t .' I jun acumen can be obtained limb eb- (ll bevuéoi gnu-d um also Induce-w. oil-m s. urinal-d. _ Search?! litter Ill Iolrrou-old ennui‘ nuw Iona-mi mulled -Lhut. ccl. n. A. nudism-n, u. s. . a . . are: ll. ugg New: Drnot. 80* Wu: 40th St. p gunner and Ilnlted emu! pm your 1h adruee) delivered. Vlu-frerlden%ul.ni. bums D ' l. (lurrle. Audlermun. 2M‘ Trrmont 9t. r " RIB’ GLASGOW. N. fl.— l1. ll‘. Flullmer. IIUII IOIIAOUI-W. A. Johnston. ruin oumn 5...... l (inlet. (treat George Street. m. Iyewl. rm (‘like D’ ' w: s 00-. union Strut Whltlcrl, Great George Htreet. SIDS-Hunter Book m... re. SOUBIS-ll. S. Arorn, , following ugeutc In (Yherlottetovrn. Duly. llluvmnud Street. Alex. McPherson. Queen Street. n. Tweel. Um Ave. Tomlin: Grocery. Cor. Kent I Bechford J. Canada New: Co., Depot. Mrn. '. Duly ‘ueeu net. fluent-on, bcreheeter Street. Irnuh N. Kaye. l9 Ililhboro Street. “_i=(' TUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1929 >7 AND NOW WHAT? "M the regulai-Tlual meeblnk 05 pmflnghfl Dairy-men's Associa- tion on March 6th last, the following resolution was adopted . RESOLVED that we, the mem- bers and delegates to the Prim‘? Edward Island Dairymen‘s Assoc- iation here assembled. View with apprehension the imlwmmhh m‘ to the Dominion of Canada in Increasing quantites of Austral- ‘ fan and New Zeaiand Creamery Quflgr, lowering the market price ~ or Canadian butter. coming 111w the Domini - as it does during our winter months when the costs of production are higgiesr than during the summer mon . , 1T 1S ALSO RESOLVED that ‘we regpggtfully request the__Fed- eral Government to at once ap- ply the Dumping Clause on all butter coming into the Dominion whether on straishl I318 m‘ ¢°“‘ argument. "rile followin! paragraph formed ‘pert oftheoriginal resolution as moved: as: rr ALSO marinara RE- aonvm that we request the Ilbderai Government to at once ' _ take steps to terminate the Aust- relian and New Zealand trade _ treaty at the earliest. date 1105-" k sibiie. . "Ibis clause was finally deleted to m“ the wishes of the Hon- W- M- ha, thruster of Agriculture, and‘ other prominent Liberals who were prudent. Ml‘. Leo spoke disfllipfw‘ gqiy g1 the Association adoptinfl h" gytggonistlc attitude towards the h-eaty with New Zealand and Au- gh-glia, and argued‘ that our farmers opposed to further duties on (prm implements and therefore could not logically ask for protection on their own products. As quoted by the local Liberal organ, Mr. Lea stat- ed: “'I.‘he farmers here should take the some broad view as the farmers of British Columbia. who refused to p”; any resolution against the truth" _ This was the attitude of our Min- ggq- fe Agriculturo in March last. when the question was more or less lithe academic stage. It has been the attitude persiste itly maintained by the Liberal press up "i=0 l1 few weeks ago. Some of its last utter- ances, in the Patriot of Nov. 20th last, m worth recalling in the light or the present situation: “The fact remains that the butter production in 1927 was the second highest on record in quantity, and set a new record in value. Obviously then the New zegland imports did not affect the price "of the Canadian pro- duct. It was imported simply because the Canadian producers were not able to supply the home demand." As pointed out by The fiuardian, the Liberal organ omitted to publish the National Dairy Council's report. then available, of the falling off in butter production in 1928 and its as- sertion that this decline was due to New Zealand lmportations. After quoting with approval a statement in the Farmers‘ Sun, that “than is no evidEnce that New Zeal- end butter affects prices in the East- ern Provinces” the Patriot oi Nov. 39th last sapiently pointed out our duty even in the event of being un- dsreold by New Zcaland competitors: , "We are selling large quan- tities of goods to them. and ne- cessarily we must buy their pro- ductnnThis is not a "fiscal fad," it. is-e. plain fact of economics which nojmount of "buttery pro- paganda" can overcome." 