n. C PAGE FOUR .THE GUARDIAN Auiiorizod ll second Clue Mill Poll 031100 Dcputznent. Ottawa. The Thomnon Co. Ltd. Editor and Manage , Inn A. Burnett. Associate Editor. Funk Walker. CIRCULATION "Cover: Prince Edward Isllnd like the dew” "The strongest memory in weaker than the weakest ink". ....,.- -. VA --1 - :- j-jcw CHARLOTTETOWN. VVEDNIOSIDAY. FEB. 24, 1954 The Farm Program . A planned farm program was the theme of Mr. Walter R. Shaw's opening address to the Agricultural Council which has as its theme production and marketing. These. indeed, seem to be the pressing problems of agriculture in this Province. The various reports which have been presented to date show the traditional problems to be well in hand. Indeed in several lines such as the testing of fungicides and insecticides it wasl noted that growing conditions were too good to give really satisfactory tests of preventive measures. A similar picture is given of production in the dairy industry with butter produc-. lion at an all time high and cheese up alsol both in quantity and quality. Poultry also showed both expansion and profit and it was commented on livestock production that beef production had even over-expand- ed. The contrary is the case with hog pro- duction, however, which fell off unwarrant- ably in quantity although the outstanding quality of island swine is being maintained and improved. The various reports indicate that much is being done to provide the farmer with the best quality of seed and breeding stock and to enable him to keep down the many uests to which farm production is subject. Another Victory News of the imminent lifting of all food and commodity rationing in Britain will be received with satisfaction by friends of the British people in all parts of the world. While it does not indicate that Britain's economic troubles are over, it does seem to suggest that for the first time since 1939 the end of a rigid austerity program is at least in sight. It will mean not only more food for British tables but, what is even more welcome. a realization that the coun- try is a step farther along on the road to complete recovery from the well nigh devastating effects of the war. It is a matter of common knowledge that we in Canada have never known real economic stringency. Even in the war years rationing was little more than a routine precautionary measure. There was indeed some scarcity in a few scattered items; but at no time was food shortage more than a slight inconvenience. The war was no sooner over than our govern- ment felt justified in removing most of the war-time controls. In Britain the situation has been very different. Rationing during the war and for nine years thereafter was very real and very earnest: it might almost be called a necessary tool in the struggle for survival. The heroic way in which the British peo- ple accepted the economic facts of post- war life deserves to be numbered among the thrilling episodes of their long and eventful history. Now that they can see their way clear to loosen the bonds of austerity which they have accepted cheer- fully and with good humour for so long, they will receive congratulations from many uuarters on yet another national victory. Better Lobster Traps Canada's Atlantic lobster fishermen may. heat a path to the door of the man who de- signs a better lobster trap for them, says The Fundy Fisherman. And that is just what the fishery scientists at the Atlantic Biological Station at St. Andrews are try- ing to do although they are not looking for fame or fortune. The convcntiodal trap used for many years by lobster fishermen is a contraption of wooden laths and twine which is highly efficient and manages to fool most of the lobsters practically all the time. But it is heavy to man-handle-about 67 pounds soaking wet with concrete ballast-and highly susceptible to storm damage. Lob- ster fishermen in the Maritime Provinces alone have almost two million lobster traps, valued at over six million dollars, and their normal loss each year is about twenty-five A per cent. In recent years much heavier losses have occurred in certain areas fol- lowing covers storms. l While the recent institution of federal mnmnt insurance ton lobster traps help offset some of these losses. the &:ient.i.sts at St. Andrews believe that s inure durable trap would enable the fish- to obtain greater profits from the to 1 report julimitted at the 'They are many pounds lighter