PAGE FUUK THE GUARDIAN Authorized on Second Clan Mull Post Office Dcpuhnent. Utuwl. The Island Guudlln Publishing Co. President and Associate Editor, In A Burnett. Auoclnto Editor. Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward Island mm the dew" ('Tho Strongest Memory is Wuakcr Than the Weakest Ink". CIIARLOTTETOIVN, TUESDAY. JUNE 24. 1952 Lobster season Extended Good news for our lobster fishermen is contained in the Ottawa despatch in today's Guardian, intimating that the season has been extended for five.days, to midnight Saturday night, July 5. The extension cov- crs sections of the coast of this Province, New Brunswick, the Nova Scotia main- land and Cape Breton Island within the Gulf and along the Strait of Canso.' The purpose, as announced by Fisheries Minis- ter Mayhew, is to enable lobstermen to make up catches which were cut down dur- ing the normal season by ice and weather conditions. i In the message forwarded to Ottawa last week by the P. E. I. Fisheries Federation and brought to the attention of the House of Commons by Mr. McLure, a ten-day ex- tension was requested. However, on the principle that half a loaf is better than no bread, the Federal Government's decision will be welcomed as affording at least some relief to the industry at this time. In all matters of this kind we have a valuable friend at court in Mr. MacNaught, who is Parliamentary Assistant to the Fisheries Minister. Some unfortunate publicity has been given to criticism of the Fisheries Feder- ation in statements attributed to Mr. Har- old Cormier, president of the P. E. 1. Fish- ermen's Association, which Mr. Cormier has repudiated. His denial that he had any knowledge of the alleged interview will, we have no doubt, be acbepted in responsible quarters by all concerned. The statements attributed to him appear to have been in- tended to foster discord between the two organizations, and the effect at Ottawa might well have been to discredit the ap- peal for an extension of the season al- together. Fortunately this has not been the case, and both our packers and fishermen will benefit from the concession granted. Next to agriculture, our fisheries is the most important industry we have, and there is ample room for both the Fisheries Federation and the Fishermen's Association to function in this Province to mutual ad-, vantage, and to the great benefit of the Province generally. Tiiew Pacific Dean At the end of an echo nearly seven miles down, British surveyors have found a new deepest ”deep” for all the world's oceans. H.M.S. Challenger, sounding a vast undersea canyon south of Guam. in the western Pacific, touched bottom at 35,640 feet last summer with an underwater sonic signal and a weighted steel wire, the British Admiralty has announced. Previously the greatest known ocean depth was 34,440 feet, recorded in 1945 off Surigao Strait in the Philippine Islands, the National Geographic Society says. Verified in 1950, this meas- urcnicnt is named Cape Johnson Deep. The new Challenger Deep exceeds it by a full 200 fathoms (1,200 feet). At the time of discovery the Challenger was midway between Guam and Yap and within 200 miles of the Great World War II anchorage of the U. S. Navy at Ulithi Atoll. As the hydrographic survey ship crossed a known trench in the sea floor, its sonic depth finders lost touch with the bottom at about 4,100 fathoms. Explosive charges were set off in the water to con- tinue the soundings. The Challenger pick- ed up the echoes from the bottom with hydrophoncs. Meanwhile, a 140-pound lead weight was lowered on a sounding wire. It ran out for an hour and a half before strik- ing bottom. In October, the Challenger re- turned to the same positioniwith its sonic equipment adjusted to record theigreat depths. The measurement of 5,940 fathoms (35,640 feet) was verified. The location was latitude 11” 21' north, longitude 142” 15' east. Challenger Deep lies in one of a series of deep trenches gashing the Pacific sea floor from the Philippine archipelago to the Aleutians. One arc of these furrowed wrinkles sweeps from Japan southward to the Caroline Islands, rivaling in depth the 600-mile-long Mindanao Trench aldhg the eastern flank of the Philippines. As long ago as 1899, a record depth of 31,614 feet was reeled off by. a survey ship charting a Pacific cable route southeast of Guam. The spot was named the Nero Deep. Not faraway, by A later discovery, is the 32,- 1208-Ioot Mansyl Deep. 2 ...... Cape