...¢,.._, -of -no-..,..-_._ -w 5% ‘ _ ._|_ B' _ ‘"“‘.~ Editor sul Publisher ‘ 1 FRIDAY;-{iUGUsT 6, iazo . CAN.-_iDliiiN,. TRADE “we fl E i The monthly commercial letter of the Canad- nienoeil lpelllng_‘out -a word which neither of them understood, would nt on`oe and in every case pron-V ounce lt f.‘Jernsalem.f' The Patriot has similarly caught up a big word familiar in; the press,ot the day, of what it means, but because it looks 'big and has an _nnwholesomi reputation, applies it indiscrimin- ii-teiy and' fegirdless of sdsptliii when it Wlntl to give vent to its .intl Banki of Commerce, referring to Canada’s im- meer." "Bolshevism" is mo sewn _§>_rts _and exports for the twelve months ending in sly last, points out that the principal increases in oi11?imports_‘a§‘e'_in clioclllate, motor cars, tobacco, Sugar, cotton and._wool., It_ is noticeable, says the- let- ter, that imports o£"me'afs and foodstuiiis-typical products-of the dominion-have increased. For the captured favourite which it so moseiy hugs to its bosom, -:no until it .bas almost. become an oblect of daily worship. You will find it sev- eral times repeated in one editorial, land none of its articles are consid- ered complete without inclusion. year ended in May"$llile there was a decline in ex- s"'°'Y» "‘°""""'° “°“‘° °““°“"“* , ports our imports increased 38 per cent. men' in the Liberal ranks who, to _ _ _ save the party from ridicule, would During the three year period ending iii May last Canad‘a’s exports to»`i~he United -States amounted to 3 $1,335,000,000 while imports from that ‘country amounted to $2,3l2,000,000 leaving an advers`e'bal- sideration and a glance at the articles mentioned above shows that our purchases are very largely of luxuries. Extravagance is very largely responsible four our adverse trade balance( » A noteworthy feature of the letter of the Bank _of Commerce is the reference to the increase in the number of live animals exfported. “Evi-dently”, it says, “the United States no longer produces suiii- cient live stock for its own consumption, so that the 'be willing to lnstrpot the staff, if they are capable of learning. ss to the meaning if the words it so frequent-ly uses, and save it from ’ ance of $976 460 000 This is matter for serio"ii> con "°°°°"'“g “S “ “ge” “°“l°“'"" ’ , l A _ \! ~" - i than nature originally intended. It would be another good move if some of the truth loving Lib- erals, would get together and in-sist upon the Patriot publishing al least one article -:i week, or per~ haps once n month by way of be- ginning, in which its favourite ele- ment of untruth would be totally eliminated. We know the task would be difficult where the dis~ outlook for a steadily extending market for Can-. _ adian live stock is very bri_e'ht.” With the increasing urban population in the Un ited States it is not probable that there shall be any perceptible falling off in their demand for live cattle. misc by so long usage has beionii- ehronic, but with outside help it would not be impossible. lt should at least be able to cut oilt those statements manufactured ubsoluely This is at least one conimoditv» which they -are not fm" '"“‘g‘““"°“~ F" ‘“S'“““" i" likely to “dump” upon us and there is every prospect that there will for a long time to come be a good demand there for Canadian cattle. There has prob- ably never been a more favorable time in Canada for the breeding of cattle and we trust our farmers will see it that way and take advantage of it. is editorial of Friday, on the in- come tax, it says the Conserviiilvefi "':illowcd many of the wealthy men to go clr-nr, BUT TQOK GOOD CARE TO SEE TlIA'l‘ TliE MAN OF. SMALL PAIID UP T0 THE HLLT." There is not a small salar- ied or poor man in the province vlio /loes not personal!-y know this ‘ ~ -THE EI'l{()PE_-\.\` SI'I`\_'.»