' MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN ldueatlon B a nonunion which cannot be taken away from man. i lg Carrier: Charlottetown, lamiaueide usoe pu annrua. liaewhero In l'.I.l. 8I.00. Other Province! and U.B.A. 812.00 per annual.) . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHAR!-OTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1953 practically have to live in it. MAXIMS. DIA. MERE MAN In order to live off a garden you 16 PAGES The Guardian. Five Cents Morning Daily founded 1581. BRITAIN TO EMBARGO STRATEGIC MATERIALS TO CHIN Decision Due Today In Freight: Rates Case Reds Plan Mighty Funeral Display For Stalin Today By Eddy Gilmore MOSCOW. (AP) - Communist leaders. proclaiming to the world that they are still following a "firm policy of peace.” labored Sunday at the final preparations for a mighty farewell to Joseph Stalin. . Dense crowds still plodded in raw and gusty weather to Red Square and the muted Hall of Columns for a last look at the man who ruled Russia for 29 years. Their ranks twisted back for miles into Moscow's suburbs. Thousands upon thousands were on the streets, for this was a free day. and the ranks of the mourn- ers were swelled by people who came from the surrounding coun- tryside and by officials and lead- era who clocked in from cities far and near. Chinese Premier Attends Among the arrivals was Prime Minister Chou En-lai of Red China. who immediately went to Stalin's bier and stood honor guard with delegates from Eastern European Countries. All this will stop today. Pre- cisely at noon. Moscow time, the life of the nation will come to I complete standstill for five min- utes when the body of the "man of steel" is laid to rest beside his .-o-revolutionziry. Lcnin. in the black and red tomb by the Krem- lin wiill. Plan Country-Wide Salute Exactly at that moment. cannon uill boom a fiery salute in every urcat city and state capital in the soviet Uiiloii. For three minutes ruuntlcss factory. locomotive and ship's whistles will shrill a many- nmcu salute throughout the land. tinm Chukotsk peninsula. almost 151 sight of Alaska. to Pechanga Prlsanio near Norway's bordci. il..fi from Meshed on the Iranian mlcontinued on Page 5-Ccll.V-4). How T: Pronounce Names or llussiais New High Command NEW YORK. (AP! v Here is imv to pronounce the names of Russia's new high command: Premier Malenkov: Mali-len-off iccrnting the last syllable. Doputy premier and Minister of the interior Bcrla; Bch-ree-ah ac- :i-ntirl: first syllable. Deputy premier and Minister of War Bulganln: Bull-gahn-yin ac- cciitiiig the second syllable. Deputy minister of war Vassil- msky: Vah-slice-lev-skce accentlng ihird syllable. Deputy foreign affairs minister Kuznctsov: Koos oo as in foot- uyit-rnfi acccnilng last. syllable. Coming Events "Cohccrt, Little Pond Hall. March 17th. Starting 8 o'clock. "Variety Concert. Murray River Public Hall Wedncsdnyi March 11. 8 P. M. "Card party. Pownal l-ialL March 12. sponsored by Poivniil Women's institute. "Just arrived. Car of Bran and Bhnris. Also in stock Barley Meal and Barley Ont and Wight Mix- iurc. W. I. Bowman. "Master Feeds-Another car has arrived H. B. Willis lnc.. 0'Leary. Phone for off car prices. We results that count. "seedsl send for Free Cata logue. Arthur Vesey. York. ' "Eggs delivered to our station will be paid highest market prices. M. at A. Peters. Market Building. Charlottetown. . "Victoria Rink tonight. post- honed league game. Victoria Un- ions vs. Tryon Arrows. Tuesday nllzht Kelly's Cross Redwings va. Shamrock Rockets. "Introducing Pioneer Sow Ration and Pig Starter to induce more DGODIO to test this good feed. A -eductlon of fifty cents will be al- lowed for short period. Oil Cake 35-95 per bag. Choice Coduch no 5:; lb. R. L. Dlckieson, New Glas- "Hockcv at North River Rink. Monday. March 9th. Nine Mile Creek Bulldogs vs. Cornwall Me- teor: in fourth game of finals. Game time 8:30. Anyone wishing to lot tickets to imp the Island- '" "WI!!! club can do so by go- slnr to the rink office. a En lloute To . y-1av'g"!