, MAXIM! OI), MERE MAN uwmlllllll!) in aunallform. eneilaeoyyoffloldnila qgrlofleeown Guardian. uornlfl‘ Gllffillla FOG-IMO‘ "l1. TwnCeah \ Read by Eveybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew i CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1941 VIGOROUS THREE -WAY ATTACK ON GOVE u JWCYY" r 14 PAGES m. t». .--' a - ' i. -, n-w m ‘wwqp; FM!!! mother's evil qualities, a wise man corrects his own. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Subscription Delivered $0.00. Greek-Turkish Alli Over First Hump WM-TIINGTON. May 6—(APl_ The $400,000,000 Greek - Turkish ‘in program got over if; first hump in the House of Represen- itltircs today, even some of its m; voting to send it to the floor (or debate. A standing vote of 168 to M wcepted a lloceduro caning for nine hours of debate and un- limited attempts at amendments. Title was no test of the bill's intimate fate. but if it had been the other way around the effect would have ben to bar the blli from immediate consideration. In a letter State Secretary Mar- shall advised the House that the "greatest urgency" for aiding Greece and Turkey had been made “even more pcsltive" by the re- cent Moscow conference of foreign ministers. Coming Events "Now unloading last oar of hay for season. P. L. Morris, Kinkore. "Now in stock,’ choice Peace River oats. McGulgan and Boyle. "Dance. Bonshaw Hail, Wed- nosday nigiht, May 7th. Sale of lunches. "Now in stock. Asphalt Shingles and roofing. Also seeds and barb vnrc. L. S. Willis. New Haven. "l-‘nrnters you can still book W11’ mixed clover seed 70-15-15 for ‘ll cents ib at McGuigan do Boyle. "ROSETVP Wednesday. Septem- ber Q-lth for Kings County Plough- l-“S Mflitil and Fair at Dundas. "Dance and Box Social. P1988- ant Grove llall. iiloriday. May 12th. Aid of school. "Err Keliy’s Cross Play in Lot t5 llctll. Friday. May 9th. Curtain 8:30 PM. Dance after. ‘_'Car of asphalt shingles to arrive this week. Order early. F. J. Trainer. "iiuiitcr River Starch Factory is 110w opon lo pilrobase off grade potatoes. Deliveries accepted by ap- Mtriimont. "Bsriiartfs Store, Bradalibene. fur ihut Firestone Tire and Bat- "TY you need. Call aind get our ltrtccs. v"B0x Social and Dance in hrnon ~ River Hall. Wednesday, ilay Till, by C. W. L, lilillvictw Olthfsirzl, ‘ "Canoe Cove Players present three act play "Danny Boy" in Alton Hall, Thursday. May 8th. Mails and weather permitting. “Mwies in Hunter River. "Eut mi of Heaven". starring Bing “My and Joan Blondeil. Thurs- tlv. my imi. a P. n. "Bernard's Store. has a ship- ment of Sherwin Williams Paints Ind Oils just arrived Come to our store‘ in Bradalbane for your needs. ave it. "Unloading ear ‘killed eats. $8 per hundred will‘, today and tomorrow. ‘m! balls. N. Aubrey Cutcliffe, Y-tdericton. "Sailor Take Care", than act with weeemed by Cherry val. M Y- P. U. at Orwell Hail. PridI/Y, ‘Y M)» tinder auspice! a the "nfflsvlulat-ituie. Curtain 0.30. "PM Prince nlwua Island gllbmrlal executive of Women's zmiiiiihiry Societies will meet in ltflitlllurch on Friday. May 0th P-m» daylight saving time. fidlllresldenta are. asked to at- “Clipper" re- “mdiili live o“ Thumday §.‘_§§"°w= Bl-Inm ide on 1:» M‘: “emirates: till a r. u. m“. Beenell. Huntet aim ‘Mug; gay. ETITIOP Wigmere. ursday till train %,,T"‘"kihl service when roads ~ MacEwen and Cueley. Two Trainmen Killed In N. B. Den-ailment BRISTOL. N. 3., May 6—(CP)\. —'I‘wo lrianmen met death today as a result of derailment oi a Canadian Pacific Railway freight train one mile north of the C. P. R. station in this Carleton County village. The dead: Vinal Thornton, 58, of Woodstock, the conductor, and Robert Ketch. 