\"l‘I()N statement to be an undiiltcrnteti falsehood. Then it says “THE ACT ' ' ' ' ° ‘ UNDER WHICH Tl-IE ASSESS- The situation in Europe today is little if any less MENT WAJS MADE (1919) WAS threatening than it was immediately before the 'PASSED m,` ,HE C0N_SERvA_ breaking out of the great coi_iflagration_ in 1914. ..,.,V,,: ,»,0v,,,._,,NMEN,,._., Tm, ,oo ,S Just what strength the Bolsheviki ol Russia are able wise. THE INCOME 'PAX f\<"'f to put in the field ,wc have no means of estimating; W-AS PASSED BY THE LIBER-| - ' AILS LONG BEFORE THJE CON we only know that the uncounted millions of people and the untold wealth of that country are available to any leaders that may arise among them. The fact that these millions and this wealth 'is not immed- iately available counts for little; we know what or- ganization and enthusiasm did in 1914,‘15 and 16 for the Allied countries and we know that in these days of rapid progress raw material is very soon con- verted into effective energy. The unsettled and an- tagonistic attitude of many parts of Eastern Eur- ope adds to the unce tainty of the Russion situation. ". Great Britain alid France are committed to in- terfere on behalf of Poland not so much to save Pol- and as to save Europe. That neither Great Britain nor France is anxious for war goes without saying but 'from the present outlook it is difficult to ’s`ee how they can avoid it. Our dispatches of the _past few days are anything but reassuring and develop- ments will be anxiously looked for. 1'n the mean- time we have the assurance that France and Eng- land are in thorough accord and that Lloyd George and Millerand are at least as capable of handling a diilicult situation as any two other men in Europe. ""1‘iiE 1i.»\BiT on iixTR..\\'.iti.\Nci~: -Fi Mr..__D. B. Hanna made the statement the oth- er day' that eighty cents out of every_dollar earned by Canadian Railways was paid out in wages to em- ployees and that it cost more than a dollar to earn a dollar on the railway. The,history of the railway is the history of pract ically every other enterprise with the difference that in_,the caseof very many of the latter the price of theiproduct is increased to a figure that leaves quite a margin of profit for the employer. The em- ployee receives an exorbitant wage; the employer squares himself by raising the price and the consum er pays _both wages and profit. The high wages of the past few years and the high prices received for commodities, whether pro- ducts of the farm or of the factory, have led us into extravagant ways. The article that costs three or fourtimes as much today as it did before the war is ,as readily bought as when the price was well within the income. In the last analysis the high cost of liv- ing is the result of extravagancc; extravagance feeds the demand for the more expensive commod- ties; the demand enables the producer to pay a higher wage; the higher wage compels the producer to charge a higher price; the higher price _is paid by extravagance-_and there we have the circle com- , plete. ere will it end? What is the_rémedy? I EDITORIAL NOTE . __ The Patriot during a lucid interval expresses appreciation of and agreement with a paragraph in 'fan edigxrlal ‘in yesterday’s Guardian under the cap- gjiontl eer Up and Get Together.” The “cheer up” m%ion appea,ls`to its buoyancy, but what “was .the ter. with the “Get Together end of it?` Are ‘SERVATIVES \CiAiME IN P0iWER.' lrho situation is becoming so fc- | 'voltlng 'to the IIUDUC. that “nl”-“S lsome honest men' are i`ound in the p.irty, who will demand il halt 10 these exaggeratioiis and direct un- truths, they will bury th€n1S0lV@5 -iice say one truthful article ii week That would not be much. l ln a former Comment. We Bali and we now repent. thi! "NNY lla” not dared to lay llnnds “D0” “ Smgle dollar and say that ll W" ‘“Bh°“' cstiy or improperly expended by the Al-senault Government." Undo: the caplion. “At Their Own '~Peril, Tu-esdnyss Pau-mt' makes Sumo bum ,hream and covert inslnus "b°.