MAKING 01A MERE MAN II. the M!“ 9-‘ i as ealretitite for QI- vigorola educated life of (I Clan ‘I've Onto ilfiiflfiillinfra-rm m1 BULLETIN NDQN, April 21 -—(Wed- lelsfldl —- (C?) — A daylight gttack by German flelnkels on in; between London and Lia- r“, between Innflon and Li! bon, the first such attack in ‘h, w“, was MP0"!!! "d" from Lisbon. The British overseas airway! “rporation slid the fill!" land‘ ‘d Safely in Lisbon and” will ",1, "slightly damaged. The attack occurred Monday- Commercial air llflrviee be- d 4| soon was ifiiigalfaiin“ ‘after the out- break of war. Princess Elizabeth i7 Today Iy Russell Landstrom Amociated Pres, sit-aff Writer LONDON, April 20 — tAPi — Princess Elizabeth, fast-growing end fun-loving but alread at grips with earnest matters o life, will be 17 tomorrow, the beginning or rm; final stage o! adolescenc from which she will emerge as a. iullfledged public figure. The heiress presumptive l.o the throne legal] come; of age when the is l8 an after that will have virtually her own household. For iinotiier year she will continue yrithout her own staff but with her own rooms in the p ace. Quiet Birthday Her 17th birthday will be a quiet rffair. Apart from the sobering effect of war, it falls in Holy Week and thus will be further subdued. No party will be held but the Princess will spend the day with the King and Queen and her younger sister, Princess Margaret. Gifts will be few. The most sig- l nlficatit of them will be a earl’ from her father. the 1'1th cl, a necklace which will be completed‘ r -—__— -_- (Continued on Page 7_ Q91 y) i Organization Formed To Stress Needs Of Provincial Sanatorium ;__ ~—-—---i .- _ _ ._; SOLDIERS SENTENCE!) MONCTON. N.B., April 20 _. iCPj- Pie. din Philipe and Pie. Clifford B. Pugh. both of London, Oiu. were seazcnccd today to eight months each and Pfe. Gordon Brown, Toronto, received a sus_ bended sentence of three years. 71W‘ had pleaded guilty to charges of breaking and entering andsteol-W ing a car. Coming Events _o- ' 'TaLkies--Souris Monday. 4-20-3i. "PLll)'-—MUI‘X‘B_Y' River Friday. , 4-20-3l. ; “Hour Sale, Overloaded. Clark Bros, .vit, stewan. and at. ruienii Bar. 4-2l-li "Loading Bogs ior Davis at Eraser rriuoy. April 23rd until l2 oclock noon at Auburn Station. E.‘ P. Shea, Watervaie. 4-2l-2i "Bingo and dance Hope Rivet Parish Hall, Easter Monday. 4-21-24-21 "Unloading car No. 1 vie Seed Oats. April 90th and 21st. L. MacEachern. Mt. Albion. 4-20-21. “Talkies - Monll ue scrim-lav. Charley's Aunt with aok Reagan“ "Kinkom Hall Friday t, April 80th. Bingo and Dance. ul- ligsn Orchestra. A-lV-It. "Dance and drawing for Lottery, It. Andrew: Hall. Easter Monday.“ "National Film Board Moviu - Remington. Monday; Freetown. Tuesday; Bracalbane, Wednesday: New Wiltlhlre, Thursday. 4-19-41 "‘Corran Benn Players present their a act Comedy Drama Enter {imam Conan Bluff Hall. pinion "Livestock Marketing Board "Ming has; at Charlottetown Wed- "esflly an Thursday, April 2i and 33 Bind: pens closed Gaol Pri- iin. 441.11 "loading hogs Thured . April ilflumniertide till i P .: Ken- llflflon tlll a PM; Bulman and >ZW/’ The People's aper WE“ m“ ’_________.a- '--.._____________‘ Covers Prinoe Edward Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody .__ . . . . . CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1943 MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN l The body is involvcrl in (‘\<'l‘] ,1 menial proccas", the miiiil in i-ii-ii bodliy process. Subscription Delivered, 83.00 In“. ‘LIW- othe» Provinces I (Ll-A, $5.00. 