-om - -q-am;-CA-.-;,,..,,... . I l THE GUARDIAN rul-ru Prllcs Eduard lulu! us. in Des" Punllstlrc cyan week-A mornlus Ii I36 Prince Street. cmlriouunwu. Pi-:.i. 'rhomnnll Company us. 44 Kills St. W.. Toronto. ofllrc. 11.5 l'u.ivsnity Towu Bldg. I-Jallur. Frsnll walkal General Manager. In A. Buneu viemhel Canadian Dull: NCWIWDG Publisher: Association Dlllnllcul Member of the Canadian Prus Mcllluer -ludil Bureau at CITCMIILIUHI EIAIIQII uHICl.'l Ii sulnmemue. Montague and Afbertuu I-mm--n-o as Second Class mail by the Post Office Departnlenl Ottawa. 5; .alllcr Challulll-llmu -mlllllwrslde 515.00 pct as- lum. HII4 wlleru in P. L. I. 39.00 Jlher Provlncu um U S. 112.00 per annum . "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest Ink." ' SATURDAY, OCT. 22. I955 Term Extended As reported by ollr (lttawa cor- respondent, the Honour Lieutenant G 0 ye rn o I Prowse as Her Majestyls represen- tative in Prince Edward Island, which would normally expire this month, has been extended. This news will be received with general satisfaction, as His Honour has dis- charged his duties in a most accept- able manner, particularly during the present year of our civic cen- tennial, when exceptional demands were made upon his services. He and Mrs. Prowse have been perfect hosts to thousands of visitors as well as in our own citizens at various social functions at. G0i'cr'nmenl Hotlse, and have Ill every way up- held our finest traditions of hospit- ality. There are other duties besides those of a social and ceremonial na- ture which the Lieutenant Gover- nor is called upon to perform as head of the Government and first citizen of the Province. His Honour has been aided in this respect by his lollg experience in public life, first as member of the City Council and Mayor of Charlottetown, and later as member of the Legislature and of the Executive. Council. lie has serv- ed also as President of the Board of Trade and other business organiza- tions, and for many years has head- ed one of the largest mercantile firms in the Province. His many friends will appreciate the high tri- bute implied in the extension of the term of office which he now holds. Certainly there is no question but that our interests. will be well served by this arrangement. Island Livestock Entries Prince Edward Island livestock brcederll and farmers will be well represented this year at both the Maritime Winter Fair and the Royal Winter Fair at Toronto. The latter exhibition, which takes place No- vember 11-19, is on a national scale and some of the finest cattle in the world will be competing for the awards. As noted in yesterday's news story, an entry of Island sheep will be shown there for the first time, as well as Guernsey, Ayrshire and Jersey cattle, and an exhibit in the horse classes. Revived interest. in sheep breed- ing is also reflected in the news that a large consignment of Ram- honlctte and Corrydale sheep is be- ing shipped here from Southern Al- lwrla, for cross breeding with our lVol't.h Country ('llel'iots. This has been made possible by the Provin- vial and Federal Govt-l'lnncnts, the former paying tlll'cc-qlial'lcrs of the freight. if the cxpcrinlcnt proves stir-r-osxt'tll it will illrlwlsc lhc nlllt- ion lirorillclioll of lilo ('hl-vlots which have a lino rcplltation for their wool, and will be cxiclltlcd to t)IIll'i' hrccrls ill thc Prmincc. Illlli l'.'lrnlcl's arc l':lculg a par- lflclllxllll rlilficnlt situation Ill potato IIl:llIx'I'llli(I this war. All lllc morc rczlsoll why no should conccnll':ltc on cxploltinl: other sollrl-cs of our (liyl-rsllicrl ;lt:rlz-llltllral ccollomy. Wr- arc fol-tlltllltc in Ilfll'IllL' illl expert body of officials in oltr Provincial and Fcrlcrlll dcp.'ll'tnlcnls who are second to none in Canada. and who work in closo co-operation in the in- temsis of industry. They have aid- ed in bringing us to the forefront Ill dairyinlz and swine production, and Olllt Iilrctlcrs lime been alert to tr-lkc arlyalttagc of their st-rvlccs. The sheep industry for some years was in the do'dl'llms in Canada, and wr have been importing increasingly large amounts of mutton from other countrirs. The production trend now is on the upgrade. and it is to be hoped that this-will mean profit- able. returns to our own f8l1I'leI'5. .,. - Once! the best ways of publiciz- . nil: our achieve-"entn agricilltulally all through the lfsritlme and nat- Imllll fairs. Tilers will be keen in- terest in the llvesloclrsltowlnp this term of His. year, and our Island breedenl are to be commended on the efforts they are making to have us worthily rep- resented. A Vasl