MAXIMS or’ a MERE MAY MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN “Atfiliohinfreodganwhiehtlaflo sham: 1:." 1.55m‘? ACT" "°°' "°‘ F ‘ _ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew morning flaarllao. loaded III. ohariofloiowl Oaasdlantwodlsnts. Price Support For Potato Markets is CHARDUFFMDWN, CANADA. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18,1946 is PERSONS LOSE _I.IVES IN AIR TRAGEDIES,‘ Disclose Keitel Balkedi In Suici d e Attempt Princesses To Act ils Bridesmaids LONDON, Oct. 1'1 --(Rouitors)- Princess Elizabeth. Princess Mar- garet and Princess Alexandra of Kent will, it is understood. be bridesmaids to tho honorable Patricia Mountbatten at her wed- ding, Oct. 26 to Lord Brabonne at Ramsey Abbey. Hampshire. The King and. Queen will be among he guests at the wedding of the daughter of Viscount and Lady Mountbatten. The Ar ‘bishop of C tarbury will perform the ceremony to which only about 200 guests-nearly all members of the faanily or closg per- sonal friends—will be invited. Coinin_g_ Events "Movies at Borden to-nliht, "Unloading car‘—of Bulk Wheat October 18th and 19th. Bring Bags. Mack MscLean, Vernon River. "Poultry buying daily live and dressed poultry, paying top mu‘- , ket price. Davis s; Fraser. Ltd. "Mosquoraddull-an-nco in Aliacrry Plains Hall, Monday: October 21st. Mlllviaw- Omhestra. ' ' ' "Buying bre-ssgdflrolnti-y. n. M. MacKinnon. Murray River. Reserve Wednesday November 13th. Tryon United Chicken Supper and Baaaar. Community Hail. "Don't forget regular Monday night Legion Dance, Mt. Stewart. ltiscKenzieh Orchestra. "Pantry Bale. Ladies Aid. Church of Scotland. Maritime Electric. Sat- urday. October 19th, two o'clock. "Masquerade Dance, Flat River linil, Wednesday, October 23rd. Sponsored. Bell River Branch, Csn- adian Legion. "Grand Lodge Officers P. E. I. Visitation Southern District Mac- Phee L. O. L. on Monday, 8 P. M. "Dance, Ko;y Corner. Vernon Bridge. October 18th. MscKenzivs Orchestra. "Girl Guides Rllimllnflflg Sale. Trinity Social Hall. Saturday, 4:30 D- m. "To ovoid 'congeation Hunter River starch factory wi-ll accept potatoes by appointment only. “Dancing tonight. Island Coun- iry Club, ‘Traveller's Rest. Music by; 0. K. Preeby, "Meadowbartk W. I. Pantry Sole lit Rogers Hardware. Friday, Oct. 18th. 3 P. M. "Loo Hogs at Cardigan Sto- station eac Thursday for Davis d1 Fraser. Ltd ormon McKenzie.’ Cflfdilon. - uo-aot tf. “Coileo Bogs oaoh for Davis a ssor Ltd. for true - lNz service through Earnscliffo Ohorry Valley; Vernon Orwell and Newto p ouo Waiter Crsno. 11-12. 6-81-1441 "Hampton W. M. S. Pantry lolo at Holman-rs m Saturday. October 19th at 2.30 P. M. for y. “Lo at 5%. Pshll Davis $0! d. oaoh ‘moods lbr truck pickup service from farm to cor. phone ltoddio Pratt. fl-ll-ld-ll-mt-Ltf OI ‘ 1...“... it?” “ 1552C? Prooor 1M. Merlin Bovine 145010-10. ll. OI ‘nu Stat ggigrflsoafiiorunuiivts a 1'1. . l-i-H-bo-oot tr. "flushing bolts. misfit bits Ind all other heavy and light rub- ler bells. now and uood. l: inch. s PlY-alillllrfbondothorboitain proportion. clinton Merriam. Fredericton. ~ "lpooiol Notion-tumors Lt- tcntlondn response to mom of- flee snot: and telephone sails. we wish to adviss hog producers that our hog prices have not boon. iovm-od thio wool: ho no chaoga wool: of. Oct. (By Ton: m!) NUBRNBEBO, Oct. l'i—(AP)- The bodies cf suicide Hermann Goering, and 10 hanged German war leaders have been cremated- iike those of tho thousands of their victims who perished in concen- tration camps-and "secretly dis- persed", thg Allied Control Goun- cll announced today. The official announcement, which did not say whether the ashes hud been scattered over land or see, came amid these developments: l. It was disclosed that Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel also may have planned to foil the hangman by suicide. but was balked. 