1 Notes By The Way‘ 1 ti‘ ' - ‘ ,_- . t ,_ ab: , location-w lllvdarl when». 1 Illhv all! Ilauaglaag Alleviate Hilton-Pearl Dallilhl llllfllll u‘; lavatory-mine ~00! D A pa: year flu vaaeelaaalieo g1 ‘f ,.-v;. ' l I‘ via-vane} n. Us‘ Ivlhuwa. D I DIIIIOQ. I I l. »Ialkn all It I Canto Q p10 “madman . “in”, , f . large-scalp, emigration to the nnpire is now officially admitted to be a failure . Uncfficially thil has been known for long encufli: but the report of the Infer- Departlnental Committee on Mi- A ffEATl/RE ISSUE ' The present issue of The Char- lottetown oumlisn consists of :4 pages, 3'0! which are devoted in the piesenfitlorl of pictures of leaders - in fields of thought and l lwcaikiuthePrcvince. Thudoesnot ~ pretendtobe a complete list of the " - icodersflor the community, but is a . ». saruunar, ooronuu r1, 1m. . LYON A FIGUREHEAD? __-_ “W5. Colnmefli-llionlhediemiasaiof Mihkhfipllffilmtilo Ontario Hydroflommissionfcrthepurpoae ofmakingroomfnraLiboralpal-ty worker, the Ottawa Journal, of whiohllflzfloaliltlieproprietor, appointment of arr. stew‘ ilrt Lyon es choirmm of the On- Wb Hydro flectric system was probably received with mind ‘feel- ma: by his newspaper confines thrflllliollt Ontario. Thfly knew that collection of representative men and women who hold prominent P111111“! in publio life. There is nothing in the shape of “hot air" publicity re- garding the parts played by the in- divlduals selected; their portraits! some time ago of peasants being gration Policy definitely advises gout, ‘ against its The immediate rn is mete’! » - ‘ efforts than ever the necessary in &'i”.i.'.'.' the direction of home development. U55“ ’ One of the time-worn recipes for q °xlxfirg§fl "Elmmi? relieving unemployment has con- feaaedly broken down. Its time will come Iii-in. but until than we must resort energetically to other rriethodss-iiondon News-Chronicle A Patient may consult a number oi Physicians who, after examination, [cannot iind any cause for the Bymp- toms of which the patient complains. The examinations may include the Wei-h. tonsils. nose. throat, metab- olism teeth-rate at which the body Processes work when at rest,- X ray examinations and examln- ation oi blood, urine, and faecsg_ wastes from ‘ teatin . Home --‘ ' will *' the Bympwms carefully and try to show the patient that even if they. are present there is nothing about them If there h any truth at all in the report that Yugoslavia is con-- oentrating troops on her Hungar- ian frontier the sooner she is call- ed to order by the greet DOWNS the better. There has ions-flown tension there. Hungary '""' shot for purely technical violations of Yugoslavia frontier regulations, are reproduced and underneath are given the main positions they oc- . cupy. it is for our readers to fill in I -- [.116 lafllktl. The feature we now pub“ ‘ la not poly-pf current but of historic value Pogterfty may be desirous of having u". a bird's eye view of the people who nvererat the forefront in the critical years of Canada's history in this Prcvlpce, and they will find them in the {yle for 1934 of The Charlotte- town Guardian. Considerable work was entailed in the production of this feature. and {the fGuardian does not desire to take the credit for it. It is a scheme which has been adopted in the cur- rcntffyear by several of the leading newspapers in Canada, including the Toronto Globe, the Ottawa Journal, able and indlpandent machine. 1W1‘- Lyflfl had no knowledge of elec- miiily. and little elfaerience of business or of public office. put they thought they knew that he wasagooddealofamamThey Reflected him as unquestionablyan minded lollrnalist. They knew that as managing editor of the Toronto Globe he had been a. vigorous chem- pion of the principle of keeping the great Ontario Hydro enterprise out of politicsJAnd so they hopgd that whatever little w. Lyon might know about electricity and wing- ever his leek of public experience, Premier Hepburnk reward to m, Lyon for political support in the Toronto Globe milht not hurt mdrointhewoi-stwayitcouldbe hurt, amely by making it a party and ‘the Halifax Herald. The same promoters who successfully carried out the plans on these journals gave their; services for a. similar Purpose en The Guardian, and to them cre- dit is due for whatever success the feature attains. The other i6 pages of The Guard- ian contain much that is of general interest, and we feel sure will be appreciated by our steadily growl!!! number of readers and supporters. CGALS T0 NEWCASTLE “Bi-It. alas-the m. Lyon who was to be a rugged