lei 3|“; 1;‘, Ignggn-J It. "new" up nun» dwells“- ‘ Vpo-l‘ I Irina- I. 0 Adm-m» lullmv-ll at. rowe- _ ~ u mono P our Dunno nan-o 'oeolu.:'u'$ luau-u um u.» go- vm no hem-oi em SATURDAY, _APRlL 5. 1930 offset by the purchase of a smile ‘ ._ verse balanoo worse and worse as the ‘ 1 mail-om the United States. g A Political Prohibitionist i} t.‘ The Hon. Dr. Grant, member with- iut portfolio in the Saunders’ Gov-l rnment, delivered his swan-song in' ‘rthe Legislature Wednesday after- ‘moon. The Doctor expects shortly p0 be leaving provincial politics to; @ilf‘tlttlphte in the Dominion election; ‘die felt. be said. like a man who is about to leave his neighborhood, or ilwas about to die, and who wished to "ilnake his peace with all men before yhe departed. Dr. Grant has a gen- ius for selecting simllies, and in this instance we believe he chose a sig- nificantly appropriate one. i Possibly because he felt free from the obligations assumed when he con- tested the provincial election on the " Saunders‘ prohibition ticket, Dr. Grant gave expression to some dras- tic criticism about temperance coll-| ditions in the United States. "80 far as I am concerned," hc said, "I am not particular wheth- . er I make a break or not. I am telling you there is no prohibition in the states. You can buy your casks and take them into the house and make grape whle and get as full as you like. It is not against the law there to make grape wine, beer and moonshine so long as you don't sell it." v Dr. Grant's farewell comment on Prohibition was probably intended to gbe ambiguous. "1 ain't upholding Prohibition," he said, “any more than I should as a member oi this Govern- ment." ,' Canada the Prize Exhibit in . the "Suck-er” Class _ The following editorial is from a I Uberll newspaper, The Montreal Jlerald, and is so strikingly honest it must convince even the Patriot. The U. S. Senate is expected to ' Bass-the tariff bil.i today. It will shut out a further $10,000,000 worth of lm. I ports from Canada. Canadians must indeed he fools ll they do not recognize that this is "a v- final notice from Uncle Sam that he does not desire to trade with Canada. All he wants is to use Canada as a5 dumping ground for surplus indus- trial and agricultural products, but as for exchanging products with Canada — well, don't be silly. The American tariff policy is the _ acme of selfish, grasping soullcgg "materialism. It is made the adjunct of the modern policy of mass produc- tlon. To produce more than the American nation can consume and ship the surplus abroad, even if it sold at the cost of production or under. will keep the wilcels of ill- dustry running at high provide more wages and purchasing, power at home, especially if the pzo-i pie who buy from Americans are not! allowed to scll to them. i It is a beautiful scheme so long as. other nations remain in the class ofl "Nth?!" We do not doubt for a: moment that Canada is regarded by Americans as the prize exhibit in thel "sucker" class. Fancy the sncerlng! contempt with which these Americani taril! makers must look at the trade! llgllfcs relating to Canada! The fig-l ures are almost unbelievable. For l. for the last 30 ycnrs there‘ has not been a single year in which Canada's trade with the United‘ States has not shown a serious ad-' verse balance. And the astonishing‘ l * mt u that while the United States has been raising the tariff against: , Canadian goods, and making our ad- ‘tempo and "It! lo on, Canada has been buying, 31-hour and greater quantities of For '5 years past our adverse balanca of Willi thfl Ulilibd Slllbl Ill-l been l lvfinistcr of Agriculture they will | Acting Premier, Mr. Lca, and pub- l the "memorial" filed on the same day cent's worth of Canadian 800d; by Americans! Fancy what the even hulf that amount in our own country would have meant in building up our population and developing the vast territories which are our heri- tagel Are we to continue in the “sucker” class of nations? Are we to take this further blow at our trade lying down’! Ii we have any spirit at all we will demand oi our Gov- ernment an immediate increase in the duties on commodities that we can produce ourselves or that we can buy from peoples willing to buy from 11S- Dutlcs on American iron, steel and coal and their products should be drastically revised. Against every class of American akflcull-“Tll Pm" duct we should put a duty Bdmmcdly designed, like theirs, to be prohibi- tlvc. We can easily 8°?’ B“ ‘he agriculturalvproducts we need, semi- troplcal or early season. H0111 Fm British West Indies and other part5 of the British Empire. Let us frankly accept the challenge the United States has thrown 110W!!- Lct us refuse to be an adlllllci- 9! th°| Stars and Stripes. Lct us build ul‘! "l" trade with nations willing to tilde with us, and thus not only extricate ourselves from the ruinous situation m which the United States is placiril; us, but incidentally expand as never before the ocean shippinl 1°!‘ the development of which we are so for- tunately placed by nature and by 0m‘ priceless membership of the British expenditure of 1 I Empire. Hopelessly at Sea Hon. Mr. hePfléfl in the budget debate) ; Did you ever hear anything more contemptible, when the 810k were suffering in the country for to hrinr: politics ill at that late date. nml alter the Opposition were m Government for four years and never moved a hand to get that $100,000 . . . . .. In order to try to (lamage the good name of our stoop to nothing. . . . . .. The Stew- are Government was asked for a Sanatorium when they were in power and they never did any- thing. Dr. McMillan: We didn't destroy the one that was there, as you did. Hon. Mr. LePage: that is an old , story, and it has been threshed out and there ls not a bit of wheat in it. non. Dr. McNeill (in the bud- get debatei: And now they (the Guardian) find fault because the present leader of the Govern- ment is going to gct something for the Dalton Sanatorillm included in his claims when he presents his case to Ottawa. That l5 qlllic T58113- wllcn he is presenting his case. to show all the claims: and l have no doubt that there is a possibility that the present administration nndcr McKenzie King might con- sider it because he has been very generous with this Province. Dr. McNcill must have been "speak- ing through his hat," or he is entire- ly ignorant of the fact that the Gov- ernment, oi which he is a member, has lodged no claim for the Dalton Sanatorlum. According to the Patriot of the 27th ult. Premier Saunders stated in the Legislature that the "pamph- lct" handed t0 the Patriot by the lishcd on tho 31st oi January last, was substantially correct. l! the "pmnpillet" is substantially correct. by Prcmicr Saunders at Ottawa is substantially wrong, because both documents ore as for apart as the poles. The fact of the matter ls that the Government is hopelessly at lea on the subsidy " . Either they do not understand the question at all, or if they understand it, they are try- ing to mix and muddle it so that no- body else will understand it. It will not do for the Government to state that tho "pamphlet" ‘was the work of Min-Lea personally, because the Pot- rlot, when publishing it, stated it was the result of several mblltltl‘ always the same) meet one is can lain to hear a good many mlgquogg. tions of ellllrammatlcal expréeeiolu uumbe of current ails-quotations in general use ls far greater than most correctness shudder at the liberties taken with original texts and the oc- casional resulting lapses into the lud- lcrous. ‘rake for example Butler's fa- mous lines- l-le that complies against his will Ls of his own opinion still, ' which are thus interpreted: . "con- vince a man against h? will and he's of the same opinion till," or "Per- suade a. man against his will," are, which is not quite so meaningless, for although a man may be persuad- ed agalnst his will, he cannot be con- vinced. A much quoted line of Shake- speare's, “All that glieters -is not gold," has been rendered. “All is not gold that glitters,‘ 'and "All that gilt- ters is not gold." Glis_ters evidently docs not appeal. “The play's the thing," quoted oft- tirnes with