Phocrouw m: BHARLOTTETOWII, culnnllll Notes lo o» wo President-W. (‘ho-try B. Iii-Lure N. l’. ‘ Snn-Inry-Iileul. (‘at h Editor and Mnmllllll Director-J li- "I'M" A|\_|lo_1:lnt_r_ El1|IllPl-—F'_P_ilfll_\_v£|_!P: 2d l_) Qlfflfl ll I 1i d l!!!) 83-00 pa: yen (In advance) delivered. I-Loiiriinc: dnulilnliivzncep muih-li an Canada and United amen. JP-"l" Still U nexplaincd In an endeavor to reillldme 1°‘ . . -1 sponsibility for including twlcc the and medical superintendent of Pal schOOIhOHBQS hill/e TUESDAY, APRIL, 21, 1931 In advising the Dominion Govern- nlent that it is opposed to the 1111- mission into the province of M1“ Alexandra Tolstoy, who wishes to edit a Doukhobor newspaper there. British Columbia states that it wants no more Doukhobors what- ever. The reason for the 0l1P°5ii1°11 is that some members o! 111B 880l- i‘ have been indulging in character- The annual report of the trustees m“, anti“ o; late and numerous been burned Vlrr-Prealdent-J- B- lurid! A lllmlilnnon l) ll 0. - Falconwooii ‘Report - down, not to mention other matters. 5am or $24,465.33, "Interest cn Slnk- ccnwood Hospital and the Provincial. ing Fund investments." in the Pub- Infirmary shows that at the begin- llc Accounts so called revenue and’ l expenditure statement. the Govern- ment callzd Mr. John Anderson, Provincial Auditor. and Mr. W. E- Mgssey, Assistant Alldiwl‘. b31959: the Public Accounts Committee. Both witnesses were vcry voluble in their answers to questions, but both attgmpijed, ably assisted by the Government questioner. i0 Side step the point at issue. Th9 Guardian pointed out. and reitn-ates. that in the statements of and expenditure printed ull 1111295 5! and 7 of Part 1 cl thc Public Ac- counts, crullt is taken twice in the total $1,483,451.35 for the sum of $24,465 83. No flnessing or juggling with terms can gainsay this. On the expenditure side immediately above the total of $1,483,45l_35. 311199515 the sum of $72,731.33 which includes the following; Ordinary debentures 518,515.50. Highway debentures $29.- 750, and Interest on Investments, $24,465.83. This total is then carried to the Revenue side and is shown above the total $1,483,451.35, as Ad- dition! to Sinking Fund $72,731.33. That, of course, we ilave shown. includes “Interest on Investments $24,465.83.“ But, also, on the Revenue side the Accounts take credit for this amount in a. total of $27,389.95 made up as follows; Premium on De- bentures sold—unapproprlated, $1,- 924.12, Interest on Sinking Fund In- vestments, $24,465.83, Difference on Gasoline Provision, $1,000. Thus in Chg grand total of $1,403,451.35, the sum of $24,465.83 is made to appear twice on the Revenue side-once in the $27,389.95 sum, and again in the sum of 572731.33: while it appears only once on the expenditure side of $1,483,451.35, namely in the item "Interest on Investments" $24,465.83, included in the figures $72,731.33, No amount of ccntriving on the part of the Government can possi- bly alter these facts, nor has thc Public Accounts Committee succeed- ed in explaining how the Govern- ment made their statements balance lwlth a difference of $24,465.33 on one tide. Canada's lllnturing Bonds ‘This ycar $78,000,000 of Dominion Government bonds will fall due, and will be replaced b_v new issues ‘bear ing interest at reduced rifles. Ill 1933, other bonds will mature to thc value of $446,000,000, representing the 15 year victory Loon issue or‘ 1918. And in 1934. the 191i‘- Victory Loan bonds will become payable. to the value oi’ $510,000,000. Tillls the Government of Canada must pro- vide for the refunding within the FBVCHUC ‘ i l Wise loafing is an art. The 111d!