ccautovv TllE ciiiinzerrisiowii cuaiiiiiiiil ltliitnirig Daily (Founded Ln 1887) Aistiiorlzi-d as Second Class ltlail. Pout Oflloo Department. Ottiiiva. President. lun A. Burnett; Vice-President. Wm. ll. Burnett; sEl‘_V.-Tl'(‘tlS.. G. M. Burnett; Editor and Managing Director, J. R. Burnett: Associate Editor. l-‘riinli Walker. “The Strongest lilemory is Weaker Than tlie Weakest Ink.” For A Safe Holiday With the szhocls now closcd for the an- nual mEd-sirnimcr holidays, ‘leaving thgugqn; of Island children free to enjoy the long vow. tiorvp-eriod, the sccison UISO brings its respoiigi. bilitics to parents who are called upon to do their part in t.'ie drive to rc-Juce the dangers of: a heavy death toll on the highways at this timc.l Various gsvzrnmsnt and safety bodies have is- sued pamphlzts on -the dangers inherent during the vccmion season but unfortunately the great majority of children have a tendency to ignore their contents. At this time, the parents could do much h cut down the accident toll, which often con- vcrts the ordinarily happy summer season into, one of trrgcay, through teaching the following! simple l-csscns: | - r i l g By emphasizing the fachthat motor, trot’- fi: rzaches its peak in the summer and early fall. By advising children of the safest places to play in their neighborhood and discussing these places and their advantages. By discussing safe, traffic-free routes when children plan jaiints and picnics. - By instructing older children to look out for yatinger ones, guiding them on the streets and highways. By warning young bicyclists of the dang- ers of "hitching on" to trucks and autabuses. By informing the children of the proper way to move in trofficbn the highways. Agricultural Salaries Salary scales of professional agriculturists In Canada is the subject of an interesting analy- sis by the Agricultural Institute of Canada. The survey was prepared by the national committee of the Institute under the chairmanship of Mr. W. N. Keen and gives a wealth of statistical information. Here are some highlights of the report: Salaries In professional agriculture were admittedly below those of other professions, which condition has prevailed for many years. Upward salary revisions, as recorded in the re- port, Indicate that such workers are still op- crating under a low standard of remuneration as compared with other professions in Govern- ment service and industry. For example, in the Dominion Government service, the report shows the following data as applying to profes- sional and technical employees receiving a salary of $4000 or more per onnum: Agricul- ture 4.8%,", Mines and Resources Zl.8%; Bur- eau’ of Statistics 26.9;% Notional Research port, the committee repeats its charges that Nazis hold key jobs in the Allied zones. In the United States, the indictment against the Communists IS on four counts: "l. It slvows unswcning loyalty to the basic principles of Soviet foreign policy. "Z. It has consistently refused to take sharp issue with the activities and policies of cither the Communist party, United States, or ith-e Soviet Union. "3. It hos maintained iii decisive posts per- ‘DDS who have the confidence of the Communist press. "4. It has displayed consistent anti-Am- erican bios and “bro-Soviet bias, despite profes- sions, in generalities, of love for America." lt is a strange condition that after a global war, ideology false to human liberty and the basic rights of man, still waxes strong. There seems gno doubt that Germany has not been de-Nazi- lied, and there is no doiibl of world Commun- ist activities, and a Fifth Column better organ- ized than the Nazis ever were, and more deadly. -— KDIIURIAL NUIIIS .- lt may well be that next Dominion Day will be celebrated by ten provinces. * * ‘P 1r A time will come, says Mr. Herbe Morri- son, when we will smile to iomember "t e moons of the Jeremiohs abroad and the whines of the faint hearts at home." Britain will surmount this crisis as she has surmounted many others in her long history. .. . The Canadian Cancer Society is to enlarge its directorate to incluilc a representative from each province, two for bi-lingual Quebec. The Society is now the sole official fund-raising body for cancer research in Canada. i C a a 0 O Gordon Graydon (P.C.