Johnson Deep will. rank second. Ramapo Deep, midway between Tokyo and lwo Jima, will be third at,3-1,038 feet. Pursuing The llnattalnaliio One of the will-oi-the-wisps which we all pursue is that of certainty. Whether it is E the employee concerned about getting at regular pay cheque, the farmer seeking uniform crops and dependable markets, the business man wanting dependable sources of raw material, the lawyer demanding that the law be precise even at the expense of justice, or the philosopher, scientist or theologian seeking absolute answers to his; questions,Aall want to be certain. i What they have found, of course, is thati no matter how much data can be collected and generalized upon there are always un- accountable factors, unaccountable that is in advance. After the event it is possible by reviewing the circumstances to see where predictions were in error. It follows that plans for action must at best be provisional. The best plan is the one which takes account of the most im- portant known factors yet which permits variation when conditions change. Today it is in the field of politics that there is the greatest need for adaptability. A complete! political philosophy breaks down all too often in practice or if followed to its logical conclusion, as in totalitarian countries, can result in measureless misery for the sake of principle. EDITORIAL NOTES Feast of St. John Baptist. I O 0 This evening the annual school meetings are being held in every district to review the year's record in education and to pro- vide the personnel and funds for the year to come. A it 0 Canadian Girl Guides, including some from this Province, are. looking forward to the opening of their national camp at the Connaught Rifle Range, Ottawa, on July 15. Prime Minister St. Laurent will do the honours. O O O A high honour has been paid to Dr. L. W. Shaw in his selection to represent Canadian education at Geneva. The genial Deputy Minister of Education has a long record of valuable public service and such recognition by the Canadian Education As- sociation is highly gratifying. ! I O Ambrose Bierce, American author, was born this date 1842. He enlisted in the Un- ion Army in 1861 and had a distinguished record. He went into journalism in San 'Francisco and later in London. His stories. including, ”Tales of Soldiers and Civilians . show a notable capacity to depict war in all its horror and had a marked influence on later writers. 0 O I The Ordnance Compound on Wednesday is the centre of gravity, if that is well put, of the first get together of the Prince -Ed- ward Island Regiment (17th Reccel S1000 the end of the Second World War. Pastl and present members of the regiment will enjoy a smoker after inspection of the troops and march past on Brighton Road. I I O The name of Daguerre will always be associated with photography. Just one hun- dred years ago the famous father of photo- graphy was buried at Bry-sur-Marne. and the societies of photographers and of films held a special commemoration ceremony in honour of his name. At the. same. time a ispecial exhibition was opened in which 0110 ihundred years of progress in photography was the theme. 000 , The appointment of Capt. C. E. Dug- gan, to be'an aide-de-camp to the Queen emphasizes the personal relationship in the post. As master of the Empress of Scot- land, in which the Royal party returned from last year's Canadian tour, Capt. Dug- gan had a chance to earn Her Majestyis confidence although a Merchant Navy of- ficer rather than as holding rank in one of the fighting services. 0 Bank of France reports that 3920 bn' banknotes are being boarded in that coun- try. This is five times the amount of aid France has got from the U. S. since the war. German taxes are higher than Brit- ish, but overtime pay is tax-free. As a re- sult, German work-week often runs as high as 60 and 65 hours. Standard work-week is six days, 48 hours. 