MAXIMS 01-'A MERE MAN The ealhd playthinu of our elders are buaineaa. The Guardian. Five cenu. I iilornllil Dally Founded 1081. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 19S1 INDIA SEES CHINA READY TO AGREE TO CEASE” FIRE By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON. Jan. 26 - (AP) China's Communist leaders have changed their tactics in an effort to split the anti-Communist coal- ition. according to reports from Peiplng. Officials here say the Red Flor- eimi Ministry has taken a new line with British and Scandinavian dip- lomats at the Chinese capital. For- .-nerly these diplomats were ignor- rd. but new they are being called in for frequent talks. They are reported to have been kept. informed of Red China's Kor- can cease-fire dealings with India and to have been fed a steady diet of C unist propaganda against the United states and its Far East- cm pclicles. Until I few weeks ago Pc'iping's official relations were al- most entirely limited. in the lion- Communist field. to its ocntacts with India. The Peiping maneouvrexis regard- ed at the state Department as one ride of a. nutcracker pressure on the grand alliance of the free coun- tries. The other side is Moscow's itiplomatic pressure against forma- tion of the North Atlantic defence army. See Dangerous Situation To officialslhere the pressure Zooks heavy and potentially dung- erous because of conflicts in the national policies of the U.s.. Brit- ain and France. These conflicts even extend to the question whether the three Western Powers should sit down with the Soviet Union in a foreign ministers meeting this spring to red: 3 solution of major world problems. Top American officials are convinced such a meeting would be little more than a propaganda battle between East and West. But the pressure in EUNPG I! 50 593038 that American officials felt they had no choice except to go along with moves for a conference. But it is on Far Eastern issues uhich divide the U.S. and Brit- ain that the pressures are heav- lest. Relations between Washington icontllllled on Page 13 Col. 4) Gloria Swanson Awarded Title NEW YORK, Jan. 25 u- (AP) - Actrem Gloria Swanson has won the title of 1950 "Celebrity of the Yrar". Celebrity Service, Inc., said today. The service announced a list, oi in leading celebrities in America," saying it was based on a tabula- tion of more than 1.500.000 tele- pimne calls to the Service last Frar requesting information about imiables. Alicr Miss Swanson werc: Actress Tallulah Bankhead, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. writer John Horsey, actress Faye Emerson. William ("i-lopalong Cassldy") Bord), Margaret Truman. Phil Rizzuto of the New York Yankees, actress Carol Channing and com- poser-playwrigfit Gian-Carlo Men- niti. Coming Events "Mail your Films to Garnhum Photo studio. Charlottetown. "Cake salelat Holmana. Satur- ilux. January 27th. at 2.30. by Buckley Ladies Aid. "Kinkora Hall. Friday. Jan. 29. Sea ihe film of the world's clas- Iic "Llitlo Lord Fauntleroy." "We are buying mixed stain or straight oats daily. Get our prices. 5- J. Maobougall. Vernon. "Rummage Sale. Christian church school Room. saiamy. January 2712!. 3-”. . "Our food warehouse will he Wen each blond and Friday will 9 a.rn. so so am. New lllslllrg Dghvylg. Co, "Come to card party. Wluloa :."M"i1;nuHali. man. no. :9. "RM .. 0-n-a-' "”'r'r.l'.t'.5i'f'.'ll'ii'i'ii an ma Tuesday. nosm onw- "M-rhvwa radio service enop. mud. will in open from today lib January. Watch for . '1' Itltiql on waiting date. -"mirilth ' on simu- "iuu. M? -for Believe Chinais Leaders Change Tactics In Move To Split Anti-Red Group Weeks Sentenced To Twenty Years In the Supreme Court yesterday morning Justice George J. Needy sentenced William Weeks. char- lottetown, convicted of man- slaughter, to twenty years in Dar- chesfer Penitentiary. The prisoner showed no emotion as the sentence was read. but his wife who had been sitting near the prisonerls box ran weeping from the courtroom. Speaking to the prisoner. Justice Tweedy told him he had hada fair trial and the jury had brought in a verdict of not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter. He added it was his opinion . the evidence had warranted a verdict of murder. Weeks had been found guilty of manslaughter last week in con- nection with the death on De- cember 4. 1950 of James Mullins. 