Discrepancy - One would imagine that both the Dairy Council of Canada and the Federal Department of Agriculture would have a fairly accurate picturc of conditions in the Canadian dairy industry. Of the two, the Dairy Council might reasonably be expect- ed-in the event of controversy-to be the more reliable in the matter of statistics affecting surpluses in its own particular field. This is so because, while the Dairy Council is concerned primarily with its own in- terests and is. therefore, in a posi- tion to concentrate on a few art- icles, the Agriculture Department just spread its fact-finding facilities over the entire area of Canadian farming. All of which would seem to indicate---tbollgb there is no way of being certain about it-that the Council's estimate of 65 million pounds of surplus butter in this country at the present time is more likely to be nearer the mark than Agriculture Minister Gardiner's es- timate of 10 million pounds. It does not, however. explain the vastness of the discrepancy. A difference of 55 million pounds is not a trifling one, even assuming that the Dairy Council is erring on the side of caution, which is under- standable, and Mr. Gardiner on the side of optimism, which also is understandable. It must be that the respective protagonists are arguing from entirely different assumptions; or, it could be that Mr. Gardiner's definition of the word "surplus" bears no resemblance to that which is favoured by Dairy Council offi- cials. In any event, the matter is much too important to be left in such an obvious state of confusion. Sound Theology In both Judaism and Christian- ity-and, for that matterkin some other religious systems, toowjoy is regarded as one of the really im- portant symptoms of the religious ethos. St. Paul, who perhaps is quot- ed oftener than any other Christian apologist. puts it second only to love in his list, of ”the fruits of the spir- it". In a recent sermon on the occas- ion of the Feast of the Tabernacles (the Hebrew Thanksgiving) a New York Jewish Rabbi made reference to the importance of this phase of religion. Because the truths be ex- pressed are just as applicable to Christianity as to Judaism we are taking the liberty of passing a few excerpts from them along to our readers. "Many persons”, said the rabbi. ”associate religion with sombreness and lugubriousness. Such a concept of religion is as unjustifiable as it is unfortunate. Religion should be sober but not morbid. A truly re- ligious man is allergic to pessimism and frustration. He is buoyed up by faith. He has inner resources that help him overcome trials and ad- versitics. ”Too many people think that rc- ligion carries with it a long face and a sorrowful mien. The truth is that the joy accompanying the carrying olit of religious duty is even more acceptable to God than the com- mandmont itself. In other words. joy is one of the necessary condi- tions without which the laws of religion cannot be adequately ob served." Certainly, there is a wide mis zlon for joy to attempt in this fear ridden and uneasy age. Anyone-abs be Christian or Jew-who can help it along by theological reasoning is bringing a healthy influence to bear on the social patterns of our time. EDITORIAL NOTES Boy Scout Apple Day. 0 O O The British are not doing I0f madly in matters of trade, after all Their exports for the first 9 months of this year were 6"; over the sam- period of 1954. September sales rrv duccd the gap between imports llnrl exports by some 58501,, million, con- pared with the previous month. 0 O I An American scientist is quntrl as saying "the golden age of science is upon the world." Its an age of science all right, but whether "gold- en" is the right adjective remains to be seen. The symptoms at present are not too promising. although there are signs here and there that they may be changing for the bet- hr. ROUND-WORLD DIARY Singapore Impressions By 1. Norman Smllh Assodnlo Editor, Ottawa Journal SIMI.-IP()lfl'I. (ll-lllbcr 2l- The ('()It)IllI)U Plan will go Ull but not with grc.