-v Britain S BELGRADE. (AP)-The Yugo- slav Ciovemment announced today that President Tito (above) is en route to Britain in a move involv- lng economic. political and deferre- ive measures. The terse government announce- mont issued shortly after midnight said only that Tito had left. ac- companied by Foreign secretary Koca Pepovic. the deputy foreign secretary. Ales Bebler. vice-Alrni- ral Josip Cami and military and diplomatic leaders. There were no details on how Tito was travelling. g There has been considerable speculation that he would steam down the Adriatic past hostile Al- bania to Malta and there be pick- ed up by a Royal Navy cruiser for the rest of the trip. In was the first trip Yugoslavia's chief made oumldc his country since 1947, when with cabinet ap- proval he visited Bulgaria. Hun- gary and Romania on a goodwill mission for the Russian-led Com- in-form. Transporiid. Will Rule On 1 P.C. llequesl UPPAWA, (C?)-Decision in the rallways' application for a general freight-rate increase of seven per cent will be given at 11 am. Mon- day by the board of transport com- mimioncrs. Judgment will dispose of the first part of a three-way applica- tion pending before the board. In the other two. the -board has been asked to grant. a specific nlne-per- cent increase and also to change the rate-setting method so as to permit further. intermediate in- creases at the discretion of the railways. Would Give 38 Million The seven-per-cent increase would give the carriers additional revenue of about 338500.000 a year. The case was heard by the board a month ago with eight provinces-all except Ontario and Quebec--opposing the application. Basis of the application is a drop in net rail earnings of the cana- dian Pacino Railway. used by the board as the iiyardstick" line for the setting of rates. Under a board formula the railways have been allowed rates calculated to give the OPE a surplus of 315,205,000 a year on its rail operations after deductions for fixed charges. taxes and dividends. For 1932 the actual rail surplus fell to about s6.000.0iX) and the company estimated it will again fall short of the authorized amount this year because of higher oper- ating charges since the formula was last adjusted in Janxuary. 1952. ,gggg:g,.m,.....,.. .. (Continued on Page 15 Col. 1) End of Trail For Supejirls is or WASHINGTON, (AP)-It's the end of the trail for the Super- fortresses. the 8-294; of Second World War fame and their heav- ler. more powerful postwar off- spring. the B-50s. Boeing Airplane Company announced Saturday U151 the last Superfort has rolled off the production line. All Boeing bomb- ers produced from here on out will be powered by jet engines. More Aggressive Soviet Foreign Policy Fore-cast By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON. (AP) Ap- pointment of V. M. Molotov as for- eign minister in Georgi Malen- kov's new soviet government is re- garded by top American officials as a move toward giving Russia a more aggressive foreign policy. While none in high position here can say how or in what area Rus- r.La's steady pressure for Commun- ist cxpansion mi lit be intensified. the best-informe officials look for posszble trouble in the Middle East. Agree On Sit-Tight Plan President Eisenhower. state See- retary John Foster Dullesland the -Britlsli foreign secretary. Anthony Eden, have been reviewing the possible effects of the Russian gov- ernment reorganization. They are reported to agree that for the mo- ment the Western powers should sit tight, avoiding any action which might be considered ei'ther provoc- ative or softening their determin- atlon to defend the free world. While authorities now believe the Kremlin may em rk on a more aggressive pursuit of its foreign policy aims, they do not look for any quick. basic change in those aims. After all the men who are now in the forefront in Russia were close to Stalin and presumably were decisively influenced by his policies. Unknown Quantity Malenkov himself. ax far as fac- tual information and firsthand im- Dressions go. is almost an unknown quantity. Many Americans consid- or him to be a hater of the West. some British experts regard him as primarily a Soviet isolationist. The speed with which the Krem- lin group organized and put up at least the appearance of a united front was a defeat for one of the main hopes of the West. The con- fusion and struggle for power which were expected to follow Sta- lin's death have not rintcrinlizcd. at least on the surface. Malenkov seems so firmly entrenched that a struggle may prove to be impossible even if some me in the inner group desires to start one. Chinese Reds Pay Scant Attention To Malenkov TOKYO, (AP) - Communist China's controlled radio was fix- ed rigidly Sunday on the death of Prime Minister Stalin, with scant mention of his successor. Georgi Malenkov. Pelping radio