old scotch-Can. adieu who called his soul his own llld would be no politician's puppet in the control oi that tremendous end enlendldenterorise the Ontario Hydro. has proved nil-noel: to be merely Mir. Hepburn‘; yes-mm, “And yet Mr. Lyon is mo“ m be pitled than blamed. The real culprit 1e Mr- Hepburn, who has used the Brest position the people of on. tario have given him to injure both m. Lyon and the best trust the who have given careful study to 811990681 in the newspaper world the problem of increasing safety at sea. and particularly to the ques- tion of dealing with the fire risk, that, no matter what app may. be provided for dealing with fires in passenger accommodations, it will aways rest very largely with the personnel of the vessel as whether or not a time of suspense, following the appearance oi signs of me, will develop into a period of general panic, or simply result in the orderly assembly of passengers at predetermined points under the o1 tho 5111p‘! personneL-Londcn Times. such as for following cattle that strayed across the bolder. Probably all the fault is not on one side and the treaty boundaries, plotted with ' the best of intentions, have not examination reveals no" tmubm solved all the racial problems of a} New there may not be any phy- vary confusing region. Nevertheless-‘sical or organic trouble, hut them 15 now is most emphatically not tbsp-rubble somewhere and it is the pat- moment to do anything infithe least 1611i psychiatrist cr- nerve specialist likely to start a blue, and Yugo-I'm Whom the patient is usually sent slavia has shown a little too greatfl-bli 1111111y Bets at the cause of the readiness to march iennorcements Bylflllleme. to her frorltiers.—llbr. i 1""!!! the 111M017 0i the case as ;511Pl111€d him by the other phygjc- The arms manufacture inquiry m" "-1111 by his first questioning or can hardly help having s wide af- the patient. he knows that there is fact not merely upon popular senti- 11° “$81116 Symptoms and that the ment but in oillciai circles as well. When governments discover that their subsidies for “notional de- fence" might just as well have been spent for the defence of their bit- terest. rival, the end of the arms racket ought not to be merely a dream-Baltimore Sun. ltiatheviewofmoat that need cause any worry. other Physicians may bluntly state that there is really nothing wrong be. cause the complete and tywmush the symptoms or 5.. ma. Al Df- D- Thom in the American Journal of Psychiatry pomp; m“, ‘he “minim 1e. "What Pllflloee does the 1161170818 — imaginary symptom __ serve in the life of the individual?" min other words there is something l the home, business or profession. a life of the patient that is ilpseb- "n! $119 Patients balance to some 535th?» “.5. °' 53.“, “,“‘“,‘,“, ‘m’ . a o Protection °u 1 °' This means that the doctor has to question and question the patient to find out Just what is "underneath." to 1-‘- msy be a feeling or injustice in the office, a lack of love or respect 111 the home. perhaps a little ps1. ousy. not setting his or her own way 55°15 11111188. a feeling oi being 511Bhted, or some other slight or serious matter. It isn't any wonder that examir‘. atfons by these psychiatrists are long K1141 frequent as it takes some time liances d of competent members patient has some reason for having .° ‘ms of the ‘n10 important, non-political con- lerences have been held this week at which the problem of potato ietlcg was. disclosed from every fljflb, Orig conference was held in 0mm, w; was Attended by rep- resentatives of the ilve ell-lief“ l1!“- 711mm. The other was the, annuel meetirlglof the Maritime board, o! 1e at St. John. Many sugges- ggm; yersjnifiydfq‘ the improve- . giant or the potato industry. but thee were" i=1 “PM °¥ i“ . idler which our local contemporary i heslput forward as being ithe solu- ,1" tiomtolcur present marketing prob- isugphis was. in short, that “since l: Midland won't buy our WWW"- il‘? ‘hBQEION some reciprocal arrange- ments should be made with the ,; {united States." m falling to brins If,‘ thhmfbflght susilestion f0 the at- tention of the white Comrrlissl on Maritime claims at its organisa- tion ‘meeting in Ottawa, Premier MacMlllan was criticised by the DITORIAL NOTES news of this great industry. representation. liiberal organ, and it was aumested people oi Ontario have, by deggd. 