_$__&___~*k‘> MERE MAN m" n thing. take a thin‘, that's I n. old ma’: rhythm!- 0 nrdlnn Two 0cm: lfwdliiraiin. Founded m1 WI/ ///' The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like thepew CHARl-QTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1931 Read by Everybody A petition requesting c. reduc- tlon In fees for 3rd and 4th Year prince of Wales College students n; presented yesterday by a del- miion of the students to Hon. M. g, McGuitzan. Minister oi Educa- tion. who informed the delegation m; t]... matter would receive con- tideration by the Board of Etiuca- lion. 17... petition read as follows: undersigned members third and fourth year classes oi Prince oi Wales college, hereby wish to bring be- fore your notice a matter oi the utmost importance concerning the future of education in this prov- high fees which are charged stu- dents attending third and fourth rear classes at. Prince oi Wales dents. especially ones from the country. are kept Prince o) Wales College each year on this account and are thus be- tnr kept from further cducatlnr: The fees as tiiev now third Star and $100 00 and $150,011 We IIFIZO you t0 look into this matter and $3000 aurl $50.00 for country and town students respectively. a5 the third. and fourth __rears at Prince of Vlalcs. have the interests of ilie rising generation of this province heart. we feel sure these hifzh ices will be lorered. thus allowing the ~ youth cl today to educate them- "llfi l0 lflke thvlfnlace efficient- ll‘ as ‘he men of tomorrciv." ixclimsi: m navizxur; iF-l’. By Guardian's Specltll Wire) MONTREAL. Sept.16—Inci~casc 9i $4.55? was shown today in Can- ldnn National Railways cross rcv- enues of 54.140116 for the week Iilflcfl Sui‘. l4 compared with $4.- ltnltil zu the corresponding period Ottawa are still to present plans. REJ. Plans For Youth Training Province Seeking. To Participate In Dominion - wide Project Along Agricultural Lines. _ (aw/RIVA, lselll- l_6_—(C_P)-—_Proposals of Prince Ed- war s and for participation in the youth training pro- l-Uflm sponsored by the Dominion Government were re- ccltiifd today by Iiabor llrlinistcr Rogers and an zigreemeiit “l lhlll- llrflvlncc is expected to be concluded shortly. _ The Dominion is contributing $1,000,000 towards train- . lug of young people in trades and a similar amount is to be spent by the various provinces. The Prince Edward Is- l land program is chiefly agricultural. Agreements have already been made between the D0- minion and six provinces. Quebec and New Brunswick May Become British Subject Col. Lindbergh tenth ctv?iii' ' "Daurc Pcnke‘: Hall, Mkinday‘, NEW YLZRK, Sept. 16-—(AP)— A lollilfhisilillill .0ur.e associated with Col. Ciiurics A. Lindbergh said today the famous flier in- lelldctl to renounce his Uiiittd States citizenship and become n. British subject. The informant decilned to be "Uzuiee Lorne Valley Hull Wcd- Bl‘. Sept. 22nd. Webster's Or- "DQIICB. Miilvlew Hall, Wed- mtlel’. Sept. 22. Ausplces of Ver- ¢ In Emerald Hall Friday, lli- 17. with orchestra. nlshlle PTldHY- Free transporta- On loaves Siuinyslde Iharp. V“Comc to Stanley Bridge Friday honing, Septernbei" 17th, Kenslng- l1 5t. Mark's Players presenting m I One On Bill" sponsored by BY Bridge Women's Institute. Club will load hogs "Hdav morning tr a sufficient b" l8 ready for market and With local secretary. R. E. "Hear McDuii Copeland. Scot- Blltertatner and Kenneth Dufi h Violinist at Marsh- . . t Admission. adults All time wishing to have flocks for supplying hatching . I. Oo-opei-ative Hatch- "queoted to make applica- "flcfl Itltfng size of house, r oi hens, breed, etc. Address Box 360. lAbfi-Q-IO-lii-ib-ii "Llmlbcll Marketing B o a r d lives. lambs. calves