Ho histo Help: The 1 ‘ecu léyter: t Kc ana a u Iishe Mm?!” i g Kc con ere pros, the Re‘ F r W chair. ‘ I ~.' wy- man o: f hav,‘ service . 1 “B, subject I K ye, E. Boo s M, Ministf ‘ I ion. tor l o! c helpful Em, hrrsti, 1 1:12“; » i ptive g l is ‘Nat, er t00< 1 '10 1 lerlar- 1mm g cg l ' doing Y . iiAccc » lnom ways , fr" "raw i . i x‘ . ‘one ‘ ‘w’ ',, ‘ on . m“- l i Order‘ I as a l. Brotr l is thv larger ' life il t l spirit‘ there . man V . in: ,‘ y . . beini j slde.. the iwh“ ‘l Th. | I, 1 o , . § l ' an rm- ” l T- . = of b ii i gent l I i’ a s» l1 "°" l l I l i I l --.. ‘v1- -_-.. - -_-.¢_....,-.--Kl_..>».. ....._...‘.,_ .. y» PAGE FOUR all: clllllllorrlsrolvll aulllluln _ Incident-W. Cheater l. Hobart. ll. seei-ecur-I-lluh-flb P, vm-ruormn-a. n. Inlet o. a. lhsllnlol. n. n. o. Editor and Managing Director-J. l. Burnett. Aaloelllc Etgllarllz-‘fiflauwlliigxlullr- j-uggrlvdmnn‘ I’ “:;:i";,1";'1i.‘ii.l"..i......> Lures‘; Cnnuh and one-d em»- f TUESDAY, MAY, 3! 1082 5 m?- v TWO assumes ‘A significant feature of the by- "election in West York, Ontario, was ‘ the bitter opposition of Commun- ists to the successful Confiervfllive The provincial Liberal leader, Mr. Hep- ‘ burn, endeavored to curry favor this class by denouncing and as- suring the extemlsts of the labor candidate, Mr. l-larry Price. with “millionaire capitalists" element that he. in his political policy, "swung well to the left." Premier Henry, on the other hand, who also participated in the cam- paign, refused to be intimidated by Communist threats and. at a memorable closing meeting, sallled forth. “hard headed and hard fist- ccl, to send his opponents scurry- ing for cover." The words quoted are from the Toronto Globe (Liber- al). His attitude, and its ef- fcct upon the electors, is thus re- ported by the same newspaper: it was the rock of Section 9S- the "unlauflll assembly" sectiou of rho (‘riulinnl Folio, upon which Mr. Ill-nry manic the stnlrll that curried hlrn through tllo hcckling barrage to rhl- iflllil fllTilfflll of 75 per cent of hl-l BllIiil‘l'lCO_ and, willie it may bare h)" ll lhe inadvertently nlrned remark oi‘ ill! opponent thal gave him his 1-1:» for llCfiflil, he seized upon it “.111 uvllllty null left no (louht in thl- nlinlls of his listeners as to -- hi» hn-l lhl- Prlivinm- ut whose I 1\ rich/w s! Hid with rlrgurll to ",\<- man will he dflpflftfl‘ from fln- country," he fhllllllervll, "if he ullllr-s ilinlsl-ii’, "llilli the aonnor ~f lhl» i‘ llho V-"illlvfll behave ii‘ gone the better it m fur IIF lril." -<rii_ m», goim llu what papa says!" cll-lwll the nlnst persistent heeklor of iilb‘ evening. "Lei hiur tell lrsl about Section 08- ff - will," rasped another trouble- hm n“ill'\' il~ l.‘ til," =ll"l'l|l- ill!‘- ]‘\'l§'l|, endangering the ffliiin “rniko" ,'illf slonll in his p:l_lr_ His hrlllrla 'v!~ lrrllvll. ll'~.- l ,..- u-l-rk-l-ll, Ills jaw iswlupoll. Hom- was all his earlier ,h~ ~= llitiivllf-rilllllhiillg around for rl~'l-l|lrl|l-ll phmsos-cilngrin zit haf- lll: n-ril-irltr-rlllvll rl-nrarks on llyllrn lJlPlI ulhl-r nulllr-rs of liorornuront polo-y rnlllml l\_\' rllt-lulils from lllc lull-k rl)\\" vnllt rue i» ivil you lllmlrt i. .. , lllr chzlllvfllrull. “'i‘l~ll yin uhul I Il-l-l shun» flu-lily ml-n, 1-‘ ~l iliPHiirlWi wllll the (J0m- l 1| lllisi ilil)\‘i'llll‘fl[_ who (‘IIiIlO to fllc sumo time m: asking rue solemn- I\' ill irlslrl ' the Aifnrlley-(lenl-rrll r,» lvllhhlllli .ll prosecutions under i. l s illtli .\ llvilli hush hull flow closed flown l. ‘ilr- Iflwlirl‘ lino pvitplf.‘ from the ~rzll iiifilfii‘! of West York sat ’* vnniinlloll the Prime Slin- ffiiil thorn-and I my llrruhr to exist regarding _ l Illiii fhenv-thlltula long all ‘brill-ill iN f'('lllilillflli as the ifl\\' nf IYiiI vouniry the Province of Ontario would enforce it without fear or IIlu-lir I" I .»\ ripple of chm-rs. Thou a bed- l-ai“ of them, to drown out isolated culls of "Bologna i ' llllli "is ihlrt s0?” The contrast between the attit- ude of the two party leaders in Ontario is indeed striking. Courag- eous leadership always commands respect, and the result of the North York by-election may be taken as a personal tribute to Premier Henry as well as an en- ! cda. Let us trade llwb Pmduw- I" ‘cum h", N“ ' terrific blow at Canadian welfare if Greet Britain bad taken the other course. The political and economic Ill;- nlficance of ails move which Ill!