i I “"" ~'-e'--.:.,..,_.. -as 7-r_v-*.5 .' r ,_ . V v ,. v' li. _i -- ,_ .~,‘...~{-as-s ,__ ji \ i 1.-o-l\(| Ill- \'l(hsl‘ \ l`A'l`l\ LS uwrran s'r.\1i-.s-'rho urckwiiii Oral Building, hen York Lltv, henerni Building, human Lily \\1llo\|lliby Troll Building St lmlllll (zl¢'\\|| lag, Bon Frnnclscm 1185 he 6501 so-ect r-ifiinucipilinf lrd in Lnnudn and bnited Staten Special Agency Inc how York Cen iilotorl Building Detroit. Interstate ble S dlc to Tower Building, L nloi yll I Building Atlanta Monadnock Bain WEDNESDAY» MAY 31. 1933 ANOTHER MILESTONE As in other years, the Commence nent exercises yesterday at St Dun rtan's University formed the subject of general interest and the pro- gramme proved a most interesting md inspiring one. Recently the Convocation exercises at Prince of Wales College were held. It is noteworthy that in both institutions, despite economic difficulties which are general throughout the contin- ent, additions to the teaching staffs wére made during the past term and the graduating classes were excep- tionally large. Reference was made at yesterdays function by the Rector, Rev. Dr. Murphy, to the services, in which iboth St. lJunstan's and Prince of Wales College will share, of a Pro- fessor of Sociology and Economics under the Carnegie Corporation endowment; also to the benefit which both institutions will derive from the Corporations survey of library conditions and its appropria- tion of funds for the purchase of books for undergraduate rcoding. ‘Such action, on the part of the Corporation," states Dr. Murph" “i highly commendable and will, I am lure, work out to their entire satis- faction." Commenciable also, it may be said, is the fine spirit of co-op- eration shown by both institutions Ln connection with the efforts of the Department of Education and the Carnegie Foundation to achieve tlie results referred to. An illustration of the value of the training given at St. Dunstnn‘s University lics at hand in a note in the current issue of St. Diuistan‘s Red and White, in which a list of the graduates of twenty years ago is given. The graduates of that year included Rev. Edward Curlcy, St. Charles College, Helena, Montana; Rev. J. E. Dougan, Halifax, N. S.; Jules- Drouin, N. P., Rue" St. Louis, Quebec City; Dr. A. Jobin, M. D., present address un- known; Rev. A. McAdam, Strath- mon, Alta.; J. A. MacDonald, K. C.. City, _ Barrister and member of the Provincial Legislature; Rev. W. V. MacDonald, B.A., Parish Priest, Hope River, P. E. I.; Rev. A. Reid, Philip, S. Dakota; H. Robil- \lM» B*-Av Pi'°~’°m' addfess ““im°Wn5 yet to be carved out of the North Rav. lawrence Smith, B. A., deceas- West -Iven.1to,.1es_ From the outset *di Df- G- L 5”‘"“» M- D~ Chai' conciiiaticn was thc guiding star Iottetown; Rev. F. F. Walker, B, A., last St. John, N. B. A list of all the graduates of St. Dunstan‘s would doubtless show lhat they src distributed throughout lvery State and Province of the con- tinent, and that a large proportion of them have made a success of their careers. The sumo might also be mid for the graduates of Prince of Wales College. Both institutions have followed sound ideals in edu- cation; and under wise leadership have gone on from strength to strength, increasing in value to the _ommunlty which they serve. LIBERAL “ECONOMY” lofienoe is made by our local contemporary to "the fine example" given by Hon. H. C. Nixon, the Pro- gressive leader in Ontario in joining forces with the Liberal leader, Mr. Mitchel Hepbum, to campaign a- Kli1'i5f~ 3118 Henry Cmvemmeni “" the expected Eldorado they found the sciiriet-clad Northwest Mounted Police already there. It was then next Ontario general election. Our rontemporary, however, omits refer- ence to the nature of the "economy" pledge given by Mr. Helibli-\'l'i 011 be' half of himself and Mr. Nixon. This pledge was to the effect that if he ghd his Progressive friend were el- ected to power they would refuse to vote the estimates for any expenses in connection with the office of the Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario an so "freeze him from office." Commenting on the Liberal lead- ar's statement, the Ottawa Journal nys: "The office of Lieutenant-Govcv nor il. established by the Bfiiisii North America Act, which is thc written constitution of the Domin- ion, and its abolition therefore pre- Nllllbly Wotlld require tho c:li.;c it S in organizing the "Moun tional government It would be Mr Hepburn's privilege, if he were lead er of the Ontario Goiernment, to discuss this question with his brother premiers in an effort to reach an agreement for the elimina- tion of this branch of our political system. "The alternative course the Lib eral leader proposes to adopt is money for the upkeep of the Lieu , his resignation and to discoura involve the Kings representative` 'the provincial administration; w not tolerate methods reminiscent De Valera in the Free State ruth , ition." R.