MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN -:::m '1.”--nothing In so expensive glory. mu lame, but do not look 2'2. I I. 00-00. other Provlneeo cu-flan Charlottetown. humor-side 015.00 per annum. Elsewhere and U. 8. A. 012.00 per annrun. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1952 PEVAN MAKES ALL .- OUT ATTACK ON CHURCHILL GOVT Pressure On Prices In Canada Reported Easing Princess Elizabeth Helps Shy Boy Over Rough Spot NAIROBX. Kenya, Feb. 1 -(CP) ..Princesli Elizabeth helped a shy young African boy over a rough spot in Kenya colony's welcome to her and her husband today. Proto- col was preserved. The boy was Prince. so named because he was born the some day as Elizabeth and Philip's son. Prince Charles, Nov. 14. 1948. Solemn in white shirt and blue pants, Prince was assigned to hand Princess Elizabeth a bouquet when she visited the new African maternity hospital soon after she and the Duke of Edinburgh flew in from London on a royal tour. Prince was bashful. He turned his back on the Princess and back-handed the flowers. Elizabeth gently pulled the boy around. took the bouquet and thanked him. A large crowd of Africans on hand was delighted. The Princess and the Duke 'tccFu'i?iTeti on i-.g.Trc?.i.'?F Coming Events "Seeds! Send for free catalogue. Arthur Vesey. York. "Races at Vernon. Saturday. Februrary 2nd, 2 P. M. tonight "Skating at Hunter River rink. "Card Party in Clinton Hall, Monday. February 4t h. "Reserve Wednesday. Feb. 13, for dress carnival at North River Rink. "Hockey match. Long River to- night, Graham's Road vs. Long River. "Marshfield PT-E.-Eyterian l..adics' gilrrxi Cake Sale at l-lolman's Feb. t . "Farmers. ask about the shur Gain Feed Finance Plan. For part- iculars contact your local Iced mill. "Valentine Social. North Gran- ville Hall. February l2t.h. Spon- sored by Y. P. U. "Horse racing at Stanley to- day. Saturday. Feb. 2nd at 2 p.m. if not fine Tuesday 5th. "Hockey at Sandyls Saturday afngrtnoon. school teams. skate at "8 . "Milton Hockey Club bus leav- lnlz bus stop for Sourls this evening at. '1 sharp. Few seats remaining. 8l.00 return. "For snapshots that will not fpdo mail your Films and Nega- t.ves to Garnhum Photo atudloa Charlottetown. "'Now in stock. Cod Liver Oil, Flehmeal Purina steer Fattene. Purina Dryenna. Dillon and Spillctt. "Queens County L. 0. L. meets in Barton Lodge Room. North Mil- gf"-M'm9Sd!Iy. February 5th, at 2 "Get your beef cattle ready for the Fat Stock Show. Ilse your own grain. See Gil Henry. Purina Feed Store. "Come 'in and talk over our Purina Finance Plan. for your lions and Poultry. Dillon and Spilleit. ” 'fNational Film Board presents 'Slll(l and Sulkies" and other in- "93""! films in Emerald Hall. F'b- 4th. sponsored by Emerald Fawn Forum. M"Buylng pigs and feeder collie uglldlv at Fredericton. paying w '00 POP pair for good pigs over lbs. each. Will also buy smaller lmel. Knud Jorgensen. M”shur Gain Amateur Cavalcade. scroll Hall. February tlth, I P. M. ltl;:"'0TM by Mot-ell Women's in- " ute. Entries to he sent to Mrs. eeman Jay. Morell. M;1'l8ihur Gain Amaleur Cavalcade. H vew Hail. Wednesday. Febru- Mllr 20th. Entries to be sent to Mull. Gordon sheldow, Secretary "OW Women's Institute. ."7he Annual Mectin of the X”el";hlr0 D-Irvin: oo.. 14.. will on nflid in North Wiltchire Hall. Dndlv. February ilih. 1952. It 2 P. "um M Nelson l-lathorley. sec- 0.1" Luluhllio south Queens Hockey the New Haven "Royals" l'&:dIIbediued 30 mnLnnAppin m Eulldon on Monday night 70th Birthday O'I'I'AWA, Feb. 1 -(OP) - Prime Minister st. Laurent is 70 years old today. It is a ”Work-as- usuai" birthday. His staff greeted him with con- gratulations in his East Block of- fice at 9:20 this morning-about 10 minutes earlier than he usually arrives. ills agenda called for "a typical day," one side said, adding that this is one of the busiest -2---lcds the prime minister has had since taking office in 1948. Will Charge Baby Silier Wiih Murder TORONTO. Feb. 1--(CF)-ssuh. urban Scarborough police said to- hlllht flint 22-your-old Diane Bound. a baby sitter. bout n .'i 112. year-old girl to death with a beer bottle and chair after he- cominl: drunk from beer she found in the house. Police said the young woman will be charged with murder. The baby. Susan hellough, was found dead by ll neighbor