vwr i... -, \‘ - '. r . A‘ _ I / }| Phlliiii Eulliiiléii Return . Tlotio- Triumphant That Mar? in UIII Al. -PIICEB s” .' \ I l s" ;-\ ‘,1 . ‘f? ‘v @111] VALENTINO 5 y“ Ongafill ed with “man” . . -. .. F’ “w” Titan” rancrous" Indrvlsailngwlab ..~ picture that swep‘. the dnlmulfi mo!!!‘ lrll of‘! its feet. Vaien- ents — a terrific =03 greatest triumph. forest. are _ m, a cosi .‘.l.1rs. n n 1 o r u .\_r. 5,". c~ o n a av I- rmvca snwann on l‘\'.'0 years in the making at of over l ltlillion MUSlC4_°-‘N_ senators-crown .- q rvs‘ Gfllllflng drama. of -the great north- west forests, pack- ALSO MACK SENNETT M battle for the hand of a beauti- ful girl by two well bred men. '1‘ H E CHESTRA Ayrshire Breeders Annudl Meeting The Prince Edward Island AFT-ill Breeders ‘Club held their annual meeting in the Agricultural Hall. Charlottetown on January llth. Ow- ing to somewhat inclement weather, and the prevalence of the "Flu" many were prevented from attend- 111g this meeting. Nevertheless even with these handicaps, a well attend- ed and enthusiastic gathering was the result. The Chair was capably filled by} the President, Fred McRae, who de- ,1ivered the" following excellent ad- dress — ' ’ ' "The past year has been one of quiet but steady prozreFa» vbeen blessed with splendid crop. and ‘éflyfavorable weather conditions, start‘- ilng with a. fine early spring, and ffinishlng’ up with a very fine Open 32in l Prices of dairy products and other products associated with the dairy i ' industry have been good, and. the de- _ rnand for high,cla.ss grade and pure .bred Ayrshires has declined a new high level with prices correspond- . m‘ New markets which have been re- recently attained are showing an in- n: creased demand for our stock, and future prospects are. bright indeed. ' ‘The demand in our own, and the 1' other Maritime Provinces, especially - 11;; good bulls is equally encourafhng; _ Where our Island bred stock has ' "come into competition with the very best from other parts, including im- ported animals, they have made a creditable showing. 1 refer partic- 'ularly to the cows in milk class at the recent Royal Show, where two Island bred cows came in second and fourth position in what was said to .be one of the strongest classes of the Show. We note with pride the splendid of butter fat, and wish to congratu- _, ate Mr. Whylie, her owner. t We also wish to congratulate our ' esteemed rival biecdx. 1.1:". J. ‘$12.1- ter Jones, who was so successful at lie recent Royal Winter Fair and other Shows. This strengthens our contention that our conditions here” are unsurpassed foi‘ the development of live stock. This should inspire us to fresh efforts which will doubt- less be rewarded. The one branch of farming which his to some extent boon carrbd on it a loss this year is the potato busi- ness, and while this is regrettable, and has caused some financial handi- caps it ‘should serve to teach the good ‘lesson that a good herd of cows V lbould have a place on every well - managed farm. ‘An interesting and imtruvtive Mold the home of C. D. 1170145 n. Clyde River, lust March, though not as lei-gory attended as we had hoped. I 0n account of the Provincial Ex- hibition coming on in August. right liter haying. we wcre unable to hold our Annual Plaid Day at the Exocri- mentul Farm. In future it will b9 advisable to ho‘d it before haying. u this ha: aiw~ys been an import- nngmd enjoyable p:rt of our year's l‘ refiirlnc Y 'v'.‘\‘ lo oxcrran my _ vr-fitvw M ttv» c'fl"'rr~ "'1' ~ Jfifiilh banana Ind mod record mode by Nellie Osbourne of- 27197 pounds of milk and 1257 pounds ‘ fl- rathei. Barn Day. ivus held at’ will which prevailed throughout the year. and bespeak a continuance 0f his for my successor, as the success of our Club ls due in no small de- gree to this harmony. And nov: for some New Year’s Re- muticns for 1929: Lei us have increased faith in our business and greater devotion to it. Let us altogether make the Char- iottetown Exhibition a famous Ayr- shire show. I Let make a combined effort to display our‘ stock at the Amherst Winter Fair. Let us send a representative ex- ‘iibit to the next Royal Winter Fair. Let us seize every opportunity of cxtending our favoritles incur own Province. ' Let