MAXIW MAXIMS ' OI‘ A o, A 7 MERE MAN , MERE MAN The ‘only infallible criterion as wisdom in vulgar iudgmqsea 1a ... aeeceeel Q The flrat step to aspire Ie revolutions by which power ie con- Caper , er early, ‘Ibo Guardian. Three Cecil. llernlng Dell! Iburuled llfl. l h: ThePels Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARIJOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, APRIL s, 194s 16 PAGES toned. mum. vnv or l Russian Poliey IDNDON, Belle! that Russia, by her iraiiic control in Berlin. may be tryul rut a new variation oi her policy oi causing ience" to the western Powers- rether than playing ior a. major break with them-was expressed by diplomatic observers here to- night- . They agreed that, as an indicat- ion o! this Dolley. ‘(loecow had chosen to apply pressure at the point where the Western Allies are physically at the grehtest disad- vantage. In the case oi Berlin such e policy would consist o! sticking politely but iirmly to their insist- ence upon Soviet right oi search end control oi passengers and ireight trafilc in and out oi Ber- lin in the hope that in the long run the Western Powezc would tire o! an increasingly untenable posi- tion and would voluntarily with- tew irorn the sections oi Berlin which they now occupy. From what is known here oi tho conduct oi the Soviet authorities llnce the application oi the new» regulations and oi yesterday's in- terview between Mal-Gen. Nevil Brownjohn, representing Britain. and- ‘Lt-Gen. Lukyanchenko. rep- resenting Russia, there is nothing to suggest that Moscow intends to resort to physical coercion at the present stage or contemplates any formal act oi expulsion oi the Western Allies from Berlin. Caches 0f Arms Found Near Rome ROME. April 2~Cuches oi arms estimated suflicient to equip a battalion o! men were uncovered by motorized troops in raids about " 'fihe' approaches to Rome today. Between 30 and 40 persons, ident- ified as "Communist extremists" were arrested. ‘Coming Events "pried W507... point-i. c1“: Bros. Mt. Stewart. St. Peter's Bay. "Reserve Thursday, April 15 ior Zion P.S. variety concert. "Regular Dance at Walter Oonnlckie. Klnkore. Tuesday night. Ii not line, Wednesday. "Come to Variety Concert and Dance, Bredalbene Hell. Jhlday, Arfifil 9th, in lid 0f HD1111]. "Ladies Auxiliary Y. M. C. A. gekhetleie at. Holmans today at 3 "Buying Pigs Monday at Fred- Iricton. Paying $24.00 pair ior good pigs over 30 lbs. each. Will also buy mailer ones. Knud Jorgensen. "Notice - Unloading car cem- ent Friday and Saturday this week. Get. yours new. Will be very ece-rce letcr on. G. C. Green. Emerald. "No. 2 mixed clover seed, ‘i0 per cent timothy. 80 per cent clover. 32 cents- Book now. MacGuigan and Boyle, Hunter River. "To arrive, car oi choice dou- ble re-cleaned ‘l c.w. Alberta cats. 850 per 100. Book. McGulgm & Boyle. Hunter River. “will have cer shavings arrive at. Iraclrley Siding sometime neat week. Definite data announced later. Book orders. Idvestock reed Agency. "Distributing bran from oer on waterfront Monday and Tuesday. April 0th end 0th. Limited quan- tity to each customer. Livestock "l! Annoy- .. -._- "A, meeting c! importance to ell interested in e eo-oaeretivs etere will be held in (merry Vel- iey School on Monday. April 5th. at I p-m. Special Qeebera will be meant. "The: Mrs. A n. Sectionals in Beetle loll, ey evening, eight “DR. m .ce1 rubbers. whee Trinity Evening Auxil- "iu eLevel Cream Sep- arators. due to arrive in about s Spreaders. Fertilis- ece. Book your orders lleCoweue umitcd. Kil- llflllr. "lave yeueorlered’ our Chicks? W ‘ "o! lest- is. an um“ rs Almielehee item our mm: layers. Season's one! It , ,. New wiltahirv. (l. April I —- (Reutersl-d “maximum .inconven-. ~ MENU“ SaysForeign Planes Can Bomb Any Part 0f The ll. S. (By The Associated Preee) NASHVILLE, Tenn" Apr. 2- Gen. George C. Kenncy, chief oi the United States Bomber Force, aaid tonight that air- crait "right now in the hande of potential enemies" can bomb. any pert oi the United States irom bases already built. They can do ll. by ilylng the Polar routes, Gen. Kenncy, head oi the Strategic Ala- Commend, uid in a speech prepared ior the convention c! the Tennessee Reserve Odie- era Association. lie asld Russia ie maintain- ing "huge armies and air ior- cee" and Soviet iactnrlee "are building thousands o! new bomber and new lighter plan- es." Kenney, a. native c! Yar- mouth, N. 8., warned against too much reliance on the st- omie bomb. “We must not forget that we developed the bomb irom scratch in three years, that It is nearly three yeara since the first atomic bomb shattered Hiroshima and that the scien- tlets. the physicists and the engined-a --“L:‘.mfl_ {arid have been burning the mid- night oil ever since trying to develop that. and other weap- ene oi mesa destruction..." "Lyndal School area, was search The trozen body oi‘ Elmer Mac- Donald. 