10 PAGES Til ANlilY LAUNCHES NEW OFF NSIVE Presidents OF United Slates, And Mexico Meet Gains Height Proolaim Solidarity In Conflict Each Gives Unstinted Praise To Good Neighbor Policy. By DOUGLAS CORNELL (Associated Press Staff Writer) MONTERREY, MEX- ICO, April 20 — (AP) — President Roosevelt and President Avila. Camacho tonight proclaimed the solidarity of their two countries in war against their mutual foes, in the doctrine of the good neighbor, and in pro- mulgating a peace in which no group in one country may exploit the resources and people of another. They spoke at a ban- quet here a. few short hours after the first meeting of American _ and Mexican Presidents in 34 years. Each mentioned the brotherhood of arms achieved by the two neighbor nations in a conflict to crush the Axis p0wer~a conflict which lvi_r_t__R.oosevelt_vonce again (Continued on Page 7, Col l)‘ At a larscly attended meeting in the City flail last night. lt was de. cidcd to interview the Provincial! Government a5 to the urgent need‘ of additionaal bed accommodation‘, at i-he Provincial Sanatoriiim. ‘ A 51111118 Qfilunlzaiion was ap- pointed at the meeting to conduct, f necessary. an educational cam- paign with a view to arousing pu-b- lic opinion on this subject. The) personnel of the organization. which is under the chairmanship" of Ml‘. D. J. Bonnell. follows: Patrons: Hon. B.W. LePagc, Hon. '1‘. A. Campbell. Hon. George De- Blois. Hon. Chairman, Dr. W. J. P. MacMillan, preside it, Red Cross Society: Dr. P. A. Creelman, Prov. Sanatorium; Dr. B. C. Keeping. Deputy minLatei‘ of health. Chairman. D. J. Bonnell. Vice Chairmen: Lt. Col. K. S. ROEETSI Dr. B. H. Howait. Judge C. St. C. Tkainor. Roy O McLean, Souris: Secretary, Mary G. Mc- Donald. Executive: Capt. N. W. Lowther. ltf.M.: Hon. Russel C. Clark. Geo.’ J. Tkveeriv. K.C ; J. E. Dalton. Col, G E Pull, Mrs. Fred Gates, J F f lzelghtlgei Al son McLean. Hon; __. . ___..___.____ l (Continued on Page 9. Col l) Nazi Raiders » gs . ., RECEIVES APPOINTMENT__. Brigadier" J. F. A Lister, 86, (above) of Victoria, B. C , has been promot- ed from the rank of Colonel and he- comes Deputy Assistant Adjutant zinc. Quartermaster-General of a Can- adian Corps Overseas, according to an announcement from National De- fence Headquarters Canadian Anny Photo Canadian And iLK, Prisoners Still Shaokled OTTAWA, April 20 --(CPi— The External Affairs Depart- ment in a. statement tonight said that prisoners of the United Kingdom and (‘tan- adian fllrltits are still shackled at Sialag VlllB and other camps in Germany. 'l'hc statement said that on Feb. ll the British and Can- adian governments communic- pied to the Swiss government a request that their views on the question of‘ shackling con- tained in the commlllllcalltln he conveyed to the German gov- eriimcnt. The German government had asserted it. would renounce measures taken against British and Canadian prisoners “only on the receipt of an assurance that instructions have been is- sued to our forces forbidding binding of German prisoners in any circumstances whatso- ever." in the communication oi’ Feb. ll, the British and (‘un- adian governments said in- structions had lit-en issiicrl to the armed forces to ensure that all ranks should observe the terms of the Geneva con- vention, requiring that prison- ers of war must be humanely treated. ln those Infilrllvilonfl it ivas mflfic clear that a gen- eral ordcr to bind prisoners Wils illegal. But it added ‘ ir cumstances may arise in which binding of prisoners may be necessary and may indeed be in the best interest of the pri- soner- himself.“ Thc statement continued that the German government had replied "stating that the prin- ciple of shackiing is made ll- lusnry by the above reservation oi‘ circumstances, and they, therefore, insist on compliance with tiic earlier demands." The Canadian government. in consultation with the British government. is considering what i-eplv should be returned. said the External Affairs De- partment state ‘ Dump Few ‘Bombs On London Area Swift Allied Venture Bombers Raid Nazi Targets In France And Belgium. iiofor Again To Canadians LONDON. rii ll -(Wednes- day) — (OP eblel- The Daily Ex ess said today the German ra io has