(7.1iI_P. ANNIVERSARY ies" was to maintain law country. It was in the late Autum of 1873 that the first of the North- west Mounted 'Police were heading West to take their place on the frontier at Fort Garry, present site of Winnipeg, and beyond. From small beginnings the force has grown into 16 divisions totalling 2,500 men. One of the major factors which ex- pedited the organization of the N.W.M.P. was the massacre of an encampment of Cree Indians in the Cypress Hills by a party of Ameri- can settlers. Through their forth- right dealing, the influences of the police with the redsklns grew space from their arrival in that vast un- settled wilderness now known as the Prairie Pr<>vinces. When it was decided to police the plains, where the redskin roam- ed and the buffalo ranged. few Canadians had any idea of the vast- ness of the work to be undertaken. Manitoba. was still in its infancy and Saskatchewan and Alberta were of thc world's most famous frontier force. "Before you came the Indians savage, Crowfoot, head of Northwest Mounted Police the sa Crown through Inspector existence of the force, paved way to the Indian treaties that Following the Riel Rebellion so/m which goes to make a. rush the precious metal surged on to that Canada's frontier began to thought of in terms of the north stead of the west. A milestone was the Boer W helmets. the immemorial Cones Horse (Royal canedians,) a crept along, now they are not afraid to walk." 'I‘l'iis striking tribute to the police was paid by an untutore t powerful Blackfoot confederacy. Three years after the advent of the m Ororwfoot, rendered fealty to the MacLeod who, in the first three years of the th fo lowed. 1885 a great influx of settlers into the Northwest Territories com- menced, with the Police pointing the way. When the countless hordes of men who were destined to moil i'0l‘ wid. and the flotsam and _let- for in- Tho Mounties, who then wore white scarlet iunif- my canes and sucrokin d brecches, decided to take the equiv- slent of the Queens shilling, and :some 250 enlisted for active service the Canadian Mounted Rifles. One d he e E 1- in In be ar. nd of them was Sergeant A1-thin- 1-1;;-. bert Richardson, the first soldier from the Dominions to receive t t small and coveted bronze decoration for valor, the Victoria Cross. on the veldt with Lord Strath- ha. uggmmnggvmogmdoithena-` HOTES BY THE WAY R,nosevelt‘s appeal enabled Hitler to speak reassuring words this has cluh principle of Mussolini with modifications agreed upon, and this again ties in with the MacDonald disarmament plan as the basis of a full agreement that will fumish guarantees of genuine disarmament while a period of peace for this to he effected is ensured by the Mus soiini plan while it is said not to be the intention of the greater Eur openn powers to enforce their will on the lesser porwers, is mizhl-Y machine of assured i.r11i‘N1i"fifi`ii1’ is installed. ` There was never any intention on the part of the British Government what Bohr Qnurs Iona W Barton. MD A WHEN SHOULD PULPLES8 TEETH BE REMOVED? ‘ A patient suffers with rheuma. tism and it is decided that certain dead teeth should be removed Dead teeth as you know, are the ‘cnet from which the dentist has removed the pulp (whicli includes The Session At Ottawa A series ci articles dealing with the business of the recently prorogued session of the Doxnin ion Parliament G-OLD AND CREDIT There is no lack of credit in nada and there never has been during the last f/wo years. This is proven by bank returns which show that the banks have more liquid as sets than they usually have or than they desire to have. . the nerve). United states or any country. The ts-Regin Stir- I From more than one 11 li sion, has pehmitted them to make democracy and to trade unionism. That antagonism is only haif-ex- pressed._Such movements in their, early days are not given to frank~`, iness. The Fascist fowler docs notl isprcad his nec in sight. cf thc La-' 'sour bird. But it is :here-quite definitely, quite strongly. The desire to curb-or even to dcstroy-de- mocracy: the desire to curb or even to destroy the unions. Sooner or later the issue ,viii have to be set- tied.