t ' v»’“""" ~ fl- III'-_Fill e=',__ i=§2 = e xii; iw for one vleioua ’ 'Zi lished and Ind ”/ /ff 'l""' `§"" ‘ ' ‘ ’ ’ `“'~ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew aharlottotown Guardian 'Iwo Coutg lorninl lhmrdlnu, Founded 1581 Miiils ,W hl\\\\l/ac- -\ i Glurlrmwll rum ...°";...; A ‘ The Peop|e’s Paper Read by Everybody \ MAXIMS or A MERE MAN man yon honour in your iieart is the kind of man you long inexpresalhly to be, and would thank GDd`i1 you could bc. - _ - B '-en CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1937 8 PAGES Annual S ulisrription Delivered By Mull Cuundl and U. S. A. $5 ,G Ss Z Arabs Expected T 0 Renew Fight ()n Jew Settlers Hebrews In PalesTi_ne Drilling For Defence And IMPLEMENT PRICE PRUBE IIUNIINUED Hear Claim Steel Pro- ducers F a i l ed To Take Full Advant- age Of Import Duty. UITAWA. March l-(OP)-Dun ing the depression period Canadian steel producers did no talre flill ad- vantage of the Canadian import duty in setting their prices, J. Dili- rm. purchasizgz agent for the Inter- national Harvester Company, today told the House of Commons Com- mittee inquirirlg into farm imple- ment prices. Beflore 1930, said Mr. Dillon, the Canadian price for steel was usually the United States price plus du y ~'?l-*- (Continued on page 3 [OWNG fVfNll li "Annual meetilfg of Progress Egg Circle is postponed till Thurs- day evening. -L-5690-3-1-21. "Dr, Lanoursiere, Dentist, will be in Murray River March 3rd, 4th, ith. L-5714-3-2-li. "Credit Union Meeting at Vernon Wednesday, March 3rd. Preparatory to organization. L-5'll0-3-2-li. "Buying live hogs Albany Thurs- day ith, Emerald 5th until noon. Cv. O. Green. L-2022-1-W-t-t-W-t-tf. "llomets va. Covehead, Milton tink tonight. Game starts 8.30. L-5726. "Borden rink tonight, Welling- lon Baitiers vs. Nationals for Rog- ers trophy. skate after. L-5725. “Borden Line Club loading hogs, lambs, calves every Wednesday at Albany. Hours ia-a. L-6972-10-M T W ti. " “Come hear a lecture by a tal- ented speaker who made the trip, in i-leartz Hall, Wednesday 8.30. Silver iolleclion. L-5718-3-2-ll. f'Hartsville Maple Leaf; vs. Kingston crystals at wlltshlre ‘ink Wllislit. Play off game. L-5732. "Hockey Victoria Wednesday, March 3. Borden vs. Crapaud. rl Semlrlimu Lea and wright. Ad- nisloli 20 and 15. L-5729. "Loading live hogs at Kensing- lo_n ull day Thursday, March 4. Nlcholsoli Bros. loading at Hunter River Friday until noon-McEwen lnd Campbell. L-5893-3-1-21. ) "A liurlor social will be held at the piirsonage, New Glasgow, on Wednesday evening. March ard. GW' program and games, refresh- ments served, all for 20c. If not line lhufsflay. L-tooo-a-2-ll. ‘five can put you in touch with I limited quantity of com products "' °0~°m~ratlve prices. lf you re- quire any telephone today, Live- 'l°Ck Marketing Board. L-5694-3-l-2i. "Come and see the Bradalbane Amateurs presenting t.hsir two.act “ily "The Perplexing Situation" in Bradalblme Hall, Tuesday, March md- Good specialties. Bae of '““°*‘°S- I.-em-a-2-il. m;*Livestock Marketing Board kills orders for a car of corn- 'geill and cracked corn delivered at mleadalbane. Book your require- kecfits. It once with Shipping Club Wlrllfll. Lorne Seaman. L-H130-3-2-21. “_;‘Thousands of bushel; of oats Qu Jfuulred for seed purposes in he *C and Maritime Provinces. ,neva Y°\11's bv substituting com- , A and make a dollar. Consult °"’ Shipping club secretary. 14-5094-3-l-2|. mh0°I;\l:lneel is an excellent ration. mu W ch to finish hoga and beef - India Save your valuable oatl by mem g a liberal ahare of corn- nm ll Your ,feed mixture. Book mu order for another car with |°°ll lbirlping club secretary. IAOG-_l~l-I. ll/lake Ready For April Disorders. d: 5 5' 5* ._, __ ;_‘f;‘__/_ _______ ___ _ M British Leaders (Asrocllted Press) JERUSALEM, March 1--Nation- alist leaders here predict Fawai Bey Kaukji, labelled “Public En. Emy N0. 