Guamfian "Conn IMIII Elwin-I IIIIII LII: III Do-" hahllsxed uery week - dny morning II It") Prtnco Stroll. Elarlotuwwl. P. E. I.. by he Tmunnon Comp!” Ltd. 04 King St. W.. Turanln. Uonllnl Office. 22;: iii. uzuly Tower Bldg. Edllur. Frank wuss: Gruenl hllnu cI.IIn A. Burnett Member Cam. :mI).uiy Nculpapcr Publamero Anocinliun c Member of The CanIdian Pren- Member Audit aw;-nu ul Clreulziuuns Inmt lI"l(TA at Sumnu.-r-'.uIo:. hlnulazwe Ind Albrrtun Aullmruod ll Scrlllltl Clans Mril by lhl Pall Office llephrlmcnl. OIIIWI. IN Currier lllmrlolteluwn. .s'un-mcrsldt 115.00 per In- Ium. I-llseutu.-rr Ill P.Ii.I. 89.00. lllhu Pmvlncu Ind ll.S. 512.00 per Innum. "The strongest memory In wcI-lieI'4t.IIIIA- the weakest ink." i iTlIl'llSDAY.7 FEB. 16. I956 -- Matais Decision l'he dc...-non of thc pt-oplc of Malta to throw in their lot with Britain and to make their island home a part of the United Kingdom, as expressed in the rc;-ent referen- dum by a majority of three to one. is of considerable ' importance and significance. For the Maltese them- selves it will mean that they will be represented .in the British Parlia- ment. share in the advantages of British social legislation. and be spared t h e administrative prob- lcms and expense involved in Do- minion status. which had been ad- wcatcd by the Nationalist Party. For Britain, the referendum result is a psychological victory of some magnitude. It is an effcctive answer to Soviet slandering of British col- onial rule, and it is plain evidence of Malta's loyalty to those qualities of freedom and justice which are sym- bolized in the crown. The assurance that the island will remain 8. strong bulwark of British military might in the Medi- terranean is, of course, of inestim- able benefit not only to the Com- monwealth but to the entire free world. There is yet another result of the referendum in which the British people can take special pride. Dur- ing the political campaign preceding the vote fear was expressed in some quarters that integration with Brit- ain might possibly mean a curtail- ment of the rights of the Roman Catholic Church to which the major- ity of the Maltese people belong. By their vote the people showed that this fear was not 6 widespread one. That their confidence will be re- Ipected and honoured and justified goes without saying. Malta has been in British hands for 142 years. Dur- ing that time the absolute freedom of religion has never been question- ed. There is certainly no reason to suppose' that any change will be made now or in the future. And it is good to know that most of the Mal- tpse feel that way about it. ln Saskatchewan Of interest to all concerned in promoting rural electrification in this Province is the detailed account of the results achieved in Sask- Itichewan, appearing in the cur- rent issue of the Canadian Geo- graphical Journal. This has been the largest farm electrification program ever undertaken in Canada. which Itarted practically from scratch in 1948 with 1.300 farms on pop er lines. Last year the figure was 22,- 000 farms; and if the goal of an- other 7,500 farms clcctriflcrl in 1956 is achieved it will raise the total to the half-way mark planned for the Provinces 600,000 rural cltizcns. The project to date involves 23,000 miles of transmission lines. In geo- graphical vastncss the area com- plctely dwarfs the combined trans- mission areas of Ontario and Mani- toba, and both these provinces have cheap hydro power which Sask- atchewan has not. The scheme has been carried out by the Saskatchewan Power Corpor- Ition, a publicly-owned utility. and it has been on R sclf-supporting bus- is. The schedule for niral power con- Iumption was set at rates which. over 8 period of years. would amor- Qize the capital cost of the program. The immediate obligation. the costs of transmissiondines and generating forks, was assumed by the Corpor- G tlon. In the original planning it was - clded that the farmer would put paopercentoftbofarm line cost, ' hlch was around 31,000 per farm. . ' u .. In Ictual practice the 5- ll'IIIEI"l contribution has ranged ” bout 8520, depending on the den- t ty of farms electrified in I project Vj reg. The Corporptlotfs responsib- " Ilty In& when Itpmlkes the trans- . - H r lnltollation. complete with big, 3: Rduwfntln poletoo ' I I-"om that point on. the were a few individuals opposed. mostly for financial reasons. On one or two occasions the normal occupa- tional hazards of stringing power lines have been heightened by the appearance of a wrathful farmer pointing a gun. The power crews are not paid to argue with guns. They leave that work to the persuasive members of the Field Representa- tive Branch whosc job it is to melt resistance. One of the bespways 0i doing thLs is to have the people of 22 projccl arca organized behind the program aml actively supporting it. Public meetings ztrc hcld for this purpose and all are invited to parti- cipatc in the discussion. 