first; ‘Ill! GMILITT TIWII IIAIIIAII Iorllll‘ Dill) llillldlfl Ill III"- fifllillslllotCol-HKCIIIQIKIML ........."*'.s.'si-a'.=.t. arr.” "* " I I . Idler and Dunner Alodnto Elton: Walk Ilrlotl, l-(LNJLI- (01: rein flervlll ‘The Strongest ‘Memory is Weaker The! flu Weakest Ink.‘ IlllolLDJ-D- =J.I.Inrnm.IJ.l udl-Iutlna THURSDAY, REALM. 19M Motor Gasoline .?__.. ‘Iliere is no prospect at present of motorists obtaining a larger supply of gasoline, and the present ration may be reduced, all depending on the progress of the war in Europe, according to a recent statement in Parliament by Hon. C. D. Howe. "If the Allies are able to win a reasonably quick overpowering victory," he said, "our position ivill probably not deteriorate to the point of further curtailment, due entirely to the cori- servation measures wc have introduced and en- forced. lf, lroivever, the invasion should de- velop iiito a lung bitter struggle. there is a prob- ability that we may all have to do with less gas- flii in Cziuadzt." The Nlinister‘ ivzrs answering the reports that the supply’ of gasoline ivas not so short as it was represented to he, and he showed the very heavy demands for both motor and avia- tion gasoline for ivat" purposes. It requires 2,000 gallons of fuel to move an armored division one mile, and a fleet of 5.000 bombers and escort fighters raiding Ger- many uses up some 5,250,000 gallons of avia- tion gasoline. "These fighting men iiitist not lack fuel for one single instant because of our carelessness, selfishness, or waste," he said. The request made to motorists in 1942 for the voluntary saving of gasoline reduced consuinp- tion by only 30,000,000 gallons. Rationing was then adopted and consumption was lowered by 156000.000 gallons. In spite of the saving through rationing, the inventories on March 31 last were 55,000,000 gallons less than at the commencement of rationing, when the stocks on hand were "uncomfortably low." Consequently, the Minister declared that "this is not a time for other than the most es- sential driving.” He stated that misuse of petroleum products “has been kept to very small proportions through the vigilance of the Gcv- ernment's enforcement officers." But there is still considerable abuse of the rationing system. Greater activity of the Government in check- ing it, would encourage the best response to the appeal now necessarily made to all motorists. _____________*___ The Shoe Changes Feel Senator W. M. Aseltine says electoral re- form is needed to prevent minority candidates from being elected to the House of Commons. He says the single transferable vote should be adopted for single-member tidings, and pro- portional representation for the multi-member tidings. What moves the Senator from Saskatche- wan (who \\‘ll§ defeated when he ran for the House in I926) at the present is the spectacle of his own province where, he says, the C. C. F. won 90 per cent of the seats with 53 per cent of the total vote. However, notes an exchange. a little study of the records shows this as nothing new, ex- cept in the name of the party that won. In both the i934 and i938 Saskatchewan elections the Liberals won lieavily—inore than 90 per cent of seats in 1935, and around 77 per cent in r938—with less than 5o p21‘ cent of the total vote on each occasion. The Senator says a similar "landslide" could take place Federally. Evidently he has his eye on the C. LI F.. as he would hardly be calling for electoral reform to keep his own party out of office. Demands for electoral reform. curiouslv enough, are switching ovcr to the old parties. lt used to be that this sort of thing came from the so-callcrl radicals who ivcre always tip to something to keep the two older parties from making it a straight two-way fight. But now that parties of a different liuc are getting into power. or threatening to get there, it is a Coir- scrvative who is calling for reform which. in the good old (lays, \\.‘llLll(l have been heresy. .‘\ll the same, Senator Ascltiiie nlight be having his eye on the chart. He might be sav- ing to himself that a big protest vote against the l.i rls i.- roinfiig up, and that in provinces \‘.