to handle been conducted with several traps of con- ventional shape but made of steel rods. out of water while they have about the same weight in the water as the stone- weighted wooden ones. They offer much less surface to current or wave action and are less likely to be tossed about by storms. In fact during two severe storms in coastal ivaters last year the steel traps were un- scathed while half the number of conven- tional traps in the same area were destroy- ed. The big question, of course, is whether steel traps will catch as many. lobsters as the old wooden ones. Tests carried out off Port Maitland, N. S. in November resulted in the steel traps catching about as many legal-sized lobsters as the wooden ones. Be- fore any dcfinite conclusions can be reach- ed as to their efficiency, however, many more trap hauls will have to be made and the performance of ten of these metal traps is being studied at the present time dur- ing the lobster season at Port Maitland. Paul Earlanfl's Dismissal There is no place in the world where liberty of conscience is more secure than in Britain. It is one of the essential rights which have not been disturbed by all the social changes that have taken place in recent years. Every man's mind is a king- dom over which he himself bears rule. How- ever, like all other rights, this one carries with it definite obligations; in no instance can it be permitted to serve as a cloak for wilful irresponsibility. This is the signif- icance of the report about the dismissal of a young man from his local Boy Scoutl troop because of Communist affiliation. Paul Garland will not be persecuted nor humiliated in any way because of his be- liefs; his membership in a Young COTIT-1 munist group will in no way affect thel rights and privileges which belong to every, British subject. He is being put out of the Boy Scouts for the very simple and practical reason that Scout principles and: Communist principles are incompatible. A solemn affirmation of faith in God and of allegiance to the Queen would quite ob-I. viously have no meaning for anyone who accepts the Communist assumption that re- ligion is an opiate and the monarchy a relic of medieval feudalism. It may be that in due time Paul will see for himself the utter futility of the Communist creed; oth- ers who have allowed themselves to be led astray by the same insidious propaganda have been reconverted to freedom's way. If and when that time comes his erstwhile Scout associates will be among the first to extend to him the right hand of fellow- ship. Meanwhile, it would be fair neither to himself nor to the Scout movement to allow him to continue nominal membership in an organization established on religious faith and national loyalty. EDITORIAL NOTES Heavy ice off St. John's at this time of year rather paradoxically indicates an early spring. Islanders are long familiar with the phenomenon of heavy ice only ap- pearing in Northumberland Strait when the back of winter has been broken. 0 D O The depth which it is proving neces- sary to bore to find bedrock for the pro- posed Federal Building in Charlottetown must come as a surprise to many. Drilling twenty-six feet without striking rock indi- cates an alluvial deposit laid down over a long period of time. The Island must once have been submerged for a very consider- able period. I O O The annual conference of the Agricul- tural Council which is holding its sessions at the Charlottetown Experimental Farm is probably the best assembly of expert opinion on Prince Edward Island agricul- ture that meets at any time. The toll sub-committees deal in a scientific manner with almost every phase of farming. O O 0 Chester William Nimitz, American ad- miral. was born in Texas this date 1885. A submariner, he rose in the First World War to be chief of staff to the commander of the Atlantic fleet's submarine force. 