of umbrageous interpretation. In reaching that, subjective conclusion. I was 111-l rlulglng in what Deweyists label "independent thinking." Anyway. it is gratifying to know that. there is I "middle of the road" party in the educational world. What intrigues me. how- 'erer, is the fact that self-styled "middle of the road” men like Mr. iChandler and "small it" lea.n so perilously to the progrenivlst aldc. Now, don't. think that I have a par- ticular animus against. Mr. Chand- ler. I know scores of his ac- quaintances and the consensus of opinion is that he is A prepo.sses- slng gentleman. I don't. know him personally. That. is a pleasure Ii am still looking forward to. But. if you read his review of "So Lit- tle For The Mlnd". you will won- der why so busy it man devoted so much time and space to no worth- less vi book. The same tendentlouaneu re- veals itself in "small d"o appraisal of the debate. After stating that. he agreed with many of the argu- ments against. progreuiviom, he levelled I volley of lronlcal cpl- thets at the traditlonaliato. - - - "tho dear dead past, etc." He in- timated that their mint were hermetically sealed ogalnat. any modern ideal. I don't. know which method was in vogue when "nmall d" learned 1 to read. But. if his reading on the lines equate: his reading between them, it isn't anything to bout of. My mentioning that Island educa- tional leaders ltudied and obtain- ed degrees from Canadian maln- lnnd and American universities VII to refute his intimating thot. education here is u idiosyncratic dustry may well revert to earlier condi- u pomp growing. and not to tions. there was great variety of design and in dlvidual models were easily to punch out steel body parts. Now. how ever, with the advent of plastic bodies in- I music solvent of mlau i dlviduolity of design should again be to the fore. Students of the Manitoba Technlca Institute, for instance. made a plastic car body from forms made by themselves. In the days of custom-built cars recognizable. Mass production changed all that because of the enormous cost of the presses used voice I blanket. damnation of the practice. "It. it unlikely. how- - ever. that -t dent: who qualified at institutions where progressiv- ism is rampant were not infected with the virus. It in heartening. to know that. I am dealing with I nuin who has n ' hence of humor. That. attribute ll at."-1 inu. My fooetlmu account of tho Dewey mound of touching the I mooning of the word "jump" wu interpreted an I intended it. to ho. Nevertheless there are pemgoglcni techmquu practiced locally that -.l.v takes the largest toll of deiitlis osis are the biggest. killers. Mai- . large Indialogue By Gerald Steele Illa Year 8.1) ARE DOING ABOUT THEM n.i.s AND wan rum: After ll?.'lil1lil.l'iil0li vrliicli direct-. in India, inalaria and tubercul- aflfects an unibelieveably sectioii of Llie population estimated by some to be well over, 20 nilllion. Of thcse cases. over t.wo million dic either directly or iiidirectiy while ii. large part of the remainder are incapacitated for long periods of time or for. life. From this loss of man- power. production in agriculture is hindered consldcrably.';iiid in addition to the loss merely in terms of food. the country suf- fers A financial loss of many .1 rid to offer protection to 125 million of the population. After much research lll conjunction with UN. organ-izatioits and other interna- tional bodies the Indian Govern- nieitt has embarked upon this program. As a preventive force. trained men inspc-cl. poter.-tial trouble areas and remove stagnant water and vegetation from drains and (IEDFCSEIOIIS. Various chemicals fllld DDT are then uscd in nrcns where the po-i ten-tial danger cannot be removed such as village tanks or irrigat-ioii systems. The presence of these village tanks, or large open cis- terns. as well as the familiar rice paddles which are flooded for a- bout four months in the year. of- fer many difficulties in mosquito control. In many areas, instaiices of malaria were so high that cacti persoii could get two or even three; attacks fl. year. This situation has improved now by about 80','.'