“ promise of drawifll m? B1191" m“ greater unity of interests i1! we!" of trade relationships and reclpwc- al u-terdependencfl may 118W l 1"‘ reaching influence upon the future of the Empire. In its immediate effect, the greatest lmlfifiln" °t m, Impefifli conference is the re- newed emphasis uPl-‘m “W- 111°“ essential element of nvmic ‘capitalism. Great Britain desrrcs i0 ‘obtain as much wheat and bacon land butter and newBDYlBi- 8s P05- l sibie for the products which she lexpeets to send to Canada- MOVIES AND CRIME The relationship between moving picture and crime entered a debate in the British House of Commons. The Home Secretary, the R/Bht H011- Herbert Samuel, devoted a lengthy speech to the subject, and, in part. said: "There were some who thought that the cinema has another factor contributing to crime, especially among the young, but there was much division of opinion as to that ~and his very expert and ex- perienced advisers at the Home Office were of the op‘n'0n that, 0n the whole, the cinema conduced more to the prevention of crime than to its commission. It kept boys out of mischief and gave them something to think about. Of course, if films were of a character giving technical instructor: in efficient methods of the commission of crimes that would have an op- pmite effect; but the Board of Film censors made it their duty to prevent propaganda of that kind- and the objections that might have been made some years ago under that head were now seldom heard. In general, the Home Office opfnon was that if the cinemas had not existed there would probably be more crime than there was, al- though at the some time they were far from saying that it was not necessary to raise the standard of the films which were produced. "The cinema mdustry was now one of very great importance, and the effect of the films that it ex- hibited was profound upon the national life. There was now much Anni-m- NOTES BY TIIE WAY Hon‘. L. A. Tllchcrearhppegkfng as Attorney-General. declares that objectionable periodicals will be barred from sale in Quebec upon proof of their immoral tone, even if special authority has to be resorted to. The Prime Minister will have the support of the public in the matter, for he is acting chiefly in behalf of impressionable youth, which is most liable to be harmed by evil literature. The British Government is known to favor the entire cancella- tion of all war debts and indemni- ties, and it is expected that the Empire, represented by delegates will be a unit in support of this position at Lausanne. On the other hand. Edouard Herrlot, who is likely to control France's foreign relations in the incoming Govern- ment at. Paris, has declared him- self as being opposed to any re- vision whatever of the already es- tabllshed basis of war obligations. While thir- assures a conflict of views at Lausanne, it by no means implies a deadlock over the ques- tion. A compromise between the two extreme positions seems more probable. The national debt of Great Bri- tain amounts to 7,544,000,000 pounds. Of this enormous total, no less than 5,632,000,000 pounds is in the hands of various sections of the British public, the balance of 1,912,000,000 pounds being held by British Government departments for the benefit of the nation. Virtual independence of British authority in India promises an In- dia inveterately divided against it- self. This is the shadow - which leads even the most earnest demo- crats of Britain. such as Ramsay MacDonald, to hesitate about de- creelng the withdrawal of the su- preme authority of the British flag. Peace between Moslems and Hindus is something which evi- dently Gandhi and his followers are unable to bring about. Rackcteerlng exists and prospers in the United States today. says the Detroit News, not of its own strength, but because there are lawyers who make it possible. Con- sldcr the racketeering lawyer. He is prospering. He belongs, often, to the best clubs. You meet him at golf; you find his name begging for enrollment on prominent lists. But he is a racketeer, one of the vast class directly responsible for the ascendancy of the underworld, and drawing his wealth from pre- cisely such sources of illegal in- come. Whatever new arrangements are destined to appear, says the Pro- vidence Journal, a fresh adjust- ment of some