again “eferred to the alle d presence of Canadians in Tun ia and has described them at "pushing forward alnst the Axis linen" in an unspec fled sector. The last time the German radio mentioned Canadians in connect- ion with the North African cam- pai n was on April l4 when Capt Ludwi Bortorlus a militar coni- merits f’ laid "Lhc Britta up using‘ Canadians and l-li hlanderl‘ in t e fighting at Ou Zargha. in the Medjez El Bab region. Fem-ll. nuiitei- River Friday tm YlOOIl‘ “Mir ll ll A.M. Mcllwen andhad described previous German ‘mpbell, q-qi-liireferencea to Canadians in North ' iAfrica as "fishing expeditions.” Artdaur Harlem, Breadnlhane | Canadian authorities made no comment on the broadcast. ‘Ihey ____ LDNDON. April QO--iCP)—A few German raiders dumped b0illlb5 on two LiflllllOll district-t lute tonight. during a brief alert that Sent. one capital’: devastating anti-amoral; barrage info action. The Germans struck back afar swift Venture DOIIIDBII, accom- panied by lt.A.l". and lt.U.A.l". lighter-s. during me day raided iyazi transport. and industrial tar- geu in France and Belgium, Pos- sibility that. the Allie; might be ratduig Europe by night was seen in the shutting down of the Berlin and Calais radiog shortly before _ midnisht. Prom Zurich. Switzerland, a. Reu- ters news agency correspondent ro- ported that the R.A.F.s huge raid last Friday night on the Skoda works at Pilsen in Czecho-Slo- vakia had killed 800 P0750115 Mid destroyed everything within an area of so acres of the great mun- iiionii factories. This report gaid German experts had estimated that it would take three to five months to put the plants into operation again ' the 0n Last Night FWar Situati By Glenn Babb, Associated Press War Analyst General Tojo has given his Japanese cabinet the most extensive shakeup since it was formed l8 months ago to lead the nation into will‘ against the United States and Britain. A number c! the entirely un- distinguished bureaucrats who have been willing to serve as his sub- ordinates have given way, in most oases, to others equally without in- dividual prestige or influence. An exception to the rule of mediocrity among the newcomers is the Foreign Minister, Mamoru Shlgemitsu, whose selection raises some inter- esting conjectures. His career has been an outstanding one in the Mik- ado’: foreign service, including terms as pro-war Minister to China, Am- bassador tn Russia, Ambassador to Britain and finally Ambassador to the puppet "Government of China“ at Nrinking. lfis Ilussinn experience may have been a factor in his choice, since conciliation toward the-Soviet Union seems to be 'l‘okyo’s policy for the moment. Sliigcmiisu had some success in ‘" .. especially in settlement of the 1938 “vest pocket war" on the eastern liIanchurian-Siberian border. Otherwise the shakeup appears to be the climax of Tojn's long cum- paign to make himself, as representative of the dominant rnliitary element, i the sole repository of political] puwenlie would hasten to ntld, of course, l that lic wields such power entirely "by the grace of the rlivinc cmpcrnr," l, being as he told parliament, merely "the moon receiving the light from l the sun." This was during the debate on legislation, which parliament lute; passed dutifully. empowering the Premier to take the place of any of hia Ministers in any matter affecting war production. This in effect gave him dictatorial control over the economic life of the nation. Japan's political processes, mysterious even in peacetime, arc even harder to understand when we can only see them dimly through the veil of wartime secrecy. But the shakeup and the discussions which preceded it indicate strongly that Tojo encountered opposition to his program of total mobilization for war and that he has taken strong measures to break it down. The appointment of General Kisaburn Ando, retired, as Home Min- ister, fits