after the See Indications Inflation Peak Already Past By The Canadian Press Pressure on prices is casing and vou can take it -from Trade Min- ister Howe-there's an even chance 0; prices going lower instead of higher. However. Robert parliamentary assistant culture Mtlnister Gardiner. asks why the consumer isn't already getting the benefit. of lower prices for beef and pork. At his cattle farm at Spring- bank, 0nt.. Mr. Mccubbin said Friday that farmers are getting lower prices for beef and hogs and these are not being passed to con- sumers. It "didn't add up." he said. speaking as a cattle farmer, that farmers should be receiv- in-,1, less for their products and no corresponding reduction seen ”as yet" in consumer Mccuhbln. to Agri- prices. He didn't know whether the packers or retail outlets are re- sponsible for not reducing prices. but he did know that in the last five or six months hog prices paid the farmer declined 12 cents a pound dressed. in the last two months beef prices to the farmer dropped five or six cents a pound on hoof. or 10 or 12 cents dressed. The farmer's market would be strengthened, he added. if retail meat prices could be dropped and lncreased- consumption encourag- ed. in Montreal :1 Canadian meat packers convention was told to prepare for a sharp. but not dis- astrous lowering of cattle prices. A.G. Hall of Toronto, a delegate. believed. however. that adiropgiri beef prices would be healthy for the industry. It would stimulate A l BUENOS AIRES. Feb. i-(Reut- crs)- President Juan Peron today threatened to nearly double the price Britain pays for Argentine meat after the current contract expires April 22. The new price. he said, he 12250 a ton. The statement opening gun prior to Anglo- Argentlne talks later this month on terms of the next contract. "When the British came to buy meat," he'said, ”They did not want to pay our price. The nego- tiator who come here said we could not goon much longer without selling. '”We will see,” I replied.- 'You would was Peron's have hunger and we have meat and we will see who can last the longer.” ”They did not want to pay :90 per ton but they ended up paying E150 and next time they will have to pay 2250." he added. Commiiled On Murder Charge WINNIPEG. Feb. 1 --(CP)- Gavin McCullough. 51-year-old accountant, today was committed !or trial on a charge of murder in the slaying of his seven-year-old foster child. Martha Louise. last Friday. At a preliminary hearing in police court, police quoted McCul- lough as saying he and his wife clubbed and strangled the child "because she had the devil in her and would not kneel with her par- ents in prayer." His wifei.-Lillian, 02, also has been charged with murder. she is in a psychopathic ward where she refuses to eat. she was remanded -tccTrftiiiucci7:YFPsiie-5Tc'oT:iTT woman had gone to n suburban dltion. and Mrs. William Roy said the woman got into the beer supply (Ii. the house and on the baby when the started misbehaving. The baby sitter is said by no- lice to have tied the hnliy-'s font. to the bottom corners of her crib and her hands to the top corner and then to have beaten her to death. infant BY NORMAN ALDSTEDTER PARIS. Feb. i-(CP)-Soviet- bloc delegates at the United Nations condemn the Western press but quote Wesicrn news- papers continuously in attempts to prove their arguments. Few soviet-bloc speeches go by -"Wlltshlre rink tonight. Hamp- shire Ramblers vs. Wiltshirc Jets, Canteen service. Skate after. "Attention. Due to mild wra- tlier no hockey or ltknling for school children in North River rink today. "Hockey North River rink to- night. Saturday. Feb. 2nd. Nine Mile Creek Bulldogs va. Cove- hesd Red Wings. Game time 8 o'clock. Skate after. "Collecting Hogs for Canada Packer: l.td.. each Tuesday at Crapaud and Carleton, when roads are impassable farmers are asked to deliver hogs to our trucks at Orepaud. and Carleton, up until 11 A. M. each Tuesday. under the same arrangement as last year. R. N. Dawson. Phone No. 12-11 or 17. "Booking orders for car of asphalt shingles and aiding: de- livery in spring. Call now and get our prices. We have in stock a limited supply of register Laur- ontian Turnip seed. Thlsjreed originated from Maedonald Col- lege. There will be shortage of roglcte read. You are well eti- viled to get yours now. Consult