MAXIMS i ‘m’ A MAXIMS ‘ - MERE MAN 01" A MERE MAN Bless Ill the Churches, u“ :W[/ (y, Public worship confers insight, blessed be God. who, in thk q" 5"“ mu’ ‘New u. u“ chumhn- because by our public force we can V share and know the nature of . The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew things. 7 Charlottetown Guardian Two cue. Morning Guardian, Iouudod 1817 RAMSTRIIIGE ANll BURSTS lNTii FLAMES Tire Blow-out Blamed For Disaster That Claimed Lives All But Five Occu- pants. SALEM. Ill, March 24~A tire blowout hurled a private bu. ag- ainst a concrete bridge abutment and turnul it Info a blazing wreck in which 19 persons, including a iour-ycar-old girl. died today. Only five persons survived one of the worst disasters in the his- tory of United States motorbus translwriauml» and two of them were so seriously injrcd they may die. The bus, loaded with a profor- clonal roller-skating troupe, en- route from St. Louis to Cincinnati, 0.. was going down a slight grade when its right front tire blew out about 50 feet from a bridge two miles west of here. Bursts Into Flames The heavy machine careened orazily, dug into the soft shoulder of the highway and rammed into the bridge abutment with tcrriflc force. Hurled on its sidc. the bus burst into flame‘ whcn it; gasoline tank was smashed. _ "lite survivors said the bus ap~ pearcd to cxplcdc and tlicn tlicrc was fire all over and all ivcm caught in it. reported Dr. H. L. Logan of the Sale-m Community Hospital, where the injured were taken. - "I can still hear my pals’ sci-cums of tcrrcrfliDon Plancry of Kansas City, a profeszioniil roller- kntcr, iald. "They were "trapped in a regular mass of fire. 'I‘hc brys as well as the girls were hysterical and fought like mad to get out." Flnnery managed to crawl out a window of the bus but hc suffered Bggiburns when he attempted _(Contlnued on age 12) com fVfNli "Buysig iive . . ,_. Albany Thurs- day 25th, Emerald 26th until noon. C. C. Green. L-2022-l-w-t-r-w-t-u. ' ‘Zion Church Annual Easter Cake Bale Saturday at R0861? Hardware Store. L-8l5-3~25-2l- _.___. "Borden Linc Club loading hogs. lambs, calves every Wednesday a1 Albany. Hours 12-3. L-6972-l0-M T W l! "South Granville presents its comedy drama at Hope River Easter Monday. Dance follows. L-Btii-Ii -24-3i. "Easter Saturday Hosnllul Flili; Day. Meet ladies with a. smile and buy a flag. ' L-OOG» skunks in- to $1.00 ef- Department L<907-3-25-3i- "Bounty on adult creased from 50 cents loctlve until May l5. of Agriculture. "Sec “Noble Outmst" Masonic Hall, Hunter River by Granville Players, Thursday night. MB-lflh 35 in iild of Women‘: Associations. L-B51-3-24-2i. "Special meeting Milk Producers and vendors Association. Tllwdfly. March 30th in Agricultural Hull. Directors meeting at Z o'clock. Gen- eral meeting at 3 o‘clock. Important I that a'l the Milk Producers and Vendors attend. L-814-3-25-37-79 --- . "Buy your baking on Easter Sat- urday from the Ladies of St. Eliz- abeth's Aid in aid of St. Vincent's C-phanage at the Maritime Elec- trio. L-B83-3-25-2i. _.___. "mm-h Kings Sl-ilpplns Club Milking orders for another car of Born-meal and cracked-corn- Wlfl’ orders with C D. Mackin- mll. lourls. by Monday nislli- Orders for Elmira should be listed with John Pierce. Act quickly. Price some as rut. our. uoa-a-as-il. “Livestock Marketing Board ltlalitng livestock through local shin- olne club during week of March 99th» as follows: Monday after- noon Miscouche. Tuesday forenoon Kensingtou-Chsrlottetown, Friday Ifternoon, ‘Dill. Elmira, Souris. Montague, Cardigan; Wednesday lorenoonuntil train time, York. Wlnsloe. Wlltshlrc, Hunter River. l2 to 3 w oo-operat gnd help main- picb. L-Itll. Of" CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1937 i 19 ‘ELLE? 11v YZLINEE M63101. . _iZ§ i daisy “No change of any moment should be made in the curriculum or in our present system o! edu- cation without grave and mature consideration," Hon. M. R. Mc- Guigan, Minister oi Education, dc- clared, speaking before the Prince Ekiward Island teachers ln annual convention yesterday. He was not trying to suggest that no changes should be made, Hon, Mr. Gulgan pointed out. Education was not the only field in which unrest. manifests