111g the great Ontario Hydro-Eleo- tric enterprise into a party weapon," Our sport and horse notes are unusually interesting this morning. w Mn m a; 1mg thggatgnh,‘ The Pall Pox Show is approach- ing and promisu to be more than usually successful. Our F!!! Notes onanother page feature the live Groups o1 potato growers have been having meetings throughout the country with the view of hav- ing a monster demonstration in the city when the next meeting is held to consider marketing board Italy led the way with a mass aeroplane crossing of the Atlantic to Ol-hldl; Britain followed with ' tuljeus chance, mascots the . 'adfl trade. That espanaionis due that the public is anxiously await- ing, “a pronouncement" on this “vifil question." an open airplane ram to Melbourne; now France contemplates e. similar " air derby to Indo-China. Thil is how new developments gradually become commonplace accomplish- mentl. - fS-TILL IN THE LEAD Geneva despatch to the New Yet‘! Times tells how once more a ooniinittee of the League of Nations points to orestnritsin and Can- oidairas the two nations which, in showed the greatest 11108198! to recovery. jmethlng more than mere for- ’ Y (Independent), must be "responsible for the fact that countries continue to show amtsinsd mgr-es. while all other nations either stand still or make buffblight" advance. the cnse of Canada. the ex- vp . tion ls found partially in the country's rich n: , otably in thmtaxtiwordinary development oi week to this last year was one of mines. But it is not the soiees- the coldest within memory, with plaliatlon. Allied with it. and r ‘he thermometer registering about factor, are the financial an I 30 degfrben Hovemborooi-respond- aoopomic policies o1 the Bonnet. _d to the average January in tem- qoy; ‘thesei, “by, _andwawcreaiisetfor guch‘ war-anew ‘ as the f‘“'— Lwhat ‘ out to be a. record agreements and by the splendid winter both fcr cold and lenlth. maflitenamoe of the Dominica's The successful inauguration of s. reduction in gasoline is all the more praiseworthy asoui- Government has no legislative lever as the Gov- ernments of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick possess. m our Act, no provision is made for Government interference with regard to price- fbdng, and the object had to be attained by private negotiations with the different companies eon- cerned. It was a distinct triumph for Premier iihclllllan’: diplomacy. Pom-Record “Lest we forget," it may be re- called hare that the corresponding naspecialmilaions this weak heidattbaBasiiicaandtl-iaohiid- rat's retreat at the Church of the Holy Redeemer, have been very ‘the IRQQIHVO‘ Nations commit- beipoints to the expansion of Can- antirelytothehnpireagre-y ‘ whicnbaveaeon ailmseontryu trade with ni-ituo aa awilolrareraadyandjllil for amaiaissloemueomaotoiopsrsrorwudmoveinsntertbisdsserio- aarftwfiiie lie trade with foretell ' elthr rimmed station- trensporting it to the unloading Mmtll-Yll- awarded the contract is building ment at its plant in Elblng, East Prussia. fr many Italians who are not com- pletely reconciled to the Mediter- ranean being what they call a Brit- be ltitle excuse for Gibraltar, Malta and Cyprus and owning most of the shares in the Suez Canal. But Great Britain does not stand alone. She is a. member of a. mighty commonwealth of na- mandates to govern many peoples cans-Exchange. to get the patienfls confidence and have him fully linburden himsslg about his “wrongs? The psychiatrist finally learns the “reason" for the symptoms and treats the patient; M. cordingly. If Italy and France really hands for the preservation of Euro- pean peace there can be no grave fear of wai- except from Russia. However much Germany may he" evaded the provisions of the Treaty oi Versailles relating to armament, she can be in no situation to make war unless she could persuade Italy Francs. it will be a tremend stride forward if Italy and France can come to some definite agree- ment on joint policy, not alone in the general affairs of lmrope, but on their pivotal meeting points on the shores of the Mediterranean. One of Italy's most urgent needs is I'll/OM “T0 AUTUMN" Where are the songs of Spring? Ay, where are they? Think not of them, thou hast thy yggqumeg and an outlet for a KIOW- music too’ ins population North Africa 1e the While burr-ed clouds bloom the direction lhd l! 100K158? will mfpdymg day’ Franco help? And touch the stubble-plains with rosy hue; A 111N180 N111! bill" ll Dlfllil 1| Then in a wailful choir, the small to be the largest in the world. The m,“ mom-n contract was awarded by the oon- Among the river sallows‘, borne servancy board of the Whangpoc river in China. The mil-chine W111 Or sinking as the light wind lives be 861 feet long and 60 feet wide, and