84 year-old resident of Charlotte- town. In his plea for mercy. R. R. Bell. K.C.. counsel for the defence. pointed out the prisoner's past record. and stated he was not a. criminal but one of the unfortun- ates who gels himself convicted of a crirnlnal defence. South Koreans . Vlani Peace Al Any Price BRA!l'I'FORD. 0nt.. Jan. 25 - (CP) -- South Koreans are inian extreme state of apathy and "probably ready to accept any- thing, even Communism. to end the fighting." a Canadian army officer returned from Korea said today. Maj. John Firth, company com- mander. with the 2nd Battalion. Princess Pairicia'.s Canadian Light Infantry. was granted compassion- ale leave because of his wife's ill- ness and arrived home yesterday. He said the morale of the Pa- triclas training in South Korea is high and they are ”bur-sting to get into action." Sliippers Will Save Up To One Million Yearly OVITAWA. vised setup Jan. 25-(GP)-A re- in freight Transport Commissioners The reductions will save shippers of freight to and from the new was estimated later by the Canadain National Railways. The Board, acting on an appli- cation from the Newfoundland Gov- ernment. chopped down charges for handling cargo on the water haul between Cape Breton and Newfoundland and also directed specific decreases in rates between the Island and points west of the Msiritimes. A large pr portion of the goods into a if out of New- foundland is expected to be affected by the decision, which gives Newfoundland is victory in its claim that it has not been getting freight-rate con- cessions to which it was en- titled under the 1049 confeder- points at issue. ordered the C.N.R. to put specified rate reductions in operation by March 1. Tile C.N.R. operates Newfoundland's rail line and the boat service linking it with the Maritime terminus at North Sydney, N. S. - Main effect of the reductions will be to wipe out any rate disadvant- ages to Newfoundland. by com- parison with the Maritlmes, result- ing from the fact that its freight movements involve a water haul and that the Island section of the C.N. R. is a narrow-gauge operation. v Upholds Nfld. .View The Provincial, Government had contended and the Board upheld the argument-that the confedera tion terms were aimed at wiping out any such '" dvantages, giving Newfoundland the same level of rates as prevail in the Maritime Provinces. l Specifically, the Board ordered that: l. surcharges on Newfound- land freight are to be removed. These surcharges consisted of 12 cents per 100 pounds on freight entering the Province and 10 cents on goods leaving (Continued on Page 13 Col. 4) "If we could put the same qual- ity fish into Montreal and Toronto that we put into Halifax we could not catch enough on the East Coast to supply the Upper Canad- ian market", stated Mr. E. A. Day, Moncion. Department of Re- search and Development, C. N. R. here yesterday afternoon at the fifth annual East Coast Fisheries Conference. P Mr. Day was discussing the role of tranqioriatlon in developing . the fishing industry. The session proved to be one of the most in- terestlng and lively at the Confer- ence and continued over from the morning into the afternoon. The morning session opened with a discussion on the automotive transportation in the fishery do- veiopmeni. Supporters of the two transportation systems. trucking and railway. presented their views in attempts to prove which was the better system and what were the most desirable conditions. Mr. Day stressed the point that it was neceaury to provide Upper Canadian centres with high qual- ity fish. "I do not eat fish in Montreal and would not touch a Rival Claims Of Trucks And Railways Discussed lake trout in Toronto." he said. "Thirty five pounds of fish are consumed per person during a year in Halifax. while only five to six ,.ounds are consumed per per- son in Montreal." Temperature Important with regard to refrigeration transportation. the method by which it was considered possible to get high quality fish on the markets. he stated that "we in the railway business think th! proper temperature for transportation of frozen fish is plus or minus two degrees from zero and plus or minus two degrees from 29 for fresh fish." He did not think that those who represented the trucking trad-e were in I. position to tell what the temperature should be. He re- counted that he asked 18 truck- men and he received -eighteen different answers. On a haul from Halifax to Montreal we get 6-l0ih of a cent per pound, he stated. "1 do not think 'i:hose in the trucking in- I (Continued on Page is col. ill By DOUGLAS BOW Of1'l'AWA. Jan. 3 - (OP) .. A thi'od- ay star D , defences will be dis- cuasod by Cabinet with Gen. Eisen- hower here tomorrow. The cost. in all its ramifications. wll quite probably go beyond'l600.