.. . . . l Tuberculosis riinking next fol malaria, kills from 250 to 500 peo- ple out of every 100,000 of the population. Due to malnutrition and the ravages of other diseases. resistance Ls very low union: the masses to that the number of tub- ercular people is increasing. Un- f-omunatcly sanatorla are ex7t.re- mely scarce so the prospects of meeting this great threat. are not very Il1EZlI”If1tliil'.lZ'. Hovtiever, even if sanaboria were abundant, the pomibility of finding out the vic- tims of TB in India would be led- sened'for various reasons. Cholera is a dread disease spread very rapidly through the water supply of the different vil- lages. Incidence of death from cholera is about .7 per 1000 of the population, or over V, million deaths per year. More widespread use of certain Sulplia drugs now is helping larger sections of the population against this killer. Small-pox claims less than 100.000 deaths per year and is largely un- der control. Plague in decreasing in lnt.en.slt.y since 1890 when over one million loot their lives in its great. sweep. Even lyet. modern Sulpho drugs and Btreptomycine have not been able to decrease its number of victims from the present 300,000 each your. C C O Leprosy is a very real threat in India for here are found about one million of the estimated 5 mutton oufferc-rs in the world. some of then are found in lepro- urluma. but the greater number cm be found wondering the streets on beggars and den-lieu. Beciiuoe -j- have more merit. as onllnthenlca than as mental disciplines. Finally, it is not. practicable for me to cite local personally veri- fied exempllflcatioiui of progra- Ilvlam. I am not actually engaged in pedagogical work. Therefore. were I to invite myself to a par- ticular school in on invesiigatlng capacity, I mlptrt. be told politely, but firmly, to go to "Hellgolond." But. that does not. prevent me from knowing on ,cul.horlt.u.l.lve hearsay that. there are many pro- xrouiviala. at least of the crypto brand. in key educational pool- IIOBI. I am. Sir, ot.c., W. J. !ZNR.IOH'I'. Charlottetown. R "so weakened by it. that. they are 'iidequ:ite finances. lack of medical .U. Student of this fact: the disease is diffic- ull. Lo control and although three new drugs of the Sulphone group have been found effective, ade- quate control is not yet. in sight. Again the inadequate water sup- ply can be blamed for the 100,000 deaths caused each year by diar- rhea and dysentery. This ac- counts only for those who die and doemnot. take into consideration many times that number who are unable to perform their neces- sary function in society. Again man-power drops and takes along with it. agricultural production. From my own experience I have found the Iridilan peasant to be rrither careless in regard to the cleaiiliiiees of his water supply. It. is not uncommon to see people drinking from li'rigat.ion ditches, puddles or village tanks where every kind of mobile life seems to find its way. 0 O This summary of the health situation covers only those aspects on iiliicli I have information. It must not be thought that the :- bove are the only maladies the Indian peasant known. He is in- flicted by every disease known to us--except stomach ulcers it. is said -and many more. Conditions pre- vlously described partly explain the reason for the intuiaity of these ills, but. the remedies are a long way from realization, due to in- cquipmeiit and accomociaticm. ill- lleriicy, poor communications and many other social factors. An important development of late is the realization by the com- mon man that poor conditions of health are not. inevitable. The Indian peasant is coming more and more to realize that his misery is not. something necessary and that it can be removed. In fact. he is now beginning to demand that something be done, and that is it goal thing for he wlu try more to help himself. Workers find now. what. instead of this former reluctance in face I doc- xg Notes Bx. "lngihl may be I living Iongno but some speakers nuke it sound pretty dead" - London Free Press. A subscriber asks if we know of a way to keep potatoes from sprouting. You; cut them. -Petei-- borough xxnnilncr. One good uiiii; out can be said about winter is that you can get all the way home before the ice cream melts. - Siraiford Beacon- Herald. Too but than in no way of framing a labor law to prevent kids from working their mothers