2. Twelve German prison em- ployees were kept under close scrutiny in an attempt to unraval the mystery of how Goeri-ng ob- tained the vial of potassium cyanide that killed him, 8. Former Nazis among the Ger- mans were Jubilant and anti-Nazis shocked at Goerinfs act. Fan- tastic atories spread among the German people-including one that straw dummies were hanged, while the criminals went free. It was not known where the The bodies were removed from the prison Wednesday in two seal- ed trucks guarded by jeeps. Col. B. C. Andrus, commandant at “the Nuernberg prison, also dis- closed that Keltei. who had asked that hg die before a firing squad instead of on the gallows, tried to keep hidden in his wallet g long. sharppieee of metal but was caught by a prison guard. Meanwhile, prison officials link- ed Goering's refusal to take exer- ‘cise in the corridor after his sen- tencing with his suicide, saylmz he didrft wurit to take n chance on jeopardizing the vlal's hiding place. Col. Andrus said his own per- sonnel was lnnocent, and express- ed the belief that a German law- yer may have passed the vial to Goeritng during the final days of the trial. But Col. Andrus’ as- slstant. Maj. Fred Teich. said he was convinced the Marshal found a way to hide the vial and perhaps had it in his possession from the start of his imprisonment. Maj. Teich also discounted the theory that, a B118"! h!!! ‘liven Goering the vial in exchange for one of his fabulous jewels, Both Maj. Andrus and Maj. Teich exonerated Gocring's wife. noting that a ill-HI SW96“ 590' arated the two during her visits, LINK WITH EGYPT ‘There are desert tribes in Afri- ca and the Near East wearing sandals almost identical with those made the ancient myptlans. Most animal oils used bl’ com- cramation took» place, or the hour. ‘ mentally are obtained from fish and marine mammals. KAlMATl-I FALIB. oN-l Oct. engers on a northbound Pacific critically. early season snowstorm. Portland. Ore ‘ g lmkan log, the buck fled to found . “when began a walkout for and starting an momma/w of its teachers for a I400 niabioroffosoiou fclnoe so minister KONG KONG. Oct. l1 3 VERON- 0f of coor- youth -~ll‘ot lovnrod at carrots. Livo- stock sousouag local. paganism ' rnannlcxsauno. vs. on. 11 bnek door startled office workers Company hero will! b! lflllllll cl rll b th moonlit‘- “flmm n. n‘ y Q-“rlowoodonoorbywhorolie wao Oct. r1 -ui.rl - lam-three- lentil ‘higher pay today. closing four schools vacation for gdiool board. pleading financial inability. had rejected tbs demands yooriy salary imreolo. GUI‘ Oolonbinbotl‘! IO l. of interior and of odaaotlol. . Dmoutors) - The former British corvette rotunda arrived hero today Oil l!!!‘ WI! navy. A Low-ton vessel. oopablo of id ..___..._-_____ 0111.. Oct. i‘! -(OP)— "Oonlrlunlln. soother. isf t crooning into o controlling poltim in a grost t solutions." Gordan Oat-son. prosidom of tho Young magnum conservatives of Ion William osid u oa association Transport Crashes In Snowstorm LARAMIE, Wym. Oct». l1 — (A?) Unexplained ‘ ’ struck a twin-engined transport plane during a. heavy auowlto west of Laramie early today and the craft pinged Into tho troolooa prairie, killing all 10 paooengors and a crew of three. Anion, the victim were the pilot, Clarence Robert Abernathy. 27, of San liorenlo, Calif" and lill other-in-law. Mrs. Mary Boland of Toronto. Abernathy, o. lieutenant commander in the United States Navy air transport service, was ‘ re: oi tlle N.A.'.I.‘.S Air Transport Service. a post-war commercial alDl organised by a group of former service pilot. The line carries passengers and freight: on a charter basis between Dominion To Observe‘ Canadian Citizenship Week Next January filR-ANBY. Que . Oct 1'1 —(CP) —(Advatrlce) -- A Canadian citizen- ship week will be observed tthmugh. out Canada next Jan. 5 to 11, with fiimlnnnies in the principal cities. Eflib y Mmtiu ’ bonlfliit in I!