us about your feeding problem. All poultry foods are in new Jute mVlMorln iunk. euro after for bau. E. J. ldacbougcil. Vernon. East York home in a drunken con- town of Ville St. p MONTREAL. Feb. 1- (CP) - Suburbnn elections in the' tiny Michel today erupted into a bitter controversy Police said the woman hurl been over the seizure by police of Paci- left in charge of the baby by Mi'. fique Planie, a former top Molli- Kclloligh renl police official, while they went shopping. They 28 others. and at least Shortly after polls opened, the turncdtsuliurhnn police seized Mr. Pltlnie. ldismissrd assistant police director lot Montreal. outside a polling sta- tion. His lawyer, Guy Dcsjnrdlnes. lsnid police refused to let him see lhis client. or make known the ciiarizc against him. Mayor Charles Lnlontalnc. a lMontrcnl city councillor seeking Reds Condemn Western Press But Quote Freely without at least one quotation from editorial or news pages of British, French or United States newspapers on some of the topics under discussion here. if the Soviet delegate is trying to prove that the U. S. is aggres- sive he picks lomc editorial in a U. S. newspaper which he inter- prets as calling for stronger meas- ures in the cold war. When the job is to try to show that Russia is peace-loving. the Soviet delegate can find some paper in the West to quote whirl: has stated that it does not believe Russia wants war. Favorites for quotation include The New York Times, The New York Herald Tribune, The Wash- ington Post, The Chicago Tribune, The Times of London, The Econ- omist (London) and Le Monde (Paris). Observers here speculate that the job of collecting items for quotation is done largely by Rus- sian and other Soviet-bloc embas- sies in the countries where the newspaper originate. Most of the papers quoted ave been condemned individually, and all have been condemned collect- ively, as "lying capitalistic tools" and "controlled". But that does not stop Soviet-bloc delegates from quoting them for their own purposes. Once A Polish delegate quoted a story in the Toronto Daily Star about war refugees in Canada in an attempt to prove that refugees in Canada were living under bad conditions. to Feb. 7. Police Arrest 29 At St. Michel Civic Election; Gestapo Tactics Charged re-election as mayor of the sub- urh of 3.000 voters. said the or- rest was a case of the police "cleaning up the city to allow honest men to exercise freely their right to vote. . ." Long Time Stomi Centre Mr. Pinnie has been a storm centre from the time he was named head of the morality squad and then assistant police director in 1947. The Canadian Brother- hood of Policemen protested ilie nppoinimcnt liecnclsc”Mr. Plante was a police legal adviser, not a policeman. As head of the morality squad. Mr. Pianie earned the enemity of the gamblers by a campaign to close down their houses which had operated more or less open- ly for years. After police director Albert Lan- glolse fired him for insubordln- niion. Mr. Pinnte joined a group of citizens who promoted a judi- lcinl inquiry into conduct of the- police department. The inquiry now is stalled by legal proceed- ings and a counter petition to investigate Mr. Piantc's direction of the morality squad has been made. Th reo Names Ilcvr-alt-ti Mr. Pla.nto was taken in cus- totly about an hour after the polling stations opened with three other men, A. McGarr. Mike Clint- fey nnd J. Duhamel. Those were the only names made public by Mayor Lnfontaine. Mr. DesJtirdins sought a writ of lichens Corpus to have Mr. Plante released and said he would take the matter to the Attorney-Gem eral of Quebec. Premier Duplcs- a. Mayor l.:ifonininr'a opponent in the election. Adelard Bolsvcrt. laid the arrests were "Gestapo tactics." Convicted Of Manslaughter HULL. Que.. Feb. 1 - (CP) - Gerald Ryan. 2.2-year-old 'l'lmis- ltaming, Que.. lumber-camp chef charged with the murder of his 17-year-old bride of two months. tonight was convicted of man- slaughter by an Asslze Court l U?! Mr. Justice Vaimoro Bienvenue remanded Ryan to,the end of the juices for sentence. Peron Threatens Boost In Meat Prices To The U. K. Death Yesterday Oi Rev. Mother Paula .l,,: The Late Mother Paula . Rev. Mother Paula. C.S.M., one of the most. widely known mem- bers ol religious Orders in this Province. died