- Wire MAXIMS or A MERE MAN ‘the more fooliab s more lnlolflt ho ITO!!- aiaalauu Guardian. he Cash. [mung Guardian. Founded III. Read by Everybody . Covers lfrince Edward Island Like the Dew Cl-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY. JUNE s. 1941 w 12 PAGES He ti certainly who whirlwind. evil by the dangers of others- MAXIMS I 01A MERE MAN . Subscription Delivered 86.00. ‘ Mall 16.00, other Provlncea b U. l. A. (1.00 BELIEVE BRITISH PLAN FOR INDIA IS ACCEPTED opposition Attacks Importation or Alien Lgbor fin Dounefl ille ilorsemeat Supplies Going To Europe OTTAWA, June L-tspeolal) Prices Board and Agriculture Dc- pinment officials today held out little hope for the improvement ‘llllllffi of horscmeat for feed- lfl~l w: animals on the fur farms a: ‘Ilf’ Maritlmes and other parts Europe consumption had drastic- dcwn supplies of this _v for fur ranches. While illSillPSS has undergone a that agents of . neat. canning plants at Swift (llym- and Edmonton had left t... Ifuyripn szeeking new. orders for t; r precincts. Bureau of Statistics ofliclals ,_,»_,.l tfldfly that for the past two W” some 50,000 horses had .__.._ wtcilntinued on Page 5 COL 5) Coming Events "Tniklt-S - Millvtew. Thursday. "lalkirs - Eldon, Friday. "Talkies - Morell, Saturday. "TalkIesJ-‘Unze ‘Cove, Wed- nesday. , 1 _) _ "Dance in Curran Ban l-fall. June 4th. Good lmlldld- ."Dar.ce, Holy Name 8111.5!- Poll-pg Bay, Wednesday, June 4th. .€.2.Cnilccil.ilK_,_l-10§§ each W000“- ._ morning for Canada Packers. nobt. Dawson. Crapaud. "Legion Dance, Cardigan Hall. Wednesday, Juno 4th. Wdbllfil‘! (lrclicstrs. "Rtgulnr Dance. M00008“? Curling Rink. Thursday. D00 lllosscrs Orchestra. "This store will be closed everl’ Wednesday. 12.30, for summer .".lllll‘.llS. A. P. Gallant, Rustlco- "Kingston H811. FNGIY- 5W” Sift. Milton A. Y. P. A. P103191‘! W9‘ Milt "Uncle Josh'Perki.ns'. Special- tics. "Loading Hogs at Fredericton every Thursday till 11 A, M. Col- vilo till 11.30. D. L. McDonald. "llovies—l-funter River. WQQ-llu‘ day. New Glasgow. ‘Ilnursday- "F?" and Border Bandits“. A double fes- llltc programme. "Klnkora Dramatic Club P?!" rants "Lena Rivers" in Klnkvfl iloil Wednesday, Juno 4. 3 9-m- allti B30 p.m. "Hunter River Y.P.U. Drown" ‘Aunt Tillie Goes to Town. lllsflhli‘ Hall, Tuesday, June 3rd. azo pm, "Attsnlian! Everyone come to Isrrington Variety b “'1 North Hall. naaaaar, Sale of lunches. "spanal this week. Robin Hood. Pliny anti Five Roses flour. $2.00 l" b1: R. L. Dickleson. “Unloading cars bran. shorts. ‘Zlllvlini-at. oats and Pioneer (illCk rwnrler, grower, laying mash "l1 mg starter and grower. Priced ll sell R L. Dickieson. “Commencing Wednesday. JllllE 41h, olii- stores will be closed ev- f?’ llrtlnrsday at noon until fur- Wr notion. R. L. Dickieaon and l‘. S. Dinlzwell. "Se" Summerside Baptist Play- al in "Aunt Tillie Goes to Town.’ “florid-av. Jllflld 4th. aw P. u. Cllarlotlrtoivn Baptist Hall. All-l- llto B. Y. P. u. “We have a vary few can of W891i number one feed data in ‘"1 sacks for shipment from “Mo. when meana Quality Oats. c for Brice. m Atlas Grain "mushy. Board or Trade auudlnu. ontreal. "Lllsdlna live r1 Thursday ll follows: Summer-sol‘; till 1.80 wlii- Kenalngtorl till a P.1d. m“ BI-gnall, Hunter River hrgdav all day. 2.1mm- Wigaiora. "h; "bane, Thursday till train mh7"l=klha aarviaa when roads ‘I- “when and a At a special meeting of the City Ooilncll last night, discussion w." held on the matter of the location of the bleachers at the Memorial Playsrlound at Victoria Pork. The meeting. which was attend- cd by all the Councillors, was prg. sided over by His Worship B. Earle MacDonald. = Col. WJW. Reid. speaking on be- half of the Playground Commis- sion stated that the promised loc- atlon of the bleachers on the north aide of the field was impossible if the Victoria Driving Club woe to maintain their racing strip in its PRlQnt position. Col. Reid wont on to relate the reasons why the bleachers must he built 0n the north side. He further stated ‘hat the purpose of the field is to bring back athletics to Charlottetown ""0 that he