i Mon-o.- .sna an-qnQsst ~,,.,_,,,.,,., ’ commonwealth. It PAGE SIX line GIIARLUTTETOWN surname ' , l F-J- $‘“‘d.“‘?“| Chute: 8. llelmre, "11""! - flvcrefnry-Jfleun-Col. 15.1fm: Ind Managing lrrn-gor-d. R. llurnelt, I’. J. I- Annolalo killllur~i— l-‘rank Walker and D- A. (Jurnu $4.50 per your (In nth-ante) mnl ADVERTISING RIC UNITED STATll5--The IINUWIF" ernl ltulldlng, New York Clly, General Ilulldlulg, Kenna! Atlanta; lllonadnock Building, Sun Francisco; h: Phlimlelplfla. "ma" our; (IIIIIIMIPKI um woo n» city. Wlllouzlihy Tower Building. Qhlrulo: yup (In tdvnnu) delivered In! In Canada and United Stair: PICEHIINTATIVHII _ Spechll Agency Inc, hen fork Cen- summ- liulltling, Detroit. lnleniiail Glenn Bull» ll3fl Xu- Gblh Bin-rt FRIDAY, JUNE 30. 1933. l4 GREAT ANNIVERSARY "And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thl‘ 50d " ‘led tbce.“-—Deut. a;2. Tomorrorv is Dominion Day- 811. anniversary ever notable to Canad- ian citizens as marking the birth.‘ on July l, i867. of the Dominion of was Cape Breton, that Prince Ed-i Canada, This year it has Wild-fir‘, significance for the 1.7801918 0f 9115' Province in that it falls on the' Diamond Jubilee of Prince Edlvamll Island's entry into Confederation. Elsewhere in today's issue appear’ congratulatory messages from thc Rt. Hun. Sir George H. Polio)’. K. C. M. G.. Acting, Prime Min- islet‘, and frcln the Prclllffllli 0f U10 other Provinces, “chose cordial good wishes on this occasion will be read with the utmost interest and appreciation. Messages also appear from His Honour Lieutenant Gov- ernor Dalton. and from Premier the‘ Hon. J. D. Stewart. The events leading up to Confederation, and the part played by the Confederation ifatesmen of this Province in bring- ing Prince Edward Island into union with the Ciomlnlon, are also dealt with. this being an opportune time to refresh the memory of our older readers. and instruct the minds of the younger, on a subject of such treat and far-reaching importance. There were few outward indica- tions that the Canada of 1867 would become, in the course of little more than half a century, one of the greatest nations within the British was then a zountry circumscribed in population, lh area. development and in commerce. Railway building in resource was in its infancy w-ith a mere 2.200 miles in the central provinces. There was not a single milc of track north of the Great Lakes and a. trans- continental line was nearly twenty years away. Water transportation was both archaic and slow. Good roads in the modern sense were practic- ally unknown. Halifax and Saint John. Quebec and Montreal towns rather than cities. were Winnipeg was a settlement of a few hundred. lost in the immensities of the prairie. Regina was Pile O‘ Bones, Saskatoon not even planned; Cal- gary and Edmonton had not start- ed to outgrow the trading post stage: Vancouver, a mere five-year- old infant. The West No Man's Land, and a trip in pre- railway days across the plains was on adventure. The Rocky Moun- tains rose up as an almost unsur- was E mountable barrier between eastand west. and British Columbia was a terra incognito to the rest of Can- lda. It required breadth of vision to rec. in the scattered colonies of British North America as they cx- istcd in i807, the nucleus of the Dominion of Canada of today. That was tho great achievement of the fathers of Confederation; and they had the faith and oounee to stand by the vision which was vouchsafcd to them. The strides made by Canada in recent years have been the subject of world-wide comment and observa- tin. It is a truism to say that we lave within our domain all the cle- rfients of power, all the essentials of léosperity, all the factors requisite ' a strong and verile citizenship. gaw that there are unmistakable agns of recovery from the past flree years of world depression, it ihoovcs us to take stock of these ga-mifold blessings, and, with grat- iidc to Providence for safe guid- écc in the past, to step forward with renewed faith and courage. '5'- canors LANDFALL ifawfoundlanders allvparcntly ire "i; going to accept without pro- tiit the assertion made in an article ithe current issue of the Canad- i Geographical Journal, ‘to the sgcct that John atom memorable the 436th anniversary of which oc- curred on June 24, was the eastern extremity of CW9 Brew“ Bland and not Cape Bonavista, Newfound- land. The contention, as noted in these columns recently, is not without local interest as it is hlzh- iy probable, if cabots "Prima vista" yvard Island \vas one oi the firs! places on which he landed. The ar- guments pro and con are fully dealt with in Warburtows History o.