y 3 TEEN-TOWN TOPICS By BARRY Vince Lunny, columnist and feature writer of the = Montreal Standard, in a re- cent issue, blames the radio for crimes and atroci- tizs committed by the youth of our country, He men- tioned the two young men con- nected _ with a bank robbery at Pickering with whom we had the pleasure (?) of riding to court, who were sentenced to seven years in Kingston Pen. Mr, Lunny fail- ed to mention that every daily newspaper in the country splashes its front page with the most grue- some stories and. pictures it can find . and this too, may give the youngér set some of the hair-rais- ing ideas they get. However, Mr. Lunny is a member of the Fourth Estate and naturally he has his limitations in his remarks. Free T-B Tests Great Stuff Owing to the fact that many towns and villages throughout On- tario will receive the free T-B' tests campaign that is currently on the go, we are.asking for the co-. operation of everyvone--especially the teen-agers--to make these cam- paigns a success. Most of the adults - realize how important this free check-up is; but some of the kids, thinking they are in perfect health, just don't bother. This test may be a guarantee that you will have a future--Dbe sure you heed the call when it comes. Lucky Little Ladies, You! Two lucky little girls in the news recently were Marjorie Norman of Erindale and Judy Schopf of Owen Sound. Marjorie, who is 15, won the gate prize of a beautiful pony at the Cooksville fall fair a few weeks ago. She will call 'him Jo-Jo and says that she has wanted a pony of her own since she was a little girl. Judy defeated all contestants in a beauty contest to win the title "Miss Owen Sound".. Thisevent was held at the annual fall fair too. Runners up were Owen Sound girls, Jackie Ruck and Doreen Bye. All these girls in their teens are well known in their respective com- munities and their popnlarity will no doubt leap to greater heights with the recent awards they have won. ' Good Listening Now that fall is well on the way, all the good winter programmes are back on the air. In case you have forgotten, you will catch Phil Har- ris Sundays at 7.30, Charlie Mc- Carthy at 8, Lux, Monday's at 9; Bob Hope and Red Skelton on Tuesday nights; Bing Crosby on "Wednesday and Al Jolson, Wayne and Shuster and Abbot and Costel- lo on Thursdays: Other big-time radio shows will' no doubt have made their appearance by now, so see your local paper. TEEN-TOWN REPORTERS Parry Sound--Audrey Harris-- \9e have a Friday-Nite. Club dance weekly and the majority of 4 the Hi crowd attends. Skating, skiing and sleighing parties are planned for the winter, We had a school track and field meet in late September. The school was divided into four houses, each house with an executive, colours, cheers and cheer leaders. The idea of the house system is to increase comp- tetion and-also to make for good sportsmanship. ~ Marg Howe and George Ryder were senior 'champ- jons and Isobel Makins and Cal Nichols won the intermediate cups, while Betty Sheridan and Jim Dar- lington carried away junior hon- ours. Rydal Bank--Gail Martens and Isabel McLeod--We have been ap- pointed - correspondents to Teen-, J Town Topics and will send in re- ports, We are both students of 4 ¥ - bid LAAT - A x | #5 . grt What Science Is Doing Royal Jel ly' The queen hee owes her extra: ordinary vitality to food rather. than to her life of ease, finds Dr. Thomas S. Gardner of the scien- tific department of Hoffman-La Roche, 'Nutley, N. J. A study. of royal jelly, a glandular secretion - of worker bees which is the rich- est known source. of pantothenic acid, has partially explained why a queen bee lives about five years but the average worker only three months: Dr... Gardner separated royal jelly into its chemical com- ponents, tested the. various frac tions on fruit flies, and. so, veri- fied a suspicion that royal jelly 'promoted longevity. He traced the active ingredient to pantothenic acid, which produced a 27 per cent iticrease over the controls when - used: in quantities of half a gram to each thousand grams of food consunied, Biotin alone had no. effect on' the length of life of fruit flies but pyridoxin extended