-London Daily Herald. An idea of the importance of the German debt question is realized when it is noted that Germany's total foreign indebtedness is estim- ated at between 24,000,000,000 and 25,000,000,000 marks. A gold mark is worth 24 cents. Ol the debts, the Germans owe 8,016,000,000 marks to the United States, 2,231,000,000 marks to Great Britain, and 864,- 000,000 marks to France. Since the war Germany has imported capital in fantastic sums. When interest payments fell due, more bonds were sold and the interest met with the new capital. Dobt was pyramided on debt until the structure became so dizzy something had to be done. There have been conferences and meetings and Germany has sought to have the total whittled down and down. Naturally the creditors want to get as much as they can. ` lf the Four-Power Pact means anything-and if it has really been agreed to-it means ten years of peace for Europe. Ten years is a long, long time measured by the rate at which events are marching today. Ten years hence, the world will not be so financially timid and powerless. Hence, those who would then think of aggression would be far more cautious. Nations will be able to float war loans once more- especlaily if they make a fair iob of miie*-1118 at least their domestic creditors for the past loans, 'mn years should carry us over the abyss. The acceptance of this, pact by Gemiany would seem to mean that even the inflamed-but tamed -Hitler sees no hope of being able to move under ten years. None of the other signatories is so much as suspected of s. desire to move. won fresh laureis in Belgium, France and Siberia, their example ever pointing the way tc those who were to follow in their footsteps. In 1904 the North West Mounted pciicc were grnnicd thc prefix "Royal" ir. the Coronation honors. A further honor came when the Prince of Wales became honorary oommandant. In 1920 they were pi- lied with the Dominion Police and in 1930 the RCMP. absorbed the Saskatchewan Police. In 1932 came further co-ordination, emciency and economy with the inclusion of the provincial police of Alberta, Mani- wbt, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince lidwlfd Island. Latest in the list il the Pre/ventive Service Brunch of the Department of National Revenue In the Great War the N.'WJ42~ ' I. V”*W and a strong antagonism E Notwithstanding that these dead Q W attempt 9° “ke advantage °f the ; teeth have been removed, the pa- it`ent may still suffer with sore body should be removed. Dr. H. R. Miller, New York, in ii study as to when and under what; circumstances pulpless teeth should be removed points out that there are at least three chief considerir ticns: first, there must be no im- portnnt ailment existing in ther body such as hemophi1'a (blee-‘L der’s disease, where patient might- bfecd to death); cancer, disease of the blood making organs, and dia- -betes: second, there should be shown as clearly as possible that the teeth are most likely to blame for the patient’s general condition; thfrd, pulpless teeth may be re- moved when it is felt or actually knoum that they contain harmful organisms and poisons which can injure the various structures of the body. The thought thn is that if you are in good health, the annual X. ray of your teeth shows no infec- tion, and your puipless teeth are giving you good service, your den- tist will likely advise you to leave them alone. If you are :not in good health, fffei lazy. irritable, no ambition and no cther cause can be found by your Physician, it would be well to have your pulpless teeth remov- ed. T!lE LAMPMAN' CAmN A1- MORPETH Build hiEh this cairn, for here was 1-9~mPman born, Here fell that silver seed of high endeavor, Here nrst_he raised that echoing llolden hom' Bwllty his creed. and truth his .sign forever. _ ,. _ Q Here he first lienrd the seo;-gig gf the Spring Whose white feet passed bmvem the early flowers, And listened as the April winds would sing '1’i\=iYfi<= of I poem cnuahccu hours. Little he gained of gold, that lust. rous sign Of all the world's acclaim-yet in the mind _ He was a Croesus of pure song, whose arts T0 P0‘ff»S' hands the wandering winds resign. These touched him and he is for- ever enshrined Imperishable in Canadian hearts. known great open spaces make their strongest appeal: an appeal which no one is trying very hard to resist. Offices become as prison cells, Figures get all blurred up with sw€€Dil18 illifiimliiir-‘I iinrl fleecy -Nathaniel A. Benson. These are the days when the well- ; The ten chartered banks of Can- ada have in their vaults two ¥ hundred and twenty millions in gold fand Dominion notes, fifteen percent mcan one. He would refuse to vote `n¢w treaties are in real fact only* and enlarged joints and may wowioi an theipdeposits, whereas six t0 - remlusbmems Yi.