- ning of 1930 there were in the Hos-‘vldual who, during a, holiday period, pital 266 patients. During the year can put out of his mind altogether g7 patients were admitted. o1 dis-isle Wifld a“? “zfills: rxiilzleknsrx: l O TBS . ' charged and 21 died. Remaining in‘ °“’ lcmk; and the pedestrian who walks the Hospital at the end of the yeariml. Waudn-gs Sake knows Something W616 205-136 male, 129 female. The about lt. such pccvle return 11°11‘ a number under care during the year holiday refreshed ‘alldu 11111150112111: was 353. The percentage of recoveriesigggeeztfyrifgfgsietlgg: eInaVlYKEd on on admission was 5a, the pcrcent- m. mm come, back baflly 1a need of age of deaths 7.6. a rest, colleges might do worse Mention is properly made in thcithan establish a. course in 191511113- report of changes m the pal-Somali Thenc are some amazlnl; “B11115 and of the graduation of nursesion human longevity according to oc- durirlg the year; also of the work onicupauon recently disclosed who, Falconwood Fann, the purchase of "for instance, hasn't thought of ‘coal an electric motor, the installation 051111111118 110i will’ as a“ extra‘ a2‘ a new leadmp pipe to the wit" a-i-dmls but also an unhealthy oc_ cupation? The miner works l-n 8 tank, repairs to roofs of the Hmpitalwlcramped position in the dampnegs Infirmary, Green Cottage, Convales-mnd poisonous air of a mine gallery. cent Home and barns, the various exposed to a score of agencies pro- ‘. , ~ dd d th. entertainments held during the yelugfmcflve °f disease or s“ en ea .Yet his expectation of life is not a the contributions of magazines and little beyond that o: the avenge 198411118 11151111‘. 6w- icitizen—51.3 years, according to Strangely, however, there is no ref- 1 this latest authority. ‘ ercnce in any’ part of the report to,‘ Harm?! 1°55 surprising’ is the dlk ~ th t, f ll th ' occupational the extraordinary circumstances conyxggg‘ dscto; five thee longest’ the nccted with the finding and identi- iaverage doctor's life being 62 years. flcation of the skeleton of an es-lcompared with the regular hours, caped inmate o1 Faloonwood at Eastllilfliihz! lfgitleezg: ‘Zia: Point last October. The coroner's “kegomg w warjvet the average jury’ empamued “m” much deiaaxbookkeepers life is only 36.5 years, to inquire into that matter. sus- ,lt is said, the shortest of all. gested the advisability of holding ai general and more thorough lnvesti-' Chase" o, “tum”, a" bacon‘. saticn- The public was by no mean-sang all too successful. The list of satisfied as to the manner in whichjleiitefedbfnes £1111" ifdF-His 1x1“; the deceased lhmotc came to hls;::°‘;:tt;e§°in 3;_ow'ech“on ‘top of death, or whether every precautionmese Professor Gabrlel Bertrand, of 11841 been $811611 by the authorities Paris, recently reported evidence of a at the time of his escape two years still unknown vitamine, lack of pmviously; lwhich makes rats’ hair tum gray The Lea Government has so “rand may have a similiar effect on human top-knots. And finally comes ignored the sussestlon of the ¢°1- Professor Pappenheilner, of Colum- oncr’s jury, but the clrcumstancm are ‘bia, with his report to the biological Sm] sufficiently fresh in the public societies at Montreal of still another . d t d t m lvltamine, deficiency of which in the mm f” °_°““s° “m” e’ a e "m" diet is mllevcd to cause mental dis- “er m winch the “ma” h“ bemiorders of the type called softening of ldcalt with, and the absence of any't.he brain. "Scientists should cer- reference to the matter in the oflic- Win11’ make i? dmgem Search m’ . 1 1, m _ u M I lthls as yet unnamed vltamine as m report o e ms w on ‘evidences of its scarlty are multiply- .ing. Canada and the Reds Statistics are now available show- ing approximately at least the The “dcmand" made upon the Do- strength of the red army. Military mmion Government u,“ week by the service is obligatory for all able- Wcrkers' Unity League of Canadafbodied mm except’, the bourgeois class. It includes prcLmlnary instrus- Canadian Section. Red International “on from nineteen to twPnty-On‘: 01 1411901‘ 171110115. met with a flat andiactive service from twenty-one to final refusal from the Prime Minis-‘iwehiy-fll/B, Service in the 1W0 div- terl The league called upon the Gmhisions of the reserve from twenty- *itofrt.I thi th S'it ernment to institute a ncn-contrl- 5X o y n s way e o‘ e flnstructs more than 870,010 soldiers butory system of unemployment rt-ate a year, and me gffggflvgs 1n the insurance, to which Mr. Bennett rc-Iiwehty-i-WO 01115555 011i 0i a 11011111111- pmd, owe Wm not put a premium ion of 150 million must exceed fiitccn on idleness and we Wm not m our million men. The military budget p increased from 240 million gold rub- PE°P1° °11 the 1111189’ lcs m 1922-23 