it about 10 per cent. When Dr. Cardner fed his flies a - mixture < of = biotin, pyridoxin, sodium yeast nucléaté, and pantothenic acid in the concentration found in royal jelly, their life span was in- \ MURKAR- Bruce Mines Continuation School and are interested in the acpivities of teen-agers in the distic) Runnymede, "Village ub" Velma Davis -- This is the third year of operation for the Village Club. Last week we held a dance and accomodated 350 "people, while dozens were turned away. We are making plans for a larger building. Runnymede Dramatic Society also has big plans. They recently held a social, when the student body en- joyed several plays that were stud- ent acted and student directed. . Thanks a Lot, Gang Many thanks to all you kids out there who have béen appointed as correspondents for your town for this column. The letters are starting to roll in and we are trying to an- swer them all as soon as possible, _1f we do not answer your requests for a few days after receiving same, please be patient and, in the mean- time, send along any news you can think of that would be of interest to teen-age readers. Canada's Real Source of Dollars p-- s Where Canada would stand to-- day if our newsprint industry were not producing upward of 300,000,000 of U.S. dollars is hard to say. We might be a stagnant or even an in- solvent nation. One might also ask where the newspapers of North America would be today if there had not been this vast development of newsprint man- ufacture in Canada. They could never have attained their present circulations and scope, comments the Financial Post. 3 Newsprint is a perfect example of "continental" development industry in North America, mutu- ally advantageous to the United States and Canada. What made it possible was the elimination before World War 1 of the U.S. duty on newsprint paper. Canada continues to run behind in its U.S. dolar account, gravely threatening the cconomies of both "Canada and the United States. We need more bold and imaginative planning, applied in industries other. than newsprint, A perfect opportunity' for such mutual planning exists. It is in the "book" and "fine" paper industry, which is cleanly split by the 49th parallel. Three facts stand out: 1. The United States" demand for paper, particularly for the magazine and commercial printing industries, is growing rapidly. It is not likely "that the U.S. paper industry can supply that demand 10 years from now. 2. The U.S. industry is only able to produce its present total of pap- er hecause it gets pulpwood and wood pulp from Canada, one a raw product, one semi-manufactured, both returning fewer dollars per ton of natural resources than they should. 3. Canada is capable: of great ex- pansion -in its production of finer grades of paper, while the United States is not. The facts all point to the need for joint action between Ottawa and Washington to wipe out tariffs on grades of printing paper other than newsprint and try to devélop in Canada as the newsprint industry has. New mills are needed. They .should be built here in Canada wiiere the wood _ grows and the rivers run. "been guilty of a considerable a- of 'thus enable the book paper indus- Photograph by your Ful-O-Pep Photographer Marmora--A closely contested race at Marmora. "ponies" are seen going into the home stretch. Here the Station K. Box 23. Toronto, Ontario "Classified Advertising AGENTS WANTED 2 OILS, GREASE, TIRES, tusecticides. Electric Fer. eo Controllers House and Baro Paint, Roof i oatings, etc. Dealers wanted Write Warce Grease & OU Limited, Toronto AGENTS: Sell Blip-Not Tiles In jour spare time. A' fast selling, repeat article. Write BELL WATCHES And get yours free. Write for particulars and sample watch State age and occupation. Sell. ers Brothers Jewellers, 130 Ranlelgh Ave, Tor Ont . AGE 5, route men, to sell children's wear, toys, novelties for manufacturer Full ume or side line. Attractive merchandise. I'opu- larly priced. Protected territory. Star Nov- elty Mfg. Co, 172 Duluth East Montreal 18, MAKE MONEY AT HOME Dependable Company has opening for hard working, dependable applicants between 25-60, part or full time basis. Excellent