‘skis 7.. i U!“ 'U ' Canton l. I loan Fellini-I 4J“§"w. IL lune I’! Ollll Uoflo ill alnloll (IOIICII illll rows cusnnau l) a Iaallalaa ll I-il Iloo-Pnalloao-J I Darnell laaonats Iodluaswll. l (IIIIIQ iamaaaualiassoadmsa Qcnwtlladraaauhlinno MONDAY. MARCH 24. 1930 Our Water Supply ' It must have come as a surprise to i most of our citizens that the in- adequacy of our water supply had bqon qigaging ths attention of the City Council. Oi recent months there has been too much secrecy about the transactions of the City Councillors. Hols and corner meetings are held, "gagged" debates take place, and de- - cisions arrived at about which tho ratepayers know, little or nothing whatever, and still have to foot the bills. 'I‘hs City Council is a public body and its transactions ought to be discussed in the open, and no special meetings should be held without the press - the guardians oi the public intcrests—bein8 advised of them, the public thus being given an opportun- ity of being represented. What the City Council needs most oi all is a. little opposition in its ranks. It is not good for the Council or ior the ratc- paysrs, that the Council should tran- sact its business in camera. without . free and open discussions so that the’ electors may know where their rep- resentatives stand, and what care is being exercised over public funds. In the matter oi this proposed new expenditure on water works involving a capital outlay oi at least $125,000. and an additional annual taxation oi $8,000, there is diflerence of opin- ions about its ecessit . ‘rho Water Commissioners claim that the domestic consumption of water is in-i creasing at such a rate that unless’ additional supply is obtained, there will be serious danger in the event of outbfeaks oi lire. It is ths Water! Commissioners’ duty to for-see this’ andlto provide ior it, aha they us‘ doing so in ths manner suggested. But responsible men. consider that our shortage is largely due to gross wasto ofour domestic supply, and that if comer-s vation measures were resorted to.‘ there would be no need for this ad-‘ ditionai incubus. It is suggested that a far more economt and effective m would be to introduce metcrs for domestic and manufacturers sup- plies and that would compel consum- ers to economize in their own inter- ests. This is an important matter and deserves-the serious considera- tion and v ' oi all , citizens, and should not be rushed through without the adequate weigh- ing oi the pros and cons. An Old Peoples’ Home Legislation is being sought for the incorporation of a body oi represen- titive citizens to establish and carry ' on a Home for aged ladies who are § abls to pay in whois or in part for i their board. This is a very necessary institution for Protestants and will correspond with the Sacred Heart 1 Home, which though a Cathoiiflnsti- too far out from the centre of the city; on the other hand it must be borne in mind that the corporation. would be building for the future as well as the present, and before very long there will be buildings right out to the lower St. Petcr’: Road, as the centre of the City ls steadily going north-east. It will not be many years before St. Avards and all the territory between that and the River will be included within the city limits. If the gentle- ment about to be incorporated are men oi vision, as undoubtedly they are, they will give this aspect of the project their careful consideration, and no doubt invite the opinions of others regarding the best plan and policy to pursue. Mr. K ingfs Couelsm. 0n the completion of the agree- ment for the surrender of its natural resources to Saskatchewan a couple of weeks ago, Premier King made this astounding t: “The four Western Provinces now have their resources, and the Maritime Provinces have had their difficulties adjusted, so that the whole country has had its problems aired and attention giveri to them." Mr. King's faith in auto-suggestion is supreme, ii heiimagines that these reitrations of the unreal will make it real. The most important oi the Maritime claims still remain unad- justed, three and a half years after the report of ths nova! Commission that translated them into adjudicat- ed rights. The reassessment of Mari- time subsidies recommended in ths Duncan Report has