“ Prince Edward Island» l" which the weight of evidence seems clearly to favour Newfoundland. However, the issue seems again in dispute and the St. JOhKVS (NW!) Evening Telegram offers the fol- lowing comment: “Thirty-six years ago when foundation stone of Cabot TOWEI‘ was laid on Signal Hill. the four hundredth anniversary was effective- ly celebrated. Then. there‘ appear- ed to be little doubt held as to the actual landfall. Newfoundland, however, has done nothing since then to press its claim. The day passes unobserved. and in the mean- time Canada hss stepped. in. to contest it, despite the fact that existing maps and records appear to substantiate the contention that Newfoundland was the first land sighted. The very fact that Cabot sailed on a northerly route would suggest that it would have been al- most impossible {or him to have reached Cape Breton without hav- ing first sighted the Newfoundland coast. In any case. since the actual landfall is still an open question, and in view of the geographlrcl po- sition of the Island, Newfoundland has strong reasons to assert its claim for the honour of having been the first land sighted by the Navigator, to whom was paid by Henry VII. ‘ten laouncls for having found the new isle)" CANADA’S ATTITUDE Through her Geneva rep- resentative, Dr. W. A. Riddell. Can- ada has told the Disarmament Con- ference of her belief that manu- facture of arms should be restricted to State-owned establishments; in words, that it should be taken away frcm those people who depend for their profits taper. war, or upon preparations for war. The story of the activities of private armament manufacturers is fairly well known. More than ten years other ago a committee of the League of Nations put them down as tomca- tcrs of war. It said of them that they deliberately started war rum- ors. worked to create ill-feeling between nations; bribed. or sought to bribe the oflicials of foreign governments", managed, ln some countries to control the press. Yet, despite this indictment, and not- withstanding repeated attempts to restrict private manufacture of arms, the armament makers have gone on their way, growing more powerful from year to year. It ls well for Canada to sieze every op- portunity of dissociating herself from these activities, and through her representatives at Geneva. to press for their abolition even though the probably of such a measure being endorsed by thc League is remote. EDITORIAL NOTES “Where else in history can one find the record of a people no few accomplishing things so great in a time 5o short?" Canada's present, Prime Minister, Right Hon, R, B, Bennett, once asked the foregoing question in the course of one of his addresses. Up to the present no one has fillBtested an answer. The name "Canada" was a term used to designate all the Indians of this country and it is to be found in many early writings. Jacques the l NOTES BY THE WAY [low can the influence of the Bible, or Shakespeare be measured? A thousand years from now the in- fluence cast by these works will human feeling. All effort, to be of any lasting influence. must be sin- cere. It must bear the mark of an honest mind and heart. N0 one should be ashamed of ones beliefs! Not ncwspapermen alone but the public generally will be interested in the new law put into effect recent- ly in New Jersey under which no ltorial body could require any re- porter to divulge the source of con- fidential infomation used in news articles. This law simply recognizes what has long been the code of the news-gathering profession: that a reporter is in honour bound to protect the person from whom he gets information of legitimate in. terest to the public. It ls a new bulwark for the freedom of the DWI. » Time was when fiscal and econ- omic disturbances were confined within recognizable limits and such speculations as the “Mississippi Bilb- blfi" 01' the “South Seas Scheme" affected one naton only, the rcst being interested only as lockers on. But conditions have entirely chang- ed and the rapid means of converse between nations. coilpled with the unprecedented scope of their trade interchanges have intensified the problem of securing any equilibrium upon tariffs. currency units, debts. prices. etc. to a tenfold degree. Almost at the mvment the news- papers in the United States carried the information that federal auth- orities would undcrtake Q. campaign t0 suppress bandits and rackeicers throughout the country, a band of killers Bl'l1‘i€d with machine guns murdered four peace officers and an escaped convict in the Union simian Plaza in Kansas City. The (‘rln1illa15 thus furnished a, cflnffete C35,; for the forces of order to lest their strength on. And there are divers others in diverse places. History ls the record of strong nations overthroivn and the plains of Asia are littered with their ruins. china, the one nation of the 01d world that has never made a cult of Mars, alone endures, her essential strrnath unimpaired by foreiitu vie/- tories that loomed large im- iiie mo. merit but had no permanent value. —-HOIig Kong Weekly Press. Everyone remembers how gross and the nation repudiated President Wilson's commjtmcnts after the Paris Peace Conlcrcrlcc. 