remunera- tions. Blue Brand Products, 7227 Alexandra, Montreal . BUSINESS OPPORTUNAIIES ATTENTION FARMERS AND PROPERTY OWNERS Wanted for cash purchaser,- farms, acreage or village property residential or business. Send full particulars, such as lot, concession, taxes, kind of bullding. Also full price asked, H. Pragnell Realty, 1553 Danforth Avenue, Toronto The other day a friend, who is not too athletically-minded, asked us why it is that sports stuff com- ing over the air sounds, as a rule, rather more sickening than matter appearing in print regarding the same subject. As 'one who has mount of material that has been used in -both these forms, the only honest reply we could make was that the reason is exactly the same as the one for the black cows cat- ing more than the white ones-- there were far more of them. -- * * What our friend was mainly re- ferring to was thet broadcasts of the last World's Series. So we tried to explain to him that the quantity of wordage those slaves of the microphone-had to turn out would, if printed, probably fill a whole newspaper. Such being the case, it is surely only natural that the chaff would outbulk the grain by a considerable margin--a: far greater mdrgin than if they could boil their matter down' to a column or' so. : ¥ « + . ' "It seems that every sports broadcaster--and we do not know of a single exception--is gripped. with a sccret fear. He fears that if he leaves even one split-second of silence, all his listeners are liable to take a runout powder on him. And as we have said before, he also appears to be mortally a- fraid of coming right out and say- ing that a -contest -is downright lousy----even if cverybody knows it is--but scems to feel it his duty to try and make you feel that you are missing the thrill of your life by not being present. 2 + * * Why these things should be you will have to ask somebody a lot older--or anyway wiser--than we are. Personally we thought that the World's Series artists did a pretty fair job, only slipping to any painful extent in their incense- "spreading at the feet of High-. Commissioner Chandler for his "master-mind" innovation of plac: ing the couple of spare umpires down on the foul lines, instead of leaving them on the bench or in the bull pens. However, as the "same Mr, Chandler has much to say regarding who is to do the broadcasting, possibly they can be forgiven, human nature being what it is. . * «oe Once upon a time there was a Strike Conciliator sho got the war- She Pioteste--~Among hun- dreds of Londoners who dem- onstrated against the<British government's new austerity rulings was 13-year-old Mar- jon Garner. --- Decorations gasoline coupons -- useless now with the ban on pleasure - driving in force. : «teased 40 per cent. ¥ around her skirt bottom are- ring parties together and addressed them something like this, "You both say that -you refuse to give in" an inch" he said, "so let's imagine that this strike has been going on for six months. You, the workers, have lost a lot of wages and your families are really- feeling the pinch. You, the employers, are short a whole heap of * sales and profits that are going to be highly embarrassing to account for when your stockholders are expect- ing their dividends. So now that you «have all this firmly in your minds, where do we go from here!" The stirke was settled in half an 'hour flat; but we had better explain that this is d wholly imaginary case, such peurile tactics being 'far too direct and simple to be used in the upper reaches of Capital and Labor rela- tions. . rr * . . Back there a piece we made re- ference to. some of the sports bal- Iyhoo which comes over the air, and hinting that the perpetrators of same--like the dame in the old song--were really more to be piti- ed than censured too harshly. Now, with the hockey season bust- ing intg full bloom, comés the" time when the sports writer who' is nine:tenths press agent and one | tenth reporter is seen at his best --or worst, If you like. And, like Sports -- And One Thing or Another By FRANK MANN HARRIS ("A Sixbit Critic") waves, for this type of writer it is also possible to find excuses. ' * * * For he, too, has his bucket