4 c from the attitude of our Liberal ', representatives and their organ it llillbeeeerlthaturlless thereisa ebonle in the political wind there is little hope for any immediate relief p"fllc'farlners of this Province. It iillbe um. too. how much at val 1 can are thelfviews from those of ‘ ‘Q Provincial Dairymenb ' Associa- ‘tflru npielsed by the president, W. J. Gibson, at the annual above refenodto We quote “If New Zealand butter contin- ues coming into Canada nearly duty free it will eventually put dairyirlg out of business in this Province, for it is impossible to compete, our conditions are so different; and if this happens it will take with it, to a great ex- tent, the next great industry. the bacon hog." I, Is it not time thaixwe had a. re- statement of the case from those who so recently sneered at the “buttery propaganda" which was designed to protect our farmers and merchants from the very situation that has arisen during the past week? _ RADIUM CANCER CURE A French physician at a. recent meeting of medical men »in Paris, gave a report of experiments in the treatment of cancer by radium, con- ducted by him during the past five or six years. The treatment, he de- clared, had been very successful. A percentage of some twenty-four of the number of owes treated liacl been completely cured, while the majority of the remainder were greatly benefit- ted. No doubt, cancer,‘ like many other diseases, will ultimately be conquered by science. But perhaps a more sig- nificant statement than that regard- ing the cancer cures was made by the doctor when he said that the amount oi radium available in the world to- day was not sufficient to meet the demands, and that this was because the production was being held up for commercial reasons by corpora- tions controiling the _only districts now known to produce it. _ The cost of producing radium‘ is necessarily very great, making the price practically prohibitive. But when it is stated that the production is being deliberately curtailed in or- der to enhance the value, the situ- ation is really alarming. lt has been known for years that cancer is iri- creasing. So far radium is the most successful treatment that has been attempted, and according to the statement above mentioned it has been successful in so many cases as to make it imperative in the interests of humanity that its use be made as general as possible. Sufferers from this terrible disease will find little consolation in thefact that the only known remedy‘ is being ruthlessly exploited. Legitimate commerce and industry must‘ not be hampered by govern- mental action; but when the very necessaries of life are being monopo- lized for profiteering purposes, then some preventawe action should be possible. ' This is emphatically the age of combines, some of them necessary but all of them instituted for profit- making. When we permit them to exploit human suffering we are fol- lowing the road of Egypt, Babylon, and other nations that have perish- edf There should be a remedy. EDITORIAL NOTES Australian newspapers are com- plaining of the January heat. Dairy production seems however to be go- ing on just the same. “Severe weather, Sam," observed Mr. Pickwick. "Fine uiné for them as Ewell wrapped up. as the Polar Bear said to himself when he was practising at the skating,“ replied Mr. Weller. A member of the staff of the Sia- mese Legation knocked down a man in London with his automobile, and s fuss is being made because the law "cannot touch him. Washington was annoyed some time lgo because the British limbmylhm claimed e:- emption under llmflll‘ circumstanc- ‘ _ .- Notes By 17w Way According to the latest mode. neither the Stanley nor the Mont- calm will be immediately available for the relief of the oer ferry, and no further um- uncement has been made with respect to accommodation in drydock in Halifax, or elsewhere. Pro“ has been exceedingly 800d to us- so far, having “tempered the wind to the shorn lamb." .'I'hc policy, however. of waiting supinely for providential aid has nave; been esteeme‘ swiseoneonthepertof statesmen It -is proverbial that Providence helps those who help themselves. Cromwelrs motto: “Trust in God. but keep your powder dry,” however questionable theologically, would seem to flt'the present emer- gency. We remember what happened "the Foolish Virgins, wbo-aedamps went out. A similar mishap might overtake others than virgins. The nations of the world have been inventing schemes for the pre- vention of war, and those of them which were foremost in this propa- ganda. for peace are today busily eli- gaged in adding m‘ their navies. The prospects of peace iii the circum- stances are somewhat clouded. The United States led the way, both in the tactics for peace and in the en- largement of its navy. The others, while subscribing to the peace pro- posals, are following in the naval competition. Italy is the last to add greatly to its naval strength, and her newspapers Jusify the measure" on_ the ground that others are doing it and that Italy, if true to herself, can- not lag behind. How will it end? In an allegorical novel entitled, “The Legends of Smokeover," an English writer describes modern con- ditions as making inevitably for war, despite the