1938 he was promoted to rear admiral and following Pearl Harbour he became com- mander-in-chief of the Pacific fleet with the rank of admiral. He was responsible for the organization and strategy which restored American power in the Pacific un- til MacArthur was ready to invade Leyte. O O 0 Scientists continue to make discoveries that were well known to practical men of years gone by. In this Province there are many who remember and some who took part in the hard work of spreading thou- sands of loads of seaweed on the fields. Now the National Research Council and the Department of Agriculture have determined that seaweeds contain polysaccorides, chem- ical compounds that are excellent soil binders to retain soil moisture and to serve as soil conditioners as well as the more in. unuautlxnocrlmcnuhm '.,h)Qh3o!fhl.FiIheriResearch common feflllliel ingredients. , . . THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN AOn The Jo ,V'. b ."llloglcol". In I PUBLIC FURTJM This column in open iAi' the I discussion by uulesponiicnto of questions of interest. The Guardian does not neceunn Ily endorse the opinion of sun respondents PROGRESSIVE EDUCATION Sir,-Little "cl" launched into wishful thinking in "Let's Talk It ct Over” (The Guardian, Feb. 22). His prattle about "the complacent old. stand-patt.ers, etc... etc.." is entirely irrelevant. No writer so far has contended that the past was perfect, or refused to envision evolution in educational pmcesses iii the suture. "Tradit.ionalists" believe in progress. They agree with little "d" that progress means change, but they do not admit that every change is an improvement. "f..et:s Talk It. Over" goes off the beam in identifying educational progress with progressive educa- tion. The author seems blissfully unaware of the fact that. peda- gogical progresslvism is an aca- demic ideology just. as devastating to the educatimial world as Com- munism is to the international world. That" variety of pedagogic: is based on John Dewey's phil- osophy of pragmatic relativism. It. To deny that there is FY03”-5' slve education in this Province is just as preposterous as to deny that the Island is surrounded by water. All our educational mag- IITIICS received their degrees from universities on the Canadian main- land or in teh U. S. A. Some NC graduates of Teachers' College. Columbia. The reviewer of "So Little F0! The Mind" said: ”She (Miss Neat- by) places herself on the side of tho "trodit.iona.li.st.s." Then he Pl'0' cecds to bclabor the work with I barrage fo opprobrlous epithets: "diffuse". "repetitious". "exasperatingly unclear". "DYE- ludlced". "bendentlous". Now. MI”- Chlmdler was the spokesman for educational offlclaldom in P. E. I. And it. is quite evident. that he is hot. n. "t.radltlonalisl.". Then. the only thing he can be is I "DIO- gi-i:sslvist." - A little while later. "19 SUDCF lnbendent. of City Schols declared: "Despite the able presentation which Dr. Neatby has made. I still remain a supporter of lhe modern school with its progressive lmethods." In the Feb. 22nd issue of the Guardian, the Aulstont. to the Director of Education conforms .o the pattern and uses the PTO- gresslvlst lingo: "Randi!!! "Edit lne”':' "lnm-eating. stimulating. l Jzgggg '7 J ?oe&l'6um THE BOY outside boot. morning tide, knee. (er-point, any fence: It pouem gate or fretted barricade id. not his lance quutloned how. -Elizabeth Mabel Brynn in christ- ian science Monitor. 0 No fence. will keep it growlnl boll can wanton whirlwind. atom the can rock defy the reach of living ro ? ln dream of storming buttons he will see For toe-hold widened crovloel that blunt, And he will ferret. ride-mm with I one hand cupped sloutly on A dI.g- Your boy can come to tel-mo with no mean: to climb ouch toll im- pedlmenu Rather than scuff thick bluoatone. and Your would-be knight has never Blessed are they that do his com- l monuments. that they may navel enter in through the gates into the city. . and satisfying I experience", c. Exactly the same techniques arcl used by pmglcsslvists throughoutl North America. For instance, when: "the skilled teacher”. that mcllnsl ated with Deweyisnl, ivishcs 'tol teach her pupils the meaning off the word "jump", she proceeds thus: She first gives the childrenl a mental picture of the iiord. Thcnl she displays a word card on ii lllclll the word jump is printed. Then. the pupils jump; then the teach- er Jumps; then they all jump at the conclusion that. ,Lhcy know the meaning of the word jump, justl as Mr. Maclicnlzie jumped at the. conclusion that that method iiasl better than the old one. . A serious licakiicss in Dl'C3l'C5-: slve education is its difiuseness. ltsl leaders want not only to look after the total development. of the cliild.l but to extend their solicltudc ml is a self-contained ideology with me parems through E 50” of. mi N” techmquea terminology "Bringing Up Father” and Mother and propaganda machinery. department. Progress involves change. But. when there is continuous experi- menting, the