‘MAXIMC i _ o, g MAXIMS MERE MAN °’ ‘ MERE MAN >,‘(‘//// The People's Paper 1131i Read by Everybody (lovers Prince Edward‘ Island Like the Dew i en knaves betray each omer. ontndan scarce be blamed or the _ Du," pit d. Work as if you uere to live a. 100 years, uray as it‘ you hen: to dlc m- IIIDITOW- owl Gun-dun. Two Onto, __ . Annull Snbavrlpilon Delhi-red, 85.00 > maroon-um. Pounded m1 “f: 51ers troops join Island men in The 3rd Division will join the Canadian Corps, now one of the most powerful military formations in Britain and trained to play a major part in reipelling any invas- ion frcm German-occupied Etirope. Grceted by Canadian High Com- missioner Vincent. Massey, War Sec- retary DtlVll‘ Margesson, Maj-Gen. P. J. Montague, Chief of the Can- adian Military Headquarters, Lon- drn, anti several high-ranking Bri- tish officers, the contingent con- sisted of divisional units. infantry regiments from Novt Scctfiv New Brunsxvick. Eastern, Central and Western Ontario, a French-Canad- ian regiment from Quebec and un- llslrcnl the artillery, Ordnance, rvico corps, engineers, pro- : . i is and medical services. In addition. there were airmen, fresh from training in Canada, a- board tho grey tronpships and nurses and doctor's many of them frcm the United Stairs and large ozmntitic: of ammunition, war sup- plies and fond. The advance parties of several wcstmi Carindo infantry regiments 22;: ————- I (Continued on page 11, Col B) Argentine police Raid Nazi center ROSARIO, Argentina, Aug. l - (AP) - Headquarters of the Ger- man culture ivclizire association ilflu “'11s raided today by police who nrrcstoti 30 persons and seized I tiutultliy of books and pamphlets, including copies of Hitler's "Mein Kampf." The rnid was made after neigh- Ws Bolllhlained of military train- 1“! 0f young men in the head- quarters zli: night. Rosario. with 514,000 inhabitants, b Argentine! second city, n Coming Events lhte for Notices In this column 3 cents per word. "Sil0\l'—-Cl‘fli)8lld Tuesday. L- 17-84-21, "SilOW and Dance. Bradalbane Wednesday. L-ll-8-2-2i. Ifworited to buv Chicken, Fowl land Luld Storage L-2l0-7-9-1. "Dance anvil-lot Dogs, 1.. d re C01. AilRllSl. 5th. L-RZ-‘an-f-all. 1"Ice cream and dance Taran- “m School. Mondny. Aug. 4. “Reserve Wednesday August 6th 1°!‘ i-he Cavendish Tea. 14-1036-7-25-101 "Deuce, St. Teresa’ Hall Aug- llst 5th. Webster's oi-crlcstra. L-l196—B-2-2l. "August Stir-Tea Party Cardi- jjgo an Troops From 3rd Division Land On English Soil Huge convoy makes unevent- ful voyage; Well - equipped Canadian Corps; (By ROSS MUNROE, Canadian Press Stiff Writer) SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND, Aug. 1-(CP CABLE)—Adding bhoua. uids of mm to Canada's overseas army, troops of the 3rd Division have poured into this camp for a day and a nlglii. ns special lralng hugflgfl them away from the trans-Atlantic debarkalion port. Tho mcn, comprising- part but not all of the 3rd Division, arrived at aBriilsh port. after an uneventful crosxlng in one of the largest convoys ever used on the Atlantic and guarded by Canadian and British warships. l-ll- If not fine. following day. 91370001! welcome L-1l90-8-l-3iu "Si. John’: Presbvtcri Ohur h k? $111151. postponed tillnwcdnels- . August 10th, L-‘ia-a-z-zl. "see Eves of Love by St Chmrlca 13g‘?! in St. Andrews Hall on By Auizirst 4th Dance after. 14-20-8-2-11. 5w Aunt ‘Plllle Goes w To fillies Dramatic Club, m‘: Georgetown, Monday. August L-lioa-a-i-zi. DUB iii. - i . a over ‘ h- Knud Jorgenson. L-l97-7-l2-l9-20-l-I "wflilied to bu Bo] ‘ — ogna Cutie ~ Hélgmveal alves, all grades 510mg‘: Co" brices. Island Cntléi "-15 flkcnt for the Livestock ‘ yrsélketing Board, will be glad to t," {mil 1108s fcom- your door my g‘ extra charge each Tues- . ' °iifv Allan swim-t, mach Cf-"Htlherb Store, Kelly's _ r i" Knud Jorgensen, h no n a L-ll-g-lgii IES Contingent. Nazi official Report brief BERLIN. A08. 