appearance of industrial pic-occupation exhibited in the large manufacturing and commercial cen- tres of which "Smokeover" is an ex- ample. The economic system, the trade, the manufactures, the business, the WRSB-eflrlilng and profit-making that go on from day to day, all look peaceable enough; but we are asked to observe things with a closer eye. We find that "wealth in Smokeover is so distributed that it can be easi- the commlssariat of war," and "the peace is thebasis for the distribu- tion of power in time of war." We are referred to the statistics of rich and poor. "Lo and behold, they roughly display the proportion of of- ficers and privates contributed by the ‘city to the recent war. Is that an accident? What a war-making civ- iliaation demands is a relatively small class of the rich and well-to. do to furnish the money and. the of- ficers, and a relatively large class of the poor to fill the ranks and clean up the mess. Exactly what you will find in Smokeover." Under the writer’: analysis, our peace-time industrlallsm takes on a sinister attitude. "In the foreground of the picture are the slums and the suburbs, the chimneys andthe tennis lawns, the factories and the mansions. the churches and the taverns, the throng in the streetand the crowd at the football match; in the background are marching hosts and bloody bat- tles; and between the two run links of meaning and purpose, which so con- nect them that. foreground and back- ground combine together into one consistent whole. The transition from peace to war in our city is not violent, as some think, but natural and easy. ‘In a war-lilaking world “mokeover stands ready for use at the shortest notice, and with the least possible breach with existing habits of mind. One may compare the inhabitants to a. mighty shoal of fishes imprisoned in a far-flung and invisible net, which encloses so vast an area of the ocean that the fishes may swim and disport themselves for hundreds of miles, and reproduce their kind generation after genera- tion, without once discovering that they are in a cruel trap. When war neegs_..ihe fishes the net is drawn in." Surely a sombre picture; but one on which we might do well to ponder casionally. The British House or Commons is still the theatre of some classic de- bates, though the days .of Gladstone and Disraeli are over. Recently, in reply to criticism levelled at the term "charity" in connection with the Government assistance to the Lord ‘Mayor's Fund for the reilef of distressed miners, Premier Baldwin saidz-"To hon. Members who dis- I would make one observation: Char- ity is the word that is used in the Authorised Version: the Revised Version uses the word ‘love.’ I would commend that u. them." To which Mr. Ramsey McDonald replied: “fillerrimesfinister finished by giv- ing a Biblical definition ‘of the word ‘charity.’ May I givethel-louse the Persian definition of ‘charity? ‘Charity is e virtue that is required to overtake neglect and indolence,‘ and that is e definition that is quite eppl-oprlste to the present altruism.‘ est got at when wanted to furnish‘ distribution of wealth in time oi l like the use of the word ‘charity,’ _ By lulu W. Barton. ALD. TELL YOUR. DOCK)! EVERYTHING Perhaps you feel ill at times with headsch . pain in the stomach. heart rapid and no inclination for food. You consult your family doctor," and after an examination, as 11¢ cm find no reason for your symptom, you leave his office with the feeling thflt he thinks YQbl EN imagining 0r at least exaggeratingyour symptoms. And yet you know how you are feel. 1118 and know that you are not real- ly well. You have confidence in your physician's ability and decide that it is useless to see anyone else, as he would likely tell you about the same thing as did your-sown phygg- Now what is‘ the best th ‘h, d lander such circumstanc ‘E m: o Well there must be some reason for your feeling so mise 1.30. and think the matter ovéfquietly, and ask yourself about the food you are eating. the regularity of the meals, your hours of sleep, whether everything is all right at home with all the family," whether it is some financial loss or some other condi- M011 Dreylng on your mind. that is causing your symptoms. If you are honest with yourself and able to put your finger on the red- 5°I1 1'01‘ Your mental depression, you have made a long stride forward in the successful treatment of the trouble. Because your doctor will tell you that these distressing emotions a1. m"? BPPBWA. digestion. sleep. heart action. and practically all the proces- ses of the body. The fhvhsht then is that if your Phydlclen thoroughly overhauls you