not yet been a a Notes B_y_[7re Way Liberals and dclcits go hand in hand. Tho Saunders Government have gone behind approximately a quarter of a million dollars in one year; and the late Liberal Govern- ment of Saskatchewan were respons- ible for a deficit there of $400,000. In reporting the deficit, the Saskatche- wan Provincial ‘Pleasures said unsatisiac‘ y crop conditions last season wis partly ths rwan, but the deficit was caused "mainly byithe policy oi the former govern- ment in allowing political consider- ations to influence ts policy affect- ing expenditures to too great a de- The Saunders Government has been ‘ ‘ ‘y eonscienceless in its handling of public iunds. It budg- eted for an estimated iiture on general services of $977,510 and actu- ally spent ol,060,954.79, or $73,444.79 more than it was authorized to do. what is the use oi the Legislature. discussing and passing estimates of expenditure if they are to be abso- lutely disregarded by the ‘Govern- ment. Might as well give them cartc bianche to do as they jolly well like, for they are doing it anyway. Such a riot of unauthorized expen- diture has never heretofore been heard tell. In almost every depart- ment the estimates have beeneir- ceeded, and it looks as though oflic- ials and ministers had a free hand to spend what they liked without let or hindrance on the part of the Government. As a matter oi fact we have had practically no Govern- ment sincs Mr. Saunders assumed oifics. The ministers and their de» puties have been galavantlng over the A continent, and even to Europe, at their own sweet wills, an ' hang the cost. It wfi ‘ oi‘! the "#1 Ill? oi years, S; [can W. Bark. Ul- PREVENTING CONSTIPATION In speaking to a service club one noon hour, I dwelt for a few minutes upon the effects oi constipation. 1 tried to point out that a constipatcd individual was tired before he startod out in the morning; in fact he was tired all the time. ‘ This meant that before the day was over he wanted to quit work. If a traveller he would amit the last cou- ple of calls ahd use the telephone in- stead. Because absorption into the blood of wastes oi intestines, is practically the same as wastes from hard work. They are poisons. My idea was to show the handicap under which the most willing indivi- dual lived, if he were constipated. I told them that I believed that half of those who consulted me gave a his- tory of constipation. m" flwhrrufmwu owing/m Book Review "nu Inch; rbb surf A voiumsbsasing this titis,_from the pen o! lit-Col. W. G. MacKend- rick, D. S. 0., (Commonwealth Pub- lishers, Toronto) is to hani- 111s publication actually deals with three subjects. a project for the co-oper- ative policing of the seas, a consid- eration oi the war debts to the Unit- edStates, and a presentation of the fascinating Anglo-Israel theory. Ne- cessarily then it is somewhat discurs- ivs, but against this we can put the factthatthereisnctadulllinein the whole book. The author, whose iine profile, (instinct with soldisrly qualities temps by a genial dispo- sition lnd a sense of humor that not seldom creeps into his writings) adorns ths frontispieca oi this work, has already achieved s. literary rs- putaticn u an exponent oi the Anglo Israel theory, which by the way was a strong point with the late Queen Victoria. That sovereign believed she was of lineal descent from David the son of Jesse. and the chart in our book reveals David, Prince pf wales, as the hundredth in line from that Monarch. Briefly, the theory is as an equa- tion: what nation fulfils all the con- ditions as to the existence oi Israel At the close of my talk a physic- ian oi a large city clinic, where a number oi physicians were grouped , together, came over and said. "You ‘didn't stress the harm of constipa- tion euough, and as a matter of fact we find in our clinic that 70 per cent of the patients are constipated." And all over the civilised world constipation is prevalent. And yet just a little thought, and constipation would be limited to those ' who are bedridden. Ii you are constipated and have no inflammation or other trouble in tho t - and 1-‘ ‘ , you simply gym," anyway who were havmg cat every day of some of the the good times; and besides if the moheyfoéd! that have a residue. com" was no; 1n