22. Aroostock Juno. tion, a brakeman. ' Engineer Guy S. Downey, b7, Woodstock, suffered a hand frac- ture. leg injuries and possible rib fractures. He was admitted to hoqzltal at nearby Bath. where doctors reported his condition as favorable. . The other members of the crew, fireman Ernest Lewis, 28. Perth, and brakeman Dan Dewolfe, Si. Stephen, escaped injury. The wreck occurred on a 100- foot stretch of track undermined by freshet water of the recently swollen 5t. John River. All five crew members were in the locomotive cab at the time. Conductor Thornton was killed instantly. He jumped and became pinned between the tender and a ledge of the river bank. Three hours of work with acetylene torches were necessary to release his body. He is survived by his widow and three children. iVira. Thornton has been seriously ill. Brakeman Ketch died in ‘lus- pitai at Bath after suffering 1n- ternai injuries and an um frac- ture. He is survived by his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Shepherd Ketch, Aroostook Junction. and three sisters and two brothers. When the weakened track gave may. the engine. tender and six - of til long southbound freight potatoes. Greater Tragedy Averted A possibly greater tragedy was averted. aa a northbound passeng- er train had been due to pass over the same spot 45 minutes later. The land drops sharply to the river in that area. The passenger train waited here. Passengers and mall were carried the three miles from Bristol to Bail-i by taxi. A wrecking crew was engaged in salvage work tonight and expected to have temporary repairs completed by tomorrow a1’- terinoorl. A coroner. Dr. Tihomas Nugent, Bath, ordered an inquest to be held at Bath Monday night. RCMP. Corporal C.W. Prime, East Floroncevtllc. went to the scene. Medical men who iroatrd the ilIlflilPBd were doctors J.L. Lock- hart. John Lockhart and Ian Mc- Callum. of Barth. May Be Wreck 0f T.0.A. Plane VICTORIA. May 6 -(CP)-'I'the frigate H.M.C.S. Antigonlsh report- ed tonight. that it liad made an "undetermined contact" with anti- silbmarine detection equipment off the southeast coast of Gabriela Island-the area where the missing Trans-Canada Airline;- carryl-rig 15 persons is believed to have disap- peared eight clays ago. Search officials immediately started preparations to send a div- ing tender. accompanied by the ocean-going tug l-leafleerton. tothe location vmere the contact was made and which has been marked by a floating buoy. British Doctor Says England ls Starving LONDON, May S _ (AP) _ One of Britain's leading dictio- iane. Dr. Franklin Bicknell, eaid 105i? that "England la dying of starvation." "As asnation we must, liter- ally perish" unlell food Itocka improve. Biekneli wrote in the Medical Press. an independent weekly, Citing the “piteously thin shop girls," “undersized debilitated children" and what he deemed the bad temper and general laseltude of the whole popula- tion, Bickncll ealil the Govern- ment's nutritional surveys have “damned themselves by their own euphoria and mean noth- lng." A apokeema for the Medical Press said the publication ex- pected to present opposing views later. Tile Government's posi- tion has been that, ‘in spite of admittedly short rations. Brit- ain's over-all health was bet- ter tharl before the war because of more equitable distribution of foods. Blcknell described Britain as the worst-fed country in we“. ern Europe, including Germany. He said everyone in the coun- try was suffering from "p". longed. chronic malnutrition.” "The 40-hour work. no Satur. lily’ work. shops closing for over an hour at mid-day, the very low output. of work. Ire all the unconscious reeulf. of star- vation forcing the worker to conserve his enemy." be laid. tree . t own Business Line May lint Be Able To Handle All Freight Because 0f Equipment Shortage llueen’s To Be Only Double Constituency UITAWA. May 5- (Spool-sin. With tho adoption today by the redistr button committee of the Commons of the report of th! Nova Sootln sub-committee. the riding of Queen's. Prince Edward Island will he the sole double constituency in the Dominion of Canada after the Redistribution Act is passed. Halifax. which is one of the two remaining double constituencies in the country will be apllit by the Redistribution Act into the new single riding: of Halifax City and Halifax-Dartmouth. Nova Scotra will also gain a_ new seat which will adopt the name of Queen's- Shelburne. Opposition to the sub-commit- tee report today came from A. J. Brooks, Progressive Conservative member for Royal. NB. who con- tended that instead of creating s new riding on the mainland of Nova Scotla. the extra seat which Nova Souths is allotted should go to Cape Breton Island. "Cape Breton South is a riding with a population of 8211b," Gal. Brooks said. "It is being tinkcred (Continued oin Page 5 O01. 