“ addrem before the Gsnnby Chamber of Commerce In an add-rose prepared for de- livery before n divisor meeting. Mr. Martin observed that the Canadian Citizenship Act, passed at tihb last session of parliament, becomes ef- fective Jan. 1 and said the Citizen. ahip Week would be launched with a oeslemony on Parliament Hill at Ot-bawa Jan. 3 in which Prime Min- ister Macxexizie King would take part. While Mr. lifurlin did not mdic. ate vnhetiher Citizenship week would Oakland and Newark, NJ. The piano was bound for Chi- cago and was twlstod 0o piecea affair plowing 800 yards across the snow-covered cart-b and some bod. lea were throws: 75 yards from the smashed cabin. . AIR COLLISION I-IARPENDEII, Berta, England. Oot. 17 - (Reuters) — Throa per. sons. including Sub-Lt. George Greenwood, ltCLNN ll. were killed today when a Tiger Moth plane collided with an airspeed Oxford plane hero today. Fit-LC. Leslie N" Binpsnu, ll. A.F., pilot of tho Tiger Iiloth. and thewpilof- of the Oxford were killed in the crash. ~ 1 Threatened Strike Cf Engineers VANCOUVER, Oct. Threat of a strike engineers covering 939 Vancouver operated irelshlefs loomed tonight as the rnhlfll‘ 5H0- tor in a developing maritime Strike picture that already has cut the Alaskan port of Juneau off from Canadian steamship service. At the same time a small dock strike was settled at Victoria. Most stores in Juneau were run- ning short or entirely out of food supplies as iongshoremen refused to work Canadian steamers. Oper- ators announced the . els would pass up the city and go dircctlli to Skagway. No announcement has been made of any differences be- tween the union and the Guild!!! lines. At Vancouver the National As- sociation of Marine Engineers turned down the shipilwneri’ Pl‘ fer to retain a $44.50 war risk bonus in basic engineers’ salaries and grant an additional 11 plr cent wage increase. 1'i—(CP)-— of marine men on 48 World News In Brief 1'! -(AP)- ‘rweniy-fivo of I poss- Greyhound bits were irrlllfid- when the bus overturned so miles north of here today in on ‘rho has was on K011i! some from Los Angelou to _(ar) - A loo-pound a0 tho lbobort I. Payno Coal sh h plate lass window n" ‘Badly it'd and with borough 1.800 pupils. 111a Rankin _(AI)-IoIro Hash Oarrono. dioloo&.l ohooorvol to bocomo‘ port of Guru's infant knots. its now is nomad Pu Po. moot- beoome an annual event. it was be- lieved the guvernlment planned eventually to set. u date in May or J1me for citizenship observance. presentation ol citizenship cormif. icatcs to new Canadians and cere- monies would us held in Halifax, Fredericton. Montreal. ‘Ilononto, Hamilton. Windsor. 0:11., Winni. - ." ‘ ‘ Regina. Edmonton, Vaswouvn and Victoria Mr. Martin said every year some 200.000 young Canadians come of voting age and "enter into full partnership in Canadian life" and expressed belief some recognition alwuld be made “of this important event in tlhe lives c! our young peo- ple." ‘they should be encouraged. through yowtn organizations such as-tihc Y.M.C A. and tihc Boy Scouts, to take part in the citizen. ship ceremonies He said the Federal Government had no intention of interfering with the educational plograms of pro- vincial governments but was work- ing with the adluic educational bod- ies of the provinces in the citizen. ship ping-ram. Mr. Martin said tha features of Citizenship Week would be the Remove Price WASHINGTON, Oct. 17—(AP)— A top level official said tonight that the Office of Price Adminis- tration has set a Nov. 1 deadline for doing away with most of the remaining price controls on foods. commodities and services. This disclosure came as ORA. released all price controls on cof- fee and miliers argued for lifting ceilings from flour. The government official, who withheld use of his name. told a reporter that pluns are laid for "an orderly retreat." "We must keep ceilings on rent. We also must keep them on auto- mobiles, building materials and certain durable goods." Scheduled to stay under ceil- ings are many household ap- pliances such cs refrigerators. cer- tain basic clothing items. furni- ture and farm implements. He related that 0.P.A. divisions now are busy compiling a corn- plete list of all controlled products. both food and