- 0lll.000 in the next 12 to it months. It involves dispatch of arms and the commitment of poimd and air units to lurcpp and the ti-aininl ox lulopdan air and ground offic- ers bare. Recruiting for the armed forces has tripled in Plea to book up the ' E gamers. commander for the ping; prayers in lurope. roundina off his mission may of Mr- Eisenhower To Meet Federal Cabinet Today Canadian plan to bol-. Qoan defence pupanllolll. ii (ii? at Roekoliffe Ainport It midday for I N-hour visit. Take No Chance: I A police guard will Join with De- fanoe Miniatu Olaxton and other dgriitarioc in greeting him. Auth- orities see little prospect of a re- nowal of Europe's communist dim- onstrations but they are taking no chances. - cien. Eisenhower will hold a brief conference ind than pitch to conferences with Prune Minis- tor st. uurent. the Cabinet and defence dffloials. when he leaves aaturday for Wu: Point. N. Y.. he should have a good picture of a Canadian uro- rates for Newfoundland. with many charges slashed by as much as 25 per cent. was ordered today by the Board of Province about 31,000,000 I year, it special ation pact. . The Board. upholding New- foundland's cm A tion on most Ffelgllf Rates Are: Ordered Slashed In Nfld: Five from various recruits Prince Edward Island points who enlisted recently at the R. C. A. 1''. Recruiting Unit in Sudnmerside are seen above as they were about to leave for Manning Depot in Aylmer. Ont. They are Front Row. l. to r., AC2 Cyril P. Murphy, 134 P. E. I. Recruits For Air Force Milton Ave.. Summerside; AC2 Ed- win C. Cook. Mount Edward Road, RR 6. Charlottetown; Standing. 1. to r.. LAC C. T. Butler, Mayfield. is war-time member of the R.C.A. 17.; LAC George A. Stewart. 0'- Leary. an Army veteran; and AC2 J. A. Gaudet of st. Nichol'.s. . Employment Discussed At Conference Increases in the New Brunswick the fishermen and employment of shore help were attributed to the use of drsggers by Mr. H. J. Robichaud, Four Executed For Korean Accident MEMTPI-EIS, Tenn.. Jan. 25 - (AP)-Four south Korean soldiers who were riding in the truck which collided with the late Lt.- Gen. Walton Walker's jeep have been executed. a. Memphis war- rant officer said in a. letter home. Gen Walker,.was mander of the U. 5. Eighth Army in Korea at the time of the fatal accident. In the letter to his wife. War- rant officer James E. Bestiie said "They shot all four of the Koreans that were in the truck. The Kor- eans shot them after we turned them over to the Rok (Republic of Korea) army." I Beattie did not explain whether authorities thought the Koreans miht have deliberately pulled out of their convoy and crashed into Walker's jeep or whether they were shot because they were in- volved in the death of Walker. News In lhief FREDERICTON. Jan. 25 A (C?) - Twin demands for price and rent controls highlighted a nine-point brief of the joint legislative com- mittee cf the Railway 'Iiransporta- tion Brotherhoods taken under con- sideration by the New Brunswick Government here today. TORONTO. Jan. 15 - (CP) - Defence Minister Claxton said to- day that the Federal Government will pay for civil defence equipment and will invite provincial author- ities to confer on the division of other civil defence costs. oI'rAwA. Jan. 29 - (op) - Prlme Minister 5.0. I-folland of New zealand will arrive in Ottawa Jan. 29 for a two-day visit to Cali- add and will talk with memba-s of the Cabinet and be accorded a state dinner by Prime Minister St. Laurent. He will attend the open- ing of Parliament Jul. 30 IJ&'DON. Jan. 25 -- (AP) - Winston Churchill opened a last- ditch mini today to keep Britain's stool indistry in the hands of its private owners. me industry is scheduled to become stata-owned no. is. Speaking in a bitter Per- liamontory exchange with Deputy Prime Minister Herbert Morrison. Churdilll pl-aniscd to submit a motion of censure "in duo course." WEILINGTON. N. 2.. Jan. 5 - (GP)-New zealand will augment her out troops now fighting in Korea with reinforcements. Iag- fanoo -Minister Thornu MacDon- ald said today. life said the Gov- ernment had decided to proceed with the caliup. training and dia- pdtch of this group. There was no lflm M Ild-(m'-IINIII