23. missing since Dec. 24th last was found late yesterday eve- ning on the bank oi the Head oi. Montague River about a hali mile irom the rrxaln road and at the rear of Mr. Ronald MacPhersons iarm. The spot where the body was found is about a hall mile irom the home oi his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel MacDonald, and about a mile irom the Lyndale School. "Buddie" McPhee, a young man, whose home is in Upper Montague. iound the body. The coroner, Dr. G. S. Inman, Montague, was sent ior and the R. C. M. P. notified. After a coroner's jury had inspect- ed the body, it was removed by the R. C. M. P. to Montague and con- veyed from there to the MacLear. Funeral Home in Charlottetown where an autopsy by Provincial Pathologist, Dr. Harold Shaw, will be periormed today. The inquest will -be held at the Legion Hall, Montague, on Wed nesday. April 14. . " The late Elmer MacDonald left Brackley, where he was employed, on the morning oi Dec. 24th last- and came to Charlottetown where at 4 o'clock that aiternoon he took the Charlottetown-Murray Har- bour trein ior U188. the nearest station to his home. It is understood that he got oii the train at Uigg Station and was driven to the Lyndale School where a Christmas concert was scheduled ior that evening. That was the last time he was seen alive. For the next several weeks the ed ior the missing man until the deepening snows made iurther in- vestigation impossible. . _._ By JOE MeoSWEEN HALIFAX, April 2—(OP)-Pre- mier Angus L. Macdo lrl today brought down a budget predicting a surplus oi 01,354,030 at a busy aitcrnoon session od the Nova. Sco- tia House that also considered new legislation designed to provide beer and wine by the glass or bottle in hotels and taverns. The House studied: 1AA, budget iorecastlng 1847-48 meal year revenues oi $80,119,420 and expenditures oi $27,413,809 to give-en estimated surplus oi 01,- 354,980 alter deducting sinking iunds. This compared with an act- ual surplus last year oi 09.007115. derived ircm revenue o! $83,294,218 and expenditures oi $22,599,204. N. S. Premier Budgets’ For Large Surplus Sale 0f Beer And Wine By The Class Forecast: Mr. Macdonald Condemns Freight Rates Boost. excluding some $200,000 in capital items. 2. An outline oi a Liquor Act amendment which would provide ior plebiscites to give a “yes_" or "no" answer on open sale oi beer and wine. It was expected that hotels and taverns in municipali- ties iavoring open sale would be licensed to sell beer and wine by the gloss or bottle. There would be no change in regard to spirits. S. A submission by Premier Macdoneld condemning the decis- ion oi the Board oi Railway Com- missioners in granting a 21 per cent freight rate boost to Canad- ian railways and enpressing "em- easement" ii the increases werenot . . (Continued on Page 1S Col. B) . By SD CREACH WASHINGTON. April 2-—(AP)— Congress today voted final approv- al by an overwhelming margin o! oi 00.000.000.000 global aid bill elm- ed.at stemming the world tide oi Communism with the goods oi peace and the weapons od war. The House oi Representatives passed the historic measure by e thunderous S10 to ‘l5 vote and the Senate shouted agreement without even bothering to cell the roll. President Truman was ready to sign the bill into law thus start- ing history's largest peacetime now o! American dollars. esmeeud reconstruction equipment to 1S countries east. west ~end south oi the Sovlst Union. , In tho House,- 10? Republicans and ill Democrats yoted ior the bill and 02 ieepubilcena, 11 Demo- crats and two American Labor Party members-both supporters o! Hoary A. Wallace-sealant it The long and bitterly debettd program, which, ltuesie already has declared its intention to wreck. two vssarhelore the April ll ib- alisa elections imwlsleh. the Gom- wiil male e new. Nrbafl decisive bid lee power. to bvvctee- loser. but Abe-seesa- i structlou ‘finance corporation can \ e Congress Approves G lo bale Aid Bill will swing into action more than advance right away: 31.000.000.000 ior the lhiropee-n recovery program-to launch the. so-caiied "Marshall Plan" oi help- ing ldturopean countries and Western Germany work their WW toward Communism-Prob! econom- ic health. 