~Peel) has objected to government reports containing only "ancient history." He cited one which dealt with events happening in the spring of I945. The reports presented to our Provincial House are open to the some objection, fi i Encouraging local business. It is interesting to note that the gold watch presented to Mrs. J. Walter Jones by Marine industries Limited, Sorel, was purchased locaily at the G. H. Taylor Jewellers. The watch was a PATEK PHILIPPE with solid gold brgcelet. n I At the annual meeting of the Canadian Medical Association it was proposed to unite the provincial Blue Cross pre-paid medicab service schemes into a notional‘ service. We will soon catch up with the Chinese who have long paid the doctor only as long as they remained well and promptly stopped paying him when they became ill. . i i i i! Extent of the increase this year in indus- inent is indicated by statistics just released by the Department of Reconstruction and Supply. These show that about 72,000 furnaces or 47 made in Canada this yeor,. Similarly on aver- Council 55.9%. ‘ Statistics compiled from tlienelcords of 10,-] 867 technical personnel,_both within and with- out the Government Service, as provided by the Bureau of Technical Personnel (I945) show thatl graduates in agriculture are offered salaries which are lower than any other professional‘ classification. As compared with mechanicall engineers, this ls 32% lower, and is l3% lower than the next lowest class. In tho Dominion Department of Agriculture,‘ the average increase in salary, based on the old and new maximum is 229/6. Many employ- ees were at the maximum of their class and, therefore, immediate benefits were limited ac- cordingly. A period of three to four years must elapse before the full increases are received. For example, in one group the actual immedi- ate increase was only I396. 05 flqlllll" °'3°% increase in. cost of living during the some per- iod. Liberty At Stake Not only in Germany itself, but in several other countries, is there a resurgence of Nazism. The International Committee for the Study of European Questions has come out with a strong exposure of tli-e Nazis. And while this is hap- pening abroad, a special committee in the Uni- rod States is exposing the Communist activity .now screened under the nuiiie of Southern Con- ference for Human Welfare. The International Committee in London has prepared a document that has been submitted fr. III the AlEied governments in which the com- mittee lists by iicnie ci number of Nazis still holding key pests in-both the United States and British zones of Germany. i It accuses the Swiss, Swedish, South African i and Argentine govcrrin-ients of laxity in dealing with Nazi assets and organizations in their own countries. i It alleges that underground groups of the Fascist party exist in nearly the whole of ltolyi actively engaged in organizing the escape of farmer Axis collaborators apd that "this not» work has the support of a number of conver directly depending an Rome." Tho lnterndtional Committee for the study. of International Questions includes a number ofl prominent Europeans. Among its British inem-, hm are Lord Vansittort, Lord Brobozon ahdi Viscount Elibank, as well as two Labor M. P.‘s,l Capt. Raymond Blackburn and Seymour Cocks. Edouard Herriot, former French Premier, hoods the list of French members. ' Their report is to be followed in a few weeks by a document on communism. The com- mitten declares that o "world-wide struggle be- twoon communism and anti-communism is taking placa today” and that in loco of this dangerous development "the United Notions appear pow- crises." Mkocalling tho roundup of Nazis in Gor- Inlll) that followed its inost rocont previous ro- uge increase of 66 per cent is expected in a wide range of heating equipment including radiators, hot water storage tanks and electric water heat- CPS. w u 1i w As formers become more dependent upon their mechanical equipment, they also become more concerned with its operating efficiency and its maintenance, says Implement 8. Tractor. Time is such an important factor in most sea- sonal operations that delaysidue to working in- efficiency cannot be tolerated, and delays from breakdowns must be reduced to the minimum. Hence the farm workshop is developing rapidly and is becoming as essential o part of the estab- lishment as the dairy barn or any other build- Eng‘ I i i I Jean Jacques Rousseau, French philosoph- er and writer, died this date I778; was pioneer ol the Romantic Movement, prccursoruof the French Revolution, and advocate of a Return to Nature" creed; he proclaimed the rights of individuality, denounced the evils of artificigl civilization, and sought to reinstate Naturfl H1 education, literature and life gcnerollyq" gov- crnment, he IIEItIpdCPBIKIS on consent o_ the people. The real strength of his work lies ill his style, easy, simple and clear