PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN Authorized no second Clan Mall l'on Ufflco Departmcnl. Ottawa. The lnlaml Guardian Publishing Co. Inn A. Burnett. Walker. President lnll Auuclnto Edlwr. Associate Editor. Frank CIRCU LATION "Coven Prince Edivnrd lslaud like the dew” I I ffho Strongest Memory is Weaker That the Weakest Ink". FITIIIIIILOIITETOIVN. Oirlndustrlal Development MONDAY, SEPT. 29, 1952 Because we are chiefly dependent on agriculture and fishing, we have come to regard ourselves as a non-industrial Prov- nce but the fact is that subsidiary indus- fries are becoming of increasing impor- ancc to 0Lll' economy. This is clearly indi- :atcd in the report on Industrial Develop- aient in Canada, 1951-52, prepared by the various Provincial Governments and sub- mitted at t'lic recent Trades and Industry Conference at Lindsay, Ont. p Listed among the developments of the wear in Prince Edward Island has been the Establishment of a fishmeal and fish fil- Ieting plant. Five new draggers are in oper- ation for this plant and three more will be finished by the end of the season. The Gov- ernment cold storage has been increased and has put in new quick-freezing equip- ment; which takes care of all fresh fish offered. The frozen strawberry and blLie- berry industry has been expanded greatly. Electric power is being extended. Progress is reported in the Irish Moss industry and ex-, neriments are under way for a new pro-7 :ess of gathering moss direct. from the oeds. Canada Packers Limited have added wait a million dollars to their already large neat packing plant, having now one of the most modern plants in Easteri. Canada, Dairy plants are streamlining their pro- cessing and packaging methods; the pick- brave new venture. It does mean that :- nest-egg and enthusiasm are not the onl, ingredients required. The proprietor of ii small business must be at once salesman. buyer, display manager, advertising man- ager and bookkeeper. There are many thousa'r:cl.s of storekeepers who manage quite well to be all these and more; it can be done, and it is well worth doing. A busi- ness of one's own can, and frequently does, mean prdsperity and independence. But the cold statistics of business failures should impress upon the beginner the vital importance of careful planning, preparation and consultation. EDITORIAL N0! ts Feast of St. Michael and All Angels. I 0 0 Day of Atonement. '59 Yoni Kippur-.lewish II 3 Congratulations to Mr. F. A. Stewart Jones and Mr. B. Graham Rogers on their election as President and Secretary-treas-. urer of the Maritime Wildlife Federation. It is a tribute to their enthusiasm and the effective steps being taken in the matter of conservation in the Province. An Ontario grand jury has reported that? the escape of the ill-famed IBoyd gang fromi Toronto's Don Jail is not a reflection on; the physical qualities of the jail. In brief, this investigating body voiced an opinion; that has been expressed before-a jail isl no stronger than its sustaining staff. 0 U C Robert Clive, first Baron Clive, Indian administrator, was born this date 1725. A, shy, lonely clerk of the East India Com- pany, Clive proved to be a military genius and daring soldier. His holding the town of Arcot for two months with 500 men against a French army of 10,000 may be regarded as the turning point of English fortunes in India. 0 0 0 ling plant has increased its facilities, and other evidences are cited to show that H10; Province is making progress industrially. It is emphasized in the report. Which W353 prepared by the Provincial Department of; industry and Resources, that the Islandy has ample room foi',furthci' expansion; along these lilies. Labor troubles are non; existent, taxation is low and there are, splendid water, rail and air facilities for transportation. l A bright spot has been the tourist busi-, ness which enjoyed zi banner season thisf year. In this connection the report cites the, Department's program for the rebuilding, of dams and also the work carried on conservation and reforestation to maintain: l0F9St S!1'0Wihv which has mica”-V increasedilllg budworm. A large area containing isome of the finest softwood forests in the during the past year. . An obstacle in the way of economic ad- vzincemcnt is our high transportation costs it is emphasized that as freight rates in- crease this handicap against effective com- petition in larger consuming centres will become more serious. Also it is pointed Jul, in strong terms, that the