to death. - Hamilton Spectator. one thing about moving fre- quently - you may not have many good friend: - but you end up with curtains that will fit almost my kind of window. -Stratford Beacon-I-Ierald. It has taken 3 long time to make the discovery. but. slump in any city are a heavy cost. In money. plid out in fire, police. welfare and other services, they take seven times more than the revenue they provide in taxes. - St, Catharine: Standard. Square and commanding I Ilng view of our beautiful City Gar. dens, are still to be let. The io- maining portion of the building is held by The Examiner Pulilisrr in; Company. entrance to The Examiner being by A door and stairway ingeniously placed in the front of the building I0 that it does not subtract materially from the breadth of the large single- pane show windows of Mcssn. Harris and Stewart and Mcssiv. McLeod and McKenzie. The busi- ness and editorial office: of Thu Examiner are on tho first floor (first door to the right), wtiilo the jabbing room, composing room and press room occupy A largo part of the second floor. "Messrs. McKinnon and Mrlman are now supplying the buildinx with hot water apparatus. and. :1- together, tho London House hu been thoroughly repaired and im- proved according to plans furnish- ed by the architect. Mr. W. Harris, jr., and under the super- lntendence of the contractor. Mr. Cox. As it stands today. it rp- flectl great credit on the owner. Charlottetown can 1. 1 I.) BUSINESS IMPBOVEIIEENTS Id "Among the many improvements which have been effected in Char- lottotown during the season now closing, perhaps the most notice- able on those apparent in the London House, the establishment of Messrs. Beer Brothers, and Dodd's Building, which includes tho hnndsotno Itoro of Messrs. Dodd and Rogers and Dr. Dodd's Medical Hall. "The London House was well and substantially built by the Messrs. Davies about twenty years ago, and has ever since been the centre of attraction for purchasers of dry goods. The ground floor has now been divided by a. par- tition running its entire length. Messrs. Harris and Stewart retain the larger store on the corner, which is still one of the finest in tcwn. They have an elegant show room in the rear for mllllnery and mantles, And about two-thirds oi the first. flat for the sale of cloth- ing. carpets, house furnishings, and hats and caps. The smaller ltore on the ground floor is occupied by Messrs. McLeod and McKenzie I! B Kentlemenis outfitting estab- lishment. Messrs. McLeod and McKenzie have also a large. airy and well-lighted work room on the second floor. "Two offices, fronting on Queen tor or get a needle. village people fight. for I. place in the line-up and demand a. needle for every- thing bot.horin1z'h-lni whether it. be the common cold or a broken bono. I I 0 Combatlig illness in India. there are three general smtemis of med- icine followed: the Western sys- tem as we know it. The Auryvedlc autumn coming from the ancient Vedic writlriaa through the I-lln. duh, and the Umnl system. com. lng from the Greeks through the Voslems. Although sentiment. is swinging more to the Western Jyo- tem. the latter two schools are still quite strong. Regardless of the system followed however. there is much work to be dam by all. In this battle for human lives. new emphasis is placed on research in India itself, and in the training of more docton pnd nurses. with the help of other countrieo and of international health organlutiuno such as the WHO, India. may one day be mic to lift her head and assert that as for u her death rate is con- cerned. she in no longer one of tho moat unclvllized countries in J ???oe3fi'lGwm "MY DIIND TO ME A KINGDOM IS" Imagination shows to me Horizons for on land and In--- In wonderment I contemplat- The universe. so vastly great. This earth we love. and when we stay, Turns on its axis ovary day, And ..out ..In space so cold ..ond clear. Goes whirling round the sun each year. With night. The starry bright. That. shed a weird mysterious awe, I gun on wondrous sky, and mocnbums glow o'er land and on when waters ow. My mind you rooming for wide. , To gather memo:-lo. that abide Through all tho ninety year: I've seen, Through up: and down. my lot has been. and I've wondered for, Wu wandered