broadcasts, heard in Tokyo. emphasized that "under the leadership of chairman Mao Tze-tung we will always unite with the gran: Soviet people in the development of national con- struction and defence of world peace." The Red radio made no immed- lntc effort to build Malenkov up to the Ilaiure of Stalin or even Mao no a "great teacher and leader." Nor was there any kind of speculation on polilcal chang- er inside the Soviet Union ainco Malenkov took over., However. a high-powered Chin- us Red delegation "headed by Premier and Foreign Minister Chou En-lai was in Moscow to attend Stalin's funeral-and pre- sumably would talk business as, well as mourn. The delegation included high economic. financial and foreign office figures as well as deputy leader: of the Chinese Red Army. Air Force and Navy and the minister of public security. For the time being. the Chinese propaganda effort -ignored vir- iually everything else-including the war in Korea and even the latest germ warfare charges against the United States. Pelplng Radio said it would devote nearly eight hours of its overseas broadcast Monday to cqrerlng huge mass memorial meetings in Pelplng and 'elae- where in China. A five-minute silence was ordered throughout the land at 5 pm. The North Koreans fire salvo: of guns planned to in several cities. PUSAN.-(OP) - A riot of 2.000 rebellious North Korean prisoners of war was quelled with tear gas and gunfire Saturday night. Twenty-three were killed and 42 wounded. The United Nations command said Sunday night the prisoner-of- war compounds on Yonchon Island where the uprising occurred was ”quiet as we can expect it today." Several UN guards were hurt by a barrage of stones hurled by the prisoners but none of the injuries was serious. A statement released through UN command headquarters in Tokyo said Allied guards fired on mutinous prise-ners' under an 23 North Koreans Killed In New Prisomgamp Outbreak emergency plan designed to pre- vent a threatened mass breakout. Lt.-Col. Gerald Momeyer. camp commander. said dieharcl Com- munist prisoners in Compound A instigated the rioting which began at 7:30 a.m. Saturday while the unarmed compound commander and his assistant were directing feeding of the prisoners. The commander ordered the POW's to produce one of their men who had broken camp rules. POW headquarters said. Without warn- ing. 60 or 70 prisoners began throwing rocks at the two men. Altogether four compounds were whipped into mass hysteria. and rock-tlirowlrig before gas and bul- lets brought peace. Queen Mary's Illness Causes Some Concern LONDON. (AP) - Queen Mary's lingering illness prompted first open expressions of public concern Sunday. Officials said the 85-year-old queen's gastric trouble showed no change although she had a good night. She has been in bed for a fortnight at her Marlborough House residence. ...One ,Sunday paper said the ill- ness has caused widespread con- cern and expressed hope for a speedy recovery. The Duke of Windsor and the Princess Royal are due in Britain Thursday aboard the liner Queen Elizabeth. The Princess Royal cut short a West Indies tour to come to her mother's bedside. Three Children Burned To Death ST. OMER DE L'ISLET. Que.. (CP)-Three small children. one three months old. were burned to death Sunday when fire swept through their wooden home here. Alfred Choinard. the father. rc- turncd home in time to save ll fourth child. two-year-old Herve. The child. in hospital with severe burns. is not expected to live. CllaRiliilil Oi N.S. Bd. of Public Utilities llies Allied Air Raids Touch on” Battles Over North Korea SEOUL. (A-P) -Allied Thunder'- jet nght.er-bombers heavily pound- ed the Communist main railroad and truck supply line from Man- churla SallIlday.toLichlng off violent air battles over northwest Korea that resulted in destruction of three Red MiGis. Sabre jets patrolling North Ko- rea tangled repeatedly with the Red fighters. one MIG crashed in flames tlirougli the middle of a Thunderjet forniation. The Sabres probably destroyed a fourth MiG and damaged another in dogifigiits above Souclion. about 30 miles from the Communist jct flgliter base at Antung. Mnncliuriri. The air force credited Col. Royal N. Baker, 34. with downing one MIIG. making him the second. American flier to destroy 11 Red jets. He also has destroyed one propeller-driven Red plane. leaving him only two behind the total combat score of Maj. George A. Davis. now l”lllF5-ll1i!. Siindays