itself, the Minister of Education said. “The economic system has its monetary difficulties and all 0f the old, established, and what we call democratic forms 0f sovemment. are under fire and openly attack- ed." Two Opposing Forces the education system the same thing was true. Amidst all the arguments two opposing forces arc seeking for control. Onc relies upon the past. upon reverence for tradition, obedience for law. EDDIE- elation of the great things hurled down by wise and famous men of bids youth forget t. are behind and find satisfaction in the things that are present and to seek happiness In in them. It is the struggle between cultural education and the practi- al. c “The cultural education embraces cl the wisdom of the centuries and it is this system that has been adopted by Great Britain for many decades. But the promoters of the new system would bring it into the market-place and 0011x991 "8 l0 prove its value in dollars and cents. “It has not yet been proven that the British system is wrong. but which of our institutions are per- fect?" Hon. Mr. MoGulgan re- marked. Agriculture Education "A great deal has been heard during the past few months re- garding the teaching of llEflill-lnll" in the common school," the speak- or went on. "This is a very im- portant subject and one that re- quires our careful consideration. It is said that our schools and col- - ——-—--—~— f... Killed In Plane Disaster (A.P. by Guardian's Special Wire) coupon. Mazaii 24 - Imperial Airways tonight announced four members of the crew of the flying boat Caprlcornus were killed to- day as the plane struck the Beau- jolais mountalis near Ouroux. France, in a storm- Mrs. B. M. Coates. the (lily 9”‘ sengcr, was injured. The only other person aboard. wireless operator J. L. Coopcnwus not injured. The dead were listed as captain Paterson, First Officer 0.1!}. Klein, Flight Clerk Dr. O'Brien and Stew- ard F. A. E. Jeffcoate. Educationists Discuss Issues TRADE PACT At Convention ARE APPRilVEIl No ‘Change In-Ifducation System ,Without Mature Consideration Hon. M. R. McGuigan Tells — Sessions Conclude Today leges instead of helping to prepare our children for a. life on the farm are really educating them away from it. I think there is a great deal of truth in this charge but the school is not all to blame as the parents foster in their children the idea of leaving the farm and. ob- taining employment in other fields of endeavour which they deem to call more genteel and which they consider to be certainly more re- munerative. “This policy was not so far wrong in the first quarter of the present century in as much as there were opportunities for young people in those days. A New Attitude Necessary "A new attitude should be taken on the part of all concerned both in the home and in the school re- garding the importance of the farm and farm life. The minds of our young peope should be filled with the idea that farming is the great- est of all professions. It should he impressed upon them from their earliest infancy that. they are ex- tremely fortunate in bzlng born on the farm instead of in the crowd- ed city. A love for their surround- ing-s. their life and their oppor- tunities should be impressed upon them. They should be taught that farming is an honorable profession and one in which they can use all their ingenuity. “Another movement has been started in this province and can- not fall to improve the position of our agr-icultnrlsts. I refer to the Adult Education movement. This program is not directly controlled by the Education Department but is under the guidance of the Adult Education League. It is assistwl, however. by the Department of Ed- ucation and Agriculture. Its inception here the speaker attributed to three main factors. (l) The establishment cf a Jbrary- system in the province by the Car- negie Corporatlon of America. (2) The wonderful success such a (Continued on page l2) British Market Open To Canadian Cattle (GP. by Guardian's Special Wire) TORONTO, March Zii-The Uni- ted Kingdom can absorb all the store cattle Canada would like to send and can do with a lot more Canadian bacon, Sir Francis Floud British High Commissioner, as- sured a large gathering of stock- men, farmers and