I Notes on tones connector» wmu Fox Farmer] 1 week nae been ‘on the m pfity favorable for mach- “ mwxhla? theymwuokieerglugwfg lc are f“ p . This is one of W, most, at platters m; the rancher can attend to m oonsidrabie study and time be Spent on it. Ono has awn: look around and see the mwossful ranchers. those who flu that it f‘; in selection which iluoush the years that “drying results. The Qch breed of foxes hinges on me principal matter of selection. it was lust as true forty or fifty years ago when Charles Dalton. Robert Ouiton Siles Rayner and 0mg;- founders of silver fox (gflnmil were in their heyday as it g now. We heard Sir Charles ipalton say tbs/t when he and Robert Oulton wore building up ve such of have “In experience in plaizlnums that many of our fox tanner friends here have but we do put a. great deal of time orig Xi th ht into th new examine the platlr-rum i "Crayfish" . very Rood platinum and we do not get good results even with., Norwegians by using three-quart- t tiline h t illkliind mus u w a e u; i the best results in his ow; "fir? Buyers do not like dark under- iurred piatlnums they do want the types that, give that bluish cast which was what made four pelts of ours sell for $220. each at the January auction through the Canadian National Sliver Fox Breeders‘ Association Every Mom Q surface oi the land. clllmato. and c 1 1 tin .' 3mm; possess a high degre oi natural mtg; ifiifinfimbe, 1s to kg: fertility. In fact ‘the greater clear of very dark underfur 9m appears '-° b° lmerbf- ‘Nearly all flip, soils are deficient n Farmer-In Japan iias Tough Joli the minis o! view o! th soil. Japan may be led as one of the poorer agricultural- cmmtries. About ‘l5 per cent oi that country is hilly and mount- ainous the slopes of which are usually too steep or too thin for ordinary culti tion. Becausethe mountain regions occupy the central and greater part of tho country. there are no extensive plains as are found in contin- ental countries. The" typical plains of Japan are mainly nar- row. coastly lowlands. With regard to climate there is enough rain on the whole to meet the needs of Japanese agri- culture. but the soils do not nitrogen. and only by very careful attcntlon to the needs of each particular soil situationcan large production be obtained. Nevertheless. large crops are grown with many people on little land. the fields of Japan able for star-gazing. When it not raining (or snowing) me back to my old pastime. As looked u a little explanation. the, Pole Star: it is. the rection. Spaced almost at oi the heavens. The Dipper one to find thr- latter? Looking - NEWSY NOTES - This fall has been very unfavor- was there was a thick canopy of clouds that hid the stars. last week, however, there was one clear night that sent t of the eastern window, about 7 p.m., I saw a brilliant dis- play of stars and realized that I was looking at the "Capella quar- ter" of the heavens That may need Almost everybody can point out ‘sailor's lode-star, the friend oi everyone that wishes to know his true di- equal distances around lt are the Dipper, Vega" Cassiopeia, and Capella, each giving its name to its own quarter nnd “Cassiopelifs Chair" are fairly well known, the former especially; but Vega and Capella are not. How is from the eastern win- dow at this time of the year one sees a misty cluster of stars, (he SQS-"leflglh without breadth" - plemdes. or "seven Sisters" Us ‘like old Euclid‘s definition. Yes, some people call them, (Others in Things 599" BYE greater than lng. Without it, the countryman feels, with Alexander Selkirk, that he is "out of humanity's reach." The sales, so dear to his heart, ii not to his purse, come and go and he is not there. There is no "hatches, matches and despatches" column to keep track of. He can say with the old general or philos- opher’ or whatever he was- 1 hayent time to look it up—"Per- dldi diam", I have lost a day! The radio, though excellent in its way, is no substitute. The listener, I find, can repeat only quarter oi the news he hears: some item catches his interest, and while he mulls it over the announcers voice flows on a most unheeded. That of course is not the radio's fault; it is tho imperfection of the human factor. As for the advertisements, the radio does a good lob. for its poi-- sistence, day after day. will bore into the dullest consciousness: but it ls not able (as the newspaper is) to punctuate its ads with at- tractive pictures of willowiy dam. mn- ilne herd of silvers that m“ would in; them