-ltly at-l-ell-rated speed or incrl-zlscd volume The Western Three, United States, Britain and Canada did not make any consider- able sltow of interest in making more out of the Plan and the Asian ('ountries who are old fashinoed nnnugll to live courteottsly, being rcclpicnts did not more or faster aid if was decid- ed io lengthen the plan from 1956 I to 1961. and in 1959 the meeting will consider possible further leng- ibcnini! after 1961. This did give some satisfaction 1 to Asian countries, for lhough they expected extension they were not sure a fixed period would be more thall two or three years. The meet- ings has not gained much attention in the local press, probably because it is becoming aware of the fact that though the Columbo Plan is a good thing it is certainly not large or powcnllll if measured a- gainst its unslatcd objectives to make this part of the world at lcnst rclativcly morc prosperous and therefore safe from the lures and propacallda nf ('ommllnism. Britains incrcaso Ill technical as- sistnltce to rate more than double lll-r rate of the last five years has been Ihc most notable contribut- ion of this lTlf'0llnK. Canada's of- fer of an atomic reactor was infer- csting. but tbc small print of Mr. Pearson's spot-c'h made clear that other than that the anticipated Can- adian incrcased donation to the plan will be about nil, excepting an added silflfkflflfl to the United Nations tcl-hnil-al assistance pro- gram. We are also making some propaganda out of a small and vague offer of French speaking help to IIl(' l-'rcnl-ll areas of Indo- china, bill this will hardly stop the kind of tidal lla'll'l' of nationalism and Cnmlnllnisln that this part of the um-Id llns already seen and may scc yet more of. P0l.l('I('Al. STRINIQS Tllc .illlcrll-illls spoke l,-lglll-Ll of oftcrlm: all alolull rczlctor to some part (it lIll' zlrc.-l, place ltnslalcd, but sulllc oi lhc bcnclil accruing front such illl otlcr was lost be- cause ll was lll-4il:.cll.about with "ifs" anti hilly rcllltlllg to the hopes of lVa.slllll;.'toll that such I contribution lltllllti hr kept secure. That is it polllu-:lI sirllllz. and aid to this pint of tiw il'lIl'I(I does al- most llltll'l' h;ll'lll than good If ll is openly xlll'fI as El weapon or presllalicr, M-ll 7.:-lllalllls down- to earth l"nl'l-lull Minister in a clog. ing spccrll tlllx nlllrning called the meeting :m l-xi-l-l-no in cooperation, and that is it description. lllll wllctllcr mere co" operation will enable the States of the West. Elflll Asia to stand up agaillsl Illc tllrl-ills of Communism IS another matter. They need help and support This rcpol'lct".s lzllcss is that the ordinary people of this part of the world, the few who can read or know anything about the Columbo Plan will feel some slight lift and happiness because of what has hap- pened at this meeting. Bill to tell such people in such conditions that they are going to receive in the coming years about what they have NEW YORK VAPI -About 100 birds wrrc killcrl Tuesday night by crashing into tllr upper part of the Hnllvirc State building They np. parclllly wcrc on their wnyjnllill for the wllllcr Most of the birds were dcsrrlbcrl as warblers, The birds were found on various set- backs of the building and on 33rd slrcct HUI-INOS AIRES fAPv - The navy ministry announced Wednes- day Albcrto Tr.-issalre. a retired admiral and vim president of Ar- gentina when Juan Peron's regime fell, will he tried by a five-man naval court of honor. This court will judge his conduct in office on the same terms as an army court of honor will review Pt-ron's cou- duai. Tge armydmlnistry swung I ve- an cou altwee to Penis h about I" speak ollt fori fair and realistic l X been receiving in the past is not to excite them to ruptures lu stauld still in such circumstances is al- most to go backwards. LITTLE OF CHEER And I understand that the Columbo Plan report for the last years op- crations which will be released in November will in fact reveal sev- eral of these Asian Columbo count- :ies have in fact in many ways zlipped in that period, and that lthers show little of cheer. The communique issued today (tossed over this a little. but the 'eport on careful reading will show i differently. The meeting heard the Asian countries say that they would y themselves increase their develop- . ment plans, and as what they do i themselves amounts to eighty pen I cent of the whole Columbo Plan I project, perhaps that means the l situation is not beyond salvaging. After a trip into the Soviet Un- ion and a look at the energy of that country's efforts, and after ' bearing in this area somewhat first ,' hand of the improved conditions in l Communist China. one gets the dis- : heartening idea that the Western Democracies are falling short in their realization of what is at stake in the game out here, and what is the pace of that game jimggggggg Canada's Firslljrflic Mace By Harold Morrison Canadian Press, Ottawa Jfbe gnarled bands of eight Eskimo craftsmen, I a b o r i ng srduously with simple tools. have created Canada's first Arctic mace. symbol of parliamentary authority and .3 graceful, artistic emblem of native history and culture. The