g follow" ‘ MAXIM! 01A. MERE MAN malignant-mam. sateeoflecurlty. -~ I'll!- ‘rlse Guardian. ThreeCeull. Inning Dally lblllded llfl. CHARDOTTETOWN, CANADA, ‘WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1948 . Read Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew rybody 12 PAGES not Illlllly end there. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN ii Love that begins at. homo doee Mall lubscrlption Delivered 85.00. 55.00, other Provinces l: U, 8. $1.00. CONTROVERSY EXPLODES ovm MARITIME PORTS Freight Rate A Iiote Delayed IIntillTotIay OTTAWA. A?!“ so - (UP) — Before an almost-emptied Com- mons. Parliament's long freight- rate debate today (ironed on through another afternoon and then went oveifluntil tomorrow with votes onZnbn-coxuiden __~. tlons almost sure‘ for then As one m j . after, threshed over the issue __ freight rates, jhe only neflg. - Ill to amcrgeiyss a strength ‘ing of the Government's virtual cer- uiinty of coming out on top in the test of strength. Two Western member sewed up that prospect Last of the Independently-in- clined Government supporters who had been looked on as possible boilers. ‘rhomas Reid fr. -- New Westminster‘) and J.L. Gibson 11nd .- Comox-Aiberni) made it. clear they would be safely In the Government fold when the vote came. In earlier days of the debate. other Government backers "crit- ical of rate increases had given assurance they would vote against C.C.l=‘. and Progressive Conserve- tive motions of non-confidence rellsiIIIlI-B the Government for its freight-rate policy. ~ In its seventh day. the freight debate was cut off at. six o'clock until tomorrow. This was for the convenience of Progressive Con- servative members who wanted to attend s. major meeting o! their national convention. Coming Events "Play. ‘Pracadle Hall, Wednes- day April 21st. Dance after. ""Cred.lt Union dance in Vernon Hall Friday, April 23. Good music. "Dance Covahesd Community Hall Friday night. Good music. "Notice: Unloading car mixed feeds today and Wednesday. G. C. Green, Emerald. "Place your orders for gross reed. Booking now. Vernon J. Noyc. ' "Dance. Spring Valley Hall, Fri- day, April 23rd. Rollie MacKenzieJs Drhestre. "Dance, Summeriield Hall. Thursday. April 22nd. Rollie Mao- Kenzie, Orchestra. " "Dancing Thursday, April 22nd. Country Club. Travellers Rest. Orchestra Prince County Pioneers. "l will not be grinding any Brain after Ami] 29th. Lam Mac- Donald. Ncw Dominion. "Reserve Thursday night, April 22 for dance in Rustlco Hall. Good music and refreshments. "Unloading-Monday and ‘mes- riay. car cement; also buying Pota- toes and tiu-nlps every day. P. J. "OY- i-lunter River. "Loading Hogs at Fredericton for Canada Packers every Thursday till 11 A. M. and Colville until 12. D- L. MacDoweil. "See Ikedericton Players pre- sent two one-act plays and special- ties in Fredericton Hail Wednes- day, April l1. f‘8ce 3 one-act plays in North Wmaloe Hall, Wednesday. May Iii-h. Also specialties. Presented by Wins! ve North Women's Institute. "t tloadihg car barley Tuesday and Wednesday this week. $2.75 oer 4 It. Bring bsgs. Fraser and Annesr Peed Service. Montague. "Choice quality oats on hand. reclesned. u you desire. Priced to sell according to grade. 1f inter- "M. bookorders at once. Live- "wk Feed Agency. , "The Annual Meeting of the Created sun 00.. viii be held "will: evening, April ma. at she Hall. Everyone interested In the bill-lulu of Onpeud Hall kindly fl-temd. B. 0. wood, Secretory. "MOM-Ill! and vicini ferm- m will rel-IMO?! Ir n again 15 year by having their seed PFWEII! cleaned and graded. We m F1001!!! every day. Fraser 1h Ame-r me llrvlcs. "W111 be ioedins bags u the Mints esch ‘Thursday: m" Winters; Indefinite. until 11:50 ma: lei-era Israeli. lfua- i" River. until noon; Summer- side until 1:80 nah: and Ren- “mm lint-ii a pdll. seamen sud a -_ Heavy Storm Damage ' In Ontario County BOYCAYGEON, Ollk, All?" M — (C?) — A gals accomp- anied by heavy rain and thun- der tonight