character cannot be delayed much longer. With the German Government apparently very strongly committed to the doctrine that reparations payments in the future, if they are to be made at all, shall be on a substan- tially lower basis, the days of the Young plan are seemingly num- in the treatment W)" Mb? at '. £01m: Barton. RLD "if" e B; [ounce W. ear accoannvo r0 YOUR nun.» I have written before about the three types of build or "physique (a) the short narrow body on the long legs (b) the long wide body on the short legs, and (c) the type that has normal 1ength_ and width of body, on legs of normal length. You can readily see that just as these bodies differ in shape, so will they differ in weight for the height, thus showing that no table of weights can be made to apply to everybody. In the French army only the length of the body is taken, being measured with the recruit fitting down. As the narrow body gives less room for the lungs, this type of in- dlvldual is more apt to have lung trouble than with a wide body. Now as lung ailments demand plenty of good food it is unfortu- nate that the stomach in this type also is crowded downward, thus making it more difficult for food to pass from the stomach to the small intestine. To make matters still worse, it has been found that most of these narrow individuals have a. small intestine (where food is absorbed into the blood) a few feet shorter in length than in those whose bo- dies are of normal width and length. This means of course less surface for absorption. What about one with the wide long body? He has plenty of room for his lungs and stomach, and his small intestine may be slightly longer than in one whose body ls or nor- mal length and width. He will thus have a good appetite. a good wide stomach, plenty of absorbing surface, and good large lungs to supply oxygen to bum up this food. It is this type of individual who is likely to overeat and thus more likely to develop the penal- ties of overeating-kidney trouble, diabetes, heart disease, and hard- ening of the arteries, and apo- plexy. Thus we find that in institutions where tuberculous patients are be- lng cared for, that plenty of rich concentrated food-meat, eggs, cream-is a big part of the treat- ment. On the other hand, as you know. of overweight, heart, kidney. and hardening of the arteries" foods are given that are bulky, but not rich in other food value-cabbage, celery, let- tuce, spinach, grape fruit, and as- paragus. Meat and eggs are given once n day only. So, take a look at yourself; and if you belong to either the first or second class mentioned above, eat accordingly. '1 , While there are those who deem v| ward self-sufficiency. lprration-has driven Great Britain of the Victorians, {one hand, with the other those countries, dorsafion of his administration. lzrceler liberty in expression than was considered proper in Victorian times, and the consequence had been the introduction not only into the cinema, but elsewhere, to a degree unprecedented in modern th-nes, of the six element. There was BRITAIN'S POLICY Discussing the economic prospects b! the coming conference at Ot- tawa the Royal Bank Monthly Let- ter says: bered, especially inasmuch as the British and Italian Governments are inclined to sympathize with) the German desire for further re- vision. the manifestations of these um’ desirable tendencies was another matter. Freedom also was of im- Let me bu; live my life from year foreign foodstuffs and farming would bea highly favoured industry. tendencies of an indecent and de- grading knd. We had got rid w a great extent of drunkenness as l that the record of Great Britain ismational vice, but there were still not entirely clear in this respect,:dangers in other directions. Tile yrt in spite of the obvous tempta-‘Britlsh people was, as it had al. ltlozr toward such a course of action, ways been, on its guard against the main drive has not been to-ithoce tendencies. It was easy to» While des- scoff at the bourgeois respectebilityi but there was ai yinstinet in thosei she iriconveatlons: it was a reaction fromi thatthe looaenus cf the period of the and particularly‘ {those within the Bnpire, which Iwlil purchare British goods will find ‘rn open market for their sales inlvery eemeat desire for clean livin Great Britain. for decent ordered family The economic bash for this pcsi- was mental that we should maln- llon is the recognition that wheat tain that character, for the sake can be grown more cheaply in not only of our influence in the Canada than in Great Britain and world, but for the sake of our in- that ihcrc are other products which fiuence in our own Commonwealth. C can be produced in Great Britain How fer the Stats could intervene‘! II creek!’ advantucjhfl ll 0U" ‘l ‘into errccting tariff barriers wlth;gccd dealofhealth wielding out a proclamation There was 1 e {should not be ehary in expressing down, was unwholasome and ignoble in o.“ mugh or smooth, tho journey our drama, n our cinemas, or in Wm be 50y; our literature, and so to restore and Still seek'ng what I sought when mafintaln the cleanliness and dignity Si!“ 9- i107. which were essential elements in New friendships’ high advenmm M I ,, and a crown, n! o“ greatnesm My heart will keep the courage of T“ the quest, EDITORIAL NOTES And hope the fund's last tum will "- be the beet. lments of yesterday indicate that it Regency which had preceded lei‘ is less concerned with the plight of in the British peoplwllllempioyed workmen in Charlotte- now, as there had always been, a town than with making political gJcapltal ollt of their difficulty. Its m. Icifmoring of the mt that the un- gemployed men's association is non- partisan and is appealing to the City Council as well as to the Gov- hg the ggwer of the law to rep-e“ with the Government. a WW1"! 0911110“ that m" had portance, and was an integral ele- to year If there were no more intelll- been over-stressed, whether on the mgnt 1h the Br-ijgjycharagter, and with forward face and unreluet- gence in the conduct of British stage, in fiction, or in the cinema, between these two wngyjcgng claims ant wllii affairs than is being exhibited in and there was a wholesome re- the position of the Home Secretary Not hunylnglw’ nor turning from . ,, the goa ; 31105; other; countries, it i: probable action 13f public op nion. of the day was ncver an easy one. Not mourning 10,. the thlngs that a Grea Br an won be at 'I‘ouc ng on moral conditions without exerglsjng the power w disappear.‘ WQYK "Don a plan by which EBB- Bmfiflliy. 1h! H0019 Secretary suppress by forces of law tcnden- In the dim past, nor hailing back land, Scotland and Wales should voiced the following sentiments, cles which are undesirable, the l“ "l" be made as self-sustaining as is which admirably express the wewqsme could Qxgrflge a ‘my power. Fmm Whit the full"? V8115; Wt t rhyscallv possible murmurs Point o! thinking people 1n thlsi ful influence and power of leader- A d hwm‘ “n33? ma, pays m efforts would be made to increase country ls wall u in Great Brit- ship h, help-n; u, set the w“, o; n £3” ’ \he area under cultivation, high air): national life. But 1t must mainly 1v, youth and Age, m4 travel; oh tariffs would be erected against "There were in our mldsts certain rest Wm, public Opinion use“ n wlgh cheer, So let the way wind up the hill or tself to help to remove whatever Our local contemporary‘; com- —Hel1ry Van Dyke. "Woman's life must be wrapped up in a man, and the cleverest woman on earth is the biggest fool on earth with e manP-Dorothy Parker. "No man ever thinks n. poem out: he only feels it outP-emdwin Mae;- ham. v rnment is obviously calculated to mbarrass the association in any Brcement it may seek to make (‘The average Briton tries to pet- tem his life after that of the coun- try gentleman in the lg! 0f Billie- ‘spearef-Jiendrilk Willem van‘ moo. ' PUBLIC FORUM rm column u own hr t" mum a: corrflwllliw" ogqueatlons of interest. Thr (Ihsrloftctown Guardian 6w not necessarily "14"" u" opinion: of ecrffllwllduk- POLITICAL PIGMIES Big-Calamity often b11118! W light the revolting P119595 ‘l! hu‘ man foulness. It was illustrated in the Great Plague of London where ghouls shapen like men. film"! death from relentless disease, en- tered plague stricken homes to pil- fer, and even the Plflcfis 01 1111"“! to rob the dead of the Jewelry and trinkets, to satlate their unholy greed. It was like in the case of the Lindbergh child, when filthy human cormorants fed upon the agony of others. 