ou dear sunny loci-ed and pelted. By the m careful selection. with an colonhconfgurixptation and alit tev up e gllagnivficent herd of silver the world had ever seen. today the writer can look as can many others in this oi Dalton and Oulton foxes. clear bluish blade color. t o a day in December ‘and if there was a shade of brownish- the iur they would be is; eye iur most foxes Even back prov- lace and recall the beautiful types the t the market that there was last year resilience oi the fur the bright- ness of the silver and the clear colored brushes and tips. it was not the Dalton foxes. the Oulton foxes. the dtayner foxes or any of the best breeds developed here that gave the brownish tinge to tho black which a so mu in avldeme. That um).- from Newfoundland where a type oi black that never should lllVo been introduced here was rough in the wilds. Other blacks from Quebec were impo they had been bred in captivity bv Johann Bah and while not up w island stock in quality were ood. Thenthere were Ontario loxes brought here and they did not have quality neither did the wstern silvers. with the exception of some that came from Peace River such as the Pure Canad- ian Company imported. They were beautiful foxes. no question about it. and their strain. -- ed in quality through the time we looked at those foxes in the shed we would remark that .thev had a distinct bluish cast and they were clear and matched ier-iiactiy. Of course considerable credit, for the price must go to the graders who placed the four of them in a ‘lot and a buyer from South America who wanted a particularly nice cape for a clicm paid the price. This’ season there will be double he number oi platinums on the but if the iur trade is in nn op- timistic mood there is nothing to prevent their being sold as Can adian platinums have made reputation for themselves that has gone far and wide. There is a. big market in the United States‘ and if exchange is available a tremendous market in south A- rncrlca. W.- are all looking hope- fully forward to the first auction sale of the season which will be held late next week or the follow- ing week in Montreal. the reports of which from George Callbeck will be carried in the Guardian And now we swing back to the matter of fox shows and have, through the energetic and kind artterltion of Lowell W. Hancock 0i Summerslde. who was present. a first hand account of the Oiiio Michigan National Fox and Mink Show held at Grand Rapids last week. W» turn on Lowell... "The Ohio-Michigan show is just, over iiad 500 foxes and over 500 U are cultivated intensively They are treated more carefully than many a garden in other parts d! the world. Although handicapped with poor soil in many districts. the farmers by intensive appli- cation of labour and abundant application oi fertilizers achive high yields per acre Two suc- cessive crops are grown each year on a large part of the I-md. Th,- fact that recently 5.492000 farm families cultivated 14.896.- 000 acres indicates that the size of tn.- farm unit is small. averag- ing 2'7 acres Th- lrv" standard nf living oi the vast‘ majority of farmers explains in part, at least whv the country's small cultiv- able acreage can support such a large number of people engaged in farming A government survey oi farru income from all sources from i918 to i934 revealed that the exception of i918. agricultur- al income each year fell short, of meeting household expenditure and forced farmers to depend upon non-agricultural income to make up the deficit. The income from other sources ranged from 23 to 3i pcr cent oi the total in; come In i936 expenditures 0n the part of farmer owners aver- aged 841 yen. or 2 30 yen per day (a yen equals 29 cents). Asthese households averaged 3 able-bod- ied adults. the actual household expenditure is less than one ven per person per day. It ls only through such smaLl expenditures that the meager farm incomes permit tho mainrity 0f Jfiilllmese see twelve or thirteen stars in (he group, without optical aids; while the telescope reveals hundreds more.) Midway between the Plei- ades and the horizon is a small group shaped like a “V" lying on its side; there is a brighter rnd redder star at the tip of the lower arm of the V. This little triangle is the head oi Taurus (the Bull) and the red slur is Aidebaran, the Bull's eye. Taurus is the original long-horn, as one finds by produc- ing the arms of the “V" to whole two brightish stars form the tips things heard" and so wo miss d511,)’ D5961‘. Worst