I . -. ' . . + ° »\ . 3.1¢, I . ` _ , ' A ' ) "‘ 4% 1 - Rmlusm HE I -.I.TiEIQlf.. GUARDI NEDII __ _ I A _ Y 1. _Wm'w°w%m¥° liulbfi on } "'ljI-Is: Larssr Nlrws CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY DECEMBER 12, 1913 Fmsr or ALL." Iii ll ,BS Ss Qx YEAR DELIVERED IN ADVANCE lt YIELD. BY MAIL IN ADVANUl` GRDWM-PRINCE [umm Mlsulls will wuulnln luusl uw ul COUNCILLORS A IN ALsACEcRisi5 ul run nun ll za auuillull llclllulinilll coME T0 BLQWS ` -_*il* "'“i A 1* -id _ _ V _ __ii1_._- BERLIN, Dec. 10.-(Special).-_ The hand ofthe German Crown Prince was at work in the recent crisis over the incident between the military and civilian .authorities ln' Alsace, according to Dr. George Weill, 5 ,f,,._ iaiist deputy in the Imperial Psp. liuuicul. Speaking in his constituency of Mets yesterday Dr. Weil! said the Grown Prlncs sided strongly with the soldieryiand had gone to the Impsi-_ ful Ohanatllor, Dr. von Bcthmann- Hollweg, on December 3, the day on which the Chancellor made his. un. ~4'-1:-1'_'-Y:-::::::.>-_-_-;_-,-,-_-_-_-_-,_-_~___._._.;____V___v_v_v_ satisfactory spec li ' - . which resulted in cthe 1:a.s§;:g;h:)Ten§ 53131.01 nun-confidence in the govsm- Dr. Weill declared that the Cha.- cellor's hazy references on that o¢_ casion to the Emperors anti-milit- ary orders to reconcile the wishes of the German ruler and his eldest son. Lieutenant Baron von Forstner of the Ninetyninrn Infantry, ure' in- stigator of the trouble between the soldiers and the citizens of Zabern, told some friends today that he was he good as retired from the army. GOING BEYOND THE MONROE DOCTRINE. LONDGN, D60. E-Ill a, speech on Mexico on Saturday' Ameriosii Am. bassador Pa-ge, said that one feature of America's attitude to Mexico was that no sort of financial control cam' without the consent oi the United States, be dbtaincd over these weak- er nations which would in eilect, con- trol the Government. The Standard says thatthis carries the Monroe Doctrine farlbleyond its origiinal scope Eitnd makes a big type splurge over TUG IMPERATOR HAS BEEN LOST. sA'rI-IURs"i1. N B., nec. s-'rne tug Irnperator, 'owned by the North- ern Dredging Co., was destroyed by fire. ARRIVAL OF NEW ZEALAND, LONDON. Dec. 8-The :battleship New Zealand, arrived at Devonport, Eoday from Halifax, after her world our. PROPER FOODS _ The end of all feeding is profit, eithnlf directly of indirectly. The farmer who knows how to feed for profit is likely to be a prosperous farmer and agood one. Feeding for profit is an art as well as a science. Many a good feeder has the science without being aware of it, but not so with the art. He has the test for that in the quality of the product which he sends to market. The animal body is asort of ma- chine; Itfrsquires material for its building: it requiresfuel or energy to keep it goin-g, and it can use still other material to work up into more concentrated on finished products. All feeds are of interest and value to the farmer because they contain either one or all of the following! proteins fats or carbohydrates. In the proteins is the element nitrogen and they are of prime value. It is necessary that every animal receive pr_otein_in__some form or other in or- der to grow and to live. It is the, proteins which are the chief constitu-l ents of the lean meat or_ rnusclew Starch is a carbohydrate, and this compound goes to supply energy for the animal to move, work and carry on its bodily functions. The surplus may be changed and stored up as fat. The fats may be digested and at once stored up on the animal body as ani- mal fat, or they may be utilized as energy. Fat is a more concentrat- form ofenergy tb-an the starches or sugars. That is why the Eskimos like so much fat; it furnishes the greatest amount of heat, which ls Ht another form of energy. ' The basis of all 'successful feeding rests on the problem of supplying the protein, carbohydrates and the fat in the proper proportions. When this is dons we have a balanced ration. The scientists take an animal and determine the amount of the various feed constituents required to maln- :nin the body, to grow, to do work, or to lay on fat. Then they flnd out , the vsrious quantities of these con- tained in the various farm feeds. By supplying just the amount of feeds ofthe various sorts to that the to- tal o'f'tlii protei1`1s‘and carfbohYdl'Bt°B or fat required, they supply What has been termed the balanced ra- tion. ' ' Why Are You So Tired? 