to 92o millions of gold No other reply, says the Montreal rubles in 1928-29. Gazette, could have been given by,‘ the head of any self-respecting gov- Ottawa. dispatches indicate that Premier Bennett as Minister of Fin- cmmem" “d the prmptnm “d ance, hopes to cut off $50,000,000 in firmness with which the Prime Min- expenditure this year. The dispatch next three years of obligations ag- Bresating 31.035.000.000, or approxi- mately 40 per cent of the whole na- tional debt. These maturing obligations. how- ever, as the Sydney Post points out, are not giving the Government any undue concern. The sooner indeed thatthey fall due thc better it will ister placed himself on record should 1111115 i-hflii he 11111.11 110i be B-bie 1o d0 be a source o,- satisxution to mecuite all that, but he will come close d1 1 > b t m ‘l m v,to it with every department service Cam an peope’ u e s!“ cancecut at least 20 per cent. Had thc of the incident lies. not in the char- 01d government practised ecanon-jy to actor or me Goverjmenyg Enact", a reasonable extent, Hon. Mr. Ben- but in the demand itself and its net“ problems might not be 5° diffi it t , d tl t implications, To the minds cf most mlglfélnogu; $221,311“, allclfilllciilllgilfi-Z people the action of a group of avow- ion as is the case toda“ ed Communists in approaching the -——— Dominion Government with any sort of demand for social legislation has the appearance of sublime affron- tery. Perhaps it is Just as well, how- ever, that the thing happened. It may serve to arouse among sane, law-abiding people a more adequate appreciation than they have hitherto shown in regard to the extent of Communist organization in Canada. the unrestricted distribution of Com- munist propaganda, the immunity which Red associations have enjoy- ed and still enioy in this country, and the widespread use which has been made of that immunity. be for the Canadian taxpayers, be- cause this billion dollar debt, when refunded, will cost the country $10,- 000,000 less interest per year than at present. All the war loans were floated when interest rates were high, the bond issues of 1918 and 191B bearing interest at 51L» per cent. Tbday money can be procured on the Dominion Government's credit at (‘,4 per cent. and the rate may be even lower when the time for re- funding arrives.‘ This saving of s10,- 000,000 per nnnum in interest will be an item of considerable importance. It will be virtually equivalent to a If in this world oi’ inventive genius and rapid transit some clever indivi- dual could suggest a means for the storage of fog says an exchange, he would reap a fortune, or at least fame, As the matter now stands there has arisen the necessity for making fogs and this is being thoughtfully considered in London which city does not lack a reputa- tion for the thoroughness with which nature has performed this service. Nevertheless a correspondent states that in some of the larger nurs- ery gardens in and about the Flames and Kew districts the gardeners have been watching with the lceenest of in- terest experiments made this past autumn by gardeners on the outskirts reduction of 3200000000 in the na- tlonal debt. when Sir Thomas White issued short-term war bonds. he showed that he understood his bus- The canadian Goodwill and ‘Pradc inesa as Finance Minister as few of Mission to the Argentine has re- the treasury statesmen of other turned with an imposing list of ar- countries did in those disturbed and Ucles for which a market can be Editorial Notes of Hamburg. Drums containing unslak cd lime are placed around the areas to be protected and when the weath- cr clerks give a wanting that frost is eludes fox pelts, which should par- diltracting years. I found 1n that country. The lint m- ticuiariy interest the people of- this Province. I Til ' I 1Ebat £003’ ~¢. of f finurs By lame: Barlon. M.D DOCTOR AND PATIENT One of the hopeful signs of the times is the way a physician now handles a patient who has beenall- ing for some time, has gone to three or four doctors and is not satisfied with the results obtained. In former days the physician made the examination, and gave medicine or other treatment‘, the patient was not told what was