PAGE _i_§_OUR __ p ad to France ten months. that the business goodwill which should prove to of permanent value in the reorgan- IZJflOii of the cattle industry. Encouraging also is the recent rmival of the export cattle busi- conducted with Great Britain. This fact is noted in the current issue of Agricultur- al and Industrial Progress in Can- ada, a monthly review published by Department of Immigration and Colonization of the Canadian Pacific Railway. It is significant, neg previously the says this publication, that in 193 when general world have been sary to make ments of live stock going forward i the late summer and autumn by the St. Lawrence route, and that additional accommodation shoul have had to be arranged with full expectation of all available spac being fully occupied. Moreover, it is a strong indica tion of the quality oi the ship ments to recall that because of an embargo in B-itain on "stockers and feeders," necessitated by an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease animals shipped from Canada have been treated as cattle and slaughtered immediately on arrival, and yet have been such us to well in Ireland, the fully finished butcher satisfy the demands of wholesalers retailers and consumers. This fact confirms the view that Canadian stockmen are capable of holding their own and producing finished cattle that can compete in itself with any in the. world's market. The revival after a three years, power of the Canadian dollar in the interval of shipments to Britain in ‘August, 1930, was undoubtedly the most promising sign which those engaged in the industry had receiv- Qd for many months. U. S. IN DIFFICULTIES That section of the Liberal press which refuses to be cheered by op- timistic statements of leading Can- adian economists might turn its attention, for a while, to the econo- mic situation confronting our sou- thern neighbors. Canada's position icompared with that of the United States, has everything in its favor. Here is the situation, as summed up by the Washington correspon- dent of the Manitoba Free Press: During the past three months the United States has floated bond is- sues aggregating 8,600,000,000. There is to be another bond issue equally large in December, and yet the Treasury deficit will be at least a billion dollars at the close of the current fiscal year. The I funded debt of the United States was re- duced to something more than six- teen billion dollars during the Har- ding and Coolidge administrations; it will be increased to more than twenty billion dollars before anoth- er year is past. 0n top of all this comes the de- mand for immediate cash redemp- tion of the soldier bonus certificates which do not mature until 1945- Should this demand be granted, the Chcaiury by fresh bond issues will have to raise the appalling sum of l2360,000,000. Hence, it is evident that the revenues oi the Govern- ment must soon be increased by heavy taxation. The taxation problem in the SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER N. 1931 A despatch in yesterday's Overd- lan announces the successful arriv- al in Paris of the first cowl!!!"- menr of Canadian cattle evcr ship- This consignment. consisting of 173 head, will be fol- lnwed by n second in a. fortnightfs time, and regular weekly shipments, thereafter, the completed arrange- ments calling for a shipment of 10,- 000 head oi cattle within the next This is encouraging news, especially in view of the fact i5 establishing conditions unusually difficult, it should have been found neces- advance bookings Weeks and months ahead for ship- HIE BIIARLOTTETDWI lillllllillll . . i I. I L I. P. Indium-w rgxrcn-ary-lfionllrttfloi. ll. A. Ilcllllol.» h. I. 0. Editor and Imaging Divan-J. ll. Iuruotl Anni-into Editors-Front Wllkn all lb. IL Olrrlo Infnln‘ ngliy (founded ilifl) woo In 10C! (in IIIIIOI\ delivered. “.60 on vru fin odvunnl mulled in (haul: and [lulled Italics ,L I f ct that the enormous flototlons of CATTLE SHIPMENTS Mix-free bonds by naiwmi- 5W"- and municipal Govemments PTW/lde an easy avenue for escape by the very mm 1mm very high taxation. cocious talent at school; ing exceptions. Not as encouraB mcnt to laziness but‘ as a bracer be is reprinted tutors : ailanguage- Napoleon was number 42 in h were ahead of him! 1. should. Alexander von Humboldt! teach ers were doubtful whether he pos n intelligence. d promise of lrilliance in her youth. liunt in his school work. James Russell Lowell was sus C _ indolence. bottom of his class. mathematics. his parents took him out. There is no occasion, says the Sydney Post, for alarm or pessi- mism over the