which" must be filled whether or not bossy is brimming over with milk or rapidly running dry, Besides, possibly there are plenty of folk «who revel in knowing just what "color of eyes their latest hockey hero possesses, and what tinge of talcum he favors; in this. busi- 'ness, as in many others, the cus- - tomer is always right, i * * * So we have hockey stars who look and dress like moving picture leading men, who know exactly which knife to eat their pic with, and who are much more at home at a tea dance than in the back room of Hennessey's Tavern. But make ne mistake about it, they still suffer for the cause. That gaudy sports shirt still 'covers a ~multitude, of abrasions, and plenty .of bruises still lurk underneath that flowing, hand-painted cravat. * * * Still---it mubt be old age--more and more as we look over the capers we wonder whether we are -still on' the spbrts page, or have strayed into the Hollywood jot- tings by mistake; and more and more we find ourself yearning for the days when lads like Sprague Cleghorn, Bad Joe Hall or Scotty Davidson would spit out a mouth- full of teeth and continue on their way without breaking stride, little caring how their next photograph would look .or what effect such marring of their manly beauty would have on the volume of their fan mail. Ho, hum! maybe it's the weather; for even it appears to. have gone slightly haywire in this definitely screwball era. Spray Keeps Fruit Hanging on Trees Freight trains, jammed to the: roof with boxes of B.C. apples are leaving the bustling Okanagan Val- ley fruit-growing centre every 15 minutes- bound for the fresh fruit markets of the Prairies and the United States. » Plagued by a shortage of pickers and fearful that the apples might fall prematurely, many growers for the past few weeks have been experimenting with a hormone spray that may revolutionize the fruit industry. A. T. Howe, of Vernon, B.C, re- putedly the owner of the largest McIntosh orchard in the British --Empire,--said--the--spray--whieh--is-- scattered over the trees from a helicoptep "apparently is success- AN OFFER to every inventor--List of inven- tions and full information sent free. The Ramsay Co., Registered Patent Attorneys 3113 Bank Street, Ottawa. . AGENCY available for the Scots Guard Auto. matic Fire Alarm, Designed for home pro- tection. Write for Details. Royal Scot, 6 Charles Street W,, Toronto. BABY CHICK» A FEW started chicks; prompt Chicka for November-December ohould bs ordered now. Ask for list. Hatchery, 130 John N., Hamilton, Ont, WANTED--Flocks to supply us with hatching egga for the 1948 hatching season. Flocks culled and bloodtested free. Guaranteed pre- mium plus hatchability premium pald. For full details write Tweddle Chick Hatcheries Limited, Fergus, Ontario. shipment, delivery Bray, FREE range pullets 10 weeks to laying, Barred Rocks, New Hamp:hires, White Leghorns, White Rocks, Light Sussex. Also 'day old chicks booked to order. Free catalogue, 'Tweddle Chick Hatcherles, Fergus, Ontarlo. FREE range yullets 10 weeks to laying: White Leghorns, Barred Rock, New Hampshires and many other popular breeds. Also day old chicks booked to order: Free catalogue. 'Top Notch Chickerics, Guelph, Ontario. BARGAINS while they last on six, seven and elght week old pullets: White Leghorns, White Leghorn x Barred Rock, Barred Rock x White Leghorn, Austra Whites. Only a limjted quantity. Send for reduced price list. Tweddle Chick Hatcherjes Limited, Fergus, Ontario. PULLET, bargains while they last: White Leg- horn x Barred Rock, Black Australorp x White Leghorn, White Leghorn, Barred Rock x White Leghorn, § week 45¢:.7 week She, eight week 65c. Assorted Light and Medium Breed#) 6 weeks 40, 7 weeks 50c, 8 week 60c. Top Notch Chitckeries, Guelph. Ontario DYEING AND CLEANING HAVE YOU anything neeas dyeing or clean Ing? Write to us for Information We are glad to answer your questions Department H, Parker's. Dye Works Limited 791 Yonge Street. Toronto. Ontario A FARMS FOR SAL ARM for sale," 300 acres, 15 Parcy Sound. For full particulars, S. J. Fisher, Parry Sound, Ont, RR. RR. 1, FARM FOR SALIE--160 acres. good buldings, 2 miles from St. Thomas on No. 4 