1!- hlid bfifll hoped that the terrible economic ordeal through which tllc neighboring Republic has lately Passed and. indeed. is still passing, had taught Congress the absolute need of ¢°~°Deration with cine. "alums 90 secure a return of nor- mal material Progress and prosper- ity. C-tn- Dr. Robert A. Millikan. eminent United States physicLst, presents new evidence “garnered in the dark interior of the atom” inni, creation still proceeds in the cos- mic vastncss of interstellar sjtace, H15 Claim l5. with all reverence,’ that the Creator is still on the job. Mr. R. B. Bennett, thr- vigorous Prime Mnister of Canada. will not leave the World Conference uncon- sclous of his presence. He comes "W! H Dominion that is a world in “$913 B- land that is vast enough and rich enough to guarantee the future ofwestern civilization f0 centuries to comgg 1-19 docs not apologize for being British. m glories in it. He believes that the Brill-ill Empire is a than: of design ind "09 B-wldént. Mr. Bennett docs not want to see that design de- stroyed nor even marred. He believes in internationalism under the Brit- ish n88- Such men madc the 13m. Dire. Such men will save it-Lon. don Daily Depress, -___. In the literary and cultural sense 51°99 the Bible ls a treasure not ugh“? to be despised. The speech °f d5"? 1119 1S moulded on it, 1n HIGH‘ (IQEDCSQ mornicnts people 5m] quote “'5 Phrfl-WB» often quite un. consciously. Literature is steeped in it. Art has searched its pagcg roi- “,5 loftiest subjects. In its magnum"; rolling periods and swift movements of manner and tone music has found its finest inspiration. And n11 this without touching the purg] religious effect of the Bible. ' Stadaoorle (Quebec) as Hing of Canada. and applies the name Can- ada to the country lmmedjamy adjacent. The name Canadicns was given the Algonquin tribes on or near the St. Lawrence river by French writers of Jacques Cartier‘; still be fresh for each is woven With ' court, grand jury. or other inquLk. 1 lame: W. Baden. MD. REHIUVING DISCQNTENT In these days of machinery most of us, as we remember the days when almost all labour wall done by hand, are apt to rejoicelhat men can now direct; machinery and thus avoid the hard muscular work of former days, Naturally as man cannot be so lircd as in those days, and has a “viking day really tlvu or three hours less than before the machine age. one would expect to find him happier because of this extra lei- sure time. But man is really p0,; happier in this machine type oi work, because he does the some thing every day, every hour of the day. End perhaps fvery minute; in fact he is almost like the machine itself, doing the elilnlfl‘ $111114; all the time. I'm speak. ing of course of times when the population as a whole is working. And not only the working man, but the professional man also, 1s gctliilg so luuch of his work done in the laboratory by such definite "lcillflds. that. there is not the same thought being given to individual cusos or problems. It is this very sameness, this dal‘y routine, that is making so many people discontented. What is really needed to keep us llllplly and contented even when there is plenty of work for every. hotly‘? I have before quoted Dr, Warm. ins definition of what work should really be. 1. Work should be a, daily “d. venture; going out each day‘ to tackle uouicthing different, sonic- illing that should give you a thrill. 2. Your work should freed some» llliug of your brain in it; some scr- ious thinking or planning. 3. Your work should be such that when it is done it is of a construc- tive or useful nature; of use to your fellow man. 4. Your work should help you mingle daily with other workers, and should train you to get along with tlicln without the slightest trouble, In other words the cause of dis- contentczlncss is that so much is done for us by elevators, automo- biles, radio. and other machines. This takes the advcnttlrc, the plan- hing, and the “constructiveness" out of our daily life. . What is the suggestion? That if our work is simply a daily routine, then some hobby, some dif- fcrcnt line of endeavor, some special reading, some special work that is helping the other fellow, might rca- sonably be expected to remove “dis- ccuivnt", and make life really worth living. THIS IS TIIE LAND