reduced purchasing United States. Relatively to other countries, Canada's credit never stood higher than at present, if in- deed lt ever stood as high. The fluctuations in the exchange value of solvent and wealthy countries are due to causes which have never been satisfactorily explained. Canadian currency in the United States fell to the lowest points in modern times between i917 and 192l,—a period of abcunding pros- perity in the Dominion, when our foreign trade reached the peak levels in the country's history. It will be the business of the United States, not that of the Dominion of Canada, that will suffer decline while Canadian exchange is at a discount across the border, for the effect will be to erect a currency barrier to the tariff against Ameri- can imports into this country. EDITORIAL NOTES Our local contemporary, whose preference for foreign propaganda induced it recently to feature, as its leading editorial, an article ‘borrowed’ from an American ex- change. now takes issue with the staff correspondent o"! the Toronto Globe over the fact that depre- ciation of the Canadian dollar in New York means a beneficial cur- tailment of Canadian purchasing of United States goods and in- creased purchasing at home. Our contemporary has evidently aband- oned the Globe a; its "guide, phil- osopher and friend." In doing so it seems to have gone further and fined worse. Its discovery that the American market "today largely determines the standard of_ value in international exchange" lends color to the suspicion that it has Vloo-Pnoldolfl-I. l. Burn-N DUNCES T0 GENIUSES Geniuses. as a rule, exhibit a p"- but the rule is subject to many outstand- tlwfie students who have tried sin- cerely and failed to win distinction in the classroom, the following list from an English exchange, of “dunces" whose subsc- quent careers must have occasion- ed considerable surprise to their Charles Darwin never could- learn class-yet we do not know the name of one of the forty-one who Sir Isaac Newton was next to lowest in his form. He failed in his geometry because he did not do his probems the way the book said he sessed even ordinary powers of George Eliot teamed to read with very great difficulty. She gave no Sir Walter Scott was never bril- pended from Harvard for complete Oliver Goldsmith was at the very Emerson was a. hopeless dunce in James Watt, inventor of the steam engine, was the butt of his playmates at Mr. McAdams School. G. Bemont, co-discoverer of rad- ium, was so stupid in school that CURRENCY AND TRADE iiiilES Bi’ According to the July blink ltltc- ment deposits in Canadian banks amounted to 849.000.0013 more m!!! i. rm: GUARDIAN " . nu: wAvl s ‘ .. Reminders and Reviews lust year. we have on ’ $1,45l,000,000 this added to the various amounts on current ac- count and in stocks and bond! would seem to indicate that. not- withstanding the much talked 0! depression we still have some- thing left for a rainy day. Prob- ably we would have more for the suushiny weatherifwe spent morc and deposited less in the banks. United '\\tes investments in Canada, have reached the colossal total of 8,790,300,000, taking 1B branch plants, mines, public utili- ties. Dominion, provincial and other bonds. If foreign caipllfll comes here it ls slrrlllly because foreign capitalists feel certain that money invested in Canada is as safe and as profitable as money in- vested anywhere in the world. e- to In p, recent address Mr. Arihlll‘ Henderson said. "I am going t0 make a little confession to you. I claim to be as strong a free trade!‘ as any of our friends. But l! I were faced with a large cut-off in payment given to unemployment. and a 10 percent. tariff as an em- ergency expedient, the revenue therefrom to be assisncd i0 1m‘ employment purposes . . . if that would meet the situation I would try the value of that expedient- is The British birth rate has fallcll to 16.3 per thousand the lowest 1n many years. But Great Brltflln takes a philosophic view of m‘? situation which not so long ago would have been viewed with alarm. The New Statesman sum it up in these words: . "Smaller families mean 0n the whole healthier families. better nurtured and educated families. more efficient and productive fam- ilies, as well as a far better life for the mothers. Nor, in face of the work of rationallzation in dispens- lng with iubor, need We feel‘ ‘i shortage of hands to perform the necess y productive tasks. Some day when the steak is 8 little tough, or the toast perhaps not so hot as it might be. 0!