exporters. at a meeting of the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair Association here to- day. Sir Francis spoke on some as- pacts of the Anglo-Canadian trade agreement as applied to Canadian agriculture. He believed the in- terests of the fanners of the Uni- ted Kingdom and of Canada could be harmonized. Those interests on both sides of the Atlantic were 'most vital and stabilizing factors in the economy of the two coun- tries. Soldiers Fire On Hunger Crazed Chinese Farmers ._____ demolished a magistrates office. (Ar. by Guardian's Bimini Wlnl HANKDW. Ohms. March 24- The story o! soldiers flrlns “P011 goo crazed farmers at- tacking rice southwest of wan Province. night from moi-l China. A large number of farmers well killed. ‘ In nearly every "will °1 u" province there have been riotmthe a ents r . ggggrvlng men and women. their farmlands burned by aevm wont-l" of drought, have raided rice shops. kidnapped children to sell them for food and eaten the leaves of trees. The Yungchwsn mob, after be- m; burned bank by rifle fir‘. lstl reached hero to- of the Bank of Another crowd surrounded the magistratds oflice at Pslsha, also southwest of Chungking, and shouted demands for rice. Officials lured the mob outside the city walls with p. mises of relief and then barred the gates. Elsewhere in the drought area hungry throng looted rice shops, driving police from one townwhen they attenuated to make arrests. In another town peasants chop- down all the trees, ate the leaves and sold the firewood. foreign missionaries and native relief agencies in Eastern l-lorian Province-m once rich wheatland -sent calls to Shanghai for mon- ey and rice. reporting 2,000 farm- ers already dead of hunger and espolure. IJETAILS 0F First Reading Is Giv- en Bill To Ratify Revised Anglo-Can- adian Agreement. (C.P. by Guardian's Special Wire) O’I'I‘AWA, March zit-Details o! the new Canada-United Kingdom trade agreement were all approved in ‘the House of Commons today and first reading was given a. bill to ratify the pact which replaces the first five-year agreement made at the Ottawa imperial conference 0f 1932. The agreement will come into force on a date agreed upon be- tween the two governments, Fin- ance Minister Charles Dunning told. the House. The tarlfi chan- ges in the agreement are already in effect, having become operative with the presentation of the bud- get. In completing its consideration of the treaty items the House dis- posed of the greater part of the budget resolutions. It then took up a. review of changes in the tar- ifI not involved in the treaty. A flrm stand against sit-down strikes in Canada on the part of the Federal Government was ln- dicated by Justicc Minister La- pointc, in answering a question He said this forjmpf labor activity would be ‘illegal in Canada. and while the provincial governments were responsible for the adminis- tration of justice the Federal Government was prepared-to use its resources to the extent of its legal powers to prevent it from obtaining a foothold here. In the treaty discussions Con- servatlves objected to Article l2 which deals with the dumping of Canadian goods on the British market. The Canadian Govern- ment undertakes to take adequate steps to correct a dumping situa- tion on complaint of the Brivlsh Government by permitting the clumping of a quantity of British goods on the Canadian market if necessary. "I can not conceive of any gov- ernment agreeing to a proposition of that kind," declared Conservat- lve Loader Bennett. If some Canadian manufacturer, faced with bankruptcy and not concerned about the effect of his action on industry and trade gen- erally, sold goods in Great Britain at less than a. fair price in Can- ada thc government agreed to correct the situation. That meant all other Canadian manufacturers might be penalized by the admis- sion of British goods into Canada (Continued on page l2) No Trace Found 0f “Flying Duchess” (A. P. by Gaurdiaws Special Wire) LONDON, March ‘lit-Ending the second day of fruitless search for the flying Duchess of Bcdford, of- flclals were convinced tonight the 7-year-old peeress had been for- ced down in the North Sea some- where off Linoolnshire. On the slim possibility the plane. in which the intrepid Duchess took off Monday, was still afloat, the Government ordered all ships in that. vlclnity to keep a sharp watch. Several witnesses informed pol- ic they sighted a srnall plane an- swering descriptions of the Duchess‘ green moth flying out to sea about 45 minutes after she took off from Wobum Abbey. seat of the Duke of Bedford. Witnesses said the plane passed over Hunstanton, on the Norfolk coast, heading northwest across "the wash" toward Boston, in Lin- colnshire. .