and finds no organic reason for your Symlilvms. and thinks your Symp- toms are all in your mind; the cure Tests “Ill-h you. It means the re- moval of the depressing emotions, o; fflplacins them with the opposite kind. Your best plan is really to tell “ell your troubles" to the doctor at the first visit. because he is meeting" the same or similar ones in patients position to help you. So don't go around imagining you have some real serious type of illness because you feel miserable. Get the matter settled at once, qr W11 may make yourself a. chronic “nervous" case, Daily Lessons i ' in English B! W- L. GORDON ' oo+ WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: D0 not say, “I have no hopes of herre- covery." Say "hope." OFTEN MISPRQNOUNCED: Mar- di gras. Pronounce mar-de-gra, both a.'s 8.5 in “far," e as in "me," 3c- cent first syllable. ' OFTEN MISSPEILLED: isinglass; only one g, three s‘s. SYNONYMS mark. characteristic, impression. sign. stamp, symbol, 1o- en. - _ WORD STUDY "Use o. word three times and it is yours." Let us in. crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: ENTREAT: to ask earnestly. "Let me enireat you to speak truthfully." FO-GOO-O-O The Land We Love Br FRANK ncron 90-O-O-O-O-O-O-H THE‘ 1775 ATTACK ON QUEBEC Q- l What was the 1775 attack on Quebec? A. The attack on Quebec, on New Years eve. 1715. was the attempt of an American force, under General Nfimtlmnefy. to capture the city uhich was held by u small force un- der Sir Guy Carleton. The 11,555,111; was successfully rmisted. resulting in the death of Montgomery at a blmchde "n chBmI-‘ilain Street. A tablet in the face of the rock wall marks the spot where he fell. His grave is in St. Paul's Chilrcll, New York. Benedict Arnold was wound- ed in the some engageme it, and sev- eral Americans were killed. It was the 1m attempt by the United States to capture Canadian centers and by May of 1776 the Americans had eva- cuated all the points they had gain. ed in Canada. vwrr6"O-O-O-O Modern Etiquette of ROBERTA LEI Q. At what" hour to a reception? . 5- Ai- Ihy time between the hours rlamed On the cards issued. Q. What is included in the home augmnftelish f - es o all ds, , nuts and candies. U“ celery Q. What kind of gowns should the short woman wear? A. Long-waisted effects are the most becoming to a short woman. ‘The Poet's Corner T0 LUOASTA, on aomo 'ro - - rue wAns ALLA‘ v should one go ‘fell me not Sweet, I llll unkind» - Thatfrom the nurmery 0f thy chute breast. and quiet mind To m and arms r m. Truemnewmistreasnowlchue,‘ t n» in til ma; And with a stronger rllih embrlbe‘ l h . shield. ‘Sitting’ every day. and is in the best possible ' 0 (m Setluldsy Review, London) The advocates of the Channel tun- nel are elain active and all the ar- guments which have for so long been ’ up with nowhere to Io are promised another airing. They need it, for on both sides, for and against the tunnel, they seem to have grown a little sentimental ‘and old- msidish. The decisive ~ argument against the tunnel in the past has al- e» ChanelTunneli ways been that it would make invas- j . . ion of this country easier, and to this view many distinguished soldiers from '_' i. Lord Wolseiey downwards have sub- scribed. There is still something in it. The trouble is not that it will be eas- ier to land men on our shores if they can come by train. It has never been ' difficult to land men here-the same fleet, for example, that bombarded . Hal-tlepool in the war might have landed a thousand men just as easily. " The difficulty is pot in gg ing the men across but in llillin them here and still more in getting them back. Sea-power operates not by erecting an uncrossable parapet of naval fire but by cutting (or main- taining) communicatlqls across the sea. No naval man will guarantee im- munity from invasion by a small force which is prepared to commit suicide, but nearly all will promise that the invasion shall be on so small S10E18 that no enemy in his senses will et- tempt it until he has secured com- mand of the seas. If the enemy has command of an alternative route un- der the sea, obviously he is, for so long as it remains open, independent of sea-power. What that indepen- dence is worth depends on circum- stances. It is true that a tunnel can easily be destroyed, that a hole in the ground is an impossible place to de- bouch from in the face of opposition. But one has to think of the psycho- logical effect that the existence of this hole wpuld have on the mind of our people. Undoubtedly they would insist on having powerfufbattcrles commanding the exits from the tun- nel. and a fairly strong force in the