000000.000 each to China, Greece and Turkey. For Greece and Tur- key, the United State! eld 1s wholly military-to help them re- sist Communist pressure. China's ehers ie partly military, partly economic. _ The global eld bill ls built e- round lint-the Illrobill l0- covery Program-end authorises up to 00,000. .000'ior the tint year cl it. llour and e quarter years oi United States eld is ‘contemplated’ but not ddnitel! pledged. "the over-all cost has been estimated at 011.000.000.000. Other items in‘ the bill : aisl.000.000 iumilitefl-ebd 0000.- 000.000 in economic eld to Gains. where Cevernmeat is locbed» in civil war, with Chinese Communist term 000 in military aid to . ma‘ mm. cautious a can.» uoaooom mn- - guerrillas. ‘bee been udder isussien pressure Federal By-election In Yale 0n May 31 OTTAWA. April z-Dete oi the Federal lay-election in Yale. B. 0., has been set at May 81, it was learned today from Prime Minib- ter King's biiles. The election has been celled to till the vacancy created last year by the resignat- ion oi lion. Grote Stirling,| Pro- gressive Conservative, because o! poor health. Commons vacancies also exist in Vancouver centre and the riding oi Ontario, but no dates have been announced ior these contests. Vancouver Centre was vacated by the resignation oi Veterans Minister MacKenzie to enter the Senate. while the Ontario seat was left empty through the death last fell 01’ W. E. N. Sinclair, Liberal. Troop Movements In Russian Zone Q BERLIN. April a.- (Reuters)- Russian occupation troops in fig;- lillny are preparing ior large- "PIP flllhoeuvrea in the next‘ iew weeks. the FTcnch-iiceneed news. Piper Kurier reported tonight. The Dfiller said that large num- bers of Russian troops, mainly xoiinc soldiers. were passing Qhrough the railway junction o! Seddin. 60 miles northwest oi Berlin. on their Way to Thurman. which borders the United States zone. A considerable concentration o: Russiantank units had also been observed round the town oi Mein. lnsen. l5 miles (rem m, m“; h... , d"- thd PIPE!‘ added. ll.S. r st Fl‘ v can sabrdmoo m HALIFAX. April 2 - (OP) _. Forest fires in 1047 cost Nova Sea. tie more than 8800.000 and losses were the largest in l3 years. the Lands and Forests Department re- Pflrted today. All 8M1 0i 45.000 acres was burn. ed over in 444 fires. Deputy Minister IRA. Harrison oi the Department o! Lends and m»- fill slid molt oi the tires were the result of “ignorance and care. lessness." Fifty-three outbreak; were believed to have been o! in- cendiary origin. - Pollo Case Reported From llova Seotla HALIITAX. April 2-l‘irst case oi policrnyelitls in Nova Scotia in 1048 was reported here today. Hospital authorities said a. ilve- year-old girl was auflering from a mild attack oi infantile paralysis. Congress Enaets Big Tax Cut WASHINGTON. Allril 2--(A.P).- Congress today enacted a $4,800, 000.000 income tax cut. It brushes aside a veto message in which President Truman branded it. a “recklese" measure that would sap the strength oi the United States at e. time oi world danger. ‘Dievctawee Sll to 80in the House o! Representatives and ‘IT to 10 intbe Senate. The House margin was 4d votes larger than the necessary two thirds. The Senate majority had 10 votes to spare. ' save czecn Pit-Ell sruzzaab GRIIVA. April 2- (Reuters)- Jehn Murray Watson. editor o! the ldlnburgh Scotsman, British dels gale at the United Nations cen- isrmce on n-sedom ei-iuiormation, today accused‘ the Communists oi “completely muaziinl the Csseho eicvek press." t | 30 Troop Planes Re-iuel At One Field a FOR. ST. JOHN, B. C.. April I»- (CI-W-Giant transport planes_ both troop and supply carriers.