f, iii, W li,, CANADA Stop, Look and Ltd" A fun It») " mlwsy crossings costs nothing In cal: and little In time. " in cheap Insurance sums! - or tummy. - Toronto Tale Ion-m and the Automohm. N ha. all motor can, I hue them limo-t u though they were ani- mate beings. The internal Gtnttus. tion engine hats spoilt England. There in no romance In true! now." The Lady Eleanor Smith, dang» ter of the late Lord Birkenhead, and heraelt a writer ot no mean; merit. it in true that the automoll bile haa annihilated distance. but has it not aleo brought within the Brt"t, ot the multitude a whole world ot travel from which they had tor. meriy been banned? And has it killed romance.' ls there no beauty left in the English Lake District. in Devon, in the Scottish mountains. or in the Yorkshire dales? Bo long as beauty remains in the world, ro- mnnco cannot die. And beauty will live no long as man does not delib. erately destroy it by trying to improve upon Nature’s handiwork. It " not I matter ot automobiles oi any other forms ot transportation. but whgt lies in the mind ot the beholder and what he may feed upon. It the auto- mobile helps him to appreciate the beauties of the Dominion of the love. linens ot Shakeepeare'o land, then the automobile is surely a boon and not a curse. Lady Eleanor Smith has spoken out of turn.--Montrea1 Daily Star. Sammie Diacovary. This Would most assuredly be a bleak and uninteresting world with- out the scientists. One ot 'em has discovered. a!!! painstaking re- amrches. that a frog is not tickllsh under Thanks to Imperial Conference. l The lesson ot the Ottawa Confer once has first been learnt by the mast refractory ot sli countries-the United States. For some months our neighbors have been mdusiiy brought to the redintion that they were on the point ot losing their tiw) best etienta--Brttaut and Catt. ada. And this resiintion. which made them foresee " irreparable disaster. has msde them sympathetic to the idea ot entering into s tresty on the basis of Mty-fifty. In ProPor" lion to their real readiness to depart from their habitually selihrh point of View, the conversations at Wuhing- ton will have fruitful results. - La Patrie, Montreal. Roosevelt's Magic. President Roosevelt is the Brat Preldent who has been able to make the rest ot the world sit up end take notice with no other innu- Once than his own personal weight. and his countrymen will respect him ucordingly whatever their politics. It is astonishing the dinerence I man makes in any situation. HU. tory will agree that in the present juncture at any rate, Mr. Roosevelt ls some tttatt.-9Utttlltoa Herald. Hudlm Driven, The Instance of u legions South Carolina man driving 1 cur after bo- ing denied a license recalls the num- ber of headless persons who do the same titing.--Buitalo Courier-Ex- Foresight, Tim man who built I two-car ga- rage in 1928 was toresighted after all. He keeps the car in one side and live; in the other.-41uelptt Mer- Just the Same. Bays Hamilton Spectator: "That Italian mother ot 18 daughters pro- hbly gets so wen-y listening to the daily urgument about whose turn it " to do the dishes that she does them herself. halt the time." She is. therefore. we take It. In the lame pogltion as the mother of one daugh- ter. Woodstock setttiatR-Rerlew. prPH Lear. Ot these, 3.209 were received February ard 176 In Jnuuary. The "o-months' supply from the Irish roe State In: 79.706. compared ith 123,306 In the same period In: mr.--tharlottetomt Guardkn. New Mark“. Canadian cattle imported by the United Kingdom In the Brat two lamb: of 1933 numbered 3,935 as "ainst nil in the nuns period last Rise In Prices. After whet they hue experienced our!" the we tew yew. it is well @1de why the grain growers “out! be dubious ot the future, but there in I emu uentlment of optr mien developing in ell directions luck max - the en important War'. Aftermath. It took England thirtr-h" years to recover from the Napoleonic War. The pepole of todny should exercise nuance utter s cauclysm such I. the Great War, -etoeeia11r pine. tt III followed by An orgy ot 011nm. and left . heritage of debts Inch " the world has never Anomt."