MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN’ Devotion ll_the mother of ienoe. obed- flu Guardian. Three Cents. ‘(oi-hing Dally Founded llfl. . CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WPRIDAY, AUGUST 21, Read by Eve rybcdy Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew 1948 12 that; miadn MAXIMS OIA. MERE MAN Folly in youth n sin. in age on HI- “ bacriptioua Delivered 06.00. Mail $5.00; other Provinces A U. l. $1.00- COMMUNIST- LED THRON G INVADES BERLIN CITY HALi. §art Work On Million Dollar Contract At S’side 37,938 Visitors To National Park Nero OTTAWA, Aug. 30—(CP)-Can- Ida's National Parks attracted l record number of visitors in the four months ended July 3i, the Resources Department announced today. Attendance totted up to 694.344, a six-per-cent increase over the revioul all-time high of 653.861 the same period last year. Jasper and Banif National Parks in Alberta both share-‘l 1n the upsu-ing, the latter setting the para with 186,770 visitors or 24.133 more than last year. Riding Moun- tain Park in Monitoba ranked sec- ond in Banif with an attendance of 1191464, an increase of 15,827. In the Maritime Provinces. 37.- Kis persons visited Prince Edvva-‘d lalanrl National Park, an in- crease of 8.434. Cape Breton High bnds National Park had l. total ei 9M8 visitors. Apple Crop Below Thai 0f Last Year ll (By The Canadian Press) KHNTVILLE, N. 5., Aug. 20- Annapolis Valley apple growers met here today to discuss pros- petis of a small crop and a poor market. outlook. A. w. MacKcnzie. Provincial Agriculture Minister. addressed the growers and suggested a more active advertising campaign. Unless the industry “gets busy", he said. it will not be able to capitalize on potential markets. The apple crop this season has been estimated at 1,000,000 bar- rels. considerably below last year's yield. Coming Events "ice Cream, Dance, Iona Hall. Friday. August 21th. "Ice Cream and Dance. Millvaie Ichool, Friday, August 27th. "Dance in Tracadie Hall, Mon- lly. August 30th_ "Dance and Ice Cream, Bloom- liz Point Bchool, Friday. 27th. "Dance, Orwell Hail, Monday. lllsu-lt 30th_ MacLeanb Orchestra. "Pictures at Moi-ell every Tues- lay and Saturday. Show 3.30 p_ M. "Wood Islands -— Movies-Mon- hr. "Mr. District Attorney." "Dance. Aiberry Plains Hail, “today. August 31st. Millviciv chestra. Lunches. “Dance in Toronto School, Pri- :y1 night, August 27th. Good U50. I “Dance. Little Pond, Monday, august 30th. MeCormacks Orch- a. "Reserve Friday, September m Gay Ninety Revue. Bonlhlw “Dance, Canteen Service, Bum- ertield Hail. Friday evening. tlug_ iih- Music by Hickey Bros. "Special meeting Clyde Precep- imy at Kingston mday nlghtJor Oonferring Izifth Degree. "Oornwall Hall, Sept. l, supper him sandwiches. tea. apple pic Ind ice cream. Music and prizes. Proceeds school. I I-uxqa ' "Coma to the ice cream social \nd dance at Kelly's Cross school hi1. Frid i "than". u. Aus- 2'1. McNeiila "'1: Each His Own" bhia n a "W"? Picture and it is playing to- {QM Ii McDonald Bron, ‘flieatre. Ml. SHUNT), SHOW’! lit I30 P. M. "PM! mlila the regular dance 1"‘! Workshop, New London, c 41v, Auzuat 27th. Good music. ‘Ween service. u ‘i- (lome to the Mermaid W. P. B. "t Cream Social at J. R_ Munnb. flbrnaid. Monday evening, August . If not fine. meedey. éxhxifg Match and ilorse o"? “no undas, September 22nd. .00 . we“ w tn prizes All classes Asphalt laying operations cam- menced on Tuesday on no. 2 rur- way at the Summcrside R.C.A.F Station. Curran and Briggs Ltd. hold a million dollar contract is!‘ the reconstruction and extension oi tho runways and preparatory work has been going on for the past few months. A large plant has been _|et up adjacent to the main highway near the airport and a -railway spur has been run in to bring lh materials and equipment. After the plant was set up the crushing and stock-piling of material" commenced and now huge piles of gravel tower over the machinery and equipment. It i| hoped that the recapping of this runway can be completed this fail. Whila the plant was being set up aivi grading operations were being done a one thousand foot extension of no. l runway was e:- ing completed and this will be paved next year. In addition to this the contract calls for a 000 