'l'hc country residents yy ho ZIVP freoly of their time, to ufile and promote -power projects in their arch. says the article. are the un- sung homes of rural electrification. With the blessing of the Power Cor- poration. they make the rounfls signing up individual farmers. W0l'k assiduously and persuasively. to bring some unwilling farmrr H110 the plan. prepare maps of the urea to be served. and arrange for ill". casement right-of-way for trans- mission lines. it should insllllii” ””" own rural citizcns to read Wllal has been accomplished in this connec- gion in the big western Province. A Grand Old Man Charlottetown was a small un- incorporated town and many parts of this Province were in the pioneer stage when Alexander Cameron was born on Christmas Day. 1851, at Long River. He went West in the early gold rush days. but for the most part he resided here all his life. operating a hotel in Alberton for many years and later residing with his daughter at Elmsdale. He lived to survive all his contemporaries, re- taining his physical and mental pow- ers to a remarkable degree until stricken with aserious illness last November. His death on Tuesday last is noteworthy on account of the wonderful age he attained; but Mr. Cameron set an example in other . ways which are worth recording. He was an exemplary citizen, a good neighbor. I hard worker and I staunch supporter of movements in the interest of his community and Province. Our citizens will join in paying tribute to his memory, and to the sturdy qualities which he carried with him to the end. EDITORIAL NOTES Congratulations to Douglas Wed- dall Cudmore. who has been chosen by the local Rotary Club to be their representative It the "Adventure in Citizenship" rally which is to take place in Ottawa in May. I l C Colonel F. I. Andrew is one of our outstanding livestock breeders and his election to the presidency of the Ayrshire Breeders Association of Canada is a deserved tribute to his achievements in this field. It is the first time this honour has come to Prince Edward Island and it re- flccts crcdit upon the Province as well as the recipient. O O C This is the time of year when re- sidcnts of incorporated villages are holdings their annual meetings to elect commissioners to attend to matlcrs of common concern. Re- ports indicate fairly representative attcndancc at most of the meetings. This is as it should be. Public inter- est is ncccssary to the progress of any community. The most compel- cnt commissioners would be helpless in the face of public indifference. I O O Lord Trcnchard, who passed passed away a few days ago, is to be buried in Westminster Abbey. an honour that comes to few British leaders. It is due to his great work in organizing-the Royal Air Fare.- and making it into an efficient fight- ing force? In I very real sense Lord Trenchard made possible'the heron- defense of the British Isles in tn.- last war. although he .had been re- tired from active service for some time. O O 0 While only three plays are in competition for the Regional Drama Festival this week. local talent is well represented and the players have been conscientious in studying their parts. They deserve public sup- port Ind it is hoped that there will be I large attendance this evening Ind on Saturday afternoon and eve- ning It the performances before III Idjudioator. Aport from the Gnpolltlve lnterclt. the productions if -mliord oxcellent entertain- OTFAWA REPORT Agriculture Minister Gardim:-r's proposal for immigrants - by - the- bushel caused plenty of mirth Ind speculation in Ottawa. And this in spite of being only I three hour wonder. It was born while Immig- ration Mlnisler Plckersgill was lalherii ; himself in his. bath: thus. he said. he first heard the proposal. announced on the 8 I.m. radio news bulletin. It was killed when John Dicfenbaker with poker face jump- ed to his feet