m ohlrhflpilIl Ill ' Iornlll a‘ '“' MAXIM! ,~ OIL MERE MAN ,3}; .:,.‘::t 2:: entn- ' uffififfi?“ _ / liEhN77!iFI' 17V’.SZTl7T?l?()1?1V'.l€lZ!l£?(Zllkl1Zl)l.Al(§lTh(2fiV't MAXI M6 OIL MERE MAN Failure never really begins llfllll we have given up trying to suit-evil. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. THllliSDAll, MA-Fvi3tki1940 O “mars Anuull Subscription Delivered $5.00 ll! llalb-PJLI. H.004 (‘asiuila and U35. $6.01. .__._ a -_-_._.___ _ Grim Battle As B.E.E l/Vithclraws ,To wards Channel Crack Regtméfit? Put Up NTOW DEF Heroic Fight In Face Of Great Di£f_i_<_:_ulties. ' (By J. F. Sanderson, Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON, May 29—(CP Cable)—Crack regiments of the llritish army, regiments famous throughout history, ioiiuhl a grim Teflrgtiard action tonight against the on- rushing German war machines to shield the Withdrawal of the llritish Expeditionary Force toward the English Chan- nel. Intact and unshaken by 19 days of fierce fighting, the li.E.l-‘. established and held new battle positions despite relentless attacks by the German right wing while Gen- mil Viscount Gort, Commander-in-Chief, gathered his forces for a “death or glory” march to the sea. Hundreds of thousands of men stood to arms iii this country ready to take the places of their comrades killed or captured in Flanders, while factory chimneys belched smoke and machinery clanged in 24-hour shifts to replace‘ the tanks. trucks, guns, shells and munitions likely to be lies l‘0\'(‘(l in the B.E.F. withdrawal. itiittec to speed up thc design t.c.ii.r. llnit d d 0 f g lrrives |n .."_.i.".;:.°“°.:i.°..;‘"l.t:::i:;.i: oget who was attached to the ministry of munitions in the last war. On the financial side, O'l"l'.-\Vl’.'\._i'\/lay' 29 -—(CP) -—-Th6 l Rota! Canadian Air Force Sir Kitigslcy Wood, Chancel- lor of the Exchequer, extended W ‘n m Wmhabmm. an the excess profitstax of I00 y n; Nu 112 (cm, o; per cent to all business, retroac- t army cooperation iii. on. ha: arrived solely in the Herbert Morrison, Minister of Supply, established a coni- tive to April i. Previously this provision, which urn ll ~ tom, Air Minister Pow- . . . l"‘°"""l‘ ‘my nnm, - 4 gnnighp profiteeriiig in the war emer- vo H2 t ll act as a reserve for gency, applied only to the tniini- tions lllClllSll’_\'_ Labor Minister Ernest Bevin appealed to employers and work- ers on war production to cancel summer holidays and stay on their Jobs seven days a week. In the latest move to curb fifth column activity, the government. ordered that starting next Mon- day all aliens above the age of l6 i. 110 tCity- of Tomato) army operation stpiadron, which went erseas in Fvbrunry. Ditties o! the squadron are to not o .~ of ground forces for e and scouting work, ground strafing. ck ago Monday night Mackenzie King _ m. the llouse of Com- . Canada's secrmd army- '4" t: 4 W ma“ Squadron won-d pm_ of all nationalities must observe d ovrr r t __ ‘M, n c“ N _ 113 -_—--~ ttract‘. imlier wing," me o (Continued on 13. Col :'>_)__ c rm- Sec Men Off Ralsfon Blanket Au In W‘ wrnestes saw the men of ll? llt‘.*ill'i from Ottawa tin- the leadership of Squadron tier W, F‘ Hanna oi Winni- l‘. was another Wlnnipcizizer, atiron lender Wilbur Ban Vllet, w"? Na no out of Ottawa for ‘ h- riuiig ‘inc (‘nltllllfillfltlf F‘, V. ‘Beam- ot the Royal Air Force act-u- ‘has in charge of No. 112 dur- lw vovrv-"ze. as was the sen- nflicrr aboard t cir shin. ll‘ Wino Commander holds a mimic. in the R. A. l". but “" rrtnvlied to the R. C. A. or u. s. To Permit °"'"3E"e"" Her Pilots To 10-. In Commons O of movement under modern condi- gade under Brigadier C. B. of Montreal, in recent weeks is