cluaed heavy dam- age to the nearby Sturgeon Lake district of Victoria Coun- ty. First reports said no one was Illlured but the hall-hour blow wrecked coflagei, boat: houses and Ifhrns and Tlppltll telephone and power lines. Local Men Elected P. C. Vice-President‘ OTTAWA, April 20-(CP)-J. M. Macdonnell (PC-Muskoka-Ontario) today Aves re-elccted president of tho Progressive Conservative As- sociation of Canada. It is his third term. His election was declared unanimous. John Bracken, Progressive Con- servative leader. was re-elected honorary president. Ivan Sabourln of Montreal. party leader in Que- bec. wss elected first vice-presi- dent. Miss Hilcla Hesson of Win"- nlpeg. second vicc-mesident, and B. Roy Holman of Charlottetown. P. E. I., third vice-president. Auto llnion Need l Reported Wounded DETROIT. April 20 —- (AP) ._ Police reported tonight that Walter P. Reuther. president of the United Autoworkers, was wounded by a shotgun blast fired through o kitchen window of his home. First reports said the blast struck Reuther in the right arm. He was ‘taken to Grace Hospital. Police said a woman told thom she saw a burst of flame shoot on‘. from a ca:- ihat passed the house Just before she heard the sound if t c shot. o further details were avail- able immediately. PLAN’ NEW HOSPITAL KINGSTON, Jamaica, April 20- (QP)-A $528,000 hospital with’ 150 beds will be built in nearby Span- ish Town, Jamaica's ancient cap- ital. it. was announced today. The colony will supply $140,000 and the remainder will be paid by the oloniai W el fa r c Development Fund. By FRANK BRUTTO TAIL April 20—(AP)--M1t- irig returns buried Italy's ooai-‘ munists tonight under s heap of votes that gave the christian De- mocrats and other anti-Commun- ists a victory margin o! better than two to one. it was apparent that Premier Alclde de Gospel-Fa Christian Dc- rnocrats. supported by the Roman Catholic Church, might gain s. majority in both the Beasts and Chamber of Deputies. Virtually complete returns in the Beasts contest lave the com- bined anti-Communist parties 54.1 per cent of the vote. 0rvi2.400,5'ld w 5,052,258 for the Communist-led Popular Front. The Front‘: pes- eentnge ms 80.5. Minor parties accounted for the rest. Returns from the vote for the Chamber of Deputies showed sl- most the some margin. Blnob it is elected by proportional represent- ntion, the popular vote wiii’be an index to the political makeup of the, powerful lower chamber. At nightfall the Christian Demo- orstc clone lied a three to two lesd over the Communist-domin- ated Popular Front in Chamber voting. virtually co rte returns from the Mlniltf! Interior on the senatorial race-MM! out of 041 meatball-live Christina De- mocrat candidates 5.844.448 votes. or 47.4 per cent of the total. The Communist-dominated Pop- Production 0f Coal Slumps After Lewis And U . M .W. Fined PITTSBURGH, April 20—(AP)- Production of soft coal in iilie United States slumped today ln the wake of fines levied on John L. Lewis. Leaders of the United Mine Workers find.) were reluctant to csli the growing idleness another general walkout. Bu‘. reports from coal producing states showed more and more miners were refusing to work. How long they would stay out. to protest. the $1,420,000 in fines levied agaiqt the Union and Lewis was - in one U. M. W. officlal's words - "anybodyh guess." '_ The diggers were quick to brand the contempt of court fines "a dirty deal" and "fascist? Even before the sentence was announced in. Washington today. about 140,000 miners were idle in protest agalns John L. Lewis’ contempt convic ion. The mine chief drew I. $20,000 fine from Judge T. Alan Golds- borough and the United Mine Workers Union was fined 01.400000 for delay in obeying a com’; order April 3 to call off the five-week ponslozvwalkout. Possibility of a spreading work stoppage in ‘he mine fields as a result of the fin- Ing was voiced by David Fowler. president of U. M. W. district 21 in Kansas City. Fowler termed the fine; "unjust" and said they would cost the Government "l0 times more ln (Continued on Page 5 O01. 