teacher begins to feel, resentfully. that she is play-l mg the role of laboratory tech-l melon and her pupils are being used as guinea pigs. In conclusion. I would like to suggest to little "d" that it is not becoming to a veteran pedagogucl to spin yarns for propaganda pur-, poses. I am, Sir. etc. W. J. ENRIG-HT g........n... THE FIITURF. on THE UNITED STATES l Sir,-I llm not adopting the. roll of a prophet. but simply giving the' facts as I have learned them. I am concerned about this great. no- tion and what. is happening there. In Life Magazine of Jan. 4, a very glowing account is given of they present. prosperity of that cnuntryl and I rosy picture of her future. About. '10 pages. or nearly all the, issue of Life is given in picturesl and descriptions of U. S. gl'OWi.li.l "Our biggest yexlr," they say. "nnd basis for a bigger future." Her cnemics have been prophosyilig for her ii grevious depreslsionp worse than in the 30's, but. the! President assures us there is no depression in sight. case the experts may be wrong the Governnment has. very care- fully, blue-printed for 15 billlom to be spent in public works in the next five years, thus to forestall nny threatened depression. I dare say he has Russia. in mind. per- hnpc all through this glorification of the us. They need to know that this in I great. nation. But. there are other things to In 1178 Gibbon wrote his great history: The Decline and Fall of Even if it be spiked and tall lam” Rom” Empire. nick at nu beginning of the christian era when Home was lltlll in her power and glory, mistress of the world. what. man could guess the future of that nation? The Romans were immensely proud of their country. She would sit. as queen on -her uven bill: for all time. Gibbon lllis four cause: for her decline .lind full. The first he token is the undermining of the dignity and sanctity of the home. which ill the basin of human society. Divorce had become very common. In the Us. the noted rnnrrloge ceremony hu become a mockery, divorce a scandal. sometimes I have been saddened. u a minister. knowing u I did that. the parties were not. fit to enter such an alliance. we here in Clnldl are drifting. but. In the 11.8. many a minister: hurt must. be note. on he performs : mornlu eel-limony. of course. many marriages are performed in the mulIt.rot.e'I office. and take The Age Old Story N ;:8:8J3:tDnQDDD3IbD33DDZO.uD?QQDb2L " llllnl'e exciting and brutal. The U. and lust. inf think about besides the materlail levary ion in the country in its Z Nlotev B); -u.-4.... llootofuoutoullholnnd. vvrltlnt on the wall. The mistake we make in in kidding ourselves into believing it isn't. true. Stntford Beacon-Herold. Wonder wine the buggy-whip manufacturer. who our the hand- wrltlng on the wall a few you; back and switched over to airplane Propeller manufacture. in thinking about in this let an. - Btrltford Beacon-Herold. Dnlvenlty of California atomic Bclgzitists have produced "Element 90. the heaviest known. 'ln their Cyclotron. but don't. know what to do with it. At. lut this may be the Diva" welavht. tint will keep ptpera from blowing off your desk when- ever I. window in opened. -Wind- sor Dally Btu ...... our ovcruu (nook have con. plalnod of menu: in French They agree with Mr. Lillyvlck, who on learning the French for water remarked: "Lo, eh! I don't. think anything of this language .noth- in: It all." At. my role we never put. the word water in French on our bill: of f e and there is on- other good ohn Bullish English word (or is it. Scottish?)-porridge That invariably Appears at the head of the list. at. breakfast in native condition with no foreign nonsense. Irideed there was once o. Swiss hotel-keeper who firmly bolleired that porridge was the English for menu. .-London Times t Holland in 1. null country both in area and in population. But in getting things done, Holland takes a back seat to no country. whatever its size. Hence lt.,came FEBRUARY 24. 1954 The. Waxa ratify the zumpun gluaity umy. Both liJl:il'llL.oi:o.'I.” u h parliament ' the treaty. and Hbullandu ugipmm ready to so I-held nnq N. no. part in thin collectln ucyuriti agreement. if and when the othl countries concerned get uuund " ntltylnlz it. By ll. rapid mm k flon of the treaty. Helium mg C" on ' for its lower null? 501'!