as deylight, which effected a revolution in French prose. i it I i A mother of three children, the youngest only nine months old, was recently elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Britain-ant of the highest honours a scientist can achieve. She's Mrs. Dorothy Hodgkin who was a pioneer in the discovery of the chemical structure of Penicillin. Dorothy is one of the world ex- perts in X-rays. She took an accurate picture of the UH ngernent of the atoms in the Peni- cillin molecule. For a long time her discovery was kept sécrat because of the wartime seciirllY agreement between Britain and the United States, but now it has been made known, and Mrs. Hodgkin has her reward. This quiet womdlt in her mid-thirties has had on amazing career. While studying at Cambridge University l3 years ago, she started work on the compara- tively new science of X-Ray Crystallography under Professor Bernal, and among the discov- cries she made with X-royi. She V/Wlied °"l U‘? structure of insulin. Later, she moved to Ox- ford where she married Thomas Hodgkin, head of the Workers’ Educational Activities in that city. Besides her intensive research work, and teaching at Somerville College, Oxford, Dorothy Hodgkin runs her own home, and cares for liar husband and three children. She is one of tlis youngest Fellows of the Royal Society, as wall as onfof the first women to be admitted. Tho Society was founded in tha days of Charles ll, but it's only during the post two years that woman have been recognized for membership. Dorothy takes liar place beside Dr. Kathleen Lansdals, who is an X-ray expert as wall, and also a mauled woman and mother of tvrol ._,_.____... trial production of plumbing and heating equip-‘ er cent more than the pr-e-war peak will be, flutes By the Way "From Tavlstock we learn to o...» uismay that the village blacksmith ls a figure or the past, ma ma; iii _Zo~i~rn and South Tasthope town 511-05. heavy horses are going m”. 195$ for want of a blacksmith to time Lllem- Once there were five cmilthles in Tavlstock; today there ti" "We. Much the same state 0f affairs exists in Mlddlesex. Most farmer's today possess tractors; Very few are using heavy hon" and those who do have difficulty 1i. keeping them shod. _ undo“ Free Press. There's a feud In Reflng l”- tween a man who claims he ls a ininmaker and the Kinsmen club of that city. The raiinmaker takes credit for a downpour there last. “Pvk. but. the Kinsmen point out that the storm came during their Annual outdoor carnival when, by limafilfindlnz custom. it always rains. However. no one had the courage to come forward 1n 0n. Karla. in the past month, with a formula to make it stop raining. This country needs fewer rain- makers and more ralnstoppers. _ Cornwall Standi-ird-Etreeholder, The number of seats in the llouao of Commons is to be reduced. The recommendations of the Boundary Commission for England which has been studying their redistribution were published recently and those provide for 488 English seats com. pared with the present total of 510. The changes proposed by the com. mission will reduce county cati- sLituenci-es by 10 and borough Con- stitiiencles by l2. London boroughs “ill be affected in the greatest de- gree since they will now have only 4t; seats as against 62. —-U.K. Iri- lormation Office. A fine amateur symphony or- i-hesira in Duluth number's among lls members on obstetrician. One evening, just before a concert, this gentleman was obliged to rush to ii HPEIFD)’ hospital to deliver a new little Duluthlnn. After finishing the concert he returned to see how tlie mother was getting along. They are still laughing m Duluth over B proud boast the lady made to her friends when she returned home. "Was my case something special" she boasted. "I'll say it ‘was! Why. do you know, the physician “rho attended me wore a full dress suit!" _ Wall Street Journal. Anntlser great war iii not to be aiitl-clpatcd in the near future, and ll Congress fails to set up a real iriilitary system, including univer- sal training. in this session there will still be time next year or the pveai" after. Delay ‘rn itself would ‘llril be fatal. But what would be fatal urould be simply to imagine that the whole issue could be dropped (much as happened after the last. war), that we could fall back on parsimonious economy and antiquated tradition and accept the risk of being caught again far more disastrously than we were caught by the disaster at Pearl ‘Harbor. Delay cannot again be al- lowed to generate i-nto inertia. — ‘ New York Herald. l It is well-night impossible - in this part of the country at least.