8) Considering Nealth Insurance Legislation IOTTAWA. April 20 - (CP) - Prime Minister Mackenzie King disclosed in the Commons today tihat the Cabinet has been consider- ing health insurance legislation from time to time since the present Parliamentary session opened. Whether or not it. will be introduced at this session depends upon the progress of business. he_ said. Rare Radio-active Element Produced CHICAGO, April 20 - (AP) - Creatlon from radium of 9, rare radio-active element never seen before was announced today to the American Chemical .Socicty. The element is aotiniimn, element 89 in the periodic table. For near- ly 50 years it has been known to exist in nature, but In amounts so tiny that it could not be con- centrated. The final isolation of actlnlum in pure form was announced by Dr. French Hsgornann of the Ar- gonne. National Laboratory here. It. looks like table salt. ' Italians V0 t e '1‘ w o To Ono Against Reds ular Front received 5.582.258, or 30.5 percent. Other parties: Alti- Communist socialist Unity. 1.840.- 511 or seven per cent; National Bloc 1.205.490 or 6.6 per cent; Re- publicans 510.132, or 2.6 per cent. Latest unofficial and official rc- turns for the chamber of Depu- ties, gave this comparison: Christian Democrats 0.010.157; Popular Front 0.204.855. An oflioisl telly by the Minister of the Interiorof 21.724 of the country's 41,047 precincts for the Chamber of Deputies showed: Christian Democrats 5.368.300; Popular Front 4.545.554. The some precincts gave the lo- oisliet Unity group 050,245: ite- pubiiosne 880.152: National Bloc 428,820, Italian Social Movement (accused by its foes of being pro- Paecist) 240.450; Mnhsrchlrta 502.- rt-y. cold on the basis of early re the Christin Democrat wplared to have won an sbsolutn mllority in both see. . . ope Pius, who bent his mercies to defeat el the Communist. ro- ceivsd s group of United ltstss newspaper men today and estd be would niche e terms! stctemntoa the stratus: in s do! or so. chem the Italian steak market rose in the Isle d the christian Democrat niecdss. On the bendonsteck exchange foreign bonds went ue sli close u» iiae. May Sever Co-operation With Americans VIENNA, April 20—(R.euters)— Russian authorities tonight threat- ened to sever completely their co- operation with the Unlted States in Austria unless United States of- ficers and men alleged to be guilty of “pi-evocation" against Soviet officers after yesterday's kidnap- ping incident in the American sec- tor were “strictly punished" at. once. The official Soviet news agency, Tass, issued a statement declaring that if this co-operatlon was brok- en "the United States authorities will have to bear the full conseq- uences for their attitude." American authorities in Austria earlier today made a triple protest to the Soviet authorities over the incident in which three Soviet officers were alleged to have tried -to kidnap s. German girl living in an American displaced persons camp. A four-power military police pa.- trol stopped the car in which the officers were travelling, forced them out. arrested them and re- leased the girl. Gen. Geoffrey Keyes. American commander-in-chief. sent a letter to Gen. Vladimir Krassov, Soviet High Commissioner. protesting a- gainst the Russians entering the American sector ‘ito make an un- authorized arrest of a woman." bringing loaded weapons into the American zone, and against the action of Capt. Kooshln. Russian assistant provost marshal, in. "ob- structing the United States pro- vost marshal in the execution of his duty." The Soviet version of the incl- dcnt tonight said a. group of Sov- iet hospital employees during an excursion m the Vienna woods mot a former hospital employee, Mrs. wlasenko, who, it. was alleged, es- caped from the Soviet zone be- cause of a criminal offence. "It was ascertained that Wlas- enkO, as with other criminals of her sort, had hldden| herself