--Rbllno Lender-Port. I ' 75'" ll I nod clnn CODITBM this year will um-.,.,'eh" Driver room in the Capitol. Here: 32?: there has been no me, ,0. A Purpose. but last. ye" Room P59, just. off 0.2;. mm" floor. become ovalllble. when H, ion is overcrowded even a stain: may serve for the reception 0; I new influx of light in hlurnan con- sciousness. I new gppegrlm 0, divinity in human affairs. Bug in the bustling Capitol of I gran and powerful nation it. is fitting that a quiet. room he set mg. where overburdened legislator. may turn to receive more of that divine light. to guide them in th. way that they should go, m ohm. tlan Science Monitor. A Toronto lawyer has given ll" Canadian Bar Association solos. thing to think about in his con. tentlon that. confessions should in excluded from evidence submmed to courts. Norman Borlns, in, lawyer, taking this vinw -believes that the dhn-..,' of confession: has been dz-lll. onstrated in recent years in cases of international importance. He said he was especially COflC('1'!l- ed when a confession from an ac. cused constituted practically ,.u only evidence ill the Crown's ensl- Old Charlottetown will P. :. i.) HILLSIIOROUGH FERRY '1'” "" um "5 M ""5 "ml "'3.Vl From an aliony-mous letter in Ills the Royal Gazette, Sept. 13, laaozl "Any person who has crossed on the Hlllsborough Ferry at anylbe there" and he came down to ltime within the two last seasons, 5'-C--rcllnnot but observe that the rcgu- city for t.en'.s sake. I am. hoping 'lat.ions are flagrantly dlsre,-,vai-d- that God will not only spare the iU.S. for the sake of the Christians boat is an old sudden craft, with, who are there, but that they will ed. The substitution for a horse much difficulty kept. above wntelyl Y . . , . . not even fit for a dung barge. whole current of her career for one Hm I5 mmougml mdoCt”n'l'Ili:rc is only one small boat talld: the better. that provided very recently) ln' which la passenger may trust him-.for this great nation. our nearest at least.' neighbour. We believe that under- without. being subject tosit crampedlncath the web of political mano- likc a tailor. or the pleasant sen-leuvering the U.S. leaders are sili- sation of lief. feet, while mwedlcere and genuinely peace-minded. self with any safety. or across at about the speed of at criminal's cart. E "Instead of fifteen minutes only.,st,m1ey Bridge. passengers are in many instances detained for nli hour, .solr.':t.lnies two, and, not infrequently. two hours and a half. To scc II boot plying recently after sunrise is nearly as rare an object. at flint. particular time. as the evening star; and to get. A gig or wagon! over before eight o'clock in tliel mornings is next to impossible. one urunkard. and a lad hardly capable of sustaining the labour. lire the persons to whom the managemcnt. of one of these crazy boats is frequently committed. Very commonly sixteen. eighteen. and oftentimes more than twenty per- suffercd, if not. com- sons. are pelted, to cross in a boat at one time". and treatment the most. rude and insulting is daily experi- enced from the ferrymen." ' from five to ten minutes. The next. point. Gibbon maker, cum." m” M comma,” mu Chas. R. McOuoid BA. was the Roman's mad craze for pleasure; sports every year became S. ill going much the same way. Sport. horse-racing, boxing, foot- fall, which hardly knows I Sabbath day, with sport. for more import- ant. than church and religion. Kept. within bounds these sports are wholesome and necessary. but in the US. money-madness has carried them to the dogs. I have never read of the Romans "fix- ing" any race or fight. or they of- ten do in the States or is that just. .l modern trick to fool the bet- tors? llle next cause of downfall was the building of gigantic Irma- ments for defence and offelico while the real enemy was within. the decadence oi the people. In the next five years the U.B. ex- pccts to spend 56 billlom on arms. She, quite honestly. feels that that is necessary. She does not. want to be caught. again unprepared. nua- atn il a potential danger. But. no where it in lending! Recently I law had to be passed ruining the national debt level to 290 billlom. No fear? Pmllnpc not. but I heavy national debt is no ufe-guard. The final point Gibbon makes in the decay of religion. and be- coming impotent to guide the peo- ple. Thln ll tho moat. fatal hap- pening In the 11.8. and threaten! grave issues. Recently. Deblliul. A European bishop. sold to the Am- erican church that. they should have two nltnn, cm for worship of God, the other for the dollar. This nine might well lpply to