I From “Fragment of ArrOde to Carlads." It lies outstretched a vision of de- light. ' Bcnt like a shield between the sil- ver seas It flashes back the hauteur of the sun; Yci. tccms with humblest beauties, still a part OI its titanic and ebullient heart. . ¢ - And Thou, 0 Po\ver that ‘stablislied the Nation, wisdom in the midst of our elation; Who are so free that we forget we UPC- That freedom brings the deepest obligation: Grant us this prestige for a‘ guld. fng star, To lead the van of Peace, not with a. craven spirit, But with the consciousness that we inherit What built the Empire out Q1 blqpd and fire, And can smite, too, in passion and with ire. Purge us of pride, who are so quick in vaunting Thy gift, this land, that is innoth- ing wanting; Give mind to match the glory of the gift, Give great ideals to bridge the 501-. did rift ' Between our heritage and our use of it. GIV -Duncan Campbell Scott. In hunting for criminals in 13mg- lrmd, Scotland Yard is displaying their pictures mid descriptions in motion picture theatres. Paper has been manufactured in what. now is Czechoslovakia since 1520, when a mill that still is in operation was established in Mor- uwuwmewteflti-Plle- Qhfl-ifl‘ 135G390! the Ohief OI - i - em-ezifl-WPWFFZT ’ rm“- i-AiIK-I-alifilllkifi‘: Kw‘ ‘ . ' l CONFEDERA TION RECORDS Compiled from authoritative sources by 1L R. Slcwart- Deputy Provincial Secretary. Extracts from Speeches o! lb! Fathers of Confederation and Others as Set Forth ln U10 Union of the Provinces ~hy ulononblc Edward Whelan and Edited by' D. C. Harvey, M.A., F.R.S.C. The Honourable John A. Mac- donald at Charlottetown: The D90- plc of these lower Provinces of Canada were separated too long. Our hearts were one: our loyalty and attachment to the Throne of England one and we were of one ancestry-except. a portion of Can- ada--; and yet we were unfortun- ately severed from each other by the present construction of our re- spective constitutions and govern- ment's. He had, however, every reason to believe that the result of the convention that had held its sittings in Charlottetown for the past week, would lead to the for- mation and establishment of such a federation of all the British North American provinces, as would tend to very materially enhance their individual and collective prosperity, politically, commercially, and so- cially; and also give them, in their united manhood, that national prowess and strength which would make them at least the fourth na- tion on the face of the globe. He then alluded to the uninterrupted pleasure and happiness which he, in common with all the delegates, felt at their visit to this lovely Is- land. The Honourable George Etienne Cartier at Charlottetown: They‘ (the delegates) met to enquire. whether it were possible for the‘ Provinces from their present frag- mentary and isolated material to form a nation or kingdom; Canada of herself. though she was a large country, with a vast and extensive interior, could not make a. nation, neither could the Maritime Prov- inces of themselves become a king- dom. It was therefore essentially necessary that those national frag- ments and resources of all the Provinces should be concentrated and combined, in order that they in their trade, intelligence. nation- al power and prosperity might be rated as at least the fourth nation of the world. The Honourable Doctor Tapper at Charlottetown: "The deliberations of the convention were conducted apart from the public not because there was any desire to conceal its proceedings bill: in order that the confidential character of the dele- gation might lead to speedier re- suits." He felt amured that all would endorse the sentiment that it was our duty and interest to cement the colonies together by every tie that can add to their greatness. A union of the North American provinces would elevate their position, consolidate their in- fluence and advance their inter- ests, and at the same time con- tinue their fealty to their Mother Country and their Queen, which fcalty is the glory of us all. The Honourable Adams Cr. Argu- bald. Leader of Her Majesty's Op- position in Nova. Scotia: "We may be proud of the inauguration of the movement which at no very dist- ant day will be looked upon as ‘one of the greatest and most important events of the present age." He then alluded to the harmony and good- will which prevailed during all the deliberations of the convention. in proof of which he adduced the fact; the Conference was about to ad- journ to Halifax, lest Nova Scotia and New Brunswick should without further notice become annexed to the Island. Honourable George Brown at Toronto: "We arrived at Charlotte- town on the 1st September and most kindly