in the Ameircan zone where she was in the Cobcnzl Displaced Persons bump under the false name of Elsa Heifer,” the Toss statement said. "The Soviet physician and com- panions in the car stopped Wies- enko in order to hand her over to the competent police authorities," it added. To Begin New Dil Well Near Moncton MONCTON, N. 3.. April 20 - (CP) -- Drilling operations on tihe new oil-field location at Round Mill, Albert County five and a half miles from the present source a‘. Stoney Creek fields, will get underway early next week. it n-ss ant- -' today by C. '1‘. R. Wilson, manager of New Brunswick Oil Fields Ltd. Equipment has been set up and as soon as fuel oil for diesel equipment. arrives drilling will start. The new site near Hillsboro. is regarded as the most favorable location selected by geologists and hopes are entertained for the in- oreallflfl of gas supply to Mi and suburbs. Forecast Wind-up 0f Wartime Nouslns OTTAWA, April 2O - (C?)- offieigl- wind-up of Wartime Houllru Limited is forecast In l Commons‘ notice of motion by Reconstruction Minister Howe. its operations would be transferred cornplehly to Centrll Mtlfilll! and Housing Corporation. "h"?! fer some this has been the ch10! Federal housing Idem-T. ll Canadian Wheat Stocks Decline ._._._ OTTAWA, April 20 — (C?) _. Total stocks of Canadian wheat in all North American positions at March 31 this year were 209,000,000 bushels. oi’ which 2,400,000 were held in the United States. the Dominion Bureau of Statistics re- ported today. This is a drop of 36,400,000 bushels from the corresponding date last year, when amok; wlalled 246,000,000 bushels. . Of this year's total, 116,000,000 bushels were held on farms and 39,500,000 in country and prlvaue terminal elevators. The remainder was in port and mill elevators and in transit. Stocks 01' oats totalled 135.- 4915242 bushels against 184,209,708 n year ago; barley 72,940,054 against 76,944,556; rye 2,224,209 against 2.816.961 and fiaxsecd 8,536,164 against 3,201,187. Prime Minister King Sets New Record OTIIAWA. April 20 - (C?) - Priznc Minister Mackenzie King is about to make Ihlstory — ‘again. He ls to become the Prime Minister with the longest record of service in wntten Commonwealth history. Today, he equals the record of Sir Robert Walpole, the 18th century Prime Minister who served in that office for 7,630 days — a total of 20 years, 10 months and nine days. Tomorrow. he will surpass that; record and will have gone Sir Robert one day better - 7,621 days - setting a history mark of his own. That has long been a cherished ambition of the 73- year-old Canadian Prime Minister, who came to office m. 29, 1921, and now is within four months of his retire- ment in August. There have been two breaks in his prime Minister- ship - three months in mid-HE an-d five years during the early, depression-ridden 1930s. Sir Robert ran his record out ‘In one stretch, holding office from April 3. 1721, to Feb. 11. 1742. In 1946 Mir. King hung up e. record for the office in Canada. On June 8 of that year he broke the record of Sir John A. Mac- Donald. who had served 18 years, 11 months and 26 days. While there will be no sPwM ceremony to mark Mr. K1083 achievement today. he is expected to receive tribute from Opposition party leaders and h-is own follow- ers at the opening of the Cbrnmofli- _ Al’. 13. Mr. King enievs sow! health. although he has retired ‘.0 his home several times during the past winter to fight off colds. Steel Shortage May Nit New Glasgow (By The Canadian Press) NEW GLASGOW. n.s., April 2° -—A spokesman oi’ Eastern Car Company here said today he fear- ed a 25 per cent cut in steel sup- plies which would result in un- employment at his plant. Commenting on a report that Montreal's. Canadian Vickers 1e‘ laying or! men due to s steel shortage. the spokesmen said his plant. already had taken several cuts in supply. The "newest" slash would reduce supply by 35 DB1’ W"! and “will certainly result in broken employment." Eastern Car. which Ill-l ill!’