the dredge depth will be 45 feet. It will be captain's of headline about 8,500 tons of mud a day and or dies; And full-grown lambs loud bleat front hilly pourn; Hedge-crickets sing; and now with treble soft The led-breast whistles from a garden-croft, And gathering swallows twitter in the skies. , ‘Ssllows: i.e., l0w;growing willows, —Keats. The German firm the machinery and boiler equip- ltaly and Great Britain are good lends. Nonetheless there are driving force, elasticity and experi- mentalism o! private enterprise, while at the same time limiting it within the requirements of the . t ish lake If it were a case of Grea public mterestyJrhe Economist‘ Britain standin alone, there would her holding can people to read of another pay- ment of ransom for the safe return o! a woman kidnapped by a. hood- lum, after the police had been call- ed off. Every successful crime of this kind makes repetition more likely and the kidnappers more bold. some such system as that re- cently sussested. by which the state would seize control of all monies of the family seems to be the only feasible way of halting the plague which is spreading all over the United States. Only when the ele- ment of possible profit is removed W111 11111118431198 be SWPPBil-mrlless ths kidnappers are caught and punished-chorus Falls Review. ALBERTA T0 OPEN JOBLESS’ HOSPITAL CADGARY, Oct. 26. -- A modern hotel, formerly used as a convales- cent hospital for returned soldier-a, has been by the Alberta tloris; she possesses a vast colonial empire of her own: she holds on behalf of the League of Nations; her dominion is spread over the entire surface of the world, and her sea communications are her very life. These include the Mediterran- Han’: flrat problem are purely economic; then social, out of which emerges the moral question-curios. It is idle, becaule unhisiorioal, to reverse the order, for "the moral question itself arises out of econ- olnic rights." Our first business, then, is to solve the economic prob- lem, national and ‘ , for as a world of nations we are more or leas in the primitive stage of Relief Commimion for the cars of m“; q mum.“ 1”; 11gb " p; o“ u ¢q'°1°’mqng_ . ver Oil Ixtrachwlth "°*"1<1IINI1HIWWN¢ #11101“ ssidweslewouiok us ores-etc and Gulacoi u -- o». u». o- ... more: restless. ee-Mo-e-o- n» ems- leek-Mme the Worldiheyvlflm houaefromliiotoilililmenfromali ‘m’ ‘M m“ w.“ “m” m that they are out of the main “mo; thgmwm“ - current of twentieth-century oevel- 5 "u “u, p; 9mg,’ all!!!“ "Plllatinlultgle sense _ \ Ooldislalauiasandiirippo. m VB flhflfi, . 1 ‘ . ml be mole in a compel-at’ sly y 1 I y, u 559"" "1111 "@1118! velopadoountry suchaaitiu- ‘ "m!" 1‘ 5 .. ‘KIDNEY Ill. I'M “when. and notably in - the United States tinder President l the new appointee. It must be gelling to the Ameri-‘ s0 YearsAgo And Since i —-—- l7 FRED 000K ma our and aromas-r f It has always been a mailer of, regret to many Ooiawans thatj the 43rd Reglnaerlt the Duke :f< Cornwalys Own Riilm, bat its identity a few years m.‘ wbsnit was merged into the 38m Oamernn| I Highlanders. It has an eqirit de corps which I am certain was not excelled by any other regiment ‘in! Canada. From the dmys when Colonel Wil- deplriw postmaster general. was commanding office, in the eighties, down to the time the official change was made, all the. officers were my warm ' ' friends. I never ioined the regi- ment owing to the demands of my newIW-Ptl‘ work but I we! honored by being elected to the officers‘ mess and often aeoonmanied the regiment upon its trips aboard. In my second year as Mayor I was invited in my official capacity to join the regiment on a visit to Boston Mesa. For the first time in nearly one hundred yealp the Washington government had grant- ed permlmlcn to a regiment from a foreign country to enter the United States bearing arms. It wad a friendly gesture which was appre- day the City Club gave ns a break- fast. There were only three ere, the president of the club, Colonel Sherwood, comm " of- ficer of tho D. C. O. 12., and my- self. Upon that occasion I told e story which made a. higiib some it rnaybecldbuttomsnywflmread it new for the first time it may ap- pealssagoodorleAlludingtothe development of friendlier relations between the United States and Canada, as exemplified by the visit of the 48rd, I said it was gratify- ing to observe the change oi view on the part cf our neighbors. It reminded me of an ardent politician in one of the western American cities who, when his party came into power, looked to his congressman to ure for hLn