us always be ready to help the We have lncw beglnnenand don‘t on any 00- casion sell him an inferior anilnal. Let us on all occasions remember "nd liveup to the high ideals of ‘our Constitution. _ Let us increase our membership." Mr. McRae epitomizes alsplendid id spirit, optimism and progressive- ness in this statement which is re- flectcd throughout this whole organ- Zzatlcnn The statement of the Secretary- Treasurer, showed the Club to have a membership of 36. The receipts for the year were $146.24, while ‘the disbursements were "$84.93. Balance on hand $61.31, A discussion then followed deal- ing with the minimum price placed on Grade A bulls namely $150.00 as orrnnged- at the last annual meet- ing. It was decided that no change z-hould be made in this rule. The matter of another general test for bovine tuberculosis was next introduced. The great benefit of this work was stressed, and a Resolu- tion was passed unanimously asking the Federal Government to conduct cnothcr general test of all the cattle of the Province. commencing some- lime in the spring months, and oom- plctlng it as soon as possible. Roe be recommended for the posi- tionptnew Director on the Board of the Canadian Ayrshire Breeders l/‘r-soclaiiion, who will be appointed at the annual meeting held on Janu- ary 30th at Montreal. Judges for the Fall Fairs were also recommended as follows:-— Charlottetown. Peter McArthur, Re- serve; Richard Blggs; Amherst, Wil- 11am Grccnshiclds; Reserve, Professor Barton; Halifax. J. R. McQuat, Re- zcrve, John Hunter. Mr. James Paton of the Exhibition Association next addressed the meek in}. He congratulated the Breed- crs on their success in being able to meet compctition in any kind of l. show. He welcomed from the breeders,in' regard to im- provement that might be made in Lha Exhibition. No place has bet- “er opportunities to make good than we have here on Prince Edward 1a- ing his address. Mr. Paton who has travelled widely and has just rotum- ~d from a. trip across the Continent "knows his onions" when it comes to ndvantageioffered for the man who is willing to work. A full discuss‘ -u woe place on Field work, and a resolution was pas- ‘ltdwllltln; that in the opinion of ncvtin; the" Maritime Provinces " ‘e "all ‘ed to a Field man, wafer- Ablv a Maritime man. ‘who mould It It was agreed that Mr. Major Mc-_ suggestions. ‘and, stated Mr. Paton in conolud-l employed in this fieldffor at least six months of the year. ’ On motion $25.00 was voted to help defray expenses of a delegate to the annual meeting at Montreal. It was also decided to ask the management of the Royal Winter Fair. to again introduce the County been a great‘ inducement to breeders from these Provinces East to assem- ble a car lot and show at the “Big Fair." Q ' _ Tht Following commlttes were then cypointedz- , v Exhibitions - Vernon Mclifillan, ‘llarl Ings and B. R. Brown. Field Workz-Major McRae, Wil- "iam Younker and Earl Lugs. Extensiom-B. R/lrown, Roberts, Earl MoRae. A question of outstanding interest which was discussed, had to do with the establishing of a. futurlty stake at the Charlottetown Exhlbrion. It was agreed that this event be estab- ‘lished and that entries be received for calves born after this meeting. The rules require that cows carry- ing the calves be nominated before parturition, and that the owner be a member of the Ayrshire Breeders’ Club. An entrance fee of $1.00 will be charged at time of entry. _It is interesting to note that 14 cows were immediately entered by members pre- sent, and it is expected that s. very large number will eventually be nom- inated. The following are the complete rules governing the competition:- 1. All making entriw must be members of the Ayrshire Breeders Club 0f P..E. I. 2.‘ All calves must- be pure bred and registered at the time of show. 3» All cows must be nominated by June 1st, 1929. ' 4. A fee of one dollar must ac- company» each entry. 5. Futurity year shall be calcu- lated from August 1st. succeeding the nomination (June 1st, 1929) un- til the following August. 6. A full pedigree made out on certificate from the accurate mark- ings of calf shall be sent to the Seo- retary o! tho Association together ivith one dollar one week after the calf is delivered. 