our c nodlon churches. "Tho world, t e flesh and the devil." II I trial of evil forcel. playing on human life. sometimes helrd from the pulpit; and of than three by for the most widespread and flhl in the world. Money. money. money, milllcnu. billlom. income: rocket- lhg all over the country! In loll Plan-o, the Spaniard. invaded the Inca emplro in Peru and carried away Ihlplondn of gold and silver which enriched Spain for con- tul-Ioo. but that gold had I good deal to do with lpolnb downfall. Tint iuiirldlod (Intro for vnoltli as no surprise last week to read .that. The Netherlands has become first European tho and Us. You remember on a hill and the city. "If ten and God promised to spare the be the means Let us hope truly Christian people in the will yet. become her salvation. praying for the salvation of At any rate John A. MacAllllv l-2 Winniper: ,presldcnt of the Cl-.- adian Bar Association has Elllll! on record as saying the CM would give carcful stlldv in in Borlns' propos-ll. - Sydney Past- Record. t country to Ten per cent of the rlllillll Slates Annys draftees ncecl llI'):I- cducation than they have in of-arr to understand basic mllitlll-y tl-...ll- lrlg. according to Army Asslst.l:l' Secretary Hugh M. Milton, 2-1 The need for highly qualified ll1'!' i: increasing because of toll- plex new weapons, he said ill a speech at Elgln, Illinois. cllln. for "xi better rdilcatloziallimtw-' If bcttcl: cdl;c:ltioli is nccrlecl. :- cludlng that at elementary lDl:F. in Order to understand niollrrn methods of destruction. is tllsl-r not as least equal reason for mow and better instruction in the cam- nlex nrts hf cil.l.'7r-nship and lie!” ' old Abraham stand- overlooklng Sodom fifty righteous men of changing the for the very best Ever ndd::i bit of support und standing for thc Al1lCl'l..-" I Em: 515 NC-v public schools is It contrihlltloll tr W- 1- GREEN that improvement. -- Cllflsll i Science Monitor, PRO FESSIONAL CARISSQ l Maflieson. Paulie & . Nicholson MATIISLSON. A. ll. PEAKE. B.A.. LI..B. I JOHN P. Nl(..'HilI..'i(IN. LLB. Barristers. Collection: - I15 Grafton street A.W MucPhee 8. Trainer II. E. bllrflll-.'E. B.A.. Q.c Ir. sonmnwn TBAINOB. on Am”! '” '0'" lllgrrlltcn. Eu; J. S. Taylor. R.O. 0l"l'0Ml-ZTRIST Eyes lixnmlned. Glasses Fitted Corner Kent. and Queen sis, Office Phone M33-House 4756 A. Wulihen Gciudef. LLB. E BARRISTEIK. S()l.lCI1'()lI. me . Phillip: Jniidlng , Ill Grafton Street Collection on l Etc Money To Lalo Gang" 3, g,su',,d J. Elmer Blanchard. c.n.oao'r A. GAUDET. o.a.. 1.1.3 '34- Blrrlsten and Solicitors BARRISTI-JR. SOLICITOR. Money on Loan - NOTARY. Etc. Bank of I 201 QIGIII IL Ill-blond cum Bldg. ls pefhlpj the crooks!" mount the U3. face: today. , ' our hope I that tholinuity fiiu M. Albon Former. 9.6. BA LL. .. B. Barrister Ind Solicitor- Charlottetown none: to loan Palmer 8. I-Idsloni I A. J. IIASLAII. ILA-. LLB. In-rlour. lilo. Onnk of Nova sooth Chambers Ola:-lothtown. P. l. L MONEY ro LOAN Dr. A. L. Moclsooc Above Charlottetown Clinic Montreal. Quebec. Othvn. . CA. at Inllfu. luau. II. album IJvoI'l0Il. New Phone 4'.Ll2 165 Queen St. Bell. Mothlcson 8.7” Foster IAIRISTIJB. souorron. NOTARY. l'-'tc- Bu-rlltcn. Solicitors. lilo. Butlorn Trust Buurllng 3, 3. my-ug q,c, Cl-IAIII.0'l'rl!iTlIWN 0- 3- FOSTEIB l-l-I1 -AA--A-A-i --- lanln on City and Form H. J. Mobon. R.O. M nf'cr;:;;:;e-Sm” mu .' ”l'""''”'''''' , lg L Chm-lotutown. l'.E.l. Phone on Frederic A. Large. 0.0 nnrrlotcr, Solicitor. Notary lloyll Bllllf of Guild: Bulldinl Chu-lotintnwn. P. E. I. loan: on City and Fun Proportion J. A. McGuigon BABBISTEI. SOLICITOB. EW- NOTAIIY. lib. Ourrlo Building Gordon E. MocMilloii. B.A.. i.l..ii.. vi . nulniln-n. common. ma- D"cg,jo5ng:,':”" iu Prlooo :tiAL- ughlrloboetowi Palmer (ll-uionh Ib0Fl'I'l.10WN Dial 0438 iii Prince at Byron J. Grant. O.D- OITOKETIIST LII lent Shoot Phone I'll (Opposite Bonn lloull nun-in "W H" Allison M. Giills. i.L.I. ULOIIA oimomo unis-rn. souorros. an I10 Grlfton IL Phone Q! III Uohmoogat. -I&)hIrIottat0Wl II Or. if. A. Mociocliorii -rs-'--"r'T om" I 0.0 An R'o' 9...... 3..., . onoimnin in mm street ri-om it" Ill Ion! Ill-eel - Dial out (fun to llmpoolro Axum McDONALD. CURRII ll CO. OIIAITIIID AO00II'N'I'AN'rl 'l'oronh. lulot John. slicrbrooko. VIIIOGIIVQI uh. Ilonoull. Illmlihu. cbnlottouwo. H. I. DOANI In COMPANY - NTI on: 9.0.8011" IIlmaow.I'lIloIIl.l.'hCI Phone fl” Ia Mn. chm-Iomltowi. Illfglm nu uenioui. M- Dnbnnh Inch J