‘i1 a (i. (I l". man doesn't win nu the pro- test. a nice bundle of choice votes might wheel I I Cdhoervative. Religion And Life AmOng recent publications is "Worship and the Common Life." By Eric Heyinan, NLA. (Cambridge Vniversiry- Press). Tihe need for the integration of religion and life. of the de- votional attitude as expressed in worship with the ethical as expanding into social action is. or should be, clear enough to all who are cori- vinced that apart from religion there is no highway through life and no end that either ex- plains or justifies it; and, therefore, to Chris- tians Mr. l'lc_vnran's book is written round this central theme. The author is a member of the Society of Friends, who combines in a remark- able way a deep sense of the Vfllllt! of thr- wit- ness of that Society and the belief that iii the work of integration it has a particular vocation to fulfil with a very strong hold upon those conceptions of chirrchnianship with which the term “Cathnlic" is generally associated. He is, in particular, profoundly Sacramental in his whole outlook. though he has his defence of the Quaker disuse of those Sacramental ordinances which mean so much for the great majority of Christians. He feels keenly the need for Chris- tian iiriity. If "the common life of man is to be method will be "in the experience of ucramen- will need a long period of peace, he believes. of I00 pounds. ernment had a for the Privy Department and to be postponed. search Committee em research visualized b year April 1, Caribbean Research African Research include a hand sica. tal worship,” and for this there must be "the eUective realization of intercommunion between all who are one in Christ." In the the question of the relationship o of Friends to the Christian Churcl and in connection with re-unioii, is posed, if not solved. Earlier chapters, such as “The In- dividual in the Common Life,” rather suffer Tim from an attempt to say too much, and what is said is not always said with sufficient iniplicity. But much is said wisely and arrestingly, as, for instance, when Mr. Heyman criticizes the ex- tremes of humanism and of the Borkian the- ology. The reader who will take trouble over it will find much in this book that will make him think and help him to think. .______._______. EDI IURIAL NOTES e- More than 40o acres of marshland in east- ern England, owned by H. M. King George VI, have been reclaimed and ploughed, and are now producing crops of wheat, peas and potatoes. ween George ll, King of the Hellenes, born this date 1890; great grandson of H. R. H. Prin- cess Victoria, Queen Victoria's eldest datighter, who married Frederic, German Emperor; his mother was the late Princess Sophia of Ger- many, who itiarricd Cons Hcllenes iii 1889; George married Princess Elizabeth of Roiiniania, the marri solved in 193 81bit Church becomes wealthy and its member- ship scanty. One hundred years ago the Church of Scotland was almost penniless and in 1841 it reported it was unable to pay a printer's bill Today it is worth more than $150,000,000 and is the owner of many thous- ands of acres. Its stock exchange investments were so astutely chosen that the Church went. through the slump early in the 1930's without loss, according to a report made in i934. But in the past decade the General Assembly has faced an acute problem of loss o and today I I Ii ll Prime Minister King announces the Gov- plan ready for a new building Council, the External Affairs the Prime ltlinistefis office when the war broke out, but the project had The matter came up on a clause in a bill t0 set up a new national health and welfare department dealing with supervis- ion of governmental buildings to ensure the health of civil servants. great necessity for a close examination of the existing conditions in practically all public build- ings and things have become worse than ever under war conditions," said Mr. King. “As soon as the war is over, I hope that some of these situations may be immediately relieved." i IF 1i l The Bishop of Fredericton having ruled that an Anglican Priest cannot run both his parish and political activities a Rev. i! I l‘ I The Annual Report of the Colonial phasizes the necessity for y the Committee during the i943 to March 3i, r944. A re- serve of scientists in many fields such as medi- cine. sociology, fisheries, anim archaeology is to be trained by onial Research Fellowships. come from anyw ill t i 4' Mr. Eric Johnston, president of the United States Chamber of Commerce, an American cap- italist. wants no part of the tem for the United States. Yet his experience as an industrialist and as a Captain in China combine to give him a preciation of material progress and of beings. The spectacle of M his