at Parliament's open- ing Ihat morning. to prompt I den- ial by the Prime Minister that the government has Iny such plan. Two years ago Jimmy Gardiner. always Ilertly seeking mean: of reducing our embarrassing riches of unsold wheat. was discussing international trade with Sir Winston Churchill. Wheat is our most vIl- uable export. he volunteered. Em- igrants are the most valuable ex- port from Britain. concurred Churchill. This human freight should be thrown into the scales to balance the unequal flow of Anglo-Canadian trade. Mr. Gard- iner suggested. So it was that last week the Min- ister-unilaterally-mIde his specific proposal: that Canada should give Britain 1.000 bushels of wheat for each British emigrant to settle in Canada. This makes each pound of English flesh, blood and bones worth some 420 pounds of unhusked Number One Northern. As meat. this is costly. But. as I worker. cil- izen and breeder. each immigrant must surely be worth much more than 31,500 to any country in our condition. SLAVE MARKET PRICES I don't know what the price of an Idult slave is on the black mark- ets today. But it seems that Mr. Gardiner grossly undervalue: I British man or woman at this price. I recall that the Ontario Women's institute some years ago priced II farm wife at 869.000. My own cal- culations show that the lifetime labor of the heroic Canadian wife. mother and unpaid helper is worth 3170.000 at 60 cents per hour. Given the principle. the applicat- ion of the Gardiner while slave trade suggests some fuclnatlng possibilities. If an immigrant from Britain is valued at l.000 bushels of wheat. In outraged M. Duplcssls would certainly charge that this was In- Mr. Lazar M Kagsnovlch would like to see 8 tunnel bored beneath the Bering Strait. This would link the Old World and the New. but from the sides opposite to those usually thought of. It would enable shod to North America while wc. for our part, would have ready Ic- cess in Siberia. Mr. Kaganovlrh is I First Do- puty Premier of Russia, and he must know that among the sober men who guide the destinies ol nIf.IonI his suggestion will meet I mixed. if not I cold. reception. He may. however. take some con- solation from the fact that in every country in the world there is one segment of lnclely that will groc' IIII idcI with enthusiasm. Small boys. whatever langulge they mly Ipc-Ik. whatever pnllticn they heIr discussed Icross the dinner table. Ipprnve of tunnels. In theory and In fnct. Ind can hardly have too many of them. FULL OF MYSTERY Tunnel: are connecting links. dork. secret pnssnges. full of my- Ifery Ind the fhrIIt of danger, through which I boy can crawl with tinted breath and thumping heart fmvnrd adventure. Behind him he leIveI the known. the comfortable. the ordinary everydny world. Be- lero him lies he know: not wllnt. But whether It II I plrIte'I tru- lhe love llf Tunnels Winnipeg Fr" Prels the Inhabitants of Asia to walk dry it Just Wouldn't Do By Patrick Nicholson other example of Ottawa's discrim- lnation against Quebec. 50. quite rightly. we would soon ship wheat in exchange for French settlers too. From that. it would be short stop to opening I world-wide bar- ter trade in human lives. Hungry families all over the world would soon be shipping their children to Canada. "We dont want to lose you." parents would say Is loaded emi- grants ships sailed for Canada. "but we can feed your little broth- ers and sisters for I long time on 1.000 bushels of wheat." On humanitarian grounds. our restrictive immigration prejud- Ices would hIve to bow before the hunger of brown, yellow Ind black rIccs. as well as white. There would be the interesting conflict between the desires of the prairie farmer to sell his wheat and the purblind obstacles to liberal imm- lgration. set up by the department of Immigration, by certain Quebec err Ind by organised labour. pMAIL ORDER BRIDES The wheat farmers of Saskatch- ewan could expect some share in this deal. We might have situations like the chestnut about the lonely bachelor settler, who returned the gown to the mail order house be- cIuse it was not the same as the one illustrated in the catalogue - the girl inside was missing. The Gardiner scheme overlook- ed two important points. First. the overburdened taxpayer might not ' be willing to pay the additional load for this give-away program. which It present plans would cost the Iverage family 580 this