}i§°s`£iLf.i{.{ii' 3 Guardian lleiileis. _- Furnished by W. U. Louson. ; ,,,_,,4.¢¢¢.o4+o-ooo#-¢*°***‘ _ LIFE of-oo-.- Between the buddinS and the mu ing lf-:if . stretch hniuiy nllleslim mm ‘ ' , rflf S ~ yyilthlinlildlriiilos in unlnnds “nd l" giiidea M Tho world is r e. ` Then on a sudden all the music dies, The color fades. Ilow fiiizitilvi/:~ and brief is mortal 0 Between the buddin8 *md the fall- ing leaf! _ 0 short-breathed music. dying °“ tho tongue Ere half te mystic canticle be sung! Who, if 'iwcrc _his to choose. W°“ld know am'-in The bitter sweetness of the lost re- train, its rupture and its pain? Thougli l be shiit in darkness and hcconio Insentient dust blown.ldlY 110"-l ‘md there, - I hold oblivion n scant price to pay For having once had held Bsnlllil niy hp _ Life’s brimming cup of hydrolnnl ` and rue For having once drawn womun's ‘holy love - ' And n chiiii's k-ies. for a little space ' Been boon company to the Day and Nlkht, - Fed on the odors of the Summer diiwn, And folded in the beauty of the I stars. Dear Lord, thouih J be changed to seiistiess clay, ' And nerve the putter as he turns his wheel, I thank thee_for the gracious gift the of tears! A' Inu mm school -mutsi=`»’°"°".°_ "*°"l¥E"¥ _*3‘° io on-sm "M10 ¥n°W|°ds° of void commit °°'°"'““°”*- “"1 M no u. s. a. q,,,,_,,,,¢,,,,,_,¢_,m,, beyond me mn they ii; their siiosos io, _, I i _ _ _ _ --T '-` oeyllable, when his scholar com°`|°“”"""“ Wm °°°|° f|’°m ., , and absolutely without lmowledge __£iou|, hinting at "‘dlsholie`e‘tly or them- that they may carry schemes in peace. Lat tis plain to the Patriot ghd to the ern-ment thin we are not to be ea, oiuiien oi- intimidated by or any of their uuprberf And we" are~ equally sure that ex-Premier, Arsenault. and' his two colleadnee in the Public Works and-Agrlodli ,turab departments, had no dllhon~' est transactions which they would- periilt much lass wish ns to coin- pound with the Governmqnt or.'itl organs 'Dba' very suggestionbt such -'i compromise by the Liberal daily smacks of the worst~ kind of cor- ruption, and such as should damn~ the suggestors ln'the estimation of all honest people. No three clean- er or more upright men ever as- minlstered a public_ service than the gentlemen presiding over these departments and if the Patriot. is anxious for genuine trouble they can have it by putting their under~ thrust inslnuatlons of dishonesty into is more concrete and negoti- able form lp the meantime the Guardian will continue in its duty to the public to condemn the wrong and uphold the good BB it has hitherto done. _ ,____. Then the. evening manipulator gets into the muddling of figures again in its usual way. The partial statement of figures, prepared unu- or special direction last Septemb- er, is once more conscripted into Sewing, why roar the whole trulh so much that nothing but these partial one sided statements arc over permitted to see the light of diy? Or if fractional transactions are decisive of the whole. WHY D0* r-limlni_i‘te_ the receipts in full, and Ulm,-go up only the cxpondlturc'.’. lt would make an ,\‘n0l`ln0\l9lY l1\\`3‘"` risticii, on paper. and w0\1l<1 be 1"” “limit ni; reliable us what they ari- accusloined to dish mit. lf _ HIS Worship the .Mayor should ask' our -City Cie-i°k for ii siiileniclit of moll- r-ys received and D121 out at the present date, what k ll of il SHOW ing would it make? -it would prob- ably show an apparent deficit of nearly 3100.000 in this small citY» And why? Because most of the ye-ir’s expenses have been llrovidcii for, while comparatively few of thi- iaxvs have been received as YH!- This is the camouflage they §on~‘ stantly put up, And to further de- ceive, they -snr.-"The Guardian tors report. WELL HERE IS THE PR‘0VlNlClAL A»I.lDlTOR’S RE- PORT.’j How cunning. They know full well that this is not the i”e~ port asked for. lt is the COM- in ¢llsSf“C°~ 5““°lY “WY °°““' 9'” ,PDETE uproar, Swoim 'ro un- FOR|E THE PU|BfLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE that the Guardiar and the public want. 