non-food. and list- ing those‘ on which the public spends less than srsnooom a year. These items will be decontrolled. the official added, as unimport- ant tc living or business costs, Meanwhile, prices for livestock. dairy products, cotton and grains started to slide in markets across the country. New Outbursts in Palestine Jmlisannivl. Oct. 1'1 -(Reu- ters) New terrorist outbursts occurred Ln Palestine tonight with ,1 British police inspector fatally wounded by an unknown gunman in the Jaffa Road. His attacker was believed to have been a member of the under- ground Stern gang. It. was oloc lest-nod that three British soldiers were injured Wed- nesday night when s military truck was blown up by s mine bo- tween Haifa. and ‘lei Aviv. The Palestine Arab high execu- tivo decided tonight to call a gonorai strike in the Holy Land Nov. I. 39th anniversary of tho Balfour declaration of 1917 which said the British government "view- cd wit‘: favor" it establishment. of a Jewish national homo in Palestine. DRISIOL. "England —(CP) — Grocers are "rationing" potatoes to their customers. Rain and ocld have msda than seas-co. ll” Will”? Hill/w" l 13d?» it)“ N J t .03 i Controls On_ Foods, Commodities, Services lZl-day-old y Strike Comes» I To An E_nd WINDSOR. Ont, Oct, 17—(CP) -—The IZi-dny-oid strike at plants of the Chrysler Corporation in Windsor and Cflalhsm. Ont, run he considered officially ended, George Burt, Canadian director of the United Automobile Workors (01.0), said tonight as he ari- nounced that- Chrysler employees in Chatham had voted to accept lllg Rind formula of union setup- ity and to return to work, Earlier today Chrysler workers in Windsor voted to end the strike -iongest in the history of the U. A. W.—and i‘ was announced last night that they had accepted the Rand formula by a 2-1 vote, Union members in Chatham rot- ed 66 per cent, in favor of contract terms previously accepted by Windsor unionists. Approfimaiely 500 workers are employed at the Chntham plant. With about 1.500 persons pa;- tlclpatlng, unionists here today voted 62 per cent for acceptance of the settlement terms. As soon as the result vms announced, pickets were removed from the plant »gates. The Rand formula. evolved by Mr. Justice Ivan C__ Rand of the Supreme Court of Canada during the Ford Motor strikg last Jan- uary. calls for all employees. un- ion and non-union, to pay union dues through payroll deductions. in return for all voting privileges and participation in all benefits derived through union-manage- ment negotiations. E. C. Row. Chrysler vice-presi- dent and general manager, said it would fake a week to get the plant in shape for return of tho majority of workers. Maintenance men would be called to work immediately and others as soon as production could be started. “The agreement, in brief, in- eluded a lfl-cent-an-hour in- crease for all the company's Wind- sor 5.200 hourly-rated employees. and in addition the boas rate of Bil minimum-rated employees has been equalized by adding an addi- tional three cents to the general lfl-cent increase." he said. IIA-GIIT DOMINION No point in New Zoalsnd is more than 80 miles from tho sea. °§§.°M Flow: gasses-oi ' opened by President Truman next _ tho Paris Peace Conference. iieath 0f Well-knows Hotel ilianager THE LATE HARRY C. BROWN Edward Island Hospital last night after an illness of several weeks rmnager of the Queen Hotel. "ears ago, of the Victoria destroyed the chased the Queen time of his death. Mr. Brown by his assuming disposition made a host of friends who will extend sincere sympathy to his widow, the former Miss Alice Stevens of Truro, N.S.. in her bereavement. One sister Mrs. W. J. Archibald of Toronto also survives. Mr. Brown was a strong adher- ent of St. Paul's Anglican Church and also a member of the Masonic Order. Funeral arrangements had not been completed last. night, Loses Life In Car Crash PERTH. N.B., Oct. 17 —(CP)- Robert McNaily. 