year. Sec- ond. lhe British government has no power to order citizens to barter themselves for wheat by departing themselves: in fact it has had no such deportation powers since the early whitr population of Australia was picked by the best judges in England. The final doubt about this pIn in whether it would in fact dimin sh our wheat surplus. For Mr. Gardin- er could not deny that I Canadian baby is worth as much wheat as I British baby. So in return for our huge annual export of our most able and best educated citizens- plus I few illegal Italian cIrboot- travellers - we would be the reluct- ant rcclpicnts of hugh quantities of dumped American surplus wheat. ed and relished in I boyish mind. Tunnels are for escape. How many thousand boys have stood on guard while. with the handle of his iron pot. poor Edmond DIntc-.n hacked It the stone and plaster of his prison wall. and have crawled with him thrnugh that agonizing tunnel in lhc grisly Chateau d'lf to learn the wisdom of the ancients from the Abbe Farln. and the sec- rct of the caves of Monte Cristal How many boys have crouched with Sherlock Holmes-and Dr. Waf- son behind the crates of gold napo- Ieons in the darkened vault beneath the City and Suburban Bank. and watched in fascinated horror as I pale. "Ilmoat womInly" hIId grop- ed from the lurid aperture of tho surreptitious tunnel with which the Ingenious members of the Red-Ho ed Luguc hId pierced the throb- bing heart of Iondon? THE MIGHTY POIITIIOI It ms in I Iunnel'I mouth. will lnoxonhlc Inlto monollthn. And how many have held their breath aixwe the page to catch MI whispered. "Patience! Pltlcncnl" II he sunk fplo III In-okon noon. boys eoul.l:Il1 do whom nu- A Medically I Speaking f lyllu-uIINlIIIdIIII.II.D. BED REST AIDS RECOVERY FROM RIIEUMATIC FEVER We hIve no mincle drug: to cure rheumulc fever. But the old trled'Ind true method-plenty of bed rest-II still the but trut- ment durlng the Ictlve Iloge of the disease. Drugs. or course. ploy "WY Diff- Aspirin or sodium nllcylnlo generally reduce the temponturo Ind Ibollsh the joint pIInI within I few dIyI. Recently. some doct- on have been trying ACTH Ind cortisone. P LocIl lppllclllunn to the joints also may be helpful. Maybe your doctor will recommend use of methylsallcyhto Ilniment Ito give Iome relief. If the joint pain Ire really sev- ere. he might advise holding the painful limb or limbs rlgld through use of weights and pulleys. Maybe elevating the clothes from the body by use of I bed cradle will help. Although diet is not particularly Important, the patient probably will want nothing but fluids during the early stages. Thereafter. foods should be especially nutritious. LONG BED REST Even if the heart is not obvi- ously involved, the patient should remain in bed for at least three months. And if the heart is affected it means I minimum of Iix months' bed rest. That's I long time in keel) I youngster in bed and it's going to be I trying period for you parents ll well as the victim. Right here let me warn you to hide any Ilarm you might have. A youngster confined to bed for several months might easily de-. velop I poor mental attitude if he sees you worrying about his recov- ery. BE CONFIDENT THE WI-JATHEIPS WAY ”You just can't trust the weather". we remark- And yet the weather never breaks its word. Because it never promises that dark Will hold off till the lost returning bird II safe. nor that the showers will arrive before The drouth has left its mark nor any wind . Will keep its voice below ll threat- Ining roar. Nor. mischievous. washings pinned In it. The weather. indeed. Was never known to give its word that gold Maples would last for weeks. nor guaranteed A man nor animal respite from cold. Before the Winter wu over. One might say The weather is dependable. in It: way. respect the being win -By Elaine V. Emans In the New York Herald Tribune. Be confident of his recovery- the odds Ire greatly in his fIvor -Ind let him share this conflcence The heart is I pretty tough organ. Tell him so. It's important, of course, that you permit your child to enjoy all the activities the doctor Illowl. The doctor knows better than you when it's okay for the youngster to do certain things. To keep the child's spirits up. keep his mind busy. If you've got I record player or I radio. plIcI it beside his bed. A goldfish or I bird in the room also will help keep him company. Maybe I