foot. extension cf no 2 runway and the recapping of all runways. Three concrete buttons each two hundred feet long. the tvi/lth uf the runways. are also called for in the contract. It is expettel that the contract will be complet- ed in the fall of 1949. Next spring work can be commenced early B'if1 with the preparatory wonc all done and favorable weather tins deadline should be met. At pie- sent approximately one hunched men including men with trucks are on the job and this work mi‘ continue till about the end c! October. In addition to the from being done on the runways it is expected that a contract will be let this fall for the reconstructiir. 0d some of the buiidiligs.-—S. increased Production Key Tc Improvements For Maritime ‘Miners BY DAVE MCINTOSH (Canadian Press Staff Writer) TRURO. N. S, Aug. 26 -(CP)— Thomas Kennedy. International Vice-President of United Mine Workers (C.C.L.>, said today in- creased production in the coal, fields was the key to improvements; for miners in the Maritirznes. He told delegates to the annual U. M. W_ District 26 convention here that low productivity had held British miners back and still was Increased production had been the key to improvements in the United States. The convention also heard n charge that C _B. Wade. District Research Director, was a (‘om- munist coupled with a. demand that the Research Department ‘no done away with. No action was taken. Mr. Kennedy snid the U. M. W. had a tough time to get the 00n- ttiact it did out of the 1947 Mnlri- time coal strike because production was low_ ’ President Freeman Jenkins said the coal industry kept going dur- ing the war because the govern- men poured money into it. Once subvcntions ended, "p oduction llnrl d) come up, some fillings 11nd i0 lit‘ done in the collieries or they “mild hiwe folded.‘ He added "we were on 0m own after the war. When somebody else isn't. Dlyilbfl the shot the operators will have to keep the Record Group 0f Exhibitors For GJLE. glPW By JACK GRAY Canadian Press Stat’! Writer TORONTO, Aug. lib-Canada's extravaganza of enterprise-the Canadian National Exhibition- opens here tomorrow. The two-week colorful showing oi the products and ideas of bus- iness. industry, science, agricult- ure and art gets its official send- ofl’ by Earl Mountbatten of Bur- ma, speaking at the band shell in the western section of SSO-acre Exhibition Park. The sprawling O. N. ER, largest annual exposition in the world. also will present the most exten- sive sport program in its 69' years. in front of the new $3,400,000 grandstand and along the shores of Lake Ontario. The biggest group of exhibitors ever to obtain space, some 600 in- sida the numerous buildings, gave finishing touches today to displays that include the first all-British motor show ever held in North America. Other exhibits include new developments in industrial processes and a. panorama of machinery and building enterpris- es from the fine watches ‘to pre- fabricated houses. Unusual among the many in- dustrial exhibits is a complete crcw and. equipment from the Leduc oil wells in Northern Al- berth. There's something for everybody at the For the women. be- sides the latest household gadgets, there are fashion shows and ba-by shows. The kids have their an- nual inning on children's day, AUF- 30. At the Coliseum proud farmers save last-minute groomings to their prize animals in anticipat- ion of next week's livestock judg- lug. New Treatment For Nephritis nr ALTON L. peaks-sun BUFZMLO, N. Y_, Aug. 26 --(CP) Successful treatment of a serious kidney disease in adults by giving then new blood for old was rcpc-rted today by a French physi- clan. The patients are given a. long transfusion which swaps their blood for new, healthy blood. This kind oi swap in adults is unusual. 1t frequently is done in babies born with a dangerous blood condition caused by a substance known as the Rif factor. The exchange of blood in 1B8 n its and older ohildzen was described by Dr. Marcel Bessie of Paris at the closing session of the International Society of Hemat- ology. Normal blood donated by healthy persons is fed continuously into the vein of one arm While thfl “Tdhufiuea on Page s Col. s) Tanker llailoatoii HALIFAX. Aug. 26-(CP)—-T'1e 243-ton tanker Britanette which ran aground off Anticostl IsumJ Wcdnrsdny wns reiioated tonight at high tide. The vessel struck a. aholl U- iween Cape Henri and W050 Point while proceeding through dense fog. The Britanetta was scheduled to dock at Ellis Bay, toontihiieri ..'l»i.;.i'i1i.af i?