yesterday at the Mother liouse at Mount. St. Mary's after an illness of several months. She was born Eileen McPhee. daughter of the late Captain liugh McPhee and Mrs. McPhee. George- totvn, where one reccivedlier early education before coming to this city where she studied at Notre Dame Academy and Prince of Wales College. Mother -Paula taught sclionL1oLseveral years un- til 1918 when she entered the Sis- ters of Martha Novltiate at Anti- gonish, N. S. After having served the order as Mistress of Novices she attend- ed Marquette University, Wiscon- sin, U.S.A.. where she received special training in hospital ad- ministration. In 1925 the Sisters of Martha took over the hospital duties on the departure of the Grey Nuns and Mother Paula be- came the first superior. to post which she held ulitii 1033 when she was named Superior General of the sisters of Martha in Prince Edward Island. However. 1': years later she re- turned to the Hospital again as Superior and remained active until Julie of last year when she became ill. During this latter term in of- fice she had much to do with planning and bringing to fruition the ion:-hoped for addition to the Hospital. The Reverend Sister was widely known for her interest. iii all phases of social lvo” (Continued onWP i".SllPClililV to 5 Col. ii CAIRO, Fob. licvcs negointions uiih lirilnin the ”onl,v norm;tl” u'.'iy to attain his people's aims. Mohylio iii Dirt l-Zililliv. scorc- tnry-gcncral in My llnlicr Pasiia's cabinet and chief of the Premier's pcrsonnl staff. tlisclns:-cl the Pro. mlt-r's views in n sititcmcnt. to- flV. "The question now is not who- ther to enter or not to enter nego- tiations. bttt on what basis." the sccrctnry-genrr.'il snitl. Mnher Pasha ll!!!-I unincd Prem- ier by King Fnrouk after last Sai- urdrwis rioting in t'nirn claimed at least 67 lives. The rioting stemmed from Egyptian demands that Britain lcnve the Suez Canal zone. Since Mailer Pasha look over there has bhfxll no violence in Cairo or in the (.'.-innl Zone. in addition. there has born a sug- gestion that Egypt might be more receptive in Western proposals for a Middle East dt-fence com- mand under which I-Egypt, Turkey. France. Britain and the United States would protect the Suez. Another indication that the new Premier wants to negotiate with Britain is his order to his offi- cials to draw up a comprehensive note in post negotiations. If Egypt nnd Britain get together again, It will he the first time since. Egypt cancelled the mutual friendship treaty in n one-sided set. several months into. While the situation remained calm. steps were heinl taken by the British forces to add strength to the Suez garrison. At Ismnilia. the arrival of bombers. fighters and infantry re- inforcements was reported. Underway To End Health Plan LONDON. Feb. 1 - (AP) - Aneurln Bevan charged tonight that Prime Minister Churchill's Conservative Government is using Britain's financial crisis as an ex- cuse to destroy socialized medicine. In what many politicians regard as his all-out bid to seize control of the Labor Party from former Prime Minister Attlee, the fiery left-winger attacked a government bill which calls for sharp cuts in "tree" parts of Bitainls tax-sup- ported medical set-up. Labor wants to try to unseat the Churchill Government on the health scheme issue, and Bevan's left-wing followers are booming him as prime ministerial timber. Passage of the bill, Bevan told the House of Commons, would "mean the free health service is dead." The bill cutting the health ser- vice, introduced by Health Minis- ter Harry Crookshank, comes up next week for second reading. The Conservatives. with 9. majority of i4, are expected to push the bill through. Attlee himself earlier assailed the bill, a. port of sweeping econ- omies aimed at preventing nation- al bankruptcy. but political observ- ers feel that Bevan stole the show with his more vitriolic attack. Bevan, 53-year-old former Welsh coal miner, master-minded the health plan adopted when the La- bor Government came to power af- ter the war. The new legislation would slash the cost of Britain's socialized med- iciiie by E2l,000,000 pounds a year. By sharply modifying the "free" provisions of the service. that am- ount now will be paid by patients. Without these reductions.,,cost,of the program would amount to within i22.000.000 of the i400.000.