7._ No exhibitor shall nominate or show the progeny of more than two cows in his own herd. I. Calves must be from ll. 0. P, dams or from sires out of qualified darrls. '- 9. Money winnings shall be divid- ed —- 50, 35, 15, 5, 3, and 2 percent. 10. Nominators of first and sec- ond prlze calves shall be awarded ten per cent of the prize and five per cent of succeeding neyl won shall be paid nominetors of the other winnings. ' 11. There shall be no set amount named in this futurity for prises un- til final payments and donations are mode. . a On motion it we! agreed that the Secntnry receive a ulary of,$25.00 per year. - It was also decided that a tax of 1 per cent be levied for Club pur- poses on all eblesfmuie by Member: during the your 1929: I The following are the officers el- ccted:- v President — Vernon Mcllliilln. Buckley Point Road. viceiPresident -- Iicrl "ookfiald. ‘ | Beoy-Trus-I. B. Brovvu,~!’ork. wfii.bllfflvifliflflll Athol K011i“. 4 1 nerd at. this show.’ ‘ This feature has _ » l g ND PRINCE RI (JHA'RI) DIX IN ~ iWtINDAY runs.‘ EDWARD “sconrmo GOODS” A 1 s o PRINCE TO - DAY, "any AND frmzm "rm: bfluflTY" _ of the Picture uAPrraL F R E D a -\I 0 - ' .1 ICLIIYC History _ D liv E D N E s D é ‘g _ _ Ftp,‘ gggmgg ONLY Annwalvlsarno music" serum. YQUAL PRILI" -' as ;. w ~- a —""-"'— ~ b 1.11.“... _ °. . ~ RICHARD Biilllllil ' a2‘ 1 I v i fir» ; harms: ‘f’ ‘ QR 160v: - IION- ' is?“ . ' cgunfalizlr-J: ‘ “ EVER TOLD l f‘: ‘ s '1: o n r n! RUPERT HHES /*W vo- ‘I-‘ires of youth and courage that will set your heart ablaze! The love-romance that played Broad- way for 4 months at.$2.00 a. seat. It's here at last! No advance In prices! ORIGINAL MUSIC S C 0 R E BY P. E. ORCIIESTR B. C., which is owned and operated the older building, This is an architect's drawing of the famous Empress hotel at Victoria, by the Canadian Pacific Railway Co. This beautiful hosteiry is now undergoing extensive alterations, including the addition of a. new wing containing 270 rooms with bath, an addition to the ballroom, a new conservatory and an extensive system of sample rooms The new extension follows the chateau style of architecture exemplified in New Brunswick ‘ Has Surplus FREDERICTON, N. B., Jan. 30.- The province of New Brunswick has a surplus of $198,209.30 on curréht re- venue account for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1928, according to the annual financial statement pub- lished in an extra edition of the Royal Gazette this afternoon. This is the second year in succession that the province has had a surplus in current account, the credit balance last year being $15,792.64, which fol- lowed a deficit in the previous year's accounts of $61,523.44. The surplus for 1928, as it was in the previous year, was reached after a deficit in the operation of the» Saint John and Quebec (Valley)' Railway, amount- ing to $257,807.07, was taken care of. In 1927 the cost to the province‘ of the Valley Railway was $272,362. In addition to this surplus the province set aside sinking funds iot- alllng $247,402. The consolidated ba- lance sheet shows that the net debt of New Brunswick at October 31, 1928, was $38,254,372, an increase of a. little more than $3,000,000 during the year. Revenue Reached New High Level The total revenue for the fiscal year reached a. new high level in the history of the province, amount- l»; to $5,785,619.33, an increase of more than $852,000 over the total re- venue for the previous fiscal’ year, which up to the end of last year had ‘been the highest on record. * The largest items in the revenue account included the Dominion of Canada subsidies, which totalled $1.- 20537999, an increase of nearly $33,- 000 over the figures for the previous fiscal year. The motor vehicle “ fees 1.1- turned $744,822.95, the gasoline tax $374,388.33, a total for the two of $1,- 019,011.28, being $180,165 in excess of the ooilectionlfrom these two sour- ces in the preceding twelve months and more than $30,000 above what Ill estimated.