immediate neighborhood. If these precautions were not to add to the cost of the army they would subtract from its strength elsewhere, and that -_~not so much actual fear of invas- ion-is probably at the root of the military objection. It is not formid- able but it is appreciable, it adds to the burden of the case hlch the advocates have to make o t for con- struction. ' ‘ Au Easier Way The military objections have been further weakened by air-power, which has opened an easier way into this country than through a. tunnel. But the aeroplane has also weakened the argument that the tunnel would save time for travellers. Those who are in such a. dreadful hurry can now take an aeroplane. As for the argument that crossing the Channel, makes many people sea-sick, we refuse to gmtake it seriously. There is always Mothersill, which islcheaper than a tunnel and is guaranteed free from strategic or political complications. Moreover, there are worse thiflfls even than sea-sickness, and the at- mosphere of a tunnel twenty-one miles long might be one of them. A more solid argument for-the construc- tion of a tunnel iscne that is rarely mentioned. It is that it would dimin- ish the danger of a blockade. The conditions of blockade are at present- ly heavily biased against an island as compared with a continental Pow- er. For the continental Power block- aded at sea. may have neutral neigh- bors from which she can continue to import by railway. whereas an 181W! Power has no railway communicat- tioris with neutral Powers unless there is a. tunnel. Due weight should be given to this argument. But, after all. the amount that we could import by a single line of railway would make precious little difference, and if we ~ made not one but a dozen tunnels with double pairs of lines in 98011 5° that‘ they became a more adequate guarantee against the dangers °1 blockade, we‘ should merely increase our dependence on France. And at all costs if we were in dart!“ °1 W“ Wm‘ a. strong naval power we should have to keep France neutral and her price might be high. A much easier way of insuring" against the risks of blockade would be to establish a. genuine navfll understanding with America which might keep the Atlantic routes at any rate open to trade between the two countries in war time- ... umeuts Examined The longer we examine the argu- ments fdr and against the tunnel the clearer is our conviction that the real issue is‘ political and stratezlwl. 11°‘? commercial. We doubt .very much whether intercourse between England and France u greatly impeded by the sea-passage, or whether there really are people who refuse to cross be- cause tlie Channel might be too fresh, but would be delilihied W °°m° by tunnel. Anyone 'who honestly ex- amines his heart will agree that by far the most important deterrent Household - Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE Mesh Bags To clean mesh bags, with a small brilsb in soapsuds ‘ ‘ ‘ ammonia. Dry by shaking in box- wood sawdust. smml Cranberries Half a teaspoonful of baking soda added w stewed cranberries or sour fruits, when nearly done. will lesson the.quantity~ of auger required to sweeten them. The Teeth 1'11: whiten the teeth. apply perox- idetzrf hydrogen diluted with one-lid! we . . A|~you,,too. shall ~ Iooul not love thee, Dear, so much fared I-ootlioncr more. ~ quences be military only, or confined .312‘. . p‘ E "’ A k‘ firs c/zart s/zozvs t/ze of” FEDERATED CAPITAL CORPORATION stock 4 You can share in the profits trust by investing in the units of two shares of Preferred stock and one share of Common stock at $ 102 per ulit. The 6% dividends on the’ Preferred stock have been I than three and one-hall‘ tunes. e shall be glad to sell?! toanyone interested litetturc and a record cf earnings. - ’ _. ' ST. JOHN f ‘tw- ":\ \ INVESTORS who bought Fcderatcfi C poration Common ‘stock when it was first issued twenty ' have a market appreciation of more than 100%. Later inv tors have to their credit a corresponding share of "these profits. These Federated investors—who share in the earnings of z 5 5 of Americaflpgreatcg; corporations, banks and [insurance companies-receive regular of 1.5% on the par valugof their Commonvstock." ‘Jm/ ~ v ' will! ‘J ‘use. ,4“, __ h in! Cor- ths ago dividends Q A Eddy FEDERATED is an p e_ven better investment" L. ’ 4 v'~ FEDERATED CAPITAL CORPORATION C§nmibr stock day at $52 a share is even more attractive to covpscrvative investors than it was twenty months ago at $2} a share. For not only has-it a record of dividends and earnings but it is still selling for less than seven times its $8.2<_)‘fcarnings. The company has