MAXIM! OIL MERE MAN --¢-_-— proscenium-ionospher- Guardian- ‘Jaw, pally Iouilded lass. Three Cents, ,‘ CANADA SEEK CHARLOTTETOWN. CANAD Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew SNEWSFROMl EHIN A,‘ WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1949 ~ Llfelsaserlesofmrprilen MAXIMS or A. MERE- MAN 16 PAGES C Cllntralized Cooperative ..__»-\--—-—-— Gardiner In (lid-Fashioned , Political Speech By Douglas How OTTAWA. Feb. 22 —(CP) Agriculture Minister ' Gardiner. en- tering the Throne-Speech debate with n fishi-ins. old-fashioned political speech, told the Com- rnons today Canadian farmers are making more money than ever before. He slapped the Progressive Con- servative Opposition for t-heir cri- tlclsms of the Anglo-Canadian food agreements with the state- merit that it was the Conservative Bennett Government which ended frte trade and ushered in the quota system of Empire preferen- ces in the 1930s. The present Unit- ed Kingdom trade situation stom- nled from that. Until recently, Mr. Gardiner said as he strode into the green ceri- trc aisle and waved his fist. the ldberal Party was the only Can- adian parivwhichbelieved in free trade. Further, the Liberal Gov- enimenl had increased Canada's trade b0 per‘ cent" bbtween. 1M and the war and much more since. Spurred by Opposition taunts. lie" declared that. if there were Liberal governments in "all lands, with their belief in free trade. therp would be no war. "But when get policies like those of the ly 30a all over the world, of Milne you get war." Coming Events . "Mail your Films to Garnhuin Studio. Charlottetown. :;"Card party, Webster's Corner eel. Friday, Feb. 25th. "Lev-any Concert. ‘Ikaeodie Hall. jjtuscoy. March ma. l"? """—" ‘Wblnce in Fort Augustus School ‘February isrd. Good music. 5"‘Natlonal Film Board, free, M223; River Hall, Thursday. “tlioekey: Long River rink Wed- liltlly. Feb. 23, French River vs. .lu View. Skate after. _“~"i>forkcy tonight Long Creek Pllilt. Massey Harris Rovers vs. [Mtg Crock Beavers. Skate after. “Dance at the Gordon lodge "m"? ‘tight. Feb. 25th., dancing 1- I from 5' , ""°\'|<<‘.\' New Glasgow rink io- "lfhl. Hunter River vs. New Glas- IOW. Gamc starts at. 8.30 sharp. Skate aftcr. " .’"0ld Time Movies -- Wallace 5°"? iellllrfl. Charlie Chaplin ‘Weds-York mu. may. rear-u- : 3- DIN mill Q10 Old Hick- “East Royalty rink tonight firkdale Juveniles ~vs. Winsioe “Vlgillél, also Parkdale Bantams ‘Marin: Park nor-mat. Skate "The ‘Reiidheatld at Norboro Player: In Suez: I hall Thursday. Feb. 2i. "Pgalilélse. Sale of candy. "Jun P - mlldll mv-Udfilasm “ma? "-15 P. M. Betetsfiocisl um ° bee!!! Cakes to auc- o-w “two's “s? ‘offal; l?" Klnsstoa mama. , at the a "will be __' gown‘ Wllllzdln‘ h y; llartwlmwl. Bflflllallllfllnlléltl "We will have s ll it ' ‘ of “my m In M! quantity Ell. flltl. U! it , whasmamiughfigcgzé “l, M" "'°"1Y- We m sheet of Marketing Plan Approved At Opening Farm Meeting In yesterday's six-hour session on "Marketinf which o-penedthis year's Farmers’ Week. reviews of the marketing of the various farm products were given at the morn- ing meeting and a proposed cent- ralized co-operative marketing plan "s approved after spirited discuss- wll. following an address on co-op- eratlves by Mr. R, J. McSween, Director oi Marketing, Nis, Sponsored by the PE I. Feder- ation of Agriculture‘, Mr. J.J. Train- or, past president. presiding, tile well-attended meeting lll the Leg- ion llall, yesterday morning heard the Hon. W.F. ‘Alan Stewart, Mili- ister of Agriculture in his opening address. stress the necessity for "producing what the customer wants" and offering the “highest quality product in an ever-increas- ingly competitive market”. Calling on the P.E I. Federation of Agriculture to press for lm-_ ‘médriaia action from the Dominion Government for a Natural Pro- ducts Marketing Act. Mr. W. R. Shaw, Deputy Minister of Agri- culture etated that “no Province. more than Prince Edward ‘Island required this Magna Charts of the primary producers’ economic free- dom." He stressed the point that any form of successful marketing re- quired well-paid trained business- men, knowledeeable in marketing methods. Ha felt that now that