--Vtctoria Dally Colonist. "tiifrrin.L-rroruer Cities Star. THE EMPIRE, lucvltably. "Take oft your clothes. lie down in a hot bath, and what do you heart" asks I: doctor. .. elect on the world markets. - Ro- sin: Star. The telephone bell starting to ring in a hot bath, and what do you heart" ial. Mr. Shaw’s Bad Jokes. l The Americans no angry with Mr. Bernard Shaw, who nus looked in on them during his world tour. They think his Jokes are In bad taste. It is obvious that they neith- er understand nor appreciate our national playboy. All his best jokes hare been in bad taste. - London Daily Express. Britain', Export Trade. The trade ot the whole world has shrlvelled, and we doubt it there ll a single country, great or small. which can show the "moderate" ex- panslon of exports disclosed in these Board ot Trade figures for March. That ln itself ls a matter tor real encouragement. Till recently our best boast has been that we were sutteriug less than others. Now lt ls possible to tutter ourselves that our export trade is actually on the ntend.--Lmdon Daily Telegraph. Fresh laurels are added to the fame ot British cars and racing drivers by the 1,i)00unms road race round Italy, in which Captain G. E. T. Byston and Lord Howe won the first two prizes in their class. This was the first time a specially pre- pared British team had been enter, ed. It was almost an impudent challenge. Three small British cars were pitted against giant competi- tors driven by the fittest “aces" ot the Continent in a terrific teat for men and engines. Capt. Eyston was the first home, having completed the srdnous course " a speed ot 56.90 miles an hour, including stops, and Lord Howe was only a few minutel behind hittt.--Lottdott Daily Mail. .. .... National Char-cur. A public conscience is the sum ot private consciences. The vision without which the people perish is a personal vision. The Christian gospel ot goodwill-to which the world is slow to liatett-ig an indi- vidual message. "Thou shalt love thy neighbor" is more than . gen- eral injunction. It is tor each ot us. essiduously, hopefully, to seek that which will give light in darkness and guide our feet into the way of peaee.--me Alfred Ewing in The Hibbert Journal (London). ' Advertising, Ancient and Modern. l Advertising is not a fancy devel. opment ot modern times. It has 31.: ways existed from the earliest days ot buying and selling. The town. crier making announcements at the street-corner. the hawker shouting loudly to attract attention in an east. ern bazaar-all are advertisers. The difference between ancient and mod- ern advertising corresponds to the changes in methods ot production and distribution. Between the pro- ducer and the distributor today stands the advertiser, performing 3 function which becomes more and more important in proportion " in- dustry is conducted on . larger scale, and as potential consumers are more widely seattered.-Bpeetar tor (London.) THE UNITED STATES. Source of Power, At the mouth ot the Severn, Eng- land. the waters rise and tall 47 feet at the equinoxes. Even the alprlng tides have a range ot 40 feet and the neap ot 22. Why not build a dam to hold back the water and pay it out guadually through turbines which would be coupled with dynamo: to generate electric energy? Moon and sun would turn the wheels ot Brit. ish tactorres.-New York Times. An organization ot nature lovers is asking Congress to pick u muon- a! tree. Without wishing to preju- dice the thing, we'd ny, omnnd, that the plum appeals most strongly to most of the chosen representa- tives ot the peoNtr.--Boston Herald. A slender and pretty young lady‘ took a taxicab the other day and said, in clear and lovely tones, tint she wished to go to the corner of Fifty-first street and Park avenue. When next she looked up, she beheld herself being driven past Fifty-first, well on toward Fifty-second. She spoke to the driver sharply, "Why are you going to Fifty-second Bt.'." she demanded, "I and Pittrdirtst." He shrugged. and then unhsppily explained how it was pouibio tor such mistakes to be mule. “It I was brilliant, lady, I wouldn't be driving this cub." he tta1d.--Nerw Yorker. Medtord, 3ussttettttsetts, a city with 64,000 people had no deaths trom mo- tor vehicle accidents lost your. A British Triumph, National Tree. Not Brilliant. April Construction Brisk In the Dominion Toronto-Construction activity for April was almost equal to the com- bined totals of January, February and March, according to figures compiled by MacLean Building Reports Limit- ed. Contracts awarded throughout Canada for April totalled $8,60$,T00 as compared with $3,191,600 in March and similar amounts for January and February. Quebec led all other provinces in contracts awarded with a total of $3,- 365,600. Ontario followed with $2,- 045,100, while the total for Western Canada was $2,910,300 and for the Maritime Provinces, $287,700. Engineering work amounted to $8,.. 