a good position in the "federal ser- vice, and in due course he was nominated by the president for a small consular office in one of the cities of western Ontario, Chatham or some place near by. The day the lllmointulent had been unced in the local news- a friend who congratulated him upon having secured the office. But instead of accepting the good wishes so tendered, the appointee the president, his all the leaders of his party, Sold he, “It's nice thing to send me to such a Godforsaken plane as that to which I have been asipolnt- ed. up in the frozen north. I never felt more discouraged in my life, and my family have the same feel- ings. Why, do you know that last night I heard my little girl of seven saying her prayers at her mother's knee and she closed with this re- mark: ‘Good-ibye- God; we're going to Cillil8dil."' His friend remarked that the new consul was absolutely mistaken about the section of Ontario to which he had been appointed; that as a matter of fact it was one of the fairest on the continent. He could say that because he had resided there. The city was a pro- gressive one with fine buildings, good schools, theater, public library, and inhabited by a splen’“ class of people. And then he said. "Another thing you quite mis- understood what your little daughter said last night in her prayer, She put it in an entirely different way." “What do you mean?” inquired "Well, what she said was, ‘Good’ By God we are going to Canada.’ " And then I invited cur Boston friends to come to Canada and look us over to see if there was not jus- tification for the revised exclama- tion which the appointees friends had given. A few 32ers later, in i900 to be accurate. the 43rd D. C. 0. B. was detailed to proceed to Quebec at full strength as part of tthe force which was to be reviewed by the Prince of Wales. Altogether over twelve thousand men, cavalry, in- Itwasparticularlyflttingthatllae 48rd ahouidbeinviindtoboflhsnt Henderson & gCudmore The Ontario Scandal‘ (Victoria 3.0., Colonist) The Hepburn Government of Ontario is providing columns o! newspaper publicity for itself, but it is not in the nature of political propaganda of its own making. It is the press that seizes upon inci- dents of the Hepburn regime and that must interest not only Ontar- ians but the people of the country as a whole. 'I'his is indicated in the Attorney-General Roebuck and Col- onel George Drew who was, until summarily discharged, securities papers film ngw 59115391 w“ mgfl by commissioner for the province. C01- onel Drew was entrusted with the pa tectioll o! the public against fraudulent security salesmen. He had repeatedly refused the licens- burst out into a til-ode cf abuse of 1118 of I wimp New“ W110 1W1 m‘; a record of twelve criminal convic- tions under the act. The salesman rendered material service in the late provincial election. In recogni- tion of that service, Attorney-Gen- eral Roebuck ted him licensed again. This Colonel Drew refused conscientiously license a. man who had been often in difficulties on ac- count of theft. misrepresentation and criminal fraud. l": short, Col- onel Drew. In the office which he held. oonsidered that the hard- oamed "Vines of uninformed in- vestors should not be the prey of en habitual criminal. Because Colonel Drew refused to do what Attorney-General Roebuck wanted. he has been dismissed from his office. The piquancy of the sit- uation liea in the fact that in a statement made by Colonel Drew he represents Attorney-General Roebuck as a man "wholly unfit- ied for his office," and as one who in the present controversy has "pil- ed falsehood on falsehood." He de- mands. moreover, from Premier Hepburn that he should insist oil the Attorney-General "showing some decency in public office." Now it appears that the Ontario Govern- ment has to clear its skirts or lose political prestige. Colonel Drew, unlike hundreds of civil servants who have been dis- missed from office by the Hepburn has not taken his Government, 31511115551 131113 down. l-fe has let the province know exactly all about the circumstances, and in doing so the good faith or the ohmic sd- mirilstratlon has been injured. Col- onel Drew has been an honest and WI SILL AND RECOMMEND MACS Special llx. 315 and body-building tonic for both young and old who tale it regularly. Beautiful $16.50, S1 gnaw IIVEIIBIIAT-S Priced, $1 $.50. $1 $.00, 8.00 v0 to $30.00 t Come in and see our large and complete showing of smartly tailored overcoats. Meltolla, Silvertoliea and Elysiana are much favored this season and the prices are