5) N.B. Capital Considers Site For New Airport -1i" FREDERICION. May 6 -(CP)— Deprived of adequate air t nspor- tetioin facilities, Fredericton reti- dents appeared tonight to have somewhat brighter prospects. Steps taken by the City Council brawl-it e suitable airfield closer to realization. Coupled with city action was the assistance of further consideration by Reeonetnretion Munster Howe to construction of an airport at one of two sites to which his Depart- ment hdd given approval. ‘They are Lincoln and Rueagonia. ‘Iihe city's action took the form of a decision to proceed along the lines suggested to Mayor Ray T. Pwbes in conesporldenca reed i0 night from both Mr. Howe and Fisheries Minister Bridles. New Bnlncwiolt‘; representative in the Fedegal Cabinet. m A our airport comm ee we; set up To meet the Provincial Government, officials of the De- partment of Transport and Mr, Bridges to study the question furth- GI. . Mayor Forbes named Alderman G. Everett Chalmers. A.W. mouilb- es and Veain C. Bastin u the other three members of the new commit- tee. Municipal-provincial eo-operaéw was necessary. together with - erai anietuloe. if an airport was to materialize, it was pointed out. The cost of developing the Lla- coln site would ermine t0 81.800.- 000 while the one in the is area would total slightly more tlhm $2,000,000. rlve-thousand-feot runways would be possible at either but for more practical pun poees it was allaeeeterl the Lincoln location was the better from sev- eral etetndpolnfa. It la on the paved why!“ jllt beyond the city lim- Finel selection would rest with‘ the city and New Brunswick lov- ernment, dqmldirlgto what lengths they were peppered to l0 l0 l!" light of lib aviation needs cf Fredericton. BEHIND BARS AGAIN Behind bars again after plead- ing guilty to uttering forged che- ques worth more than $17,000 is Lucius Parmalce, shown here. Said to be one of the ailckest confidence men in flle last half- century. Parmalee was picked up 35 miles from Ottawa after cash: lng four cheques at city banks. lie Necessity For Large ll. Ii. Force NEW YORK, May 6 -- (AP) — Gen. Joseph T. McNarney. chief United States section. military staff committee. United Nations, told a press conference today there was no necessity for the United Nations to have an armed force powerful ‘enough to defeat a major‘ power. He said that if the need for fighting a major country arose it would mean "war and nothing but war." . By JOHN LEBLANC OTTAWA. May 6 - ICE‘) Improved prospects for the haili- ing of Western grain this year were reported to the Board of Transport Commissioners today. Wbile,teiiing the Board the Canadian National Railways prob- ably would have to turn down . contrary. it got sway “from lP. Llslanil‘ For Move To Out Sadat Training OTTAWA. May 6 —-(CP>—Prer-n. ier Drew of Ontario dlatged today that Communist activities were be- hind efforts to abolish school ca- det training and asserted that. they would never accomplish their pur- pose in Ontario as long as he was prcnller. He also told the Ottawa. Wom- enfa CanadlamClub a Communist- pronloted Federation of Labor You/tin had stirred up tire juvenile protests against the price increase in chocolate bars to eight cents. Premier Drew urged study by all Canadians of the purposes of com- munism and of organizations such as the Federation for Reconcilia- tion. the Women's League for Peace and Democracy and “others with vague names" which took ad- vantage of well-meaning people anxious to aid a. worthy cause but in reality failing into the Ccm- munist pattern. Urging a. dynamic democracy. he upheld. cadet training as a method for lncuilcatlng a basic sense of ve- sporlsibillty in citizenship. Its pur- pose was not militaristic. On tire th s rnawkieh nonsense" WhIQhDYEBChPd tlhat youth should be allowed to fol- low its ovm whims without being taught the advantages of the Can- adian hart-tate- 26 Loans Under Veterans’ Act ’ ~" "o... . . oirraws. May 0- neckli- Prlnce Edward Island veterans are taking advantage of the Vet- erans Business and Professional Loan Act, it is noted in a report of the status of veterans loans is- sued today by the Veterans Affairs Department. In all Canada. a total of 1.763 veterans have availed thee-nselves of these loans which as of today total sameness. A report {rem Charlottetown district which in- cludes all of the Island. 