1" by British troops dur- ing the 1936 riots, will retum to Palestine as "commander-in-chief of the Arab army" and that guer- illa warfare will be resumed in~a few weeks. Opinion generally is that rioting will break out again about April 1 with the end of the orange export- ing season. Both Hebrew and Arab HBWSDHPBFS point to the growing freflllemy of shootingr, holdups, b°Il1biI1€S and assassinations as an indication of renewed Arab war- fare against Great Britain and the Jewish national home project be- ing established under Brltaln’s ‘mandate for the League of Nat- ions. Fawzi gave up a commission in the Ima army to lead me uuur sent force: in Palestine last year. Recent reports from Baghdad said the new Iraq govemment had ask- ed him to leave Baghdad because the demonstrations excited by his presence there had brought pro- tests from Great Britain. He now is said to be ln Kirkuk. “We will welcome him back,” one nationalist leader said, "if only for the enthusllrm his return will arouse among the young national- ist; who worship him as a hero and a patriot. "We must continue the sort of guerilla tactics that enabled Abduel Kr-lm in Morocco to defy the French and Spanish for years and cost them millions of pounds. Brit- ain won’t qaend millions for the privilege ohhanding our _country over to the Jews." Melmtime. sentineis of the Jew- ish argrlcultural colonies in the Emek, or Valley of Jezreei, are on guard 24 hours a day against raids by bands of Arab marauders. Troops of Jewish supernumary police drill daily, and by night searchlights on the watch-towers of the colonies sweep over the plains and the hillside forests planted by the settlers. Keys to the colony armories--each containing five shotguns supplied by the gov- ernment-are kept close at hand. Yet almost nightly somewhere in the Emek a colony is fired upon. Frequently trees are destroyed. crop: burned and occasionally s watchman is found shot or beaten to death. The colonists live almost in a state of siege, for the formal end- ing of the Arab general strike last October does not mean an end to Arab raids on the settlements. Anticipating a renewal of trouble Lleut.-General J. G. Dill, com- manding British trcops in Pales-l tine and Transjordan, i` supervis- ing personally a new topographical survey of the Holy Land. trallty bl P tack the eastcm seacoast of 80V- CRIPPLED BY srulsylllu Eden Hints At Renew- al Of Efforts To Bring Peace In Civil War. LONDON, March 1-(AP)-Float- ing mines crippled another foreign ship off Spain today while official British pronouncements hinted at certain renewal of attempts to bring Spilnish pedoc. The srlcken' ship-third to be menaoed by mines in shipianes off Bpain's east coast within five days -was the French freighter Marie Therese le Borgne. She made port at Paiamos, Spain. but shipping circles showed alarm. The place where she hit. the mine was near the spot where the British liner Llandcvcry Castle was dam- aged similarly last week. More- over, the French transport Seboa 'reported she narrowly had avoided a mine off Barcelona. Hope for new international efforts to find a peaceful solution of the- spanlsh war. now 7 l-2 months old. was buoyed by Foreign Secretary Edien'ii declaration to Ccmmcns that me Government had proposals for halting the war “constantly in mind." ' Auhoritative sources said they be' lieved Eden was considering, new' mediation attempts if and wh\Sn| the European Neutrality Commit-‘ tee‘s arms-and-men emlbargo shuts off foreign interference in Spam. The For ,lin Secretary’s assuran- ces that “every effort will be made' to make the Committees embargo “as effective as possible" came as he prepared to send the first comin!- ent of 130 Brit-ish observers lo Por- tugal to cheek up on the Lim” Governments compliance with the agreement. But much remains l-0 be dime be' fore the lurid and sn. imtwl °f Spain and Portugal becomes effec- tive. weuatiormed quarters d°° “"‘ ed. International diplomats ac- knowledged that the control DlH11» bp whioh` the Neutrality Commit- tee hopes io localize the Splmlsh struggle. could not be fully opera- tive by next Saturday midnight, the date originally set. Seeking to hasten completion of the complicated details, the Non- Interventlon sub-csmmltiee met to rule on imrportant regulations. Lord Plymouth, chairman of the ‘ main committee of 27 nations. sad he would call a meetills Uf me fun group tomorrow if possible. vanrzucla, spain. March 1 Government quarters expressed fear today that Italian warsl'_liDS, participating in the scheduled neu- ockade of S ain. H1181” 