‘ the ' undercrust of a Juicy Blllilc p16 9' bu; soggy, instead of complaining give a. thought for the thousands who would be glad to trade P111065 with you nevertheles. The problem of the future of oiir children is, if anything more acute than ever, says an cxchantic. fif- teen or twenty years ago our young men found it easy enough to get jobs if they had a commercial dip- loma showing proficiency in stenc- graphy, shorthand, etc.‘ In these days it is the young girls who get these positions. If thejobs were only given to those girls who were, obliged to wrok, it would not be so bad, but the unfortunate thing is that many of these young girls only work in order to be able to spend more on luxuries. The result is that young men can no longer get these positions, and in times of crisis like today, one sees in many houses the anomaly of sisters working while the brothers can find nothing bet- ter to do than to hang around the street corners. S ll o The tariff which will he set up 0 at Westminster, either by the res- ent co-operative Government or by the Government which will shortly succeed it, will provide for the first time in generations a medium by which preferential treatment may be extended to products from Can- ada and other parts of the Empire. Nor does any doubt remain that such preferences will be of a sub- stantial character. trade and the coureurs de bola. quick as an otter an always sure of himself," who lost his first love to the "Venerable Bourgeoys" but who later married Cecile. the anticipation of the watchers as the ships 00mg in. Shlpg that came once a year only to the (Quebec) bringing supplies and news» from the Old Land. more than one reason, but the out- standing reason to me is that the reader seems actually to live in the spirit of the recreated period. Some may miss the dash and clatter of advcnilire but others, like myself, will enjoy the quiet flow of the passages, especially these; autumn had come on; all the vast Canadian shores were clothed in a. plendour never seen in France; to which all the pageants of all the, kinks were as a taper to the sum, Even the rugged cliff-side behind, her kitchen do was beautiful; the wild cherry and sumach and the blackberry vines had tinned crim- son, rmd the birch and poplar sap- gleaming in the soft, hyacinth-col- beeches. Most beautiful of alll was the tamisheu gold of the elms, with a little brown in it, a little bronze, a little blue, even, a bl e like ame- thyst, which made the azure haze with a kind of hap- piness, a. harmony of mood that filled the air with content." Gather was a volume of verse, “Aprll Iwllights." Her next. a vol- Some reviewers of "Shadows on the Rock." Willa Gather‘: latest book, are not so eulogistic u they were regarding “Death Comes for the Archbishop." They say it loch. action; that it is too quiet, and c116 must. admit there is nothing “ - itinish" about the mrvqrne thrill- ing incidents and sword-clashing so necessary to some historical novels would seem out 0f place in the writings of Miss Cathcr: she is dignified and restrained 51W!!!- This is particularly true of her two last books. but the New Mexican story, woven of coarser material. (excepting for the threads of gold- characters that inspired the story —) has raw, crude spots of neces- sity. . In "Shadows on the Rock" she combines the culture of the Old World with the heroism of the New, and creates a story that, in the opinion of some critics, is likely to become a classic. We are taken back to the Quebec of 1697; to Euclide Auclair and his twelve-year old daughter Cecile, and knowing them, we become ac- quainted with Count de Frontenac. the patron of Auclair. He is rc- vcaled to us as a gallant soldier, and a broken-hearted man whose exile meant much to New France but very little to his King. We meet Bishop Laval, stem churchman and ascetic, so hard on himself and so kind w child- ren, whom Cecile belleved had “A kind of majesty in his grimness and poverty. seventy-four years o!‘ age and much crippled by his in- firmities, going about in a rusty old cassock, he yet commanded ones admiration in a. way that the new Bishop, with all his personal elegance, did not. One believed in his consecration, in some special authority won from fasting and penance and prayer; it was in his face, in his shoulders, it was he." Pierre Charron, “hero of the fur We share the tense excitement,- "Rock" This is a remarkable book for wry and its beautiful descriptive "The glorious transmutation of - we say four men lifting a man, specimen of physical manhood, from a dirty boat in which he was lying face downward in a drunken stupor. A few minutes earlier, this man's companion had fallen rirunk over the