through slllplllnll clubs during ivceli n00". Miscouche; “Y morning. Kensington, '8, Morel], Murray Melville; Wednes- nter River, Brend- u! 00h. Albany. Please l - °<‘k with local secretaries so "who arrangements ctuclcrl, or lo' permit use 0i his name. Imtliis connection with The manner iii which the infer- ination was obtained was not div- ulged, and confirmation or denial could not be obtained elsewhere. Ten Million Loanod Foriloinelmprovcment OTTAWA. Sept. 16-tCP>—— Nearly $l0.0u0000 has been‘ lent under thc Ilouie Iuipzovemetit. Plan since it was instituted last November. The total on Selll- 15- Flnancc MiiiLstcl‘ Dunning said to- day, ivns $9 204.000, an increase of $054000 from Aizg_ 23. Totals by provinces to Sept. 15 are as follows: Prince Edward lglnnd $57,000, Nova Scotia $622.- 000, New Brunswick $300011], Qllc‘ bcc situation Ontario $331810”- Manltnba 8579.000. Saskatchewan $242,000, Alberta $838,000 and Brit- ish Columbia $840.000_ Will Reop MONTREAL. Sept. 16—Plans w reopen the Fort William. Ont... plant of Canadian Car and Foun- dry, Limited. idle for more than l5 years, wevc coul rmcd today by Prcsldent. Victor M. Drury. Mi. Drury said the company had rcccivcd a. tentative order from the Turkish government for $2,- 000,000 worth of fighting airplanes and If the contract. received flnnl ratification \Vll(‘ll the. details reacti- ed Montreal Iiead nfiicc, it was planned to start manufacture at the Fort William plant. Whirl! ¢05l $3,500,000 to construct. In any evmt, he sad. it WM planned to reopen the bl! P Bm- l" unless Maritime q lltinfloticry. the head of bake Superior. and it Lindbergh was an established unc_l en Order For Fighting Planes Receives l‘ PIINISH WAR RllfiES llllll, I crn affairs became | Geneva. I IJapan would not send reprcsiii- RENEWED IIIGUR Valencia Bombed, Ma- drid Shelled as (‘on- tending Armies Iii- teiisify Campaign. HENDAYE. Franco-Sputum Frontier. Sept. lti-IAPL-Sp n21 civil war raged with i'e\'i\'c'l ferocity on many fronts teddy as ll"? (‘Olllelldlhiz armies strove to establlh new’ gaIns before cold weather sets in. Vevcricia was bombed. Nlllflflfll shelled and on the Day of Bisravl Coast. iii Jirrvznu and around Madrid fighting ("ntinus-(I. Tu/cnLv-Iwo were killed. includ- ing a British sacaman,‘ and 60 wounded when Insurgent bombers raided Valencia. the Government capital. Five Insurgent seaplancs bomb- I I l‘ Japanese aggression to Accord. lilcufiiiilis ITAIY iccusii or P It A c v Spanish Premier De- nounces Fascists - Chinese Appeal Re- ferred To Commit- tee. GENEVA, Sept. ltiw-(CP-Iiavas) —-The troubled paths of China and Spain crossed flcetiiigiy today at a Luiguo of Nations Council session which heard Spanish Pre- mier Juan Ncgrin brand Italy as tho "pirate" wlicsc submarines liar-vo attacked Mediterranean ship- pii The Council a little while before passed on the Chinese question by cferring to China's appeal against the 23- puwcr consultative committca, crc- ated in February, I933, with thc United Stat-es as a. member, alter ‘Tokyo's Ma ldll conquest. The Council decided to invite ' the 23 nations oi the original committee to reconvene. iicnec the quvstion of the Fnltcd States altitude toward further collabora- tion with the League oi far erst- important to Japanese v spokesmen indicatrd tativos to any meetings oi’ the committee. CRITICAL 01" LEAGUE TIic Council members were nct rid so easily‘ of the l5-nicnih-old Spanish civi‘. ivzir. however. Neg- rin's spccch was so emphatic azalnst Italy that even the Sav- i Foreign Commissar. Maxim Litiinoff. ndvl ed he "had noth- zng to add." Ncgrln, after crit zing “limita- tions" of the iiinc-poiver Nyon took the League itself to task for closing its eves to "proof" that "the anonymous state whos: warships have tterrorism in the Mediterranean is Itnlv." sought to create Whereas thc Chinese delegate, Dr. Wellington K00. npticarcd gat- isllecl with League handling oi his appeal, Negvln. who is president of the Council. was critical ofboth Geneva and Nyon. ed Portbcu. important railwav , -,~ point near the French border in f Th3. Swill"? Plflinleg 02mm? t: northeast spaht l ‘oima pro cs nga ns t e _ac that the Mediterranean piiacy Muck Rfpulsed question had been examined and On the Ariigoii battlefront Gov-l eminent. trcops attempted to cut‘ enemy communications l)C‘l'-\‘L".‘ll Terucl and Zai'ugoz.i_ They were repulsed ivith 5.000 casualties. Iii- surgent military dLsputchcs sud. Insurgent cannon west. and south of Madrid pounded the heart. of the old capital. Several were killed before they could take cover. General Franco's columns met strong resistance on the Bay of Biscay Coast. where a lllfEC- prongcd drive against Gijon is al- temptlng to bring all nvrtlnvcst Spain under Insurgent rule. Frances commanders paid tribute to thc defence of their Asturfan foes In the rugged Sella rlvcr region. To the south. Insurgent columns. driving up from Leon reported they were within fivc miles cf the village 0f Pajarcs, boyond which they expected a comparatively easy, downhill path to Gijon_ Bomb Border Town PERPIGNAN, Sept. 16—~(AP)—— Eight Iusurgcui plains bombed the Spanish frontier town of Portbou today, setting fire to freight. trains in the yard, disrupting rail ccm- municatioiis with France and causing heavg; damage In the town itself. A Anti-aircraft battery fire was in- effective against the raiders. : w‘ --.—~ t 2i Fulfill was expected 250 workers would be given employment. The company had been seeking orders sufficient to keep the Ontario plant in oper- ation, and it‘ the Turkish contract for the 40 two-sector Grumman planes was ratified by the company it was expected the full staff would be given employment at the plant, If the contract. to which the ‘Turk- ish agents nli-rady have agreed, failed to meet filial npprovnl of the company. Mr. Ilrury said, it would be impossible to say how many employees would be needed for the re-openlniz. The Fort. Wiflian plant. .Mr. Drury said. would be used for manufacture and assembly work. decided at an international con- ference at WlllCh the Spanish Gov- ernment was not represented. Ncarin requested extension of the N_yon “aiiti-pivacy" plan to include action against surfaceships and all lllicitly aggressive subma- rines, regardless of whether they 1'.".‘-']‘.Pl'l0d‘l.hB Imidon protocol o'.' ‘i936 for lilo humanization of sub- marine warfare. Wants Another Race With Famed Bluenose BOSTON. Sept. 1 (OP; taln Ben Pine. owner of the American Banker Gertrude L. Thebaud, just back from Arctic adventures with Commander Doii- ald MncMilInii at the helm. said tadrrv lie wanted "one more try" at Nova. Scotlak famed Blucnose. international ISIIIIK; schooner champion. He suggested a race between the two as a feature of the 1939 World Fair at New York. Pine, a native of Fortune Bay, Nfld. claimed his craft, aithoullll suiallei" than thc Canadian Dank- er. could "make the Blucnoc hustle" and pointed out thc The- baud had defeated the Luiienburg Schooner twice off Gloucester. Mass. in 1930 before losing at Halifax the next year. "I'm ready tor a. race. How about Angus?" he challenged. He referred to a name synonym- ous with flshermens race... the redoubta-ble Capt/n Angus Walters oi Lunenburg, fiery skipper of the Bluenose who boasts the timber needed to beat the Bluenose is still growing in the forest. __Cnp. liistoric Order Honors Viceroy v Lord Twccili-muir HALIFAX, Scpl. ic_.ip,_ Goicrnor-(i-uiiciuil Lord Tivccds- inuir will rule over Nova Scoiiai, Order ol Goad (Jhecr, It. was un- nuunced today by lion. A. S. Disc-l Highways ; iiiillaii, Nova. zicoiia‘: dllllibi-Cl“ The Mcertw will fly fruni (liar- luticluwli, ivh 1-: he ii iii be 0n Sept. l0 on an iriflcial visit, l0 assume; the grand mastnisliip ul’ tlic ills- loric order ivhlcii Wlli founded by Champlain at Port ltoyul, iiuw ffnnapulis Royal, in 160G. Ritual for the colorful ccrcniotiy. ivliicli will be held on the grounds ‘ of old Fort. Anne, near the Bay ui‘ Fundy town, was being prepared it wrs stated. . IENIESHIITEYII SIIIIII titan. N egro Seaman 'l'esii- fies In Hatfield Fraud Case- (C.l". By Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA, Sept. 10~InipIicailioii by Col. Warwick Beamcnt. counsel for Captn n Freeman liatfzcld. that Senator Hance J. Logan hurl "short, changed" Alexander Alli-nu. color- ed second mate of thc Gypstiln Queen. to the extent. of $270 00, was made at today's hearing of the Nova Scotian -'§llllllllil.<l"l".< trial. Hatfield is charged with obtain- ing $72,276.72 from the reparations’ commission by false prctcnccs. The money was paid ns compensation for the loss of the thrce-iiiastcd schooner Gypsum Queen. said by Hatfield to have tween slink by a German U-boat near Fnsnct Iilillll. off the Irish ccviat. July 31. 'I‘Iie Crown claims the vessel los; through "stress of \‘;(‘i\§ll(‘i‘. Acting for Hntfefd in the l'\’]l.'ll'— aliens claim ivas Senator Lofiau, of Parrsboro, N. S., who, iii .~-i sequent, civil claim was Ol'(.lll'(‘tl by the Exchequer Court. to return whatever portion of thc $ ’ he llflll l‘C(‘l‘l‘.'[‘(l. The Sciili oi nppculetl fvoni this judgment. Bicught from Stilton Island. N. Y., where lic is now cuiploycrl as a riggcr, the ncgru .- uunii ‘llilil the lraiisaetioti < lull 1H March, 1031, on ll‘l'l'_\'l)t'.ll has y» it'll till‘ crossing New York ‘arbor. lie i‘:- lntcd how the St ior and Ilat- field had CllC0llllll‘l'L‘Il llllll on the ferry on the way to Alliioifs Iirinic. Logan Itad with luui ll. cheque awarded to thc nrcio b1." thc Ite- pitrat ons Commission 1m" the loss of effects whi-n rlic GYll-illlll Queen wiis ubaiidoiicii. “I have $500 iii my pocket ior you,“ the Senator has Illltllfll lll‘ Allison as snylliiz. liftjlill then pro- duced the clicquc and, aci-oriling l° wll"°5s~dl‘“““l2l;_‘l h,“ “Vighuthe lng: his plane without a license from Nyon pact. “mllm lPlllllPfflr reverse si c. \\'il tic n-ii m! _ H‘ k ‘ . r T.‘ _ "Just big“ m“ “(pink-a l gcitmCi iadian Mlnlstci o ITIIS 4G 52 Allison swore he did iiotltiioiv‘ 7__w7_ ___ 56 M this was a cheque. mid that it lllltl I T-r '—I*'—:‘—>"'-=‘- "-»"*1>—"'*=‘-‘-:' 1' "~'s"-""" ' M-s" " 4., 7g beenhissued to lIlIIl.llUl']$lt|li{m. I t 34 66 "T on you foluil tia mum G d Q S 1H - short-changed you." said Defence‘ u C M, Counsel. "He kept out $319.80. be ' ‘ a 4, 62 meflfggtndlglgtr"... ;;;;.>3,i;';'.~',._ ~‘ “w Ocean For Sign Of Endeavour so t. "He got a cheque for $770.80. ,_ "mhn a he gave you $500; and you have l, If -_ A 56 6O —-‘~— ~~~r ~ ' | ‘ (By The Associated Press) terday and reported the. nine-inch _ I ‘P, v (Continued on page 9, Col 4t BOSTON. Sept. Iii-Four (éilflfil? hawscr being used to tow he ('h“‘°"“°““ 54 62 _ _ _ m? Guard cutters poug ed the iie- comparatively frail ravine \l‘.\-i'l FORECASTS Try Saladalbrange Blend l TIA ITAL Y REA CHES IMPASSE W his. FEES suiiici or PETITIIIN Reduction In 3rd And 4th Year Fees Re- quested By Stu- IIAPP rliiiisit jlnvlici IN; (NIIRIHMIIHINA I t l I l I t I v I Sweep Further Into, Sliansi Province and o I Threaten Chinese Hopeh Defence 0 . Lines. t —— l BY MORRIS J. HARRIS l Associated Pres Foreign Staff SHANGHAI, Sept. lli—(.