glass in a Tashkent fa "the to know how he came to talk like that, Montreal Gazette. Mr. Johnston ' home to tell them. the Soviet Union in the United States ca after the war, and Notes By Tlle Way a Plto-lffi] “us. Tn P.E.l. Farmers The Japanese Beetle a; A. M. Bell. M. n. ure of the world's tn- ure of our oDlmr- lr Wllmot lbewls. The n's Wuhtnztvn oor- M°'° "u" swim °hu‘"" (Continued from yesterday’! Guardian) To destroy the Japanese Beetle when 1t has attained full adult de- velopment cnn be done by varlous ways. A simple method often used at the appearance of the first ar- rl ls to shake the plant g so that all lnto a suitable dlsh. held. underneath the 1n d has‘ been placed mixed wlth water. When the beetle fa sub- merged ln this lt soon dles. This can be done only as ln the early mo rrlr causes the beetle to be slow movements l‘? 001 unltlu ln all parts of try. According to is recent nda ofcroaslngs. no school ehlld as been kllled ln a for ten years or m Safety Patrol mem —New York Tlmu . ___. The Chinese News Service dec- a’ homes ln the Pre- Szesliul and Jungyang as two-storey mountain caves that rernaln warm 1n winter d cool ln summer. and that are ttve in all seasons as bomb- proof shelters. They would ar to solve several housing prob- lems still bothering our citizens.- OX1 hen it. ls cool- ing. when cool and often shams However when the alr becomes ‘i. d... g "s. y, g wnrm this insect becomes dew Ind “w!” PUBLIC FORUM mggiéy reunion b: ffllo d III The hotter tn..- nlr the “I-"fle" “WI- he I". and on the nsnnllulliendoeafiroohlnno slightest disturbance of the plant on which lt ls feeding or on the ap- proach of a person It very quickly leaves and flies to a more distant APPLE MAGGOT sPRAY plant to feed. Another method ls the use of traps suspended on lron Slr,-—'I‘he first: spray to control from Apple Maaiizot in Prince Edward ng, ivhich ls Island should be implied on or u- bout Jtullsy 25. arxlmthe Lsccrzlfnienlécuy l e1 ' l w lch ls the M18115 - $8 9H8 8 0 0 . a Id emm ed ti? ilmshu. prefer, 1b. in 40 gallons of water. or ff you cannot. obtain Arseriate of Lead. them to i, when use Ansenate of Lime, 9’. lb. and ha], the Hydrated Lime i’. lb. to 40 gallons Researches begun before the W81‘ should maintain B ln the struzele to the war. They have produced wool- len goods that will not shrlnk no matter how many times they are And they have prsduued a woollen fabric that wlll_ dresses with the sheen of silk, 11n- gerle wlth a satiny flnlsh, and still retain the warmth of el St. Thomas Times-Journal. tantiue. King of the rods aboutJO feet where they are feedl usually made of tin or sheet iron age being dis- 5; his heir is his nephew, Paul, who married Princess Frederica, daugh- ter of the Duke of BFlIIlSWlCE, and who has one son, born in June, i940. ted that they hold they try to get at the , construction ls such that they can- ‘ifnvgater’ not cling to the polished surface Rubber needs of the country - milltary and clvlllan together~for the year haveoogeen officially esti- can be produced. That is 300.000 tons that wlll not be available for clvlllan use. 1t means that several million civilian cars won't. get even one tire, no matter hOW dGBPEX- abcly they need it. want. to keep on ought to bear that. ln mind t they have by keeping ceptable filled wlth which soon kills them. The ball. used ln these traps generally: con- sist of 10 parts of geranlol and one part of eugenol to which can beladded 1-2 part of plienyl alco- ho Another method that is used to that. kills by con plied by using a hand power sp er. One of the most satisfn sprays of this type ls compo sodium oleate and an _ extract of pyrethrum flower»: dil- uted with uiater. This should be Lead arsenate ls also often used to spray the plants and leaves uhere the beetles feed. It: ls used at the rate of 4 pounds to 100 gallons of water in wlth a. sticker-such (containing at least 4 per cent of rotenone) when at the rate of 4 pounds to 100 gal- lons of writer plus 3 pounds of rosin residue emulsion as a stick- ing agent-ls very effective as u. to use a spray there Isn't. a motorcycle cop trail- inif them-Providence Journal. Some indication ol the damage f membership women predominate in congregations to the extent of 80 per cent. bombs t5 given by the fact that 4,121 places of worship 1mm fflm- y churches to humble village chapels, have been churches completely estroycd and 1281) damaged. The church of Scotland has 10st nine churchcs, but 1m are destroyed and damaged total 234. 