sur- plusses were a ing some form of protection was cessary for the primary producer. He noted a weakness in which "our farm peo- ple have not been educated to Join together in market planning." Another weakness has been the ' (Continued on Page s Col. 1) Britain To col Army By 300,000 LONDON, Feb. 2B — (Reuters) - Britin’: army will have 300.000 fewer men next year, War Secre- tary Emanuel Shlnivcll announced today. Its cost will be slashed by £800,000 ($1,200,000). Army estimates published today showed that the maximum number of officers and troops to be maintained in 1940- 00 would be 550.000 against 850,- 000 last year. Expenditure was estimated at £304.700.000 again last year's 52905000000. . llama Spoiled Whale Meat For "Plague" EDMONTON. Feb. 2a -—(CP) - Doctors reported today a. myster- ious plague which almost wiped ollt an Eskimo villagp about 1.740 alr- nliies northeast of Edmonton mny have been caused by the natives eating spoiled whale meat. Doctors at the Federal Government's Ind- ian llospital here said a 15-year-old boy brought here a little more than a week n80 from the Eskimo village sold the inhabitants had been eat- lng parts of the carcass of a dead whale that had been washed ashore. By Richard K. Ofithlley MUNICH, PW. 22 --(AP) — A German appeilstg court today freed Prits Kuhn, former German- Ameticsn Bund leader and eon- viowd maior Nari. by wttind hi! 10-year prischl sentence to two yea-rs already served- jggm pinned at the decision. lie add it was a fair trlv-l- ‘TIM he heckled aotiui soy Culwn- a pronoutfoti witness and author of the anti-Fascist book "Under Cov- er,” lira corridor encounter- “Get that Communist out of here," Kuhn shouted. "Gel him out. I don't want to talk to a. Blus- also. It i|.“nished Caribou, an American citizen of Armenian birth. Irhmfld “my It Kuhn and shook his head. Kuhn, born in Munich in 189d. said its would try in "I110 “l9 American oitlsenmlp he lost June 1| M, ' o “no more orsaaisstious. no more swirling," Kuhn said in reply to a bisection mun: he planned W ‘start another lune. lie has been in prison or in in- ilo Destruction 0f Potatoes Suggested OTTAWA, Feb. 22 —(C!P)—Agri- culture Minister Gardiner said t0- day in the Commons the govern- ment has not urged the destruc- tion of any of, the 1948 potato crop. Replying to E. G. MoCulloug-h (OCE-Assinibola), Mr. Gardiner said the government is striving to encourage the sale of potatoes at reasonable prices without at the same time encouraging the sale of potatoes ordinarily fed to live- stock. D.P.’S COMING BY AIR HAMBURG, Germany, Fob, Q —- (GP) -- An air lift of displaced persons emigrating to Canada will begin on March 2. the Internation- al Refugee Orsanizaztion announced today. Planes chartaed from Trans - Canada Air Lines will @1111)’ 40 to 50 D.P.'s on each flight. Truman Uses Sharp Words To Defend Member 0f Staff N.S. Lime Plant Destroyed By Fire WINDSOR N. 8-. Feb. 722- (CP)-Clllldl'l olded limo pin-Ill, Ellldirh Lime Distribut- ors, was destroyed by fire here Wllcht. Damage who estimated at $8.000. The mill was razed and a lions-s pllnt damaged in tins 1|". which originated in the mnln building. Dnplogsseg mm. b8 on the nlzht shift discover- ed the blue IIQIPI light switds. It was believed a short circuit might have caused the fire, The plant which etmployad ll men, produced sagllfillnllfll lime. About 600 persons will be ferried to Canada in this way. Mr. Speaker HON. EUGENE CULLEN Speaker of The Legislature Youthful Movie Star Weeps As Mother Wed PALM BEACH, Fla. Feb. 22- (AP)—- Tours streamed down the face of movie star Margaret O'Brien tonight as she watched her mother. Mrs. Gladys O'Brien, mltrry orchestra lender Dori Sylvie. ltlnrgnl-tet. 12, stood quietly in her mother's hotel suite. her hands clenched uild her eyes red during tho five-minute civil cercmflni’ P0!‘- formcd by Judge Richard Robbins. Afterwards ‘she refused to kiss her new step-father when photo- graphers made the request. She wiped her eyes and smiled briefly for group _plctures. like a good trouper, and then boson weeping German Appeal Court Frees Former Bund Leader Dkalll. ternmmt almost steadily since Nov. 29, 1030, when he was eon- victed in New York on six counts of grand larceny and forum. in- eluding misappropriation of Bun’! funds. He was sentenced to a terns oi 2 1-2 to five years. The United States interned him as I. 111130?