wrong with him or why the particular treatment was used. What do we find now? That the doctor explains in simple language what he thinks is wrong. He explains the proper structure and the working of the particular part at fault, and what he thinks about that structure and working in the patient. He explains what is happening and what will be the effect if treatment is not followed. I-le explains the treatment he is giving and why he wants the patient to follow it. What is the result? The patient knows what is wrong, and why he must follow the doctor's advice, and by giving his active co- operation in the treatment best re- sults are obtained. Corny-are this with the old methods. The patient had no knowledge of what was wrong with him. It might be serious and he would not consider it very serious and so not follow the treat- ment. On the other hand it might not be serious, and yet, not knowing what was wrong, he would worry himself needlessly; not eating, not sieping, and unable to do his work properly. In desperation he might naturally consult another doctor, or solne healer, and get no farther. Perhaps as a last resort he would begin taking some patent medicine. Now patent medicines are carefully watched by the government and theirl claims kept, truthful, but the patent‘ medicine the patient would use might be utterly useless or actually harm- ful in his casc. And so as Dr. Thos. D. Wood says "It is encouraging that medicine is losing its air of mystery, is casting aside obscure names, which to minds which are fearful and ill, are fraught with unknown dread. ' "Every competent physician who doesn't explain why he recommends a treatment thus taking his patient, illto his confidence is not "up to date." These are the words cf Dr. Chas. Mayo, America's outstanding surgeon, head of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester. Minn. fl Jic L oilébuwm THE BANDS OF ORION Down steps Orion to the west. Higll-hcadcd, starry-eyed. Watchful belltatll hi."- wztrrior-crcst. His sword upon ills siclc. Alnid tllc ullllunlbercd Stallb of night Hc lllis his measured space, : T110 fashions cf 111': fllcc. He. mzllacs no gesture, glam no $1311; Yon form is all lvc R1111’ S0, belt and Scabbard u'::.l to shill: Millions of ycals ago. Across the regions of tllc night, Across the darkened lands, , He travels on in cllallgcfizss lnigitt, And none may loose liis bands. —Laul'ence Housman. llkcly tn occur within tllc llrxt fcw hours. a mixture of sulphur trl-clxlzic and chlorine sulphonlc ncld ls drop- ped on the lime on the windward side of the garden. A thick fog is thus generated which takes most of the sting out of what otherwise would be a disastrous cold snap. Gardens near foggy areas thrive. well as n rule, but there is n eon- sideration due the human product who doubtless both in London and along the Atlantic seaboard-Nova. Scotia for example, will fee] that there is a sufficiency of the natural article without experimenting with artificial ones, PILLS i? l\ \~ ' Aiimhhklo Q‘ . I 4E '. In,‘ DD\f(hi.Tl_\n((.>:|Ji:l , . ' "Rum/W", // hfl lllwN luv vll ‘ \l ‘ ilrcm tllc Church, and Alld covcrs undcl- paint. of light i177 "5 i“? “mi-‘im/‘mh (“my "Fhe Public Forum This column h open for the discussion by correspondents of question: o! lntemL This Charlottetown Guardian doc not necessarily endorln the opinions o! correspondents. PUBLICITY AS A PUNISHMENT Sin-It should be clear to all ob- serving and reasoning persons. that llibitory Law is its non-deterrent punishment. 1f a law breaker will not pay n fine or if he is not allowed the op- tlon of it, he is sent to jail for a. few weeks or months. His name is not published out of respect fol the feel ings of his friends. His term is spent in idleness, living at the public ex- pensc! Do you call that punishment? The Premier says it ls very hard to find work for jail inmates. They must not take tllc work from hon- est laborers. Quite right, but a little nominal work, a little sham work, such as parading the streets in prison stripes, bearing picks, spades. and hoes under the command of po- lice officers, might be m" great o. de- terrent as hard labor. The B1 persons taken in a recent raid on a Montreal