0 0' O The negligence of mothers may lead to tragedy. ' Mrs. James Bradley, mother of three young children who fled from their west-end Ottawa home early one morning when fire broke out in their living room. was fined for leaving them unattended. Mrs. Bradley, who'sald she had been at a party, appeared in Family Court on a If flnhpllybvarlfled, Challenger Deepiwill charge of leaving the 'chlldren unattended lion worth of gold and hard-currency , g1'THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN - Weighing Problem &00MMafrGOfC Old Charlottetown (And P. E. L ) -A.. TELEGRAPH MONOPOLY t "For some years past the friends of this Province in Ottawa head- ed by Senator Carvcll, have been endeavouring to break the mon- opoly enjoyed here by the Anglo- Amerlcan Telegraph Company. A good point was scored last year in the passage of the Bill relating to telephones. This your the MI- vanlagc then gained is being fol- lowed up by I! Bill to incorporate the Canadian Rapid Telegraph Company. The Bill has passed the Senate. and is now under the con- sidcration of the Commons. "The Anglo-American Telegraph Company have, however, petitioned against the passage of the Bill, on the ground that they have an exclusive right of telegraphic con- nection between the points refer- red to. But the following extract from the charter of the original company, dated May 10,1854, would seem to be fatal to their claim. It provides that (during the ex- istence of this company no other person or persons, body or bodies, politic or incorporate, shall be permitted to enter upon or touch any part of this Island or the coast thereof, or of the islands or places within the jurisdiction of the Government of this Island. with any telegraphic cable wire or other means of telegraphic communication from any other province, state, country or place whatsoever, beyond the continent of Amerlch." "As the Ottawa Citizen remarks. had these last five words been omitted from the charter. their claim would hold good; but as it is there is no stipulation that any other company on the continent of America shall not make connec- lion with the Island." --The Examiner. May 4, 1883. ..A(- O . I ' - TO A FRIEND WHO MUST GIVE UP GARDENING lLady if you have the strength To spade a row, Oh. by all means, but if not. Let it go. Birds have colors, bright as flowers, Insects, too, Flaunt a red, in purple, green mctallc hue. Rainbows flash within ii drop Of trembling dew. Flowers in'nll their loveliness Are but one smpll Fiicci. of beauty that Jewels all. Stars are just as numerous. Just as bright; No one has to hoc and weed Stars all night. -Margery" Mansfield in the New (I - ' Q The Age Old Story the-cooo And It came to pan. that, while Apollo: was It Corinth. Paul hav- ing passed through the upper cont: came to Ephesus Y . . And God wrought special ' ' by the hands of Paul . . . Then con- tain of the vnubomi lawn, exorc- iuu. look upon them to call over them which had evil spirit: the name of the lard Jesus, saying. We uuure you by Jesus whom Pnul' prcsoheth. And there were seven non: of one soon. I Jew. and chief of the priests. which did I0. And the evil spirit Ill- nwered and said, Jesus I know. and Paul I know. but who are ye? And the mm in whom the evil spirit wn leaped on them. and overcome them, Ind prevailed no that they fled honu naked and out of the. want: IAIIII this was known to all the lows and also Greeks dwelling at Ephesus: And fan ml on all. and the nuns of the Hgdpesl known hole in the sea. and was fined sis and costs. -,,,,,,','"3.''' one was magnified. 'llIIllI0'n. L Notes By The Albany Air Defence Filter Center received a telephone warn- ing from a woman the other day that enemy aircraft had been sighted over Canada. Possibly she was a Republican who thought President Truman hat! flown here to find out why the Can- adian dollar was worth more than its U. S. counterpart.-Otlaw.1 Citizen. Part of the Calgary Stampede legend is the hospitality of Cal- garlans. This city is famous for treating visitors fairly and square- ly and for not trying to exploit them during Stampede Week. make little if any revision their prices for the week. Most auto courts, too. quote the usual tariff in spite of the fact that space is at such a premium they could get away with almost any increase. A recent survey of the motels showed the great majority sticking by their usual summer rates, which ls.to their credit. But two of them are out to make ii killing. Whereas their custom- ary prlce is 35 to 57 a night. during Stampede Week the figure will be 520.