1 read some Liberal propaganda, of urclay's Patriot ls a. fitting type. His genius proposes to increase the price of butter, and to enlarge the "milk checks" by wiping out the 8c duty on butter, and allow New Zealand to flood Canada with millions of pounds as in the halcy- on clays of his party's rule. Can- adian beans, which he had to pay 10c a pound for under hisbenefi- cient tariff, he can now buy for 2’,éc. And with characteristic in- consistency hls removal of the tar- iff is plump up against the paradox to increase the price of agricultur- al products as exports, and,_ like a. two edged sword play the reverse game of cutting the cost of im- ports. This mirage is familiar to those looking through the wrong end of the telescope. He chatters over political pledges, made in good faith, in a political vflmllaign, under normal conditions. He hasn't apparently awakened to the fact, known even» to school children that the world has since been overtaken in ~a stupendous crisis of depression. dawned upon hlmthat the brain- iast men in govemmente, in fin- ance and industry. have been tox- ing brain anclbrawn for a solution of economic problems which have puzzled the genius of the ablest of the world's thinkers. And yet, with wind and a vacuum for his capital, branch railways and pay old age Pensions, and give employment to all, while the universe, outside of his own sphere is u» the throes of stagnation. He evidently knows little of what is reins an in the world. He appar- ently does not know that Canada is making the best effort of any “unify in the universe to stem the tidal wave of depression, and that the eyes of the nations, with rare- lv an exception. are studying the Canadian program and commend- ing its success. That the economic world is now looking to Fromm- Bennett as the astutest of states- men. and centering their hopes upon his ideals and the Great Con- ference, the offspring of his genius, .to herald the opening of the m; of relief and prosperity. Nor does he seem aware that the whole-scaled big hearted and ablest of Canada's Liberals, and the big. Rest and most patriotic of Canada's Liberal press, have lifted themselves above the plgrnles of their party, and Joined hands with Premier Bennett, not in his politics, but in his heroic efforts to steer the coun- try clear from the great whirlpool of bankruptcy and ruin which is threatening the World. Thank God that we have those hi2 men, and a Canada loving press, rue in the very essence of their conduct to the fundamental prin- clpies of true Liberalism, who, in the hour of their country's danger, exalt themselves above the exped- lmtr o! party. and ply their tal- ents and labors to the aid, not only of Pemier Bennett, but all govern- menta and civic rulers and kings of finance and industry in making Canada the leader of the 11mm; in the restoration of pr05pgf|f,y_ I am Sir, etc, A SUFFERER. g, insults” Kl N E‘! These reflections come to me as which "Disgusted Farmer" in Sat- It has notl he would cut out taxation, buildi Prophets or Ruin (often Journal) Last December su- oeme Palall made our flesh creep by $811111! "I ‘that unlesswar debts and repur- ations were fixed up in "m! way by rleoruary ti" W" would go smash. The 01d perverse world didn't fix "P W" debts or reparations orrnuch of anything else, and it refused t0 l0 mush. Now ye have a lot of other experts telling u that unless the coming Leusanne conference dob-r succeed we'll all go bust for sure- “Well, our own humble expect- ation is that Lnusanne will settle nothing, and that the world won't collapse. ‘rile world is 8XtIl0f-_ dinarlly tough. Somehow or other it possesses intangible assets; that nomlsts and eXPQTt-l in‘ variably fail to reckon with: l0 that just when it seems to be 0B the verge of ruin somethin! 01' somebody cornea along to save it- Or to give it n few more years 01' grace. It isn't that war debt: and reparations and a whole lot 0! other things aren't serious, that things aren't in a bud WHY- 1t i5 simply that the world being what it is, and people being what they are, things just simply can't go smash- If it were otherwise, if war-a and debts and pestllences and famine-s could submerge civilization, then the world would have gone smash long ago The great trouble with econom- ists, we think, is that they lay al- together foo much stress upon rows of figures on paper. Kipling Made A Fellow . (The London Time!) i Mr. (we shouldsfly 137-) RlldYi-lfl Kipling has honorary doctorates in eight universities in England, Scot- land, Canada, Rance, and Greece: .; but it must be rather a lonely tiring ibefng a Doclor but having no f college to call ones own, no qua/d- rangle or hall in which one may ,fee1 oneself at home. And now it is announced that Magdalene College, Cambridge, has filled that lack in the life of her Litt. D.