849,200; ubsinees buildings, $2,473,- 000; industrial, $405,500, and resi- dential, $1,881,000. Figures for contemplated or pro- posed work indicate even greater ae- tivity in the immediate future. "Bluenose" Carries Woman Old Tradition Defied Halifax. - Bowling along before fresh winds in the chill of an Atlantic dawn, the famed Bluenose, champion of the Atlantic fishing fleet, was off Como, N.S. _ _ _ Four passengers were on board the craft, including Miss Marion Young, Halifax. Her presence was proof that hearty Cap'n Walters places lit- tle confidence in at least one super- stition of the sea-faring folk. For that tradition Ma it that disaster awaits with sea-faring craft carrying a woman passenger. 24 Killed, 138 Hu_rt ottawa.-A'werty-four persons were killed and 138 injured in railway and railway-crossing accidents during February, according to a statement issued by the Board of Railway Com- missioners. Of those killed one was a railway passenger, 12 were employ- ees and 11 were elassified as "others." Ten passengers, 102 employees and 26 "others" were injured. With regard ii, accidents at high- way crossings, two occurred in Quo. bee and 12 in Ontario. ' For biting Senator Hattie Caraway and biting at nett, Major, Roosevelt's police dog, will be muzzled. war's arm was bruised-Mr. Bennett's trousers snagged Flood followed a death-dealing tomado which "rcpt lower Minis-inn! state. killing about 100 and injuring over 1,000. Thin in the suburban section of Yuoo. MiatsitmittttL In Rail Accidents “In Dismco' 100 Die In Mississippi Tornado Code of Warnings New York.--vro the motorists' code of a. straight arm for “I am going to make a left turn," a lowered arm for "I am going to stop," and so forth, Gladys A. Reichard, Assistant Pro- fessor of Anthropology at Barnard College, would add another. Would Add to Motorists’ A long toot on the horn, a short toot, and a long toot, like beep-be- beep, for "a boy is stealing a ride on the back of your car." She pointed out that 18 children were killed in New York stealing rides last year, and 519 injured, end announced that she was stating a campaign for a universal adoption of the warning signal from one motorist to another. Lmdon.---Pltrgs flying throughout the country, lengthy eulogiee in the newspapers and a 21-gun salute at all military posts was the only commem- oration on May 6 of the 23rd anni- versary of His Majesty King George's accession to the throne. He will be 68 years old June 3. His Majesty the King 23 Years on Throne A stream of congratulatory mes- sages poured into Buckingham Palace. There was no formal celebration at the Palace where the King and Queen spent the day quietly together, but every Royal servant drank to the health of the Rulers in champagne and port supplied by the King. way and biting at Premier Ben- will be muzzled. Senator Cara,- Railway Reports Cut In Operation Costs Montretd.-Gross revenues of the a11-inolusive system of the Canadian National Railways during March were $11,399,215, a. decrease of $2,- 856,290, as compared with the reven- For the three months since the first of the calendar year, gross revenue: declined $9,077,277. Operating ex- penses were $6,383,585 less. ues for March, 1932. Operating ex- penses, totalling $11,654,522 in March, 1933, showed a decline of $2,104,083 in the same comparison, leaving a net revenue deficit of $255,307, as against $496,900, a decline of $752,207. flï¬â€™ . rtance Queen M_yr_tumk cit.t...lm.Year Eaeimtttt The Imp?“ an... - --. __-"'"-" - - To Toronto Chicken Toronto, Mar tk-om of the most chumincroynl trifutoeometoth'm country is a portrait of Ber Ninety the Queen and little Princes: Eliza- beth which arrived at the Queen bitty Hospital for Camumptive Children on the banks of the Humber at Weston on Saturday. It bears the simple tuto- graph in the Queen's own handwrit- ing, "Mary R. and little Elizabeth." Behind the presentation, there lies a story. Back in 1918, Her Mnjesty pressed the electric button in Buckingham Palace which caused to swing open the doors of the hospital that been er name. Ever since that time, she as taken a deep and personal interest in the institution that has brought back health to score- of Candi“ youngsters. For n considerable