was in favor tit having the property. which is Crown land. for this purpose. Col. Reid laid that he was willing to cn-operute with the horsemen and if anything could be done to reach a decision favourable to all. he would be glad to help. Willard Kelly. speaking on- belhalf of the Victoria Driving Club. sold that all they wanted was a strip of flat land 80 feet wide and at least u quarter of a mile long. He offered the suggestion that some of the trees might be cut. down to make more spare. There was some general riisrus- sion of the possibilities of lacing in cther locations lmd it tvas d:- Clded that a committee be appoint- ed from the Ccunzil to look into and settle the disomaiori about the present set-up. k t u f The Mayor as ed, he :nric o:- thelt Llndfyfdudl" opiu o and -they were all in favor cf the playground going ahead as planned it the rac- ing strip was interfering. A com- mittee comprising Coun. Stewart, Conn. Dougazl and Coun. Mac- Donald was appolntdd to accom- pany Col. Reid and Mr. Kelly to the park last evening to. look into the matter. The Street Committee brought in the following resolution. "That the Island Construction Co. Ltd. betauthorised to place stnzie chips on our asphalt per their tender price of .l’l ctnts per yard, ard the patching neces- sary before these chips he placed on the streets not to exceed cost plus 10 per cent. The streets to be stone chipped to be determined by the Street Committee." The reso- llrS-or. which was moved by Coun. Dougan and seconded b!’ Coun- Stewart, was passed ry the Coun- cil. Dlalnls United States ls Importing Uranium MOSCOW, Juno 2—The maga- zine New Times asserted today that the United States was im- porting uranium from the Belgian Congo. "At present the Belgian Congo has factually become the property of American monopolists. the supplier of raw material for mking atomic bombs which serve as a weapon of foreign political blackmail and preparation for ttcle contended. street surface as‘ Unexpected Death morial Playground Bleachers 0f Sheriff Wright f i l i i i l Mr. Fred J. E. Wright, (above). »Sheriff for Prince County. died at _h_is home in Summerslde last lnrght. He was 70 years old. Al- lthough Mr. Wright, well-known [figure in the western section of the Province for many years, had been unwell for several months his death was unexpected. Until shrrtlyl hafcre he passed away he appeared tn be in his usual health. He had heen sheriff for a great rnany years and i-n addition was o. well lmown horse racing offi- cial. As a younger man he drove race horses but it was an official at race meeta that he was beat known in present-day racing circles. His passing will com; as a dlstlnct,__ahock t the former Cora Davlson, and b_~; a sister, Ml-ss Minnie Wright, 3;... of Summerside. Funeral arrangements had not been completed last night. Filleting Machine ‘Wins 1947 Award BOSTON. June 2 (C?) — A lhigtl-speed alltctnatfc fish fillet- llng machine developed by Atlantic iCoast Fisheries Company won the i184"! award for the nation‘; out- lstunding achievement in food tggh. nology at the seventh annual con- ference of the Institute of Food Technologists here today. The company said the machine. which required 20 years of research, can Iillet 4.5 haddock or '15 roseflsh n minute, and improvements are being made which will rtep up production to 200 whiting fillets per minute. The award. presented by 8!.‘ Proctor oi’ the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, w-ia accept- ed by Ell. Cooley, president of the company. DARWIN. Australia - lCP) - The world's largest airplanes can land End take off at. largezt airport here. Tiir main runway is 10,030 fest long and small craft must land near the centre ior lmperiallstic aggression." the ar- lfear of wearing out their tail skids ltaxilrg to the hangars. Year Vit By JOHN P. MeKNIGHT VATICAN CITY. June 2—-(AP) --—Pope Pius today warned the major powers of the world that the remaining months of mr-a your that "future generations will either biesa or curse"-migbt be their "last opportunity" to chart an enduring peace. In his hardest-hitting speech in years, he said the world had fail- ed humillatlnkly thus far in 194"! to aolva its war-born problems. "The wounds caused by the war have not yet been healed." the slender, '11-year-old Pope said. "Indeed, some of them have rath- ur bean deepened and Jnfiamed. The Ponttff assorted that the verdict of hiatory would hlnlfl 0h "events and discussions!