i f! 0.fsiDriaggers fish catch, money earnings of Director of Fisheries for N. B. yes- terday afternoon a.t.1he concluding conference of East Coast Fisheries Conference. Mr. Robichaud noted that the diraggers had proved so popular with the deep sea. fishermen that no applications for fishing boats other than draggers have been re- ceived for over a year. on Dec. 31, 1960 we had 62 applications for the construction of more draggers, he added. With regard to money earnings, he stated there was no comparison with the... amount previously at- tained by the fishermen. He noted that dragger fishermen ware aver- aging twice as much money as those who used long liners. The off-shore fishermen. after the first year. did not say that they were losing out in their catch- es due to draggers, he stated. They say they are not getting as much as draggers and he recounted where one shore fishermen told him his catch had increased due to the use of draggers in deep water. Asked to compare the catches of draggers and ordinary fishing boats he stated that the drarzger catches per week were around 60, 70 to 80,000 lbs. against 15 or 20,- 01!) pounds for ordinary boats. If we were to stay in the fishing business we had to get draggors. he stated. New Brunswick fishermen now operate 23 draggers. Last year they experimented with a 45 foot dragger. which they liked and next year they plan to put a 47- footer into operation. Not Entire Solution Draggers. however. were not the entire solution to the N. B. fishing problem, he noted. We still have (Continued on Page 13 Col. 1) Allied Ships Shell lnchon; Land Frail Quiet (By Robert Eamon) 'IODYO, Jan. 2s--(l"riday)- United Nations warships shelled Heoul'a port of Inchon on the west coast of Korea Thursday as Allied ground patrols wheeled freely through a deepening no-man's land. They sought an enemy that seemed to havoivanished. Gen. Douglas MacArthur. the UN. commander. said in a pre-birthday interview: . "Ware goinggo give the Chinese a bloody nose somewhere in the south." A naval spokesman said the United states heavy cruiser st. indication of its strength. p (continued on Page lg Col. 3). lmplores-Ill II To Capitalize On Present lull (By William L. Ryan) LAKE SUCCESS. N. Y., Jan. 25 -(AP)-India hinted today that the lull on the Korean war front may be an indication of Chinese Communist readiness at a mo- ment's notice to order a cease- fire. and implored the United Na- tions to seize upon the lull as an opportunity to launch peace negotiations. Backed by Britain's Sir Glad- wyn Jebb. Sir Benegal Rau nf lndiii demanded priority consid- eration by the 60-country political committee of the Asian-Arab bloc proposal calling for an immediate conference of seven countries on the Korean crisis. He said it should take precedence over the U. S. resolution to brand Com- munist China an aggressor be- cause the Arab-Asian move was more likely to lead to an early end of hostilities. Aiihoughe the 12-country Arab- Aslan proposal as originally pre- sented made no mention of R cease-fire, Rau said the sponsors had this in mind as the first order of business of the projected seven-country conference. Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin said Russia accepted the Asian-Arab proposal. Plow- ever. he proposed an amendment which would delete a section of the proposal calling upon the U. N. Assembly president to set the lime and place of the first ses- sion of the proposed seven-power conference. He proposed that "the conlcrees" do this. Observers not- ed this would make the time of the meeting subject to the wishes of Communist China. Tsarapi-tin also proposed that the words "intervention of Com- munist Chins" be deleted from the Arab-Asian resolution. He said this was contrary to facts. Solidarity Threatened. IDNDON. Jan. 25 .. (C-P) - As. the issues of peace or war in Korea threaten to shatter Anglo-American solidarity. what is know as the "Asian viow" commands increasing attention in Britain. Stated in strong terms. this is simply that the United States un- wittingly helped bring on the fight- ing by persistently denying New china her rightful voice in Far Eastern affairs. T0 CB-midi-fins. hearing the salty speeches cf United states senators confounding Communist China and all her works. this View may seem extreme. The American case is impressive: China "aggiressed" and any country which doesn't try to do something about it is guilty of appeasement. If Red