approval by critics, actu- ally requires the succeeding sentence "wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king," to complete its meaning. "A rose by any other name would smell as sweet." is really preceded by the words "That which we call," but it is seldom so used. That quotations from the Bible should‘ be mauled is surprising, but it is true. Here are a few: Correct-"It is not good that man should be alone"; incorrect-flit is not good that a man should live alone." . Correct-"Behoid. there ariseth a little cloud out of the sea like a man's hand"; incorrecfr-"A cloud no big- ger than a man's hand." Correct-"In the multitude of coun- sclors there is safety"; incorreot-"In the multitude of counselors there is wisdom." Correct-“There is no new thing under the sun"; incorrect-“rhere is nothing new under the sun." Correct-"Illat he may run that readeth it"; incorrect-“He that runs may read." Correct-"The laborer is worthy of his reward"; incorrect-"The labor- er is worthy oi his hire." it is a remarkable fact that Blinke- spenne‘ ls more misquoted tilall any jothcr writer. "Though this be lnnd- ncss, yet there's method in it," be- comes "there's method in his mad- ness." "Misery acquaints s. man with strange bediellows," is rendered. "Mis- fortune makes a man acquainted with," m. f "It's. an ill wind that blows no- body any good," is the general way in which Thomas Tusser, who lived ‘in the sixteenth century is misquot- ed. Tuser wrote: .- Exoept wind stands as never it stood, it is an ill wind turns none to good. Lord Brooke wrote more than three hundred years ago. "And out of mlndc as soon as out of sight." sight is out of mind," "She and com- parisons are odious," wrote Dr. John Donne, and he is variously interpret- ed. Even Ben Jonson, speaking of Shakespeare's "small Latin and less Greek," has "little" substituted for "small." Milton's "human face di- vine" gets "‘form" ior face, and "all" ls adopted for "neighboring" in the boring eyes." “The busy hum of men" in the some poet's "liAllegro" has “haunts" for “hum." "To prove concluslonsorthodoll," in Butler's ‘Ll-iudibras," should be "And prove their doctrine orthodox," and "daggers-drawing" for "dag ge rs drawn," by the same author. The ‘ couplet affecting thé timor- ous soldier runs thus: For those that fly may figllt again. Which he can never do that’! slain. also from "lludlbras." ed the sentiment in far between", The man who lllfl fl!‘ NQIQID." ' ‘ from." owner ma: ball a‘ like-a womla/eaernelvxls lniaq _ Notes lire Way " When legislators or debaters (not from classic literature: l indeed the people realize. Advocates of absolute‘ which is now reversed in "Out of, famous line, "the cynosure of nelgh- ' John Morris, 1657-1711, wrote "like angel's visits short-and bright," and Robert Blair, 1009-1704.. had itfllike those_of angels short and far ba- tween" and Thomas Campbell adopt- "Pleasuro of Hope" u "like mulls’ visits, fewand 1180b: generally eaye "like angels‘ visits, few Matthew error-v r-rlnn byjdlrfll. and beautifully ma" gets "out ~ or "fine" and his “Virtue is her Own ra- ward" la always quoted wltlrifltftfor "her." AdllBbhYl "The woolen that - dellberatee‘ is lost" impelled by Plus- COLD I'll‘! When you hear oi an individual as having cold feet. it B of course ano- tiller way of saylnghe is scared or ef- Now as ~a matter o! fact when you are afra-id or sch-red your feet do rr-l tdally solo and this u likely the reason for tho expression‘ "m feet. ' ' When lrllfhhhl yflfl i-hb lit-tie nerves controlling thdblood in the feet makestliese blood-vessels contract or" portly‘ close,’ and so very little blood goes to the reotfrhe lam blood vessels, in the abdomen en.