'Perhaps in no instance is there more satisfactory evidence of most shameless profiteering and manl- pulation to the Eelleml C0l'lG\l1'l'l€\'. than in the matter of Bllgfll Thi* enormous giviliendg declared and the advancing prices of stock in sugar companies indicate that huge fortunes -have-been so‘~1€€Z¢d 'mm' the consuming Duane by these manipulations. The claim that the inordinately high prices were re- sponsive to the law of SUDDIY "nfl demand can not be sustained. ll-.il this law been allowed free course sugar Would never have S0110 to much above one half the present figure. 'Rename computations show the world's supply to be ample for ,nil requlreinentn. Large speculators however by cornering iiiiiii'-nso qiiantitir-v, priricipiioli-y ol’ ilio raw supplies, have seen enabled to hold off sufficient of them; to ci-onto scarcity in certain ceiilres ni' com merce, ensiblinz them '.0 ,lack prices up to where they are today. But rr-liable miviccs indicate a iurii in the tide nt it not too _dist- ant date. Already there are indica- ions of a distinct uneasiness on the port of large sugar holders to unload. Arbucklo Bros., one of the largest refining concerns in New York last week reduced their san ing prices 3 cents a pound. l'law_ sugars are reported as declining since last May, and -prices for the raw article are quoted at 16.55 as compared with 23.50 two months ago. Large stocks of raw sugars held in Porto Rico because oi. strikes are now coming forward. and lvas.tended to overload the market. Iii quite s number of cases the: raw product is unsaleahie ex- Wvt “P011 price concessions, specu- lating manipuluiors being more an- xious to get clear of than to in- crease the supplies on hand. im- lwrtant amongst thc influences pro ducing this easier situation is that the European war countries form- erly large buyers are now export- ing sugar westward in unexpect- ed liberal quantities. Lower prices are pralicted from many soui.-fs. ‘lf-Agn sions L_A.l|__ nw__x___,f_» \ \ _ . P51095 Lid- have Inst opened n quisite sable eepeefteot was tag- Vshlpmeut of furii _sent them on ep-_tied at $05.,~wiliile,a seal. rich ond' ‘ proval, the order having been can- lustrous, was marked $58. There eellod when the luxury tux was ire also hosts of other small pieces. levied. These furs, ay coniprehen- ‘ Tho fur coats are big and roomy live, showing ot the tar styles roi- :is to 40 inoiioo -I long, ohsrro- the coming season, will be return' ing coats, cut and fashioned with wi vvlzhiu a short time. so the la- not perfection one always finds in dies of Ch-irloiteiuwu, and men. .’atou’s furs. An outstanding. value loo, are invited to call and see was noted in a, smart Poney coat . them within thenext few dare. A with deep collar and cuffs of ben-' glance at Paton’s window.-i ls but ver, priced at $876.”_A 'marmot of " ` on index of the wonderful range the softest shade, was 'made into in the main store, where nunxer- -i captivating 40 inch coat, lined " ous ture ln all colors, all virieties. with radium satin and priced at _ind wonderfully V attractive styles ',`-236. _ are shown; among them mink, A combination or beaver ni-id ' beaver, fox, lynx, npossum, Hull- :narmot was irresistible st $310. son seal, etc. -Home in and see the' it is doubtfull if there were ever showing arranged for your conven- richer seal coats shown at Paton's, _ieiice and inspection; in fact suci _one dspeciull-y nice coat, straight » a rlvlshing display of beautiful lines, with _flaring eldrt, has a fiirs was never surpassed, and in large, 1‘2'inc\h sable collar, belt ' face of the high prices of the fur and large cuffs of same. It wasl market. never so cheap as Paton's lagged $284., A » musltrat coat of ~ offer. specially fine skins is'showu et In small furs the caps effect is . $300, and a seal and opossuni com- very prominent, with beautiful lin- blnatlon, two of the richest com- / ings. tussels, etc., and in some in- bined furs. sells at $425, while the stances finished off with tails. stxight Poney comes az !2l0.