‘ durinl the balance of the year. and ura- ad "wars of tliienlstatcs not to le: slip ophoru l’. "It may be-God forbid-the last opportunity.” he added. The Pope delivered his 30-min- ute addresa. which was broadcast by the Vatican radio. "Om h" red-und-gold private library 0" the occasion of his aunt's day. at. Eugene. Seventeen members of the College of Cardinals were present. papa Pius asserted that much 7;” mg during the. war about a Pope Pius Sees This al ToPeace universal prosperity which would result from an Allied victory. “But where is it?" he asked. "Where are. indeed, countries where the wheels of industry turn rapidly and work without ‘intar- ruption and at a maximum capa- city. "Production. o v e r ~ production. that. is the golden key, the sesame, the secret formula that would wipe out the last traces of the cvils of the war and fill up the craters it made. “But the prosperity of nations cannot be safe and secure if all do not share in it. Hence it is not unlikely that. idleness and the impossibility of commerce in which some nations find them- selves placed will automatihlly cause in the near future economic crises and unemployment even in other nations aa well." The Pope said that millions of péople were still living "under oppression and despotic rule," while the world waited for lua- tico and law to create stpbla con- ditlons. "For- them nothing is safe. neither home, nor IONS. nor lib- erty, nor honor." he said. "Thus the last ray of happiness, the lall spark of courage dies in their hearts." 3f"! '" i He ‘is survived y hlrwldo/w. Heat Wave Breaks Records In London C (By The Canadian Prom LONDON. June 2-London fa sweating it out again. The temperature la soaring and old man weather's to blame. Sweltering in a heat wave for more than a. week, Lon-- donors today had the sultry satisfaction of knowing that it really was as bad as it seem- ed. Records 90 years old were broken by thermometers at both suburban Kew Gardens and atop tho Air Ministry, not far from Trafalgar Square. At Kew, the unprecedented figure for June of D0 degrees _ was reached while the Air Ministry went one better to 90. This was one degree more than the Ministry's previous June high. reached June Z2. 1041. Reports from acroaa central and western Europe indicated the same heat wave in force. At. a. Roman Catholic dem- onstration in Vienna 40 per- sona fainted in a temperature of 86 degrees. while ut Brus- pfi-Qfliflliiflllfiilluium‘ temperatures were noted. But Moscow expects frost. Last night the thermometer fell 43 degrees, followed by predictions of even cooler weather. It may l"! u" 50' ginning of a cool s?!" "WI"! westward. Cooler weather was predict- ed for tomorrow in Erlslflld- Huge Scrap Rubber Fire lloar London LONDON, June 2—Thousands of tons of Government-owned scrap rubber caught fire in a dump l5 miles southeast of Lon- don tonlght. The blaze was one o1 the largest ln the London ares since the blitz. Donvietion 0f Mayor Durley ls Upheld WASIHNGTON, June 2—(AP)-— The Unted States Supreme Cour: today in effect upheld the con- viction of Mayor James M. Cur- AusTl-alirs ' lay of Boston on mail fraud charges. The court refused a request by Curley that it review and reverse a deciaion~ by the Uni-ted States Court of Appeals here which affirmed his conviction. The ra- fusal leaves the Court of Appeals decision in effect. The 72-year-old Mayor was sen- tensed to six to l8 months in Jail and fined 01.000. - Curleyh counsel may ask the Supreme Court to reconsider it: refusal, but such requests are rarely granted. Court rules allow them 3 days to act. WILL NOT BIZ-SIGN BOGIION. June Z-(Alfi-Mayor Jbmaa H. Curley lindtcated today ho had no intention of resigning —aven though he might have to zun this city of 800.000 from Jail. Neither has he any intention of going to Jail and acceptinu defeat in his flght against a Washington fraud conviction. Within l0 days. lie told reporters, his counsel will exhaust their final manoeuvre. a petition to the United Status supreme Court to reconsider to- day's denial of an appeal. Ontario Grain Crops Hard Hit By Weather Provlnee’s Minister 0f Agriculture Says llls Department ls Worried Dver Situation. ‘DALHOUSII GOAL IN SIGHT TORONTO, June Ll-Incessant, rains following the cold wet spring with its serious effect on Canadian grain crops resulted to- day in arrangements being made for a national conference on feed glalns at Ottawa June ll. Directors of the Ontario Fed- eration of ,Agrlculture. meeting while Ontario Agriculture Minis- ter Kennedy said that '70 per cent of Ontario's feed grain crops may be lost_thla year. made arrange- ments for the Ottawa. meeting sponsored by the Canadian Fed- eration of Agriculture. “Consumers may face a short- age of fruits. vegetables. beef, porkjeggs, milk, cheese and but- ter during the coming autumn and winter as a result of contin- ued rain and cold weather," said Robert Norrison oi’ Alvinson. first vlcel-president o! the Ontario Fed- eration of Agriculture. Lively Debate Flares Up In The Commons (By John LeBllnc) UITAWA, June 2 - (CP)-_A prolonged and bitter debate sprang up in the Commons today over the import of European "displac- ed persons" under private labor contract» with two Cabinet Mm.‘ istersfendlng of! attack: from the three major Opposition pa:- tles in a battle that raged for hours. Touched off by M. J. Coldweii. 0.0.1“. leader, on a motion to dis. cuss an issue of "urgent pubiic importance," the debate centrrd about the transfer to Canada of 100 Polish girls to work in ten. tile mills at St. Georges de Beaure, Que, owned by Ludger Dionne, Liberal member of the Commons for Beauce. From the Opposition benches. six members criticized the gov- ernment's action in the Beaura case some of them holding the incident an example of a lack of immigration policy. Labor Minister Mitchell and Farm Income Cut "Farmers are faced with a con- I siderably reduced income as result. of weather conditions. Aj year's work may bring farm fam- i ilies only six months‘ income! Farm people would face a si uat- ion comparable to that face by an urban family ulhosc income ulas cur. ofl for six months." Heavy week-end rains over most of Ontario continued without lot- up tonight. runnins.._into their second 24 hours. Upwarda of two inches fell since Saturday but the rains were expected to stop Tuesday with clear and cool weather following. But what's desperately needed is warm sun- shine. Over the whole Province, Agriculture lllinlster Kennedy estimated that 60 per cent of acreage sown to feed grains had been seeded but that only hall’ of thla acreage will be harvested-in other words, the best that could be hoped for was a yield on 30 per cent of Ontario's 3.230.000 feed grain acres. Reconstruction Minister Howe- temporarlly in charge of immigra- tion-defended the action. Wfr. Howe declaring the Beauce lgis- later-industrialist was putting iri- to practice the "liberalized" immi- gration policy of the Government. They were joined by Antllbll‘! Hlynka (SC-Vegreville)— himself an immigrant from the Ukraine- who split on the issue with Solon Low, Social Credit leader. whqde- clared immigration should no} be run by "vested interests." One Opposition member, T. L. Church suggested Mr. Dionne might lose his seat, as he possibly had con- travened his privileges as a mem- bar in arranging tn bring the girls to Canada. the House as the deb é developed’ around his acuozi; he had return- ed from Europe only over the week-end, flying to Montreal with the final batch of 30 Slavic girls destined for his mills. l Because of his absence, both Mr Mitchell and Mr. Howe suggested OIFIPIgIs "aafir While fruits and vegetables so far have not been hurt to an ex- tent comparable with the loss of grain seeding, reports from the Niagara peninsula