the trgggury Lhgy could v roughage in them, that because it is always resort to ths money lender 110$ disostlble. $1118 V61’? I011811118P “and gjvg moth“ “wring; on gm rubbing against the walls of intostinc which (though carried away captive by the Assyrians in B. C. 720) was not-to perish, but iri.the fulness of time to "become the fuiness of the “ ?" They were to be planted in an Island home, somewhere N. W. of Palestine (Isa. xxiv, xii, xlix ct al). ,'i‘hey would so increase that the land would be too small for them (Isa. xiix). They would colonize the deso- late heritages, causing the deserts to "blossom as the rose" (Isa. xxvii.) and develop into a nation and a ‘company oi nations" (Gen. xxxv.) They were to possess the gate oi their enemies (Gen. xxii.) and a glance at the map oi the world will tell us what nation fulfils this condi- ‘ion. They were to be a blessing to .111 the families of the earth (Micah 5) and one oi their special duties was the suppression oi slavery and tyr farmers farms. Why should they worry? They were going to be de- feated next election, and they might as well make the most of their op- portunities while the going was good. With a party in power holding such lax views, and exercising such loose control over the nuances nothing but made.’ _ In his complacent announcement the Sydney Post, the Premier adds misrepresentation- to neglected duty and insult to the denial of justice. Alarming Decline The present situation of agricultur al production in Canada as evidenc- ed by ths following export B811"! for 192s and 102s. may W11 c1111” 1111- essiness at Ottawa. The figures were given in a recent speech by 51111- ator ' in the ‘ Cham- ber: Eirports i025 1W9 Milk (fresh) and cream ..$ 7,704.22 8 5.801.793 Milk (cond) 5,088,441 8,625,361 Seeds 16.635355 3335-733 .. 22,110,978 16,453,235 9.917.516 . 34,575,980 985.093 2,619,298 37,715,281 Cheese Eggs Hay . Meats Bacon and Hams 39,055,490 0,868. And our farmers are being told ths great increase in export of auto- mobiles! 15,778 HM Editorial Notes tutlon, is open for ths reception oi, ‘I and is taken advantage of. by Protes- ‘ hlitl ll well. It is understood the proposed corporation has already ' , $40,000 at its disposal part of which‘ maygoforbuildinl. whiispsrt must be rollrved for endowment. It is ‘ islibrltood that an architect has been sauna to cream cans 101‘ a suit- building, but so far no definite action has been taken. Some of those‘ inhnsted are of opinion that the‘ Cundal Home now used by the rgw. b. a would Ina-ks a suitable __;n,’{ I I 3 ufispraoiiosuyuo subsidimd "1' ‘v bolrdinghoulsfarhinoeci Wales would be good mamas if the new ursubsairvalrioniomohnzrl‘ Jfiiueipsocarsiaatsoupits‘ ‘with so cowhide’. the meson‘ ' ,' Ms i» m 0m nae-P ' ‘ ' rank _ ‘lame .1 “in in’ . buiidingasatprosent it isbcingouscountryCanadawmildbccoma." Coihieotudoiihandasummsrro-GWPIWOVEIINHRWIIIIISWN touristmfltbsrsconsiderit oablhhldulmsmboroftbllflw- paid in advance. But what a queer lot they are! Canadian opinion is well summod up in the following comment in the Rpgjng, IJgfly Sh": "If Chi] Pllmhf King would show hali as much energy inbuilding up Canadian trade asiin cutting it oil, what a prosper- nisproiosioruianrssssrasoa. tivscithehmperancsmliancoin- dicatssthe frea-and-oll! an», smsoosrmoxmsmosouneae itlaokiillruino ‘mum-t iromtho ma» bower" of as cousins sew-em a-“vfnlstftflfllb by 1M ill -- s: so 1's. ‘literar- complains Right in the midst of their éitrs distress, more than a thousand of Chicago's civic politicians foregatbcr at an oificial dinner coating 0100 per plate. The caterer must have been f ' 1 disaster could be anticipat- ed. Speak about Wall Street collaps- ciiizens, business ‘may, “the [flgflflmg' pmvluggg. have es, these were comparatively triflin-g hm ma“ dlfllcumes adjuua," n” , along side the Saunders drop oi a‘ lquarter million dollars on less than la million estimate. One wonders what theendistobcArewetobc made so insolvent that we shall be glad to make terms with Nova Scotia to get rid o! our liabilities? Was this what the Premier had in view when he made his ill-advised remarks on ‘Maritime Union in the neighbouring i province? Whatever the end in view oi the present aggregation, we are confident that the pepols of this province are not going to sit idly by and allow their birthright to he filched from them byacrowd of‘ ‘ ‘ who evidently do not know to keep within their authorized esti- mates. Up go the estimates every year. and up go the excesses over the estimates, and so away we -go until .065 this th laboapvb past year ere has been spent 423,573 1,799,113 1 137563-71. 