- completed large orders of box cars for Canadian National, Railways and C. P. R... now is converting to produce cars for the Aluminum company of Osnsds and has other orders on the docket. TIA B \ ADS-- Farmers’ Problems Are Discussed At Prices Investigation OTTAWA. April 20 — (C?) - Ranchers and farmers’ problems in raising livestock-fears about mar- kets, high feeding costs and a dis- astrous ivinter-occupied todays sessions of the special Price Com- mlttee. A series of ivitncsscs. represent- ‘ng Western producers, explained their difficulties. Fears were ex- preaed about the future of the United Kingdom bacon market be- cause of Britain's exchange diffi- culties. Ranchers felt they might lose the American cattle market unless they were allowed to re~ enter it soon. Both were worried about costs. Some of the gloomiest testimony came from H. _J. Hargravea, as sistant. superintendent of the Do- minion Experimentsl Station at Swift Current, sask. "Operators. . .cf the beef in- dustry are today in the midest of critical times," he declared. “Hign feed costs coupled with abnormal weather conditions have produced a aitflitI€ii"'"ii/hic'lf diirfwnot’ been paralleled since the spring of i920." a OTTAWA. April 20 — tSpeOlal) — Action of the Dominion Govern- men‘: in giving the green ligiht w the Board of ‘Transport Commiss- ioners judgement in the freight rate case is due to fundamental weakness in the present structure of the cabinet, both Liberal and Progressive Conservative merribers admitted here today. Far from having adequate representation on cabinet council. strength of the Maritimes in the Government hag been out 50 per cent from the war years, On top of this British Columbia has been de- prived of cabinet representation through the appointment of former Veterans Affairs Minister Ian Mackenzie to the Senate. l-iad the ‘Maritimes had fair speaking and voting strength in the cabinet, parliamentarians here say, the rushing through of the ‘Transport Board's judgem it on freight. rates would never have happened. Wartime Cabinet In the wartime cabinet. Prince Edward Island was represented by Defence Minister J. L. Ralston, powerful protagonist of fair Mari- time rates; Nova Scvotia by Justice Minister Ilsley and Angus Mac- donald, although the latter technically represented an Ontario riding; and New Brunswick by Fisheries and later ‘Transport Minister Joseph lvlichaud. More- over all four- of these ministers were thoroughly versed in railway (Continued .;.»..?re.1.'.s‘ (By D'Arcy O'Donnell! OTTAWA, April 20—(OP)—Need for s. sound national party policy was stressedtoday by delegates to the annual meeting of the Pro- gressive Conservative Association of Canada. Practically all of the day's func- tions were held behind closed doors. However, sufficient informa- tion was released or leaked out to indicate the trend of discussions. Among those urging adoption 1f a policy was George Hees of Tor- onto. He said there was an urgent need for a Progressive Conserva- tive policy which would show the people of Canada "h0\v we WOIIICI run this country better than the Liberals and the C. C. F." He made the statement in with- drawing his name from nomina- tions for the presidency of the association. As a‘ result of the withdrawal, J. M, Macdonncll (PC. Muskoka-Ontarlo) was unanimous- ly re-eiected president for a third term. The election followed s report from the nominations committee. It was the first committee to re- port. Other reports will be receiv- ed tomorrow shortly before the close of the three-day meeting. A resolutions committee was understood to have considered the Sound National Policy Urged On. Conservatives said that a group of young Pro- gressive conservatives advanced a resolution urging adoption of s policy on which the party could stand or fail at the next general election. Condemns Absenteeism OTTAWA. April 20 — (CPl-A group of young Progressive Coh- servatives have condemned absen- teeism