'rn wsllm-mea Is Nor 'ro BLAME: FOR THAT “DRAGGED OUT" FEELING. "This weather simply takes the life fight out of me, I can hardly Gras one-foot liter the other,” said a run- gown, tired-out woman, the Dill" gy, _ _ We want tosay to every “ch 9°" son in this vicinity. Dc.~:i’t blelnv the westiiir, it’s your condition. »You need a strengthening tonic and the very best we know is Vinol which is a combination of the two most world famed-tonite, namely. the ln'di°i"°1' cursf;lv`s"*t1ennn:.; of cod liver oil and tonne lien; 'for s mood. 'A csth,_hns just come to our atten- tion irdtmllilford, Mich. "Mi-s. Julia Be'rbeI\f‘s's%§’ "I warrun-down and hardly I to drag shout; my er- ‘the light of unanswarable testimony. THE BISHOP or _ LONDON DENOUNCES MILITANCY BY WOMEN LONDON, December 6-A large mleeting of Anglican olergymen, pre- sided over hy the Bishop of Kensing- ton, was held in Queen's Hall last ni»giht,and‘- s. resolution( passed protest- mg against forcible feedlngs. Six h“l1dl`9d 515110118 and clergymen sent letters ‘expressing “sympathy with the movement, Hut many of them, in- cluding the Bishop of London, si: the same time denounced milltancy by W0"l°n attempting to secure suffrage. The reading of the Bishop of Lon- d0ll’S letter, and remarks by many speakers to the same eilect, led to serious interruptions on the part, oi s large body of militant suflragettes who were present at the meeting. -_*___-._.i_ MANY EMINENT MEN DO NOT HOLD PROFESSOR LEACOCK'S VIEWS Some time since Prof. Leacock of McGill set up a defence of ni-oflerate drinking. There were many things in the statement that could not be ex- pected to go unchallenged. The de- fence was undertakeii by E. E. Hew- son Esq., Barrister-at-Law, Vice President of the Hewson Wollen Mills and President of the N. S. Temper- ance Alliance. The following is the position taken so ably by Mr. Hew- son and is herewith presentcd,to the thoughtful for a careful perusal: In a recent article in the Montreal Daily Mail, Prof. Stephen Leacock, of McGill is -quoted as championing the cause of occasional or moderate drinking and fairness._demands.-that something be said in answer, The peopleof Oanads arsasked to judge whether his position will bear the' “acid test" of recent investigation. He says "In their demand that people who make use of hieer or wine or whisky shall he put into prison, they approach dangerously _vnear to thsi; prosecuting spirit which has _written in the history of mankind ,the most hedious of its pages.” This requires no contradiction, for neither temperanee advocates 'not their laws ask that people who drink (be put into'prison-except in as far as they lay themselves open to the world-wide laws against drunkenness in public places. , He says "The number of people who care to speak out and say “I drink and propose to go on drink- ing." is, alas. unfortunately few." /Possibly some reasons why they are so "unfortunately few" will appear below. men of all time have used liquors brllt it.is equally true that in these’ days- they are the first to advise their sons to leave it alone, and that the outstanding men in world leadership like the Emperor of Ger- many, 'the -Pres. of France, the King of England, the King and Prime Minister of Sweden, the Pres. and Vice-*Pres. and Secretary of Stats of the United States, have come over to the ranks of the sbstaincrs. He says “Some of them deny the harmiulness of the moderate and self restrained use of spirits... but in any case I doubt the harm." The advocacy of moderate drinking, used to be in vogue but' most think- ing men are revising their views in Were one of us to publicatly advo- cate the moderate use by the masses of arsenic, opium, or strychnine his sanity would be questioned and yet Sir Frederick Treves, F. R. S. U., of London, the physician of King Ed-1 ward and perhaps the greatest med-. ical authority in the Empire in B recent speech as reported at Winder- mere said “All alcohol is distinctly a poison with certain uses like other poisons but limitations on its use' should be‘as strict as on arsenic, op-. fum or strychine... It is simply pre- posterous to say that any young healthy persons need any alcohol whatever. Having spent the greater part of any life in operation." I would say with Sir James Paget that of all people, those I dread most to operate on are drinkers. I hope what I have said will help my bearers to answer such absolute fal- lacies as “a glass of port can do no harm." _ The great 1909 London Conference on Alcoholism, to which most of the' nations ssntscfentidc msn or other delegates, drew up end issued the following definition of Alcohol. -'Exact laboratory, clinical and pathologinal research has demon- petite tht poor and Il was not 851° to work. ,My druggist ssksd me to, try viral. 