26 iovms aggregating $33,601, have been made to P.E.I. veterans. The new loans are arranged through the chartered banks with a maxi-mum interest rate of five per cent and with a ceiling of $3.000 and l maximum term of 10 years. ’i‘llcy some freight business for lack of equipment. Stanley F. Dingle. C. N. R. chief of transportation, said it would handle more West- ern grain than last year's 168.431 cars. j Mr. Dingle did not estimate how much grain the national line would be able to transport this year. His evidence indicated the utilization of freight cans in this service was hampered by the fact there had been no major improvement in the speed of load- ing elevators in the last l2 years. Another source of delay in the handling of freight cars, he told the Board. came when cars carry- ing export products were held up at ports awaiting ships. He men- tioned Hallfax and Saint John. (Continued on lfizgezTColibl T 15 Veterans liouses As War Moiilerial OTTAWA. May 6 — (CP) War-battered Eustibourne. England. is building 15 houses for disabled ex-servicemcn as a war memorial and would welcome the aid of any Canadian troops who have mem- ories of that "front-line" city and went to help. The Defence Department today j that plan in a letter from E. C. Martin. Dastbourne‘: mayor. who said the homes. to cost an aver- “; o; £1,300 (approximately $5.200) each, would be built as a memorial mt only to those who 106i? m!" lives but also to the many Dem- inlon and Allied trawl W10 7°‘ memibered Eaatbourne as their train- ing ground. , I Bliss FLOUR w: iiiiinii 4| have been of particular value to young men setting themselves up in business or to your: dvclqrs- dentists and lawyers getting themselves established. Six Fatalities In Ontario Yesterday TORONTO. May 6 — (CPI -— slx persons met death in Ontario today from a variety of mishoPS, two being fatally burned. Mrs. David Bcucherand her nine- yerr-old son were burned to deal-h at their home at Britt, 60 miles n-crtll of Parry Sound. The body of John Hamilton '11, was found in Lake Ontario near here and Leonard Dusome. Z2. was drowned when his canoe capsized near Penotang. The death of live-year-old Carol Lytwyn at Windsor was due to coal g“ fumee and at Toronto 79-year- oid Ida, Mouan was killed when strung by u, street car as she WM crossing the street. eeiile To Observe r Victoria ll-ay May 24 NEW GLASGOW. N. 5., May 8 -(CiP)—-Merchants of New Glas- gow decided today to observe Victoria Day on the traditional May 24 rather than follow the lead of the City of Halifax and observe it May 26. - Halifax City Council decided to observe the later date because it falls on a Monday and would give workers a long week-end. C NADA M J.M. Macilonnell Says lint “Great Glasses” Who Pay i OTTAWA. May 6 _- (OP) J. M. Macdonncll. Progressive Conservative financial critic and member for Muskoka-Ontario. said today in the Commons Fin-i ance Minister Abbott had done nothing in his budget to help, the “great classes" of people tvllo, did not, pay income taxes made their financial contribution though indirect levies. The position of these people, said Mr. Macdonneil was “wors- ened if anything" by the budget. which placed emphasis on reduc- tion in income taxes and lcft other levies generally unchanged i Launching the traditional bud- get debate, he welcomed ivhst Mr. Abbott had done for the "middle- income" mun. who earned from $2.000 to $7.500 yearly. It had been said that while the middleq income man was strong, the state j was strong. But, he was more concerned about, things that had not been done. Those who paid their taxes indirectly were “sufferlng“ because they become imbued dur- ing the war with the idea that the “big money" would continue and that prices would be kept down. , Finance Minister Abbott had} left the people with the feeling that everything was going good and if it wasrrt nothing could be done aboutlit. However. Mr. Abbott had left himself a gap. He had said that,- States Canada would have. trou- ble. Mr. Macdonnell said the statement was true and Canada should be preparing now for such possible trouble. 