“ Anticmii, where the ship will be examined for damage. WASHINGTON, Aug. I -—(AP) _phuy,ographa of two letters Mos- cow aaid were written by Mrs. Oksana B. Kasenkina are being turned over to New York police to find out whether they are sen- uine. Que United States state Dep- artment announced the lotion to- day, without suiting there is any official suspicion that. they were not written by the refugee Russian school teacher. But. press offices- Michael J. McDennott. noted to reporters that "their authenticity has not been confirmed." The two letters represent al- most the only unexploded aflsii‘ c-f the affair of hha Russian school teachers who missed the boat which was to have returned them io their homeland. u province. Write for prize fl- Albert _Acorn. Secretary. Th0 itch Dqlttmllt I53!‘ Kasenkina Letters To Undergo Police Scrutiny Russia for copies in last week's note wwhinh directed that the Bo- viet. consul-general in New York‘ Jacob M. Inmakin, must leave the United states. Moscow unex- pectedly complied with the letter request in responding with an order to close down the Soviet consulates in New York and Ban Francisco and serving notice the dnited States consulate 1h flad- ivostok likewise will be closed. Mrs. Kasenkina told reporters yesterday in her first interview that the first. letter made clear iiho wanted to break with the Soviet regime and that. she lied to get out of Irmakln‘: custody. iiicinls assume the New York police eventually will make the letters public a! a part of their investigation ahtha case or Mrl. Kasenklnn and her fellow teach- The United States asked Rus- sia to recall Consul General Yakob I. Lomakin (above) for “highly improper" activities in the case oi the three Soviet school teachers. He was stripped of his authority and ordered. in effect, to get out of the country. (NBA Telephoto) Says United States Magnet For Canadians AMSTERDAM, Aug. 26 — (GP) -Whetiher Canada survives as a country or is forced into a North American union “will depend to no small extent on what happens in the future development oi Great Britain and Western Eur- ope," Rev. Gordon A. Sisco oi Toronto said today. lie told the General Assembly of the World Council of Churches meeting here, that ovith Canada having devieioped into "an Ameri- can nation nvithln the British Commonwealth oi Nations, the United States was proving a mag- net, drawing Canadians across the border in ever increasing num- hers." The secretary of the United Church of canada said Canada had an important part to play in shaping the great ecumenical movement towards unity among the churches oi the world. Outlining the history at tlhe United Church o1 Canada, he acid that in 1943 the constitution for a Canadian Council of Churches was adopted by all major church bodies except iihe Lutherans, This council was not a "super (Continued on Page b Col. 2) Investigation ls Suspended ICTMBALL. N90». Allil- 75 —' (AP) __ Investigation of the re- ported fatal shootlnil of a DB)’- ton, 0., nian in the wilds of northern British Columbia tonight was suspended until 8 b°dy l! found. The persons iwho will me shooting story marked time in the county jail here. Detained are Gustav A. Wieg- her, 24-year-old Dayton mim who arrived in ncarby l3ushneli, Neh. last svcek and immediately went into the cafe business, and thO 13__\.(,a,._0|d daughter of the man reported shot. Loull lWCCmSF- yviagner said during three sw- grate ouosilonlnab lllflii "WY mi the girl's father, John A. MC- comgg, 52, veterans administra- tion (flfliplQyEC, were on a trip $0 Alaska which began Aus- 4- Di"- ‘ing a stop along "l! M353“ hm“ way In British Columbia, Mc- Comes and wlesner went Milli!" rel hunting and McCOmll W" accidentally shot by Wlednvr- wlggner and the girl said they "got scared" and didn't W00" i" shooting but returned instead to the United states and finally “Good” Chance For Agreement Seen At Moscow By EDDY GILMORE MOSCOW, Aug. 25—~iA.P) ——TllE dfpiematle forecast changed from “fall” to "good" in Moscow to- night. Iniormanta who had said previ- ously there was a. fair chance of four-power agreement coming out of the Kremlin talks now rated prospects as good. their forecast applied to agree- ment on procedure for attempt- ing to solve differences between the east and west. They did not mean that Brit- ain. the United States, Franco and Russia had settled or were about to settle all the questions dis- cussed at the Kremlin. Walter Bedell Smith, States Ambassador, French Am- bassador Yvea Chainigneaii and Frank Roberts, special BTliiFll (=11- voy, prepared for another meet- ing with Foreign Minister Mol- otov. It would be the eighth Kremlin conference since thetalks opened July 28. Chances appeared good that. the meeting would be held tomorrow. The western envoys met the United States Embassy today and came away apparently satisfied with the way things were going. A four-power announcement on the status of the talks is expected. The wording may he framed at the next meeting Wllll Molotov. As the Moscow phase of the talks drew towards a close, rum- ors and speculation over future events were heard from various foreign ca-pitals. One was that the Allied milit- ary governors in Germany had been instructed to take over the talks. stated. however, that there has been no agreement up to now to justify that report. National Park Site Approved (‘By The Canadian Press) KENTVILLE, N. S.. Aug. The Dominion Government has approved of a national park in! the Cape Blomidon ares. of Kings,’ County, Senator John A. MoDon-l aid said tonight. An that remain-l ed was for the Provincial Gov- ernment to purchase the property. Rstebiisltiment of the park will climax a move started i5 years ago by Annapolis Valley interests to have a park set up in the area overlooking the Bay of Fundy. N. Y. Financier Sought For Murder PRINOETOWN. NJ, Aug. 2il—- (AP) - Henry Martin Brooks. ill. a New York financier, was sought. today for the murder of his bus-' iness partner, Joseph R. Watkins, in the driveway c-i Prlncetown Inn last night. County Prosecutor Mario V0117!‘ said he had "definitely establish- ed that Brooks was at the mur-; der scene." ‘ Volpe said Brooks OWPKl partner $72,000 as a result of a suit instituted by Wfitkllls and that Brooks had made unsuccess- ful eiforts to have the jllflflffll0lli~ set aside. Volipe said he had flied der charge against Brooks. Killed mainly (By The Clnldiln Press) EDMUNDSTON, N. B., Aug. 26-- Two-year-old Marcelle Milliard. of st. Francis. was killed today when she ran into a. gravel-laden truck , while trying to cross a street near . her home. She had been piayingi at a neighbor's house. The truck United 1 his‘ gtoppgd at Bushnell. YOU GET 2. If BECAUSE WE ers ‘Mr. and Mrs. Mikhail Bam- Bit I99... CANADA FLOUR ,lOO LBS. TO THE BAG... NOT 98 L83. was driven by Louis Levesque. No inquest will be held. A POUNDS OF PACK OURS The informants emphasized that. It can be authoritativcly‘ ' ~ Power cable [Carload Choice Swine iDestined For Iowa iNeat Wave I Lowering [Slightly (By The Canadian Press) "Don't even think about it," advises Toronto's medical health officer, but sweltering residents oi Central Canada felt ‘Thursday's boiling temperatures were not easily overlooked‘. As temperatures climbed close to Wednesday's loo-degree record heights, weather experts had lit- tle comfort to offer. "Tomorrow will be just about the same," they said. Official thermometers in Toron- to rrgistcred 96.4 degrees at 4 pm. today with 101 degrees regis- tered at the same time yesterday. Ottawa registered 94 degrees. Nfontreal, 93. High temperatures l predicted for Friday were: Wind- sor, 95; London, 93; Otta/wa, 93: Toronto, 92; sudbury, 90; Mont- real, 90. 