-'\P)— Ra pld Japanese advances in sweeping North (‘iiina campaigns were outstanding: dcv lopments today as conflicts continued sziv-‘ :|:el_v' liver most of’ the 2,000 mile’ (‘hiiic-‘e war front. I Japanese reported they plunged. furilicr intn Shansi Province. bombed its capital, broke Chlne!e' nztrinifs south oi Pciplng and‘ threatened to smash (‘hinivsl (‘antral Ifopeh defence lines. ‘ On the Shanghai front thc (‘hincse asserted they recaptured Iiotlcn. (Imlcm Iiccame a graverl i peril to Shanghai's millions. . Jayinvicsn ivarships rnd planes‘ ‘ rnnlinucll to harry thc south. (‘hiiia coasts. but the Chinese claimed-without independent l confirmation-their airforce struck‘ hack with punishing cffcct. sink- y in]: one enemy cruiser and damag- ‘I int: v-tkcr vessels Japanese plant's Immbvtl (‘wmtorfs airport. Advance From Pciping AC"fll'tlllll_: to Japanese. General Cuuit Juich. "llwat-cl-Ss" coniniaiicl extended its advance south ‘and slziilliutksl 0f Pcipa ulierc the capture of Kilanhsmii Wednesday split the Chinese lines. Cavalry, tanks and infantry sliurcrl iii the Japanese advance. \I'll'l'll. wheeling westward from Kuaiih icu. 30 miles south of Peip- ine. was qiprouehing Chochoirv on the Pvllllllfl-IIRIIKOW‘ Railway. 40 " boon’ bottling. thousaiiil Japanese were l lll this operation against (...I . liiiiesc divisions, about 100.- 000 uicn. Ceinniltndiiig thc rc- ll't‘lllill_'.§ Chinese was General wan Fit-Lin. \ ha] been fighting- and rczrc i: before-the Japan- c~c inlcrinitteiitly" since 1931. when .l.ip.'ui'.». iuvzuiou oi Nlanchurla found l'n one of the chici Cliin- esc Wdiiltrtls vi that region. 'l‘1ic weather. which had held up Japan's uffc " lllll“'l ; \\'.lll clear bracing days. J.\_ Army aspokesmen said! stzll lfll".!l‘l' battles were in pros- pect, ivith domination of all Ilnpch Province at, stake, but. would no’. say: where they were likely to , considered OOTll]lfll'-- ain't.) quiet on the Shanghai sector. the Chinese asserted they had taken Lotion. 15 miles north of Shanizhai. keypoint in the new- ly-cntabllsliccl Chinese defence line. Plane Impounded For g Violating Customs UliIVlClt. I2. (3.. Sept. l6 — Bert Etkslvtn, \‘i.‘lL‘l'tii‘i United Stnles | ixiiiiiali anti operator of a TZICOIIIE t Inuit: school, today had his plane tllllliclllltltd by Canadian customs auilioiltles and faced a $25 tine lui‘ operating his machine in a La- l bov Uay air SllOW here. Eckszcufs plane was seized In l licu of n. $1,000 fne for vlolatiiill l (‘ilfiixlllln regulations. lie was fined l :i'i illltllil0llill $250 by lyiagbslratc J. ll. Mitchell yesterday for operat- grcen sens of the Atlantic Ocean oil’ Nantucket tonight. searching for the British racing sloop En- Ideavour I. believed In danger ai- lter a gale parted the towltne ‘which joined tier to the convoy yacht. Viva. ’I‘h._\ cutters Chclan and Cayuga. sped from the Crmst Guard base here late last. night. and hand- quartcrs officers today ordcredthe Harriet Lane and Tahoe. on pat- rol duty along the hinssachusetts coast, to Join the search. The search began after Captain Wallace Grint o! the yacht Viva m buck into Newport, 12.12., yes- i 10 PAGES MAXI MS OFA MERE .\l.