of all, when the mailman doesn't come. you look in vain for your Newsy Notes in the Saturday's issue-to your in. finite disappointment no doubt! Scheinfelds new "d Me" - l0 dig up some notes on the Silbjéfti. made many yea-gs ago. Well, I found them. but they are not easy to present, columns of the will Men Versus Women I promised, when reviewing Mr. book "Women in the a newspaper becnuge the sight of three bright angled triangle. The brightest will preserve the chart. Auriga, in which Capella is the heavens"; Canis Major, Sirius, the brightest star in sky; Canls Minor (the Lesser Duiz) whose gem is the brilliant unrivalled galaxy. lllflE, it was iveli-knuwn to Greeks and Romans, who gave of his horns. Just a little farther and the stargnzer is rewarded by stars disposed in the form of a right- of the three is Capella. We have far- Pd forth and found our goal; and if my companion is methodical he The Capella quarter of ihe Hill‘- ry heavens, includes some of the most notable winter constellations; (he principal star; Taurus, with its two star clusters, the Plelndes and the Hyndes; Orion, “the Golconda of with the first magnitude star Procyon; and Gum- ini with the famous twins, Castor and Pollux; together make up an Now for Capella itself. A brill- lant white star of the first magni- (he ii "WY are more or less _in tabular form, Just as m classifying planlgl To reduce them to readable form will require ingenuity but rn try it. ' The difference between the sexes is (l) basal or primary; (2) physi. CR1; (3) sPlfmlali and (4) mental. K With the basal difference, im- important. as it is, we need not. con- cern ourselves here, It is biological and relates io reproduction only. The Physical differences. The noics lock ai. these from two as- pects which may he labelled (i) special and (2) general (l) Man tends to have prominent features. B Square Jaw, sunken eyes because of a rugged overhanging forehead and if masterful, an aquillne nose. In woman the tendency is for the jaw and chin to be rounded, the eyes to be protubcrani. the [orc- houdsnrooth. and not. overhanging and the nose lino and more of ihc “GreciaJW iype. (Among ihe tumu- dyln: industry became so able to imitation by using fox and tutnlnn it out as a black that the vogue was for silvers which could not be imitated. As a matter of fact painstaking fox pelt but the imitation was easily noticed and could not fool anyone. 4 ‘Ibday the rancher has to be farniker with a great many types and to have an. appreciation of "W" quality and the proportion which he is going in keep of each. For instance o must i uro out lust how many white ace fe- males he wants to me. He knows Lllliiilklteuslgélti from fléhea: tfiat. a e m s ver (wales or the white rm females :0 silver mo not‘ n strains He mint mskgu up‘ V“ m 0t“ to use a white ind i800 male with or not. Where that, male is fumd and very bright, cgffykig the silver up m the peck. it osn be a very good help in i853‘ Jkitltl“ in‘. will not do anyone rough I“ Oi “"1750 the type of whi to select m um or "l! three enter fersdles with "l9 eXpectat on of getglng one: sire were a, sg... .... std-nan: cont nuo ruining Norwegians. 1 a E- ifiifffffiifv stag f??? u- Krand and mink of all types. The show was in the section of the Grand Municipal sarage Floor »= was '10 X 240 The ion was ‘l0 X 180. All crates plum] on tables single tlcr good north light with bleachers built at iha 80 degree angle pro- viding excellent nccomodatlrm for the audience. The attendance in- cluded ranchers from practically overy state where fur taming is carried on and W H. C Ruth- ven. oyd B Pollock Giiroy The banquet was held on Wednesday evening and over 500 attended. Dr. E. LeFoi-esi, was toasimastcr. I was one of this guest speakers. National Barber Show (radio stars) male quartette sang and there was orchestra music and dancing provided for entertain- ment after. Here are the winners 0f the reserve champions Grand Champion. Gil- roy Bros, Oakv-llle. Ont Reserve Champion W. if C. Ruthven. Alliston. Ont: white Marked Grand Champion. W H. Reserve Champion . rest: Pearl Plat- um (Silver Blue) Grand ghmp1°n_ w_ ,C Ruthvcn. Reserve. 0- iupids. Michigan: Hudson, an; Pearlatina. Grand Champion. Giiroy Bros Reserve Champion. DI 5- 9 Moore. Cadillac. lvilchigan: Giac- ier Blues Grand champion. 1-- B. Pollock. Reserve Champ l1- J. E. Lallbrcot; Platinum Silver. Grand Champion. Glenn Stock Farm Idaho. Reserve: Charles Awvey. Milford. Michigan. Platinums. Cvfhlid champion. Oil roy Bros. Reserve Champion. H o Hudson. an: Rapids. Mlchlaen The big chop from Black Fox 3513mm sends his retards to Y0" Silvers. 