1-(AP)—Ge1-- mnn dispatches from the eastern front claimed today the destruc. don of tens of thousands 01' Bus- sian troops trapped south of Smo- lensk, along with the capture of 35,000 prisoners and 235 cannon, but at the some time admitted that o. second Red force was yet to be finally dealt with northeast of the city. This second force, however. said the German news agency b. N. 13.. has been repulsed with great losses in its attempt to break out and is "well under German con- trol." DNB claimed the battlefield was lined with smashed and burned out war machines. The day's German war bulletin was brief, reporting: "Battles on the east front continue to develop in our fuvor." Official dispatches gave no hint of general action for the pushes on Leningrad rind Kiev. It was admitted unofficially that Soviet forccs had ‘temporarily’ driven n wedge between German and Rumanion troops on the far southern front, where it was claimed the Germans had crossed the Dnlcster river, but it was claimed that Russian attempts to uidcn this salient had “collapsed with bloody Bolshevik losses" un- der the counter attacks of Ger- man and Rumonlnn troops sup- ported by Rumonlnn artillery fire. German columns in that theatre appeared to be striking towards Russia's Black sea port of Odessa.- Jap Troops Still stream Into Saigon SAIGON, French 11100-611111!‘- Atig. 1 —(AP) - Thirty-six hours after landing here in a military 0°- cupation which has no visible ul- tlmate limits, Japanese men and machines still were streumini 110m Saigows docks tonight, carrying ever-mounting qpntltics of muni- tions and supplies. Scores of trucks moved back and ' erably strengthened in CHARLOTTIETOWN, CANADA, snruannv’ scars-oz, 1941 MASH ilondon hears Japs after Thafland IONDON, Aug. 1 —(AP) -- Ja- pan, moving again in the direction of British interests in the 11hr Easy. has demanded that Thailand grant her military bases and control of the Thai rubber, rice and tin pro- duction. it was reported authori- tatively here today. The report found Britain herself fast preparing for Asiatic action, both defensive and offensive. Japan was declared to have of- fered to restore to Thailand, in ex- change for the concessions, the province of Laos and the ancient city of Angkor. ‘These are both in southern French India-China, lying to the east of’ Thailand. The Japanese moved into Indo- China only this week after Vichy surrendered to demands similar to those Tokyo is reported to be mak- ing on Thailand, London sources expressed belief that Thailan‘ had only two choices: To grant the demands or have the Japanese take what they want by force. The air ministry announced the Royal Air Force had been consid- Burma, wPich lies alongside Thailand on the west, for both offensive and de- fence act-ens." Income tax Collections here Show decline OTTAWA, Aug. 1 —(CP) —- RAV- enue Minister Gibson announced today income tax collections during July totalled $29.999.870, a net in- crease o1’ $24,084,723 compared with July. 1940, when collections total- led $5,915,156. In the first four months of the - fiscal year starting April l. income tax collections by districts i-Oilfliiflfi smasracrs against s12s.806.290 1n the corresponding period of 1940-41 a net increase of $144,771,786. only collection district to reilflfi» a decline was Charlottetown where a decrease 0f $25,635 W115 “Med- See week-end Action in Vichy VIOHY, Aug. 1 -ta1=>- The confused and disturbed P01111901 situational ut1000l1P1°d FY1111“ 5P‘ peared tonight to be 111111111118 "P to weekend action. y Despite a day of cross-currents in poliflcal manoeuvres it. ispos- gible to gay, at least, that some- thing u likely to happen Saturday or Sunday. It. will be connected with the question of the degree of’ French collaboration with Ger- many. Today Fer-hand De Brinon, the Vichy government's envoy to the Germans in Paris, arrived in Vlchi’ on urgent business and conferred w'th Marshal Petaih and Vice- Premier Admiral Jean Dorian. Petain also hncl a 45-minute talk with the United States ambassador Admiral William D. Leahy. P19" sumably about the Vichy-Jfl-Pllll- ese defence poet on IndO-Chiufl- forth between the wuterflufli» 81111 the unseen Japanese military En" | campmenis beyond the city- The)’ were piled high with 80111111710711- Derricks aboard the Japanese transports tied un at lite piers, with the assistance of several thou- sand sweating Japanese soldiers. constantly were unloading still more stores. Mountains of munitions boxes and crntcd bombs wcrc stocked B1 the dockside; gasoline drums in fantastic number rolled from the ships. an the enrolls! Nev“? guarded. Japs after oil, Rubber and tin rmwo, Aus- i-fseiurd" ‘- (Appxmc Jalpanedl! fore gn o flee mouthpiece expressed wdll‘ J01”?! determination to obtain rubber_ an and oil in the smith orient resort; less of what it termed a do flw eunbargo" against Japan in Malaya by Britain bnd the Ulflifid 51'1"‘!