'rss nm some _helped me, and sim- taking the second bottle I, was slfitite work and felt well and strongl, Edirol is the -beet medicine I have \s'y|r taken." 'rrys tems of vinci with me un- derltlsdln tht your mono! Wm 5° returned if' lc aces nee help 1°" E.- Al. resist, osscrsi in-untere. Ow- lottstowh, P. li. I. H . \ l ._ - i > _ 1. Y » , strated that alcohol is a dehydrat- isg, protoplsemic poison and its use as s beverage is destructive and de- genersting to the human organism. Therefore its' use should be limited and restricted in the same way as other poisonous drugs." ‘ ‘ From the 1918 standard Diction- ary we road: " "Alcohol is B poison. _lt is one of the most common causesof insanity. It is true that many of the great _ BRU'33E|-13,. Dec. 6.-(Special). - Camille Jenatzy. the Belgian auto- mobile racing pilot wss soeiossny killed today by the editor of a Brus. “I5 l\0WSDaper during a hunting party. Mr. Jenatzy was mistaken n the twilight for a deer by Mr. Alfred Madeux, managing editor of the toile Belgie, who fired an explosive bullet into his thigh. 'l‘be stricken man soon died from the wodnd. MF- Jellniizy. who has been racing Sil1C° 1303, when he won the Interna- tional Cup race in Ireland, took part in the' Vanderbilt Cup race in Octo- ber, 1905, when he did not finish, and also in the following yeur when he finished fifth. _*___- CHARGED WITH MURDERING HIS FATHER AND MOTHER. GARDINER, Me., Dec, 8-The bum. ed bodies of Wilfrid B. Eidredge and his wife, were found in the kitchen of their farm house in Litchfield and their son Fernald, aged thirty, is un- der arrest pending an investigation. The police say they were apparently old folks aged about 60.-They had been beaten and kerosene, found over their bodies. Their money and valu- ablcs were not disturbed. The fire was put out by neighbors. The pol- ice say the son told them that he had been drinking last night, but slept at home, and left again at five o'clock, this morning. He made no reference to his parents’ death. l._.____.;__. MURDERED FOR HIS MONEY. L`0U1svILLE,Dec. s-Rev. -Jenn L. Grant, retired Baptist, was mur- dcred gfor gold coins he is known to have hoarded. Three negroes are wanted, suspected of the murder. liver and stomach, dropsy sud tubjer- culosis." Hou. Richmond P. Ilobson in a speech in the American llouse of Representatives in 1911 -laid! “The figures of the British Govern- ment and English Life Ins. compan- iesas to the eilect of drinking ,on longevity are stated as follows: If a young man at the age Of 30 is a total abstainer, his DTOBPCCC Of life is 44 years and he’ will live to the average of 64, but if he is a temperate regular drinker, his pros- pect of life will be 31 years and he will live to the average age of 51 ,alter losing 13 years out of his life. If he is s, heavy drinker, his prospect of life is 15 years and he will die at the age of 35 after losing 29 years out of his life." Possibly facts like these may H0- count for men’s hesitancy in 0118111?" ionlng the cause of moderate drink- ing; but let ustake evidence furnish- ed nearer home. A.hooklet issued by the Manfs. Life Ins, Co. of Canada shows that the death rate between 30 and i0 is 68 per cent. greater and these figures are from the report of the great English actuary”-R. McKenzie Moore from investigations covering 61 years and 125.000 individual cases. 'Our own Sir Wm. Osler says “A man may take four or five drinks a day or even more and thinks Perhaps that he transacts his business better vuith that amount of stimulant; but it only frequently happens that ear- ly in the fifth decade, yust as busi- ness or political success is assured Bacchus hands in heavy bills for payment, in the form of serious dis- ease of the arteries or of the liver, or there is 8 general breakdown." Col. Maus, Chief surgeon of the Eastern Division of the U. S. army in his reports to the War Dept. says- “No one who uses alcoholic bever- ages should be appointed to import- ant position. civil or miiitarY. t0 the command of military or naval forces or to any other position of importance or responsibility." . According to Adams, in the cholera epidemic in Glasgow in 1848-9 the death rate among abstainers was 19,2 per cent and among drinkers 91.2 per cent. cmu can Brouclulis Once. people get acquainted with the wonderful control' which Dr. Cbase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpentlne ex- , arts over bronchitis, whooping cough croup and colds it ls not easy to persuade them that anything else is "dust as good." This is why the imitators never get very far.