air battles topped a week-curl of sporadic but bloody flghting across the muddy battle front. in an early spring thaw. Allied troops killed and wounded more than 390 Rods Saturday and before dawn Sunday. ornc Red group on the eastern front was mounted on skies. Churchill Plans No Message On Slalin's Death LONDON. :APl -- Prime Min- ister Churchill doesn't plan to send any personal condolences. on the death of his wartime friend and ally. Joseph Stalin. A spokesman said Saturday that "the British government as a whole has expressed sympathy and that's all that is required under HALIFAX. (CIT)-.Ifil1li9s ivny. 70. ch:iii'man of tlic Scolla hoard of public utilities and lecturer in court prorcdiirc at Dalhousio law school. died nl his home here Siiturrlriy. A native of Truro, he ;:rarliint- linu- Nova in 1908 and was ndniillcd to the bar of the province in year later. He practiced law at Springliill and Amherst and was editor of the Springlilll Tribune. For sov- crnl )1-nrs he was president of the Maritime Senior Hockey Lon- xue. and was it former prcsiilnnt of the provincial bar association. Survivors include his widow. the former Josephine Landry of Yarmouth: a son. Cam. 1.. .VI. l-ianway of the Canadian Army St. John's. Nfld.: nnd two daughters. Mrs. Irene Trask of Dartmouth and Mrs. G. W. Rout- ley. Montreal. The funeral will be held here l'I'uesday. Paliislan rill? Are Stamped 0ul LAHORE. Pakistan. (AP)---The Lahore district -military comman- der-ln charge here since last week's anti-government riots- haa restricted all trawl from thr- clly and not up special courts to try violators of martial law regulations. The commander. Maj-Gr-n. Amm Khan. ordered all persons leaving Lahore to carry special permits. The restriction does not apply to those entering town. He laid, meanwhile, that the city's business is hack to normal and essential services have been i l l l l i.-ompletely restored. normal diplomatic procedure." The '18-year-old British leader. lone survivor of the wartime Big Three of Roosevelt. Stalin and Churchill. paid special tribute to Roosevelt on his death in 1045. . . A dear and clierishccl friend- ship forged in the fires of war." cd from the Dalliousie law S'llnJlySRid Churchill M Rcosewn. On Wednesday. after Moscow flrsl announced Stalin's illness. Churchill. sent. a secretary to the Soviet embassy in London with zi mes- sage offering synipatliy and risking to be kept informed of "Mr. Stalinls progress." After Stalin's death was an- nounced, official messages of con- dolence from the British govern- ment were delivered at the soviet embassy in London and at the Russian foreign ministry in Mos- cow. U. S. -N-uvy Gets First Atomic Age Worship ..-n. BOSTON. (AP) The cruiser Northampton, the U. S. Navy's first warship built to withstand atomic attack. was commissioned Satur- day. Radical changes were made in the vessel after the Bikini atom bom tests and the Navy announc- rd "he new design presents the best known defence against atomic weapons. The ship's speed is con- sldered her best radiological de- fence." Egypt. E. Germany Sign Barter Deal CAIRO. (Reuters) - Ezkpt and East Germany signed Ii 311850.000 barter trade agreement Saturday. Egypt will provide Communist East Germany with cotton. phosphates and onions. in return for machin- ery, electrical appliances. chem- icals and fertilizers. Decisioaiiade Al Anglo-American Conference U. S. Also Persucrdes Britain To Loosen Trude. Currency Re- srricrions. WASHINGTON, (OP) - Britain has promised to impose an econ- omic blockade on shipment of strategic materials to Red China. This was announced Saturday at the -'ose of Anglo-American for- elgn policy and economic talks. At the same time the two countries indicated that the U, S. has encouraged Britain to plunge into freer currency and trade policies. Two communiqucs. one on for- eign policy and the other on econ- omic policy, closed out the formal talks which began last Wednesday. Participating were Foreign Sec- retary Eden and Chancellor of the Exchequer R. A. Butler of Britain and State Secretary Dulles and Secretary of the Treasury George Humphrey of the U. S. ' Two Announcements The two announcements boiled down to this. 1. Britain will try to prevent shipments to Red China of ma- terlais useful to the Chinese war effort. This will be done by set- ting up a licensing system design. ed to prevent transport of non- British strategic materials to China in British ships. In the past it has been possible for British ships to be used to carry strategic materials from one Iron Curtain country to another. Another method of tight- ening the blockade will be to re- fuse permission for any ship car- rying strategic materials to the Chinese Reds to be refueled at British ports. Most vessels would find it difficult to get from Europe to China without refuelling at one of thestrategically-located British ports. 