- large and take in nearly all the blood in the body. and thus there is very little left for the feet which are a considerable distance from the body- Nuw it doesn't have to be l auddtfl shook or fright that cause cold-feet. Grlei’, worry‘ anxiety. or nervousness. of a prolonged nature. can act in a similar manner. It is thus only natural w find that these naurasthenlc individuals who worry about themselves, although they have no organic ailment, suffer great- ly with cold feet. v The clrculaltio of blood in the feet has 5n important bearing on the gen- eral hoaith of the individual, and if you suffer with 001d feet in winter and persplrirlg feet in summer. it is wurth your while to try and correct thes condition. “ As you know the body is manufac- turlng heat all the time. even when you are at rest. This heat, circulating by means of the blood, should keep all parts warm. including the feet. Yet if you sit or stand quietly in cold weather, particularly with light stock- ings and tight shoes. the amount of‘ host you are losing from the feet is more than your body is manuiaetu - auto wax ' mailed w ~ .___ _ ~ pbailimofmimltlvealionm vqd sin-There has been eoxulderahliipnpprth ago. discussion in the/press rqteemqr-q-louulrln a lime- the auto tu. nodal» a good deoiistoneflraitrla wbpo; yhiohgthoythive ‘ of discussion amen! 9009b been gu_ _ l _ who have not written to the Blfil; share»! meal-edit for this re» Some favor the reduction of the ilc- la-'dod,..la‘du_e/to_ Dr. Davidson cnso] feeand others 099096 lb l. 111 “Black. qqanadian lfmlnlagilt. who‘ tho case of the auto tax we have gotylrasbeen; lnvesfgga with, others, an annual tax 0f 020.00 or nmreouthls Clroukoutielt cev . under the ae- a light ear with a similar tax on_ (is ;of; the ‘WPQEMIQI Foundation truck car. If a man does not poaagll iandpooloqlcalgflufltll!!! 01mm‘ By both struck and a ou- he la not al, far to; lsiolltimaQfllv-ilhltdlflwol the lowed to take mu grist, to the mu! and linden l-,perfect_ huoruodrull, lo hlscar unless he also has a. truck’ and the gyouppf’ ogpol-u whq hflyg license for that car. Why should thll examined this epecimerllare agreed l!“ I 1i~may "be - '1 . _ - . A A fBurné-d Drsfolen ' ‘butvtlieire is’ reason‘;why,.fyou1ahoul<l bear tlrerloss, when u‘ few centaiaday will give you insurance protectiom ~ be? The answer comes, from the Pret- tlm the gekioi “in”. ogogfi in 1n. mien "We need money to carry 011 target, ad antiquity all prevldus the roads of the Province." what nods, or. prehistoric vestiges "ever do tltcy do with such money added n25”, up‘ ‘o! locality to the 5e or more per gallon gaso-rhg been going gopwiuqi m; k0,... line tax’! my buy" worthless snow yegrg port ind three years m, pr.‘ ploughs to clear a road from Bum- Bliclr,_upon the discovery of‘ a tooth merslde to Charlottetown no matter and later twp skulls, oneof‘ an how much snow it, throws in the-adult infthejtther of acliiid. came Pe<>nle's gale-ways. Evidently the interuts of Bumlnerside and Char- lottetown are paramount. Another question I would ask la whyihePootOmcegocstoflItbQ expense of bringing our mail by aeroplane while we do not get do- livery any more promptly than for- merly? If the introduction of this service is merely to kvepabrezt of the times and appear‘ pr ‘ve the promoters ought to bear the ex- penses as the ordinary tax , payer dose not benefit one iota. The feel- ing of many of the tax payers in the country today is that i! install‘! of s0 much backbiting, slander, oto, in the ugislature the partleawould get together and devise somemeans of reducing the expenditure and make both ends meet it would be much better for all concerned. I am, Sir. etc, ' TAX PAYEB. I ing. On the other hand hot , to the feet, in the form of a hot wa-' ter bottle, the electric pad, or hot or Ll perature of the body- danliiillflfi- And_yet even if you stand or sit- rlurlhg cold weather, and your [shoes are not light you may withstand the cold and havewarm "Ki Wmlfift‘ able feet. if your heart muscle is strong, and your blood vessels have been trained to keep slightly dilated. The way_to get this ltd-on: hem is by any form of exercise. walking. and particularly games. And for those who are not able to exercise. warm aplllimllfin! W u" feet will aid the ou ‘ " and by_ taking blood from the head to the feet often prevent sleoplesncu. Don't Sllfldl‘ win? cold mt. foot baths, will actually raise the tcm- .- sir.