18 Millions To Aid Farmers In Britain LONDON, May 6 — (Reuters) --. The government will set aside about‘ $13,300,000 for payment during the‘ comifll ylar to farmers hard hitf by blizzard: Mid floods last winter.) it was disclosed lodav with pub-i llcatiori of the we: of the agriculture (emergency payments) bill presented to the Commons y-rs- terdiay by Agriculture Minister Wil- liams. l lleeaptured After 15 Years Freedom MARYSVLIE. 0.. May e _.(A_p) -Nearl 13 years of freedom ended last nlglt for Mmgaret Ann Martin,i 39. who was returned to the Ohioi RBfOPmMOly for Women to resumei SWWHK a one to 20-year cheque-i forgery sentence. , The woman. who escaped from, the institution in 1934. was brought‘, back fro-m Toledo by Miss Netta‘ Hill. chief parole officer". , Mrs. lviarguertte Rclllcy, Slipfffi, lntericient of the Reformatory. said, _the prisoner would be presented to. the parole board zit its next n1€et-. 111g. early in June. Mrs. Rcliiey said‘ it would be up ta the parole board. ‘to determine lrcw nlizcli longer shci, wouid have to serve. ‘ JOHN. N. n. May s - 31. of hospital suffered , | SAINT (OH-William Jackson, Gondola Point. died in hero tonight of injuries collided with a bus near his homo. Still in serious condition is father, Sylvester Jackson. 62, in- jured in the same accident. but i it ‘values wont-baa monk United ‘ Monday when a car hc was drlfing .1110 last four months, a spokesman his lety said today. During April. 3.410 hing In Budget To Benefit Muoli in indirect Taxes. Mr. J. M. Macdonell Mines Minister Ourrie Warns Striking Miners HALIFAX, May 6 - (OP) - Mines . Minister L, It. _, Legislature‘ Y.‘ ' the generalvpublie “is not going lo Tolerate" conduct such as that by striking Nova Scotia. coal miners in cutting off coal supplies to the Allan Shaft power-house at Stellarton, N.S. lie made the statement at the some time as he had made a request to the district Irv of the United Mine Workers (CCL) to reconaid their action which would choke off power used to operate pumps and hoists and provide maintenance in the Acadia Coal Company mine. Re said authorities were of the ‘opinion that if the mine normally employing nearly 500 men is closed it will be closed forever. Mr. Currie said he had been in touch with Harold Gordon. general manager for coal of the parent Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation, who had told him that only sufficient coal was nn hand to last until to- IIWITOW’. Bridge On St. John River Swept Away GRAND FALLS. N. B. May 7-- tWrdns-sdavi—(C'P)—I"lood waters of the swollen St. John Rive: have swept array o. steel highway bfidfle at PO\\'€l'S Crock. four miles above this tcwn on No. 2 Trans-Canada Highway, it was learned early to- "lv. 'I‘raific was diverted across the s. Iilafnc border for re-crossing into New Briiirsivick at St. Leonard. MANY FAMINE DEATHS SHANGHAI. May 6 -—tReut0rsi —More than 8.000 bodies of dee- tliuie Cliiltossi chlldrm were pick- 0d up lil,tho streets of Shanghai in of nhe Shangihat Benevolent Soc- corpses were found of ivuhlch 3.048 were children. ' French Soc BY ROBERT C. WILSON PARIS. May '7 - twednesday) - (AP) -- The National Council of the French Socialist Party decided today by a 252940-1125 vote that Premier Paul Ra-madierfis coalition cabinet. from which the Communists have been rusted should remain in gffll‘ f‘. ‘The vote Yoliowrwi a seven-hour discussion climaxod by speeches by Ramadicr and fnnmcr Prcmlcr Loon Bium. Both Socialist. leaders asked that the plY-Sent Gpvcfrifllcnt be maintained in power. Ramadivr said: "If the National Council demand- ed I resign. l would sign tomorrow my letter of reslgination and submit it to Vincent Mlrlol (president of lilo rcpiblic) but ln doing so I would feel as l.f I were, signing the abdication of e republic." It wfis r-cu-d that To Support Ramadier ialists Vote isocislists‘ decision might have far- reachlng influence on the political fuillro not‘ only of France but also of Western Europe. The National Council's voio rat- ‘ified the track-end decision of socialist i-hiefs lo drop Com- munist; from the cabinet. Many Frenchmen saw the situat- ion mll- the. same as the Cbnser- vativo -i wspapcr Le Monde, which i-olmlicnlrd itirit if the Socialists "cdpitlllate lxfol-e the Conlmunista it will he their own end, and we will have in France two opposing ‘blocs like those already opposed to ionc another in thg world." High Socialist epmces predicted that the Council. would approve Ramadiors action. but only after- .u truggle between the left-wing 7.9a "sis and more moderate cle- ' led by Rarnadie: and former Mail $5.00, RN MEN T Blames Communists Speak; In Suppgrt Qf Tghargeiudget . Low Income Group] cesarean: 1st“... l" other Provineea L U. I. A. I100 Of No Benefit To Two Million (By George Kitchen) UITAWA, May 6—(CP)—A Vi!" iorous, three-party attack on the JGoVernment for failure to remove tor reduce indirect. taxes in the 1947-48 budget developed in the ,Commons today as the traditional budget debate was opened. spokesmen from the Progres- sive Conservative, C.C.F. and Social Credit benches criticized ithe administration on the grounds it had confined its tax relief to income tax rates and thereby had provided no benefit for the 2,000.- 000 wage-earners who made lilEil‘ contribution through “hidden and nuisance" taxes. The criticism was supported by customary want-of-confiderice mo- lions moved by the Progressive iconsorvative and C.C.‘F. parties in {the form of amendments to the main motion to go into committee stage on the budget resolutions. Solon 10w. Social Credit leader, whose group is prevented by House rules from moving such a motion at this time. said the re- tention of indirect taxes mean; for those below the income-tax pay- ing wage brackets “nothiiig" ex- cept "higher lrving costs" for‘- some months to come. _ At: the opening, the House gave third and final reading to two Government bills. one maklnlr minor amendments to the Canada Evidence Act and. the other res- cinding the much-criticized. Crin- ese Immigration Act. which dras- tically restricted the entry o! Chinese into Canada. Both new id Mr. J. M. Macdonnell. P.C., Mus- kokq, said he welcomed what Fin- ance Minister Abbott did for those with "middle" incomes of from $3,000 to $7,500 yearly but added that the "Heat class" of the com- munity that was affected mainly by indirect taxation found their (Oclltinued on Page ii on si- ‘fiwareilf; ‘ i ,i'~pnasst,mllrlefiei i 1'0 Until! Gilly." bfstiovlsyfiest" “item tsetse; - Altai TORONTO. May 6 - tOPi—- Minimum and maximum tempera- tures: Vancouver 4-5. 70; Edmon- ton 34. 64; Regina 28. 55; Winn‘.- pez 33. 47; Toronto 49, 56; Ottawa 49, 65; Montreal 5i. 62; Quebec d0, 47; Saint John 48. 55; Moncton 5-1. 63; Halifax 47, G3; Charlottetolvn 53. G0; Sydney 56. 63; Yarmoulh lls, 5a. , IIALIFAX. May T —-tCP)—(Tucs- dflyl-Weather synopsis and ofilc- ial inland forecasts issued by the Duninion Plllic Walther Office here at 12:15 A.l\i. today. Synopsis: The last of a long scr- los of disturbances is moving north- ward across Gaspe toward Northern Quebec. Clearing conditions art- forecast for the lvlaritimes as drier air moves into the district and clears out the fog anrficloud. Tem- peraiurts will rise to near 60 in tho afternoon but will fail sharply in. the evening. Forecasts. valid lmtil Wednesday midnight: Prince Edward Island-Overcast. clearing in the morning. Cooler Wednesday nigihi. Southwest winds 15. High Wednesday at Cilarlotic- town 60. High tide this afteii-noctn at 12.25 and tonight at 11.49. Sun sets this evening at, 7.11 and rises tomorrow morning at 4.40. Last quarter moon May 13th. 3,03 A. M. Silmmerrdde tide eishtrfli m" mo; later than Charlottetown CAR FERRY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND" Dally Except Sunday- Lesve Borden at 8.40 A.M-. 1 PM 4.30 P. M. Leave Tonmenilne at 10.05 A. M 2.40 P. Ni.- 730 P. M. SUNDAY Leave Borden 6.45 P. M. ci- l.-n Bfum. Leave Tormciiiinc 800 P. M‘. abate, -'- 3- .......;.....$.. ..._-. t... ugeaavvoaw-u