9-li' ernment held provinves- The prospect of the ltalo-Ger- man coastal patrol, arruiiglili by the 27-nation non-intervention com- mittee to begin March 8 in an at- tempt to halt men and munitions bound for the civil war, resulted in bitter disappointment and fore- boding in government circles. ‘ German and Italian co-operation llearing Postponed In Lolisler ..ooe MONCTON, N. B.. March 1-lll- ness of H. F. G. Bridges, counsel for the Royal Commission investi- gatmg illegal fishing of lobsters and smeits, necessitated postponement of the inquiry today. Sittings at Port Elgin had been scheduled to open today but under expectations they will start Wednesday or Thurs- day. ' island Senator III In Uttawa OTTAWA, March 1-Condition of Senator John A. MacDonald of Cardigan, P. E. I.,-who has been in hospital here suffering from ir heart attack, was reported tonight ` to be satisfactory. His condition is not serious, it was stated. with the insurgent armies has been - - . _ l ag, img; pai-tially responsible. gov- emmerlt sources assert. f01` thgmfg: cent air raids and Ml/"1 b°“" ments of the eastern coast. A (The London non-interven.ion committee assigned IU!-ly and 5"' many to guard the coast of T80'/' emment territory, stretching lofi; the French frontier to B Dgld north of Malaga. while France b 1 creat Brlrulu will guard the *‘ ' ance of the coastline.) ' Was llative lit Bay Fortunel Tommy Sopwith, four-year-old son of T. 0. M. Sopwith, is pictured here as 'he .launched his fathers new luxury motor yacht, Phiiante, the largest motor yacht ever built in England. Mr. and Mrs. Sopwith were with their son during the launching. Built at Southampton, England, the yacht will bc used as parent ship to the Arllericafs Cup challenger, Ell» deavour ll when she crosses the Atlantic for races in July. Toledo Shelled By p Socialists Government Troops Blast Old _ Moorish Capital In Main- taining Offensive. BY JEAN ROLLIN Copyright 1937 by The Havas News Agency MADRID, March l-(CP-Havasl -A govemment. assault on Toledo went ahead at lull-blast tonight with shells thuddirlg into the heart of the old Moorish capital, close by the ruins or the Alcazar. A violent artillery duel was in progress on the left bank of the Tagus river. A building near the Alcazar, destined for occupancy by the In- surgents’ military govemor, and a number of barracks. were struck as government field guns found the range from their posts north- east of the city. In all attempt to forestall tlle Republican troops' attack, the In- surgents opened fire on the con- RESIGNAIIUN IS DEMANDED Liberal Members Urge Aberhart Go To Electors. EDMONTON, March i-R.esig- nation of the Aberhart Govern- BOSTON. March l-Dr. Elmer J- . ment was demanded by Liberal Mwponald native 0! BBY F°fl'““°» Q members of the Alberta Legislature P. E. 1., was buried at Wcodhwn cemetery todly- H* had 9“‘°f'l“°d medicine in East Boston more .han 40 yearn and was active in Canadian and Scottish societies. _ Dr. MacDonald is survived by his wifc, formerly Miss Abbie F. Sim- mons. two sons, and two brothers, all of whom reside in Massachu- betta. ;_ - - IDNDON, Mtroh I--An oiltlllv' 01 approximately £l’I,500.000 for WN' material factories in the distressed arena is contemplated by the gov- ernmer;-;ui;,dW';lH!;hGWh in I Whlh \' » “rho sum, equivalent of $l6.000.000 will be used le ambluli plum in Scotland. Wales and Ignouhirl. It le ln addition ui 12.000000 010.000.- uool which is to be act aside for lollll to industrial undoftlkillll in the areas when unomplvrmvht hll been particularly severe for IOVUII years. Factories to manufacture flares. rockets, illuminating material! and other “flreworir.s" used in H1040!" w‘Al’!ll¢argbblblMhlUilM Munition Orders To Aid British Distressed Areas and Wales at an approximate coat of f.9,w0,000 to £l0,000,ill0. An out- lay of 10,000,000 ia contemplated for a munitions factory at a point not yet specified and £1,000.00!! to £1,- 500.00() will be spent on an aviation factory in Lancashire. The v/trite paper, reviewing cou- diilonl in the distressed Anas at le government measures h reduced unemployment to a considerable extent! In Durham, the ide and the Scottish area the reduction be- tween January, 1035. and