0 ‘=9 ‘ m thouxhtfu tasks“ to the keep us ppeninwl farmers to engage in farming. The; agriculture ls~ 110i; SUI- iicieirtly profitable enterprise for most Japanese farmers. especial- ly for tenants and part tenants is further indicated by a state- ment of (he Japanese Bureau of Statistics to tho effect that the average tenant could count uti- on a surplus only when the area of his farm was larlii-‘l’ than 4-5 acres. The fact that by far the largest number of farmers till an area less than 2.4 acres is clear evidence says Fbreign Agricult- ure. of the difficulty of Janine-W agriculture as a usiness In Japan the output per acre large compared to that of most western countries but the acreage per farm is so small that the total income per family is only a fraction of that in most western mun-tries “Feed Brood-Sow Well In Winter Many inoouirles are made by farmers each vcar about weak and dead pigs in the sprinB litters and of sows without sufficient milk for their pigs These conditions gen- erally result from the improper feedirul of the bred sOWs. it is good business to make sure that tho bred sows will be well fed this coming winter. says 2.8 Fraser. Division of Animal Husbandry. ‘Central Experimental Farm Ot- awa. .The main essential ih the-win- ter feeding of brood sows is to supply bone and muscle building feeds in ample amounts to main- taln the sows in medium flesh. Bone building material in the form of a swine mineral mixture should be included in the sow's feed un- less a mixed protein-mineral sup- plement is used. Muscle building protein is essential to the develop- ment of the unborn litter. Tho milk lay-products. mixed protein concentrate tankage. and fish meal are all good protein feeds for this purpose vitamins are necessary. and here the most easily available feeds are well cured ol- falfa and clover hay. One of tho the name whit-Ii means "the litilc she-goat" or Kid. What is SiY-illlfifil‘, the ancient Peruvians, who knew proiiibcrant eyes wore hold in be the sign of a talkative disposition.‘- ieur phrenclogisis of our village times hrightcr than the sun, that it has a companion star re voiving so closely around it separate the discs, Rhyparography I Used fills word in Newsy Nnic a fortnight ago. Ii comes the Greek “rhyparos," he usually painted, It certain chapters in thc Rev. Lau rence Stern's “Sentimental Jour expects from a clergyman. The Daily Paper trouble in our mail service when the daily "paper" was miSS _______.__.___ it in a hay rack outdoors duality some other vitamin ter though more expensive vita min feed is a feeding oil such n cod liver oil Then lastly maior portion oi the ration will consist cf and wheat. be taken not to asthese might make overiat and clumsy simplest ways of feeding the hay is to_ give the sows free scceu. to Ottawa . means (he same thing. I must illiffl on irusi the statement of astrono- mers who say that Capella is 120 1nd (hat no telescope has yet. been able lo from moaning dirty, and I first heard it applied to some of Hogarlhs pictures which were of a lewder kind than those was used too, by Professor Rhys to describe ne_y"—a book very unlike what one There must have been a spot of this fail, for there were several tluys _ When hay is not availabil- or is of ee should be supplied An even bet- the brood sow common farm grains such as osis. barley A mixture or the grains is desirable and care should includ too great a proportion of barley and wheat the sows There are many combinations of feeds lllliilblo for the winter feed- lnflgéh blwldmifléughfl ‘Dfgfif; last of the series. that of the men- ae o! the Reds “villain, and tal differences. in next week's coal-rim with these gtrich Iaitiibcgitgtznla: "m"- l); whtfiisififitiaa indicates An Early Telex-aw» (1) i if??? oi§§§§s§"§§“'§?nf$ tgwpgf some years lll§lfl "i393 I W" . t _ quit row up. wa e over to minim Deanne“ n! Azrmm u" a diestgnt vrlilage to visit a cousin "om, of Eur u 1 ,, . (2) More generally, man has (a) sclcngeg called iolpifzuflxnlllflffllos/Dfllgpl depth 0' "owc- ‘b’ “mum “I ’ ‘ shoulders, (c) hour-ii. (d) bodily firmness. (o) ~g~~nyzlh, (f) nnd ac. five endurance. Against these wom- an‘ posscsscs (a) n finer, iriqlzer voice, (h) hrcadill of hips. (c) finer, smoother skin. (d) borlily softness. (c) cncrgyq instead of sirenctlnl which enables her to run the house and rear (hc children, an exacting task. (f) and