- “This artificial exclusion of Jab- an from mppliee." said the Times and Advertiser. Ensiish 101ml" 9 crgiin of the foregn office, mere y hastens the course of nli-f-sIl-lffifi- iency in the wesiem Pacific. It pictured the United Bil“! l»! attempting to monovoii" Pllmhfi" of row materials in the south "l! and said the same altuniiul W!!! W811 to develop in south Amorlcmhweci-fllil International At A Glance By The Canadian Press MOSCOW- Russians indlolle they are holding German drives and relieving pressuroqorr ‘ lquihlfldl air raid on Moscow beaten off. BERLIN- Germans claim infan- try installed on Smolensk front freeing tanks for new drivel- BOMEWHHII IN ENGLAND — Thousands of Canada’! 8rd divis- ion arrive to loin Canadian Corpli crossing uneventful. (Mlldim 5"‘ nonnooo vut supply convoy I180 l?" rived safely.) LONDON - Jlblll "M14011 <11- mnndlng blue! in Thailand from which Singapore would be menac- ed. Anglo-Finnish relations 5""- TOKYO- Jlplllflfi revetment organ declares Japan will gei- on. tin and rubber from nouth deenlw Anglo-Untied sum "churn" VICKY-Changes In retain-Dar- lan government possible illlrllll J ju_:~_ jun-mg Minister Hon. J.G. Gardiner, Ottawa, red- eral Minister ofiAgr-fculturo, who arrived in this province Thursday night. met with members of the P. E. I, Federation of Agriculture in the Legislative Assembly yesterday afternoon and a thorough discus- sion of farm problem: took place. During the meeting the Minister outlined to those present the needs of Great Britain as they pertained to the agricultural production of Canada. It lasted about two and one-half hours. During the meeting the Minister stated, “We are now considering the possibility of pegging the price of hogs, either in live weight or on the rail. using the price at Win- nipeg as a basis with increased rates in the eastern markets be- - cause of higher freight rates." Sev- eral farmers present expressed op- inion that this was not a solution of il"e hog production problem. The question of feed costs was one im- portant element; the storage of western grain here was another and the $3.25 cut on heavy hogs also works a hardship on Maritime far- mers, In the morning, Mr. Gardiner visited the Dominion nkperlmental Farm in Charlottetown where he was met by Dr. J. A. Clark. Super- intendent, and conducted on a. tour oi the place. He viewed the farm stock paying particular attention to thehogs, horses, cattle and poul- try. Following this, he saw the pro- (Contlnued on page ll. Col 3) ll. S. “freezes” llll silk stocks WASHINGTON. Aug, 1——(AY) -The United States Office of Production Management or- tiered comple‘ ' ,,., ge of all processing of raw silk, effective at midnight Saturday, with the result that hosiery and silk manufacturing o p e r at lo n s throughout the country must shutdown and leave an estimat- ed 175.000 workers idle. Priorities Director E. R. Slei- tlnlus, in, ordered the “freezlng" of every bale of ra-w silk in mills and warehouses promptly after notification from the army and mwy that. military requirements for silk during the next two years will equal approximately the total stocks In the country. The drastic step is the result of restrictions on ii-"de with silk-producing Japan. The curbs on commerce were applied after Japan moved intn southern In- dn-China, an action which the United Stairs government. crn- sidered a threft tn American interests and security. Hanson urges Private initiative a EDMONTON, Aug. l-(CPF-The British pirates of Queen Elizabeth's rc‘gn were the first great exrponents u! privntc enterprise. dffliilred C0"- servative House leader Hanson in an address here today. Mr. Hanson urged the rebum to rlvate initiative and enterprise as ‘Elie best method of solving post-war problems and praised the pirates for their daring feats ln helping to build the British Dfntlme- 1'19 5110119 at a luncheon meeting sponsored by the Edmonton Chamber of Corn- merce. ‘The answer to Dost-war P701!