January, lo3'l, was about 30 per cent, it stated. South Wales and Monmouth- today as a consequence of its fail- ure to establish a. Social Credit fin- ancial system in the 18 months mentioned in tile 1935 election campaign. John Bowlen, Liberal House Leader and Dr. Walter Morrish, Liberal member for Edmonton. called on the Social Credit Gov- emment to give the people of Al- berta a chance to pass Judgment. The demands came 24 hours after Premier Aberhart admitted his failure to pay dividends and es- tablish Social Credit in his own time limit of IB months. He an- nounced he would call on members cf the Alberta Social Credit League to vote whether he should rggign or carry on his efforts. contrations at Los Cigarrales. They were answered by a blistering bom- bardment. Meanwhile government forces just south of Madrid machine-gunned Insurgent continents at El Pinto. in an apparent attempt to cut communications between the Toi- edo Insurgents and those besiegllig the capital. Insurgents attempts to improve positions in Universityl City and the Jarama River valley met with stubbom resistance. Ill the for-I mer sector about 100 Insurgents were reported killed or woundedi when they attacked the French, Brigade in an attempt to improve J communications with their nd- vance units, imperiled by recent Republican advances. In the Jaralna River valley the Republicans lnched forward across the devastated terrain. The In- surgents, however, continued to concentrate their strength in this sector, and every government ad- vance has to be wrong from stub- bom resistance. A brief engagement took place northwest of the city on the Mad- rid-La Coruna highway, where a surprise attack by the Insurgent advance-guard was broken up by an artillery barrage. | Government airplanes made il series of observation flights over the Jarama sector, causing a rc- newal of reports the Defence Junta plans a major offellsive in this region in the near future. Presents Credentials SALAMANCA, Spain. March 1- (CP-Havas)-The Spanish Royal March, which has been named the National Hymn by the Insurgents. was played at an official ceremony today when Roberto Cantalupe presented his credentials to Gen- eral Prancisco Franco as Italy's Ambassador to Insurgent. Spain. General Wilhelm Faupel. recent- ly elevated from charge d‘ail`aires to German Ambassador, probably will present his credentials to Franco Wednesday. An elaborate ceremony took place at the City Hall, to which Cantelupe was escorted by a (Continued on page B , 11 , _,_ . Try Salada Orange Pekoe Blend "SALAI|il' shire figursdroppadaopcroant andvleaaoambadandioocraaii. TIA LJ E - | r f .FR S H IP Iiaunching Eng_land’s _Largesi Motor Yacht l . l I , luslnrs llnlraly Plans T0 GUMBINES ACT Keep Pace With BEFURLHUUSE British Program Legislamn I “ t Y 0 ' Fascist Grand Council 'Concludes duced To Provide Pensions For Needy Highly Important Session- {’,‘,§;‘,f{’ 4° Yea” A“" cabinet shake - up see... (C.P. by Guardian‘s Special Wire) OTTAWA, March 1-Pensions for the blind and legislation tostreng- then and lnvigorate the Goveril- ments fight against illegal coni- bines were two measures pushed forward with general support and enthusiasm in the House of Coln- molis today. Applause from all sides greeted the introduction by Finance Min- ister Dunning of a bill to extend l»h€ Df0l/isions of the Old AgePen- sions Act to blind, needy persons of 40 years and over. I-Ie announ- ced the provinces had given the plan ulinliimous approval. The bill was given first reading without de- bate and Conservative LeaderBen-' nctt said he could see no rgasgn why it should not pass speed.ily_ Labor Minister Rogers’ bill to bring the Combines Investigation Act administration back to his department, “strengthened and for. tifled” and under a permanentl commissioner, was introduced and explained last week. Today it was given second reading and placedl with the comimittee of the whole House where it will`be debated later. On this measure there was also apparent unanimity but Mr. Ben- liett questioned one of its provis. ions which places the power to proceed ill tile hands of the Fede- ral authority. He was afraid it would conflict with the constitut- ional rights of the provinces in the