- In 1902 Mrs, Eugene Iler, King street, Truro, N.S., wrote ss fol- lows: "From an infant one of my chil- dren was troubled with bronchitis, and the least cold would aggravate the trouble. We could not get guy- thinglto help him, and were often grea y alarmed. Hearing of Dr. 0hase‘s Syrup of Lfnscsd and Tur- pentfne as a treatment for bronchitis we used it,” and are glad to state that it effected s complete cure. If any of the children take s cold or dough I- give this medicine, and have Payer known it to fall to bring re- ‘ ie .’ Mrs. Iler now writes that she has since proven this medicine to be s ROME, Dec. 18f--(Specisl).- Sig- nor Gnmbarotta. a liberal Deputy, was disabled today by it slight wound in the forearm, inflicted by S :nor Giuseppe de Felice-oinfirldn. ,a Socialist Deputy, after the two parliamentarians had fought twenty- three bouts with rapiers. The quar- rel arose out of an incident in the Chamber of Deputies. ‘---------_-m A WESTEHN_iiN|]MlHK Another historical spot in western Canada has recently been located and marked, says the Toronto Globe. It is in the Province of Saskatchewan, and in the constituency of Pel1y,s»it- uated about three miles north ofthe town of Pelly, on the C.N.R. The lo- cation is on the site of the old head- quarters of the Mounted Police, known as Fort Livingstone, or Swan River Barracks, and in the seventies was an important point in the west. It was here that the first session of the first Northwest Council was held, commencing on March 8, 1877, presi- ded over by Hon. David Laird, form- erly of Charlottetown, P. E. 1., who was Lieutenant-Governor of the Northwest Territories at that time. The members of that notable Council were: Col. Jas. F. Macleod, -Com- missioner of Mounted Police; Hugh Richardson, Stipendiary Magistrate; Mathew Ryan, Stipendiary Magis- trate. At that time there were no settlers, and the surveys were only being commenced in the far west. In 1878 the headquarters of the post were moved about 150 miles south, where the men put new log build- ings. In 1884 the country around Swan River was swept with prairie fire, to which the old barracks fell ii prey. It is more than 36 years since that memorable Council met, and more than two decades have rolled bl’ Since the place was obliterated by fire. During the past summer Mr. J. W. Scott, an ex-member of “D"- Troop, stationed at Swan River during thc meeting of the Council, visited the old site in company with Mr. Dundas of Pelly, and located the spot on which the Governor’s horse stood and in which the session was held. To commemorate this event and the place, Mr. McKenzie of Pellv hal! had a tablet erected on the spot. It is hoped that thc Government wifi hsve a permanent monu- ment erected there in the near future. HINDU HABEAS CORPUS DECISION OTTAWA, December 7-Whether the recent judgment of Judge Hunt- er, of British Columbia, releasing on habeas corpus proceedings s num- ber of Hindus who were to have been deported, was an attack upon the constitutionality of Immigration act or simply upon the order-in-council based upon that act, is the question upon which hinges the action of the government in regard to the PPO' blem. The text of the judgment is expected today. The impression pre- vailing is that the judgment relates only to the Order-in-Council, wlich, among other things, prescribes that the entry of Asiatics in Canada must be by direct line of steamships, this method furnishing an edective safeguard inasmuch as there are no direct lines inoperstion- If only this order is attacked it will be re- pealed and a new one passed conform- ing to the statute. lf, however, the whole question is raised as to the constitutionality of the act, the sub- ject will have to be dealt with much more thoroughly end negotiations with the British authorities will be necessary. It is expected that the matter will come to a head very shortly after the receipt of the text of the decision, which has stirred up all the trouble. .i._._..._?