den, very many of whom were prominent profession- al and business residents, pleaded in vain with the Chief to be allowed to go in their cars to the station. They feared the publicity. ‘Phey dreaded the jcering crmvds. But the plucky oflicer was adamant. They were law breakers and as prisoners they would go in the police vans. How different here. Their names are not published and now it is proposed to let them out when they began saying their prayers, I am, Sir, etc, ANTI IIUMBUG Sausages as Tithe (London Times) A controversy over the contents of sausages is being fought out in the Courts of Mecklenburg-Schwerln, a small German State. The holders of ihhablc property in the tow-n of De- men, in that State, have been bound for 150 years to contribute each year 1301b. of Mettwurst (a. sausage pecu- liar to Mecklenburg) to the mainten- ance of the Church and its servants. This custom lately fell into disuse. but in 1928 the Church renewed its claim and demanded the payment of arrears for three years. ‘The tithepayers refused, the Church sued them -and obtained judgment; and the overdue sausage was evidently supplied. Tile rep- resentative of the Church, however, after tasting the sausage, denied that it was that which the Church in Mccklcnburg was in equity en- titled to demand as Mettwurst (the main ingredient of which should be alpparcntly minced lean pork). The focd inspection authortitics in Ros- lcck agrced that too much beef had been used, the sausage was returned. and, as nothing furiher was heard. the Church has again gcne to law. Expert opinions about the composi- ticl: cud taste of Mcttwurst are much fDllfllil, ivhlf-z ancient recipes are to he put in as evidence. The tithe- srs lillve (lcclared their sccrssion the Church hes answer-rd thro‘. they must ucvrr- theirs continue tn d?i1\'£‘l‘ til: s. ‘- ra- lilc |3l‘C-D(‘1‘i,_\' and no; 011 the h". .r cm- quesiion (‘I‘l‘ill1l’1'li'§ tllc L-ull- (11311 Tllms Ilrllluizrttly dclnnntl". m‘ answer: Suppose i111‘ chilich 11cc‘. 11c- celltcd tllc t’ihc, who would have with ii? One hvl" ilrrtv p nds of szuscj Zd.:l a) llltlssive a‘; to c Tc- Thc P01: By Submarine Hula-rt .CEl|)i.'l"il Wilkins is to attempt to visit the North lolc by submarine. This is the first time most of us realized that traffic tllc other way was getting too congested for comfort. Sir Hubert has already taken over the reconditlonal underseas boat U- 12, named it the Nautilus and pre- pared for a voyage Where he 0811 be certain there will be no competition. Many explorers have been to the North Pole but they have seen only the dry end. Captain Wilkins will be able to report back whether the other end has barnacles. Some people can't get enough ad- venture. Sir Hubert is n. pioneer Graf- Zepplin hitch-hiker but wants some- thing more dangerous. In a sub- marine dash to the Pole he will get it. A four-minute film oi’ an Arctic trip without a single penguin would ‘ be the biggest screen novelty in years. Sir Hubert doesn't plan to linger around the Pole. He will merely see how it looks from below and proceed under the ice to Alaska, sailing by dead reckoning which is very much like swimming the English Channel in a sack. Sir Hubert thinks he will find clear sailing under the ice and won't have to worry about the weather. But there will probably be momenta whcnhecnduncrewwillwlslltbcy, the one great weak link in our Pro- ' your mind? fonn of life plan. AnPreailum , $13.50 15.80 18.55 30 35 H1 Premium Rates per $1,000 of Insurance A. Lifetime’s Peaceof Mind EAR "for u: children's future F . . . fear ofysassing on and leaving wife and loved ones to face want and privation. Ian’: it worth 51c. a day to banish such fears forever from “Only 51c. a day,” you say? Yes ... and if you are under 35 years of age it will be even less. For 51c. a day is the rate a man age 35 would pay on a $10,000 Great-West Minimum Cost: Policy-the Cheapest permanent life insurance you can buy. The Great-West MINIMUM COST POLICY enables you to carry more insurance than would be possible with any other l] l> _ TIIQA b" Wufluqrl Age Premium 4O $22.35 45 27-50 5O 34-40 Al? 1,)?’ VICL “Ma I45, roan 6' 0|‘ B..EAT;..‘Z’.E§I.1J.!