- _ The net profits from the sale b: liquor, as announced some time no. were 81.042.923.32, And from this m: deducted the sum of $200,782.59 for themicntion of the provincial pol- ioo,‘ leaving n balance to go into general revenue of $880,241.24. GeorgoAn- Athol Roberta, Winlioo; near-plantain . yLarge Quantity» ~ of Potatoes Held In United States OTTAWA, Jan. 30—-H0lding of p0- tatoes on January 1, 1929, in the 35 states of the U. S. growing (late potatoes, were about 30 per cent. greater than last year, writes R. U. Slayter, assistant trade commission- er in New York City, in the Com- mercial Intelligence Journal. Heavy production in the southern states has retarded the marketing of pota- toes from the 19 northern states, from» which a surplus is usually shipped. Merchantable stocks on hand in these northern states on January 1, 1929, were estimated at 110,129,000 bushels, ‘compared with 88,893,000 last year. In the remain- ing 16 of the 35 late potato states, where the quantity of potatoes grown is usually insufficient to supply local needs in the late winter months, holdings are estimated at 20,206,000 bushels for January 1, 1929, as com- jzired- with 11,053,000 bushels last "car. i The total plOClUClLlOlI of late pota- toes in the United States in i929 was 420,891,000 bushels. Of this total. about 7,500,000 bushels were left in the ground because of low price, 40- 000,000 were unfit for feed-or seed or were lost from decay or shrink- age, and about 136,000,000 had been sold up to January 1, 1929. One hundred million bushels will be re- quired for food and seed on the farms, and it is anticipated that more than 13,000,000 bushels of the stock now on hand will be fed to livestock.’ Reports received from growers manual that the "ma plum: ings will fall short of the 3,835,000 acres by more than nine per cent. MONTHLY BEPOBT OI WOMEN'S INSTITUTES I ' I rammed-moo eeting, which who held athome of Mrs. Walter ‘Scott, jwu opened with l Ill!‘ long b! members. It wu decided w wort a spreadfornfriendnndtobuyknlvibl IDOOna _ and other utensils. Ind a tablecloth fortheulesoftbomlti- tore. ‘Arrangements were made w noon hour, Next mpuungjwln, be at home of Mn", J; A. Gillie. . - r - r . / In inn-nu nun-i ‘ serve tneccbool children not cocoa it Central guardian D0 N0‘! DILA! banding your to lawn-qua I111 got on artistic colon-V mr if paid in time. I» NEW SERIAL-Mon Marooned, one of Georltfllanb’: splendid‘ tales of the Hudson Buy Country 8W1! in Monday's Guardian. l B! PAYING 100B SUBSCRIP- non new you get the choice 0111111! calendars from the Charlottetown Guardian. GET 2.003 CALENDAR IP01: I988 oy paying your subscription to mt Guardian Nine h: choose from BRIGHT CALENDAR. — The Guardian has received with thanks a pretty calendar from the Hickey 3F Nicholson Tobacco Co., Limited. PBESBYTEEIAN SERVICES — Rev. C. B. Pitcher, 3.1)., will preach Sunday, Feb. 3rd, Dundas 11 a. m.; Cardigan 8 p. 1a.: Montague 7 P- m- _ _._ "ILOESETS AND GIB-DLES worth up to $3.50, good ‘garments but broken lines and sizes, clearing at $1.00. Moore 6a McLeod, Limited. 4308-2-2-11. CAVENDISII AND NEW GLAS- GOW-There will be Divine Worship in the United Church. Sunday, Feb- ruary 3rd., at Cavendish 11 a. m-. and at New Glasgow 3 p. m. Rev. H. S. Bishop, Minister. ANGLICAN SERVICES-February 3, 1929: Saint John's Church, Cra- paud, Holy Communion 11 a. m.: Saint Elizabeth's Church, Springfield service 7.00 p. m. __,_ SMALL SIZES IN COBSETS. beinB cleared here today at 40c per pair. This lot includes corsets worth to $2.25. Moore 6a McLeod, Limited. 4308-2-2-11. BREADALBANE CHARGE, United Church of Canada. Rev. David Cvburn M. A., B. D.. pastor. Services for Feb- ruary 3rd, 1929. Rose Valley 11 a. m. Granville 3 p. m. Pleasant Valley 7-30 p. Ill. LANDS IN TOILSP-Archie MC- ‘ Lean, hailing from Prince Edward Island, pleaded guilty in the police court Wednesday to a charflfl 01 drunkenness and causing a disturb- ance. In the first count he was fined $5.00 and on the second $15.00 or in default of payment one month in jail. -Moncton Times. T0 ATTEND ANNUAL MEETING -lVIr. H. A. Ebers, Provincial Mari- ager of the Mutual Life Insurance Company, leaves this morning for Waterloo, Ontario, where he will at- tend the annual general meeting of the Company. Before returning home he will visit Montreal, Toronto, and other leading Canadian cities. HOME FOB. BUBIAL- The‘ death oocurrediin Newark, New Jersey. this week of Walter A. Leard, formerly