-\N The hand that gives, gathers in gratitude and blessings. Anmiul §llli~trrl|iliflli ill-flirted $5.00 By llail-l'.l'..l.. 51.00: Cuiiuiln and U. s, $5.00 POWERS Wants “Equality In Anti - Piracy Patrol Scheme Britain And France Remain Silent Awaiting Italian Ovcrture—- Fascist Press Ired By Rebuff. (A. P- By Guardian's Specizil Wire) LONDON. Sept- l6—liilly stood firm tonight on her refusal to join the IVIecIiteri-zinc-an "zinti-pir- acy” patrol on any basis but full ecuiality with Great Britain and France- Her spokesmen in Rome said any further move to bring her into the nine-power Nyon accord to sweep submarine "piracy" from the Mediterranean, must come from London or Paris- Meanwhiie Britain and France pushed their naval concentrations to protect merchant shipping in the Mediterranean- ln London and Paris official quarters were firm in assertions that the next overture in the tangle over “piracy"—which both Soviet Russia and the Spanish Government halve blamed on Italy ‘—must come from Rome. A high Italian official said in the Fascist capl- tai: “It is useless to talk further of Italian negoti- ations or proposals in the‘ matter.” ‘IIIIIINPIIIEIII ninoilil Said Last. Word The Italian press indicated Italy had said her last word in Tues- day's note demanding Italian parity in the International Patrol to stamp out. attacks on shipping which grew out of the Spanish civil war. Diplomats saw one possible way out of the impose. A conference of the Nyon powers tomorrow to consider aircraft cooperation with the nnval patrol may give Italy a chance to submit "constructive I suggesflonso rm. Joining the mm, zillUtlml bv the llistovic Sites piracy neck ylllli Alvniinirnts Board of Canada. z to Ailiillfill Buyfleld The tempo of French and Brit- M1,“. m, Livuwnnn,’ -- ... . . l)" i~h naval wtiiity shouctl the two; __‘ , I.’ Dvmnis m couiitvle; determined to lose no | m.“ Fnonn Thu time in taking virtual command of l the Mediterranean. Piracy Disappears Disappearance of Aieditci-vzmcaii _ stibinzirine piracy in the last two week's had no effect on the cozi- I ccntrzition 0f naval strength. _ i tailed results l ‘ ' e which sot ' "z , ~ ' - i‘ .4 rent Britain li....r ill!‘ I. .. '.\i against an flllIl-llflilflil Said the new paper 0f Turin: “The British Foreign Office is tiursuing iui anti-Italian tiolicjv Di‘- hind tIie nlllOl§€$CfPPll of a crun- paigii ziuiizusv. piracy iii the Aloft;- tcrratiean. La Stnlnpa said promotion of u. lvicdltevrnneaii bloc against Itay was tantamount to "playing iviili: an explosive bomb.“ ' ' O '.'\ Y}. . z. n,‘ PliarEotta-toivn. l rl in I033. \'.'.i~ a La Slcinipzi “qwn, L, (as WELYIHER Est bows is Lima A woMAws Minn: Suction’ (ofllanccii wim- Dipliilnatlc Victory Thc London Evening Standard. said Italy suffered n "Ituiniliatznizi (Iipiomlitic reverse" and u-awl Ill‘ Biblical quotation. "he that (lI_L'ili‘l.l 1 a pit shrill fnll into it.“ Ill rclcri Li} to Italy's refusal to taI-ze purl ll‘. llic Nyon Conference. . French and Br tisli quarters cin- pliasizcd every attempt “vllltl be made to treat Italy with the court- esy her prestige demanded. They added. however, that Route should make definite proposals to the Nyon HERE IIAYC powers since they IIIIIICTElOQCl the Spanish civil wnv iiuii-interveiitn-n committee would not consider the. .\ir"ri~-< . l6 1GP» had parted in a gale which reach- ed an estimated iiitciisity~ of 105 miles an hour. Grint told Coast. Guards he feared the weight of the haw c". l5 fattinius of which rcuiaint‘ attached to thc Eiidca-wiui‘ llv. bow. might hnvc forced Iior new Nlliritimc l-Jast: nIiIc winds; showers in some districts. lundcr water. and .\l'llll the suns “I n‘ 5 u Iwerc ruiuiiiiiz so Iicnvv at the WW“ 6L“ time that vi\~.i'.< - .*IlIll"l'-~llllt‘l'li'~‘ ' ' ' " ' l was damaged hv waves whi ‘i mun,’ _ ,1 ‘P m minutes smnshctl across licr clerks. . U .. l .' (‘nptaln Grlnt tmlnv stun he " " ""1," ‘“"" ‘”.",",‘.", ' ' ~ ‘ P, ('\R l". l wasn't, certain the Endeavour had Lcrur-n llllrllvli tun n. m.. l p. n. weathm-sd n“. firs; smaflflnu mul li.l.'i p. m. Lenvt-l Tnmcntlllr ll w“'95 o‘ m9 “orm- nn-cpt Suniiicy- ROI OGI C AL SETRVICB ‘U. - -.\f.u - moderate vari- mostly cloudy with at 6.08 and s. m.. 2.7-5 p. m. nnil 0.50 p. in, daily