plant or flower will Irouse his interest if you explnin to him that It grow: I little ucl: day. Keeping his hands busy. ton. in I good ldeI. if it doesn't tire him. Modeling clay. paints. crayons- ihey're all good for passing time. Picture books. magazines. puules, cIrd games-you'll think of I lot of things with which the tempo- rIry invalid can keep occupied. QUESTION AND ANSWER. G. C.: is there Inythlng that can he done for bow-legs? would In operation correct them? Answer: The only method for correcting bow-legs in operation. Unless the deformity is quite lov- ore. such operations Ire not Ing- genled. II I rule. The Dead Sea Scrolls By Belmon Morin Anaochtcd Press. New York It now is nearly nine years since an archbishop of the Syrian Church. Mar Athanasius Ycshucr Samuel. first held in his hnnds I brittle. dusty roll of parchment. The place was Jerusalem in the summer of 1947. Even today, the archblshop's dIrk eyes burn with a deep intensity when he describes that moment. For the cylinder of parchment. together with other rolls. and un- counted thousands of fragments of still others-all found nearby-have come to be known as the ”DcId sea St'T0llS.' Archbishop Samuel. who now administers I diocese of his church in the United States and Canada. was one of the first men to see the scrolls after they were taken from the caves near the Dead sea where they had been bur- ied for centuries. Since the original finds, other caves yielded up still more scrolls and fragments. Evidently. lnng ago. I whole library was hidden Iway in the remote. unlnhabltcd wastes on the shores of the Dead us Who did this? Why? How old were the scrolls? What writings did they contain? Questions sprung up on every hand. The first shadowy indica- tions of what the scrolls might be astonished archaeologists and bib- IicII scholars. For. some books of the Old TestI- ment were quickly identified. along with some of the so-cllled Apoc- ryphhl writings The most thrilling fact was their ago-which was holly disputed It first. They are 2.000 years old, and more-that is. written during the era of the life of Christ. Thus. they provide "undrcamed of lllumlnltlon to the study of bib- Ilcal lItcrIture.' said Dr. Funk Cross. American scholIr who is in Jeruulem working on the scrolls. some of which Ire to be given eventually to McGlIl University, Montreal. which helped finance work in Intlqultles undertaken by the Jordan government. To A. hbishop somuel. the Im- portant point in: "They establish the not that the Bible wII written before Ind dur- II1 In 1) years. 0 rs. however. Iay enough mam-I II It hand to -. keep them working at top Ipeed for the next 50 years. Top speed is slow. Merely un- rolllng the scrolls is I -' " ' punstaking lob. Many of the frag- ments Ire more slivers of pIpyruI that may crumble when touched. They may have to be read with the Isslstance of infrIred photographs. Still. I great deal IIreIdy in known about them. While contro- versy swirls around mIny points, big Ind small, there is I general agreement on some basic facts about the scrolls: 1. They were written 200 B. C. Ind 70 A. D. 2. They were written mainly on luthcr. some on papyrus. I few on metal. Then they were sealed with pitch and carefully placed in large pottery jars. The jars were hidden in the caves. . The language: on the scrolls read so far are Hebrew. Greek Ind Aramaic. The last. I Semitic ton- gue. is generally believed to have been the language spoken by Jesus. Among the original finds. there was I complete copy of the book of Isaiah. It has been described ll "mIgniflcont.' Until this wIs dis- covered, the oldest known copy of Isaiah wIs dnted Iround the 9th between "century. There was Ilso I document called I ”commentIry" on tho book of the prophet. HIbIkkuk. found among the orlglnIl group of scrolls. Dr. MlllIr Burrows, pro- fessor nf biblical theology It YIII and author of the new book. "The Dead Sea 8croIII' Viking. has written of this: "In some respects. this curious little document is the most inter eating Ind important of III those found for the identification Ind hil- ltpry of the group thIt produced Whnt wIs tbIt group? , Here. the first booming: of con- troversy begin to be IIeIrd. Schol- Irn Igrec that I Jewish monntlc sect. l-Ls of whose rnonumy ducod the commcnury. mode the copy of mm. Ind wrote the other documonta found In the first cIvI. Dr. Orou Ion: "The people the scroll: won Emnu, known Aponlyptlc act within JudIlIln.' other Icbolnx-I In less positive in the ldentlflc-Itlon. tuning the term. "lune-type" net. The sect. Ind the my III mem- bers lived-II Iullcrlty. IhIring common meIII. under strict din- ..,. ,... Notes By , 71:.