-Calgary Albcrtan. Oh the authority of ii young lady of high professional probity and social standing, this little in- cident is told. In making a pur- chase at a local store last week. this lady was tendered and ac- cepted a two dollar bill, U. S. currency, in change after payment for her purchase in H Canadian ten dollar bill. She remarked to the saleslady at the time some- thing about exehiinge, and was told that that store never bother- ed about the two percent. In the afternoon of the same day. at the same store, and with the same saleslady, the two.dollar U. S. bill was tendered for another pur- chase. In this instance, the two percent. was charged. A sermon on business ethics might be writ- ten at length on this case, but what's the use?eSt. Catharincs Standard. The report of A session of Grey county council reads'llke a new version of in wild north thriller. Wolves menacing Grey County! Seems hard to believe. Yet it is unquestionably true. The Question is what to do about it. Best solution we can suggest is that Grey county hire William Linn of ,Waodford ms offlclnl wolf-hunter-and pay him a sal- ary sufficiently large to compen- sate him for devoting all his time to the task. The salary might have to be high, because if he was successful in his work he would shoot himself right out of in. job in a few years. But would be well worth every cent has already taken a heavy toll of fun. has to work. He can't hunt all the time.-Owen Sound Times. Todnyll grown-ups. like to por- tray themselves an solemn, righte- ous. dutiful students we or three decade: ago. But we seem to re- member that in the 1920': some pretty weird going:-on could be observed on the campus scene. Those were the day: of yellow " t minted up with slang goldfish lwullowen. It was the competitive hobby t of studious young men in that an to see how many llvo goldfish they could gulp down, and they took the con- tact: quiu urloully. But as wt have nlresdy said, they didn't do Anything silly than like they do today. -saint John Teleluph- Joumnl. . Well, hard we go again. lul- dantc of my, scanning let- ter: from friend: in south- ern bn pwlll be running across the old ug.' and will, again, la- boriously reply. explaining the TIIH time It ill in- the council hsd- to pay. Mr. Linn displeased the Man" i U The Way I- volve the news item about snow on a Sudbury street in June. The fact. that the stuff is no longer white, and that it has been piled up with the accumulated grime of the Winter protecting it from the sun, will have no bearing on the matter as far as the southerners are concerned. They will simply recall that. a lady complained to the Sudbury council that water from the snowpile is damaging her property. As far as they are concerned the stuff fell last week sometime-or yesterday for that matter.-Sudbury Star. What would a British "bobby" Merchants. ,esmu,,,ms and hams be with a can instead of 9. hel- of land could not be given except In met? He would still be a pollce- by the Hudson's Bay man, no doubt; but to great num- bers either who have met. him in the flesh or who know him only' from pictures he would no longer be so unmistakably English-nor perhaps so much a symbol of quiet, goodnatured authority. Yet the tall helmets. it is reported. are being replaced with peaked caps. And the British policemen themselves are reported to be against the change. Usually ad- herence to the old is accomplish- ed by a certain amount of incon- tcnlence, accepted for the sake of tradition. But the "hubby's" reasons are practical ones. The helmet, he says, is lighter and affords more protection. Those would seem good enough grounds for keeping the helmet - apart from widespread considerations of sentiment. -vohristian Science Monitor. . Maldive Islnnds (National Geographic Bulletin WASHINGTON. D. C.-Inhnblt- ants of the Maldive Islands, a cluster of coral atolls made up of some 2,000 islets in the Indian Ocean 400 miles southwest of Cey- lon, contemplate a change in gov- ernment. Reports from Ceylon indicate that the 93,000 inhabitants of the islands plan to discard their pres- ent constitutlomil sultanate and become a republic under an elected chief. The islands, guarded by Great Britain as part. of Ceylon until Ceylon became ii. dominion after World War 11, remain a. British- protectcd state regardless of their form of government, says the Nat- ional Geographlc Society. A spokesman for the Maldives in Colombo, capital of Ceylon, ex- plained that his homeland is not part of the British Common- wealth. "but. our relations with it are most cordial." An early visitor to the Maldives was lbn Bntuts. most. traveled Moslem of the 14th century. who vizier by his efforts to enforce mosque at- the wolf population. He hunts for l'e"dmce "ml '5” cwth” the mm" But like the rest of us. he w9m9"- He married the vlzler's daughter and three other women 5"". during 8 brief stay. The lndustri us islanders are all