~ -- Natural red fox \neckplcces nro emeniber these-fur-i will only priced at $40; Patch $25; Coon be here for ii little wliilo, so caill $65, with mulls to match. one ex- early for first choice. do you-take to are PURE' EE//\€’ - AST GINGER ALE. i 'F ~>. ~* '-",` -` . no spovo asvorsgsonl-o ~'riiE~ sinner 'r.HA'r can BE MADE," and :irc Manufactured from Pure Granu- lated Sugar, Pure Fi'-uit Extracts, anti, BAcTER|0Lg_ GICALLY Pure Water, in a _MODERN PLANT, by up. to-date Machinery and Equipymmg, |m|`{ und". Q" strictest Export Supervision, ag regards, §AN|1'A1'|°N and Manufacture. These "PEE'Rl_.‘E88" levoragn gn sold throughout the Province at ,POPULAR PRICED, and ln Pint hotties only. _- _ _ _ \ - D1s'i‘1uiiU'roiis Fon _1~itiN'cE EDWARD ' ‘ ISLAND. ' ' pi-iccs prevailing in June |920, and i the Liberal ranks. li' precedent _ » ._ -»= , 1 _ ~_._- _.s ' . Paitriot gives some figures com- muir and McBride in British Col- ' paring the cost of sugar, flour and umbla, all Conservative, with P. E, lnolassrs in June 1919 with thef Island and Nova Scotia alone in DEPLOIS BEDS.. CHARLOTTETOWN. R. T. HOLMAN, 'LTD-,-",8UMMERf8_lDE. ' JOHN A. HACKETT, Ti GNISH » " J.J. HUGHES C0.. LTD-|SOUR|S il GEORGETOWN __ - ____ _ __ __ q _Y i i( states thot, "ln a number of ar~‘ccunts for a¥\Ylhlll8. then it is all , ' .» - ; ~ -_ ._ f » c ` . ticlc-s the Patriot gave as one of‘in premier Meighon's favor, and I , , _ U10 l'@“B0“S Whi’ 'ihe S0V8l‘l1m9l1¢ the more pronounceclly go, if as ro- f J. & T. ' ' were compelled to increase taxa- poi-tea, the toisi vote of Nova ` tion was the incrossod cost or food sooiin gnv_o about 25.000 votes isss " )Iaiiiii`aci'iii'ci's of the now Famous l¢“ff\`*» @SlJe°lH\1Y f°l` lhe HOHDHHI for the government than for their "I ' for the Insane." We niiist first opponents. The Liberal Govern- \_ "PEEIILESS" DRY GINGER ALE point owl, THAT AT THE TIME ment of Nova Scotia have had their UI _ _` _ , . ` ` "mis: Bum. covioaNMii.vT Tax own franchise sna msnipnioiion or ` ‘_‘“l"tt"l"““~ I }’i“°*’ |*‘|\"*'1`¢| 151111141 AVTT WAS _CONl(`il?7IVEDi. which electoral boundaries in their own ,4_,|.4. *,134* Ki- M,-* . was in February last, ’IlliESE AD hands for 3 long gimp, 1g wus 3,9. i _ _ 4 `. A ` 'N _ ‘ " '°"" V.\.\.“(7ES Il.A|i) NOT TAKEN cause of this that MacKenzie King ";==':'::'-frrr'-' rr:-f 1"- »___-..-_-_-_~-._ PLACE. So that this little excuse and his colleagues fought so hard - ' T-‘_""` will not upon its face so down. io get provincial milnipuintions on-< IIS figures also have rather nn elim grafted into the new l<‘ranclilse.Act ' V 0 - ' lfllvfliilln-l HDDPHYIIUCP. ond arelbut in which he most fortunately Q 1 worked 9”' by me mg"“l°“5 mm' failed. flow deplorable it wblild 'k. b ai liods adopted. in creating the cole have been if "ny "ve uwusaml _ ' 7"`“""1 ‘|"H°i"- Fm' l“s‘““"‘°' w Liberals in Nova Scotia could cl- EV°"|3°¢|¢= |'\wf|ni|44.25 per roll. (guaranteed for20y"r|) Tiiizygipits problcm in proportion, i'l‘ get ,mnost n unnnlmom., rpprpsgn. Carbonlte Pslntfer Roofing of all kinds-N cents por g|| ’ OS S , C ' . _ AND Twl; lution to the Federal house over w|,-° p||°,-|' “Wdy makg__°1 35 P” pam A tho heads of about eighty tlious- T0 ONE CAR Op m_,0UR, M05; and Conservatives or opnosmon I" Potato Pots, all sizes andprleel. “S9” nf these °°“"m°dme5 W°“ld voters. Ycs, the Nova Scotia elec-_ All kinds of nails. staples and small hardware. consider llint that car oi’ flour mms hmm muah ..s|gnmcn“Ce_.. , A d e would be pretty well sweetened " h "° |' 3" “"3 U°°d 'P°°|a| 7°( *M lillt iii. this rate. Another problem is -.K-<»0>-o _ 700 lbs. Canadian Ha'\dP Picked B 0 how an institution with about 400. Two