-.f2HfHH°.H5.°itrade i der whether there was any sense ini Seve!! l>€l'0€Hil iS regarded 95 00"' tenant-Governor-5 office, thus im- between the countries involved and: having these mth remwei The;sm,vame_ If they want mme cash resins economic pressure to compel 1 their ceminiy has been “° my big point that is so citcn for-gciccniihcv can gc tc the Government and ge f’i“€"’“°“"5 °f the Ottawa “Wee” is that the damage has been going |rc-discount under the Finance Act. ated that the production for the' PUBLIC FORUM 'lhll column ls 00°! 1°r UN' Mwugplqn by correspondents f questions of interest. The Charlottetown Guurdluli doe! not necessarily eMl0rl° "lf opinions of correlnondcntl- i-1i-_mi-I-1-' DANCE HOURS Bir-I am a constant reader of your delightful paper and I WM much pleased to read that the Con vocation. dance of P. W C last 'rnursday nicht began early and ended early This is certainly a move in the right direction An idea seems to have crept into the heads of the rising generation that it is unsophisticated to appear at a dance early and a sort of stig- ma in their eyes, is attached to the first arrivals. I wonder ii' they know that at Ottawa when a. dance is graced by the presence of the Governor Gen- eral and Her Excellency, and is scheduled to begin at nine o'clock and end at one o'clock those hours present calendar year will be worth DOMIINION NOTES The total Dominion note circul- ation is $175,701,l03.19. ‘I'he gold holdings of the Department of Fin- ance amount to $72,58l,827.82 of which $'l0,257,i03.l9 is against notes as required by law and $2,233,502 representing ten per cent of the savings bank deposits, and an ex- cess of statutory rcqiilrcmciits of $91,222.41. CONVERSION LOAN For the purpose of caring for maturing bonds and in order to ac- complish an all-round interest re- duction the Federal Govemment proposes to issue a conversion loan covering approximately seven hund- red and seventy four million dol- lars. This loan will be available to small investors in one hundred and two hundred dollar bonds. Tax- free issues made during the war will mature this year. They amount to $270,971,000 and holders of these maturities will be given an oppor- tunity to exchange them for long- term investments at a. low rate of interest. In addition to this there is a sum required to make up a ucncit in me canadian Naticnci Railway and Unemployment Relief, making ii. total of approximately $375,000,000. '1‘he balance will be us- ed for refundirilr. at a lower rate of interest, issues which will mature. The date for the conversion com- paign has not been set. It is thought that the conversion loan will save approximately five millions a, year in interest. The last conversion loan reduced the interest rate from five and one-half and five per cent to four and one-half per cent with a Sivilis of a little more than six millions per year in interest. ° The new bonds will be paysbig lg Canadian funds only. Bo that there will be no exchange payable nr, mn. turity. BANK AUT An ect to amend the Bank Act was puesed during the Session. The S019 Pilrpose of this Bill is to con- tinue the charters of the bmks until the nrst day oi’ July. 1034. Under the provisions of the Bunk Act the charters of gil banks will ex-plre on the first day of July 1933. unless renewed. Owing to the pend- ing World Economic Conference, it was not deemed advisable to make a general revision of the Bank Act Qi, this Session as it was anticipat- ed that as A result of _thc World Conference, amendments might be necessary which could not be anti- cipated now. g The Act does nothing more than extend the charters of the bank for one year. (To Be Continued) Who'| that? she called down to ‘her husband, ntuming very late cizutls, and the clicking of type., indeed. ~ . writers is an Wgravatins oilcusc;__i` my dog: It . I about sixty-seven million dollars. i are strictly adhered to and the or cliestra plays "God Save the King" i ~ . _ the 'f1l°l>oir'itment of a successor. The men ' 8' 5°" mr years hem” It is mticed in , ‘ promptly at one o'clock? . , | people of Ontario Wm not sancuom oi 'I oli the joints and other parts of thc. GOLD RESERVE i A few years ago a group of m_ ters appeared in your paper, one we imagine, the possibility of an , View the depression has not been, ' ..