- tc keep the youngsters away from open water everrivere it desirable to do so. Regardless of promise . made to Mother or Dad, regardless i~f threats of spankings or depri- vation of ice-cream or pie. the rlillilren find the lure of the wat- ers irresistible. A seemingly safe venture knee-deep in the current. a slip on n wet clay bank. on over- eiiper reaching for a loig or a pléce oi rlrlltwoorl all too often and 1n tragedy. Best ‘insurance Against dic-ivning of course i-s to teach boys and girls to swlm at as early an iige as possible. It swimming is taught in a rlver. the pupil ls shown that when ln (llfficully never fry to swlm against the cur- rent. Make it. work for you. -Ol.- fawn Journal. The tall boarded varieties of Iris are considered amongst. the moist useful plants for Canadian gardens, says Thr- Quebec Chronicle-Tele- graph. These ziro the ones general- i_\ known as Iris and can be ob- tained in a. great Illlmllfl‘ of colors. I-ndeerl. the varieties listed by deal- ers qgmhor hundreds and new a-nos a re introduced every year Sami- people iriiiiie the Irls 'the chic-f flower in their gardens. and grow very little else: perhaps a few rlnflnrllls n-nd other spring bulbs and some late blooming flower in orrlor to have color in the garden all season. Tlii- majority of gay. rions like a few varieties of Iris ln the perennial borders and they are quite suitable for this purpose. If given well-growing neighbors. so that the underground rootlike stems \vlll become well ripened tn summer, the Iris will bloom for several years. Irlses are not par- tt-cular about the soil if ltls well drained. but they require lots of sun. It they do not. get. it. they are more susceptible to rot. and, even ‘it healthy. do not bloom so well. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN f__ PUBLIC FORUM This column la open to tho discussion by oorm apondenta of question: cl unrest. Tho C lnttotown Guardian does not uooeaaar- lly undo the opinion at c-ureapnndanh u: av-i-om-u-NMA-M u .-.-..-, SPRAY CALENDAR FOR oncrunns Sliq-Jrhere are a large number of small farm orchards all over the Province which used to supply ap- ples for home use, even though pretty well neglected as to culti- l/Bjllfln. pmnlmg, and spraying, but, with the prevalence of iihe Cod- flllflg Moth and the advent nf the Railroad Worm. unless some spray- ing is done these orchards might as lwell be cleared up and iihe land put to oiiher uses. The Spray calendar for small non-cotnimetclal orchards can be obtained by BPPlYlng to the Prince Edward Island Department of Agriculture. We can grow Just as good apples. cherries. plums. pears and small faults as any other part 0f Canada. but we must give our orchards some attention. I am, Slrn. etc. W. F. ALAN STEWART Minister of Agriculture MR. MCLURFS DRAFT Sin-That breeze that. blows on Mr. McLure in the House of Commons ls something that has P E. Islanders worried. They look at one another ‘solemnly and say: “What wlll happen to us, if any- thing hap ens to Mr. McLure? He. ls our one voice crying ln the parliamentary wilderness. The Lazarus boys, Tom. Lester and Watson, lf not dead. are sleeping.“ Personally I do not take a very ivorrled view of that. draft. It may be Mr. McLure's source of jmwer to supply his mentnl and vocal energy. Perhaps there is a constant flow of stimulating ozone in that breeze. Our other repro- sentatives could well use some of it. If Mr. McLure should ever sneeze-then watch out! I am cncloslniz an article on another srieeze-"The Sneeze 'l"lmt Shook the WnrlrV-whlch I think should prove quite interesting to readers. I am, Sir. etc.. Lo Tisureau Par Les Carries (Enclosure) THE SNEEZE THAT SHOOK THE WORLD President: I call the 599th meet- ing of the Security Council to order. (Suddenly the delegate of the Soviet. Union sneezes and, raising his hand, ls recognized by the President of the Council.) Soviet Union: A point; of per- sonal privilege, Mr, President. President: Wlll the delegate state his point? Soviet Union: I should like t0 request. the President to ask the sergeantz-at-arms to close the transom over the east. entrance of the. Council chamber. I feel a cold draft. on my back. President: If there ts no objec- tion, the request of the Soviet delegate wlll be granted. Are there any objections? United States: My government has not. had adequate opportunity to give this unexpected request of the Soviet delegate the careful study it deserves. Accorrlinfily. I reizret. to say that. I am unable to agree to lt at. this time. Naturnllv, my government has