heads of'-a mmm, mfg not cant' lb' hr M 0° -~ inmates could consume fifty pun- necessarily better than one, You" for quamy and “""°°° -_ ' heons of molasses (two I. C. R. ' , ` speaks about the Provincial Audi. ,Gigli and one hundred barrels or It is a wise father that can con- I siikor in a season. The fact is ivslnacfls tgggrecyglfgescglgssihe parade `(|. L, ` that the increased price of flour g 2077_8_5_31 ‘_ is small and it was necessary to Tha meallfflg Of "Dl'." depends ' . M';RT'N‘ BAVVWW dllmp in an excessive amount of z},t‘Li‘;;l;‘;’o:9;;:ey7;¢4h0f_lt is nine- spgsr and molasses to bring up _ n\,““S"“""’~ ` ` the average cost AIND SUGAR‘ country of such incapable manage- ment. Not within the_last quarter f of a century, has such a state of affairs existed-. Put governments, Conservative and Liberal alike. h-ave' always contracted i‘or the ye:ir's supply of staple provisionln ‘ the month of December, and con- tractors have placed their orders' in advancxftrir 'goods to cover their ` contracts. P lactically the whole of the ,advance in cost to which the Paltriot refers has taken place since last Dccenibsr, and if the gov r-rnmont have failed to place these contracts us the custom has been, lon days W-as that all goods would be bought by tender, and if for purposes of jobbery, that their friends might “come to the crib this, then it is s shameful waste of public money. Telegraph and other Liberal pap ers are iiarplng upon the signifi- cance of the Novo Scotia elections, in relation to the federal pros-` poets, one of them remarking that "lt is a warning which Hon. Mr. Meighen cannot ignore, and they.; as well, as their opponents, will recognize, it as a reflection of Lib- eral strength in the next election.” Well,.let us see. Blr John MacDon- ald, Conservative, repeatedly car- `rled the Dominion elections when Fielding ruled Nova Scotia, Blair in New Brunswick, Mercier in Que- bec, Mowot in Ontario, Greendwly in Mahitobu, the Northwest pro- vinces not than established. all Lib- ` -eral governments, with ,only P, Ili. island and British Columbia in the Conservative ranks. Then 'later Sir ' \ cbs'1‘I Tm-2 rim. Fon PUm.ic . ,~?NSUMPT,0N_ . . _ , *qQ* 1-But the _more serious aspect of ` __ the case is -.ln the suggestion by } X B P B . l tho Pstrioi, 'nmxr THE oovEaN .WENT Alan Now PAYING __ 0 O THESE A|DV‘A'NiCED PRICES. If H ’ . _ ~ this is the case then nn indignant » _ People would be justified in ex- ‘_ I ` i lrenie measure for' relieving the ‘ _ lhen the neglect is absolutely iii- ` excusable. Their boast ln opposit- _' and get their fill" they have done » The Toronto Globe, St. John ` , s \ I W _ _ _ Will arrive. in Charlottetown on Thursday, August ' 5th and will be-on sale Friday August 6th. W IB. P. Brand,Fox Wire is made by Rylands_Ltd., of V91Th9;YT1D§0I1, England, the largest makers of fox 31115 netting in the world. It is absolutely the finest wire 3 11101165’ can buy. Every strand is guaranteed perfect, true to size and mesh and coated with the finest English Znlglfiifegyhich means long life owing to its nonrusting IMPORTANT. Every ron of B. P; Brood is guaran- teed true to size, that is to say two inch mesh is two inch {Y1@8h not two and a half inch. One and aiialf inch mesh }S _One and 2 half Inch, not one andfive eights. This is an lmvvrtant point for you in buying fox wire. Besure you get éigiée ibrue to mesh. ' ~_ _ - ,_111‘ prices on this brand of fox wire are iiilzra;tzst‘;.a.i isi°°“‘“s tips” getting their orders in. ' ' 7' we n°_ me u Phone, wire or write ~ ' 1 .,° . Wflifrld Laurier carriei .several el. lf _ ' ' 1 » eotlons, with Haven rn ing in New \~ , ' _ _ _ _ _, g’ » liriiiiswlcli, Parent ln_Qu¢bo¢,_Wbil |°m‘5'|"- , ` ' * ` f __ ‘ wAw-.......-..._...-.,___.__ _.____ _ _ _ , _gghfl i 1 s i *0O¢-4-e so oo. O 0 O 000+-oooe-40-0-0-Q00-4-+0-04-of-gg... " `>`- `-“-'~“-‘ -7- '-`-'-=--1-‘==='-'-an-\:_-.:==-4.;-._-.=_-.-.=.-2