not the least of her qualities is passive endurance. This last links with (3) The spir- itual differences. While man has (a)' activity, (h) courage. often combative, (c) boldness of inun- ner. (d) audacity. (o) its running mate assertiveness. (f) protective- ness towards his family. (t!) l acity for all ho oyvns, (h) acquisi- livcness to gain more, (i) will power. (j) decision in acting, (k) argumentativenoss, (1) deliberation or following a train of thought to a right conclusion, (m) and is the embodiment of spiritual force and power; woman, on the contrary is distinguished by (a) passivity, (b) fortitude in enduring ill. a kind of courage usually lacking in all but the greatest of ‘men, (c) coyness S when I went to the mail box in _ vain. This was not without llS "f mammr- m‘ 5°"5m‘"~‘""55 °f lesson; H showed the void h,“ feeling, (o) attractiveness instead of the repellent male assertiveness, (f) mothcrlinoss oven towards her spouse. (g) devotion lhroilgh love to all herv circle, (h) home in- siincl. for improving what she has. (l) perseverance. highly develop- ed. (i) dignity in acting. (k) per- suasiveness, (l) apprehension, often called "intuition." which cuts through the intermediate steps to the conclusion. (m) and is the cm- hodlment of mystery and charm. It must again be pointed nut that these notes were made many years ago, before the feminist movement had come to flood-tide; but oven yet, despite the hardening influen- ces of modern times, tho higher types of feminine minds still retain much of these old-world, gracious attributes. I hope to present the S low prlool articles 0|: oflloo h ovary ‘satur- ",“" “‘"_'_ nonpartisan; at. . if. o; Jtlitiiis r 0"‘ ‘Illitroloo ' flooding conditions, . i. , rongiugos have be‘, ~ _ _ KIIJQIQL . hm Woodlots llavo Great Value The forested areas found on farms in Canada. and generally known as farm woodlots supply about 30 per cent of all the wood Canada each year, D. Dominion lllorest- and . told Comm! c! the Food and Agriculture Organization at the HAO Conference recently held in Quebec City. These forested areas provide nearly 1.000.000 cords of pulpwood annually and 8 to B 3i million cords of fuel- wood. as well as saw-ions and dther products. The large part. of the fuelwood is used on the farm but sales of fuelwood. pulp- wood and other products tribute very substantially farm cash incomu. The farmer who possesses a good woodlot, protected from grazing and managed for con- tinuous production. is usually more prosperous than neighbours whose- woodiolts have been al- lowed to deteriorate. Many oi the farm regions in Canadahave become deficient in forest cover. and serious COIlSQQUEmw are becoming evident in the form of erosion. soil deterioration ir- regularity of stream flow and lowering of the ground water tn table Industrial forest operations, as distinct from work on woodlots, are of great importance to farms in many sections of Canada. Work in the logging camps pro- vides cash income duo-ins: the winter months. and the forest industries are very largo consum- ers of the products oi agriculture Were it not for local sales outlets provided by ioflBlnilclimps film)‘ ing in many of the, mOTe remote parts of the country would be reduced to a bare subsistence level. On the other hand farm- ers consume a large quantity of forest products Agriculture and forestry are closely interdepend- ent in Canada and prosperity of the Cilia is likely to be reflected in the other. says Mr Cameron. who held a position as telegraph- lst under the Postal Services branch of the Government. The instru- ment she worked was quite dif- ferent from the old “Coffee-grind- er". Gone was the horizontal clock-face with its 26 typewriter keys; gone was the crank. Instead. I beheld a vertical dial something like a compass, with a “needy? pivoted in the middle. The needle could swing but. only so far, being (rhocked by a projecting pin on each side, All the time it kept up an everlasting "tick-tack. lick-lick- iack." “What's it saying?" said I innocently. She smiled and suicl‘, "It's not for us!" A neat rc-proof. for telegraphists must not divulge messages. "How do you know?" I asked, nothing daunted, seeing that she was not looking at the machine. "I can hear the message," she ex- plained, and my respect for her ability went up several points. This was a Cooke and Wheat- stone instrument, and the "tick- tack" was the_Morse code of sig- nals. The C. and W. machine held the floor for many years till the more convenient