typ- ical of what the whole division has been doing, These tanned lads from the rifle bayonet, Today the brigade moved to open ah- canip to work on asyllsbus 0i specialized training. Regitrient, Carlton and Yorks and eitierged froth a recent rigorous 0p- en- country test rvith colors flying into the assigned sector in full btit- tle array and maimed line" for an unbroken spell of 48 hours. It was had all the ingredients of the real business, moved into actlon and du ves ii alone. a HCIZC of looking a broad, treeless valley, 'I'hev had been sent to this sector to act Receives War Financing $700,000,000 War Appropriations Bill Passed Without Dissenting Voice. luiiiieiit touiiv gave the goieriiiiiciit a S‘ltltl,00\l,0tlti but‘ chest tor Li.” XlS-Q cal year ehultig March 31. 1941 with authority i-o borrow witatever por- tlon of that amount which cannot be raised by taxation, CANADA'S SUNS [EARN FINAL NAR lESSliNS Brawny Fighters Reach Peak Of Con- w dition -- Ready For l Anything. By Edwin Johnson Canadian Press Staff writer in of France and Flanders where Canada's sons won immortal glory in t-tze last war and where they may fight again, men of the 1st. Canadian dAVISIDH learn the advanced lessons of mod- em warfare. Toda the Canadian gridiron cry that line" echoed across e wooded countryside as the Canadians went through practice battle operations, exercises in war tions such as the kind now being w E-WOTk of the 3rd infantrv bri- Price brawny, sun- Marltlmes and Quebec have reached the peak of physical condition and are ready for any trial or hardship, They graduated from the hard el- ementaries or the parade ground. through individual exercises with and other weapons of war, Now they are in a new phase of training-large -scale man- oeuvres. trench vilarfa-re, patrols through woods and open country and tactical instruction in offensive and detensive operations, For six days the brigade engag- ed on extensive titut exercises prior t0 joining the other two divisional brigades in combined manoeuvres. :1 5 Puss Tests With Honors The three crack battalions which make up the brigade, the Royal 22nd the West Nova Scotia regiment, In rotation, each battalion moved the "front a, mock battle whim thitin except {or shells that mean Lilli‘ r rover of darkness the men themsel- ii'ls over- (Continued Eiii ‘p? thority OTTAWA, May ‘.29 -—tCP) —Pnl'- After a snot-t discussion in ‘Argentine Ship EN CE D. B. Buxritt. Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON -.All.ted forces 1n Norway, forgotten legion since the greater battle burst on the western from, today chmaxed seven weeks 0t‘ in- tensive fighting with capture of the strategic port of Narvtk. Word mat British and Nor- wegian forces had taken 130550831011 of the lmlpoiitant base nestled a- mong the towerlngs hills of Oten- tjord was revealed in a. brief bulletin issued jointly by the Ad- miralty and War Office. It. said:- "KIIOTIHHEJOD has been received this morning that Narvik was cap- tured last night by Allied forces and that Fagemes and Fbrsneset are also in our: hands." Otttcials in London gave no amp- lification oi’ the announcement. One source pointed out that. since the Allies hold Fhgerres, a hamlet on the fiorcl which rufs to the At- lantic, arid Forsrteset, six miles east of Narvik on the railway leading ‘to Sweden, they had ootisolidatal ‘their positions prlcr to iJhe victory in Narvik. London [XLDOTS gave brief from- pagc play to the story and reserv- ed ltoadlL-ties for the ptediicament "I the British Expeditionary Force lting George Sends Message To General Gort LONDON. May ZlI—tCl'l-—- Tlic War Office announced to- night that the King has sent ii ntcsstige