and hospltably were we received. We were invited to take seats in the conference and to address its members, and we at once p. ceded to open up to them the object of our mission. What we said to them was this: We in Can- ada have had serious sectional dif- ferences, but at last we have agreed to a settlement of our troubles on a basis just and equitable to all sec- tions of our country; we are about; to frame a new constitution, which will be acceptable to the great, mass of our people; and it has oc- curred to us on hearing that you too were considering a change in your constitution, whether it would not be well for us all to sit down together and consider how far if. would lead for the welfare and 800d government of our provinces were we to unite them all under one system of government. ‘Well, sir, we did sit down together. We discussed the whole subject in all its bearings. We looked at it from every point of view: and after eight or ten days deliberation we came to the unanimous conclusion that ll’ the details could be settled upon the advantage of the whole o! the“ provinces that we should be united.’ The Honourable s. L. Tlllev. Pr"- vlnclal Secretary and 101d" 0f the Government of New Brunswick. at Halifax: "It is shown that we have a popu- lation of nearly four millions; lb" our exports reach $180,000,000; that the value of our agricultural prop- erty amounts to $550,000,000; that our assessed property is put down at $550,000,000; under these circum- stances, knowing, as I believe I do. something of the spirit and intel- ligence of the people of these col- onies, they are prepared to say. that in view of the privileges we enjoy, and the responsibilities which we ought to assume. we are ready to pay our share for the de- fense and the maintenance of the liberties of our country. When it is said that those who are engaged in securing the confederation of the maritime, or the whole of the provinces, do so because the Im- perial Government desires lt, I say that those who are acting in com- mon with me, and I think I have had abundant opportunities of knowing it, are actuated by higher motives. . . We have only one common object in view-the pro- motion of the prosperity oi’ these provinces, their advancement so- clally andpolitically; and I can as- sure you that all of us fully feel the importance and responsibility of the trust that has been placed in our hands." Colonel the Honourable John Hamilton Gray. Prince Edward Is- land, at St. John expressed himself warmly but briefly in favor of Con- federation. He had before leaving England in order to take‘ up his res- idence in the land of his birth, re- solved to use his influence in favor of this measure, and he hoped to see it effected at leask“il'l"“fils""Iii'e‘-' time, when a railway from Halifax to Vancouver would bring us in speedy communication with the rich and ancient countries washed by the Pacific, bearing their treas- ures to us and carrying the fruits of our industry to them. Colonel the Honourable John Hamilton Gray, New Brunswick: "When the people of all British North America shell with one voice proclaim the colonies united. and when their united talent and in- fluence shall be exercised for the maintenance and advancement of their common interests, prosperity and happiness. every barrier to their advancement would be re- moved." The Honourable George Coles, Prince Edward Island, at St. John: “Canada has come down , to the Maritime Provinces and this little daughter-Prince Edward Island- has been wooed but not yet won. The blandlshments of the wooer had not altogether prevailed. Be- fore he would consent to the wed- lock he should understand fully whether Canada. with her expanse of territory and, great debt, was able to maintain her as well as she was in her present condition." The prospect. however, he finally con- fessed. seemed to favor a happy fwd Prosperous federal union“ The Honourable John Longworth of Prince Edward Island, at Char- lottetown: We as colonists enjoy- ing the rights and immunities of British subjects. could not but feel a-just pride in forming a part», of so great an empire, and whatever the future destiny of these Nomi American colonies may be, wheth. ei- linked together in federal union (Continued on Page 10) ' Max Factor Society _ Beauty Aids Created by Max Faohr, Hollywood's make-up genial who for many year: has been chief cnumctleiaa to the screen and stage profession. Max Factor preparations are in a largo way responsible for the splendid complexion of the celebrities. Some of our ifnel include: FACE POWDER FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN AND TISSUE ORE IM LEMON CREAM ROUGE AND LIPSTICK These preparations are made from the purest in- gradients, In correct color harmony ahulea to blend with individual complexion coloring. and il delicately perfumed to please the moat fasthfous tutu. - Visit our niore and see this new lino o! Toilet prepara- tlons. THE 2 macs‘ a basis Just to all, it would be for r "v 'H‘-'w"v“\".