- 000 ceiling which both the old Labor Government and the new Conservative cabinet have agreed must be kept. The Health Service cuts form part of the sweeping government economies and restrictions on im- ports and consumption which Chancellor of the Exchequer R. A. Butler has outlined to parliament. But his aim is to prevent national bankruptcy and put the pound back on its feet in relation to the dollar. The bill seeks to impose scharge -.('-Continued on Page 5 Col. 8) Mrs. Lawson Named P.E.i. Representative TORONTO, Feb. 1-(CP)-Mrs. D. 1.. Whitby of Truro. N. S., has been appointed Nova Scotia rep- rcsontative of the Canadian As- sociation of Consumers, the C.A.C. announced today. Mrs. J. A. Lawson of Charlotte- 1"'(PlP""1l:f!,ll'li'SAm0n of the new Premier has ll'lIll('lilN'l he be-l'llhe 32nd Brigade is expected to islbe in the Canal Zone within a 4 l I imtn has been appointed repres- cnlniivc. in Prince Edward Island. Egyptian Premier Favors Negotiations With British The troop reinforcements are Coldstream Guards. Afcw weeks. The l'l.A.F. is keeping up daily reconnaissance our the zone. rovtty is no disgrace but it is eonfonntledly lent. MAXIMS p OIL MERE MAN' to I Inn. inconven- 16 PAGES Morning Dally Founded 1881. the Guardian. Five Cents. M Affectig Farm OTTAWA. Feb. 1 - (OP) -- A Prince Edward Island Supreme Court ruling has cast doubt over the powers of 10 Provincial Mar- keting Boards to deal in interpre- vincial and export trade. It also has thrown doubt on the constitutional rights of Parliament to delegate powers to organizations not directly responsible to it. but which are organized and constit- uted by provlncial governments. These powers and rights are open to question as a result of yes- terday's ruling by the P.E. I. Court that the 1949 Federal Agricultural Products Marketing Act is ultra vires - outside the jurisdiction - of Parliament. However. the issues are not fin- ally resolved by the Provincial Court ruling. The decision likely uill be appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada either by the Fed- eral Government, which may ask to intervene. or by the P. E. I. Po- tato Marketlng Board. which brought the test case before the Court. The Board sought to test the val- idity of the Federal legislation by bringing action against the Char- lottetown firm of H. B. Willis. Inc., which opposed the Board's policy to license dealers, make levies. es- tablish minimum prices and regu- late consignment sales. The Federal Government obtain- ed Parliament's approval to the legislation as a means to stabilize markets and give the producer as much freedom as possible in mar. keting his produce. The 400.000- member Canadian Federation of Agriculture for years has spear- granted2 Provincial Boards and (Continued on Page 15 Col. 6).- Three Small Girls Burned In N. B.iVillage ST. LEONARD. N. B.. Feb. 1- (CP)-The remains of three young lzirls. who died early today when fire swept through their home in this Northern New Brunswick con-imunit,v. were buried in I single coffin this afternoon. Flames prevented the horrified parents. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Beauprc. from rescuing their three small daughters-Cecile. 5, Therese, 4 and Jeanne, 2-trapped upstairs in the two-storey frame building. , T. D. Herbert. coroner. ruled the fatalities accidental and said no inquest would he held. Five sons, aged seven in 14, were away at the time. having left early to attend church. The fire started after the fa- ther lighted a stove fire in the front part of the house. He was building another fire in the kit- chen stove when he noticed smoke and found the upstairs section in flames. Benupre suffered hand and face burns in trying to reach the trapped children. Fire drove him from the stairs and then from n window after he put up It ladder outside. Firemen were unable to save the house. owned by the town of Edmundston. The financial loss was estimated at 33.500. British Non.