island has not been receiving its fair share in the dis- tribution of defence contracts compared with other Provinces, and. that this sit- Jation calls for better facilities in the way of assistance to small manufacturers, both from the banks and from the Dominion Government. Small Store Prospects Statistically, the men and women enter- ing business today have much brighter prospects for success than did their coun- terparts in the first decade of this century. At that time 1110 E1V0Fa'10 mi? 0i busimssl in the body sugar splits up to form glucosel failure was about 12 in every 1,000 firms, whereas in the period between 1940 and .1950, out of every 1,000 businesses in oper- ntjon, only two failed each year. But the ictual number of business failures has climbed steadily since 1946. An article in ilhe current number of the M oncl ar .V Times points out that in 1951 the ”ElllllLll'l lotal of failures under the provisions of the Bankruptcy and Winding Up Acts rose to 1,399 compared with 1,303 in 1930-an in- :i'case of 7 per cent." Of these Failures, 37 per cent. occurred in businesses which were less than four years old, and the greater iumber of failures were among-small mer- thandlsers. . Canadians have every reason to en.er the business world with highliopes. But he Monetary Times can quote figures to riack up its grim statement that "all too of- en it means only farewell to saving5- Mai" zinal operators. lndifferently trained, and wen more inadequately financed, these un- fortunate amateurs' seldom siirvive the first period of intense competition. ' A Canadian survey indicates that too ievere competition accounts for only 2-4 Jer cent of all retail failures. In the un- imotional tables of business mortality the vordn neglect, inexperience or incompetence ire written beside nine out of ten business tux. by not mean that comments the Winnipeg Fm PHI!- u husband and wife Caiiiadzi is largely continental but in these Maritime Provinces it might be a good idea for children to learn geography as they do in Britain, Holland, Denmark. Eire and Norway. Schools are associated with Ship Adoption Societies and keep in close touch with their adopted ship. Des- criptions of journeys, cargoes, ports of call and weather conditions during the trips, lend zest to classroom lessons. O 0 I One of the most serious unsolved prob- lems in New Brunswick today, says the Moncton Transcript, is how to save the. forests --and incidentally the province's main source of wealth-from the maraud- ,country has been overrun by the -destruc- ltive pests, and their rapid march is caus- ling deep concern among lumber and pulp- v wood operators. l D 0 in l i There is much talk about iri"-rligioii these ;days, but it is significant that 'church mem- ybership in the United States at the end of I1951 showed an increase of 1,842,515 over lthc previous year. This was a growth of 2 per cent compared with an estimated in- !crease in population of 1.7 per cent. The figures, reported by the National Council inf the Churches of Christ in the U. S. A. lshow that nearly three out of every five Americans are members of a church or ,othcr religious body. These 88,673,005 ad- lhercnts add up to a new high in church enrollment in the neighboring Republic. l D O C l l For a long time it has been known that land fructose, and these are both simul-l ltaneouslyconverted to glycogen, which is a reserve food storediin the liver. Ilowevcr, ,there have been many mysteries concern- .ing the number of steps through which .sugzir passes. In the last two decades scien- tists have discovered how to make sugar ,radio-active. By this method they are able Ito follow sugar through the body and ob- serve the changes which take place. This method is called "tracer technique" from lthe procedure followed in rapid gunfire, iwhercby an occasional tracer shell is in- ;cluded among ordinary shells, to enable the ,gunner to see the course of his fire. I 4 I I l Greece has suffered another crop failure lthls summer, due to an exceptionally severe drought, and more than ii quartci of a mil- lion people face staivatlon unless help is again rushed to them from abroad. To save the children, the Unitarian Service Com- mittee of Canada is launching ii second i”Bread for Greece Crusade", asking its lfriends and supporters to donate at least one dollar; one dollar which will purchase enough Canadian flour to feed a hungry Greek boy or girl during a whole month. The President of the small village of Kom- inades-only a few