most. entirely oslem. They live an fishermen and seamen. and through sale of native products. including coconuts, copra. coir (coconut matting fiber), millet. and lace. - The Maldives were the lies of a secret; British naval base. hacked out. of the jungle by the Royal Marines even before the Japanese molt-OI IN! KY!!! Klt EIYIDOHI. attack on Pearl Harbor. Their and bllloon 310118911. Ind Shel" strategic importance is evident W110 '0" I9”! WI” "5 ""5 333' from their position nstrlde the dir- ced "I9 0h"'I"l'9"- "Id '3'"-5 ect Iteamsh route between India :2”: flutiacred htlgh above tha: md Mrlml S"? "I "IS" "I "'9" "I ltlon of the chi la is flagpole litters - and, oh, yes, P95 - . 1, IL vmble when we look backward to the day: of fierce competition and frequent violence which marked the drive to the West in the early days of the nineteenth cen- tury, we must at the same time remember that competition and violence were the inevitable ac- companiments of great, if conflict- ing. ambitions. The most notable Slfllsgle was a four-cornered af- fair. The Hudsop Bay-Red River route witnessed conflict of inter- est between Lord Selkirk and. the Hudson's Bay Company monapol. lsts. The Montreal-Red River Trail SW the bitter contest be- tween e North West Company, and the New Northwest Company, called the XY Company. Both of these struggles ended with the consolidation of the rivals. but in the Red River Valley the two newly consolidated groups met in head-on collision. o o o Thomas Douglas. second son of the Earl of Selkirk, the son of a long line of Scottish nobles, was brought up In the family mansion on St. Mary's Isle. In his youth. we know. he met Robert Burns and it. was in the Selkirk home that Burns wrote the Selkirk Grace: "same has meat and cumin eat And some can eat but want it, But we hae meat and we can eat And sale the Lord be thankit.” Burns' love of humanity must have affected the spirit of Thom- as Douglas, and a. visit be paid to France strengthened his belief in the rights of man. So, at 28, after he succeeded to the title, he saw with disgust the "High- land Clearances" by which the great lords of Northern Scotland drove hundreds of tenants from their tiny holdings. Early in 1802 he had his first vision of a col- ony in the heart or North Am- erica to be reached by way of Hudson Bay. He ran into opposi- tion from the Government. bent on conserving manpower at home. and from influential men in Scotland. Hudson's Bay Company influence blocked him from Lake Winnipeg. He did establish some small settlements in P. E. I. and Ontario, but these were small successes. In 1803 he visited Mont- real and gained some knowledge of the Montreal merchants' bon- anza in the West. The times were very hard in Britain; the pop- ulation had increased: wages were low, the cost of living was high. Selkirk turned his gaze back to the Red River. ' a . 0 Leading lawyers, headed by Sir Samuel Romilly. held that grants Company. Selkirk had only one course: he bought all the Hudson's Bay stock he could lay his hands on. A meeting, where it little less than half the stock was represented, granted him a huge area of 110,- 000 square miles, partly in what is now Manitoba and partly in the Dakotas. In 1811 the first party of Sel- kirk scttlers under Miles Mac- doncll reached York Factory-too late to go any further. Imagine that first winter on the flat, bleak Red River Epic (Wilfred Bovey in The Legionary) , T lelvel shelters, find kill, guard against sccuail-.tlr,::ouwnt;,, spruce gum and salts of lemon cut wood to keep warm. No; ,-1,; June 12th could they, undei their leader Miles Macdonell I out and. in clumsy boat, ':,,'d with much hsrdshl way to Pemblna. P, nuke the" Next year a few more cam and in the summer of 1813 ch. whole group settled near the '1! of Winnipeg ma mwed us" first wheat. In 1814 another grow almost a hundred, under Arcllui, bald Macdonald, joined the M1. 01 hardy pioneers. M . . . The North West Which. as described in HNC16. was headed by in Montreal traders such as 51 MCTIVIIII. Froblsher and the IR?” GI1IIVFBYS'.absarbed in 150., ," only serious rival, the xy C " Dally. also composed of Montr::l' era, and by the time of Selkirkf venture had spread all over We North West and sent its agents: one was Alexander Mg.