‘-"V\‘ILVAUQIiHBHUQN¢ ' ‘ "">“Yh'4h' '\'\\.I-‘.'.'e"\=‘§ll".‘f.',00¢"- ,, . _ r, A PROBLEM? If a living man cannot raise the two or three per cent. of the sum needed to maintain his film. ily after his death, how in the world will his wife be able to raise the entire amount? The Great-West Life is the champion of thrift and the guardian lan homes. Consult your nearest Agent or write Prince Edward Island Branch Office. HYNDMAN a 00.. LTD. Provincial Lower Queen Street FOR PERF EC l‘ _-USE— Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea ‘JUNE sq. i935 7 m of thousands of Canad. Managers Charlottetown TEA F LAVtDR Sold Only in Red Airtight Packages. PUBLIC FORUM Thin column ln open for lin- nllscuulnn by ourrennnnnh-nfs u! quuilonl oi‘ interval. The (fhnrloiielolvn (llmralhlll do" not neceunrlly emlnrne flu- uplnlolu of correspondent FIRST THINGS Sin-An effort is being made to gather a list of ,"firs_t things" which have happened in the Maritime Provlntes and Newfoundland. First shipbuilding. “F55 llf-‘WBDQ- per, first church service, first town incorporation, first marriage, birth, invention, discovery. etm. in this part of the “New World." _ It will be lpprenchiagd Tlearing from readers who may have histor- ical information or suggestions of this sort. I am. Sir. etc, JOHN W. REGAN. 520 Qufnpool Road. Halifax, Nova Scotia. PUBLIC UTILITIES Sin-At this time when the mat- tcr of electric light charges are bo- fore those wno arc, temporarily. i“ authority should not the matter of telephone charges come up also. It is an outrage that a concern ls given the right to make B. SQYVKB charge for selling anyone their pro- duct. Go into any business office and you expect to buy a product at cost plus a. reasonable profit. Herc we have a. concern charging the cit- izens who pay for the wiring of their homes, offices or business ialaces a charge for getting the light attached to their properties. Out- ragcous is the answer and provcs the poor business acumen of tho City councillors who agreed to it some years ago. Now as to the matter of the Tele- phone Company here is a. worse curse, if I may use the word. to the business world on this Island. A concern given a charter for the frcc use of our highways and bridges, the latter to the detriment of our fish- ermen, who cannot make regular cast on the streams without becom- ing entangled with the wires about 20 feet in the air ovcr their heads. Common sense should be uscd and these wires which any reasonable A person agrees are necessary sho f‘ be run along the bridge beams, y,” i as to the charges for the rent oi; phone, why should the rates per taining in 1028 and I020 be allow; today when, as the ivritei- lllldor. stands, the salaries of the cuipioyoci have been reduced. and some oi good ability lct out. We have ‘a Public Utilities Corn- misslon. In the name of sane rea- son let us have fair trcatnlent fui all and special privileges to none, I am, Sir, etc, BUSINESS ‘CONCERN Using Newspapers (Amherstbilrg Echo) How to reach a large number o. customers or prospective oustomen most economically and efilclentll is a. problem which still worries | great many business men. But if was really solved long ago. and the answer is this: Print your mcssagt in. the newspapers. ‘y Recently a Detroit electric 00$ pcmy which serves 500,000 custom- ers in nearly 200 cities and smalle: communities wanted to send their a. series of letters. After considerinl various‘ methods of distributini these messages, it was derided t< use local newspapers exclusively The first letter sent out, slgnvd b! the presdent of the company, be- gan as follows: “We have n lot oi things to tell you. wh’ch are of in- tercst DQ921150 you cvre our custom- crs. We might get your attention by circulars delivered to your door. or by radio broadcast. But we think the best way to roach you ishysuc- cessive letters in the ncwspnllfli» 01 which this 1s the first." In certain special cases the use o circulars or the radio may be falrl effective, but for dcflnte result economically obtained no advertls ing medium ever devised even all‘ preaches the family newspaper. ' fir. W. R. Garson CIIIROPRACTOB. Three Year Palmer Graduate I24 Prince St. Phone. 1072 Home Calls lllndc. A better tobacco and a better cure-what accounts for the popularity of our 1*’ lament . cmswmo llltlfliyc N * .1 lac-lawl- .n. iv"- ~er-.~». ‘only-manure m.» . ~. ‘WET’ lcnolN viva-m m." amm as-