- lems ‘lies in the preservation of the capitalistic system-controlled if you will cleansed and purged of its evils and weaknesses," said Mr. Hanson. He added that he felt rek- imentaticn of business and invasion of the rights of private persons were necessary in war-time "but the minute peace comes the position should be reversed." Billion CAN ATCNAZIS IN FIIAN May Peg Hog Prices, Federal Reveals Farm representative's discuss . problems with J. G. Gardiner. Believe 100,000 iianucks now in United Kingdom OTTAWA. Aux. 1-—(CP)—Be- lief that Canadian sailors, soldiers and airmen serving overseas now number more than 100,000 was ex- pressed tonight in military quar- ters. Safe arrival in Britain of a sec- tion of the 3rd Canadian Division wils announced in London today. Exact number of these troops was not disclosed for security reasons ut. it was known there were spokesman here said they had raised the number of army men overseas to "something less than 100,000." Weld pipeline At border l-HGHWATER. Quit. Auz- l— (CPU-Canadian and United State's government officials gathered in this eastern townshiils "immunity today to witness the welding to- gether at the international border feet on soil erosion and inspected. F LCI LI I1 EXCELS N THE KITCHEN o: n, yet-uncomlplebed 236-mile oil pipeline from Portland, Mo, to Montreal. Munitions Minister. (7-11 H°W° and Premier Godbout o1’ Q0911“! 19d the Canadian delegation that took art in the welding ceremonies. Un- ted States officials included" J. P. Mcfflat, United States Mini-Sit!‘ $0 Canada, and Governor William Wills of Vermont. The line, being constructed by the standard on ccmimiy. is expected to allow the governments of both United States and Canada to re- lease a nurnlber of bankers for eer- vicc between the Americas and Great Britain. Mr. Howe said that he b01996 011 will be flowing through the Q108- lines by Dec. 1 but added. I'm sorry I cannot promise that the grtpply will be sufficient to do away with restrictions now in force." The oil would, however, go to supply Canada's essential ser- vices. Dutch lndies sending No exports to Japs BATAVIA, The Netherlands East Indies, Aug. l—(AP)-The Neth- erlands East Indies, for the time being ls issuing no licences for exports to Japan, it was learned reliably today. The iicencing system establish- ed last week put all trade with Japan under government control. including deliveries under the JapanesmNetherlands oil agree- ment. H. J. Van Mook, economic dir- ector of the colonial administra- I ktlhousands in the group and one=wln ' sonal intervention in the “slow. .;-., A.‘ ~ s’ This Free French rill»: athchcd 10 ill} RAF Hurricane snuarlrtnr fighting in Africa was mispim; in‘ the desert a, month and given up fur dead. When a British ar- like this Oanuck airmen LONDON. Aug. 1—(CP CABLEl _.Decorations to two Canadians, one o. figiilter pilot. who went all through the battle of Britain last autumn and the other a sergeant observer otf the Royal Canadian Ah- Force. r1 graduate of the Common- wealth Air Training Plan, were 1n. eluded tonight in a list of awards announced bry the Air Ministry. A bar to his Distinguished Buying Cross was awarded to Acting Siqdn- Ldr. Percival Stanley Turner, Tor- ontfl, while the D.l".C. was won bv Sort. Mark Roach of Virginia. Shsk, Sgt. Roach is believed to be the first Con-radian graduate of the C, A.T.P. to receive an award. His father lives in Vancouver, BC. News Briefs LONDON. Aug. l-(CP)-— Britain and Finland fonnally completed their severance of diplomatic relations tonight, and the British minister in Helsinki was instructed to ask for his passport. Authorities would not say whether Britain contemplated putting Finland in the category of “enemy- occupir-d territory", a5 has been done in most other Eur- opean countrieg overrun by or associated with the Axis. orrawa. Aug. i-tcmqsnbbri Minister McLnrty left by train to- day for Glhce Bay to make a per- down" strike of Nova scotis coal miners. "I am going down to Cape Breton to do my best to settle the trouble," he said as he boarded the train. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1 -- iAPi-Presidcnt Roosevelt to- day applauded Russia's strug- gle as magnificent, and expres- sed bellcf that it had surpris- ed the Germans and thrown them off their stride. The Rus- sian resistance, he said, “ls magnificent and frankly better than any military export in Germany thought Ii. would be.“ For .mpliasis, he authorized the usc of direct quotations, a permission only occasionally granted for his press confor- cnce statements. WASHINGTON. A118. 1--(AP)— tfon, said today that granting of export licences was subject to the situation in the Pacific. i Duke of Kent Prepares for tour OTTAWA, Aufl- 1—(CiP)—'I'hie Duke of Kent. toured the sun- drenched countryside of Ontario and Quebec today as he 185ml be- fore opening an arduous tour of Canada. most oif it by air. The Kings brother, guest of his aunt and uncle, the Governor- General and Princess Alice, since he arrived here by air last. Tuesday morning from Brritoin drove about Ottawa and into the Gotineau hills of Quebec for a picnic tea, after a morning in tine sun on the grounds o! Rfdeau Hpll. _ l President Roosevelt left the im- By Mull z P. l5. L, $0.00; Cunndu and L’. B. 85.00 KING Alli/licks Aims At Gaps In Hotly - contested Smolensk Sector Heavy fighting Friday fails t0 make much change in lines; Moscow has another raid. (By HUMP)’ Czissidy, Associated Press Staff Writer) “ MOSCOW, Aug. 2—-(Snturdny)—(Al’)—tfnpiializing on German inability to maintain a solid front along the 2,000-mile fighting zone, the Red army is knifing into gaps between Nazi units in disruptive flanking attacks, par- ticularly in the holly-contested Smolensk dispatches said today. sector, Soviet As an example of this technique against the tenuous mored car found him i... looked} German lines, the crack 99th Red army division was cred- ited with ripping to pieces three German divisions within nn unspecified period, these dispatches said. Heavy fighting raged all day lt‘1'iday at the Smolensk approach to Moscow, and also Zhiiomir areas guarding the in the Porkhov-Nevel and roads to Leningrad and Kiev without any substantial change in Soviet positions, the morning communique said. llTS. restricts Export of fuel For airplanes WASHINGTON, Aug. l-JAPI- President, Roosevelt directed the United states export control ad- ministrator today. to prohibit ex- ports of motor fuels and Oils for use in aircraft to destinations out- side the western hemisphere, Brit- ish empire, and unoccupied terri- tories of countries resisting aggres- sion. Mr. Roosevelt also directed that the export of other petroleum pro- ducts, except t0 these some destin- ations, bo limited to usual or pre- war quantities. The pro rata issue of licences will be mode on that, basis. The White House announced the President's action in a two-para- graph statement. A presidential aide directed attention to the fact that the statement made n0 men- tion of Japan. The prohbition on exportation of aviation filels extends to certain row stocks from which these fuels are derived. Will dry one Million barrels ll. S. apples OTTAWA, Aug. i-fCP)—A mil- lion bnrrcls of Nova Scotin apples vzill be dried this your to mect in- dlcntcd demands of consumers in Great Britain, col. R. L Wheeler. assistant director of marketing service of the agriculture depart- ment: stated today. The British food ministry will require more dried apples this yxlar and fewer canned apples, with the result. that 0.000 barrels a day will be dried for an estimated period presslon with his press conference '01 125 days. Rcquircmcnts of the today that he might visit; his sunr- mer home at Campobeilo Island, New Brunswick, perhaps in A . ust. The President's