with this cxplztnation. Andn is one of the outstanding Japanese military fascists, vict- clinirman of the imperial rule assistant association, a body through which the army tried to wipe out the last vestiges of de- mocratic processes. Tlic Home Minister controls the poll". with firm"! powers over the population. Ando will be s. willing instrument of the Tojo dictatorship. U.S. Reveals Details Of Big Raid On Tokyo Planes Took Off From Aircraft Carrier Hornet. WASHINGTON, Apfll Z0 — IA Pt-Tiic ‘vi/Jr Department dis- ciusetl ioiiigiit dciuiis of tiic Am- erican bombing raid on April id, i942, saying that tiie pianos took oil froni the aircraft. caxriei" U bKS Hornet, This carrier, which subsequent- ly was lost iii ihe baffle of duiita Cruz on Oct. ‘.16, 1942, curried fliers of the Army air forces u» WlLlllXl 800 niilvs oi 'I‘okyo, the War txirunctit sziid. 'l‘iii:i bombed not only military Ration Restored _0T_'l‘.»\\i'.»\. April 730 —f(‘.l’l— Officials of‘ the Prices Board's Food Administration said to- night that the increase in the lowance and the planning nr a butter storage program design. ed to build tip sufficiciitstocks during the summer season in Ran lntn Trouble The American pianos, the tvar Department disclosed were under maintain the present ration '°1'("-’1‘5 9° UV W slwfillled landing new whm.“ fields in uiiiiia. HOiYUVCI‘. uicy The ration was resiorcd to ‘New unable l0 rem?“ 111°" 3551811611 fields. One landed in Russian hi!" a Dolmd per person week- ly in the second week in March. Fir six weeks previous- ly it had been reduced so that allowance was approxi- matr-ly 5 1-3 ounces per person weekly. territory’. the others iiiide forced or crash landings in China or in water off the Chinese coast. All of the planes making the forced landings were wrecked. _Tlie _Dcpnrtmeiit's disclosure of fire raid details included iiiioriii- ution that. oi the 80 men Oll the ditruig raid. five are prisoners or nrc presumed to be prisoners of Jiipuii, two are missing. and otic Nazi Night Fighters _ was killed. The other 6i, mimy ziLcr long delays, made lll(‘ll‘ ' lo i iii-ps oi the Chi * llllll)‘ ti~J Uleli buck to Aiiiei l U.'l'l'li0l‘)'. Scucii who escaped were injured. Preparations for tlic raid, the Department disclosed, first started in January, 1942, four months before bombs fell on Jup- MOBCOW. A ril 2o _ _ Moscow News geld todnyM-Dharyarei night lighters were using two new tricks on t.he Russian front but th t m , an. Maj-Gen. James H. Doulitve, m; c) were Raining them n0lh-: “jaw: commhadngfil. of the Sumegjc iar orce, e erranean air corn- edlt, said the Germans had mount- miuid, in North Africa personally searchlighfs m 1 hum’ the Sklfis 1%: Rllesglnlillngleiasnet: The other wrinkle, it said, was me 1 use of signal items on the this) i with which 1' - - ~ oiit in mriemdiriedfiiigg gogildgblclgllfl‘ Y leagues following him on the‘ 10¢a.' I i tion of Russian planes. A T d (ODOR?) ogrrsmgtjilia- April 2o _, -___. " "m" "FY in the West-= APRIL 21. 1918 --.Brifi.~h ‘FOODS mfieagd. (iguugtglncmlri loci!!!’ 11- “TOW? Gcrmilll-f 1mm ftdvziiircil posi- Bilainst Charles,lions near Robecq, northwest 0g Bowsensackviiieciisrged m, r. Bcfl l 1,, . tempted arson st the MOilvfJlt Aili- of k111i? Liggfnrmgiibflaifligiflfigi selected the melt to RCCOITlDZHLV ,him on the venture. —-—ii__ FIND TRUE BILL 5°“ Ulllvffslil‘ rink two months lured 230 in the petlt Juryiish Aitncnia, lAmiciiiana Mo. Selection oi’ will be completed tomorrow, U§50 CANADA rr an PURPOSE riou Tokyo i production of crcamcry huttcr |Ul)jL’Cll\‘(‘s iii lokyo, but arniu- throughout Canada has hecn [iilciit pliiiils, duck yards, YJILYOHd Slliflckiiily pronounced to eii- yurfis and oil rcliiir-ries iii YUKJ-l ablc rcstorntion of thc full iiuinu, magi/rut, Kobe and Osaka. half-pound weekly ration al- New Frigate To lie Named ‘Charlottetown’ A frigate now under construgtign for the Royal Canadian Navy will be named after the City of Char- lottetown, according to WOfd re_ Cflved yesterday by His \VOTSlllp Mayor B. Roy Holman. The ari- nounccment was conveyed in a 19;. ter from Hon. Angus L. Macrionald. Minister of National Defense for Naval Services. Frigates are one of the newest fYPe of naval craft, ahnuf whit-h little has been divulged officially. ff is understood that they are a- bout twice the size of a corvette, Willi conespondingly heavier e- - qiiipmenf. A corvette named after the Cifv of Charlottetown ivas launr-hcd on Serif. l0. 