Highway. Known as D. I. Gilbert farm. Examine prop- erty and send Coffer to executor. W. L. Gilbert, 26 Yale Street, London. FOR SALE. 85 acres, 75 cleared, uo clay loam; exceptionally goo, Apply William Mardhall, RR. N§. Fall's, Ont. 160 ACRES 5 3 s from towt ings with attractive and (hade trees, 10 acres hardwood bush, 10 of- fall wheat, barn 74 x 60, straw shed 60 x 40, double garage, poultry houses; good brick house with sunroom; new furnace: this farm is ideal tractor land and a very deirahle property. Contact Fred and Chas. Nicholson, miles east of write mosftiy 1. Burke's L - fine bind surroundhigs, hedges Mount Iorest, Ont, 50 ACRE farm, part tobacco land, © kilns, greenhouse, tobacco implements, G-room houre, ': mile from town. Also a 4-year lease of 45 acres rented land. Apply to Frank Zajak, RR No. 2, West Lorne, Ont. 215 ACRES, 2 houses large barn, tiver, with or without stock and equipment. Tweed nine miles. Jos Robinson, Actinolite, Ont. ATTENTION FARMERS FOR SALE--Tractor Tires. made of rubber, sultable for bolting on steel wheels. $15.00 each, rear wheels: $7.50 each, (ront wheels When ordering state diameter and width of wheels. National Rubber Co Ltd, §& Wit. shire Ave., Torontp, Ont. INTERNATIONAL T.9 tractor with Bucyrus- Erie angledozer. Recently rebullt. Have purchased larger machine, Duncan _ Prentice, Minden. Ont.. phone. 8120. buildings. | are wat vm -- _- FOR BALE : METAL VENETIAN BLINDS wodern GIVE your roums a smart, APPeAl- ance with Venetian Blinds. Last longer, more fashionable, Buy dicect- from factory and save! 24x64, $7.20; 26x64, $7.20; 18x64, $7.20; 30x64, $7.80; 32x64, $5.40; 3dxéd $9.00; 36x64, $9.60; 38x64. $10.20; 40x64, $10.80; 42x64, $11.40; 44x64, $12.00; 46x64. $12.00; 43x64. $12.60; 60x64, 113.20. Larger sizes available Blinds made to order Very easy to install, express F.OB Toronto Abars Venetian Blinds 130 Queen St Eas: Toronto 2. _Ohtarlo. ru RE-BRED Irish Setter pupples, Full par- tieulars, write J. Crutcher, Bond St, Orillia, REGISTERED Beagles, pups and grown dogs; Registered Biueticks ready to train this Fall A. Leadbeater, Endiskillen, Ont RECORDS. Free catalogue of favorite hill- billy and dance artists. National Radex Ltd, Dept. O, 423 Portage Ave, Winnipes. Man: STURDY Latham Raspberry Canes for (all eplanting, $5.00 per 100. Premier Straw- berries $200. A. Crowle, RRR. No 1, ls lingt Ont ee n " a T'IRES Wa arc overstocked In good used Trade-In Tires with high treads--all guaranteed to be in excellent shape. Special price on car Tire. ALL SIZES $4.50 BIG SAVINGS ON NEW TIRES & TUBES Guaranteed for one year 30x31 --88.26 Tube $1.25. 450x21--8$9.90, Tube $1.90. 500x19--310.60, Tube $2.25. 600 x20--$10.75, Tubo $2.35. 520x18--%12 50, Tube $2.65. H50N1T--314.00, Tube "§: 65, 600x16-- $14.26, Tube $2.50. 650x16---517.60, . Tube $3.25. 32x6---700x20--8$43.76, Tube $4.75. 760 x20--34x7854.00, Tube $6.60. 825x20-- $62.60, Tube $7.76. Also a full line of retreads, ped C.OD. Dealers wanted BEACON TIRE Cor. QUEEN & YORK STS. HAMILTON 0, ONTARIO. all orders ship WOLF, Fox, Mink Trappers use only the best, complete system. Fishers trapping course and gland scents" Full particulars. A. EK' Fisher, Box 420 Calgary, Alberta 4 ) __. WANTED WANTED--Al kinds of dreased poullry. T™ prices for top birds. Joseph Cooper Limited, Poultry Dept, 2084 Danforth Ave, Toromis §. (We do custom grading). Logs Required WE PURCHASE Hardwood and Softwood lose for cash. Write Box 617, Hespeler, Ontario, ee ---- = = -- ee] WATCH REPAIRS > Dependable 10-day sérvice on. all types of watch and jewellery repairs. All work guar anteed. Sellers Brothers Jewellers, 130 Ran- leigh Ave, Toronto, Ont. "Higher" Mathematics "Do you know how these econom- ists figure out the cost of living?" "Sure. They take your income-- whatever it may be--and add 10 per cent." -- ee cept -- MOUTHS WATER when the fragrance of Maxwell House fills the air, This wonderful blend of coffees is Radiant Roasted to develop to the full all its extra goodness, HEMORRHOIDS 2 Special Remedies by the Makers of Mecca Ointment Mecca Pile Remedy No. 1 Is for Protrudi Bleeding Piles, and is sold in Tube, with pi po for internal anilioation, Price 