wharf. tint- on Prince Edward Island, did we?" And never before did we see such a sight in Nova Scotia, al- though we have spent thirteen vaca- tions here. We hear Nova Bcotians, who two years ago were ardent lup- porters of “Government Control" cursing their folly. West Bl)’. _N0va_Sc0tia, September 22, 1931. PUBLIC FOR U M i Thin column in open lol- ll" mat... by oormiwllllfllil clqucctionaoiiniacnt. Th! Charlottetown Glltdhn doc! no ncecunorll: nodal-u tho opllihll of con-uranium- N. s. Nsuns CONVIBSIONS Elli. Point yvhere the bridegroom was duly inducted as Minister of the Ukiitcd Churches, Baptist and Dis- clplcs of Christ. mam ywl M“ Jhir minister and his wife. lwom- Pllflbd by their three children re- moved to North River, where they spent five years. The Minister men- tioned is the writer of this article. For thirteen years. we have enjoyed the delights of beautiful Abegweih- The Garden of the Gulf. We have enjoyed the hospitality of the homes. We have enjoyed Christian fellowship with brethren both of cur own and of other denominations- Ca“ and Protestant. We have formed friendships which we hope to renew in another world. Now, we are returning t0 our native pro- vince, taking with us three byui lit- tie Islanders, who have been accus- tomed, playfully, to call their par- ents "foreigners." Just now, we are enjoying the magnificent scenery and the warm-hearted hospitality of Cope Breton-"Tir Dhev." We love the Island and we love our native Sim-Thirteen years m. W0 1%- va Scotiuu, bride and ‘idclfflfllfl. became‘ citizens of Prince Edvvlfll mum, settlinl in the "w" “t 5114a. l’ BnAv-JID mvas A SIGN THAT svsram uAs BEEN Sl-IOCKED When we were ymlfllflml ""1 h“ an attack of hives. just what mllllt have caused it was not given much thought. A dosa oi castor oil was the t-eatment and that was all thli mattered. Nowadays an attack oi hive! (mum-la) is given real attention not because there is Bllyihllm din‘ gerous about it, but because it is a sign, a signal that some article of food or other substance upsets the whole body, and the hives is Just what the skin shows 0n the outside of the body; the real action on the body processes is going on inside. Investigation shows that during an attack there is loss of red cor- puscles in the blood. As these are the food and air carriers to the tis- sues this is important to every cell in the body. The blood loses some of its sticki- ness and it is this stickiness that means good healthy blood; this is important. The blood pressure falls during angatiack of hives, also. Now this loss of red corpuscles, loss of stickiness in the blood, and the lowering of the blood pressure, all mean that the system has re- ceived a ‘shock.’ Nova Scotia. We see changes, some for the better, some for the worse. A sight that saddens a home-lover, when travelling in Nova scotia is that of the provincial coat of arms used as a means of advertising the Government liquor stores. Another saddening sight is that of the all too evident increase of drunkenness under Government sale. As one in- cldent-ln a small Nova Scotiu town, whom nature had made a splendid My nine year old little girl said: ‘Father, we never saw anything like I am, Sir, etc" WALLACE B. MACWALKER. not. cause shock when taken in larg- ' er amounts later on. tion of small quantities of a. strong solution of baking soda or other al- kaline salt. hive-ii. emptying the stomach by tickling the throat with a feather, or by giving a little mustard and water is helpful. If seen some hours after eating, a dose of Epsom salts is good treatment. is given by mouth or by hypodermic injection. Such shocks are not good for the individual and] he would be wise to try and locate Just what food or foods may be causing them. Very often this is not hard, and by avoiding these foods, or eating them in small quantities, he is able to avoid hives u: urticaria. When the food causing the trouble is not known then treatment is of course more difficult. It may mean trying out various foods by them- selves, and when the one causing the trouble is located, very very small amounts of that food are taken every day in an effort to get the system so used to it that it will Other methods include the injec- Ilbr the immediate treatment of To overcome the ‘shock’, adrenalin It’s Better in 77w Best in Pickardb ‘Scotch Anthracite Coal offers the con- sumer the utmost in hard coal value. It is ly and thoroughly screened, thus eltmlnaii ‘and providing a one hundred per cent burnable fuel, Try a ton for your furnace. . A. PICKARD e co. L O 0K For Our New Missing Letter Contest Page Educational amt