194i. from thr- Kingston. Ont. riockynrds. l-lei" loss in action with death of hcr commander and eight members nf the crew. was announced on Sept. l8, 1942. llfavor Holman and members of the City Council have since been endcavorintz to have another sfiln named after the Prince Edward Islrittd Capital. The favorable consideration iri- ven this sumlestion a‘ Ottawa, and thr- dlstinclion imnlicd in the se- lection of a ship of the new friizate class. will i’. is hoped ‘ILVC added impetus in the Victor" Loan cnnt- naian here on which the cffccfivc- nr-ss of all iii:- armed services so vitally depends. INTERNATIONAL AT A GLANCE By The Canadian Press TYXISIA — British 8th Army gains height overlooking road to Tunis after moonlight infantry charge; llZ Axis planes destroyed in two duys. RUSSIA — Red Army sweep! info 0ilf‘ll$i\'l‘ on ltulinfn front. capturing zuirl holding an import- , ant height. i CIUNA- Mai-Geri, (‘hennallit ‘of LLS. China air force says Jap- ianesc are concentrating troops in lFrench Indie-China, Malaya and ‘ Thailand for either in southwest Pacific Burma. 0|‘ De- ¢ ' WESTERN room - German raiders dump bombs on two Lon- don districts nftcr R..~\.F. raids (rampart. and industrial targets In France. MEXICO —- President Roose- lveit arrives on goodwill tour after inspecting southeastern military cstahlishniciits; he and President iiviln (‘umiicho proclaim solidarity nf their tit-n countries in the war against their mutual enemies, in the good neighbor policy Mid in promulgating a peace in which no group in one country may exploit the resources and people oi‘ an- other. QTATES - Washington nit which bombed _ _ .r a o look off’ from nircrnft carrier l nrnet. LONDON. April 20—(CPl -R.eu- - tors reported in a Zurich dispatch to" lit thnt (‘icrmnu Field Marshal l. l iluiiinicl is in Rome and is )il\,).ll'lll!_' to niiikc nii llhDCCLlOIl tf Fi-ciicli .\’l(‘(lll(’l'l‘illl(‘8l’l coastal dc- fences. dispatch, quoting reliable The Zurich quarters, said coLGen. Jur- ceu Von Armin. formerly the com- mander of Axis forces in north- oniflTiitiisi now is iii charge of all of thc_T_ti_iiisi-.iii_ operations. North west — . Capture And Hold Strategic Hill Despite Dcsticrntc Nazi Counter-Attacks. ‘Discuss iLS. Grain Purchases 2O the OTTAWA, April Wheat pilfriiiises b4’ adlaii market DPiCIlH‘ nfiiiisicr Ralsfon said tho House of Qoiiiniciiis tocay. Speaking for Trade MncKiiintm and Agriculture Mill- istcr (inrdiiicr. who are nut of the city, Col. malsfmi said to ii Wily: sny ivhnl across the border. The qucsliriii HOW lel. renewed offensives ‘ Fgoviets Talze Offensive _,(;p»__ Utiitcd States lizivc hccn made in ilic Can- buf any movement of grniii will dcnriirl on transport- ation facilities which are available,‘ n . Minister not busliclace rd in the movement of transportation ‘ is being examined l1! authorit- Overlooking Road To Tunis ‘Success Follows Moonlight Infantry Charge; IIZAxisPIanes Destroyed In Two Days. By WES GALLAGHER (Associated Press Staff Writer) ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AF- RICA, April 20-(AP)--Springing a powerful, sud- fden infantry charge by moonlight, the British 8th "Army has resumed the offensive at Eitflciaville ifllfl ‘seized mountain heights dominating the coastal lroad to Tunis 40 miles to the north, Allied