-V _ canada has steadily preserved her undignlfied squabble which would nywgether an evil thing. If it has Your derit‘st will tell you that gold reserves bemnd het issue or from a chaperone who was asked to in served no other purpose than to Dr. Weston Price, Cleveland, is Dominion “ctw There is forty pel__chap;aroiieY1a danse Land sh; gvent ill focus the limelight of public opin- conszdercd an outstanding, if not ` cent of gold behind me total issuelat nne ocock. t e our ca e or 'on nd ubiic protest upon extrav- the most outstardirig dentist in' h Utes The 1 81 requk»¢_Im the '""1tau°“'b“t me mst dam' of 1 a D _ _ ‘ ’ .of_suc n . €€ . agance in government it has done .Amer.ca. Your doctor will tell you I ment is W,emy_nve percent behind er did not appear till half past ten. er something decidedly worth while. In that Dr. Charles Mayo is the out- the issue up to 1-my minion dom,-5 she was much “fm°i/ed at having than of our own sound British trad- private business' or course, me same standing if not the most outstand- ! and dollar for dollar after than 1_9 Wash, an hom. and E half or her thing has been true. Owners and , ing surgeon in America. Both Drs.iLeg,s1au,m was passed mievmg the time. One of the other letters was Inanagers of an kmds of e5;a,b1i5h.Pr:ce and _Mayo advise, from their l Government of paymem of DUm,n_ frlom 1; pgothsgtothdaniing iiiiushters ments have mscovelled mat, 5 de-1v:li1st lexplerience, that detahd teeth mn notes in gold’ but it did not X1 olfous d dtr ed eog mls sda aroung i re ed income, due to the depres-V S Ou d e removed as ey gfivc th I e 1?' 955 1” ff “Ce an There was recently observed the C as people a sense of security. and change e reserves were horrified at the suggestion of ,sixticth anniversary of the orznni-:economies that never seemed DOS- i`h"Ui“i‘iiSH1 and heart disease may GOLD PRODUCTION going before the family at home 7'fiU°'n °f the Caiiadiaii Mbimied sible before and me making oil be duo to this cause without the had i'9iii`9d f°i` iiie night! The P01106 by 2¢i 01 i-iii'-` D°1liiiii0ii Piii"‘wmch has not mt,e,.fe,.ed in any way teeth being suspected. Next to south Africa, Canada is 'third letter in the series was sign- uamem' The ‘mgmal purposelwitli the efficiency of thc business There are other dentists and the lm, st mduoert of gold ed "Dancer" who stated that it was ., now Er P t- mvowed_ physc'ans who do not agree that in the world In this position she hh; wish that the dances begin pulpless te'ti1 should be removed. replaces the United Stews. Canada earlier and end earlier. and order V in the vast Western Them is among Brmsh _-,,,i“_| but that certain conditions should expanded her output of gold nam] So, Sir, perhaps with the use .of n pomicaland mdu5t,.i,,1a1ik,,_a new gude the dental and medcal pro slxwen minion in 1913 to sixty_iyour facile pen.you might be able both to fcssicn as to when dead teeth three minions in 193% It is esMm_| to make the dancers see as they are sccn bv the really sophisticated. I am Sir, etc. “ABE G. WEIT" The Red Criterion (New York Herald-Tribune> ' No one needs to be told at this late date that the one great objec- .tlve that is said to transcend all others in the socialization oi Rus- sia is the improvement of the lot of the working man. Every statement oi’ oplicy from the Kremlin since 1917 has made the worker’s stand- ard of living its most serious con- cern, and a definite degree of im- provement was specified in 1928 as an dbjective when Stalin promised that real wages-'meaning the value of labor in commodities- wouid be increased 59 per cent. by the five-year-plan. _ In sum.ming up the triumphs of uary of this year, Stalin took credit for an increase of 67 percent. in the wages of employees in heavy indusf. ries. Since he himself brought up this salary question, it is not carp- ing to point out that these "aug- mented" salaries buy, as g, matter Oi’ fiwi. Only a fraction over 13 per cent. of what the 1928 salaries did. A reduction of more than 86 pei- cent in the buying power of ms eamings is therefore what the ur- ban Russian worker has paid for such other advances as may be Credited to the nve-year plan. Some current price quotations from the Moscow press for Decem- ber and January., compared withf those quoted in 1928, show that eggs now cost 32 times as much, milk more than 12 times as much and butter 30 times as much. Two stap- les in Russia are cabbage and po- FIS HIHG I REHUIREMEHTS ~i1-"~_,-_- ' . if I ._ / iiiil ' I f /Wilt ;' -_ il -.