to the commander in chief of the British l-Jxpi-dl- tioiiary force saying: “The hearts of everyone of us at home rrc with you and your magnificent troops in this hvul‘ of peril." The King's message said:- "l\ll your countrymen have been following with pride and admiration the courageous re- slstnncc of the British Expedi- tionary l-‘orce during the con- tinuous fighting of the last fortnight. "Placed by circumstances out nf their control in a position of extreme difficulty. t-hcy are displaying a galhntry that has never been surnnssed In the annals of the British Army. "The h-arts of every one of us at home are with you and voiir magnificent troops in this hour of peril." Torpedoed BUENOS AIRPB, May 2l)-—(APJ _T‘_~c Argentine foreign ministry announced tonight that the Argen- tine nierehantman Urguay, 3425 tons had been torpedoed and stink off the Spanish t: ast. Titt- slilp ivas carrying grain to Eire, and ivns reported stink It) itiilcs off cope Vllllmv- (Two other ships, a British tank- er, and a French vessel, were sunk by German submarines of! the spsinlsh northwest coast Wednes- day.) The Uruguay was the first ship flygtlg the flea of an American re- pit c . my ao-(cr ossuii‘ lrhnoet Allies Capture Strategic Narvilt es Six Weeks Of Capture Climax Intensive Fighting. in France. ' They recalled, however, the gal- lam. work that the Narvik capture, statrnsz vtta. tho brilliant destroyer attack led by the late Captain Wu hlirtou- Lee 0n April l0 when his force of five British destroyers created havoc among a. larger Ger- man squadron. ‘Ilhree days later another destroy- er force and the battleship War- spite forced their way into the fjord, sank seven German drsltroy- ers and silenced the shore bat- teries. That action marked the end of German naval strength in the Nor- vlk area. But the German gutri- son had for-titled itself‘ strongly and was provisioned and reinforced to some extent by airplanes from German-held bases in Norway. force of considerable but tindls- closed strength that mopprd up the defenders advance prsttons arid closed in on the town itself. Narvtk was the main Flipping Swedish Mines at IIUIGR. It presumed the Allzed forces would attempt to reestablish ccnmcttons to the der. llAlYSIIlll NIJLBSBAEK FllliN PHINGE New View Of Possible Field O f Action Taken From Italian Comment. VllllS next rail Swedish bor- May and Italian observers to trike it. ivithin a few days with action in the hfetllterranettn andi Africa rather than directly against ; France. , In the "event of an act of ag-l gresslon leading to war in the; Mediterranean area," accOffihtg toj the Allled-Thirkislt treaty of al- liance, Turkey, guardian oi the Dar- I daneilcs, is pledged to enter the‘ war on the side 0f Britain and France. ‘ The new view as to the potential I theatre of attack was supported by til review "Conqulsta d‘Imperlo"-coti- l quest of empire. ' Marchltio said Italy's "often- slve objectives" would be HCUOllSt _by the navy and air force in the! Mediterrancati and laud war inl Africa w conquer the BYlllSll-i French controlled Suez Canal lind_ eventually in the Balkans to "pro. tect." Italian interests. Italian strategy is defensive. he wrote. 0n thc frontiers oi l"l‘-'\llt‘(‘ proper and Fretich-tirotvcted ‘l‘iiii- lsia yvhich fronts on Italian Libya; it. has a different character. 