head- [quarters announced tonight- Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery loosed the as- sault late last night, and took his initial objectives in what appeared to be the start of the final of- fensive to drive the Axis from Tunisia. in the skies, that offensive was already under way, with 112 Axis planes destroyed in two (lays by the mighty Allied air arm. Montgomery's tough infantry troops, again supported by artillery, smashed ahead in a thi-ce- mile advance to capture the Djebel Garci, a 1.200- foot height commanding the area 12 miles inland from the sea, battle front dispatches said. Heavy fighting still continues, said an Allied spokesman, who announced briefly that the assault "had “penetrated the Enfidaville position." The rit- tack into the hilly, heavily-defended Axis positions ‘followed a lull of a week of preparation by the methodical Montgomery. (The Paris radio claimed that “two Anglo-Am- ,erican attacks in the region of Medjez El-Bab- and ‘Bou Arada, to the northwest of Enflclaville had ibeen repulsed." The broadcast was heard in Lon- ,don by the ministry of information.) l Authoritative sources said‘ there was not ex- pected to be any sudden break through such as tvzis ‘typical of the desert actions, for the infantry must ifight for each foot of ground, and advance liilhby- ‘ihill, storming each strong defence post separately. ‘I Vlfhile the lit-h Army was the only ‘ NiW" w H ' ' l iforce mentioned in the Lnitia l drive, military circles said it was l ‘certain that other pressure would be brought to bear not only on the land but in the air and on the sea Fume “H. in a grand concert nf action a- mounted m igalnst the 200,000 Axis troops 1 “may perm ' Pa*ize'9,_ColA2)~ ‘m i 1"“ .\' Jill‘ OTTAWA, April 20D to?» civilian wzll he pv- i asks Higliunv up at Edmonton bit w only to those "\\ll*l.'~'.(‘ w: area will contrihirc to secuiiori of the u-ar." {Big Events ln (Next Few Months f BALL PLAYERS Ana CONSlDERED Dune But’ ‘Ni-lo Woulp N‘1' BE FOR (HE MONEY ‘YHEY Qsf/ LONDON. April 20 —(CP,\—SO- viet Ambassador Ivrin Maisky pre- riicicd today that the next six or scvcn months "'.\".ll have the groin- cst significance iii the history oi the war." ‘The armies. navies and air for- ces oi the Allicd Nations feverishly are pix-paring for thc 60ml"! E- \'(‘l‘ii, he said, and acldcd: “Great itnppcniiigs are brewing in various parts oilEuropeff Of Moscow High tide tit‘: nf"r"-i' I. ‘i and tonish‘ n‘ ‘ I '___ L,Sui"i sets fh._< lie woman. April 2o - iCPi 4m“ “‘"‘°"°“ "' ‘, Sweeping into the offensive on talc . Kaliiiin front norlliivcsi of Afosi-iiu". lltussinn ioitcs todav attacked ii jsirong German position and cap- l iurcd and held an important height against. repealed enemy counter-at- tacks, Moscow nnnouticcd tonight. Battering vainly llilfllllfit U19 strategic hill, dominating the entire area, the Germans left about 3,000 PM“ i .4, H" officers and rncn rifad on the field, 516:0 a.m. 2.1m p.m. ... i c ovlc-t mifiiii it (‘Ofllllllllll ul- - r g zguis g q lwntifstnlft- 305 m In the western Caucasus, attack.- M" l- W" ~ "- ' by German iniaiif.i".' supported in" 5-15 W“ tanks and large forces of aircrafi wcrc repulsed with heavv lmscs f" thc enemy. Russian anti-aircraft iii-c bringing down i2 Gcrniziti planes diirliiir llic dnv and Russian aircraft kll0Fklllf! nut nine others ‘ The war bulletin, rccordcd hero by the Soviet Radio hfcnifor_ also annnunccd minor activity on flit‘ western front. l Inst qiiiircz" namr. A .\l SiIHlmCFFKW‘ ‘ a ill :t~_‘.:1 than Char! ‘ can FPIRiH \l-'il\'lll- v DAILY trxrrii-r r~i'\ii\l Bnrrlr-n-Jxnmvc 9 (l5 am. Till formviiiinr —_ l" '1' .'i i.» l) tr DAILY FfiiYlf r. fI-IXt lrll"l SLNIHH Charlnltefnuii ‘Himin- r-iili» filnncfiin (‘harintictimn i230 m 1.30 fl m Arr vc (‘hnrioiti-i-iun l n 3.45 p. IL. 7.05 P l Alli K .iil l. m Leave Ill. A11 I‘ “’~'. ._._?’ T" __.‘,.v,_= w" - ' ‘ ‘