______.?___- Was Native 0f This Province (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) WINTHROP. March 24- Rev. You: H. Lindstone, 12, retir- ed Methodist minister, died at his home here yesterday after a short illness. A native of Prince Edward Is- land. he had served in the minis- try for 43 years. holding pastorates Maine. Li“ the Maritime Provinces and in ...,.._..,..,,_,..< . on terms which would otherwise -——-——-. ~-~—————____—_-————-—-______ - statement that Italy non. M. n. MCGUIGAN Minister of Education GAVERNMENT TRDUPS MAKE liw_§iiis Break Rebel Resist. ance East Of Ara. g0“ Highway. Ma- drid Press Flays I ADuce. ~ MADRID. llfrrch 24—-Govern- ment militiamen reported today they had smashed through a trench System near Cogclkrr on the Gilfiri- "mill-ll! front in which insurgents were fllleluiitinz to stand unzl hritt the tide of Government advance which reached points nearly 60 miles nortrerst of Madrid. Governmert infantry, dlspatcimg said. charged after a. Lhrgg-hguy ariduely Preparation and cleared the way for new gains east of the Arcana highway. The Scene of this success was lets than five miles south of Almadrones fro-m which the insurgents launched their re- Ceflt drive against Guadalajara. Government air scouts brought in reports cf heavy damage to Al- madronc: and Jadraquc by bomb- ing raids yesterday, and Govern- ment galm in Avila Province. west 0f the capital, were described in war despctches. A troop train. preparing to transport insurgents to the front, was demolished when Government planes rained bcmbs on the Mon- toro railway station, in the south- ern sector. Madrid newspapers and officials with the capital's immediate battle fronts quiet, launchfi attacks at Premier Mussolini of Italy amused by Ambassador Grandfs London would not withdraw volunteers from Spain. Glarlng headlines claimed the Fascists had defied the world and made a. laughing stock of the Non- Interventlon Committee's labors. Newspapers took the vlcw that 11 Ducc had been driven to fury by what they called the “shamcful defeat" of his forccs in the Guad- alajara drive and predicted hc would soon "take revenge‘ to one his prestige. Set Hearing In Slander Action LONDON, March Zt-Tlie slan- der action of Ernest Aldrich Simp- son. divorced husband of Mrs. Wallis Simpson. against Mrs. Joan Sutherland. wife of Lieut-Col. A. H. C. Sutherland, was sct down today for hearing in King's Bench division, probably late in April or early 1n May. The writ, claiming unspecified damages for alleged slander, is based on words allegedly uttered at a west end restaurant concom- ing Mrs. Simpson's divorce case against Simpson, now approaching final judgment. APPOINTED NELSON, B. C., March 24-—Bish- op Martin M. Johnson of Nelson announced today Pope Pius had appointed Rev. J. C. McKenzie, Dean of Cranbrook. The appoint- ment as a domestic prelatc carries the ecclesiastical title of monslgnor. Msgr. McKenzie is well known throughout Canada for his pioneer misrlonsry work in British Colum- MONSIGNOR his. He come from Charlottetown. er... Vi... lSlilRMY sciiii u UNTARAUi LEGISLATURE) Member Forcibly‘ Ejected Following School Tax Legisla- tion. (C.l'. by Guardian's Special Wire) TORONTO, March 24~QntarjQ legislature tonight came to the climax of what was believed its stormiest session in history with a unanimous volc i0 repeal separate school tax legislation pfi55ed 1n , 1936. . "It is my responsibility ‘.0 forc- stall at whatever cost the possi- bility of a religious ivar in this province," declared Premier Mit- chell Hepburn in announcing ac- ccptance of u Conservative bill t0 repeal the legislation. After announcing his position the Premier's dramatic move for closure caused Leopold