2. The two countries will co-opcr- ate and Britain will take direct action in the sterling area to loosen monetary and trade shack- les with the aim of strengthening free world economies. The econ- omic communique did not specific- ally mention methods of freeing the economy although it suggest- cd that the days of direct large- Will he A-Projectile WASHINGTON. (AP)-An atomic projectile will be fired from the world's first atomic cannon during the spring series of nuclear ex- periments starting shortly at the Nevada proving grounds. it was announced Saturday night. The huge 280-millimetre guns. of which several have been made. were fired frequently during the last year but never with an actual atomic shell. Ganadiambuilt Minesweeper Sinks ALEXANDRIA. Egypt. (cpl-1 The Canadian-hiiilt Egyptian Navy iiiiiicsvrrcprr Sollum capsized and sank 15 miles ofl here Srunrlivv, rlroivning 52 of her crew. A Polish ship nearby rescued 62 others. one of the rescued men died -soon after being taken aboard the lPolish ship. Cause of the accident has not been determined. The Sollum. M2 tons, was built. in Canada in 1941 for the Royal lrruportant resolutions covering a Wld0 range of farm activities were unanimously passed at the recent meeting of the Agricultural Coim- cll of Prince Edward island. whose membership includes officials of the Federal and Provincial Depart- nierts of Agricuivire, the Exper- mcnial Farm and Science Services. These recommendations came up to the Council through special committees on special projects. These committees are appointed each year to make a study of prob- iems in their respective fields, and to report to the General Council at the annual meeting. The following reccmu-nendations do not necessarily cover all those passed at the Council meetings. They do. however. cover the ma- uority of subjects discussed. and farm people of the Province may be acquainted with the work the, Council has undertaken. "1. The seed corn maggot has also become a serious pest on can- ning beans, and large acreagcs have been severely damaged in recent years. The committee rec- ommends that the Entomology La- boratory extend control investiga- tions to include this potentially important crop. ”2. The Council recommends are presented herewith so that tliei Agricultural Council Makes Important Recommendations Flow Of Grain To Montreal Begins MONTREAL. (CF)-Carloads of grain from the West arrived at harbor elevators here Saturday ready for an early opening of the st. Larvrence navigation season. Shipipng officials said they hope navigation will start around April Other grain shipments were re- ported on their way by rail to Three Rivers and Quebec. Exporters czipect a heavy grain shipping season because of large overseas orders. Most of the grain is earmarked for the United King- dclm, Europe and Pakistan. Chinese Paper Says Sfcilin Assessinored HONG KONG. (AP)-A Chinese newspaper making its first appear- ance said in an extra Saturday that Russia's Premier Stalin had been assassinated. The New Daily did not name a source in its dis- patch. that an extension man he appoint- ed by the Provincial Department of Agriculture to give advice on the growing and marketing. and on the diseases and insect pests. of horticultural crops. Centralized Grading st Marketing "it. As an added factor in the LEGION HALL DESTROYED I DOMINION. N. 5.. (GP) -- Hrs of unknown origin destroyed the Canadian Legion hall. formerly the Highland Golf Club, in this Cape Breton mining town satur- day. The loss was unofficially T.T0ontinued on Page 15 Col. 3) Meet To Ma PARIS. (AP)-Top-tanking mil- ilary brains from the North At- lantic Part nations start on Mon- day working out the revised moves they will make in the event of a. Russian attack on Western Europe. Tight security measures will sur- round supreme Headquarters A.