mother a- ready has gone to Campobcllo. LONDON, Aug. 1 - (CF)- The Norwegian new: agency asserted today that friction between the Norwegian people and the German occupying forces was growing and that ‘the Germans were showing uneasiness over the possibility of a British counter-invasion. MOSCOW. Aug. 1-—(CP)—Sabo- tage has caused i1 train wrecks in German-occupied Czecho- slovakia in the latter half oi July, it was announced today in a Bus. sian communique. In one wreck, 250 German soldiers were said to have been killed. Need Ground Crews OVITAWA, Aug. l-(CPL-‘rhei air ministry appealed tonight for thousands of tradesmen to meet what. was described as an insist/en: need for ground crews in the Royal Canadian Air Force. "As Canada's war effort ex- pands." l statement from air force headquarters said, "the call for ground crew ~ fitters, riggers. metal workers. instrument work- ers. electricians-weekly becomes more imperative. , ‘The air force heed: thousands of tradesmen” for conned apples substantial your, Col. food mitiistry can be met out of a carryover from last Wheeler sold. Lust, year about 800,000 barrels were dried or conned. ilnterpreting The War News (By Kirke L. Simpson, Assoc- iated Press Staff Writer) Londorrs military observers. recently openly pessimistic nbout. Russia's chances oi stemming the Nazi blitzkrieg. show a marked change lli tone as thc sixth week of the tit- anic struggle draws Loivnrd llll cnd, They now detect symp- toms of "exhaustion" in Hit- lcr's hard-driving armies. fore- shadowing at lenst a lull in the attack while new blows are prepared. The Lotidon advices did not atrocity tlic basis oi tlint llllll- tnry yudgnu-nt. If it is found- cd on any more detuiltd infor. motion as to the slttintiun on the tlirce main fighting fronts in Rllvlll illllll either" lli*l.lll or ltitiscoiv hits mmlo pllbllll. il l,- uri inipiirtriiit (li‘\'i‘l()])lll1'lli And it pnrnllcls to some cxtvni the knitting viuv in informed (Continued on pale ll. Col 6) The Russian 99th division was awarded the order of the Red Banner and is composed of picked men. German plane; dropped o few incendlaries on the capital during the night, but, most of the raiders were dispersed, it was stated early today. The morning communique re. ported the Red air force struck at the invaders both by land and sea. This communique indicated I. rvstimption of the German drive toward Letiingrsd after a tempor- ary lull. ’I'he tirevious communi- que lied not mentioned the Pork- hov sector, which is 150 miles south of Leningrad, saying instead that important fighting was under way on the Novorzhev, Smolensk and Zhitomlr greats. The Friday afternoon communi- que stated that the Red air force had sunk o destroyer and severe- ly damaged two other enemy ship: in the Baltic. To that toll this morning's statement. added an enemy patrol ship and s. 5,000- l l 10300710. A118. 1—(CPl-Mlnl- imum and maximum ticmperattircs: Dnwson 35) m; Victoria, 53 (i5 Edmonton 3.‘! '71 Regina 6i 78 Wtnnipcil 0i 90 Toronto 69 8d Mont re a1 67 88 13051011 fill 81 Synopsis: Scattered tliurirlcr-s-limv- crs have occurred in tlie Western Provinces, vuliile in Ontario the weather has been fair and warm. BOSTON. Aug. crisis: MRlllP~Ffll1'Stl‘.lll‘(l.'\_'v' and sun- do)". slightly‘ warmer Stlruiny and in cast and cxiretnc south portions Saturday. Massachusetts and New Hump- shircw-Fnir Sfllllfllily and Sunday, slightly u-armcr in tht- interior Sunday, 1- (AP) —l"ore. High iidc this evening at 6.31 nncl tomorrow morning at 618. Sun scts this evening at 7.27 and rises tomorrow morning at, 4.4a, Sunimcrslde ilflf‘ l8 minutns 1M. or than Charlottetown, nonnsx - cars TORMENTXNE SERVICE ‘ tfltandard Tlmel Lcavo Borden 6.45 A.M. 9.35 A.M. 1.00 l'.M. 4.45 RM. 1.30 IKM. Imave (‘npt- Tnrmcniinc 8.00 AM. 11.00 AIM. 3.15 RM. 0.20 P.i\l. 8.40 PM. SUNDAY SERVICE Lcnve llorrlon 0.00 Al" 12.00 noon 4.45 l‘..\l. 7.00 I'..\I. lit-aw (‘npr ‘lumncnilno 10.05 AM, 330 IE3]. 5.50 PJI. 8J0 IE“. “Tlilll ISL, , IS FERRY LNIVPS Wand islands 7.00 AM, ' 11.00 A. M. ‘t . .00 I‘. M. i Loaves Caribou 9.00 Ad“. 1.00 RM. ‘$.00 P-M- f-cizw-s re:-