'I'he Free churches have lost ln proportion more heavily than the other churches. One reason ge roof space of many buildings and the nif- ury. It ls necessary g wlth incendiary pply this spray every 5 0:" Congregationalism lost, or had damaged, e Methodists 1,316. and yterlaris eighty-tyre. — "I believe there is a -p0lS0llOllS spray ls often used around home grounds here, consisting of 4 ounces ydrated lime to 5. gal- Thls mixture must ted to prevent the settling to the bottom of the container. This spray wlth- A second application ys ls usually neces- ere is heavy infesta- Pyrethrum contact also are effective ln klllln when it. to well wetted wlth e entoinologlsts of the Unl- partment of Agri- cen working on the is beetle and how to and are using mllk Alarm has been quite properly expressed over reports of a quency throughout the Dominion. untniuo was supposed t0 have had e opening of the war, with away from home, ln and many mothers work- t the same time, F. J. Coleman, Minlo, N. 13., has with- drawn as one of the Liberal candidates for Sun- bury County in New Brunswick's forthcoming election. Mr. Coleman announced: "The rea- son given me by the Bishop for taking such a stand is that in his opinion politics and the work of a priest of the church do not mix and that as long as he remains Bishop lie could not con- scientiously give his consent to any priest sit- ting in the Legislature and at the same time carrying on with parish work. However. the Bishop told me that I would still remain good standing as a priest of the diocese and would be given a parish if an tical career terminated." the authoritative report. of bureau of Statistics. that. juvenile dellnqu the year 1943 actual] compared wlth the blroukht before the wlth 13.802 in 19 11.4 per cent. It ls added 1943 total we; still 28.7 higher than ln 1939." its consequences must countable for that. the fact that there infested grounds. d d results. Tlme will tell effective this wlll prove. In the summary panese Beetle. brief- the lffe cycle of most of this time stage of life and submerged l last year ls matter for There ls no justt plaeency, however, BlilOIl of effcpg‘ to p DwDe on the rg t path ln disturbed times-Hamilton specta- larvne for ll months (J h: succeeding year); ays (June and July): 46 days (July to Sept- transformatlons from ge of existence to the next t occur at the same ndlvlduals, there some overlapping of dates. eetles often alight on d when my poli- The only female flying in the inn Alr Force ln the Edam ls Squadron Leader l - Her story was told an Australian alr- cnrs, airplanes, railway cars sat a message home on goods in tran al husbandry and “med long dist“ granting 25 Col- These Fellows may here in the Commonwealth and Empire. To ftirther regional co-operation, a Council has been establish- ed jointly with the United States. and an East Council has also been estab- lished. Close co-operation between London and the various fields is recnnimen students are to have Certain blrds and skunts grubs when the beetle ex- i. Skuriks dig holes tlngulslied Hylrig Cro that. Snow White i5 a have been. not in the of fancy. but with t on some hundred o eluded ln hei- "tour" raspberries. apples at rlpen early arc hen adequate mea- the first Japanese locality, infestation of th then soon takes place. method. now used em, ls to spray the ded. Scholarship “complete freedom of iii- r;irir_v." Sample recommended schemes of study bunk on African languages. hydro- grapl-ric stirveys and coconut research Colonial Fellowships shall be versity graduates tinder 35. They allowance of about $1600 for a iod. She has a daughter serv new White ls only one of an s05‘ from B“ spray under high pressure, which are out of productl carry a basic m has bee“ a ma" _r ‘(t T m,» u“, l,_ t e. ensie areas are l PC BC London Leach so many farmers to d be done about the buys up old cars wlth the a ln extra gas ra- hich he ls not en- Is he not as irullty of an e person who trles to once ln a while n case of this The latest example punese Beetle has arrlv- n the State of Maine, but as as now known. lt appeared ln the Marl Conlmunist 5y? matter of a llttle time The potential dan l that its maln asset its rich fertile lands. t Injures or even lm- pairs the products of this Marine t. for stealing money es and for theft of s. 8111's coat at. a. dan rt hearing it dev glrl had a ear reg