of Pisquid: The remains arrived in Charlottetown last evening, accom- panied by his brother Mr. Frederick G. Leard and will be forwarded this morning to Mount Stewart, the fun- eral inking place from the home of his sister, Mrs. Ira Clark, Mt. Stew- art, Sunday at 2 o'clock. BUSINESS CIIANGEF-The well known firm of The Rogers Hardware Company, Limited, has changed hands, the president and owner, Mr. George J. Rogers having sold out his interests to a company of which his brother Mr. Benjamin Rogers, Sr., is president and manager. The change went into eflect yesterday. The pres- ent staff of employees is being main- tained and the business will be carried on as usual under the present firm name. AVONLEA INSTITUTE. — The January meeting "was held at the home of lidrs. Rpy Toombs with eight members and three visitors present. Meeting ‘ with Institute Ode. After the reports b: the committees, new ones were appointed. It was de- cided to purchase a new teacher's desk also blind and roller for North Rus- tico school. Flowers were unt to members in hospital. Ono new mem- ber was enrolled. A short but pleasing programme was rendered, after which lunch was served, and meeting cl with National Anthem. . MINISTER. BISIGNSPAt the c1000 of service in Trinity United Church in Bethunt on Sunday evening the Rev. Neil Mclnughlm. who for the past thrceendahalfycarghumin- iltorod to this oofllfllltion. tendered hi: animation, some to become ef- fective at the and of the present eon- fcrenoo your, June thirtieth. Rev. Mr. Maohaughlln‘: announcement follow- odn. moot interesting and forceful summon, touching on condition: and incident in the early but“! of the Christian church. After “w! or unit thduuou of the m- tlcningfcpuuiitta - o! conference.- » tirement from the pricipalship and Prince of Wales Continues Tour 1 l NEWCASTLE. Jan. 30-—His heart ‘heavy by the grim reality of poverty- stricken homes in the mining regions. the Prince of Wales wdav continued his tour of the coal fields. going to the Northumberland district. which is reputed to contain some of the blackest spots in the country “It makes one heart sick to see and hear of touch, condition-L" 581d the Prince. The first call‘ this morljlfli worst the Mallsend training centre, where men in the 8119-17108 09511511‘ of the mining villages are tryins W become efficient at some other trade. Going to another village consist- ing of 24 cottages, each containing one room and an attic. the prince accompanied a miner to his home, stooping to enter, he learned that nine persons. six of them adults lived there. Victorian Standards Are Upheld By Principal Hutton TORONTO, Ont., Jan. 31. — The Victorian standards as against the "shibboleths of this Georgian age" were forcefully upheld by Principal Maurice {Hutton in an address to members of the University at a. ban- quet hero on the occasion of his re- chair of Greek at University College. "I submit to you," he ‘said, “that we are suffering today from not only a yellow press-that merely is an echo of the spirit of the age?"- but from a. yellow literature, a sensa- tional literature, science ls desertlng continually to the sensationallsts, as that world series, ‘Today and Worrrorrow.’ ab- undantly illustrates. ’ There is noth- ing surprising in yellow literature, no doubt, andhothlng‘ at all new. The obvious, I ancient trouble about lit- erature is insnincerity and the obvious, ancient‘ trouble source of inslncerlty in literature. as in life, is the natural passion for novelty, ‘the insatiable ambition to write some- thing new." ' Principal Hutton remarked that. unless his memory grossly deceived him, a Victorian child was sworn to temperance, soberness and chastity, and earlier a mediaeval child, "un- less this history is also all bunk,” was even sometimes sworn by St. Francis to poverty, chastity and obe- dience. “That médiaeval vow of po- verty would be apriceless counter- polse today to the Georgian craze for money which inspires so many gunmen and thugs on this continent, and not gunmen and thugs only, but all the tribes of gamblers, male and female, each after his or her_ own kind," commented the speaker. - Corning to the mediaeval or Vic- torian vow of poverty, the professor