delicately-balanced mace, l fashioned of old halebone, the wood of a tragic ship, the gold of Yellowknife and even parts of an old copper kettle, will become im- bedded in the sessions of the North- " ” J in the sessions of the North- west Territories Councll-parlia- ment of the north. It will be presented to the coun- cil at its January sessions here by Governor-General Massey who con- ceived the idea. DONE IN 21 DAYS southern tip of Baffin Island. the Eskimos showed astonishing skill in perfecting the 35-pound, 51A-foot md. They worked from a rough sketch prepared by James Hous- ton, northern affairs department Arctic expert, dispatched to the north to get the job done. The great carver, Oshaweetuk, 35. of Cape Dorset did the main figures. A more elderly companion, Pitsulak, 50 did the crown. Six others helpcld. Without measuring instruments. they fashioned an Edward's crown of cope: and copper wire. polished and perfectly balanced and ham- mered out of native copper found in the central Arctic. Copper from an old kettle left by Lapp herds.-rs also came in handy. Tile orb of whalebone atop the crown is as round and smooth as n billiard ball. Four muakox horns extend from the main body of the mace. Be- tween the horns will he discs of nurc cold gathered from three vel- Iowknlfe mines. carved in relief on the wllalebone body is a circle of hnwheall whales, Eskimo sym- bol of royalty and .. airless. CARVINGS ILLUl'l'llA'l'I LIFI Below. in deeper relief. are carv- ings telling of Eskimo life: A -..-.:... , aacarvlls nommlm OTTAWA (CF)-Clndr Gordon C. Edwards, I, of Toronto bus bee to the Working steadily for 21 days in l the tiny Cape Dorset hamle in the I I Kwneq RECESSIONAI. Now along the solcnul Ileiglils Fade the Autumn's altar-lights; Down the great earth's glimnlcrlug chancel Glide the days and nights. Little kindred of the grass, Like a shadow in a glass Falls the dark and falls the still- ncss; We mllst rise and pass. Little brothers of the clod. Soul of fire and seed of sod. We must fare into the silence At the knees of God. Little comrades of the sky. Wing to wing we wander by, Going, going. going, going, Softly as ll sigh. Hark, the moving shapes confer, Globe of dew and gossamer, Fading and ephemeral spirits In the dusk astir. Math and blossom. blade and bee. Worlds must go as well asl we, In the long procession joining Mount and star and sea. Toward the shadowy brink we climb Where the round year rolls sublime. Rolls. and drops. and falls forever in the vast of Time. --Charles G. D. Roberts. am....n.m.gggggg. vnuskox. wolf, Eskimo hunter. woman with child. white whale, '8I'Ib0lI and walrus. Then comes a 'lI'clc nl deeply-carved white Arc- tic foxes. mainstay of the Eskimo economy. Bands of Indian procuplne quill york. made by an Indian woman l Yellowknife. add body color. Maill shaft is the tusk of the llarwllal. a small northern whale. From the wreck of the Fury same a piece of oak carved for the bottom of the shaft. The British ship came to grief un Somerset Island just west of Baffin, while searching for the Northwest Paa- wage in 1825. IIARPOON FORMS SPINE And below the oak is another porcupine flllill hand and carvings of seals. representing the staple of Eskimo existence. An Eskimo harpoon was drilled through the macc's centre. to be- come its spine. While bringing the finished prod- uct ollt of the north Mr. Houston had to travel from Baffin Island over 100 miles of open sea in I small boat. Ice closed in under I heavy wind. and holes war fore and aft. Everyone aboard h to ball for 36 hours before the boat reached land and safety. ' The Age Old Story Then answered Jesus and salt! Into them, Verlly I say unto you, The son on do nothing of himself. but what he seeill the Father do: for what things soever he lloeil. Illese also doeth the Son likewise. Fit the Father loveih the son, and shew:-lh him all llllnls that himself dnelll: and he will shew him greater works than these. that ye may marvel. TIAVIIL Medically Speaking By Ilermsu N. Buulieseu. M- D- HERB MEDICINES si-ll.l. rnova TO BE EFECTIVE About 50 years or so 580- "1051 remedies were extracts (mm herbs, roots, leaves and plants And they did a pretty good lob- Then synthetic drugs came 319"! it seemed as though the old herb medicines were of our and. for a while. just about forgotten- Now they are back. Drugs obtained from Rauwolfa root, for example, have been very A snuff used by witch doctors in the West Indies. coho- ba. is the latest ”dlsl-uvery". From it we have obtained a strong drug effective. which affects the arteries. Along with the Salk vaccine