- roared over the wartime built northwest staging route today bound ior the north. presumably United States air bases in Alaska. The airborne armada, the great- est seen in the north since war- lilfit. have speeded across the skies in the last 36 hours. ilying through hazardous northern wea- ther. Commercial pilots coming in irom'the north reported as many as 30 troop transports oi the ily. ing boxcar type iueling at a northern ~alr base. Southbound mail planes were delayed as mwc. as 36 hours as the war planes were given top priority. Jet crait were also reported headed north. Identity ol the planes was not reported, and R. C. A. F. author ities withheld iniormation on the northbound armada. Fort st. John is 34.5 miles north- west ci Edmonton, and 450 miles due north oi Vancouver. At Ottawa, R. C. A. F. oiiicials identified as American troop and supply carrying ‘planes reported ilying over the northwest staging route. Since last October, the United States has been (lying aircrait and men over the route to give them experience oi northern conditions. officials said. Troops are moved to Alaska by air ior periods o! about two months under a scheme somewhat similar to the Canadian Arctic training program carried out at Churchill. It was understood that the pre- sent movement. involved no more than e battalion o! men. Reveal B-29’s llave Long Range - WASHINGTON, April 2 - (AP) —The United States Air Force has shown twice within the last week that its standard 3-20 bombers can ily to a target 3.300 miles away and return to base, The planes thus could have flown 4.000 miles on a straight course, employing shuttle bombing oper- eltlons used 1n the Second World War. Air Secretary Stuart Symington told a press conierence that two B-20s this week ilern two missions to target and return under simu- lated combat conditions, ‘I'll; two planes carried five tone oi bombs in the tests. Snnington recently told the Senate armed services committee that present United states bomb- ers could strike targets anywhere in Russia from bases in Alaska or Labrador; He testiiied they then could return either in the ileld ircrn which they leit or reach other American-controlled fields. Report Culntuplets ~lorn In Crease p (By The Associated Prue) ' _ATIISNS, April 2-A prfi liipebeh tram she village ed - Komotini. reported that Mre. lllen lltopouloe gave birth to quietup te-lhreo girls and two boys-who are “doing well.” There were no other details. Aarll Snowfall Sets Record Ia Edmonton (lrTho Canadian Press; EMONTON. April 2—The lid- monton district was thrown beck into winter's erla today with an 11-inch anemia-ll which set an ell- _Tea .'onanes time record ior Aq-n. its: P.E.l.~ Junior lnvestititure At Confederation Chamber 0n Wed. Nxt At 12 o'clock noon on Wednesday, April 7, in the Confederation Chamber, l-lis Honour Lieutenant Governor Bernard will present Distinguished Flying Cross to Flying Oiiicer Stewart MacDonald, oi Little Sands and Charlottetown. Air Commodore F. G. Wait, of R.C.A.F. headquarters, will Le represented by Group Capt. J. I]. Aroliann-bault, pificer corrnmandialg No. 10 group, R, C. A. F. ____?L.. Freight Increase Opposed In N. B. FREDERICTON. April 2 -—- (CF) ~—Canadian agriculture has been placed in a “difficult plight" as a result oi the freight rate increase granted Canadian railways. GHW. Perry (PO-Carleton) told the New Brunswick mgisbiture today. One oi two speakers in the bud- get debate. Mr. Perry said the situation had been further aggrav- ated by the new income tax iorms issued learners. ' - "Not only will the iermer have to pay a. much higher price ior iced because oi the new 21 per cent freight rate increase. but he will tind his fertilizer costing him more and his iarm machinery cost. ing him more," he said. "The increases in ireight rates will also cost the potato grower from S25 to $30 a car on potatoes shipped to Montreal and Toronto. "This is not going to please the farmer very well alter what he has just been going through on this income tax business. The iermer is the only iellolw in Call- eda who has to declare hie net worth." Eisenhower Urges Immediate Draft 1 WASHINGTON. April 2 - (AP) -Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower call- ed today for an immediate dreit and oriered to stay in unitorm hlmseli as long as