China were recognized now. the argument runs, it would clearly be an example of a country gaining admission to the united Nations for precisely the offence that would normally guarantee ex- pulsion. Things may. look different in Pelping. The basic Chinese premise, as expounded by influential Asian voices. is that the United States sought to settle Far Eastern affairs without China's participation just because that country happened to be cxmmunist. The fact is China was barred; the American Argu. merits for barring her cut little ice anywhere in Asia. Canada To Back U. S. LAKE SUCCESS. N.Y.. Jan. 25- (CP) - Canada will vote for the United States resolution in the United Nations branding commun. ist China as an aggressor, official sources said tonight. These sources added. however. 14 PAGES (Continued on Page in col, 2) Slides Block VANCOUVER, Jan. 25 -(CP) - Heavy rain crumbled walls in the Fraser Canyon today and caused some flooding in the Lower Fraser Valley. Near Hell's Gate, some 120 miles east of Vancouver. the M untaln runoff sent rock and mud arcad- ing down over the Canadian Nat- ional Railways iracka. cutting the transcontinental line. C. N. R. iraina. running about six hours late into Vancouver. were re-routed over Canadian Pacific Railway tracks which run along the opposite wall of the canyon. . The c. P. R. had no trouble on its main line in the canyon but in the southern interior a rock slide blocked the Kettle Valley line in the Coquihalla Pass. Trains swere re-routed north through the Fraser and Thompson Canyons and then south through nor-rm. other slides blocked the Trans- Canada I-llghway between lponoos Bridge and Lytton in the Tharp. non Canyon. An avalanche that out the Trans-Canada artery near Hope. ioo miles out of here, was cleared today after hailing traf- fioforuhoim. .f I ',1 .11, ,1.) more now Ann I ll Insnauonix MAXIMS I OFA MERE MAN 'iiiIil-mil we In we Iui Subscriptions delivered 38.00: Mail ".00 other Provinces and U.S.A. 88.00 Announce Increase III M . . P increases in minimum potato prices. to become effective on midtnirjit Saturday. January 27, were announced in an order is- sued yesterday by the Provincial Potato Marketing Board and re- leased last night by Mr. E. D. Reid, manager of the Board. The minimum price of Irish Cobbler seed will be 50 cents a bushel and all other varieties of seed and iavblestock will sell no lower than 44 cents a bushel. The previous minimum price for cc-bubler seed was 45 cents a bushel, and for iablcstock 36 cents. The difference in the two price levels show an increase of five cents a bushel for Cobbler seed and eight cents a bushel for iablestock. Similar action is being taken by the New Brunswick Board and their prices will become effective at the same time. At the present time the seed potato prices are above he minrimum prices set by the Provincial Board. The total potato shipments for January this year may set an all- iime Jan-uary export record the Guardian was informed by Mr. Reid. Shipments to date this month number 1170 cars with six more shipping days remaining. January shipments last year wer slightly less than 950 carloads. A Mr. Reid told the Guardian that the market was very firm with a heavy export of seed. He ex- pecis that the heavy movement will be sustained for the next two or three weeks and that the seed potato quota. to the U. S. A. will likely be filled by Feb. 15 or Feb. 20 Canada's seed potato quota to the United States is two and one half million bushels. These po- ialoes are admitted at the regular duty rate of 7 1-2 cents a cwt. and double duty must be paid on any additional pots-toes. Last year the seed quota was filled on Dec. 3. Drifting Sealers Taken In low HALIFAX. Jan. 26 -(CPl.. An United states naval vessel tonight located the sealer Finbaok and took her in tow. ceasing her don- serous drift toward the rocky southern coast of ewfoundland. The 300-ton Fin isck. with five men aboard, earlier had broken a tow line to the sealer Olaf Olsen and disappeared 'in II heavy fog bank. R. C. A. I". search and. Rescue officials here. fearing she would be driven aground. called on all Ships in the area to carry out a search. The Finhack. formerly the seal- ing boat Bronco, was bought two years ago by the Olsen Whaling and Sealing Company of st. John's, ' and based at Williamsport. she was being towed to Halifax for engine repairs. AlborfcTMon 229 Days Unconscious VERMILION, Alia.. Jan. 25 - ICP) - Marvin Osbaldesion of Vermilion today was in his 29th consecutive day of unconscious- ness in hospital here. Doctors said condition of the young man has not changed. Obsldeston suffered head injur- ies in a traffic accident near Mac- Leod. Alia.. last June 10 and has been unconscious since. He was to have been married a mopth after the accident. Highway. 