-Committal By ALAN HARVEY LONDON. Feb. 1--(CP)-"Jolly poor show." said the Englishman on the suburban train. "Now I suppose I about be able to have my holiday in France." Then the commuting business man, impeccable in white gloves and bowler hat. folded his news- paper and changed the subject. That was all Britain's highly- touted new austerity program meant to him--a holiday in Jer- scy instead of France. ' His reaction may be fairly rop- resentative. The new economies announced this week-restrictions on instalment buying. reduced travel allowancea,lncreased health charges-have in themselves little impact on the average person. They have been received here with notably less fuss than newspaper comment elsewhere may indicate. In many homes. last Tuesday's announcement , d almost with- out comment. This is probably because Brit- ons know the worst is yet to come. The austoritlea already On Austerity Program, announced 'arc not so serious as the tidings John Bull may get in the March 4 budget. moved up to the earliest data since 1900 be- cause the financial situation is so so serious. In the budget, Britons expect a whopping new tax on gasoline- something flint affects nearly ev- erybody-- and possibly a cut in the food subsidies which now make things like butter and milk cheaper than they are in Canada. Actually life in Britain is prob- ably brighter now than three year; ago. or six years ago. There are more good things to eat and drink. more clothes to buy. It better standard of Iervice in such places as laundries. Except for the lack of fresh meat. London offers the ”' of any big capital. Visiting Can- adians say the city looks brighter than it has at any time since the WAY. It is the reaiiution that this improving situation is due for a setback. rather than the Ipecido news this week. which now gives Britons that glum feolifll. headed the drive to have this power . l:B0 P.liI. New Glasgow 8 Hal Leave Borden charge-s-Move Dominion - Wide Reaction To P.E.l. Supreme Court Judgment Marketing Act One Killed. 20 Huri In Accident CHAMBLY. Que. Feb. 1 -(OP) -One person was killed and 20 others severely injured tonight when a bus collided with a truck between nearby Chambiy and st. Hubert. Provincial police sent. five a.m- buiances to the scene to pick up the injured. Icy road conditions forced the ambulances to move at a slow pace along the treacherous high- way. Two priests from nearby parishes also rushed to the scene to help the injured. Only sketchy details were avail- able btit a taxi driver who passed the spot said the injured were ly- ing on the road and those not hurt: were trying to make them com- fortable. "Many were praying and crying." he said. "I'm sure there will be more of them dead before they, can be treated." TRURD. N.S.. Feb. 1 -(GP)-4 J. Burton Bass. 61. retired C.N.R. employee and leader of the Boy Scout movement in Colchestel County. died at his home here to. t1iqay.Bl-le was a. native of Moncton, if So Lone. . as A womanx ic-an CHANGE bin. MiND stir. to DOES NT More A W HALIFAX, Feb. 1 - (CF) - Official forecasts issued tonigho by the Dominion Public Weather Office here and valid until mid- night Saturday. It was cloudy and extremely mild in the Maritimes tonight. The forecast calls for a few showers as cold air approaches. and temperatures will dF0P '-0 more seasonable values except in Nova Scotla. Cloudy weather is expected to persist through both Saturday and Sunday. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island-Cloudy. A few showers ending in after- noon. Extremely mild, but turn- ing r-older by evening. southwest winds 15. diminishing by evening to light winds. Low and high Saturday at Charlottetown 30 and 4 0. Outlook for Sunday-Cloudy. High tide today at Charlotte- town at 3.26 A. M. and 3.28 P. M. liigh tide on the North Shore at 10.15 A. M. and 11.25 P. M. Sun rises today at. 7.33 A. M. and sets at 5.21 P. M. MCA All! SERVICE ., ......DAIL! EXCEPT SUNDAY ueave Charlottetown for Moneton ll:8o A.M.: Ar. 11:20 A.. .. V260 P.M.. Charlottetown from Moncton 1:25 A.M.: 1:35 P.M.; 0:55 EM. Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow - llsllfu 7:40 AM. New Glasgow . lfal. Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax 11:00 AM. from New Glugtrvv czss fat. from New Glasgow and Halifax. MONDAY. WEDNESDAY. VIDA! ONLY IKIO A.M. Arrive Sydney from New Glasgow. 10:25 AM. Arrive New Ghogow from Sydney. SUNDAY ONE! ' uovo Charlottetown for Moneiol 11:20 AM. Ar-rlvo or t from M lzbl EM. . .. - ..-1:-..... ROIDIN - CAPE 1'0 FBI! 1 IIBVIOI Dali! tlnelnlu Inlay) Icon 0. T. 0.10 A.M. L00 P.ll. 4.80 PM. no r.n.l