‘ If» Will "he Dilly llmg plgng h; Nova Emtin. Throne Speech Along Anticipated Lines Liftzing of the-margarine ban while retaining certain restrictions regarding coloration, the introducv ion of a Workmen's Compensatinmvaughan»; hone,“ Act and of provision for incorpor- ation of Crown companies. amend- merits to the Trade uiilon Act. fljemperance Act. Game Act, School Act. Hill; k Aot,--.J. , CompahiesluAydt and ca)‘ "Act. aorgagljzagorsl ‘of the 521183111911? an ar mproveme e uca - lonally and‘ activity in geological survey work were highlights of the Speech from the Throne at the opening of the Legislature yes- terday. , . The House was formally opened at 3 o'clock by His Honour Lieuten- ' ant Governor J. A. Bernard. who was accompanied by his aides, Lt. Col. P. S. Fielding. M. M., E. D.. Flt. Lleut. J. 0. Hornby. Lieut. J. J. Trainer, R. C. N. (R) and Dr. J. A. MacMillan. private secre- iary. An honour guard oi fifty men was furnished by the P. E. I. Reece Regiment under command of Maj. Jvan Harper. M.C., with Lieut. W. B. Peters. M.M., second in‘ com- mand. The customary salute of fifteen guns was. fired from Vic- toria Park by the 114th Battery. 28th l... A. A. Regiment under com- mand oi Maj. Claude Ives. The usual parliamentary tea was held in the Confederation Chamber under auspices of the Charlotte- town Liberal Wbmenls Club and was attended by the members and a large number of other guests. Yesterday's opening ceremony was unusually brief. After His l-ionourk retirement, the introduct- ion of a pro forms bill and the re-readlng of the Speech by Mr. Speaker Cullen, the Premier moved that the Address in reply he taken up on Wednesday and that it be made the first order of the day. l-fe also announced that Hon William Hughes. Minister without portfolio, " had resigned h-om the Executive Council on March S0 last and that Hon. 1-l. H. Cox had been appointed on April i2 to fill the vancacy. Mr. ‘mamas R. Cullen. a form- er Liberal member for Second King's and brother of Mr. Speaker Cullen, was appointed Clerk of the House, in succession to Mr. F. S. Martin. who has resigned. After appointing select standing committees the House adjourned until 8 pm. today. TBRONE SPEECH Following is the text of His Honor‘: Speech from the Throne: Honourable Members of the Leg- lslatlve Assembly of Prince Edward Island: "I welcome you to the forthcom- ‘ivvill do any WASHINGTON, Feb. 2.2 — (AP) - President Truman said tonight that "if any 5.0.3. thinks he can get me to discharge any member of my staff or cabinet by some smart aieck statement over tile air. he's mistaken." In the sharpest language he has ever used in a speech, the Presi- dent vlgorously defended Maj-Gen. Harry H. Vaughan, his military aide. Vaughan has been criticized by Drew Pearson, radio commentator and columnist. because he recently accepted a decoration from Presi- dent Juan Peron oi Argentina. The President did not mention Pearson's name. The commentator quickly made this comment n Truman's talk: i "If Mr. Truman is trying to d - courage the right of fair com- ment. then he too has another think coming. The men he has on his staff are his business - even though the taxpayers have to foot the bill. “But when his staff members ac- cept medals from a military dictat- or whose princlples this govern- mcnt has denounced. then it's the public's business and should be Truman's." Truman spoke at the Army-Navy Country Club at nearby Arlington. Va. at a banquet given by the Reserve Officers Association in The President said that “no poll- ster" or anyone else is going to infliuence his selection of his _cab_ net: .m b s-of, . _ _(, 5'» fiche,‘ qtlans l of his ad- ministration. ‘, ' l-Ie said attacks. on. Vaughan actually were. aimed at him s; President. "I'm a fair target for every- thing," he said. "I have my secre- taries and my military and other aides. They are able to take it." Truman said there had been "very vicious attacks on my mill- tary aide." He said the attacks were "unjust, and I say it advised- ly, vicious." The President, reminiscing over ‘itis career. toid_ of the time he went to see Gen. George C. Marsh- all Just before the last war, ask- ing that he be given active duty. When ‘Human. then a senator. told Marshall he was 5d years old. he said the chief of staff in- former film: “You're too damn old — you'd better go back to work in tile senate.’ " 0ntario Firms Plan To Boost Nflil. Trade TORONTO, Feb. 22 -- tCP) —— Some Ontario firms are already seeking to boost trade with New- foundland. Planning Minister Arthur Welsh said today. He said one steamship company has made arrangements to run a two-week scheduled service direct from Toronto and Hamilton to St. John's. The ships will be 2.400-ton oil- burnlng package frelghters. Mr. Welxll said in a statement inform- ation on Newfoundlandhi import trade is. being prepared for dis- tribution to all Ontario Infl- facturers. Dalia For Loss g Drinking In tiuobac OTTAWA. Feb. 22 -- (C?) - Plerre Gauthier (b-Portneuf) cali- ed in the Commons tonight for a public drive to end lmmoderste drinking in Quebec. ‘ Speaking in the Throne-Speeds ous enemy alien upon his ' from prison June 21, 1048. and deported him to Germany in Sop- tealber. 1M5. Hare he ran into one denaxlflcatlou courts. Kuhn said he had turned over the story of his life to the United states Department of Justice‘ and that he would ti’? to‘ let it pub- liphed. Asked if he would follow Hitler's lead and call his book "Main Kampf," Kuhn grinned and said: “i milht. it's good propa- ganda. eh?" ma appellate court ordered 20 per cant of Kubnis property con- fiscated. but Kuhn said he had no holdirile iii Germlnf- ' mum's wife and teen-age son. waiter, Wdil returned t0 Clif- many front the United States be- fore he was ssrit back. (Continued on Page b O01. D) Saint John Plane Drive Against llloe SAINT JOHN. N. 8.. Feb. 22— (OPP-City Council here called to- day for an all-out effort by police to clean up vice in the city. Zeaident conditions recently brought a protest . solution from the Saint John Presbytery of the United Church of Canada. The pe- lice departures was instructed to set ups full-ti liquor and mor- ality squad which is te report ’ b ‘ DlmGsuthiar said that for the last few years a "torrent of drink has been running day and night in Quebec” and will definitely lead to a weakening of the minds and the morals of the people of the Province. Ha said lie was making the ap- peal ea a doctor and not es a politician. OTTAWA. Feb. 22 -—(CP)~Vis- count Alexander signed tile bill re- lating to the terms of union be- tween Canada and Newfoundland at Government House today. OTTAWA. Feb. 2S~(CP) —The executive eeumil of the Traded and Labor Congress tonight. said it has decided to advise all affiliated or- ganizations against electing known monthly to city council. Communists to office. » and was phrased in sarcastic tenns. LAIMS six NAZI COLLABORATORSNOW in c_A_e_t_AoA 0.0.F."Menihper . Raises Question In Commons OTTAWA, Feb. 22 _ tCP) - Name of another alleged French collaborator tonight was added to tile five known to be in Canada when Alistair Stewart (CCF—- Winnipeg North) charged in the House of Commons that "apparent.- ly the government is allowing known supporters of-Nazlsm to enter and stay" in the Dominion. Mr. Stewart named the sixth al- leged collaborator as Michel Lucien Selsneur. a 42-year-old French physician said to have served with a Nazi S. S. unit in France and now to be living in Montreal. Earlier Mr. Stewart asked Re- sources Minister MacKinnon. who irresponsible for immigration. if Selsneur is in Canada and if lo. where. The Minister re lied that the man ls in Montrea where he has been for some two or three years. Mr. lilacKinnon added that inform- ation about Seigncur had reamed the department "very recently" and further investigation was under way. In the House donlght Mr. Stewart named Dr. Georges Benoit Mantel. Dr. Andre Charles Boussat. Julien mbedan and Jean Louis Hug a; either wanted or under sentence for wartime crimes in France. All four are living in Canada, Weizmann Elected President of Israel (above), elder statesman and lifelong fight- er for Zionism, was elected presi- dent