Interesting. iFroe Merchandise Prizes Each Week ,_ . » JKBOUT 1 pm . UWPNG :Pvf:T."YPII'Y¥'-- theYEnd to Bu, the Beginning! mechanical. "8 all slack ososnznoobv-Iuuuv-u. -»--- {_ I Railway Men! We have a special Accident and Sick- hess policy for you. Why not let us take care of your pro. tection, We can furnish prompt and careful service in settlement of claims, and will appreciate your business. We will be glad ~to discuss this, or any other class of insurance, at any time without obligation. - H YNDIJAN '6’: The Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. I. Lower Queen Street i §__,_ - CO., LIMITED Charlottetown It sho '-' be remembered that in- ngs were yellow. ‘PS0 many kinds of gold, all ured haze of autumn; bright gold f the birches, copper gold of the em melt into The first published book 0i Miss These developments are of im- l1 mense interest to Canadians because published by the house of McClure- they forcast the acceptance of the PPhillips in 1904. This volume a- Right Honorable R. B. Bennett’s‘roused the interest of S. S. M6" proposals at the last Imperial Coh-jClure, a discerning critic, ference in London. The Canadianused two of the stories in Mc- Premier had the vision and theiclures Magazine, aXld courage to diagnose the infra-Empire trade arrangements as,C a means of serving not only Great Two years later she became man-l Britain but the Empire as a. whoienaging editor of McClure’: and held Short-sighted people and mere par-What position l0!‘ 101-11‘ yP-FTB- Du?‘ tisans in this country condemned lng thBt period 9f editorial work him "at the time. They denounced‘ his courage as dictatorial. In so 60-, ing they manifested their own lack of economic understanding as is N amply demonstrated by current, political development in the Brit-i ish Parliament and throughout the British Isles-Ex. 8 the expenditure of the administration had and to bum the navy ‘up to the standard permitted by the London Despite pressure of navy officials it it seems extremely unlikely that the ,normal time: it has been neglected United States will build up to this but of recent years. - standard, m: m view of the ‘present powerful lobbvina- it h" bvwmfl United States, however, is made ex- min been cribbins Iuflebiiiiouslvmuze namhh “M, m, the 8,“. on, o; m, ‘m; mum, o, "mung oplnoii expenditur- _ peedingiy difficult by reason of the fromthciioltcnlhnsoripf.‘ erul depression, public Britishdater offered the author a position situation aright and to make a on his magazine. A biographical forhanded proposal of preferentlai:sketch states; lshe wrote very little. She travelled American Southwest, Arizona and editorial work and wrote her f.'\t novel, "Alexander's Bridge." was followed by "The Song of the Lark," and "My Antonia," "Youth and the Bright It is extraordinary to learn thotlMcdu-sn," “One 01' 01111." "A 108i United Lady." “The States upon army and navy is "My Mortal Enemy," and .“Death nearly three times as great as "ilciim" 3°!‘ the 579151-9109?’ All of w” pep," the w“, when 1t wggthese books have been translated . $366,173,000, whm, 1n Coolidge’; intoreveral European languages. increased to and Willa Cather has a rapidly $a1a,ooo.ooo. 1t is now $750,000,000. crowing European reputation?’ would revolt. The navy has never Treaty would cost s1,ooo.000.001{been to the Amer-ca me of stories, "The Troll Garden," "I who two years “She joined Mk- lurc). staff in the winter of 1906. great deal, in Europe, and in the ew Mexico. In 1012 she gave up This "O Pioneers!" Professor's House," B! I'd people what has been t0 Great Britain. In by dent of Rough, heavy hands are fumbling And shoulders mck the beams with ‘Out of my path, grey kennel where While earth's heart quivers to the The trolls, weighed down with sil- To chant their hell-hymns on the The dismal clouds rush forth in And sweep the plain with drooping Nor trees that scream there, tortur- "Pis but the poor dwarf birchea’ pit- Hclplesaly drowning in the hillowy Oh, what a desolate elemental cry; The earth out pouring drums long Deep in ltl lonely bosom, dreams of anguish, Into this one millennial autumn Ho than you wet-eyed Lcpp, go Pile on l. heap o! knotty twisted I'd kneel and worship here in pagan Gluttod with dread from days o. " tizat the dusty monarch of all’ luau pllt my door in naked mnj- _» -Tnn.li|tcd from the Swedish o.’ mum: Karifoldt by Charles 8811-" d’ , teeth, tonsils-may also cause attacks of urticaria. odZLQoMzr/r. MOUNTAIN STORM at the door, savage glee: men flee midnight‘: roar!’ once, now wax bold mountain crest. mad uni-est Ii mantle-f ‘d. is not. the thundering rush of wat- era-hark!