760. Mecca Hite Remedy eh } for He $erual Itching Biles, Bold in Jar, anc or external us, ly, Pri Order by number from your nat Wy 6 Sov, HAIRDRESSIN Information on request regarding classes Robertson's Halrdressing Academy, 137 Ave HIGHLY RECOMMENDED Every sufferer of Rheumatic Paind or Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedy. Munro's Diug Store, 345 Elgin, Ottawa. Postpaid $1.00 PILES--Nothing -else you can buy has the same Internal wction as Pyltone I'ile Remedy. This liquid (taken by mouth) Is compounded from special" DBalsams, Gums, and Plant Extracts, It gets results because It goes directly to the internal cause of I'iles. That's the reason for its pucccess on the most atub- born cases. This modern way of treating that internal trouble gets results that last. One bottle of Iyltone is enough to prove Its healing power or price refuded at once. That's our guarantee no matter how long standing your case may be. Your Drugglst I'as it; or can ord it for you. J ] PONT WAIT ---Livery sufferer of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedy. Munro's Drug Store, 335 Elgin, Ot- taw Postpaid $1.00. OPPORTU ! NITI 5 rox won BE A HAIDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn . tinirdresaing Pleasant dignified _ profession. thousands succesaful Marvel graduates America's greatest system (Nustrated cata logue free Write or Cal) MARVEL HAIRDRESSING . SCHOOLS +368 Bloor 6t W., Joronto Branches 44 King Bt.. Hamilton & 74 Rideau Street. Ottawa i . MIDDLE-AGED Touackeeper for farm home, Melvin near Box 701, town: good Chesterville cook. Ont Hummel, PAT FETHERSTONAUGH Solicitors Toronto & Company Patent Established 1800 14 King West CRISTMAS CARDS FROM YOUR OWN NEGATIVES 20 FOR $1.00 - Tha most distinctive Christmas Cards you can get , . . cards friends will treasure. Send ui your (favorite negative. We'll return 20 attractive greeting cards-§8% x 4%" with your "snap' (from one nega. tive) printed on and matching envelopes. On 2-color folder cards $1.60 ¢z. On fold- er cards with photos colored $3.60 d=. Any size roll 6 or & developed and printed 30c. Reprints from your negalives 4 cents. > DEPT. M STAR SNAPSHOT SERVICE _Box 129 Post office A, Toronto €00d wages SLOAN'S " GOOD FOR (JUST PAY IT ON! | PAT IT ON! THERE'S BNE rHING FOR HEADACHE "ISSUE 43--1047. © FOR BALE BREEDERS OPPORTUNITY! Young pair Cocker Spanicls (breeders). -- Seventy-five Dollars the pair, registered. proven, bert breeding, blonde, Cocker Puppies; temales fifteen dollars, papers extra. Black female six months $35.00. Yorkshire, Timmins, Ontario. . y BOXER. PUPPIES Fawn color, excellent blodilines. $70 and $75. M. Schmitt, Box 533, South Porcupine, Ont. Pt bbb IAT Ah "DRILL presses complete _with_motor pulley, 14 capacity precision chuck, mortising at- tachment, mortising bits, sander attachment, Sell In whole or parts. Write Tool & FEn- 4 . z 5 N ine, ful" in making apples--hang on |gincering Co.. Box 465, BI Cajarines, Om. oo ly FOX and deer hounds, bred from choice stock. more tenactously. B. BE. Tripp, R.R. No. 3, Oshawa Ont. | You Will Enjoy Staying at The St. Regis Hotel TORONTO Every Room With Tub Bath, Shower and Telephone Single, $3.50 and up-- Double, $4.60 up i Good Food, Dining and Dancing Nightly : Sherbourne at Carlton Tel. RA, 4138 FOR SALE--Power fce cutter, ice alusher, lcader and Ice tools. A. Leclerc, Box 359, Chapleau, Ont. - FASHION RITE Angoras. Excellent woollers, developed from highest prize winning Can- adian strains. [ielected 8enlors and Juniors, $10.00 and $6.00 each. A. Geberdt, Maple Drive Angora Ranch, Route 1, Ayton, Ont, GRAPE STICKS, nize 2" to 4 tops, Apply o Nagdon & Gross Furn, Co. Ltd., Walkerton; nt. JOHNSON, Iron Horse engines, % IH.1*, $561.46 1.34 H.P, $70.00, Immediate delivery. Cur- rey Bulmer, Eglinton & Bathurst, Toronto, LATHAM RASPBERRY canes, $4.00 per 100. Premier strawberries, $2.00 per 100, W. Witney; Flora, Ont. : For constant Smoking Pleasure ALSO AVAILABLE IN %2 POUND TINS his erring brethren of the , alr- Look IN HIS SLEEVES, SILLY, LOOK IN HIS SLEEVES, I "w RIS lg I Nu So CSA a 5 Ni es Ti, ST a A ty ~a - NAT A XA Vy ey --- - > wl hel Ne Sh ~~ C ge - cae, = iz 7 % CE