- mmawzlfiu” "bum"? :1‘; x- "If l had [cow to give lueh milk. ° "Pm" rd dress her up in the amt silk. i . ' THE LAND WEELOVFV ly roan moo Till MONTREAL TERMINAL Q. What is the projected Mon- treal. Terminal? the Canadian miles of new lines will beheaded to view in Canada in the near years. gunt "departing" in error. Young, In his "lave of lune." writes: ' “ where's nature's end of language is declined, p’ ' And mentalk only to conceal their ' mind. ' This il mlnquoted in I variety of ways. Gray's; Holy msylive forever and err u- ‘quotauons. too. ‘fanny kept the ndleelail tuner ofjheir way" is quoted bylnhjiety-ninr to! a with "even tenor.“ variety. ll tbs‘ voryhpiée l ~ an‘ m verbiage the-Wary“ calms. create-ll "to " ' f,“ -, fie f A. The projected Montreal Tor-I jusgm,‘ and the any," h.‘ Mn“; millal involves an expenditure of u, paying m, m“, 09 mo]; bog}. $50,000,000 which when completed will’ l“ magnum, and w; u, "ulna", transform the down town section of we 0g plum in m“, wqq-"gu; ‘flu the clty by a new central station for; n mommy 1; 1, emu-ego] p04“;- Nltlcnll Railways, tun an outlaw cow ‘lo life and luir- ‘ office buLIdlngs, tunnels, etc. Only. my to milk a, revenue out of it_ iu snmxmo was cow \ And feed her on good oata and hay- And milk her twenty tilnu a day." There ‘are four pr flvo of those cowsin the prohibition ranfih. To all appearance they are Iivinl the kind of milk which pleases the dairymen. and sufficient to satisfy the treasury wiizlorltgaeed of milk- ing "twenty timde a. day." ~ These cows. the merchant princes of the bootleg trade, are kept safe from the winter frosts and summer BUUA of r " ' To put any of them out of business would be literally “killing the goose that lays the golden egg." ' . . And why? Because they llrpply the booze for the hundreds of boot- leggers, men, women. and children. ellsrks and degeneratel. which in! lest the whole Province". my etarld behind tiloee smaller sellers and pay} their fines, and those fines aupplyl the rich creamy milk, so delghtful to the mediums of enforcement. l ;~ Com-plain if you will. that tilt»! "higher ooh" are-not brought lo‘ ltholdlaa ih Dhvldus finds. Prior lo to the conclusion that they TOPIC-- rented a new genus ‘and speciesof the human family; ‘The rlsllcs more rec- iouy unearthed are nidto justify his verdict. Careful measurements of the‘ noun bones oi the skull have ;o6ov1nccd,Pl-ofessor Black that thafwekingaavan‘ was mthink- ing- beinl. Illlltlinlereet, and, exist- aomewheroabout the beginning of theqreat no Age. The of the fossilized skeletons. as found lrrthlaglureitono cave, is held to be indicative oi" l. communal life aim ongstthbsyremote ancestors of the hlimalnfelolinlzlr. o. Elliot Smith. asfiuniqufie and epoch-making, the most momentous discovery in the whole history of fossil man. l-le gives his reasons for this dictum. ‘The chief pointsbrougbt out by an ar- ticle he writes, upon the subject are that the Chinese specimen enables anthropologists to resolve their doubts concerning two other Pleisto- cene men. namely the so-called “Ape Man" of Java, and the "Dawn Man" of Piltdown. cusses. The "Pekink Man," different in type fromboth. it is ‘affirmed. ‘when t? "make the acquaintance of s" irltirerto unau- avers that the and now made will moetprilmitlvephase of the history of the human family. ' , ‘ Other scientific. experts, however, do not speak in so confident a tone. Sh‘ Arthur Roll-h rdlorvou Ml fudg- mentraboutltha discovery. awaiting further Ur: mun. of the noyaranulronologleai Institute. pronounces it a-find. ofkver-y great importance,’ butythinh it would be pnmaturouppronnunou any definite oplnidd. Sh‘ Arthur Woodward. of the. Department" of the tlel-auuaeunurcmarlre that, "Xf it prove thatoantral Asia wls thejdenfof lthl" bfillhning of the jnbefllt least lrehowe that some of the earliest reiloeof man are to b! found there." Much "than is placed upon the feet that the Ohoukoutlen rolicl were found lo a limestone mail m and-not in ‘gravel drift. as was mu eokloi discovery, actual fossil rooming of; human races existing dpr- iqg glacial, Period revealed the oxistinca of two very different types of "humanity, exemplified ._ia the Pllt- _. u.