we now have another weapon for use against polio. A disinfectant Interesting Facts Speaking of polio, a recent study brings out some interesting infor- mation. Of l.lll3 polio victims studied. L165 had brown or black eyes and brown or black hair. Only one had fair skin and blonde hair. And only 17 had brown eyes with bloude hair. As I said, it is an interesting bit of information. blue eyes. To Curb Hiccouglling Chlorpromazine is reported ef- fective in treating cases of stub- born hiccnugbing. In the patients tested the hiccoughs were associ- ated with carcinoma. heart fail- ure and conditions following genito- urinary operations. In most of the patients. s sin- gle dose of 25 mg- given intra- muscular-ly halted the hlccoughs within half an hour. Some requir- ed a second dose. QUESTON AND ANSWER W. L.: What would cause a lien- saliun of nunlbiless in the hands? Answer: Numbness in the hands may be due to a nuluber of different conditions, first of which is poor in the blood vessels in the hands. as in Raynaud's Disease, or disturbance in the nerves supplying the affect- circulation: disturbance ed parts may account for it. Grace For Apples (London Times) There may be men. women, and children so spoiled by the soft fruits of summer, so intoxicated by tinned apricots. so drugged by ice cream that apples leave them cold- Apple l pie. perhaps, is just another pie to them, and they are capable of looking down in superior nose at that clergyman of Dr. Johnson's day who "brought up a family very an apple dumplings. There may be such, but it is hard to credit it. For who can pass an orchard at this time of year. or stand beneath the apple tree in his own garden, without thanking God for apples? Or without rem- embering. in a general thanksgiv- ing, the generations of gardeners who gave us the kind: that. are our favorites? Mr. Richard Cox, who raised his Orange Pippin at coin. brook, near Slough, in 1830; or Chlirles Ross. gardener at Welford Park, in Berkshire, for nearly m. ty years. who developed a num- ber of noteworthy varieties as well as that which bears his name, and who lived (on an-apple a day?) to be ninety-two; or James Grieve, who did good work among viola: and rhododendrons as well as a reputably” mong the apple trees. These are a few others we know a little of and can memorialize accordingly, but what of all those whose names are apple names and no more? Who was Jonathan? In what idyllic village lived Granny smith, baking the best apple tart for miles around? Was Nancy Jack- son a neighbour of hers, and Nancy Neck, and were they ladies of the manor or farmers' wives or inn- There is a Staffordahlre dessert apple named Betsy Baker. but who was Betsy? And why Bnscombe'll Mystery; who and what was mys- terious about him or the fruit? It does not matter that we do not it need not prevent us from being grateful for the good gifts keepers' daughter. .- was Dascombe, know; oforcbard and game , AUTHORIZED m nsnuan Licensed Wiring llolltractors BEFRIGER-A'I'ION We sell. install and see vice refrigerated counters. walk-in coolers. also House- hold refrigerators. C. G. E. Vacuum Cleaner nd Polisher Rental Service. M(7l'0R8 G APPLIANCES We sell and repair all motors. washers and electrical appliances. Storey Eloctrls 11! Graflss about PIIONI Ill? called ”geuisol" had been developed. Its maker claims it will kill all three types of polio virus within ten minutes. By diluting it with water it can be used in the sickroom either as a spray or as a wash for floors.- woodwork. utensils and the like. lllolnoll new LIMITED INSURANCE M and AGINTI "5'l50I!It hsrssssllln-llnvslilul 0lA.ummlowll.r.s.l. l I NOTES BY A contemporary rssreu that President Eisenhower should be ill "at the present crucial period". If Ike wanted to be ill at a period that wasn't crucial, he would have bad to arrange his heart attack while he was still at West Point. -Peterborough Examiner. The printed word sometimes alarms some people far more than would the same word spoken. They may hear much the same thing asld almost any day or approxi- mately the same. and say it them- selves. without lifting any eyebrow. but put it in print and their pro- tests resound throughout the vil- lage. -Sydney Post-Record. It is commonly supposed that the inventive Americans were respon- sible for the custom of making up names of ulganlzatiuns from the initials of successive words or syl- lable which compose them. How- ever, the tendency was already cur- rent lu the First World War when names like ANZAC were in com- mon use -in Great Britain. Since then the Americans. particularly the government and newspapers. have popularized this short form of unweildy titles. It has been a particular boon to harassed news- paper headline writers and the public quickly recognized the ob- vlous benefits.