- lied Powers in Europe as several hundred Navy. Army and Air Force officers start a five-day in- door sham battle. More than 00 hold the rank of general or lieuten- ant-general or the equivalent. They will receive thorough brief- ings on NATO's military buildup in the last two years as they work out their strategy to be pursued in event of an attack. To Draft Program Part of the five days will be devoted to drafting the .military progra.rn to be submitted to the next meeting of NATO's council of ministers in April. These foreign. finance and economic ministers decide how much money can be spent to continue the defensive buildup. The exercise is being run by US. Gen. Matthew Ridgway. SHAPE commander. Field Marshal Lord Montgomery. deputy commander. will direct the sham battle. One of the problems to be taken up is Ridgway's recommended rc- organization of the Central Euro- pean command. This would place land. naval and air forces in the strategic central sector under M:ii'- shal Alphonse Jillll. Francois NJ. 1 soldier. Jlllll now commands only the land forces. In addition, ll. S. Gen I.nuris Norsiad. who now commands the air force in this sector. would Nnvy. Of the Bangor class. thel niinrsu-caper was acquired by Egypt soon after the end of the Second World War. By Richard ()'ilegan VIENNA. (AP)-Stalin's death appears to have changed nothing in the soviet satellites. There is hardly a one-in-a-thnu- sand chance of a popular uprising against Georgi Malenkov and the new rulers of the Kremlin. There is scarcely one chance in a hun- drcd that ii new Tito will appear among the bosses of Poland. East Germany. Czechoslovakia. Roman- in. Hungary. Bulgaria and Albania. But if sonicfirliing should happen in the Balklns it would most like- ly be in Albania. or Bulgaria. There might have been a chance for satellite defection had there been a period of uncertainty about Stalin's successor. But Malankov's speedy appointment dispelled that. Possibly the idea of rising ksuch uncertainty to stir B lkan unrest was in Marshal Tllo' mind when Stalinis Death Changed Nothing In Satellites estimated at S-8.000. N.A.T.O Military Brains p Strategy w 1 officers from Canada. Britain. the U S.. France. Belgium, Denmark. Greece, Italy. Luxembourg. The Netherlands. Norway. Portugal and Turkey will be on hand. The 14th NATO nation-Iceland-has no armed forces. Four Canadian officers will at- tend. They are Lt.-Gem. G. G. Simonds. chief of the general staff : Rear-Admiral R. E. B. Bidwell. nu officer. Atlantic Coast. and chief of Canada's share of the northwest Atlantic under NATO: Air Vice-Marshal. Frank Miller, vice chief of the air staff, and Maj.-Gen. J. D. B. Smith. chair- man of the Canadian Joint staff in London. ' -flu: croseo. You on to A caizaf Mari flu: SMALLER NE Look O TORONTO. (OP) -- Minimmri and maximum temperatures: move. up in be Ridgwayis deputy Dawson for air. replacing Britninls Air view”; Marshal Sir Hugh Saunders. who is Edmnmon due to retire. Norstadis job would Calgm... be enlarged. 39mm" Senior army. navy and air force W-mmpw Toronto Montreal Ottawa Quebec Saint .lolm Moncion Halifax g A7 " m gm m, M. "mm. Charlottetown 17 lic spccdcd up plans to visit Lon- Sydney 7 18 don after lcarnilg of Stalin's deaaih. Ym-mouth . . 14 20 If so. Malenkov appears to h c 51, John's. Nfld. 12 26 been too smart for Tito and also -------P-n for any satellite Communist lea-.. HALIFAX. (CF)-Official fore- dera with whetted ambitions l'01' casts issued by the Dominion pub- power in the international Com- munist hierarchy. lie appears to have foreseen the possibility of disturbances within the satellites and made sure with months of ruthless purges that there would be no new Tlios. In retrospect. Czechoslovakia”s Rudolph slansky. Poland's Wladys- law Gomulka. Romania's Ana Paukcr-all old-time Communists -appear to have been removed lest they rise to contest the control of Mnlcnkov and: the Communist party of the soviet Union. necessary as Malenkov old rivnl Molotov. Further satellite purges may be , moves to utes later than Charlottetown. cniisolidate his succession over li.s lir ucniher office and valid until midnight. Monday: it Princn Erlwzirri Island: Clear. rlnurllnr: over Monday afternoon. widely srnticrcrl snowflurries he- ginnin: Monday evening. Con- yiinuing very cold. Light winds In- l('i'Pl'ISllliI llionrlay afternoon to soirtliwrst. 15. i.ow-hiizh 51 CV13!" lnilclmvn 5 and 25. inch Ede today at Charlottetown at.i4.39 A. M. and 3.29 P. M. High tide on the North Shore at 10.39 A. M. Summerside ride eighteen min- sun rises today at 0.3! A. M. and sets at 6.11 P. M. ?1.4u'- tab..-