_,-_ lil EAHBAEE. FISH SAUSAGE.. NEW BHEAD "PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN" DIGEBTS FOOD WHEN STOMACH CAN'T -CURES INDIGESTION. cure for whooping cough, and would epilepsy, paralysis, diseases of the > not be without it in the house. r' LONDON, Dee. 10--f Special -The Wilnon’s intention to establish a virtual proteetorate over Nicaragua, says.- "If the new policy is intended to cover the whole of the Central Am- erican states and apparently those of at least the northern portion of South `America_ it is obvious that we have a great and very serious ex- itension of United States imperial- sm. ’ WIFE RAN BILLS AND THEN SKIPPED. AMHERST, Dec. 9.-Over n _ year ago The Herald reporter received in- formation that an English woman re- siding in this town had received iword; that relatives in England had left, her some thirty thousand dollars and also five thousand dollars to her .daughter to be held in trust by the mother until the daughter attained her ,twenty-first birthday. The woman in question convinced her husband, friends euid the general public of the good fortune that had hefallen her, and on the strength of the fortune that was to come con- tracted a large number of bills in this town. Lately the husband be- came suspicious that ull was not straight in connection with the story and began demanding some evidence of his wife with regard to the facts of the case. He was put oil from time to time until 0. few days ago, when he started making inquiries and endeavored to trace ‘the matter out. So far as his knowledge goes there was no fortune ever in exist- ence and his wife disappeared from the home, taking the daughter' with her. The bills were contracted for lux- uries absolutcly beyond the earning power of the husband and comprised jewelry and other expensive lines of goods, and it is understood that in some instances the woman borrowed money. The husband is a hard- working, honest, industrious man, and it will, of course, be absolutely impossible for him to meet the bills which his wife piled up during thc past eleven or twelve months on the strength of the legacy left ber by relatives in Great Britain. Where nbc is now the husband does not know. FIRE AT BRANTFORD, ONT. BRANTFORD, Ont., Dec. 6-Fire at the Dominion Cahners Limited, farm, early today, destroyed a barn and burned thirty-three horses and six cattle to death. Loss fifty thous- and dollars. BEWARE MOONLIG IIT UECLA RES SCIENCE. The observation that the rays from the moon favor putrefnction detracts from the romance which has long been associated with moonlight. lt is an old tradition, the Lancet points out-, that to sleep in the moon's rays ls u. dangerous proceeding, and there is such a thing as "moonblink, a temporary blindness said to be due to sleeping in the moonlight of tropical climates, while some observers have reported a devitaliziug action of the moon‘s radiatians on vegetable life. There is even quoted a. death, the cause of which was olliciully, stated to be exposure to moonlight, says the Westminister Gazzctte. Apparent ly the food most seriously affected by the m0on’s radiations is fish, and seemingly trustworthy statements have been made as to the ill-eilects produced in persons who have par- taken of fish which has been freely exposed to the moonlight. E. G. Bry n.ny,B. A., B.Ss., writing iu a recent number of the Chsfiiical News from Porth Elizabéth, South Africa, sug- gests that a possible explanation of these phenomena, assuming them to be true, might lie in the well-known fact that the light is more or less polltized and possibly polarized light may eilect a peculiar chemical uc- tion. When two slices cut out the same fish were hung, one in the direct light) and the other in the polarized bcum, Do some food you est hit back- -the latter invariably hcguu to de- taste good, but work badly, ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's Diapepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There, never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how badly your stomach is disorder- ed you will get happy relief in ilve minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stomach so you can eat your favorite foods without fear. _ Most remedies give you relief some- times-they are slow, but not sure. "Pape’s Diapspsin” is quick, positive and puts your stomach in a healthy condition so the misery won't come back. You feel different ss