needed. The iormer army chief ot steii appeared before the Senate armed services ccmmittee as the adminis- tration formally asked Congress ior universal military training and the drafting or men l9 through 26. Eisenhower's testimony climaxed a tidal wave oi armed prepared- ness plgas by other generals, pres- idential candidates and others. He told the Senators that the day oi push-button warfare has not yet arrived. Manpower, he said. still is needed _ just as it was needed in the invasion, directcd by hlrneeli, oi Europe. Farmers Federation Organized ‘iour directors each instead oi the The Prince Edward Island Jun- ior Farmers’ Federation, first as- sociation oi its kind to be termed in the Maritlmes. was organized yesterday in Charlottetown with Donald Anderson oi St. Peter's as president. Other otlicers elected were, Lloyd Martin. Cherry Vai- ley, as vice-president; and Ralph Rayner, Mount Herbert. as secre- tary. Though the meeting was a re- presentative one, there being young iarmers present from all three counties, the uniavourable weath- er had resultcd in keeping away many who had planned to attend. so that, when the board oi direct- ors was elected, Prince and King's Counties had to b_e content with nve which the Federation's con- stitution calls ior. Mr. L. P. Mc- lsaac, farm extension service, Pro- vincial Department oi Agriculture. who presided at the meeting. said those Counties would be able to elect their lull quota at the an- nual meeting next January. Directors 'I‘he directors elected Yesterday ior Prince County are, John For- hes, Bedeque; Garrith hdcLcarhLos is; ‘Margaret Murphy. Anew-ins Cove; and William Cairns. Hee- town. For Queen's, Lloyd Martin, Cherry valley; Rl-lrli Rein"- Mount Herbert; Orwell Morrissey. may, Royalty; Eric McPhall, New Haven; and Arthur Johnston. Lori! River. For Kinlfl. Donald Ander- son, St. Peter's; l-ladden McLeod. Dundee; Cliflord Pierce, Elmira; and Miriam Weye. St. Peter's. The nrst named from each County will hold ofilce ior three years; the next two for two years; and the remainder ior one year each. The Hon. W.F.A- Stewart, Min- ister- or Agriculture, in accepting the Federation's invitation to be- come its Honorary President, said he was delighted with the honor. “cials m the building were told that - He congratulated the young men and wcmen present in their dis- play oi initiative and in their ex- pressed desires to organise ior the general improvement oi theircom- munlties. The Minister said he remember- ed the time when the iarmers had done most oi their work co-oper- atlvely. Those were the days when the word "bee." did not always mean an insect but was also the tenm ior cc-operatlve barn build- ing. There was also the stumping irolics when the neighbors would gather irom miles around to help someone clear his land. The pre- sent-day farmer does not have to call his neighbors in to help him (Continued on Page 5 Col. 1) I 0S0 lllsplaeed Persons Arrive At Halifax HALIFAX, April 2 ~— (C?) - The United States Army, trans- port General M. B. Stewart will leave ior New York tomorrow aiter landing 860 displaced persons today on her seventh vslt as an immigration ship. Hydro workers and miners Ontario and Quebec and 118 dcmestics ior various cities throughout Canada were included meow the new citizens. ior (By Douglas Howl OTTAWA. April 2- <CP)-'I‘he possibility is seen~ here that i! the United States Congress approves universal military training thous- ende o! young American trainees might be partially taught on Can- adian soil. 4 Because President Truman's double request ior a revived drait and UMII‘. has not crystallised ln_to legislative action, it is a quee lien which remains theoretical ir: Ottawa. Sut some Deience Head- quarters consider lt e dc iiniie possibility ii the program ior training IS-year-olds goes through. The logical place ior any train ing they might do in Canada u the joint services sub-Arctic ex- perimental bese at Churchill. liter... where there have been roughly 100 American troops to: the lest two winters. Churchill's biggest activities still lie ebeed- and one o! the clue! tasks o! lbs military populatiodoi b00-odd this winter has been the - \ .