18, of Aroostcck Junction. suffered fatal injurks yesterday when a cor failed to make the turn at the Andover end of the Perth-Andover Highway Bridge and crashed against the steps of a theatre. The driver. Borden Lunn. escaped serious injury and was held as a material witness for an inquest here tomorrow night. lake Seven Men Into Custody TRENTON. N. J.. Oct. l7 (AP>—' State police here reported today that seven man had been vanested and charged with kidnap- ping and raping three girls and that {our otlvers were being sought The police said the girls were seized Wednesday night in noo- ton and taken to nearby Borden- town where. they said. they were NEW YORK, Oct. 17 —(AP)-— Tho United States announced today it would exercise s. "reai leadership" in working in the for United Notions general assembly toward the abolition of war and the establishment of peaceful moans of settling controversies among the countries of the world. ‘llhia policy statement was made by Warru: R. Austin. former Undi- ' ad States senator and chief Uh-ikd States delegate to U.N., at the|first - meeting of the American delegation. It came oa tOfM-anklng diplomats of 5i. countries pledged to keep " world peace. began converging on New York for tha United Nations ooounbly which will be Wednesday at.‘ Flushing Meadows. Th; statnnont come a few hours ‘ aftor secretory of state James 1-‘. Byrnos flew into Washington frntaan: r. Byrneo is expected to arrive in New York early nit woo! 10 PAGES i Subscription Gr Rulin N. B. And OTTAWA, Oct. 17 —(CP) —(Advance)— The Agricul- tural Prices Support Board will support the potato mar- ket in the surplus-producing provinces of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, the Agriculture Department announced today. The decision follows rep- resentations made in Ottawa early this month by a 30-man delegation representing po- tato growers in the five eastern provinces. . Chairman of the Board. J. G. 'I'aggart, said the price support will be provided by two methods. The first concerns potatoes for processing, chiefly into starch. and prices for these potatoes de- livered at factories will be 81.00 a 100 pounds for No. l grade. 80 cents a 100 pounds for No. 1 small and No. 2 potatoes. Exact prices for field run potatoes, containing of Mr, Harry C. Brown, owner and ' i? xvi The death occurred in the Pri-ncr Pyéugn l quiet. un- ‘ y different pcrcentagcs of No. 1's. be announced shortly. and titles purchased and times of delivery will be governed by fac- tory capacity. The second method of support- zng; prices is the Boards offer to Bu“ m winmpeg- sevemydmir buy No. l table potatoes in the Dcllvolfll ".00 Mill $5.00, other Provinces I U-LA. ".00 anied g Applies To P. E. Island‘ Murder Case Will Co To Jury Today LONDON. Oct. 17 -— (CP)_- Thomas South. 31, a glum little British army sergeant, testified today that he “went wild" when he found another man in his 1if"'| bedroom-and strangled him de- Sillte the efforts of his wife and their fiveryear-old son to end the death struggle. South to-id the story in pleading that o charge of murder in con- nection with the death of Herbert Joyce. 47. be reduced to inan- slaughter. He earlier told of coming homo from service in India because he had heard that his wife was in- volved with another man. The case wi-ll go to the jury to- ITIOITOW. BARROW-IN-FURNESS, Eng. -<CP)—Vicke'rs Armstrong, Ltd..i.i to spend £2,250,000 ($10.000.000l modernizing their shipyards here. the ‘Me M" BMW“ spring of 1947. ‘llhe offered price came to Charlottetown as manager for these L, gum per 75 pounds‘ g HM“ Pbm" 23 bagged. inspected and loaded on years ago and after the fire which ca“ at Shipping points 1n New “m” PM“? W" Brunswick and Prince Edward Is- H°m ‘Vhlch land. Delivery date and other par- hotel he managed right; up to the “cum” Wm be announced shori- Survey Shows 80 Per Cent Cash Sales OTTAWA, Oct. 17 - (OP) — The average boiui purchase, exclu. sire of payroll purchases, totals $851.10 on the basis of available returns from tits opening day's sales of Canada