110w- Ht-Contintied on pflllemliii. Col 2i ‘I Nazi Freighter be sunk in the present warfare Simultaneously with the foreign ministry announcement. owners 0f the Uruguay said the ship was being gonvoye by an Allied tlect three M's M0- The company said the muzhter wss stopped by s U-boat at. 9 n- m- vesterday, the crew removed and llor Notices in this collmi H House of Commons the war. 8p. ll bill l tl i d _V 3 "I"! per word. y girtltfliout Bwgifigfflylfltlllfi with m‘ k '- " ——— and slent to the Seiliataeuwhcre lt. Wad ~ vs Pea u School 1n, ———— outcry out taro 1 , s ss- Laéfilglm, MP)_ shortly before s x oclock . Jus- t l , r ' ' , e o c - la ___ vliAiBNEitPiihYIYJrltZtxIYsaTes sec u“ o‘ s‘ Cmfqkettti o‘ ime fstlllpreflrge yfiioiliitemqood°mlmfisis°hw gar?! of State, mailing a ruling gtlfitifhltogamhaine tgut e Senate ' m c‘ d si ted to weed up delivery 0! chamber and gave ro at assent l0 “wsfdoa- ° s‘ tn Alli w interim ‘ome JTGT QQYEWTA}. mlthliiimelintlled 05kt: shit“! Wiililrfiirifiii’ yesterday. tlev River minim. H” n olti [:3 travel in belllsvient e‘ s-upplv bill authorizes s nd- ' m’ M‘ y c midis-n pm- ins oi aoorvxlmeiek “lbw-lg? 0i L-l-6-30-H. aircraft- ovlgr thdarugswkk “w. the elumates or ‘ 8300300 “bled leek olti chicks at the new day Elli» llind lervince Edward ‘Island. in the House last week but not yet ilrlfré. P. E I. (Io-Operative Previously this was fdrbiddfll b!’ V°l° - o; Hatchery. ' 1,.i35g_5_m;_3;_ 5 neuuamy mgulauom Later this sélecianggertgtteiolliouuaeFh it'll-H F‘__ “"113! "m" mwn‘ m“ Amul- fillliiwilinléler Ralston‘: resolution V...i re players m”; m, m“ pilots may now fly Amerlcsn- empowering mm to borrow up m a “l °l Kitty". brew Glasgow made lanes to the Cenldifln b0!‘- f 750000000 {or refund- Thufsrlay. May 30th. der. w are er 0f m“ W"! fi“"L',',‘.‘."§.?..§.i purposes. 5473-5-39-11- place and the Pill" l" 9mm“ is measure will be considered . ‘_—- MINI "l! Mm“- Th‘ "um PM“ further when the House meets t0- “MY "m" in Stanley to- then can re-enter and fly m‘ mo w lire t Canada to New ~' Peosiilgi“ will. ffim“ rtinnezwlcnkcrlisgvl Bcotls. and Prince M" 25 Md 15c. L-ai __, its own sebum :4": t-e- art's" ""1 c" s" ha‘! iltititittitte“.‘lir€’é’§ifiio“33§'w ‘fit “it oiinlains. Pgqllu m: cm puow‘ howeverfilcm“ m. ‘uthorlzed the Derellltlglflbfihligtersl? 1"‘ Chick gummy Atlantic. “TWA” “"1 “m L-fl-ll-ao-Bi. mvmwy "n Amalu“ “n” h“ ‘aflgt’! House also passed In Mt W u W. '6__" ‘ “m” we” m: enable permanent no officer: i; . . _, .. _ n ‘My by Iligllflnflgnllotpmusfs f had to pick it up for the fflfl“§ol‘t'-‘liei'élil§n§'l°ntvil “service ‘mm “all Friday “list. 11D 0f u" '7' when computing the time for which “m We vriginailrwqmgm The new NIH pension may be claimed. find flmm‘ ‘Y’ i at itiuithiiifogati ll‘- ttlfi-Tl- l. ts sad. on ac a y lil’ I "*~ Eletiited States bombers across the m 8W’ People's Festival at Atlantic if the British authorities m Wllélfa Church. Friday even- decided to use this u s. i‘ Hedfque, ‘esulnr nteans toi- faster delivery. O bill was out through mum Isllnd, in the eastern momma the pert of Os-nsdl. er empowering the estates left bv members 0T "l? 7°?‘ ces who die on active service. ress was made when I d l stxllses 81v; r Wm Royslmcgzitti élglmwruc the ther. Drog overninent to ulatloiis for t ie silrodv ad- ake r and distribution 0i lnlstra ioii ‘lillfllll-C, mpq-uc . IhB-il-EN-‘ll, (Continued on page ll, Col B) ‘ _. (Contlnuedaon page l3. C01 4) then the ship torpedoed. Halt the crew of 28 was reported landed saielv at La Coriintt, on Spain! northwest coast. The other l4 crew- men were reported still afloat in ll lifeboat. i i01- Germany. Sails With Rubber BELEM. Brazil, Mav 20_»-(A.P)-— The crew o! a small Brazilian boat W05 reported todnv to have slihléd submarine. believed to be the ncli Pallas, off Oytipock on the Brazilian north coast near French Guiana. The 6.466-ton German freighter Konlgsberg sailed from here vester- dav with $800000 worth of rubber Excel: ln "SALAIIA" TIA Quality l» i. 0. ll. E- Till I GIVEBIINBER; ho ciiini SunimersideLady; LINE READY Great B-Eftle Of Flanders Aided French paved the way lg!