1 Railway In Fraser Canyon The slide near Hope carried away telephone and telegraph lines but circuits to the cast were restored today. Twelve families were marooned "91" Haney. 30 miles east of Van- couver. when the Aloueiie River. bloated by the sudden downpour. overflowed its banks. Wafer six feet deep covered roads leading to the district. Farther east. at Rataic Prairie. three bridges were carried away by flooding creeks. Damage wu eatimaf d at aoo,ooo some residents of suburbs reported ments. low-lying farmland was under water in a few isolated sections of the Lower Fraser valley, On Vancouver Island. the Nanakno-Port Albernl highway was cut temporarily by a rock slide. The west coast of the island re- ceived more than three inches of rain in 24 hours but it meant that logging operations might be re- sumed shortly. More than 2.000 loggers were thrown out of work last week when deep snow halted woods werationls Vancouver flooded base- otato Prices. Sounds Warning Against Becoming Cogs In Machine Delegates to the East Coast Fish- eries Conference were told last night by Mr. F. Homer zwicker. na- tional vice president -of the Canad- ian chamber of Commerce. t-hail "the gravest problem which con- fronts Canadians is that of preserv- ing and develcvping individual free- dom or liberty in this industrial age." Member of a leading lrunenberg. N.S. fishing family, Mr. zwickeif spoke at a dinner tendered the dais cgates in The Charlottetown by 1.11! local Board of Trade whose servicq to the community he -warmly eulo- gized. The speaker outlined the works: and objects cf the various cham- bers and Boards of Trade lscatierc ed throughout Canada's 10 Prov- inces. He maintained that thew should be the literal sounding board: and public relations utilities on their communities and said this was so because their interests entered almost every phase of public life. The latta duties. he maintained. ranged from acquaihting the auth- oritles with the feelings and attit- udes of the people in any section of the country to serious endeavours "to get out the vote" at electioii times. Mr. Znvicker was introduced in the large gathering by Mr. F. Walla er I-lyndman, of the Charlottetown Board. and was thanked by Mr. Frank W. Curtis. As dinner finished at the hotel the group was entertained by somq excellent sootoh numbe B sung by1 the Charlottetown Male Chorus un- der the direction of Stanley Lan-o caster. They were warmly applaud-1 ed as they honoured Bobble Burnfi Day. an 'on not forgotten bj 4:4-6 (Continued on P889 13 001-. 97 if Must Be .GREA1 Fun 40 Be A must: IN A Ginus DOR.ViPif0RY TORONTO, Jan. 5-(OP)--Minn imum temperatures observed bod tween 7:30 P. M. and 7:00 A. iv: EST; maximum temps betwee 7:30 A. M. and 7:30 1?. M.:. Edmonton I11! 1323: Calgary 6 GB; Regina 113 73; Winnipeg 10 ab; Toronto in 31; Ottawa 10 27' Montreal 21 28: Quebec 29. 25: Moncton 35 3'1; Halifax 41 50: Charlottetown 37 41; Sydney 3! 54: Yarmouth 42 42; St. John's ll 55. HALIFAX. Jan. 25 - (OP) - of- ficlal forecasts issued by the Do- minion Public Weather office al Halifax. Synopsis: A band of intermittent rain be- coming mixed with snow stretched across Nova scotia and Prince lid- ward Island tonight. New Bruns- wick and Eastern Quebec were cloudy. A disturbance centred 600 miles southwest of Nova Sootia is mov- ing northeastward and will pass! near sable Island Friday afternoon. As it passes the rain and snow will end. followed by clearing and mid- er weather. Regional forecasts. midnight Friday: Prince Edward Island: - Over- cast. Intermittent rain. occasionally mixed with snow ending Friday af- ternoon. clearing in the evening. Colder by evening. Light northerly winds increasing in northwest 16 in afternoon. Iacw and high Hiday al Charlottetown 20 and 38. High tide today at 121) A. M. and 1.27 P. M. Sun rises at 7.51 A. M. and sets at 5:11 F. 1d. Sixnmeraido tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. IOIDEN - CAP! TORMINTINI IIIIIIY SIBVICI valid until Leno Borden Leave C. 1'. M0 AM. 2.40 PM. 1lTNI)A rssiwica iuava Borden , bean C. 1 MI PM. 1'; LI :3.