steps from the Albanian border, told the Director: "Tell our Cam- diam friends that we shall always stand like I rock at the oidel of our Alllog." But they were wrongin discussing so eagerly theirl . ll - ..j-&.1.G......... PUBLIC FORUM This column In open to tho dlscusllon by correspondent: of questions of lnteralt. The Giinrdlan does not necessar- Ily endorse the opinion of corrcspondciits. POTATO BOARD ORDERS setting minimum prices, was ccived by the dealers. Lion, should set 9. price tober. and the ors to have no relation Le decrease in the total potatoes; and every other ci-op. In the past. if a dealer this type of a wrong, he was broke pay the piper-not the Board niaking laws and levying to do so. movenieiit of our potato crop. It should be America: where we supply only 2', of the demand. der Mountuliis and Cobblers practical. The order the loading will ports where near sell. and are is Consignment marketing jectionable in the ' anywhere. A2 7?oe&l' AN AUTUMN (GARDEN Here in the sifted sunlight A spirit seems to brand In tranquil. instinctive mood; ness such as the wise earth known. wells with a full thanksgiving For the gifts that life bestows. For the splendid gospel of color, The i-apt revelation: of sound; For the morning-blue above us And the rusted gold of the fern. For the chlcknderli call to valor Bidding tho faint-heart. turn. ftQa60'&P inc Age-ou Story Q-91' a)! An nun It one to another. and Mother. the 90 may Tho offootunl fervent prayer of need to be kept allvgf r'.-.btooIu nun -viilleth much THE GUARDIAN. UI'lAl(LUl'l'!SlUWNy ,Feehng Much Better , txtlofii ,1 m if I A Sir,-Potato Board Order No. 10, re- and the general reaction from the trade is a ni'ixture of amazement and fear: amazement that on September 15 ii small group, without consult?- a maintained for the month of Oc- price named an- to the niarkct of the day, but is only a guess as to what. the price should If the United States crop report to be issued in October shows a ci'op. the Marketiiiiz Board price would be in line. but otherwise the price is such as to prohibit the sale of our potato section except P.E.I. is in ii posi- tion to go ahead and market their made izuess and was and out of business; but. today aBoard makes the guess, and if they are wrong the farmer is the one who will The dealers fear the authority of amateurs in the potato business. taxes. which should only be the right. of the Provincial Legislature elected These laws, if wrong, could completely stop the sale and renicmberecl that the tail cannot. control the move- ment of the dog, nor can the P. E. 1. Potato Marketing Board con- trol the price of potatoes in North From a practical point. the or- ls badly drawn- in many ways-for instance, small size po- tatoes are named the same price as No. 1'5, which in the case of is not puts the same price at the port as at rall- way loading points further away. which all means that the farmers the ships the others will look at their potatoes. daily action by trucks going across the ferries. and is definitely ob- potato trade What. action has the ......nn--A 4?”? ...:.....G'4..,Iz.ez... on the lfeiiuty and worth of being. And the heart. athrob with glad- For the ancient and -vlrlle nurture Of the teeming primordial ground, --Bllu Carmen. Wm dtho prayer of foul. Ilnl nndtularduul illlod ll -r'rl"i Lincoln's P twinnipeg Ninety years ago. on 22 Septem- ber l862, Abraham Llncolii prom- ised freedom to the slaves. But the promise was little more than a banner flung against the wind. It was a sign of hope, not a guar- antee of liberty. The guns of Grant and the bayoncts of Sher- man had first to crush the South before the pledge could become real. In Congress itself Lincoln fought a cruel opposition. Months of battle and of anguish were still to pass before tho war ended; and when it did, Lincoln no long- er was there to teach the nation to forget the anger of conflict in the co-operation of peace. Lincoln closed his proclamation on the first of January. 