administration of justice. Provision of power for the Fede- ral authority to act in these cases, Mr. Bennett said, was “ia ¢rm,§um_ mation devoutly to be hoped for but one the possibility of which 1 doubt very much under existing constitutional practice, certainly not if the latest judgments of me Privy Council are to be yelled upon." He indicated he would like to see the bill go to committee for any further debate and examina- tion. Mr. Rogers said the Government had no intention of making any wholesale series of investigations along- the lille of ‘inqulsitions" but intended to initiate a vigorous ad- ministration of the Combines Act in view of thc lllll in these pro- ceedings while legislation of the lust Government was under review by the courts, Prr °-rss was made in t.he estim- Continued on page 3 CUNFESSES Illi lllulll_c|l|l1r Police Claim Argen- tin e “Lindbergh Case” Solved. MAR DEL PLATA, March 1-Ar- geiitina’s “Lindbergh case" was solved tonight, police said, when a dull-eyed hobo confessed kidnap- ping and killing baby Eugenio Per- cyra Iraolo. Police announced Jose Gancedo had admitted the crime after five days of questioning. A detective, garbed as a fellow hobo, or “llnyero," posed as a pris- oncr. He obtained the confession, writing an end to one of the great.- mit man-hunts in Argentine history. The two year old child, son of a wealthy Argentine family, dis- appeared from the garden of the famlly‘s estate Wednesday night. His body, unclothed and with arms crossed on the breast, was found in a pig pen on the estate, a mile from the garden, Saturday. There was evidence he had been strangled. ROME, March 2 - (Tuesday)- (CP-Havas)-The Fascist Grand Council concluded what was be- lieved to be a highly important session at three A.M. today a.f'.cr deliberating for flve hours. An odicial communique was to be made public later in the day. A reported sllakeup of the cab- inet, with the possible ousting oi Colonial Minister Alessandro I..es- sons.-whose scheduled duel with General Emilio de Bono was for- bidden yesterday by a jury of honor-were two of the moves dis- cussed at the session, it was re-, ported. Others which have been. mentioned are: i l. A new speed-up of ltaly'sl rearmament in face of the greats British arms program. 2. Heavy-handed action to raise Italy‘s birthrate, whose decline rc- centiy has reportedly alarmed the authorities. One source said all families having less than four children would have to yield part of their inherited property to the Government. Bitterness between Lessons and De Bono, who as a "quadurnvir" of the Fascist state was given the privilege of opening the Ethiopian campaign. was reported* tonight to have cost the Colonial Minister his post. It was said he would be sent on a. mission to Ethiopia, where he would have a chance to prove his worth at work for which fhc al- legedly criticized De Bono. A duel scheduled between the 45-year-old Cabinet Minister and the white-bearded De Bono grew out of a newspaper article by, Marshal Italo Balbo, Governor of ‘ Libya, implicitly criticizing De Bono’s conduct in Ethiopia. The veteran General was said to have been angered by Lessona.’s failure to suppress the Balbo ar-l tlcle. A duel jury ruled today, how-`, ever, that “there are no elements which justify an armed encounter between De Bono and Lessons." Says P. E. Island Leading The Way (Canadian Press) BOSTON, March 1-Prince Ed- ward Island, the smallest province of Canada might lag behind in material wealth, in adoption of methods "which we, perhaps erron- eously, call progressive," but. it leads the rest of the continent in several ways, according to James H. Morson, Boston attorney and Charlottetown native who addres- sed the congregation of Dudley Street Baptist Church at its an- nual ‘Canadian Night." The island province. he said. had the “proud distinction" of maintairlg a law prohibiting the sale of alcholic beverages, that the province had no divorce law and that, for the most part its people were regular attendants at churches and had a high respect for law and order. Mr. Morson gave a brief history of Prince Edward Island. 