w 0, . And memories linger side by side. keen. I've crossed the llockled, wild and free. And nailed the great Pacific sen, NIQP stay: with all tho lovely winter days. anniversary. February ma. Niagara's foaming folio I'vo lean. And felt. the pnlrlo cold moat To southern cllmes. when num- -'H. R. Lockerby, Fortune Cove. yin Howlan. P.E.I. Written on the Iwcnslon of hi: nlnelleth birthday The Waxz lilo Inndn in little ones my: llP..!Y:IIlIhIlk0'y5o "N er get through sitting up with thin" thin you're sitting up for them": gig. I Krandfather. - Toronao Woman of the week mm ly is Bertha, wife or an 1"? irllaber name of Raymund 590l'lze. Bhc is an Eskimo. The weer trapping alone on the sewanil peninsula. She had never driven a dog team in her life -that's . mIn'l .i0b - but when her hug. band was severely burned by an exploding gasoline tank she did in. only possible thing to save his 11:, With no previous experience in handling nine unruly malemut;-5 IIIO hitched the beast; to the sled placed her auffalns husband ,.. board. and began it wild joun-m for help. The woman's feat 10... her across 30 miles of now, tundra in for below zero weathpy in the dark of the Arctic, night running most of the distance bp.' hind the team hauling her 1...... band. The trail was rough and steep downgrades threatened rm. ersl times to upset them until they reached the nearest village .. Kotzebue. She probably saved his life. said physicians at. the Alaska Native Service Hospital in the vii. lage. -Sydney Post-Record. George Davies, Esq. It is worthy of remark that. the stone sirlo- walk in front of the London House was one of the first lnlrl down in this city; and that now, after twenty-flvo year: have elaps- ed. citizens generally are only just beginning to imitate the good ex- ample. "The old wooden front of tho store of Messrs. Beer Brothers ha! been pulled down, and I new om of brick and stone-ono of the handsomest and most imposing in the city-has been erected. There are two very large plate window: on the ground floor, and six larp double ones on the first and sec- ond. The interior on the ground floor has been entirely remodel- led . . . "A parapet has been placed all around the Dodd's Building, and it. has been-made practically Ili"" proof from the. outside, bcsirlr-i having its appearance greatly im- proved. Mr. Dodd has introduced Iomethlng new in show windows. and judging by the large flat stones placed in front of the building. one of the best airin- walks in the city." -The Examiner. Oct. 16. 1383 E The Age old story; Tint which is born of the flesh in flash; and that which is born of the Spirit In spirit. rniiHTsTrt;uo iiavsrrzix acianum eacixnm um dinosaurs dominated the earth hiiitil about the world. 160,000,000 years ago. PROFESSIONAL CARDS M. Albun Farmer. 9.6. n.A.. LLB. IIIPIIIQI and solicitor Bank of Commerce nulldlng Charlottetown Money to lam Palmer 8: Hcslcm A. J. IIASLAM. B.A., LLB Bur-tuber. Eta. Bank of Nova Scott: Chlnlben OI-rlotiietown. P. E. I. MONEY 1'0 LOAN Dr. W. R. Carson Frodoric A. Large. 9.0 Barrister, solicitor. Notary loyal Bank f Canada Bulldinl Chariot town. P. B. I. Loan: on City and Farm rropci-tloo J. A. McGuigcn BAEBISTEB. 30lJ,CI'l'0B. 3'5- NOTABI. aw. con-to Bulldlnl Gordon E. Mcclllllcn. I.A.. Li..I.. lo-will-. u"?Dool. New oi-now. 1-mo cninornao-ion fun g G h IAIIIHTII, IOLIKXTOII Eu-v onnfj,-,1-';1':fw,. in Princo st. - cimiotmowv Dill an an Prlnoo at "M5 "'3 .. Iyron J. Grant. 0-D- Dr. A. L. Maclsuac .,. .,,,, 2::f,"""”...,.,... no nanny-1 ' (opposite lento lloul) ”"'"" '”"" Allison M. Glllis. I-I--I "I-0!” W"-DING unions. souon-on. Im- in unison co. rim. an no llohnond It. - unrioumwu Phone DI Or it A Mociochorn 'm---"'m"'i . . l;lNI'vI.T Jo Au "o' mam pp", 0Pl'0lII1'IlIT 5" non cimmmon Clinic 5"” m m Quinn no. hint out (km a chopper. Auncyi tMoDONAl.D. CIIIIRII If CO. ciuurunn AOOOUNTANTI Iloolnol. Qllcboc. Ottawa, Toronto. loin! Join. llorbrooko, Vancouve- Kirkland Lake. Mansion. IIOIIIIOII. Gloria” ' .. Idlnontom CIMO Ill:-. Charlottetown. DI" 373' H. I. DOANI I COMPANY - u'0:Al:'IIlII Awooiqnun - VS 13! noucuuuuu T". '-r.o.anI" .uxnoI.rlI Iv. IANNINO. 0.A. nu r. uumncou. o.:i. some 4. nrnm. M moor oflloou as llollfn. Iloneton, or. hours. an I o-M-Mill udoorncrlrovl