-;ke,,,,,,.N tflilc far as the Arctic and the Paci- Colllpany another 9 XTBM - . . The Northwe t t i , mltted wliat 5 an A M” W" they feir to 1,. Poaching on their preserves but won chanted their attitude. rim sent two emlssaries-Cameron '3 5'"00”1 ODEFMOY. and Grant, . hard-boiled "tough"-to the I . Red River. Cameron penuaded my; the Selkirk settlers to leave for Unher Canada. Grant began by arousing enmity among gh, ha”, breeds who lived nearby. M319. Macdonell was arrested-kidnap. ped would be a better ward-and taken to Montreal. Other Scl- kirk men were also "arrested", Grant and his half-breeds burned the colonists' houses but than escaped down the shore of L..;;. Winnipeg. ltelnforcements mum to the Selkirk men under "Gay. ernor' Sample and the settle- ment was re-established at Fort Douglas north'of the site of w... nlpeg. On June 19. 1816, at Seven Oaks Just north of the present city, Grant's men attack. ed Semplt.-'s little force. The 1,... ter were defeated with much 10;; of me? Semlllc. wounded bv it bullet, was knlfed: the survivors fled to Norway House, I 0 0 Selkirk was in Montreal for (La winter of 1815 but had im new; later than that of the first at- tack. He complained to the then Governor. but the Northwestern had too much political pull. Sel- kirk hired 100 Swiss veterans and set out for the West. On the way he heard the news of Seven Oaks. went on to Fort William, releas- ed the Selkirk men held there, and arrested three leading North- westers. In May, 1817. he reached the Red River. His remaining settlers were brought back from their refuge on Lake Winniptz and settled at Kildonan. now Old Klldonan. just north of the sltc of Winnipeg. Selkirk return- ed io Montreal, sought vainly for Justice against the Northwesters. and finally went home to Scot- land to die of heartbreak. Such were the painful begin- nings of the Scottish settlement of Manitoba. Today Winnipeg I1- entrance to the Nelson River: The colonists had to build them- self is Sclklrk's monument. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Palmer & I-iuslum A. J. HASLAM. B.A., LLB. Barrister. Etc. Bank of Nov: Seoul (Xnmhen (.u.rIottet.own. P.E I. MONEY TO LOAN MucPhea & Truinor II. F. IITBCPHEE, B.A.. Q.C. I. BOMEBLED TIIAINOB. B. A. Bnrriunru, .13. J. A. Mctiuigun. BARIH STEE. SOLICITOII, Eh NOTARY, ITO. BAIIIIISTER. BOLICITOI CUBRIE IIUILDING a. A. CARRIJTHEIHS , no. OPTOMETRI51 PHONE 2872 123 Ken! Strut (Next to Simpson's Agency) OYIIOII J. GRANT 0.0. oProMs'rnis'r izm item street PHONE I19 Adjoining North American Hotel Dr. w. R. Carson Chiropractor Palmer Gndunlo ' CIIAILOTTETOWN Phone 1071 I01 Prince SI. -?A..........m.. Bell. Mathieson & Foster Barrmerl. Solicitors. etc. a. R. BELL. Q.C. D. L MATHIESON. LI..B.. Q.C G. R. FOSTER. LLB. Loam on City and Farm Properties - r 150 Richmond Street Gander & Haszurd GILBERT A. cnuoirr. is. A., u. v. Barrister: and Snliclton Money to boln Canadian Bank of Commerce Bliti M. Albun Farmer. QC. B.A., LLB. Barrister amlp Solicitor Bunk of C u: Building Charlottetown Money to Loan A. Woilhen Gander, LL. 8. BAKIIISTER. SOLICITOR, Ell. Phillipa Building Ill Grafton Street Money to Lola Collection -Allison M. Gillis. . bannisuzic aouctrnn. c. 130 Richmond St. - Phone 590 Dr. A. L. Muclsuuc DENTIST Dentll X-lhy Gl..0R.IA BUILDING 119 Grafton SE Phone 281 MGDOIIALII 8: JOYAL Barrister: I Solicitor!" as Queen St. ' OTTAWA. ' supremo A Exchequer Court. Departmental and Plrllumanur! Agents. Patents, Trldemlrks, CoI1:"'IlI'"' Corporation. nuutlon. Cu f F and Exclu and General Practice. JOHN ll. MCDONALD: MABCEL JOYAL. Ch'town. Charlottetown. P.E.l. KENNETH ll. FOGARTY. wrecks on the reefs near the light.- houae on Minicoy atoll. AI re- cently as last year 3 ship carrying an lndlnn-British scientific team was caught in an Indian Ocean typhoon near the inland: and mule lu damaged way to the harbor of the Maldive capital at Mala with great difficulty. Ibn Batuta, the marrying Mos- lem, paid tribute to the mtlvel an seamen and to Maldive products in ongoing vessels. He noted that the tough ropes of the islands were used to bind ships together with I rssiilenca that resisted the effects of grounding on numerous resin. la and (learn Other ofllalnl Rallfu. Mono II.iI. IIIIME and GIIMPAIIY CHAITEIID AUUOUNTANTB IL. Charlottetown Phones I000 - M11 - Box :47 RANDOLPH W. MANNING. CA ERMA P. MIEPHEIISDN C.A km. st. John's. Amherst. Durb- uouth. lentvluo. Liverpool, New ulunw and Truro. IMDONALD. CURRIE I O0. CIIABTEIID M!t:ouN'I AN18 Montreal. Qnobeagoltuwn romno anon anon tnmbrnou Vancouver. Kirkland Ian. Ilo cum. Illa. can-ioumn notch. uuniuon. cmbiumwwn ,. . sauna til 5 g . 1