--,v-s-k' v o.;-,'..z-I-3 Pngomfho The u up mod: you Imrt driv- lug your on anymore. you?! lim- ing It.-NlIgIrI FIIII Review I In Ivori I IIII ,1. E3. mild. .Mon 9 thou gun being doubtleu spent docil- Ing fishermen.-CI1IthIm News. An electronic Imln In Now York nu written I book. Sure. but how will It look In the cuItomIry IullI- .,,-'. pom-In on the jnckel. weIr- mg In open-necked Ihlrl. smoking I pipe and caressing I collie dog? ..WlnnIpcg Tribune. , It would be lnterullhg to know whIt hll become of the 1.847 Vic- torlI Crosses tint have been IwIrd- ed Ilnco Queen VlctorlI instituted the medal for valor I century Igo. Probably some Ire lost. some In still in the family of the winner, Ind some have been pawned by men who had to eat.-Windsor Star. Tobacco product! of the future may have very low nicotine con- tent. Present tobacco-breeding work show I trend from 3.0 per cent nicotine in cigarettes of I915 to 2.5 percent in 1935 and 2.0 per- cent in 1955. According to one re- cent research report. tobacco with 0.0 to 0.2 percent nicotine has al- ready been developed.-American Magazine. The crackdown an errant motor- isls. particularly drunken drivers. showed itself plainly in Vehicle Ac- cident Court. where I man can- victed of drunken driving for the first time was sent to jail for 30 days. This was the stiffest sent- ence ever handed out by I New York magistrate for I first offend- er convicted of drunken driving. The defendant also pleaded quilty to being In unlicensed operator. having In unregistered vehicle. fIllure to obey I signal light and carrying improper plates on his cIr.-New York Times. ..AI oreluln ooluul II of doctor: In Just undo debut. In New York. And Ivory III, we ho . II at II I fiddle.-Brian ford - nor. 2 .' the ruins will body triad to1.tIrt the If-WI I . plutonium.--Edmonton Journol... II the ell! Il;NII York Ilou Iut you Iccfdenu Involving mm.- or vehicle: killed an pcnoiu. ih. lured 45.501. Hod thou been tlui cIsuIItIoI of I Ilnglo cItIItrophu win! I wIve of horror would luv: swept the continent! Bow ennui would IIIVE been the determinat- Ion to prevent its recurroncol-or tIwI JournIl. on the sIrIId In London. when newspIperu.u.. Ire wont to con. gregato. I cInny pulskeoper has introduced. I phonon-Iph record with Istonlshlng Iucceu. This re- cord imitate: the sounds of type- writers clicking Ind Drum roll. lng. Every time one of the writing fellers calls up the little wife to explain that he's detained It the office, he puts on the record for background music. hIppily pay. -the pubkeeper at ,ence for the service. Ind goes back to his gin and tonic.-Saturday Review. Unlike West Gernuny. which atIrted Igaln from IcrItcl: Ilter the war. we cannot uy thIt both exports and imports Ire expan- ing. And until we cIn. we must re. sign ourselves to III the penaltiu of I high-cost economy. Ipnrked by the high cost of government Ind sustained by fiscII Ind develop- ment policies which ItIndicIp the export of manufnctures. retnrd bu. Ianced economic development Ind compel us to continue II digger: Ind delvers for our more progress- ive trade rivals.-Toronto Globe Ind MIII. but uuIl'Itry It lowest pl-lcos Ind friendliest Iervlce. Slop with II this weekend. We are lure you wlil make shopping If WeIAhIrby's I habit. DIII 3644 for prompt delivery or oomo In Ind fill up your Ihopphg bu- ket from our shelves Ind aisles of bIrgIina. wI:Ar1u:n3v's ..u...- you the REPEAT OFFER "A" LARGE sees, doz. 45c TOMATOES, pkg. . . . 25: '(&'.??b- I lllltlllllli. - lnmnn" WHITE sn3ilvN SUGAR 10 LBS. 79c 20 OZ. TINS KRAFT or VELVEETTA CHEESE, pkg. HEINZ SPAGHETTI, 2 for 45: .....35c KRAFT DINNER 2 runs. 33: m CAMPBELUS TOMATO SOUP 2 TINS FOR 25: BOSTON Clllflli & SANBORN OWIEW A SANRDRN Iotomm (sucnn) lb. 33: RABBI!-l33.8III.49o EXTRA SPECIALS conuen BEEF LOAF, tin . . . 35: COFFEE,.lb.tin . . . . . . 51,09 INSTANT COFFEE, iar . . I I BAOONJII. ....... 450 Fm OIIOPS. lb. Ck BACK BACON, lb. 590 HAMBURG. KRAFT MIRACLE V.'HfP 8 oz. JAB 29: PEANUT IUTTR d SGIIWABIZ .... ICE BOX JAR .... 43: 59: CI-IICIIINA LOAF -- 14, no. no lb. .. S50 IOAST P03-K. "I-'39" "T ,WEllTlI.lltIY'Sp mount I III! null "