tonight were that the loss to cherry trees might be upwards of 90 per cent. ‘This damage ls caused by a fungus‘ which flourishes in rainy weather , -either stem rot or blossom 5 blight. , l On the whole Ontario situation the Department of Agriculture is "terribly worried." said Mr. Ken- nedy, and desperate efforts to set every available pound of seed in- to the ground "somehow, some way." are being made. l i Egypt's Gotten Drop iiaril llit 0v Warm CAIRO. June 2--lR.eutersi—- About 1,200,000 acres of Egypt's total cotton cultivated area of 1.500.000 acres have been affected by a “devastating" cotton worm attack. an Agriculture Ministry official disclosed tonight, ft is the worst attack in 8 years, he said. HALIFAX. June Z—(OP)— The major portion of the 83.000000 Dclhousio University is seeking for expansion “ia well in sight." J. McG. Stewart. chairman of the extension appeal committee. said here tonight. _ Although the general canvass in the Halifax-Dartmouth area end- ed officially Saturday night the appeal was delayed in other Im- portant centraa and it would not be possible to make an accurate appraisal of the measure of auc- ceas before the middle o! June. laid so. Stewart. Duteh Farm Workers Going To Dntario (By The Canadian Press) CHATHAM, Ont, June 2—Fai-m worker emigrants from Holland. totalling 1.000 including their families. are expected to arrive at Montreal Juno 27 to work in the fields in Kcnt County. it was announced tonight by V, Q, MC. Gufgan, chairman of the‘ Kent Federation of Agriculture's labor committee. The Kent. Federation has been working on this movement with cooperation of the association known as Immigration Foundat- itm Netherlands and the Federal Government for some time. Largest mass immigration in the history of Kent ‘Jounty, the movement includes expert dairy- lnen. fruit and vegetable farmers. beet workers, greenhouse men and herdsmen. rPC-Tcrcnto Broadviewk, The Beau“ membi ‘gas m)‘ his». —British watch-making IWRPHHS i cars new WATCH Mohandas K. Gandhi this week lost the dollar watch that had ‘ dangled from his loin cloth for 25 a, years. The watch is seen hang-' ‘ mg at his left. side in this picture. a popular-priced watch by/j to Gandhi to replace it.‘ sent airmail l Start Work Today l0n Annex To Local Eleetrie Plant Construction work on the annex' to tihe main plant of the Mari. re Electric CCtfilffllljf ' ‘ ' cwn is expected to get under way icdsly nr l0l'lICl'l‘U\.. l\f_ F. SCIIUYHIELEI and are the contractors. , The anltvsx will be 100 lest long,l 16 feet wide. and 35 feet high. The pouring of the cement for. the fcundation for the new turbine gcncralnl- is practically completed] The generator. on its way' ironli Englnlfi. is expected tn nrrlvt- in 1 Halli ' by Jvclo l8. Officials of the Company said last night the gener- l ate-r should arrive in Charlotte- tcovn by June 25. l DJ-KAR. French Wc-sl Africa -§ (CPI _ An Anglo-Frenth collie -‘ enee here discussed roads, railways‘ and communications ‘Ettouglxout West Africa. The conference was a drvelnplmcnt of the British-French ‘ po ._\ of collaboration colonial matters. in United States Cancels Credits To Hungar- By Edward B. Bomor WASHINGTON. Julne 2 —(AlP)— The United States in a double- barreled action today out off a $15,000,000 credit to Huxlgaryb new pro-Communist regime and promis- ed further aid to Italy's non-Com- mnsnlst government. State Secretary Marshall an- nounced that "pending clarificat- ion" of last week's events in Hung- lry which led to the omter of Premier Ferenc Nagy, the remain- ing half of an original $30,000,000 credit to Hungary for purchase of American stuplua properly has been suspended. ' By contrast. Mural-mil in a state- mmt wished "every success" to the slowly-reorganized Italian Gov. ernmant of Premier Alclde de Gasperi and added: “We shall continue to give aidto the Italian people who have dem- onstrated their sincere and abiding faith in democratic ymcesses for the preservation of their individual liberties and basic human rghts." Both act-‘oris appeared in line . with President Trunlanh announc- ed