of the State of Irsael. The Dr. Chaim Weizmann ISO-member Consiltutent Assem- bly in Jerusalem chose Weizmann president in balloting after adopt- ing a constitution for,ihe nmv Hebrew state. He received S3 votes to 15 for the only other candidate, Prof. Josef Klausner. Fifteen delegates returned empty envelopes, indicating opposition to both candidates, Six were absent and orig vote was declared invalid. He also named Count Jacques, Duge dc Bernonville, who Tuesday] was successful‘ in having deportw atiorl proceedings quashed in a" Montreal court. I He said he would speak three‘ g-lf necessary in thafrluone, ' to to record reports of brutal-‘ lty by Count Jacgues Duge del Bernonvilie and activities of other‘ men nOW in Canada. IF RUSSIA INVADES PARIS. Feb. 2a - (Reuters) _ Maurice Thorez, French Communist Party chief, today said ma; is Russia invaded France the Com- munists would act "as the workers and peoples of Poland. Romania and Yugoslavia have done." Dentral Farmers’ Sublbrlptlons Delivered 80.00, Moll 06.00; other Provinces A U. S. 82,01 D IRONQCURTAIN .___4 Religious Persecutions . Denounced , St. Laurantjllakes: Statement In llouss 0f Dommons Debate (By Clyde Blackburn) OTTAWA,‘ Feb. 22-(CP)—-Prirne Minister St. Laurent today bitten ly denounced religious persecutions in Communist Europe and assigned to a 40-year-old diplomat the dif- ficult job of getting first-hand ins formation of what is going on be- hind the Iron Curtain. He told the Commons of thd Government's "abhorrence" of “bru- tal persecution of religious leaders in countries behind the Iron Cubs tain." " l Can Onb Protest ’l The Government, he said, wal virtually helpless to do anything but protest. Peace-treaty terml with the countries involved providi- ed against such persecution. But any action to force obsess- vance of the treaty terms require joint action by the signatories, orid of which is Soviet Russia. "Since the U.S.S.R., not only sups ports but. even encourages governn ments- . . in their hostility to res ligion it is not likely to give uthest signatories to the peace treatlel much assistance in putting a hail to religious persecution," he said. Mr. St. Laurent made a stat merit in reply to a number a questions asking him to give thl government's reaction to convictiol of Cardinal Mindszenty of Institute liolds Annual Meeting Taking the - form of questions and answers. the annual meeting of the Central Farmers’ Institutes was held last evening at the Leg- ion Hall, Mr. Kenneth MacLean. Lot 16. president, in the chair. Members of the agricultural "tech- nlcal” staffs answered questions from the floor. and in this way provided specific information to the (Continued on Page 6 Col. 7) ROME, Feb. 22 --(AP) —-lt.a1y's N0. 1 Communist. Palmlro Togllatti, today levelled an attack orl. Pope Pills “which may mark an import- ant change in Italian Communist policy. Togllstti released proof sheets of an article to be published over his signature in the Communist week- ly, Vie Nuove. accusing the Pope o-f seeking "holy alliance" against Communist countries. Its caption: "God And The Atlantic Pact." The Communist policy in pre- dominantly-Catholic Italy has been to avolrla fight with the Vatican. Observers feel abandonment of that policy would be admission the Communists have failed to win Italy's masses with promises to lm- prove their way of life. Togliatti himself in the past has followed the Communist live-and- let-live attitude toward the Vati- can. In the Constituent Assembly. he threw the Communist vote be- hind the church-state " Laterari pacts. His about-face came suddenly. Tho Moscow-trained Communist chief wrote critically of the Pope's Italian Reds May Change Policy Towards " Vatican calling of special masses April 3 Assassins. Que. Feb- IP16?) _'Il1g eight-day-old strike of 5.000 workers in this district marked time todli’ IN 1139"" still centred on the presence of a special detachment of Provincial Police sent here. The strike scene in Asbestos. when 2,100 workers struck for higher wages. remained quiet but in Quebec Asbestos’ Mayo!