talisman to'an age in which the itch to say something new inspired literature to flout the old standards of chastity set by age-old conven- tions, by nature and biology, for the chaster sex first; and then set by life's experience also, if in a less de- » gree, for the stronger, which is also the weaker sex-the stronger weaker sex, as a Greek would say-the sex which is sometimes pleased again to- day to call itself "polygamous" and thereby to fall behind even the sex- ual standards of its vaunted monkey ancestry. ' He previously explained a. combin- atlon of commonplace character and mediocre intelligence inspired a sense of modesty in him. "If a man has any intelligence at all he knows what the poet laureate of England (the real laureate, not the titular professor of poetry) means when he says, ‘if you can face both triumph and disaster and treat those two im- porters Just the same.‘ He knows. every man of commonsense knows, that they are both imposters; that the man with popular gifts skims the cream off a popular age, an_ age of democracy. while the other men who are without popular gifts, the unadorned who are handicapped by physical ‘blemishes, by imperfect. vo- cal chords, by trivial but disfiguring mannerisms of any sort. are strand- ed by the harsh winds of their ill- luck on the lee shore of oblivion, be- cause they cannot blow their own trumpets, send up their own rockets. their own s.o.s., and thsri are left high and dry ‘all silent‘ as the poet hu 1t. and ‘all damned‘ so far as the applause of popular audiences cu RDIAN‘ " ' __1*‘_EBRUARY. c. m, a a ~ "“ l-----_-.__\ 171a ‘Daily Argument > AUNT HET BY BOBBIE” QIJILLQ‘. I ‘The older man "l; u" l‘ more he likes to have his y“. bsllevdho was n. devil ‘m; the girls when he venue!’ POOR PA sensational, per- haps even most sensational, when it is more or less scientific; for even said that vow would be a priceless are concerned. Bo the two forces well ask me where 7011f Fm" n‘ “The boss didnlcsoom to like it much when he cum »in an‘ saw me showin‘ a3 new pictures of my [refl- oblldren to all tho fellows in the office." . HOW THE PLOT 0F l PINAFORE WAS LAID LONDON, Eng. February. 1. (By Canadian Press) w. s. Gilbeii founded the plot o! “pinafore" on the» supposed mixing up of two in. fants. Something of the sort 1m actually occurred at one of the Liver- pool Poor Law Hospitals. Almotlier, whose two-year-old son lied been silfferlng from. measles was given another child, and the mistake was not rectified for 10 days.-In future u. piece of tape, with the name of the child written upon it, will n fastened upon the anklt’ oitavery such patient. "I must express nu amazeme it that any mother should not be able immediately to indenliiy her own child,“ declared the chair- man, when the incident was report- ed to the board. BRILLIANT ‘ PERFORMANCE By Musical Artist .Whose Plreuil Came From Prince Edward Island TORONTO, February. L-Jforonto. musical capital of Canada, acclaimed a Regina girl, Thursday night, when Etta Coles, daughter of Dr. W. R- Goles and Mrs. Coles of Regina made her musical debut with Naomi Gran- atstein, of Toronto in a two plmv recital. Both students were inim- duced by_ the distinguished M170!- Bates, and appeared under tho 1145' ronage of leading Toronto will and musical people, including thb premier of Ontario. The two plow-B" . performed brilliantly before i110 largest -audlence gathered in not!“ ‘ years to a debut. An interesting experlmoiit -is 1'0- called by 1. e foregoing desPW-h these two brilliant young studmtll were among 15 pianists gather!“ from all parts of Canada w M"- up her "piano colony" durlns "l! past summer. In making their b0! in a. two-piano recital. Toronw _ Daily star has oommen‘ ‘, they i" among the first members of the 001-‘ ony to make public appearance siflfl. that time. (Dr. Coles is a native of Mllm P. E. l. ). ' {f-n . that have fashioned me betweén W" victorianism and democracy. m" ‘ conspired with commonsense t0 l" tune me to becoming moduli’ "'1' evening and to the essential gm! d humility." ‘ __i_____._. " Mother, when the lilht 8°" m‘ where does it go?" ' "I don't know. You misfit 1"“ u Alvin“ Ker Preparations" IvIy Al m: ma». . L . “w-l-i-uflfn _ W "ems . ,- * ..1 51,.