savings bonds, National Headquarters announced tonight as il reported total sales thus far re- corded for the first day nave react:- Bd $11,327,100. At. a comparable point in the ninth victory loan, the average in. dlvidual purchase was $910 96, but i-herc is a limit of $2.000 on mdlv- idual purchases oi Canada savings bonds and there was no ceiling on wlctory bond buying. Reported silos indicate a pre- iiininary total oi $4,777,250 for On. tario, 51.043450 for British Colum- bio; $l.374.400 for Alberta, $1,153,- 250 for Manitoba. and $976,060 for Quebec, Saskatchewan has report. ed $455,360, Nov»: Scotia $318,700. New Brunswick $217,350 and Prince Edward Island $95,700. Ir: Charlottetown, a survey of first-day sales showed more than g0 pey- cent; q: then: were cash transactions. Paton: Quebec province, it was reported that mveml payroll pur- chase plan unPs 8111803’ have 9*- ceedcd their total purchases for the ninth victory loan drive. "brutally beaten. roped and lob- bed.” State police said the girls were all from "good families" and wore 24, 22 and 20 years old. ‘Their names were not disclosed. Diplomats Converge On New York For Assembly Only Mr. Byrnes and Russia's Vyaeheslsv M. Molotov of the four- power foreign ministers will be here for the opening meeting of the scheduled six-week session. Mr. Molotov will arrive Monday aboard the Queen Elizabeth. which also is bringing Foreign Minister Dmitri Monullsky of the Ukraine and Air Secretary Philip Noel-Baker of Britain who will head Britain's delegation until F o r e l g r: Secretary Bevin arrives. Neither Mr. Bevin n01‘ For- eigz: Minister Georges Bidault. of France are expected until the as- sembly is well under way. Present indications are that Dr. Herbert Evatt. Australian foreign minister and thief antagonist of the veto. will not otbuid the assembly. it was Dr. Evatt who placed the veto question on the general as- sssnbly agenda for o new airing in an attempt to strip the five major countries of their power. QUANlKY Pacoucfioti tiliAPrus ANY (also: - lavsu Laws 9 HALIFAX. Oct 18 — (OP) — (Friday) -— Official inland “walling: forecast issued today the Do- minion Public Weather Oitfice at Halifax. l-lorecasrs valid until IPr-l.‘ day midiniflht. Prince Eklwoird Island, Ekastam Counties, Lower Saint John River Valley: Overcast with intermittent min today. Not much change in temperature. Light winds. High m. day at Charlottetown 50 Moncton 50, Fredericton 50 Saint John 52. Summary-Intelunitteirt rain. Upper Saint John Rives- Valley. Bay of Ghaleur: Cloudy today. In- tennlttesit rain tonight Modems, ing tempeimtltaes in the evening. Light winds. High today at. Oomp- bcllton 48. Summary - Cloudy followed by intermittent rain. TORONTO, Oct. 17 - (OP) Minimum and maximum: tmnperm- iures: Vancouver 3s —; Edmonton 27. 57; Regina 18, 5'1; vvinriilpeg 30. 54; Toronto 46, 47', Ottawa 35, 43; lvlonircci 40, ~13: Quebec 34. 46; Saint John: 52, —; Moncton El, 55; Halifax 52, 60; Charlottetown 51, 55; Sydney 45, 60; Yam-mouth 52. 50. High tide this morning at 4.34 and this evening at 6.50. Sun sets this aftomoor: at 5.1 and rises tomorrow morning a (SM. New moon October 24th. 632 PM. Summersido tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. AIR. SCHEDULE Charlottetown-Mouton --Loavo Charlottetown 8 A. M., 11.20 A. M, 6.15 P. M. Arrive Chlnuv-COCUWD 6.55 A. M. 1.35 P. M. 5.55 P. M. Ohariottetown—l~lhlifax- Charlottetown 1.45 P. M. arrive Charlottetown 4.55 P. M. Charlottetown -New Glasgow- uavo Charlofletown 7 A. M, 1.41 P. M. Arrive Charlotttom ll..1.l A. M.. 5.15 P. M. CAI. FERRY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND” Leave Borden at 9.06 Al, I PM and 4.80 P. M. Leave Tormentino 10.80 A. ll 3 P, M-. 7.80 P. M. Extra trips are made between on which automobiles sro carried. SUNDAY IIIVIOI Prom Borden, 1 P.1d, 0M P.1d. Prom ‘rorinentlno 8 P.1d. l P-ll WOOD ISLANDS-CAIIIOU lave Wood islands, dolly ‘i All. 8 All , l1 14., l PM" I ll. 1nd I Ill. llbfl Kb] R QM hi!!!‘ have _