‘ All)!" Gaudraau‘ said he would ask Pre- mier Duplessis ttkrecail t-he police. Mayor Gaudreau is Union Na- tionals member of Die Legislature for Richmond. - In Montreal deputy director l-til- aire Beauregard of the Provincial Police denied charges of Asbestos’ ‘ibvn council of drunkenness and indecency among the deter-haunt and aid seven persons had been detained several hum during the weekend for interfering with pe- Police Remain Centre Of Interest At Strike Scene “to expiate the ‘dime of the enemies of God" in sentencing Jos- eph Cardinal Mirldszenty of Hung- ary to life imprisonment. He assailed. even more vehe- mently the Papal statement wel- coming "the steps that have been taken to bring Western Europe and the United States together in ever closer alliances" designed to avert war. . Togliatti called the latter state- ment an endorsement of the pro- posed North Atlantic defence al- liance, formation of which the Rus- sians oppose. "With these words it is stated clearly. without reticent-e or pre- tence, that the Pope wants a holy alliance against. the peoples that have committed the terrible sncrll- leg» of freeing themselves from capitalism and imperialism," he wrote. "And since the sponsor of this holy alliance is today the most ag- gressive of imperlalismstheAt-iler- loan one, behold the war moves of this imperialism sprinkled with iloly water. . ." Russia wants peace. Togliatii said. and the "best part.“ of the peoples of all the world also want peace. lice. Beauregard also said he hitd sent only 54 policemen. not 160 as men- tioned by the council. ‘ihe strikers are seeking an in- crease of 15 cents an hour to make the basic hourly wage ll. The Que- bec Labor Department has termed the strike illegal and the Quebec Labor Relations Board has can- celled the bargaining certificates of the National Federation of Min- ing industry Employees and four affiliated unions of striking s.s- bestos miners. ' Mayor Gsudreau said it was "in- disputable" that "abuses" had been committed by the police sent to Asbestos. The council, in addition in its charges of nsisconduct on the part of police. said all had been pastes- ftsidwinlblseli-rike and their (Continued on Page 5 Col. s) til. ‘lllii Aviiaaos. ma skaters ins later. 1o as tsp swscraeaa-r- » Mater, some, Aug Aueiancs! Ill: 7,- ‘l’ h TORONTO. Feb. 22-(CP)—Minh mum and maximum temperature Victoria 44, 54; Edmonton 8B, ReginajB, 20; Winnipeg 15B. 1S1 Toronto 30. 34; Ottawa 13, 25; Mom treal 13, 23; Quebec 3. 26; Sainl John 3, 30; Moncton 3B. 29; Hali- fax 11, 27; Charlottetown 3, 27 Sydney 4B, —; Yarmouth 14, 31 B-below. IiMLIFAX, Feb. 22 —(CP) —O!< ficial inland forecasts issued to- night by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax and valid until midnight Wednesday. Synopsis: Snow began to spread into thl Western Maritimes ‘Puesday even- ing. The fine weather that had been experienced over the district during the day was coming to an end as the high pressure area which caused it moved off tn the east. Meanwhile, the disturbance that: was approaching from Lake Ontar- lo and causing the snow was also causing southerly winds to bring milder air into the district. In the western sections the temperatures will rise during the night. Clea! skies in the Eastern sections will permit the temperatures to fall but as the cloud spreads over the regs ions it will become warmer by morning. There is likely to be a short in~ terval of freezing rain as the snow changes to rain in the south- 9H1 regions. The disturbance is expected t» pass the district to be followed by clearing weather Wednesday even- m . g. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: L Snow beginning during the night chang- ing to snowflurries Wednesday af- ternoon and clearing in the even- ing. Milder during the night becom- South winds 15 shifting about. mid- day to northwest 20. Low and high Wednesday at Charlottetown 20 and 30. High tide this morning at 8.0! and tonight at ‘G3. Sun rises this morning at 0.40 arid sets at 5.38. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. WEEK DAYS IAIVQ Jordon 0.101. M. ant! arrives at Cape Terncnitine ll 10.15 A. I. taavu Cape ‘lesbianism us PI- ua anlvss se lords: Ill I. ll. IIIOSGDOQ WIS “DINNER!- Nolflhyltiliodlllellllhdi. Mi Hurts - ing colder again Wednesday night. ,