soon as "Pspe’s Diapepsin" comes in contact with the stomach-distress just van- ishes-your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructation of undigested food, your head clears and you feel fine. Go now, make thehest investment you ever made, by getting n large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. You realise in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indigestion, dyspcpsfe or any stomach disorder. _ compose before the former, though the temperature ul the polarized beam was several degrees lower than the direct iight. There were indica-_ tions also in the case of other perish-1 able food substances of a tendency to decompose when they arc bombarded with polarized light. The question. the Lancer thinks, is worth further investigation. It would be curious to find that such terms of obloquy as "moonstruck," "nloony" and "moooshine" after all, not entirely based on delusions. MAGNET TO FIND LOST NEEDLE Time and again every woman who sews at all has dropped ber needle, and only through diligent search has sbs discovered the shining bit of steel close at hand. A magnet is very helpful in dnding a lost needle, but few women provide their sewing basket with this useful accessorY- Some one, realizing these two things, has put a thim-ble on the market pro- vided with atlny magnet. The needle lost, one bas the magnet at -hand. She has only to run the thlmble about and socm will be rewarded by finding the truant needle clinging to the tiny piece of msgnetised steel. .- ). Standard, referring to President City Council rejected tonight the proposal to restore Sisters of Char- ity and the members of other nurs- ing orders to the posts they held in the Plsris hospitals, prior to the separation of church and State, By vote of 41 to 155, however, the Council pronounced in fuvor of the principle of subveniioning private IAHIS, Dee. 10 -lSpecial).- The' hospitals, whore sisters are attached ,that expressed their willingness to ,take ue patients a certain number of poor. The debate on the subject was a stormy one, und the conservative, Mr. Tony Michuud, cams to blows. The combatants were parted with Idiilicnlty. They have appointed sec- nnae and n duel is uit-iy to inuow.’ S()-CALLED FREE TRAIHC BllI'l`A1li TAXES FUUIJ, FALLS BEHIND HIVALS The lute Price Collier, the well- known American writer ou Nutionnl and International topics, had ai grunt admiration fur liritaiu on 'iuunyi grounds, but her fiscal policy was not one of them. To him the British system was neither Free Trade 'nor Protection, and did not possess the merits of either. _ In his book, “England and The English," hc expressed surprise that anybody should consider Britain to possess li Free Trade system. Among other things, he :mi it- "One may note 'just here the curi- ous ilction that England is me lfnui of free food, a fiction, lzul, firmly Ile- licved both at home und nlimnd by the uninformed. /\'s il mutter of fuct,| the receipts from customs duties up-i on the things that the English out, drink and smoke, pills the excise tax- ation of them, make together much the largest item of the Imperial rev- enue of the United Kingdom." Then he gave the following figures Covering the ten years ending Mnrcii 31st, 1907:- NET RECl'}Il"l‘S FIUJM Tobacco und suuil... Spii‘its___... Sugar (lust six years only)...... Winc...... Currents, ctc..._... Corn and groin (two years ouly)... 12,000,000 Coffee . . . . . . . . . . ._ 9,000,000 UU S'i‘oM.\‘ 008,500,000 za0,000,000 z1s,000,000 170,500,000 09,500,000 21,000,000 frecnl ______ ....$1,40z,500.I.l<}S:~l AI’i"I.Ef~l FOUND AT LAST After years of search and experi- m'~‘"U1llZ |1Y Htluients of pomology at college on the old farm to produce u scedli-ss uiilrle with success, u for- nivr New York man, Julian A. Dor- rnncc, has discovered it in his orch- ard in the Village of Scotland. Mr. Dorruncc is 0. retired jewelry "u1unufnctur1-|'. Two years ago he bought u farm in Scotland. He had read of the experiments by pom91o_ gists for seedicss apples hut thought little of it. His find wus purely acci- dcntnl. The ripples, which are Of the Porter variety, \\'crc picked from 3 ti'1::_~ that pi'udu<-_ed six bushels, Some of the apples dlflered in slrape, and 0" Uiiffliillii one of these Mr. Dorrance l>ruliti<»u. Mr. Dorruuce lago- il\i5 to store them tu see how long they will keep. Nc\\'9 ui' the discovery soon reached the /\i:i‘ic\ill,ui‘nl drepnrtlnent at Walh- ‘~'H1t