length of time, a picture of the Queen and Princess Elizabeth had held 3 place of honor ever si..ce the little patients at the Queen Mary Hospital sew this in an English illustrated magazine, clipped it and had it framed. When His Excellency the Earl of Bessborough, Governor-General of Canada, recently visited the hospital, the framed clipping came to his up tention. When the story reached the Queen's ears, she graciously forward- ed the original, much to the surprise and delight of the little patients. This has now replaced the baded but care- fully preserved clipping and hangs where all the youngsters in the hos- pital mar see it. R.C.M.P. Now Guard Canada’s Game Birds Montreal. - Empowered to en- force the Migratory Birds Conven- tion Act the Royal Canadlun Mount- ed Police have started out to patrol Canada‘s hunting lands in an effort to curb the unwarranted slaughter ot game birds. Plans have been completed by the "Motuttiea" for an emcient patrol coverage of the Province ot Quebec. During the past few years slaughter ot game birds, including ducks and geese on their way to and from their northern nesting grounds, has been so great as to seriously threaten certain varieties ot extinction. Pro. vincial, federal, and private game wadens, hampered by lack of man power, have. battled inemeiently tor years against the despoiling ot Can- ada‘s bird preserve!†A cheek will be made to determine) the extent of out-ot-season shooting and despoiling ot nests. Hunters' equipment will be liable to inspec- tion in order to asseertain whether the forbidden automatic shotgun, machine gun, or my like tlretirttt was not included in the hunters' equipment. Besides protecting edible varieties of birds, such as geese, ducks, and woodcocke, the mounted police will see that there is no need. less killing ot imtetytivorotm birds like boholinks, woodpeckers, wrong, and all perching birds. .. Penalties for infringement of the Migratory Bird Act are unusually severe tor in addition to a line of 8300 and costs, or the alternative six months in jail. the oftenditm hunter stands to lose all his equip. ment through cotifitsetttion. New Haven, conn.-ax Canadians have been awarded scholarships by Yale University according to a recent announcement. Sterling Fellowships were won by Cecil T. Lane ot Mont. real in tsoefo1ogy and William J. O'Meara of Ottawa in philosophy. Six Canadians Awarded Scholarships by Tale The Henry Daggett Hooker Fellow. ship in Botany went to William Fergu- son of St. Laurent, Que. Federick W. Schaeter of Gravenhurst. Ont., won the Kellogg Fellowship in classics. while University Fellowships were awarded to William E. MaeFarland ot Havelock, N.B., and Clarence R. Tracy of Toronto. making the books balance." Meeting the Situation "Where's the cashier?" “Gone to the races." "Gone to the races in business hours?" "Yes, sir. It's his last chsnco of :Zeppolln, has ttown commereiaur/ I and that only on the route from Ger. I many to South Americe. Only a com; paretively few peeeenxen, can be carried. end they are allowed I mini- mum of luggage. A small amount ot mail " also curled. The fare per head is considerably in excess of that by tirgt-cuatt steamer . while the comfort is not to be compared. Financial Result. Lacking There is In yet no record ot the full ttmuteittl. results of this com- mercial experiment. At present, too, the are! Zeppelin hes her an beg- ltllled with hydrogen, so the rink ot Bre, has still to be reckoned with. lThe supplies of the ttonutitarttmable l helium gas are. u hr an [I known. locnted only in the United sum ‘Ind Canada in suilcient quantity to be ot use in Blling the great tr", hm. Dr. Hugo Eckener, the Ger- man dirigihle designer and skipper, looks torwerd to luring the new LZ-127, which in building " Fried- irtchishUen, borne on helium. British Airmen Doubt Com-1 menial or War Value of 1 Present Dirigible Plan 1 London-After the loan ot the US. Navy Akron and the loss of the Brit- teh Ra01 thou who believe in the fu- ture of tigttter-thanair craft and thou who doubt hue been weigh- ing their cues. In England the doubters appear more confirmed than ever In their opinions, end it fs sate to "' that there are many whose filth in the future ot the :18- borne airship has been rudely shaken. It not destroyed. Assessing the two pound-me use: for the airtsttitr--cle0 And tni1iurr--- British experts totnttt puticular " tention upon the possible future tor