` #~n r °~`--ii//k@g, lt you intend going on e fishing trip we have every-\ thing to enable you to have n real holldly. Fishing Rods priced at $3.00 up to $10.00. Fishing Bullets, Nets, Reels, F1108. Cute, Hooks. ete. Kodak Comm and Films. Thermos Bottles, Chocol- ates, etc. ' We would advise your seeing our window. Then you will see an nlorlment of holiday neccultles meqmlled nay- where. THE 2 MAGS , fd that period in retrospect, in Jun-\ ment. Provincial Lower Queen Street i Life Insurance gives a man the same oppor. tunity io protect his earning power that Fire Insurance gives him for his property A Life or Endowment Dolicy is an insured savings plan with guaranteed values for retire Conserve the home and stabilize the Nation Consult your nearest Great West Life Agent or write Prince Edward Island Branch Office. HYHDMAH & G0.. LTD. Managers ' _ Charlottetown tatoes. “Izvestia." reveals that in tht between July 1931, and Juli. 125 per cent. Potatoes cost 22 ko peks a kilo (roughly .5 cents a pound) in June, 1931. and 1 rublc 'zo kopeks in August, 1932, or near- man’s wages in Moscow are about 120 rubies a month. This entire sum would now buy between 11 and. 12 pounds of meat-and nothingi else. , creates a demand for chervonetr (Russian currency,) has lately been between 3 rind 5 cents local cur- iericy;,_nnd the Manchurian ex- change is commonly reckonedabout half the actual purchasing value of the rublc in Siberia. That would make thc trade value of the rublc about 2 cents in our currency and the monthly wage of the Moscow worker about $2.40. According to Russian figures, however, the 1933 rulbie's purchasing power is 8 per cent of nominal value, or a tiny fraction better than 4 cents. This would give the emancipated pro- letarian an actual wage amounting ic nil' or ss c month. The profiteering Moscow chauf- feur who was held up to oontumely in the press last December for earn- ing 2l2l7 rubies a month was there- fore wallowing in an income that figure of $90 9, montli in relative YNY - 1932, the price of cabbage incl-eased,while to demand that our g - ii ly eight times as much, according wetrust, in putting their des to "Pravda" The average wvrkins i“"° °°“°’e"° f°““~ The riible exchange in Manchur-i 1;-'here was an age before they ia, where a lively smuggling traffic) all but reached the scandalous Wife-Why, there's that fire buying power. our local Communists who ge together in public places every or mem, look up to the great R, experiment R8 a criterion in provision for the exploited wo; classes will find these figures ip idl Under Bare Poles (London Morning Post) when the nation got on quite pily without Free Education, Age and Widowii"Pensions, H and Unemployment lnsiiriince, all those other social services v belong to our semi-Socialistl In those days the Chancellor li pleasant task and the taxpayer ligiit burden; but they an: gone, no one has the courage even to for their return. Yet the nation begin to perceive by hard exper that there were advantages in lowing the money to remain wifi people who Spent it. Thus Mr. nes is all for "leaving the spei power in the pockets of the payer," and we agree with eni insm; but not at the cost of ui ancing the Budget. Husband-You accuse mei travagance. When did I evp anything that was useless? tinguisher you bought n year We‘ve never used it once. FOR PERFEC i` TEA FLAVOR N -USE- Brahmin Urange Pekoe Tea Sold Only in Red' Airtight Packages. E. R. B R 0 W Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance I at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd -Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown '_ l i l M _ lilsle lt‘s the Burley Leaf and the way it is cured that gives such a mellow last- ing_taste to H & N Black Twist. You'll have the' time of your life trying ,to _chew it out. ‘ nuciuwlst ..;i~-». 11.! . .' vii' . -l _ A- '“ HMM* mu 'I " "" __ 5'",-I ""T""'f'l.`~ 1.-51. V"M""t"7~'»!“ - ;:... -