policy of helping peoples resist wilmt he terms totalitarian sure. They coincided with an announce- ment alsothattllc United Slates is prepared to grant surplus property , credits up to $30,000,000 lo lran to enable that oil-rich neighbor of! Soviet Russia to refurnisli her armed forces. An agi-ocinoill is ox- pected l0 be signrd in a week or , two givlmg Iran surplus American’ military clothing, sihoes and "a F few" light tanks and combat plan- i i pres- ‘ able Iran to maintain internal sec- I urily. No bombers are to figure in I the transaction. "uspension of the credit to Hung- ary was accompanied by official indications that the United Slates soon may file a strong protest with Soviet Russia against the overturn which put pro-Communists in con-, trol of tllp Budapcst Government. l The ousted officials. accused hy' the Russian occupation authorities] of “ploltln-lz." were all members of l the non-Communist Small-Holders Party, I The announced purpose L; to r-n- 1-4 ‘lDetails Will Be Revealed To Public Today B)‘ WALTER. J. MASON NEW’ DELHI. June 2-(AP)— Leaders of the Moslem League and the larcdominanfly Hindu Congress Party were reported re- Lably tonight to have accepted a secret British compromise plan, p: uznteci lo them earlier in the d' by the vlceroy, calling for a lpar Ding of Indla Dct Lls of tnca British proposal. handed to seven Indian leaders a: a momentous conference with vicerol- Viscount Mountbatten. tvlll its read tomorrow over all Indian liadio statzons. a British commun- ique annourced. A London an- PPUHCQITIERL said Prime Minister i-ttlce will make a statement to the House of Commons on India n: 3:30 p.m. (10:30 am. ADT.) The very fact that the plan llvnll be made public indicated that the major either mrc-anliriuéill ‘a; Pioeffcol. ’l)_ Indian parties Structural Failure Blamed Forjfilsh WASHINGTON. June 2 -- (AP) -~Rerlewal of a Senate investiga- ticn into air safety was ordered tccim- even as chairman James M. Lmflls of the Civil Aeronautics B's‘ Yrrlflllcd a “struczural fail- llrc" in the Eastern Airlines plane which carried 53 persons to death at Pnrl Deposit, Md, 1551 Flrlljny, v Landis told u pzoss conference jthal the failure occurred in the Isiilrfs tall assembly However. he Idiri not rule out the possibility of other factors ‘schind the crash, The CAB. chairman said evi- air-liner was l-n level flight at 4.000 fee, then went into a rlive and i . lflnally crashed in an inverted or iii-Side down position. oua stools ‘lIiiNK 4am‘ room (at S EERlNQ when. OULD BE ‘fl-ii Favour cinctafi '5. ,-,\ n ‘E O TORONTO, June 2-(CP)—Min- lmurn and maximum temperab l UFCSI Vancouver 54, 52; Edmonton 44 5P; Regina 45. 68; Winnipeg '42 G7; 'i‘nronto 53. 5G; Ottawa. 52. 54; Montreal 49, 53; Quebec 44. M: Saint John 47, 51; Moncton 50. 56; Halifax 51. 59: Charlotte- town ~. 5i: Sydney 49. 60: Yor- mouth 50, 55. HALIFAX, Julia 3 ~- (Thlesdayi -(CP) Weather synopsis and rifflril inland forecasts issued by lilo Dominion Public Wer.tiiel~ Of- fiw- at Halifax at l.’.ll AM. Tiles- day. sylnopsis: There yvcre showers Monday in- tihi- southern lVidfili-‘llés due to conl ' ‘ed SolllElW-‘LHI o 0s: and Prince Ed» Island during the day ard r91 . Cape Breton ill tlit~ waning A dis- lid l turbance centred near Lake Ens is moving tounrd the coast and on ‘fllesday- widespread rain can be expected. FCYCJHFIS ‘cxiflrl. lllltil TLlPSd-‘iy midnight: Priiice Edward Island: Clotldv. bcconiiilg overcast with intrrn-littcnt rain in ‘he afternoon. Coal with lizlit winds. High Tucs- day at Charltctolvr. b‘! iligll t.dl- this morning at 10.01 and tonight at 11.29. Sun sets this evoninb at ‘(.40 and rises tomorrow morning at .15. Pull moon Juim- 3rd. 2.27 P. M. Slammer-side tide eighteen lmin- utos later than Charlottetown. CAI. FERRY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND" Dally Except Sunday. Leave Borden at 8.40 A.M., 1 RM, 4.30 P. M Leave Torcnenline at 10.00 A. M, 2.40 P. M.. 7.30 P. M. SUNDAY Leave Borden 6.45 P. M. Leave Tormentine 8.00 P. M. dense thus for show-a that the big. - .3. a _ ‘m-j A- _________..._._a~__.,