‘ Rudyard Kipling, by electing him to an honorary Fellowship. Mal- dalene is the col‘ ,, of Samuel Pepys, who entered it as a slzar in 1651- When his shade and Mr. Kpllng get together-B! certainly they will-between midnight and dawn, what glorious ylmllll there will be about ships and shipping. and books and ciphers, and worker! and shirkers, and a score of other subjects of interest to these two lovers of life and of the men and things phat fill it! Charles K1118!" ‘ley may look in too, and p611"?! pass a word or two about horse! ~ i ' MAY__31, 1932 I , . l _ I , , . ' . ire l’ a _ dwelling in Canada Do youlknow what time yours will be visited ‘l’ Be Prepared! Insure Now IIYIIDMAN $00., llllllrrn The Oldest Insurance Agency P. E. l. Offices Lower Queen Street Charlottetown BEGIN well by feeding fox pups Imperial Puppy Food. y CONTINUE during early months, later, with imperial Fox Biscuits and so SUOCEED in raising highest-class foxes, acknowledged leaders in live stock and pelt values. Manufacturers: Imperial Biscuit Company, Ltd. Charlottetown, P. E. l. Box 44v Phone 721 Try Brahmin Orange Pekoe Retail price 50c per lb. Sold Only in Bed Alrtightfaukages. I Tea and dogs and rhymes; but the new Fellow is not likely to let talk with the former Rector of Ever-ale)’ P1‘?- vent his having achaf- with ‘J19 shade of the Vicar of mum. the inventive Mr. Ber-thou, who 38W us, with much else, the collapfllblfi boat. There will be others easel‘ to welcome the great poet and prose-writer who baa won what Charles Lamb would call hi8 "collegiate worthf‘ without the usual approach thrcllsh H1149!" graduate life. And Magdfliel" college has not only done an honor to itself and to its new member l which will make many thousands of liar from Cantabriglan people 818d- The College may have done some- thing to express the modern Unl- verslty spirit by drawing into an academic fold the almost violently president of=the Royal Astronomi-i speaking to a correspondent 0f cal ety. the Mom ‘Poet, Dr. Crommelin Although the planet is only about said that t e planet was at presenl three miles in diameter, it is said only 10,000,000 miles from the earth that it will be pouible to determine" .411; “my-egg that any celestial from it the scale of the ent're uni- body ever approaches with the ex- verse with greater‘ llwllrfll-‘Y ""111 ceptlon of the moon and occasional has hitherto been practicable. a-asistant at the Royal Observatory i; in the constellation in Belgium,’ thought to be a‘ comet. Later, recedes to its however, Dr. Orommelin verified from the earth it will probably b4 the fact that the body was a invjglblg w observers planet. Its discovery has dethron-iname has yet been given to thl ed from its place of honor the little. mile planet, for the honor of doinl planet Eros, which was previously this belongs to the Belgian 0b- the nearest planet to the earth and server who first saw it. As a planet was therefore the one used as a of irregular motion, however, it will basis for all celestial calculations- icomets. It has been seen b3 ‘rile body was first noted by an amateurs with good telescopes and Booteel and was at first pbovethe star Arcturus. When ll furthest distancl here. M by tradition, be glven a male name unacademic master of all the arts of writing, who has enriched the English language with a manifold and. multicolored treasury. The Nearest Planet (London Correspondence) The discovery of a new planet, nearer to the earth than any pre- viously known, is nnounced by Dr- A. C. D. Crmnmelin, formerly OO-§‘O§§0 $1.25 NIIJOI ........... 75o Nujol .. 00o I’ 81.25 Lirterino 30o ‘t 75c Lllterine .... .. 41o vvVV 80o Lillorine ............ I80 Trusty as an old friend-Al‘ never 25o Llaierine Tooth Plate 21o $1.00 Mineral 0i_l 0o 35o A. B. s. a C. Tablet; flu 50o Frultaiiveu .......... 30o 25o Fraltailveu 28o 00o Cluselflerve Food .. 41o Ssotiluleslf. LPilh Do THE 2 MAGS DBUGSTOII 140 areal George Street All Mall Orders Given Prompt ' C v 'i|Y,4?"4'¢'l°l.$°~ Attention. taiisjo lplease with its acting . flavour. Bl 61W Sltllrwllvo