‘ i=- WINNIPEG were up on a nice big floating ice- berg in a blinding blizzard. There is no more embarrassing moment imaginable than being un- der the ice in a. submarine when your engine stalls. The more you think of this kind oi’ ‘Polar trip the more you wonder why Houdini never included it in his repertoire. Anyway, here's wishing sir Hubert bon voyage! If a man wants to take a. blindfold test in Arctic exploration it's his ow-n business. . Brother J osepil (Manitoba Free Press) 41110131118 figure of the world died on lvfarch 26 in Hawaii. This was 51mm‘ Joseph or Molokai. Though he 5376211; more than half of his long span of eighty-seven years in a re- lust: and mournful community from which no man who goes thither can l'i‘tlll‘ll, Brother Joseph's repute was 11s wldc as that of the tragic and rulzicnl disease with which hc se- sludcd himself. Ecru Ira Dllttcn, of Stowe in thc list: cf Vermont, he served in thc fimerican civil war, rose to the rank cf cagltam, and twenty years after the war closed, b:ing then a healthy may} 05 ifnlhihrce, wznt to sDEnd the res; a.‘ lzis days in a mission c-n the island cf iii‘: in death, suzceedhg Father DQ111151! as adlniulslrutal‘ of the lcp- Ii‘ colony. ill tllc village of Kalawao. It is a lnaticr of record that Brother Joseph could himself see nothing Si-Yflhqv. 0r even deserving of com- mellt, on his gift of forty-five years to h‘s brothers who had the malady of Naaman. A Puzzling Point (Toronto Mail and Empire) A caller in the editorial office yes- terday, whose strong opinion had meant twice a year. We tcld-hlln it meant once every two years. and pointed out that the Latin word bis was twice, and that when we bisected a thing we cut itinto two parts. “That's just my argument," he said. “when you blsect a. year equal parts you get six months." And he departed confirmed in his orig- inal error. Arctic Islands ' (London Times) Canada's lands known as thc Sverdrup group way. The islands were discovered between 1808 llnd 1902 by Conllnau- der Otto Svcrdrup, leader of tllc Nor- wegian Polar Expedition ill tllc Franl, who took possession of them in tllc nanlc cf his Sovereign. But Canada had long claimed tllc whole arca north cf the mainland; thc rights acquired by Great Britain were ‘transferred to her in 1880 by Orugr I in Council. The Sverdrup group was thc one possible group of dispute, {which has been removed by thc Ifrlcudly action of tllc Norwegian Government. In the Pacific tllc own- Iership of Clippertctl Island, disputed ll" mcnts, is stated to have bccn decid- ed in favour of France by the King of Italy, who was asked to arbitrate. :.-—. 1-; . 1-" apparently lost him a bct. asked for, assurances that the. word "biannual"; into two ‘ title to the Arctic Is- has bccn formally recognized by Nor- p thc French and Mexicali Govcrn- __ Be sure you get BRAHMIN TEA It is Pare Sold only in red, airtight Bags. Save your label for next contest Spruce LotI/lsci Cedar blzingles on hand _ 590,000 Spruce Laths Prices 82.50-43.50 and $4.00 pol‘ 1,009 —Also- One Mlllio C d shi ' Alr-DrlednBrftll-Ili (iflilillgfllffillllgllld Carnpbeliton, N B. Cellar Shingles In all Grades ' -Prlces low- ~ L,AL.ROOLE'&:CIL. ii i W Ill 4 .J l); w QQS-O“"*FI<>O<»DQ->0e-»0~>s--c- vo~o< - .. .o..>. .,-c-.,-_.o.- SPECIAL i, DEALS for This WEEK - c.5211 si.ii”lo."f’."l‘i?f. cifii B19111"! in Paris Face Pow? d1‘! 11nd Perfume. $1.50 fu Tllrce Flowers Face Powder- nnd Perfume $1.50 for .. $1.00 Plhulllls Face Powder and. Combination Cream 51,50 for, $1.0 " I Cblliatcs Tooth Paste, 2 - . 4 tubes 50c and 1 Tooth Brush .. 50c. Both . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $1.00 i e a roslsii CENTRAL DRUGSTORE - ' Palm Olive Shaving Cream‘ and New Gillette Razor 60c; for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 35c 01111’ a limited number or each deal. Gel. yours early. SUME EXTRA SPECIALS ~ Phone 315 $1.00 Abbey's Salts 690 00c Abbey's Salts 35c Abbey's Salts 50c Squibb‘: Mill of Mll- ncsin ~ $1.00 Beef, Iron a Will? -- 81.00 Syrup lhpophocphiies 88¢‘ 75c Nujol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. B51‘ $1.50 Fellow‘: Syrup $139 alzsironlooa Yeast .... .- 1"" The 2 149 Great Gcortl 51"“ ' Aliiircll Order: Given Prom!" ' , stemm-