'l‘housands of factory and oflice ivorkcrs got. the afternoon ofi to- day when work became almost A carload of the Islandi chok- est Yorkshire swine will leave the Province on Wednesday, Sept. 8, lfor the United States. The shzpmcnt, comprising sows and two boars, is being for- warded to Dr. W. J. Huts. Daven- iXlfi. IOWH. Who is one 0f the largest swine breeders in the mid- West states. The swine being shipped are nearly all of advanced registry and were selected for shipment by Mr. H. W. Clay, livestock field- man, Dominion Department of Agriculture. Charlottetown. Mr. Clay informed The Guar- dian iast night that the purebred live stock of the Province, espec- ially the cattle and swine, have such an enviable reputation not only in Canada. and the United States but in Mexico and several countries of South America, that the securing of markets for such stock no longer gives his Depart- ment any concern. The difficulty often ll, Mr. Clay said, io secure enough pure bred stock to m-eet the demand. The swine breeders of the Province could easily sell for breeding pur- poses in the other Canadian Pro- vinces and in the United States several times the number of swine oi advanced registry stock which they are now exporting. impossible. Millions of gallons of water con- siuned by heat-weary citizens re- duced water pressure to danger- ous levels in some cities. Cities issued regulations restricting use of water for lawn-sprinkling. in the Maritlmes, Saint John. N.B., had its hottest day of the year with maximum temperature at 87. some inland points, how- ever, had lower temperatures be- cause of strong northwest‘. winds. Cooler uieather was forecast for the coastal area today. In Ottawa 25 persons attending tho Central Canada Elxhibitlon collapsed. bringing to 2'75 the number of persons who have been overcome by heat at. the fair dur- ing the past two days. Farther west, however, Prairie residents enviously read reports of the Central Canada heat wave. As chilly winds swept the prairies weather bureaux predicted frost for the Peace River district of Alberta and some parts of Sask- atchcivan. Power Gable Blowouts llalt Traffic Aug. 2d - (NP) blowout: in two subway pn-wbr houses halted traf- fic on two subway lines in Man- hattan and the Bronx tonight. Trnlns were stranded between NEW YORK. stations, n-hlch became jammed with pZISSBHKGTS. Tratific was held up for 30 minutes to an hour, Linea affect- ed wore the Brooklyn-Manhattan nnrl Interborough east and west side systems. Cause of the cable blmvouts was lint ascertained immediaicy Two firemen were injured fight- ing the fire which resulted from the explosion at the Murray Sircrt power house. ,_... The same fact supplies to the cat- tle breeders oi the Province. Rescued Pair Will Make Another Try HALIFAX. Aug. as - (or) - A little thing like a broken bear- ing isn't keeping Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Civrlin of New York from making their round-the- world trip in an amphibious jeep. The two were picked up yester- day by the tanker New Jersey after drifting 10 days 2'70 miles of! New York. They left New York aboard the jeep early this month with their first stop scheduled to be the Azores. No one else was aboard. In a wireless interview with the Canadian Press tonight Mr. Car- lln said the amphibian had been salvaged and “is snug in the tankcfs- lifeboat davlts." "Damage to the craft," he Illd, “is one boflfilld" “Damage to the crew-nil.‘ “We're both in perfect health,‘ he said, "and after arriving in Montreal Monday we plan to make a fresh start." Point. of departure and date of the second attempt had not yet been decided. " Open New Offeiisive ATHENS, Aug. 26 (AP) Greek army forces have opened a new offensive against. 800 to 1,000 Communist-led guerrillas along the Greek-Yugoslav border north- west or Salonikn, a communique said today. Initial fighting took place in the grep, of Mount Kaimnkichzilaii, which jirs zisiride the border. The government in Athens an- nounced the execution of ihrie Communists - one oi than a wrman. 'Spy Probers Turn. Over WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 — (AP) _ Louis Budenz, former Communist leader, linked A1861’ Hiss to the Communist Party in secret testimony given the House un-Ameriran activities corrlmlttee last Tuesday. This was disclosed tonight when the rcnnnlttée made public a transcript of nudenz’ testimony. Budenz said he always regard- ad Hiss as a member of the Com- munist Party an-d considered him to be "under Communist discip- Pine." Hiss previously had been named by Whittaker Chambers as a member of a Communist under- ground group in Washington in the 193m. Hlsa had dented the accusation, Budenl, who renounced Com- munism after attaining a high place in party circlea and now is a professor at Fordham Univer- sity, testified that ho also knew Lee Pressman, Nathan Witt gutl John Abt u Communists. All. officials. WMeanwhlla, chairman J. Parn-| _ ¢ ma committee an-i in; Communist Part7 duq Data To Justice Dept. nounred that a nmv sane of hearings will begin scrt- 7 i“ l‘ new espionage casc. Ha said oll testimony in the initial investigation involving: High, chambers and c-tbcrs will hi‘ turned over to thr- Dcpnrhuent of Jiuaiica ‘with appropriate recom- mendations.