oould not drive. The m fnqulred further and fou r. Johnston raising ctory in tribute to tremendous progress made here in last twenty years under Communism and Soviet system” may jolt his colleagues of Chamber, and it will certainly make them w areas of lnnd ar Duetethelulberofourdrlvorlbellgllvellfll i by the leloetlve lerviee fortlie propose of u- siningfornorslnthelrhyingoperstlolmllll hpessibh for us to maintain our full K1100 fertbeneltiwowoeks. Wenbs-lldoeurutloit to his eon of our customers, who, we how, willioderstoldtbeelreunstueesudsrwbleli .wsanoblilbdlooperutefcrtblsperlod. HTS llXl 8r BllS SERVICE Quebec, whether dtsefters er-‘Tt. l iii} t from mllltary iiiirfiif reply was that hts time we! in oh tak into any such dlscusslonrr," lwhlle Hon. Hunuprey Mitchell. Min- lster of Labor, said there were no special manpower order; uffectln; Quebec, and that all regulations f am, Slr, e F. M. CANNON, Offlcer-ln-charge. Dominion lmtomologlcal borwtorv ..i_______ MR. CIIANDLEWS LETTER re the llquor traffic on P. E. I ore you goln to get at. them ff you cannot gve them the fear of God? The only other alternative ls to give them the fear of the law. all the llquor and beer that can close up the law-breaking ll you how: could not be closed. so a plcketln day was placed on that house, and when the proprietor went out renew his supply, they found lt. I think that man Bot two nlne- them lf the authorities want . A few months wlll do the trick. How can you control something that. the people think they want? It ls supposed to be controlled tn the other provinces, but; as soon as the regular source or legal places are closed each day they have the same trouble as we have on Prlnce Edward Island. The bootlegger ls busy, just. as busy as he ls here. and the goods he sells are Just as poisonous. The difference between Prohibi- tlon and Government Control ls tor for medicinal purposes only. while wlth Government Control every person of a certain age may have an allowance by law. and if that: allowance is not enough they go to the bootlegger as we do. Under Prohibition lf you buy llquor for a beverage. you are a law-breaker, while under the Gov- eminent Control Act, if you buy llquor you are still a gentleman. There is a Qreat. change from the days when a number of our good citizens could go to the schooners that unloaded their car- rzoes of kegs of llquor lnto the dlf- ferent trucks and Private cars. away wlth, thanks to the aero- plane help. Apparently the differ- ent governments require the rev- enue from the sale of llquor find beer. and the public wlth easy money seem to require these stimulants, not for a medicine. but as a beverage. If our government can raise enough revenue wlthout. the rev- enue from the snle of‘ llquor, they can soon stop the sale of llquor beer in Prlnee Edward Island. I am Blr. etc- OLD TIMER. wlth regard to the army service were uniform for uie whole of Can- He added that the the meiinlng of these regulations. The consequence of this parlia- exchange was to Place Hon. Mr. Godbout on an unecnifort- able spot. On Tuesday. however. he ublle atategyeatd lrfiiwhlch ravpu a ,, own Referring to the Iflslet r-pcccli. he said hls reference to exemptions was eLuer incorrectly’ reported by the newspapers. or l! correctly reported could only be counted for by hi; having been and having said dld not intend to to say. Mr. Godbaut made no al- tempt. to explain vdiatt it was than llglflth confpse theuAtorile Ilipl- and they slip and fall into a re- $2,: The” "T: “w?” mgmflgijuf}; “um Moth larva which makes large holes on t-he outside of that ample. c gue lnslsted on making of which his mind did Charlottetown. P. E.I. for psychological re It also shows clearly that the Premier, faced with for- n in the Impend- Slrr-The churches have been criticized for not doing their part The churches all preach temper- ance, but whom to? You go to the different churches each Sunday, and the people you see there are not. the bootleggers and law- breakers. The bootlegger and the law-breaker does not go to church. Then how are the churches to "l5 deal wlth them? How are the churches to control the public who patronize the bootlegger and the beer dives? These customers do riot. frequent the churches to hear, the Gospel preached. Then how appeal to the anti-eon- sentlments of a certain he people, and that he Dlfllylllll this same so des lscretloh to the winds. however. he overplayed- his party frends in Otta- The vendor's shops can slupply ICELANDIC NATION-ll- 50M} s e- . h cl t belo d l d. qulred for meglclne Now t ey wvfgaxggegééflgmflfflen to ‘mind 1 d ill And l’ places systems caly an I w [game Sasha‘??? bluows m!