cotntnereits1 lighter-tho-air Rampart. So tar only one dirlglble, the an! What ot the 11ghter-thatvair curt for warlike purposes? British com- mentstors revel] thst in the World Wu Germsny VII the sole possessor ot large airtthitts. Ot tlt Zeppelin: assigned to the Germsn Beet 17 were lost by enemy action, 28 by accidents. and 6 were sbsndoned a; uselesB---a total ot 51 out at 61. Except in also it is doubtful it the airship hss been much improved in etileiettcy since those days. but the military slrplsne in range. speed and ability to reach sud fly at ares: altitudes hu been improved qut of all recognition. The use ot the sir-ship In [see of the great- ly incressed efficiency ot the air. plsne would surely be even more prob- lemsticsl now than it was between 1914-18. .. Dr. Eckener Undeterred Dr. Eckener, talking with the Ber. lin correspondent of The Christin Science Monitor, said that he end his colleagues would not be deterred try the Akron disaster from continuing their plans. He hoped, too, that pub- lic opinion would continue to any port them. iGjirirtedt Airship Great Britain is at present "outl of the market" for airshipa. The ii) 100, the Burner airship. has been] dismantled and only a very small air‘ force personnel is maintained P) watch current developments. Prob, ably the view of an ex-pilot in the' Spectator is characteristic. He Cots.) tends that the airship is looked " from a wrong and dangerous angle by the press, public, and even " the authorities, It is, he says, not a commercial proposition: it " still " experiment, and an lncomplete one at that. What the airship needs in 10 years ot undisturbed. unhuetled ex- periment, by the end of which time l would be known whether it was a practical means at locomotive. How many people, he concludes. would book by the Berengaria if they knew she would sink it her engines broke down? tion through the lake huh to chi.. Kristianssand, Norway.--iund for Montreal and ultimately China), where she will offieiallr represent Exposition, the Norwegian training ship Sorlundet "iled from here loaded with examples of Norwegim industry 31 d commerce. The trip is under the direct patron- age of King Hukon of Norway and is being undertaken by the BorUndet as she is ml] enough to permit Invin- ago. In amnion to crew and oftV ecu, " appmnttiasts to the Norwegim manhunt marine no on board. Copenhagen. - U'ottatruetion bu started on the 1gngest combined mil tad road bridge in Europe, running two miles between the Danidl Mind: of Falster and Zeeland. The out is estimated " $10,000,000. An Eng- lish firm got the comma. Four New Rome.-Aimiral Sirianni, Secretary of the Navy, â€mourned in the Cham- ber of Deputies last week that the [min Government had decided to construct two cruise" of About 7,000 tom each and two torpedo boat. of 600 tons during the (in! your 1988- Start Work on 2-Mile Bridge Norway Sends Ship To Chicago Exposition Italian Ndry Program TORONTO Spraying is prob-VJ trortant oversaw of fruit grou'er. All at: wards the proper a growing ot I â€Harm-I "_'"'" - _ Wm. There are few (.u't not» which do not have their ouch of in. sect peatl and human discus s which. It left uncomrouod. will run they tott ot the grove“ profits and may oven - I considerable llâ€! lou. "W n-nv-nr man Spraying tar probably the any Im. pol-ant avenue: ot the sum-u. fruit grower. All other emu-ts trt- wards the proper euttivat'.on and growing of I lumen-wry crop tut an be nuilmed very quickly by an ludequnte or inetttciont spraviu': program. There no tew mm mm. A . “a .I...|.. aunt? of in. “II. ‘l'lmollnass and the proper mate rial Are two Important {worn in a sprayerâ€: program. The spray can not let u I care: Whether to control In Inner! post or I tungous (“wake ‘L-- .. nm\"ll lnaect pests. such ls biting "Isl-r†like the codling moth (side worm in apples) are'oontrolled by stomach poisons. viz.. arsenic in the form ot menate ot lead or calcium nr-enute, Bucking inserts, 'sttNt as plant tire or apbia. are controlled by contract sprays like tobacco extract (Black Leaf 40t. and tungous diseases. inch " apple acab. are controlled by fungi. tides like lime-sulphur spray Ot Bordeaux mixture. The majority of the mm zrower'n tronblea are controllable after and while the plant ia in teat, but there or. a few have! posts. like oyster abell scale, whteh are beat controlled while the tree is dormant, that in before it comea into bud. In (Me lnatance a very atrong spray is used. anon " concentrated lime-sulphur at the nte of one gallon to neven gal Iona of water. " such a mixtun would damage the foliage of a tron, all later spray: are somewhat dilur ed to avoid tbia possibility. - _.