- ed by the gale; emu wail. dork. er , wont to languish lllhl \ - - mend the firs, woodl fllflfl; THE SILVER LINING mists" but business men-due t0 the differing angles from which they view the situation. A touch of self-interest often deflects the vis- ion. this action and its repercussions in Canada, fairly plain:- ~4. It should give Canada a prefer- ence on her exports to Great Brit- count, obviously the British pounds will buy more Canadian dollars than American dollars. Thus it will be a better bargain for the British buyer to secure an article sold on the Canadian dollar basis than on the American dollar bass. This will help to that extent the Canadian exporter aguints his American rival. It. will be a species preferences on Co 2. It will give the British produc- Conadian market. As the pound falls, his goods will fall with it. They will do this with- out affecting the labour ‘production at home as long as wages remain charges, such as rent, likely to be affected. Only impor- ted raw (Montreal Star) Even economis‘ differ violently like But there are certain effects of if permanent, that are pete. n. 3- 1f our dollar remains at a, dis- still port the of Imeprlal " goods. fully an added preference in the goods cost of the same. Other are not materials will go up, ne- .\\_\\\\ fore its altar flame to heart's desire. ' weep, never before l0 bitterly, Ian: u». 3 Wu! Mt]. Wharton ltorkjn the American- <KIDNE "kllillllltSl" * Phil: Oiill PlLifsl w fix» g The cessarily. ‘This means that should be able to offer his wares for sale in Canada at something USE BRAHMIN TEA And Enjoy Its Supreme Qualities : fectlon from any source-intestine, y v » as to the effects of Great Brllsfifs I 55c Per Pound “dd” d“’°'°° ‘mm ‘hi’ 8°14 ‘will Sold Only in Red Air Tight Packages and. ‘This is sometimes-especially with P691719 who are not “ec°n°' he the previous price in British currency. This will equal a con- siderable reduction in terms of American currency; and it is with American goods, priced in Ameri- can currency, that he must com- I-t will reduce wages for the purpose o’f export trade. Wages in Great Britain will buy as much in the way of domestic goods. except u they are raised by various factors, such a: foreign ingredients. But they will not coat the manufacturer for ex- purposes so much in terms ‘.1 his foreign markets. This will give eworting manufacturer the advantages he has seen and sought. ~ in lowered wages, without mater- affecting the wage-earner. It is a sort of economic miracle. 4. It may increase tho purchuc of some British and Canadian in the United Btatog, A universal lowering of the colt of Canadian and British goods ll ‘equivalent to a reduction in the American tariff. A tariff ilnpost on llrmrted article is really u much apsrtofitsooatasuretiaetrsnl- portal-ion clu/rgea. may all lump in together when the article coma to be sold over the counter. Bo u re- duction in coat in the country of production has precisely the some effect-u a lowering of the duty. the Americans are in the‘ iosition of having lowered their iutlu on British. and Canadian foods. The Americana have trad't~' defences in their dumping sauces and their iovlcc on Ameri- can coat ram. It will decrease Canadian buying iii-ma lmuglling fromf-l ‘sorder American citiel. ' merchant: of Buffalo were prompt ll puwng in: their sign! r wart Canadian _ Curl-aw. Th0! could do nothing else when their banks refused it; and their banks could not possibly accept at Pa? 5 currency which had fallen from 5 to 10 per cent on their exchanfltlff But the inevitable result will b’! dlsoorurugg Canadians from crow lng over to these handy Amerm“ cities to d0 their shopplilB- 1W will not like the rebuff to tlicir cur rancy, and they will not like my a huvv bwmlum on a“ m“? buy. It will amount to a memhm turnover tax. And it will i191 Canadian merchants. A highway is to be constructed’. fmm the Dead Sea to Jerlw Rm’ in Palestine. i i out. a. Ell|i$ 1 of London Eng. Nolcil Iliyllchn, treated auc- comfullv and obtained 11"’ mlneni. curs of Siomlch Conditions, ouch u Indilfi’ lion. DIINIII-lniour Stom- ach, Heartburn. Gnu-lo Dis- ircuu and may other ailment! poculllr to the stomach with l linlctlpflon I lch we have procured and all under the lama of Ivan: Stomach Mll- ;,.5*" 1-1151?‘- IikA-l_. We alone am the w" rum on m. pmmvflw ""1 . vinoo If have received nun lntimonialn from alluded pun-chum. _ Don't fool will: your atom- noli, pal-ion condition l" iibiy to aria: if yo! 1"" vclriolf lo In into a chronic etch of o mum Gets bottle Milly. Prico 854'- flic "RC3 Mail Orion Gino Prom?‘ Aihoiioo.