telephone super- ceded it This telegraph, like all other electrical devices, cannot ‘e credited to any one country alon . The real impetus lo telegraphy was first given by Oersted who discovered the magnetic property of electric currents, and by the English scientist. Faraday who dis- covered induction. These two discoveries enabled Samuel Morse, an American inven- The dam of this purpose by her father. This smiling llll is Edith Jones, who lives at R-R. 1, Moncion, NB. When the shutter clicked, Edith was gathrr-Ing up the cavity milk cans which the milk truck had just brought h: "k from iho dairy at Moncton. The nifty little wagon was built especially for liairy Notes The Jersey cow. Standards Brave Flora—l2li25—bred and owned by Eldison B. Mutch. North River. P. E. 1.. produced a new Canadian Champion record as a Sr. Yearling in 1943 of 10.560 lbs of milk. 4192 lbs of fat. Flora comes back and has recently completed a Jr. 4 year old record of 15.304 lbs of milk. ‘I46 lbs of fat in 366 days with an average test of 4.8194. milked twice daily. This makes her a new Canadian Champion for milk production in this division on two times milking. She replaces the famous Canadian Champion Barmcntcfs Brown Marie~9HIl54- that has held the record since i940. Flora is a daughter of It's Brave Dreamer — 84726 — a grand- son of It of Qakiands. Iils Brave Dreamer has five tested daughters. _ the new Canadian Champion 1s valleyyue Flora 2nd- 93719 — a cow with three HOP. records and a daughter of Nap- pan Nobly Horn Fourth, one of the good sons of the famous Gem's that was for ' Noblv Born. many tor, to produce a working model of a telegraph-instrument in 1835. The signals were given in the well known code which bears the in- ventor‘s name. This was followed in 193'] by another (different) mod- el made by Stelnhell of Germany‘, and the same year saw the inven- tion of the Cooke and Wheatstone instrument. This quickly came into general use in England both in the postal and railway services. The English railway lines had “signal- cabina" at strategic points and at every station; and in each was a C. and W. instrument; orders could be transmitted and accidents re- ported to any point in the linc. I have heard that the C. and W. icie- graph, with the Morse code is in use here too, hut have not seen it Naturally. England desired to open telegraphic communication with the Continent and the first submarine cable (Dover to Calais). was laid in 1845. This seems to have been temporary for the pur- pose of gaining practical expor- ience, for it was replaced by a per- manent cable in 185i. Ambition grew and engineers began toying with the idea of laying a subma- rine cable across the Atlantic. The first fry was in i857. when the cable broke. The second in ‘.838 was successful, hut the cable didn't last long. The new cable of i865 was lost. In i065 (he cable was recovered, and a new one laid without any misfortune. I have read that other signals (not the Morse) have been used over the cables. Foxes For Sale i year-old Pearl Platinum (Blue) males proven poly- gamous. 1 pup male half blood Blue and Platinum. 2 half blood Blue female Pill"- 1 year-old Platinum male proven polygsmous. Several Platinum female pups. Priced RI ht C. C. BA Ell Konsington s. years at the head oi the Experi- mental farm herd at Nappan. NB PLATINUM We have a few good lylALE & FEMALE cunuom-z f FOXES PUPS For Sale ' In a mild snowstorm Capt. McKiw of the SS Rondeau Pas-k 11. spects the four Ayrshire bulls he is taking (o Nev: Zealvmd from Mont- Teal- W079i"! 8110i"- $3.500. these bulls were chosen and shipment ar- TBIIBBd by the Canadian Ayrshire B:eeders‘ Association. kei prices, "Den for the season. Ranchers in the Ma - returns. . ship to the E Attention Fox Ranchers Our receiving sfalialiu at F. R. iliclsrineis ls mm P are receiving ment to the leading marking T - . e" Years 9f Bllcgfiisaful selling and marketing for r me! '5 Yllur assurance of good Fox runs) wANn-zn .l We “in l"! bllYillir daily throughout the season s1 ver, while marked and platinum fox pelts at top may. EXCEPTIONAI. man PRICES 1P0: MINK AND NIUSKRAT D0 not dispose of your furs without gctiinglour offer- P. E. l. FUR TRADERS (W. R. J HNKINS) 212 Great George Street, Charlottetown furs for ship. We believe (he Fur Market is going to he strong throughout the season so this should he a good year to MARITIME Fllii POOL, LTD; F. R. MGLAIHE, - Local Representative MINK and M-USKRAT sitiliflaro‘ ltigh. Bringfheln in at once. '