1863, granting freedom forever to the slaves, with these words: "And upon this act. sincerely believed to be an act of justice warranted by the Constitution upon military necessity, I invoke the consider- ate judgment of mankind and the Board taken to stop this practice? It is well known that tlils meet- ing was called and action taken when the dealers' representative on the Board was absent from the province--and his absence was known by the chairman of the Board; and it can only be mum. ed that the meeting was called to put through pet ideas without con- sultation with those who are in- terested ln and experienced in the marketing of potatoes. We are, Sir, etc., P. E. I. POTATO DEALERS ASSOCIATION. PACKING PLANT ISSUE Sir. - In Wednesday's issue of The Guardian, I read 9. letter in which Mr. Whezitley expressed con- cern at the stand of the Feder- ation of Agriculture on the prob- lem of a livestock killing plant. As he has made particular reference to myself, I feel obliged to defend my poslition. In the past. the directors have granted an nlidlence to Mr. Wheat- ley many times, and have repeat- edly asked him to put in writing just what. he wished the Feder- Lv fitted in with his plan. This, he a has always failed to do. Although beneficial to the and manage R. plant ourselves. Mr. Wheatley claims to such a plan and hits asked me for my moral support tory explanation support involves. on record as favoring his postltlon slder quest. that this buslne-H. we have been seeking an answer the farmer hove? pondence with me my of my letters. 6 In: Industry would be benellcl Inland formers. ft. hultatu to all futon luvolvod. I am. Sir, el.c., President. P. If. I. Federation of Agrlcultun atlon to do, and where the farmer we all agree that a plant could be Province, so far no one has come forward with ii plan. and we as directors are cer-. talnly not in 8. position to build have repeatedly but as I have not had ii satisfac- of what moral I have not gone He stated moral support has no reference to finances. If it refers to the necessity of A plant. I,huve rilreddy expressed myself in agree- ment. If he wants me to guarantee that all Federation members will patronize his plant, 1 would con- an unreasonable re- AA Mr. Wheatley has made some very pointed accusations at the Federation. especially at myself. I would ask him to point out public- -ly in what way the Federation hindered his efforts in establishing and he could also answer these questions for which (1) Define moral support. (2) How is the business to be organised and operated? (a) What. control will Mr. Whentley has had corres- from time to time Ind he to at liberty to publllh Although the, Federation agrees that competition in the moat pick- to aloud the lumen into any buslney vin- turo without some rouoitoble u- nunnoo of Iuccnu, and without the most careful consideration of cmmus voo CT-TTT".'Tl X A Just when he looked like roclamation Free Press) gracious favor of Almighty God." accept gradual emancipation and to pay the owners for all slaves freed. But moderation has no place in war. and sterner policies had to prevail. The rebellious states refused to parley. They still believed that Lee could win a war from which his chivalrous spirit had shrunk and which he had accepted only as I! last act of tragic necessity. Their hardness, coupled with criticism from ex- l.l'Efl'll3lS in the North, finally drove Lincoln to sign his proclamation. Even then he would have stayed his hand if the war had given him any choice. He acted, as he said. from "military necessity”. He thought the proclamation would weaken the South, encourage de- sertlons in its ranks. shorten the war. He was not I morullst seek- ing to find a. home fonprinclples of justice, though he was mm with sorrow at the suffering and -sadness cost so cruelly upon the Negro. He was Commimder-ln- Chief ofl a nation med into' a divided and embatt ed household. To end the fighting. to save the Union, to establish 8 merciful peace-these were his anxieties and by them he was consumed. The emancipation of the slaves i Q........... -to offset them Amount: to nbo in: his tall, but pfeaumably ton Whiz-Standard. Christopher Columbus hid yield his honors as discoverer world as early as 1000 A.- -D. -O laws Journal. windows and raises the top of dew or mist or snow will the relay and cause the and save damage to controls the. mechanism.- lan Magazine. ence which included the administration of justice Singapore, has been appolnte reoi-ganlzin the nine thing as a kitten chas- the kitten has fun out of it. - Kings- Amei-lca first to the Vtlrlnu who sailed the East coast long before him, and now must bow. according to a south Afrlcamanthropologist, to Arabs who were in the New A device II available ,tli.nf.' clones convertible automobile at the first drop; of rain. Not only rain but actuate top to close and the windows to roll up -upholstery and dash instruments. A micro- molsture grid that can be mount.