“ Thomas did not my “but tho-W recommendations will be. How- ever. when Hiss and Grimm“ faced each other in open hearing yesterday to repeat their rlivting stnrlos, tho chairman bad announced that "lei-thinly one of these two witnesses will be tried for perjury." A suli-(vinimliiee will so lo New York Monday with the iliill of questioning J. Peters, who la scheduled to appear there for a deportation hearing. Chiurnbers, now a senior editor of Timg Magazine. has testified that. he himself was a member or the Communist. illlFlPlYTrlllNil. quitting in i113’? Ho said ho worl- three man are former government‘ ed with Pete-rs and swore that . a p. His! was a member of an "elite" coll of tindergronnd workers psy- 60' (‘firil- V lllemonstrators gllemand New iiiovernment i By GEORGE BRIA BERLIN, Aug. 26 —- (AU- A roaring Communist - led throng swept into Berlin’: city hall today and heard their ‘ ‘ demand a new uran- icipal government to “work hand in hand with the great Soviet Union." In a counter-demonstration three hours Inter, anti-Com- munists denounced the invas- ion a.a “the putech that failed." Slicing through linen of the Soviet-backed east Berlin police, about 500 Communist demon- strators installed themselves in the empty council aeeta while 10,000 others yelled In the streets outside. Inside the hundreds shouted "Down with the capitalists" and "Down with the splitter! of Germany" while those nut- sido chanted the "International" and waved Red banner!- No casualties wfire reported. The invaders left the chamber after listening to the harangues and. the crowd dispersed without in. cidente, The demonstration dimmed weeks of Russian attempts __. spearheaded by tho Soviet-epon- sored Socialist Unity Part/y (5.!!! D.) -- to smash iihe overwhelm- ing anti-Omnmllniat city liflnin- istration. noun-u Meeting rhea At the counter-demonstration of Berlin's Socialists _ Conserv- ative Christian Democratic Union and Liberal Democrats — qpeak- ers demanded that the council be given "a neutral meeting place" outsldq; the Soviet sector and greater support from the western occupying powers. In Frankfurt Gen. Ilueiua D. (Continued on Page b Ool. S) MA Scofdlhbii ARTEV tiia Rum ’ KEEP YouR EYE" on {be but‘! s \/y,. V any“. H ,1. "WCVFQ I TORONTO. Aug. 28 -— (CPl-- Minimum and maximum temper- Pllllf€SI~ Jasper 36. 42; Vancouver I56, 64; Edmonton 36, 50; Ragnar ‘51. 68; Winnipeg 59. B6; Toront. 168, 8i; Ottawa 68, 93; Montieal :74 90; Quebec 67. 80; Saint John I56, 87; Moncion 56, 82; Halifax '61. 6B; Charlottetown 59. ‘i4, Syd- ‘ncy 60, 74? Yanmsuth 52, R3. l (By The (‘unsilian Press) 1 H.~lLlP.-\X. Aug. "JG-Official m- tiand forecasts issued by the Dominion Public Weather Office a‘. Halifax and valid until mid- ‘niqht hide)’. i Prince Edward island: Variable cloudiness clearing Pr:- ‘day morning. Very warm. LlRht. minds. Low early F‘rlda_v morning ‘and high in the- afternoon atSyui- ziey. 55 and 75; Charlottetown, 5R 5 and 78. f Summary‘ Very warm. . i High tide this morning at 2.48 land this afternoon at 355. | Sun sets this evening at 0.47 and rises tomorrow morning at 5.16. Last quarter moon August 21th, 2A5 P, M. Snmmerslde tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. I Dally Except Sunday l CAR FERRY "ABEGWI-Zfl" Standard Time irnves Borden, 9.10 l. m.. l p. In. 4R0 p. m.. 9 p. m. Leaves Tormentine, 10.35 l. m.. 2.10 y p. m., 7.30 p. m. 10.30 p. III- , suxoar Leaves Borden 0.10 a. rn., 1.00 p. m.. 11ml 6.45 p. m. ‘. Leaves Tormentlna 10.36 l. m., L00 1,11, m. and 1.00 n. m. j WOOD ISLANDS - CARJBOU Daily including Sunday standard Time Leaves Wood lalanda. Prince Nova i: 1pm,]! a. m.. I 0.111.. (‘harlea A. Dunning, 9 a. m, 1 p. l, m. Leave: caribou, OIIIIII l. Dn- nlng‘! unallllalpi- for Pmiday: Clear. I71 newlines-alumina.