01' $14 Der head for every rnsn woman and child, or $70 per ‘head oi every adult person in the Ion misgovernment no less than s1,- o! province. _ And the end is not yet. , A A correspondent in the Publ‘ ‘Por- um the other day raised the legal query whether a drunk man was a law and liable to conviction for having liquor in his possession. Cur- iously encugh the question has been decided in the United States. Ac- cording to ths New York Herald-Tri- bune: A gentleman was convicted in Tennessee recently of the unlawful possession of liquor. He had drunk the liquor before his arrest and therefore had it inside him. or so the evidence against him was construed. In any case, the judge held that this constituted possession within ths meaning of ths law, though why he did not also consider it transportation is not altogether clear. Perhaps transportation under the circum- stances bad been automatically in- hibited. The defendant appealed his con- visilon to tbs supremo Court oi the mo; which has 11M reversed it: lmndiag down a learned decision that possedcn when it is’ wholly "inter- nal" dose not come within the stat- ute. ‘nislupresao Court seems to have tabla ccgnisaaco at the iamcu precedent sstabiisbsd many years ago in the following manner: ' ' com» (csiiiru upstairs to the been: "Is llr. Clio? load for two been?” ' has (calling down to tbs bar- keep): "Has be them in him?“ “t w. o» +- "Ire has.‘ u" ‘h, was. new _ ' ~-. ~ .0. “qekspoqflvhlwkfi ~ ' . . . . !' ‘ ‘f . ...-_..n.,~.-..ii'ii aasjowisit . . - / l "container of alcohol in terms of Jtftisacwrliardsdarclrtaib . stimulates them to activity and hen’ material is moved along, Such foods are salads, onions, toma- toes, carrots, cabbage, celery, ‘ ‘ turnips, squash, 1 whole wheat bread, bran, and corn bread. a This doesn't mean that you makr your meal oi the above. It means that you eatother foods that are not rough-soup and fish, fmit juices, meats, eggs, and so forth but try tr use some of the 'rough' ioods ever; clay. . And the one other necessary thii to do is a little bending exercise daily Putting hands on hips and bending forward and backward and from aid:- to side, with knees straight, will not only squeeze the 1- stinal contents but will actuflly stimulatc the bile tr flow freely. And bile is Nature's pur gative. 1.‘ Lying on the back, and raising the legs with the knees straight, is an- other exoeilent exercise. g Don't be constipated. Eat some rough food. and take a little of the Ibo , and you can pre- I vent it- ‘ I I rm: LAND ws LOVE By FRANK IEIGB summon lacs-hr: LuldiIlAIiBlUNb‘ AN \IAAL‘AIJA Q. How many British Trade Com- ....>srouers are serving in Canada? ~. The British Government h. several British Trads Commissions. in Canada in Montreal, Toronl. Winnipeg and Vancouver. l1‘. W. He. is the senior commissioner, in Mon ‘troll: A. M. Wiseman in Toronto; A‘. ‘E. Pollard in Vancouver and an of- ficer in charge. l-I. i1‘. Gurney, in Win- - 1111108. This Empire service is oi great value to both England and Canada ‘andisleadinglofurthsrtraderela- tions between the two countries. The new Zivkovitch government in Yogoslavia is instituting many poli- tical, administrative and economic m- forms. lifted. The ban against Scottish cat- tle ended onoth inst and that against English cattle on 7th inst. Cattle from Great Britain may bow come to Canada, aftcr a considerable period when: Old Country shippers were out" oi the Canadian market. ‘The. outbreak oi ioct-and-moutb- ‘disease in England and Scotland was responsible foi- ths embargo. It has been ccatsnded for some time by Mitlsh cattle men that bards was urs of precaution thatembaflo was maintained until any _ ty c: thediseaui-cachiagthlsccuirtflwls removed. oaioioaoicascspartasat Rollin that a charastcristl oi tbs icot-aad-aioatb disease is that itse- hcoaks out again with lawn-we- ar ass-momma lllhlhod in Greet Britain-misfit mefromthsdissasqbatasainsar, 