-'-- our W Iva-b -v v..‘.. V hi. spraying equipment ready. ttttf to order tor early delivery his nun-e rial- tor next year's Ipraying, Yum Brat at» should be to get the latest opny calendar for your district Write at once to your neuroeat Ex perimenul hm Ind atgi; tor a com ot the inter! Ipny aloud-r am! nttte, with special reterenre to you, particullr fruit atatriet.--Experurtettia1 Fm: Not... i AI gpny ealendnrs, giving ful' directions. are "nibble to all grow on for the â€Has. It I; not withir tho scope of those few “my: to re. tho coop ot than {cw mm. TV .M, commend ntrecttte IDTIYI. it in the desire, however. to urge the gruwm to start at once to overhaul or pr" Mg spraying equipment ready, mm Success of Spring Fair Helps Hungarian Trade Btsdapert.---Wittt an unexpected mecca ot the Spring Atrrieulture' "ir u the principal unglble re. non, Hungary, one of the first COutV trlel to feel the full effect: of the crisis. is experiencing a wave ot optimism. .. Pure blood stock " the Git actual tr sold tor higher prices then last year. sud about everything offered was disposed ot. Hotels were full. end the epprosch ot the Msy Indus- trili Pair is united with eonfideneo. Spanking before . committee ot the Chamber of Deputies, Bela im- redy. Minister ot Finsnce, declared that e brighter spirit now marks economic lite. He said that exports increased in lurch. tint axes were coming in hetaer end thnt a greater willingness to my Md been evid enced by debtors. In s specini lieu conMenee he: been demonstrated by the toundins o! s new Budwest daily. "The Morn. In: Express." designed to when to tohrists. Printed in French end Eng- iish. it is the only dsily - in these isnguues in any of the Dams bun countries. forty yesr. no I simiisr paper ind s brief existence Beavtle.--Mm. Karin Fisk, Sunk Wife, wasn't even thrilled wher the doubled for Marie Dresden movie Mar, an “Tugboat Annie." A Hollywood movie compmy arritr odinseatti.totakeseenmforthe taoduetioeu li- Dmuler couldn't u comp-n1 the out because of illness and . double was sought. Mrs. Fish was spotted on the rear of her housur boat throwing out eoffate grounds. She when! to act after never-1‘ hours of persuasion. Two uncovered lorrie- recently drove " miles through London with Me tom, ot pure sliver bullion. vnlued at £100.- 000. Only on ma, the driver, was on etch logry. The silver ll used in pre- W more tttms, and arrived ll Harrow unmounted. ott--Dominion authorities are to take over direct administration oi camp in British Columbia for single unemployod homeless men under an mt drafted between the two new“. The sky-cram em in coming to nu and. an a report to the American im 'tttttte of Architects. Housewife ftimctoe Kevyn Lekoy said Mrs. Fisk nude I he double. $s00,000 land of Silver . Required No Guard, Dominion Tilting Over B.C. Single Jobless Camps Ddubling for Dresden Of Sprayiry Holland Vanishing F Brings Dram To Curtail The Rune --h ma Chamber "Noe' to xlv - dictatorial It. slur: ot tl all lower no“ agricultural critn' on ettfetty u I meted barriers [And our: well no the qeqttrtettt, " when. ch any. lost onerous rear and Boon, I production commodmw u to . a“: " butter 1 grams the wir Lurers to ot butter .10. This m April : cordon of lion“ be not. curs: up I In the cheese u lulon bu been April and 2'it'd man Bil "ION more must red‘ so per can. the roll being whol " lute compel: Men (rude: I“: ttom the (01¢th that they musk“ mount ot the pl This [U h n mos the with which is her the coring â€will u w those Th of production I brought ubuut I policy of subs“ u the sum. 1 vorked out In ' (a which the 1 unsure: in bad “thorny. TIM who to tht mm ante! nculturul lands povorlshmout I and that in p- mtlhlml, {mil at and cheese I Iltlon. tive colltps‘ the govern! along . thro In to the tl Med cum by restricu thirdly. by .eteteer. But .tetarst poi: give- to the In use of "tting Sm mares. don and n tton ot the re . commm b. " ex to the Ct on to no oh. fused vex p: " Welsh Ca; Modern Itl’w Tl Nth lens new the I Inter 001m way Thu .PP' built in: I tion, of 80.000 tic feet mare hides to th taxis now er " ""etteel them on foo "Only by " establish at natal Jeni-y lot Cheese Out Thm~Fold The I The W HI then toth " " " ll