- PEKCB. -, ' ‘ "l PWWPW‘ airflow P" ‘P’ t U. S. Troops Might Be Trained In Canada cilities to accommodate a consid- erably larger number. Although Deience Headquarters now shows no particular desire to talk about the north, it is recalled that there have been statements in the past to the eiiect that toe experimental base could handle numbers up in the thousands. The question oi bringing the U. S. trainees into the country might have its embarrassing tinge: po- litically because the Canadian Government shows no indication oi asking ior anything equivalent to UMII‘. ior this country. it could become another phase in a situation which erupted lrv Parliament last year when Op» , " n members based en un' expected major debate on e bill to allow U. S. Army military courts to punish their own troops in Oenade without recourse to the Canadian courts. ‘that debate manifested doubt in Cenedi minds ea ‘t: just where the untry wee head ing in 1U‘DOICCQHII"QSIIBGI ‘ec- I051! we!» with "is "- l egg-Iii- Subscription Delivered some. - '7' llall $5.00, other Province: d: U. S. $1.00, u. s. TROOPS suliiouin RUSSIAN BUILDING IN BERLIN Igfifirltlilozemdentflf Transport motors Alaska I Man Missing Night 0E December 2.4 m. Cffiiial Explanation For Action British Anfimerleans Send Freight Trains Into Russian Zone. (By Wee Gallagher) ' BERLIN, April z-(APl-United States troops tonight surrounded.- a building which Russian 0111613.}! use to direct rail traiiic in the i eastern zone oi Germany and re- iused to allow any Russians w enter. The building is in the United States sector oi the city. At leash one Russian general was in the building at the time. Although United States oiilciale declined comment, it was learned ' authoritatively that Russian oil:- they could leave but could not re- ‘ urn. Official United States police and command sources declined com- > ment. Col. frank Howley, gover- nor oi the American Berlin sector, said a statement might be issued tomorrow morning. " 1t was learned authoritative- ly, however, that the action was taken because iniormetlon had been received that. the ‘ Russians moved armed guerde inside the building secretly. The R the build ng when they captured Berlin and retained it aiter the clty- was divided into sectors _i’o.l' the tour-power occupation. Sim- ilarly they retained possession o. the Radio Berlin buildin8- M1 though it is within the British sector. The United States troops moved soon alter word was received thel’. one American and two British freight trains had entered the So- viet zone oi Germany in I "$1- ‘l! the Russian land blockade oi Bert 1,111. The trains passed the Russian ians took possession of " conirohpoint writhout incident u... inspection. f The British and united State! freight trains were the first t0 pass through since they were imposed. It the same policy is followed in .-..- (Continued on Prise 5 col. S) -' - blliiih .0 this Notice 11st in in or uv r"~\¢ieaps lists zen" . A Lei’ i ‘TORONTO, April 2—(UP)—-Min- imum and maximum temperatures: Vancouver 31,13; Edmonton 14. l6; Regina 5b, 20; Winnipeg. 5b, 2'7; London 34. 40; Toronto 35, 45; Ottawa 40. 40; Montreal 45, 4b; Quebec 43. 46; Saint John 42, 44: Moncton i2, 51; I-laliiax 36. 50: Charlottetown 39.. 48; Sydney 36. 46: Yarmcuth 46, 49. _ BALLFAX. April z-cori-or- iicial inland iorecasts issued to» night by the Dominion Public Weather Oiiice at Heliiax and valid until midnight Saturday. with an outlook ior Sunday. Synopsis: There is intermittent rain or drizzle throughout the Maritime: tonight due to a storm centred in the Gull oi St. Lawrence. As the storm moves ricrtheastward io- ward Belle Isle the rain will end and clearing is expected in mos: regions S a t u r d a. y afternoon. Strong northerly winds in Quebec and Ontario promise coldem but line weather ior the Maritime:- suudey. - Regional Pbrecastn- Prince Edward Island: inter- mittent rein or drlula during the night. Saturday overcast with widely scattered showers clearlnl in the aiternoon. Continuing mild Light southerly win increasing Saturday morning to northwest :0 law early Saturday morning and high in the aiternoon at Cher lottetown 40 and 4B. Outlook ior Sunday-Clear and colder.» l-llgh tide this morning at 0.51 and this smrnoou at 4.40. " Sun sets this TIMI tomorrow _ ihwmeca Aprilat . Russian centroid ,' sea-arses,"