also built up a surplus of $1,295,000. This surplus amounts to more than 50% of thl average capital employed since -thc company's organizatioi, and i: an important factor of safety. ' Eastern Securities Ltd. INYESTMENT BANKERS CHARLOTTEJEOWN, P. E. I. MONTREAL from crossing the Channel in a ship is the discomfort of the Customs when he landsnltlsmot necessary/to build a tunnel to diminish this. There ls no reason why all hand baggage should not be examined in the trains on either side; there is certainly plenty of time and there ought to be plenty of room too. But these are, aft- er all, trifles. The really serious ques- tion-the answer to which will settle the question ofthe tunnel one way or the other-ls this: Will the construc- tion impair the freedom of our mili- tary and political dispositions? If the answer _be No, the tunnel will prob- ably be made sooner or later. But if the answer be Yes, the tunnel‘ should be opposed even though the com- merclal arguments for it were fifty times more powerful than they are. We have recently emerged from the most terrible war in our history, in which we were called upon m make" greater sacrifices for victory than_we need have done had we been as free to follow our own strategy against the Kaiser as we were against Na- poleon. More and more are we con- vinced, as the full story of the war is revealed that the entanglements of continental strategy served to increase our losses without-proportionate in- crease of gratitude or prestige. We were tied down to the defence of a small area. ofFrance when we might have rendered equal or greater service to the Allies elsewhere at for less cost Is there not a danger that the tun- nel will make the entanglement per- manent? At present, in any future war in which we are engaged on the same side as France, it by no means follows that we should again make ourselves lcs- nsible for the defence of the French side of the Straits. But if there were a tunnel would it be health and strength again. and promote strength. first bottle. It's a good one. pendence of our views. These seem to us the really serious issues raised by the project of the tunnel, and until they are cleared up satisfactorily all other arguments are relatively of so little importance as hardly to be worth discussion. c Motor buses are being used to sup- plement their_ regular service by 67 steam railroads in the" United States. With fewer than 30 broadcasting‘ stations in operation Brazil is estim- ated to have more than 15,000 radio receiving sets. A novel cooking utensil has a wide rim around its base that supports it in the opening of a coal range close to the coal. A valveless two cycle engine with but 2i moving parts has been inven- possible to resist the a. ‘ that the other end of the tunnel must be defended by our army as though it were British soil? And should we not in those circumstances lose our frec- dom to k the directions on which our strategy should develop and be committed to another war on the some lines as the last, in which our young men had to pay the penalty not only of our own but of the French mistakes too? Nor would the conse- to the period of actual war. They might also be political and deflect the normal course of our peace policy, giving it e French bias and subtly undermining the force and inde- \'. Din l» D's” " YK| DNEY -—you don't have a loss. But - when the loss does come then you went the best. Thlt’! the only kind handle. w’ Not everybody place; h]; 0Q With ill-but no one who has done so has ever regatta! it. , We will be pleased to take‘ oere of your insurance re- qulremeutl. é? Co. Limited The Oldest. Insurance Agency In P. E. I. p us! Inveleee (ion-may _ of this successful ilircstmenl " Charlottetown .. -..' r-zzfilé-n-l eaqed more‘ --»>.-.. x.- l LET VINOL BUILD YOU [P AND MAKE YOU STRONG ANI- WELD While you arc wnvaiesclng from an aiiacl of the YFlu" there is nothing to equal VINOL in brlngin; you back to It will Improvethe appetite, give tone to that stomaclnbuiid up run-dam condition It is especially recommended for all nerous, anaemic. overworked mcn and women and feeble oldpeople. We stand behind Vlnol and have done so ever sine we sold the PRICE $1.00—3 BOTTLES $2.5l E. A. FOSTER y ii unnyside c. M. Llznpson o cc. ' nsfnfiféf csfifiln Public Algltrion Sales Raw- Furs hegnrlll rambli- i?’ 3.1%.“ claim 121mb"! bu. Sum- Help il'-' - The Influ rtzii Take time byk the» treatment c Mac’s_ Col ‘l Tablets ' 'A Bottle 1? Mac’s Syrup, -l- Tar‘ Cod Li ‘i! Oil In tbepert l llavellvfl‘ guaranteed! ~ - iutlif prevention of '0 lull hurl» likewise proved l excellent. mtemiufller mlllll’ museums. , Y