gvery desire to give this matter its sympathetic consideration and to accommodate itself. ll’ possible. to the views of the Soviet dele- gate. But, unfortunately, this particular request raises the grav- est ouestlons of principle and procedure. For example, this Council can- not liznnre the fact that the re- quest to have the transom closed is strictly-and I emnhaslze strict- ly-nmllateral in nature. If we permit such unilateral actions. vhzit becomes of the United Na- tlnns? Esneclnllv the smaller ones? Moreover. can we accent as fact that. the Soviet delegate feels a draft slmnly on the b sis of his wn statement that he does? I vself feel no draft. (At. this point. the deleiznte of the Soviet Union snerzes aiziiln. in Russian.) TIn‘t-rl States rtiirnlnc to con- fer with the State Department's B. F. llutchiison 8i S0ll OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the tit- tlng of glasses for the correction of ocular de- feats.” 53 Grafton Street W Qaoon Strict commas: snsuanuca SERVICE . o): 900a: 9000b ~ ocmrwprxrrxx-i. 9. “A1,”, . K. ogers gencies uiiiru g “Clllrlottotlwn LHACS “QDING Brief fa Beauty How merciful that Beauty blossoms forth Confident h its looting lovelheaal Sweet llllco that yeatorda Filled the auxien with a , Drooplng already. A broyvn flaw when all was fluw- ess. We who Cherished your beauty wfll remember. - Let that he enough Or just blooming for the moment is enough, —R/uiha.mah lctuelnfeld Frost. O-GO'O+O'O Old Charlottetown rm us; l MAMTDE AGRIOUUIUIAI. COLLEGE N9WW5P9I‘ flies. Feb. as. 10st. "Premier mrquharsori and Hoar. Benj. Rogers. Commissioner of Agriculture, have returned from Halifax and report favorably on the proposed establishment of a Maritime Agricultural and Horti- cultural College tn Nova Bcotia. The facts in conneculon with the proposed institution up as follows: Nova Scotti: La to purchase 300 acres of land and is to erect at her own expense a building cost- ing not less than $60,000. The Co-l- lege is to be fully equipped with all modern appliances for agricul- tural and horticultural purposes; and the running expenses will not he less than $10,000 per year. OZ llils amount the Province of Nov! Scotio pays $6.000 annually; New Brunswick $4.000 and Prince Ed- ward Island $1,000. Our people will have the privilege of sending as many boys as they choose . . . as many as either of the other Pro- vinces, and more lf they see fit. Beling a purely agricultural Pro- vince although small 1n area, we will likely haye just. as many young men to attend the institution u our sister provinces. "The Agricultural Department in our o-wn Prince or! Wales College, ivhicli the Government intend to establish, would simply be a pro- paratory step. If the Legislature when it meets approves of the recommendation which will Likely be made by the Premier and Him. Mr. Rogers, we hope to see com- plete agricultural and horticultural courses instituted; a course begin- ning ln the College at Charlotte- town and ending in the institution ln Nova Scotla, and imparting tn those subjectes an education equal lo that to be obtained elsewhere in Canada." Russian expert): What did he say? (Meanwhile, the President of the Council asks the interpreters i0 give the usual free French and English rendition, whereupon the discussion ls resumed.) United Kingdom: Mr. President. ln the first. place. I wish, if I may, to say that. I endorse entlfely what the representative of the United States has said. We have never before had a request to have the transom closed. such as the Soviet delegate confronts us with this afternoon. and I do not tlilnk we should accede to lt without. first giving it the most careful study and consideration. we may well be setting an un- fortunate precedent which in the future will trouble us. I think therefore. we should be acting more wisely if we were to lti-en this matter on the agenda until some rinv in June or July. ivhen the weather may have im- c-roved. Then. if all goes well and the weather does improve. it should be possible to reizlater a satisfactory conclusion to the whole nfiriir and it: need not come up naiiln here for discussion. Poland: I feel obllized nt this nnlnt. Mr. President. to observe on behalf nf mv izovernment that. I, too. feel a draft. In nrldltlnn. I should like to call the Council's attention to a clip- nlnz I have here from this morn- ing's edition of the New York ‘Times. This story. which was featured on the front paire. wives us n summary f A special com- munique from e U. S. Weather Pun-ecu. It: states that it ls-nnd I quote-"Coid and windy