- eleotrlclocomotlves will-be used. i7 this way. .',_' Is that proldbLt-ion? winking at coordinate existing systems and lines.‘ the b'g operator to: ouzyhimeqif It ls one ofthe great undertakings in scndng out rum peddlerl to demor- alizs the country. merely arm the dollars and cents from‘ the mailer channels to provide‘ lunda for the craft? if that is it," better-‘eatlblfflt a license system dirt-x, m4 mane the whole business w-wospwlu pi; tho push. . _ _ r ., " ‘\ I elrnair. its, ~ V ViJPII-RQILOUYX 1 '-_ assures om KDUUCIION?‘ snows asarankaatlg- ' ' 0142M.- uvocarion ‘H .I)A t». waarohould 1 om and-roam tr i . ' .musov,u‘lwl j l‘ . WWQXNW ‘ - l ‘. with doubleriedr ‘. ‘ ' Naylilajn-nilstrfllji. ._ V _ ooobooevooooooob ona'of..the‘ieading British antbropo-i l" loglsta, regards this Choukoutien and I - spected relative." or: Elliot. smith’ establish upon a euro foundation the ~ ' large and resourceful brain-seems in- .eloebnlthueerd,___ 4, w“ Ask for "particulars. of our l automobile policies. _ *5 _' .~ _ ' Hyndma1’l' ‘ £3‘ jCo. -L1m1ted The Oldest ilnsurance Agéllfly, 1F P- E- 1- ‘ ryLog-gv- Quelen. Stlfeet.“ Charlottetown t “owooosoooooeoioooeeooo _ . r. 'D_0N'.'l‘ fronds? . BRAHMIN jrEA . 1s ' . Orallgo"P'ekoe' ' sold‘ ohly" in Red Airtight" ltackages ‘aoooooo-oooooo 00.30 .~a'.»¢o.“4.»¢o;¢» ' . ' \ ' . - - "r i DR- FFREncrrsl IVERMiCIDE ' CAPSULES .1 our THE WORMS WITHQUT-.GETT1NG"THE PUP. From our esperlenceln (and we tllq » all) none give the excellent results obtained by the ulo of Dr.‘ i We can show you huodredgol lestlmonlaleifthls effect from leading fox l‘ nehers throughout provlneeanq glqwhm pug you may rest purl-ed that "you are taklng no chances when Dr. i . Ffrench's Capsules are used. - \_ _ New ts ‘the time todircpare against this menace. so get your requirements cf these capsules at once. moo $1.00 per bu’ (so capsules) propulrrlo v . ' ._ _. - ._, ' \ .. .: _ _ v "E." A.’ VEoster oefitT-Ffir Sllimyside I sole Agent for Dr. Ffteneh‘: Remedies to» the ma... -. i down skull, the Neanderthal "more November Id lmtlll J brutal-looking" specimen. and the lfiobhrvel WENDY, D ~- Javancse relic described as "a sort-of visible’ “_ Illll. l" ape-man who stood erect." what mayor no traveling! an allaougil ‘ fairly be inferred is that the Poking-v en is IQ!» 118M it nid ese "Iliad" is an advance upon form- when ~a red glen appears the r er anthropological treasures unedrth- them sky. Ibu- dlyl N!!!“ ed. But, judging from informatiorirslm‘: return natives gland ‘ now broadcast; it seems certain that on top of their iglou aleklflk l‘ the latest-discove y is bound to re-‘gllmpsa of Oldgflol. ‘ vive. sharply the discussion as to the e , -- , exact relation of primitive man uninI Argongihe roomf- Illh to the simlana or Junglerrinlatesfarldburg University, jnflootlaud w“ also teasieup the question as to what pnooogrqph rwnldfl o! Ht , part ofour globe shall bongonsizlcrg folk scuff! .-1!\Ml¢ by tho l-‘J " ed as the "cradle of tho race.‘ Eiev- llhemeelvosm- r ' ,. erally, the claims ‘of Asia, A-f ca and 1. " Europe‘ have been-urged to this (iiSgnlfn-Mxhl] wnqggh] An tlnctiorll-‘rhe question is far from} 11mm», - settled. Ascertalnod. ‘howevelnhla the! ' _. outstanding fact that lnall lived ‘_ earth ataremote pcrlfild scnVilllllll ~ _ vastly more generations-ohm the ' historic cycle of which we have clog-i DR; w‘ ‘R. or survey. And somehow he managed! _ _ r o. chmpmw :2".2.'.“‘.2;".l‘...";..'.';‘°3.i'§;l all?» -'=:~---;,,-»-¢.-.: g l i‘ . l - " ,, a- ‘lg, no =the hugrbcasts ol.swI-!11il§fli‘l2l9l'*} Oupiliti at. hare chmhf pate suggests that its effect would be ' - ‘ aboutas marked as the flinging of a tin tack against the chassis of. so‘ eu- tomoblle/{rhat primitive man had a ..‘......,..._I....._,§ --,-- OOOOOOQOO-OO‘ _ v DR. J. P, MILLA' ~ ‘learn. ulnroeou ' l‘ ~11 a‘__'laso. - _J”',..’ate.oo Q Comet QIIOI III llehmoul, oouoeoloeoobcouooeief O i_ ‘ebnteeteblo. » . -~ __ _ . - luualgeli Ioauloncf-rolt- rwo nouns ‘ lfcauelilalt no.5" ' _~ j avnmreso. inns ' nth» tob-of-llle-wiae.