‘ small ‘ southern ' Gradually the Allies assembled a , poinit. for iron ore from the heart); . O. l). notional ilresldent. 2;_(._\P'__Itnh,tlake irrighters ficm the hack tonight from aim n plunge into war but. mlllly foreign; we expect her l’ c‘ Nicola Marchit-to, in the DOllilC‘ " Named To Execu Chapter. (GP) — The Canadian ll7ll.\))lCl' of the I Daughters of the Empire today vot- ,ed to raise at least 5100.000 for t. e Bollngbroke ltie Dominion govern- aitlriloso of KLYLIQQ a lbotnbet" to ntcut. V A telegram from Defence Minis- .ter {tout-rs stated that tanks, L'- 5.\ll(l('l' tll‘lll_\' co-operatioit land Bolingbroke Bombers were eq- ually tirguiit tiecds, '.l‘lie costs are $12,000 each for tanks $64,000 tor the airshtps and $100,000 for the bombers. Ambulances are not an immedi- late tier-ti. actlordina to w0i'd from the niitiislefs secretary". , Mrs. (ieortze Blank. of the Yukon. tmoved the resolution that at least lsittotioo be raised to present the ,b0nlbcr. The motion carried bv un- illlllll0llS standing vote. Ali's. W, B. Hopkins, Toronto, I said i-hc was informed the three types of war i‘t’|llli)lll(‘lll coird be matiufac- tiired in Canada but construction ‘would be quicker in England or the United states, Optics-lug anv idea of delaying the to provide work in legit in I ted on tiage 13, Col 3) ‘Great Lakes Freighters For British Service l l ‘ t')'I"l‘/\\V/\. lit-t" o; L-‘l May 29—-!CP)~A (ii-eat. [takes ll'(‘l"lll€l‘S itiuv he sent to England siortly tor coastnvisc trade around the lBi-it h Isles in the service of the Brittsh Government, it. was report. ed here totlay. Ilrlta-lit chartered eight stich Canada , lites last autumn, and‘ h authorities have open-l nogo ntlons now through the] Ciitiadlati Shipping Board to ac-i quire the additional fleet of 2i‘ slurvir Cunadinti liikeboals. l Final iiirantleirieiits for trans-l ier oi the touts to Britain's scr- ilce will be COllLplGlPd shortly, hut- nanies and present owners oi the? vessels could not be learned. l l Steam flWcerITghEIi§f eroic Stand The British Army Empire Has R Pride In Fight Of B.,E. F. In Flanders. LONDON. May 29 tive Of Dominionl SAINT JOHN, N. B.. May 29 -— national Imperial Order atrslii ps -—tCP)—A senior army officer from the battle PARIS, May 29—(CP)_. Fighting in apparently the last phases of the great Battle of Flanders, French troops tonight came to grips with the Germans in the in- dustrial city of Lille while the withdrawing British Expeditionary Force opened the flood sliiices around Dunkerque to guard their flast port of escape on the vsea. The Allied army in Flan- ders. crippled by the Bel- gian surrender. but unbeat- en by the Germans, fought every inch of the way as it withdrew‘. Strong ZOO-Mile Front Every nilnute counted. and military spokesmen. admit- ling the picture in Flanders looked dark, said, however, that the battle had given U18 Allies time to build a strong southern front along Prepare Flood Sluices-Xround. Dunkerque Opened To Hold Last Port Of Escape For Trapped Forces. ‘locks southwest and lltll'lll~ east of Dunkerque, on the great canal that flows by the city and follows the coast for many miles. Belgian Units Fight The retreat ivas h;ii".'i>.~~.~d by heavy German fire. Some Belgian units, refusing to lay down their arms despite their King’s order to capi- tulate, were reported still fighting" beside the British and French. :\ single l-‘reiicli dil.‘ ' which had been statztuted \ the lltlgitiits as the liztc. oi their front tile-l t.» back the Nari rush in 11;.