-Kitchener Waterloo Record. Discovery that sigh-destroying Lebara disease is hereditary in a French-Canadian family has set Department of Health and Welfare workers on one of the strangest quests of our day. Of 1.500 living members, 28 in the family are known to have the affliction. and another 47 may have It- The 47 are sought. What has been called "the most extensive genealogical record relating to a specific disease ever reported in medical literature" traces the ailment through seven generations. Lebers disease. an in- flammmation of the optic nerve, has some of the quirks of hemo- philia. It occurs only in men, and is transmitted by the mother. The outcome of the Federal Welfare Department's research. insofar as it can point to a cure, isolation, or other restraints on 'the disease, remains wrapped in all the sus- pense of a mystery story. - Wind- sor Star. has 4 The Guardian, t'TTT'r&- .THE WAY Assocllled Airways of Ell . ion has given up its conll-3. , supply the Dew radar line in the North following the la. .; six aircraft and the lives of iv 5 men. How easy it is to spea of the airplane conquering the A,--.;:,. and how chill the realization such dlsaste 3 bring of the danger; 53;" encountered by those who dare the frontier! Another c o m p a ll y will continue the contract and there will always be another company. But those broken by the journey who never reach the shining mountain; of success also deserve our pulls. and Asoc-lated. in this hour of mil. fortuue. must have ollr sympathy, -Ottawa Journal. Many a person wil applaud the lining of four men for cheating 3; in fair in Midland. Every so open some stickers turn up at country fairs and take the people down the line. They have various games and the suckers are encouraged to tn- their skill. They have no chance (if winning. but they see some shill; carrying off the prizes and figure they can do the same They don't realize the game has been rigged against them. Some indil'iduaLs have lost substantial sums at these skin games. But, their pride makes them keep it to themselves. Only acasionally does someone Comp. lain loudly enough to get the cheaters caught.-Windsor Star. There can be no real prosperity in New Brunswick that is not fully shared in the rural areas. Exten. sion of highways and winter plow. tug of them. extensions of power lines and the building of the new schools have done mllch to bring the amenities of life into our coun- try areas. What is required in them now is the putting of all our rural resources. human and nat. ural, into productive enterprise, We have'a rural potential in this province that has never. in this century, been anywhere near fully realized. Beginnings of an awak. citing, a healthy discontent. a con. victlon that something better than the present status quo is attain- able. can be observed in rural New Brunswick today. One extremely interesting symptom of this awak- ening is the Nashwaak Resources Development Centre. now incor- porated, which is in the process of organizing and -' veloping a pro. gram for improvement of the Nash- Tllere is hope for humanity's , future when it can turn the mach- I luery of diplomacy - so often the - channel for its self-interests. its lealousies and its rerlmlnal.lons- to the defence of one of the rarer creatures with which it shares the surface of this earth. Ottawa's protest to Washington against the location of s photographic-flash bamblng range close to the Texas wintering grou ' of the whooping crane (which summers in Canada) will be welcomed not by Canad- ians alone or naturalists alone but by millions of civilized people in both countries. What is involved here is more than the saving from extinction of a species already num- bered only In two figures: it is an extremely important question of principle; must every other value he made subordinate to the exigencies of military strength? More and more the human answer is coming to be "no." -Hamilton Spectator. twsak Valley area. immediately north of Fredericton.-A Frederict- on Gleaner. n---kg Electric Authorized C Dealer I octrlcal Wiring Repairing and Supplies Oil Heating Household Appliances Television DIAL 4021 156 Great Geo. Si. PROFESSIO NAI CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Allison M. Glllls. LL.B. M til M ..-..e..:.:.r-M . 6030.51 E.T.R-ii; .. llama ... ..ueson on .. .....:;. 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