Macaulay, (Conservative, York South) to pro- test so loud and long in defiance of Speaker Norman Hipel that inc Speaker ordered Sergeant-at-Arms Charles Rutherford to remove him. As the Scrgcant-at-Anns moved toward Mr. Nlacaiiiay, the member shouted to ihc House and gallery to sec "the dirtiest trick perpe- trated in Canadian political his- tory for 100 years." The Scrgcant-at-Arms grabbed thc protesting member and rushed him out of the House. So far as could be learned dur- ing all the pxcitement, Mr. Mac-i aiilay became the first member (".'Cl‘ to be ejected forciblydrom his seat in the legislature. Mr. Hrpburrfs move for closure, following his statement that ab- andonment of the legislation was a bitter pill for him to swallow and that bloodshed had been Athrcatcncd, brought cries from the opposition, calmed with Mr. Mac- aulfiys removal. “COlll.€l‘lll')tlbi8," “the dirtiest trick ever," “Hltlerlsm? were the words that flew from the opposition ben- ohes. Closure has not been used in the Ontario‘ House for a decade or 14 PAGES Annual Subscription Delivered lly 85.00 llall Cunadu and U. S. A. $6.00 'S'T_0__RMY SESSION OF NEUTEALITY COMMITTEE Russian-pcharges Provoke Delegate Italian To Fury France ‘Claims Concrete Proof Of Fascist Violation Of Pact. Seeks British Support. PARIS, 31111111 3i—-(.-\I’)—'l‘hc French Government RGDGHA Separate Sought British aid tonight in furl-u itiliiilll adherence i0 ' the European hzin 0n foreign volunteers in ihc Spanish civil war. Diplomatic authorities Insurgent Spain since ily.” (Haviis News Agency quoted (iiiiciui sou disclosed u French claim to “absolute proof” that liiiliziii voiiiiilccrs hzid ‘ the ‘bun lit-cumu- effective Fob. 2i) and ihzil the (iovcrnmciii \'it‘\‘.'\' lhc >iiiilliiilil ivii iundcd in h “grav- rccs us declar- ing Foreign Minister Dcilios zidviscrl the (icrmun Ambus- sailor, the necessity of culling‘ upon ian intervention. Italy's refusu Von Welczck, to urge upnn ltcichschzinccllfii‘ Hitler Rlussolini to moderate Iiui- l to consider withdrawal of what France regards as “regular army troops“ from Spain created a grave international situation. cording to these sources.) States Stand Delbos summoned both British and German Ambassadors today‘ and diplomatic sources, cictallcd the conferences thus: A Delbos stressed his Government feel tliauiviih Britain, they should , “consider appropriate measures"tr) i prevent landing oi.‘ additional sol- diers by Italy unless PrcmienMus- soliiii agrees with others of the 2'7 nations of the London non-inicr- veiitloii committee to rctirc his “volunteer? already in Insurgent ranks. - The Foreign Minister told the ambassadors France had. proof of ‘Wolatlons "Tdcnied ' yesterday by Italy, which said only medical units had gone to Spain since the volunteer ban) and that "there are limits beyond which France is not willing to allow intervention to go." Claims Concrete Evidence Dclbos contended the presence of "regular Italian troops" in Spain had been proved by a series of “irrcfutnble" documents, including photographs and orders found on prisoners of the Spanish Govern- ment. He said-France had been “very more. The uproar in the House was tcn-ific. Liberals countered with shouts of “Can't take it"; “Take your medicine." Arguments across the floor soon grew personal between members. It was five minutes or more before (Continued on page 12) __.__________ Hopes Farley Will Set Peace Basis WELLINGTON, New Zealand. March 24- i CP Cable) - Prime Minister Michael Savage today erial Coiifercnce, meeting in Imi- doii immediately after the Coron- atiori, would give grcaicr attention peace. "If the Briish Commonwealth is prepared to give a greater lciid than it has liithcrio I could im- aginc wonderful results,“ Savage said at a civic farewell here be- fore sailing for England Saturday. “1 am not suggesting laying down our arms, but if the Empire gives no attention to the other side of the argument, as wcll as to dc- fencc measures, we will never get any place." (By John LeBlanc. Canadian Press Staff Writer) _ MONTREAL, March 24-—The leaders of Canadian rail labor, con- ferring here on their geiicr strzke isuc. met acain today with tlic railroads in what was regard- ed as a showdown meeting in their wage dispute. After the meeting-fourth since the union chiefs gathered here last week for a verdict on the strike proposal-there was no indication from elllicr camp that it had ser- ved to span the cleavage between the dhputanis- Both sides held to thcli- policy of official rilcnce. But among the rank and file of the labor parlcy delegates tlvcrf.