even more attractive than last year. If you are ‘interested in a perfect fitting overcoat let rls show you the new Fashion Crafts. Siubleys English Elysian Overcoafs priced at $22.50. MEN’S WEAR ‘J of his duties. He has protected the public of Ontario and their invest- ments, and has prevented hund- reds. possibly thousands, flom be-, lng swindied. Ln refusing to do what] Attorney-General R ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ him to do he was right. beyond. argument. That will be the " ‘ of the people of Ontario and of Canada ss a whole. PUBLIC FORUM Ills column is open far the aiaaaaalan by corresponding- a OI (llalldtdewa Guardian dea_a__uoi a a! OOIIIIIIIIIIIII. w» .-._ THE PUIATO QUESTION makes out of them reading matter controversy that has arisen between is a recognised Liberal worker who P1 on the ground that he could not Portland’s Ambition (neutron Gazette) A marked copy of the Portland EveningNewahasbeensenttoThe Gazette to call attention to an an- nouncement made Louis J. Bra-rm, of the State of Maine; t0 the effect that within a mission to act towards the re- habilitation and development t: the port of Portland and the corn- ete unification of its terminal facilities. Action on the pert of the Governor is reported to have been inspired by the drastic decline in shipping st Portland. It is da- claled to mean that in time freight: and cargoes which are now shipped to more favored Atlantic coast. ports not only to the south but to Canada as well, "will be handled in Portland by Portland labor." The direct reference to Canada would sum to be a. chal- lenge to Saint John and Halifax. Some years I80. it will be remembered, goods whose logical route was via the Canadian by Goverimr P“ fewdayshewiliappointacom-m Bin-Willyou givamespaeetosay a word on the position the farmer of this province finds himself in. The accumulated losses of the last four yeara ll, at seven percent. more than he can carry. He is now back- ed up against the wall and unless therecanbeaplanwol-kedoutto him the cost of production, which is thirty cents a bushel, lie Iwillnotbainariyway abletcpuy see any reason why We cannot set thirty cents a bushel for all Canada. I think the potato grow- er is entitled to some compensation on account of the fact that potatoes is a one season crco. Every other prod ‘ can be bold over in storage: and also all manufactm-ed products are protected by tariff. and farmers pay for that protection. There is also the high rate of interest We pay. The Ottawa Government p115- aedan actfertbepurposeof en- ablingethe farmer to let slower rate of in rut, but our provincial 80v" be done marketing this year's crop. Dlinstakinl official in the discharge ' ‘Phereiatobaamsetinglflmllr’ iottetown in regard to the Market- ing Board and if all tliefarmere W11! that day off and tended. and allowed their real condition, I om sure that the government would helP to solve our problem. I am, Birgge. Atlantic ports, were invariably shipped over our government- owned railway to Portland Persistent and aggressive and-ion on the part of Canadian interests finally succeeded in reserving a more just proportion of Canadian trade for Saint John. Portland evidently is preparing once more to" aiter"l‘ “ cargou,» it will be natural and prudent if Halifax and Saintplohn, alert to their own interests, are watchful over the new movement to the south. Portland's inspired efforts to rehabilitate the trade of her own port reflect an ambition which is of course, quite ‘ "‘ ate. It will be equally legitimate for Canada's Atlantic ports to be mindful that their near neighbor's ambition shall not be exercised their Eejudica. _________._____ ELECTED PRESIDENT N. B. FISH , N’. 3., Oct. 25-- Dr. n n. Cook. of 8t SWIM‘- was elected President of the New k Hsih, and Game Protec- tive Association at its tenth annuul conference here today. l-re meow“ D. King Hanan, Saint John. quest the Provincial Government w declare a closed season for meow hunting next year. Buy the Best _ TEA p Brahmin Orange Pekoe Ceylon Small mi Eddie Cantor Buys An Annuity llerefaaleiterwritiqrbylllbilanierloihaflfedlelll whoaoldhhhhlaieatounllty: Daarllrinara ti‘ .2 r: if. c t l Ii‘ i! E l i? _-l t?! , l? “i ii E ha? i? 1 fir iii . 1 l.‘ t! E it? Pll(l' “~00 PEI BUPH-l A’! The Two Macs Ialloroararronafly Attfllfltet -.» ~ Tkaaa iarsrasecnenooawbarwhlle" anyplanofllifelneaaaaaaeqealttlalraaaresiureat-We" Ufeagaatariwllaareald . . t llflilllllli 81100., iilillill IIOII.‘ i hi fllilrdilil-Olfd » AND GAME ASSW- " The Association decided t0 1e‘ _.