-,m.ck3, 15 um; scnsjbleg we ma, ed on the exposed part. of the car wonder whether nu; young d,,,,"-lg Rotar- Lt. Col. Frank J. G. Cunning- ham, A lawyer with wide experi- mr t-we-so-o-4 SEPTEMBER 29, 1952 mg cc:-moo-Q-oo-an-t-oom...,”. J.Notes By The Wayx i Ralnln; wngu and rolling pi-lcel no.3 than fndusma) emlxrants cieiibem. izranto an 35 Ddssihle, in There the policy 1, , one of assimilation. Em discouraged, as fai- from aggregating in Dutch .. onles" and are dj5pe,.sed g 3”" to Statesman and Nation. I ic" of Montreal dolly n . us last week thntp tliieen ,,',i',j;i,:'""" Montreal had achieved the an oi of four automobile thieves. 5?; Captain Armand Gagnon, ,;C,,, or the automobile theft squad hastened to tell the newspape i the "ingenious" method of (hm robbers In getting mid of ma automobiles. Mr. Gngnon ,,,,,,f Pains to explain clearly this nlclll- od for the benefit of all those who would like to do the same thing And almost. every time a daring F011b6!')' is committed the pom, find it necessary to explain how the criminals have gone about throwing the police off their 1.. 'quents do not learn from tho. "police school" how to becgm, ;”in';enlous" bandits. -be Progrcs ll dl Old Charlottetown - coeds Mr. G. E. B. Sinclair, who director of the Northern Admtnls-l trntlon and bands Branch of the Resources Department. He suc- has retired on superannuation be- cause of lll-health. Evei--increa.i- (Am! r. l:. i.) EARLY ROAD ASSESSMENTS North and its potential greatness . the appointment of capable men to continue the good work for tho Ottawa. Journal. The , have expected to be firmly air liners from Great only guess. because Comets are hardly in supply at all. At present Britain makes about one a month. By I954 we shall have reached the staggering figure of three. Even by British standards this is hard- ly mus production.-News Chron- lclc. London. A: In outlet for the multiply-lug population, the Dutch have gov- ernment. sponsored emigration schemes. Started originally as I voluntary body, the emigration bureau has been talen over offi- cially, and in two years had in- creased the number of emigrants from 20,000 to 50,000 a year and by next year will probably be ex- porting half the annual net in- crease in popllatlon. The pattern qf emigration is interesting; 20,- 000 to Canada; 18,000 to Australia: 6,000 to New Zealand; 4,000 to South Africa and 1,000 to South America. In the case of Canada. Australia and New Zealand, laim emigrants are in smaller propor- tng interest is being shown in the vast new region is welcomed.- whom we would at- tached to the dollar area in these matters. have ordered two Comet Britain. These are only the latest items in o. list. of orders which is already quite substantial. HOW much more substantial it would be if Comets Earlier, he had been ready to were in reasonable supply one can From the report of a commiitu tabled in the Legislative Assembly, April 12. 1842: "Previous to 1830. no law exiglm in this Colony compelling thg claimants of townships in conliib. ute to the expenses of making roads through such townships. Since that time, a. law was passed compelling them to contribute to the formation (but not to l.l'.a maintenance) of such roads as should thereafter be run through the land claimed by them, in so for as a jury should find that such land was increased in value by said read: but if deteriorated, then the Treasury had to pay the amount of such detci'lomuan to the claimants of the land Ull(l(".' this law, which was put into op- eration in lB33. verdicts have been given against the claimants of land to the amount of H.929, and in their favour, as for damages, 52351: showing the balance on them in be 122,678. "Thus is appears that the tmal amount which the proprietary claimants, as such. have been as- sessed for roads. since the Colony received I! Legislature. is only one- half of what was lost your voted by the House of Assembly. in aid of roads, bridges and -wharves.aiid not more than one-fifteenth of what has, by vote of successive Houses of Assembly, been paid for similar purposes since 1824. and not equivalent. to one year of statute labour; and of this small assessment, only 5:388 appears to have been paid-a stun not far exceeding the expense to which the country has been put in sum- moning and paying juries and witnesses, ctc.. to obtain the wlinie of the verdicts.” t PROFESSIONAL CARDS was only ll detail. in y de- tail, in the larger pattern. 