151111? (1511- XIlXFO). One section wa‘ to have a separate political existenc -the U. S. iA. (Isa. xlix, 20). The israelites were to be a great maritimr nation said Balaam, the man whos eyes were open to visions oi the fa future (Nlun. xxiv,‘ 7), and the‘ lands were to be of vast mineral, pas toral, and agricultural wealth (Deut rxxiii. l3 etc, xxviliA). And many other "coincidences" might Be men» tloncd; but the reader is advised to wudytliem ‘for himself. Anothei curious fact remains in my memory; ‘cars ago an eminent German schol- ar wrote that "the ritual of the Church oi England is ‘illkitflfliiflily the same as that oi “lomonb Temple." Israel is not to ‘we confoun ‘ed with the Jews (Judah) For the rest. our author is not nguine as to the results of the Cnrrference upon naval parity, which ‘s based upon competition rather than co-operation ih God's pre-or. dained plan whereby England is to be the keeper oi the seas, and forhis remedy it is only fair to refer the reader to his book. . As for the war debts, it is poin out that Britain, who borrowed $4.- 300.000.000 ("all oi which was to be expended in the U. S. A. and ths en- tire profits pocketed by American manufacturers") must pay back in 'thc course of sixty years the gum 0| 511.105.966.000, so that the poor of (Corrtinugd on page s) . , is” or/Uléomm. MY LOST OLD AGE‘ (A Young Invalid.) I'm only nine-and-twenty yet, Though young experience makes me I'll; So. how on earth can I forget The memory of my lost old age? Of manhood‘: prime let other: boast; Itoomsstcoiatmorgooatooaoon: At times ths lils I envy most Is that of slippered pantaloonl . In days oi old - a twel oath i...» 7"“ [I hotbed and queued and chaffsd ‘ my all: And now, a broken-winded hack, I'm weak cad worn and faint and ill. l-ifewopsainl chapter pleased me ‘ V0.11: . Too hurriedly I turned the page; Ilpoilodthovoiunimwbocantsll. zWhat might have boon 1M lost old ~ Ill! . Wlwprtsoaardweagsacsecrs. ‘weiivasoswiftmcasaodaim “ILA. Barri v. c. The mind winged war-Will through fifteen years isaminl 0! the mosounsly remit-able dfltb <11 Colonel W. C. Jester, V.C., at Ot- tawa. Itwmtbaoktothseariisr days of the Great War, when the mothers oi were giving o!‘ their beloved. and the world had come toreaiiao the agonies it must suffer. And (though the war was a warofmerhofwmnemandofna- tions, the amasing spectacle was that of youth, of boy! unbeardcd and almost straight from school. ' to do combat in the 1111111 heavens. And soon young Barker. barely twenty, with swli‘ “' abandon, was looping and accruing and barking and shooting and facing death among the highest and the noblest of them all. Ho was only 35 years oi lga when he fell, but before he had reached man's estate he had been Ll Km Ill/ll, @111. .1Li\)l$'\_(lf_(l‘ j 011$ 611M111’ fame: the name of Guy- nemer of France. of the little Eng- lishman Bali, who was almost leg- endary when shot down before he was 20; and of Blflhop, the boyhood air comrade of Barker. These were mere lads, youngsters wholly irresponsible on their leaves. who suddenly aged with the wisdom’ ‘of the air when they took off in flight. From ths outset front rank was taken among them by Caru- dlarks, and they held it to ths finiah. aisi¢n a marked ilgur of this WaruHe had 11111111111! W611!- been admittcd by the right of flight of conquest. into that valiant list s""°”“‘° "lmh" _ 1 which now bears the names oi_ hand‘ r9‘ Vdulblfl Richthoien and Linke, of oounge- 11mm!!- hi? both ways when you choose Rosebud_ 7°11 lo? lgenuina cut plug tobacco of wonderful qhalliy —and you get u... biggest value on the b §> CUT PLUG This was remarkable because it ‘w "earned without reason. Why should Dauphiifs Willie Barker. after serv- ing some months in the trenches with the 1st CM.R., develop into the born fighter in the air? 0 T-ishop, or Mulook, or Alan Mcl-ecd, ‘>1- any oi a thousand others? '1' o’ ‘ceds were their record, and t“ tiered no other explanation. N "as required, for they estnlfu; 1l-.c.1 '1 uniz-lemlsiu-d renown for youll‘ Canadian knights errant of th. lr, No lm‘ght errant could be more lint than Wm lilo-her. He may vs come from the bi‘ s ‘is oi - nods. as Eurz-gcsns v. ' l think. ut his ohivaly was of the ages. fie could not play the gn-msin any air-it (that was