‘ were signs of belief the bargfalnuig stage was reaching its end. Onc brotherhood delegates said he expressed the hope that the Imp- 1 ‘than ever to paving the way for 1 conciliatory and very patient" in the face of many violations of the non-intervention agreement but the “wholesale Italian illYdSitlll in Spain" brought the risk to France o.‘ seeing her communications cut with North African possessions. He asked Sir George Russell Clerk, the British ambassador, to (iiscuss the question with Foreign Secretary Eden. Dclbos had intended. the diplo- matic informants conthiucdto call in Italian Ambassador Vittorio Ccrruti with tho German Ambas- sador but Ccrruil is in Rome. BY THOIWAS J. HAMILTON Associated Press Foreign Siail A LONDON. March ZiL-AP)» ‘clash in which the Italian and I Russian members almost came to l blows gave the European non-iii- ‘ tcrvcntioii committees long-sought ‘ iban on foreign intervention in A Spain an inauspicious scndoil t0- night. Iii a tuiiiuliiioiis meeting. dcln- gates of the 27 nations coiiiprls- ‘ ing the committee settled the last‘ around Spain which Europe hopes will isolate the civil war and hclp i maintain pcacc. A, Appointment of l6 key admin- ‘, istrators to supervise the inicrniit- lional patrols loft only the lasi- I l ‘details of a land and sea cordon (Continued on page l2)“ _ Decision Is Expected In Rail Negotiations Today thought .t “})l‘Ol'Jilhli‘" the six-day conference would close tomorrow. Before that. tho hnli-huiidrcd delegates from l8 l‘\illllill'_' trade organizations wcrc to dccidc cliiirr for or against ilic Canada-wide walkout of their 111.000 members. They had. they claimed. authority from a majority of ihc iiir-nibers to call llli‘ strike in the cvcut the roads pcrsiled in refusal of full restoration of prc-deprcvion pay scales- Up to now, there has bewi no ouiavarfi attitude of compromise on the port of the labor loaiic-rs. Rigid smrecy his (‘ll\‘l‘]0l)\’(i ilicir deliberations. even io the lciisth of sending patrols through hotel cor- ridors to keep ricwsmcn at a safe distance from their gatherings. llcibos said, ac- ls tuition or iiii R ii E ii Honorat B: r ii a r d Sentenced T0 Hang 1_ June 4. i QUEBEC, March .'.~l~Back in the jail whence he fled two months ago today from a minor robbery charge Iloiiorai Bernard ziiviutcd tonight for his cxcviiiloii-sc: for June 4- for the murder of a provincial p0- llcc detective. A jury of tho Court of King’! Bench deliberated all last night on the fatc of Bernard and thc other two Quebec men who stood trial for 31 days for zlic capital offence. Foreman Ernest Boisvcrt was brief in his delivery of the verdict. _ Honorat Bernard-guilty of murder, lic said. Cyrillc Emond and Wilfrid Darvciiu, guilty of manslaughter. Judge LllClfWl Cannon ‘immediate- ly pas-ed sentence after asking the 'Ol'.f‘l.\' if they liud illlyiilillfi to s Bernard, eyes Sinflllg, mouth acnpc. muttered "I never shot uny- brxlv.“ The Judge sentenced hirn no bc linngrrl. A WELL DIEOER is ‘Ii-iii ONLY our WHO ALWAYS GOES fo m Bot-tom 0F THlNQ$f A METEOROLOGICAL fforuiito. Liurcli 24- ' iimxiiiituil tcnipcraiu SERVICE, " imum and lfiilnioiiioii ".32 3i Vnncouvoi" ‘.58 .36 Winiiiiiog ii iii 'l'0roiiw ‘.6 R5 O! é ilWil 18 2-1) Montreal lil 28 Siiiiit John l4 30 liiili f uX l4 26 Charlottetown l" ‘l-i biarilimc East: ltlustly‘ fair and c0 d. followed by easterly \\'.l‘.(iS and probably rtllllC snow by iiiglif. High :.il~ this morning a: and txlihuii- at 10.04. Sun sch this cvciiiiig at 6.18 and riscs iiizii . iw moriiiiic at 5.55. 955 Full moon Friciirv. .\'Ilil'(‘il 26. at 6.12 p. m. _ K v Siuiiiiiviz-ido tidc ilEIili/‘Cfi nim- uics li\il‘l' iililll (‘hiir'ol'cin\vii. 'l‘oni0rr0\v living noon vniiikv and a public holiday giocoocooooocccoooouooor i Ag i’) the ncxi issue of 'i‘lll<) iiliAlflllkN will he Saturday; Nlnrch 27 ‘g 3 l l l ‘f. -\ qqcn- 1-5;; _ -,-1='.-