“ Some years ago, there was a. .V 5W5 5 place on the corner of Lower‘? Sl-"lggsogfyilgxlalc Queen Street. that. they claimed "we - g '7 . program of twenty-four hours per Mlehl-Y lhlv mountakon high t; Rivera and gushing streams nutunur cf ancient. dreams. month sentences as he was nn old g2‘? hues and anal-Rum gleam. offender, and the place was clos-l ed. You cannot picket every. place at. once. but you can clotse snow- o Ancient belbved land. from'fell to strand e. D Safeguard thy wake and 1.0m: as the sky shall sta M F lllX l-‘AOTOII HOLLYWOOD anurv Airs Mu Footer Pie; _____. Pu 75o and ugllmhctor Pineal" -____ .___ llhx Flute!’ Cold-I‘; u‘ (Mould) - 75o hhrnm, - ______ Sim Tan lotions Skol----____m rvoirsma Suntan Oll _ 3;, 55b! — — — 35o and $5, l‘ I-__-_._____ lillflfitey’! Sun Tan Louie’: T — '- 50o ___- LIQUID srocxrso, MADE iii- ‘No-Btu - - - w, .' "s s t? I- Dllfllln: Leg t8? - _. i: TllE 2 lMOS l“ Great George Strut —_-____ -:i ¢oo0+++o0+e++¢+¢+§+o4~4 Spinning and Weaving Send us your wool to be spun m. yarn and woven into blankets. Thr slle of the yarn In silllle is inedlu and the sizes In the doubled and r-wlsted are flne. meulum ml course. The charges for spin are 27c u pound (or slngls and u. a pound for doubled and lwkted Dyeing colts 25c a pound extra, The charies for weaving lilrnilrrb Ire SL215 each laundered and $2.5! cult laundered and hopper]. Wool for spinning and iveav must be rushed rind all rllrt s burrs picked out. We are buying wool dolly. w and are Ipoylrylgt this highest mam l‘? B prices. paid un lll Munch of washed wool for cumin work only. Wm. Gontlon & Sons Clllrloltclown. P. E. l. _>__ 00» For Foot Ailments cuivsuixr H. J. A. BROWN, D.P. Orthopedic OIIIIlOPOOlST l4! Grout George Street OBAIIUOTTETOWN. P.E.l. Icelandic of Bjamf ed _._______.____. NEW PROJECTS UNDER WAY IN W.V.S. Many new volunteer projects are. y ln Canadian communlt-l that. Prohibition ls su posed to w distribute liquors throug the doc- “om; w" 3mm“, o“, In lflngston the form ant. undertaking, Th EDI-st have been ree altemoons a week meet hospital trains 6 ounded “Duck lrcm Bree for other essential Thnt has been practically done o centres tliroughou Mr. Godbout’s Plea Government's election campaign ln hi5 home constituency of L'Lslet on’ Sunday, his smelt was interrupt-l ed and shortened by a thunder-, storm. but not before Mr. Godbout 08 1- had managed to set. eomehhlng go- ing that he has been lryinl! W" since to atop- Addi-easlng an audh‘ eneo which the Montreal Gazette - described as a. small one not ex e out of produc- tlele glves all fact: ad st ceedlng 000 people, Premier God- botit. according to all press reports, m e the following ‘aatoundl ,1 ternent: "fr there l; e family had no fewer- than “f: WHY Hl\\/ E He has spent six weeks in an attempt to find out if ri do business with Russia what he has to say is of in- terest to all who recognize the powerful part the Soviet will play in the post-war world. He re- marked the signs noted by other observers that the Soviet appears to be reverting to national- isni, in which love of countryi, her history, heroes ' and traditions, replaces Lenin's aim of. world integrated with the life of worship," the one revoltition. To achieve her reconstruction she No doubt there are fnmlll require the use of more t car. but the all controller require them to submit to justify an extra car d this should be fully ore extra books are ls- In the meantlme, lt, wlll be sting to learn whether or even ff he ls a cteeerter from the; army. let hlm present himself and he wlll be exem t from army ser- vlce. I wont to clear. I do not arty there may not be two or three days punlehment. runner‘: rpm are the moat. meful soldlerr on he farm." He added that. he el>0ke in thts regard wlth Ottawa’. sanction. On Monday this extraordinary the House of common-l by the Hon. Gordon Grs/ydon, Conservative lead- , er, and Mr. J. G. servatlve membe for Lake Centre, Saskatchewan. who asked pointedly, pihethsi- Prcmler King approved of l‘ Dlefenbaker, Con- Cozlboutfs statement. and LmrMEN ell-tether there actually were regul- Mlono Ihhh nods farmer's eons " COMPLETE [NSURANCE SER VIC i’ W. K. 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