not cont-lir-cd in the “de of the air forces, a. code which ‘aaornsd even ths heavens. No ri-hcr ooihbatmts cama into sin-m lose. such intimate, and such dead- ly conflict, ci- got to know who were their individual adversaries. Like Irnights of yore, iihwe boys seemed Ito invite each other to the tilts oi death. Riohthoierfs ten Fokker:- iisdainedtoocrnstotheioustnoi. _ bowing their color, and -Ba.rker’s Yrcus oi six Bop Camels flew to ‘ham doclsmated in their own colors. i, It ls fair that the number of Prince Edward Island's “Golden Future” A Booster Feature To Stimulate Business and Business Con- ditions in Prince Edward Island. published by The Charlottetown Guardian We are Soliciting the Cooperation of the Business Firms and Leading Men of Charlottetown. ~Summerside and the Province. Mr. Frank Walker. Assistant Editor of the Guard ian is editing this Special Feaiu Edition. 11111011 1' now in the course of publication. IFMr. J. M- Kirk- land is in charge of Publicity. Boost for a Greater Province each flight should be given on that l_._.. .__ -. tlncd by the Commonwealth oi Austr- alia Constitution Act as “an indissoi- ubis Federal Commonwealth.‘ under thecrowdoitheUnltedkingdormThe Australian Parliament consists oi two chambers. the Senate and House oi Representatives, tho theory being that the Senate represents the statos and the House oi Rcpruentativcs the people. The Senators, like the Rcp- resentatives, are elected by the people. Federal functions am defined, while all ‘functions not ,. y defined as belonging to federal authority belong to the states. Each state has its awn each other, along the Ypres-Msmn ‘moo in u» spans of 1m. some: claimed it was his deadliest fight. iBust the Canadian boy had laid his ‘plans and figured closely before starting outpand Won. I-is knew he could fly ht swliltly-turning Camels close dow-n to the treetops’ where the heavier though faster Fokker-s could not escape his sud- den looping that took over and ‘xihind them. Four Fokkers crashed Lwo from Baker's ballots. two from lritish airmen! (in. The youth who I mum Md “he um h“ w m" parliament. These states are jealous I brains as well as courage, and no- °l"mrmh““isw°°a4°mcmli ibody "n, denied Bark‘ m. ma” Mia and in the United Statcs. In, ssion of either. Awm- mum" m Mfimlm] which does notseem to rnakc for atability of govsrnmsn. The tend- I ncy of late has-hem for the“ Com-_ monwcrdth to seek to encroach upon stats rights. and apparently m. i Sorfilin. an labor Premier, has 1 readied the conviction that ths stats ‘parliaments should be done sway with il-bd the qu A few days hs was ordered with his circus to Italy, and hs had barely arrived on the Piave before the Austrians had been informed oi his coming. They, too, nui foe- men worthy oi his renown. make. flying his red machine. sought out the checked plane of Barker, who did not conceal lib identity. ‘Iihe ‘ oiripung Llnkmthoprlde oi Ause- Whflotbl population oiuio grout nil, had s1 vkstcriaa so his omit. °°1111h'r. isoomlllhtlvclv manna but ,thsi sunny morning he was dcubtfuiif thopublio atlarge will ~°ioaohzhsvisw holdby uhsouuiafi There is one Parliament in mamas wdflootlaad. ma Ireland was in- cluded until the has State and Hista- ..____._.--.-—_._. (Continued (I! DIIO d) -o An Australian Issue _ Australia's 14in‘ Premier. Ii‘. midsummer-mandamus». iscxeoitsdwlththolaioliiioaoisub- mittiag a reroreniamto fill olwiuaf "Wrhfl . .*."'".‘.i""- wwh-wlvwlwhw etoaaboiraioe ls- aiau mats Dr. L. B. Evans of London, Eng- ' Noted Physician treated slit- ‘gggglflll, 5nd obtained W’ mansnt cares oi Stomach 00l- dltionl. such H 971110011. user-abuzz. cunts-lac 131"" "" man o er a en to ihyc stomach with a rwfllr tion which we have 010W‘ and sell under ths hallo l‘ Evans Stomach M11111"- We alone have the sole I18“ on this presorlimfl" “d ‘h’ selling it have received IIIIW‘ our testimonials from s! Sour PIIIC D ' fool with Your stabili- serlcaa conditions are "it": arise if you allow I11 lapse Into a chronic rastric trouble. Get a bottle today. Price 1“ 771a Two Macs 149 Great George 51'1"‘ on of authority b! i settlsddras for-good andali. “""'_""""' r We [C1111 Deliver ='~.’ws have a stock of tbs no var WV“. COLI- lcetoraaccwil lndigcsflll. Sionsel. stale I 2*‘? \ \T\'r1~?. No‘