'the Gar- den of the Gulf” from the time of the arrival of the Scottish pion- eers up to the present. Two thous- and persons attended the service. presided over by Dr. Arthur T. Brooks. fslollls lllr infill lull lrrulnvr I _ l British Isles, Western Europe And Part Of Africa S w e p t By Gales. LONDON, March I-At least 19 persons were dead today as one od the worst storm.; in recent years lashed the British Isles, the coast of Western Europe and North Africa. A roaring gale reached 98 miles an hour at Holyhead, North Wales, and at numerous other points wail greater than hurricane force at 75 miles an hour. Snow Drlfie Deep The death toll in Britain reacl; ed 12 over the week-ond, with mo of the fatalities resulting from ex- posure and exhaustion. Snow drift- ed 20, feet deep in some sections, halting transportation and com- znurilcations, and isolating many villages. Four persons were lost when A sailboat capsized off Casablanca., French Morocco. English Channel stcamers wars delayed as much as five hours whil sliow and high winds drove acrosl England and northern France. Three Killed in Quarry Three men were killed at Bresl in a quarry landslide loosened by continuous rain and snow. River transportation between Paris and Rouen was suspended as the flood- ed Seine continued to rise. Important tributaries of the Seine had begun to fall, however. and it was hoped the crest of the flood, wcll below the record high, would be reached Tuesday. At the height of the storm. Q section of the Dover Cliffs, esti- mated at 3.000 tons. broke loose and crashed down on to a closed. factory. There were no casualties. The liner Tuscania, outward bound for India, picked up 17 men- bers of the crew of the Italian cargo boat Jolanda in the Bay of Biscay. The men had abandoned ship and taken to the lifeboat which had nearly been swamped by the heavy seas. i`_Z.TAT_’. I :;’liT .7_' ‘ if leur A~ScANca\. lmnl. lr ar-.clue -ro lnteaasr //6 \>eol>\.r.! Ll \\"\`\\\ élgl Halifax Child Fatally lniured HALIFAX, March 1-Derek Har- nlsh, six-year-old Halifax child died in hospital tonight, three hours after he had been struck by ia car operated, aocordlpg to poi- ice, by Adolph Zwerling. IDNDON, March 1-The Duke of Windsor was reported today to have set. May 2 as the day of his wedding to Mrs. Wallis Simpson. The Associated Press said the Duke was generally believed tc have made it clear he intent. marry Mrs. Simpson as soon as her divorce becomes absolute April 21. The date set would precede by ton ‘days his brother‘s colonation on May 12. The Duke of Kent is on his way back to England after viaitlnl his brother in Austria. While Iprrd Bl-ownlow. who accompanied Mrs. Simpson to cannes durinl th* °°"° smurlonel emu, li sr prevent H visitor at castle Enaesfeld. Tile Associated Press declared pane Dubai recent Duke Of WindsorMay Wed . rg,-cg, Mrs. Simpson May2, Report Wg- with emissaries from Britain were said by sources that professed to know to have been concerned with jewels ot the Queen Alexandra col- lection as much as the question of an allowance for the Duke. Before the abdication he is slid to have given some of than i¢W¢lB to Mrs Simpson. Bhd ll ’°P°"'°d l io the throne. The Manchester Guardian said it was reported His Royal I-ligllncss was planning to return io England I in August. It was being said in court circles, the Guardian explain- ' eci. that the Duke of Windsor has spoken several times cf returning to hialwd in August. r _ ll. J can n.:\\ . Ju . (C.P. By Guardiarfs Special Wire) MIETEOROIJOGICAL SERV ICE; B I1 Toronto, March 1-Minimum maximum tcmperatures:-- Dnusoll 1 BB 2B 42 50 E mon n 20 Regina 03 4B Toroll 21 Ottawa Montreal Quebec 5 nt John Bai Halifax Charlottetown 38 24 IB 39 15 34 1g 3( 30 36 32 32 ; Maritime East: Fresh southwest and west winds; partly cloudy: not much change in temperature, | High tide this afternoon at 1,32 to claim now tho! M lllhefmd me ‘ and tomorrow momlng at 2,27. collection from his sf°”dm°“*" I -sun sets rhl- uflemmn at me l PGNOUBUY fl*-her mar” is the heir; and rises tomorrow morning at 6.36. Last quarter moon Prlrlny, March 5, nt 4.17 ll. rn. Sliinmcl-siilr~ lille ciullii-oil nlillillr-.< later thrill Cllnlrloitviowll. VIII! FAI! FY.RliV ~»? 2.. F9 ji loaves Borden 0.43 n. loner Tormentine ll I. m. Dall( except Sudan i ,l l r i /` /l ` I ~ `.l l l 4 I