0 O O Nor were all slaves promised freedom, even in Lincoln's procla- mation. some districts, though few in number, could still have slav- ery However. by the end of 1864, about 1,300,000 slaves had been freed. The next stage was to make this victory perpetual by having it rest on something more durable than an edict. issued un- der the stress of war. In addi- tlon, the demand was becoming irresistible in the North to b " t slavery everywhere by law. That meant a. constitutional amend- ment; but Lincoln's hold on Con- gress was precarious. Before the election in 1864 al- most every leader of the Repub- llcan party in waahlngton-his own party-opposed his nomina- tlon for 5!. second term as Presl- dent. only two Republicans in Congrus openly supported him. But. the people, as often happens, were wiser than their leaders. They knew a man when they saw one. C O 0 There was. for example, the farmer who visited a Chicago newspaper: "A sturdy farmer from oiikaloosn. Iowa, one of the bone and slnew class, called upon us yesterday in r ' ” to J. A. McGuigdn BABRISTER, SOLICITOR. Etc. NOTARY. Etc. Currie Building Chas. R. McQuuid B.A. BABRISTER. SOLICITOB, Nonrlr. Etc. Elf True! Bullrllng CHABIJOTTETOWN Phone 1711 Dr. W. R. Carson Ci-IIROPRACTOR Palmer Graduate. CHARLOTTETOWN Phone 1012 201 Prince St. M. Alban Farmer. Q.C. ' B.A.. LL.n. Biirrlster and Solicitor Bank of C Lu Building Charlottetown Money to Loan Gouda! & Hdszdrd GILBERT A. C-AUDET. B.A., LLB. Bari-lotoi-I uul Sollclton Money On Loan Canadian Bank of f' ..C.:....C.C...D.D.... Mutheson. Pculie 8: Nicholson A. W. MATIIBSON. 43-0- A. ll. PEAKB. B.A., LLB. JOHN 1'. NICHOLSON, LLB. llnri-Intern. Etc. Collection: - Money To Donn no Bldg. matters. him now Mr. Iowu. 'Stands?' sold the old farm- er, with glistening eyes and ruin- lng his brawny fist. '0ld Abe stands seventeen feet higher in Iowa than any other man in the United states'." Al: the party ooh- vention in Baltimore enough dele- gates were present who felt like that farmer to ensure Llncoln'l nomination. He curled the coun- try with I majority of 400. . Now came the test. in Congress. The majority was assured in the Senate. nor would there be trouble in getting the neoesury approval from the state I lalotui-es. The problem was the Home of Repre- sentatives. Could I two'-thirds majority be won there? Nrhnt was the issue. I ' In this crisis Lincoln acted like A polltlclnn so well u I noble leader. He bought vote! with pet- ronage and fnvorl. threats and y. mint. and all the devlbu that can be used by the White Ifouae. Edmund Burke sold I sound veil hide: the bcslnn of thtnu;--u unnltlve man will hesitate to lift the veil on the deals and intrigue: that led to the adoption of the luh Amendment, outlawing clov- erv tn the United cam. You of Int the work was done. nioilm Democrat: abound nldu, or stand away. to 3110 the ivoa majority. On 81 Jun- uuy . tho the unonduuut bgulll-II, at Q Dcinoerau be absent. Tum smrimuvo voice out the other lny would have prevented. vu- wry. Eye: Examined. Gluul Fitted Corner Kent and Queen su. . Office Phone XIM-I-loulo 1013 Banister," Solicitor. Notary loyal Bank of Canada Blillulll Charlottetown. P. E. noun on Clay and Farm Properties unison. souci-ron. im. Frodorio A. Large. Allison M. Gillls. 'LL.I. no Iiiobmima st. .- ouuiommm MucPliee & Trainor H. F. MIEPHEE. B.A., Q.C. E. SOMERLED TBAINOB, ILA. Barristers, Etc. A. Walthen Guudef. LL.B. BARBISTER. SOLICITOB. Etc. Phillips Jullillng lll Grafton Street lllimoy to Loan Collcclluu Boll. Mufhieson IO Great. George Street cimioueiown an H H , . c. Bem,j,e;g;,';5- meg,-rig; J. S. Taylor " BEcLI:" .0. , o,..,.oMm.ms.,. D. i.. MA-i-Hiiisoiv. mm. on 0. R. FOSTER. LLB. Loan: on City and Fiirm Propertie- l.'i0 Richmond Street Charlottetown. l'.l!:.l. Palmer & Huslum A. J. HASLAM. B.A.. LLB- Burllter. Etc. Bank of Nova Bootla Chamber! Charlottetown, 1'. E. I- MONEY T0 LOAN Byron foruni. o.o. , OPTOMETBIET in Kent Street Plnrmo 9" I38 Kent Street (Next to slmpooiru Agency) Phone 28?! l'h'"'9 . (Opposite Bevel-o Hotel) J. A. Ccrruthors. lt.O. Dr. A. L. Moclsooc orrounruu m':f.?:T,'g:'" omen BUILDING N no on-men on. Phone --I CHAITIIID uxnoni-ii . w. mmumu. on. other offices at lllllfu. Monaco us but oaom 81.. Clnrlottooawjl Planet Inc - iu-i - lo: :41 lentvlllc. Liverpool. New Glasgow Ind Tran. ” X H. R. DOANI 8: COMPANY ACCOUNTANTS - IIIMA r. MiioPnl:Rtl0N, iii in. St. vlolIn'I. -Amherst. Dlrtmou -3 5-u u.-.oouAi.o.- , cunning- Ifoutrul. hoh'o:.uOIuin. idioms poi. bhvlolleb Ulla I .,.4,.. ', CIIIIII I CC. Aooouimuuli-I W min. uiuiimue. Va-Iw'""' V M: Id. 1”;