‘ port-Dixmiidc sector, a 1...; field of the last war on ‘fie coast lll>l'lllL'.'l_\l of llizi‘ Stiicide squads Elli" Ull the CZl>l(‘lll Zilitl . ' sides ot’ the Allied path :l_. . sea. Some Allied utizts Zisti to fight through li€flllflii Po‘ " lthe Somme and Aisne rivers, l miféflmlalll“ 1t'l‘]~'"‘el}‘l“l b? l t - _ _ _ _ ._, s ‘s, ‘as e 2st; “TF9” mugs‘ "c1055 llhmce- solid Allied positions. 'l‘l'i t o.’ While the waters rose the battlefield was a marl" 0m of steadily in the vast system ‘of streams across the piain_ _ of Dlmkel-qum pal-ouch d1“ vljlOlKls haiimiii-I over isions fought across the! landscape to hold the reari while British ed the main points of pass-- age for the main forces seeking" the coastline. The itllies brought on the inundation by opening the By_ eason ‘For ing Quality troops defcnd- l‘... k5 free-tor-all fighting, ' blazing fires. Airplanes tangled in l area. Allied tiavy d". tising the low-thing employ against stilmia ti warships, pliitiged on .n . ‘mfiimaifittiit. n. (x1 t» OHlGEEt 1105 WEATHER QlVES ME THE SPRINc. f-‘Evaa A mniotvw. w? WAC?“ Minimum and maximum tenrPPYfl- llITO-wi n; | A ‘on S6 7O s edliclflandegs toaifht told Britain in s broadcast that the British .9::§ccu‘.fl. 4v 71 Em‘ “n”? "u- Ylrllll") lflrlfvlfli through no fflllll of its own, lPxlnton-ton 4h 95 h“ pm “Ft M"! l5 Dual"! Illl. a show of which the vrliole Fm ire must Rpgm“ M he Droud." ' p ‘ yvititinws ‘oron o l -- 7 n; sold he-left l bomb-shattered hflrllfir u» “inn lwlfll‘! rm in the ‘Oliere ‘f; l . t. l ‘ Ietrvehglare of blazing oil tInlts after a fortnight as commander of a lwonga 4; 5'7 iesc mcnt detailed to cheek the Gennan eneircli-ment of the B E. I‘ Saint John 38 "7 in northern France and Belgium, Halifax 5i‘ 5" ______,__ , ,, Charlottetown J5 56 "ww" ‘an ; :- l(‘ en ' - ' Two Arrested l‘ll..“?i1»“.'*-“.€S .“.?."3l.§*i"iit‘l "i" mnmm .. .n .it l . . “qmre m...“ m,“ “wmllvmplmtlfinilllée, Maritime Protimies. gdshxmt]: with terrific-q fflfugpfis in a confusv moderate winds. far an a Under Defence areal?" were time bee» um "m"- Bvnoipstst ‘Uhe tvmitltei- tia= been of c d Vnfllnching Gummy-y mostly lair :11 Ont Jlo 011d ll" a wfg‘prn pron“ ‘n’; oftli ll“lli'\(‘l'll— TOR-ONTO, Mny 29—(CP)-— Joseph C. Parr. otgatitzer of the NaLotial Unit-y mil/y, and Joan M. Lnrimer, staid by police to be a nteinber of the allegedly pro-Fas- cist. oigunimttou, weie arrested lo- day. City and Royal Canadian Mount- od Police raided two houses on Jarvis Street iirar the central sec- tion lllill ;i:i'.I.d Hirr. who was iii but. lslllll l \\ii.~ pit-la“! up at his otlii-i: “'llt‘lt' lit- ls all d l0 Work us a nituiiiii'iicliireis' agent. Both voere chorgetl iicider the Defence of (xmadn Regulations. ‘ v "'11P flank and rear oi our group oi “Attack alter attack was met with unilitit-hitig llflllllilhfy," said this 01-‘ fiber who remained anonymous. Withdrawal was Olllv forced "m" m" 3- E- F- by enemy penetration on another - extrication oi our long mechanized columns often under intense air at- tacks and dogged delaying actions fought bv our rearguard were alike remarkable tents." "lliit south of 1r.- ihe izfln ri-nuilited tmt-ltrvli lil|tl iliioiiuliit tioiilvii ill‘- uioietl and mechanized iuruiatloiis. Utir roiiiiiiliiiirtititnis were rut and titres M Atom. so swarm l“ 11""- itoba and s/lFKlliFlltWVflll. High tide this evening a‘ 5.1.‘? and this afternoon at 5.1.". _ sun sets this evening at 73l and rises tomorrow mom-till! l" 4.18. New moon June 5. eon pm. Stlnmerstda tide l8 minutes lat- er than Charlottetown. Till-I (‘All FERRY tHIl-INh-S Leaves Borden 9 in A M . l no P ..l . ‘Iklli/PN (continued on page isfooi is)“ rfl 4. 5 PM Tomtetituie i100 A ‘M. 8.15 P. M., 020 P. M. \