today, Min. do; Mair. litW-unquote. It. la. therefore, the opinion of the Polish delegation that. the Soviet delegate ls quite within the provisions of the Charter in ask- ing that the transom be closed. The Netherlands: I am anx- ious. Mr. GhalrmAnr-t-hst this I to lie aduqiiatoly llYlllllllAll s. your Insurance nuda. . Offices: Charlottetown Thomas tloAvlnn Earl It. Barks J. l. Barrows AT LAST oi.ii sviiiii-zv coat Sorry tlia price is liigliar but, glad to have a good quality cool for our customers. Your order will have our ot- tontion. A. PIGKAIIII 8i 00. LIIIITED riiou: 24o question be viewed in the light of general principle and not: merely os an isolated case. Now, out. of my banking experience, 1 have Just. thought of a vary sound reason for opposing the request of the Soviet delegate. If I remember OOHQCCIYJIG ask- i ed to have the transom closed on a point-and I quote—"of person- al privilege." Now in banking that would never do. When we lend money, wa have certain well- tried rules and regulations that apply to all borrowers. even those we utterly trust. Thus, in the opinion of my government, it would be contrary to sound prac- tice and the Charter to permit unilateral action by granting spe- cial personal privileges. . Poland: May I point out. Mr. chairman. that this matter ls no longer unilateral? I. too, have risked to have the transom closed. I still feel a draft. Australia: Mr. President, the question before this Council la whether the transom shall be closed for the reasons advanced by the Soviet delegate. Examin- ing those reasons. it. seems to me that the situation has not yet reached that stage of maturity in which the Council could consider agreeing to the Soviet proposal. We have. I submit. no real in- formation on this situation. In- deed, we have only conflicting re- ports and a news clipping. I be- lieve our first: duty la to ascertain the facts. I suggest that the Council appoint a committee of inquiry with instructions to return no later than a week from now with its ofllolal finding. Mean- while. the Council can reouest: the Weather Bureau to keen the Soc- rctary General posted on any chances in the situation. Soviet Union: I must siiv that ‘l’ fall to understand whv the mem- bers of the Council are not able to consent to the fullv lustlflerl request that I have out forward in the name of mv irovernment. f stated quite clearly that 1' felt. a cold draft or- mv back and that the transom should be closed Since the Council ls unwilling t-s grant this entirely reasonable and logical request. I am now compelled to state that I am iin- able to atay longer in the Council chamber. (At tho end of the interpretat- lon. the delegate of the Soviet Union amt; advisers leave tho chamber. e Polish delegate re- mains seated. however. merely turning up his cont collar. After is brief absence. the Sov- iet delegation returns. havlnr had a brisk walk around the Hunter College campus. On tnlrlnir his rent at the Council table, the soviet delegate raises his hand Arid is recognized by the Presl- dent.) Soviet Union: Since our earlier discussion. Mr. President. the sit- uation has changed cornoletelv. The sun was pleusaritlv m"... out- side. and I no ionizer feel the draft. It ls clear that these cir- cumstances render useless and senseless any further discussion of the matter bv the Council. Therefore, I should like to with- draw my request to have the trun- som closed. ' United states: The UnltcdBtat- as’ is naturally pleased to learn that. the Soviet delegate no longer feels the draft. However. I must point out that. once a situation la on the agenda. it must remain there untl‘. tho Council itself dia- (Oontlnued on Page 5 Col. B) r's;cii roucv All lllll If lltIlltl attested. 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Collections. - Money to Loan 90 Great George Street Charlottetown o§>oiw3oo PALMER 8. HASLAM A. I. IIASLAM, ILA, Idol. BARRISTER. ETO. Bank of Nona Scotla Chamber! Charlottetown. P.E.I. MONEY T0 LOAN Phone 85 P.0. lo: ll 0R. W. R. GAIISOII Chiropractor Palmer Graduate t. ‘ottoman In Prlsioo it. Phone lfll Frgihrlc A. Larill. I00. ARIIBTER, SOLICITOI, NOTARY loyal Bank of Canada Chamber‘ Charlottetown. REJ- Blloooasor to . Goorao J. Tweedy. L0. ms EXAMINED ' ‘ AND HASSES FITTED I. 8.‘ Taylor i OPTOMETRIST 1 OOPIII lent 1M Qllan II. Phone [I56 Rulings by Appointment Phone: lolllonco 10H 00-0‘!- 4 A. lioa Bandit. LLB. I00. Walt .&rrlator, Iolloltor,‘ Phillipa Building Ionq to Lou. DP. A. n. SMITH pain-in» I'll Gratin ltrm _ Olallsuai oust-ass.) -- i . sunsha- III - t i tbtlfflltlidtlFltlttii