and the lack of aggressive- ness among Party members in the commons, it was learned today. Word of the action leaked out from closed sessions of annual meeting of the Progressive Con- servative Association of Canada. Call to Women OTTAWA. April 20 - (GP)-A cell to the women of Canada to rally around the Progressive Con- servative colors came today from the Party's only woman member of a Provincial Legislature. "There will be, without s doubt, s. general election next year, and we are going to be successful Zn that election." said Mrs. Tilly Jean Rnlston of Vancouver, in a luncheon address to 300 women delegates attending the Progres- sive Conservative Association sn- question of policy. A party source nual meeting. (By James MoCook) LONDON, April 20—(CP)—Rte Hon. Leslie Hore-Belishs, former Liberal. Liberal National and In- dependent, now a Conservative. has stirred s political furore with his argument that Britons should forget third parties and concen- trate on Conservative and Social- ist policies. His , ‘ set out that the ‘Liberal Party cannot expect s '4- vivci and Britons should yield to "the inexorable logic of the two- party system." The Liberals. with only ll rep- resentatives among the 640 mem- bers of the Commons. call down s plague on the Houses of both the senior parties. "Liberals must again personalize politics," said Philip Pothsrgill. Liberal Party chairmen. "We must shake ourselves free of the plans and the schemes, the blueprints and the white papers. We must go out and win the con- fidence of men and women. . . ." Whatever the Liberals may hope, Hcre-BeIIshLAIAaJgIInst them their recent record: i They eontnstnd only}; seats ‘n Says Britons Should , Forget Third Parties the 4i by-elections since the i046 general election. In nine cues they forfeited their deposits and‘ they won in none. Scotland, formerly s. Liberal stronghold, no longer has a single Liberal member. In Wales, even the seat held by the late Earl Lloyd George. wartime Prime Min- ister,‘ Caernsrven Boroughs. has returned s Conservative. No indus- trial constituency in Britain is rep- resented by c Liberal. If the Liberals aspire to form a Government again, they have the task of winning as sects for every one they now hold. "it is the rank and file o! Lib- erals who are settling the ques- tion.“ said l-lore-Belishs. , Fothergili said he agreed that many of Liberal mind are outside the Party and perhaps in the 0on- servativs sad Socialist ranks. "We need not inquire how they got there-for our present purpose it is only necessary to stress that neither of the other two parties as at present regarded or con- stituted csn fill the role of Je- iender. of the democratic way of Russians ylThrcatenll Action Inl Vienna Incident Angry mo.» Q Maritime Weakness In Cabinet Revealed By Freight Rates Df Commons Railway Group By JOHN LeBLANO OTTAWA, April 20-(CP)—Con4i troversy over charges of raiiwayq “dlscrimination" against Maritime ports exploded today at an angry session of the Commons Railway: Committee. ,' 1n a heated debate, New Bruns- wrick Progressive Conservatives aired accusations that the Canad- ian National Railways was trezr- ing the ports unfairly, while C. N. R. officials and Transport Minister Chevrier denied the charges oste- gorically. ' Frequent flare-ups marked the proceedings as MI. Clievrier cic- fended his Department's railroad azaixm D. King Hazcn (PC-Sr, John-Albert) and H. H. Hatfield (PC-Nictoria-Carletioni. At times, the Mixuster term Mr. Harm's remarks unfair an untrue. In turn, Mr. l-lazen ac... eused Mr. Chevrier of “covering up) Even EC. Vaughan, the urban; president of the C. N. H... pitched into the battle with vigor to ac- cuse the New Brunswicker of be- ing "unfair-P ' f Between Mr. Vaughan and traf- fic vice-president Alistair Fraser, the C. N. R. entered s. denial u; these ChB-IfQAfVJhlCh were made at various times and resurrected to- day by Mr. Hazen: (Continued on Page N col. d?‘ Strong Demand ‘For l White Fox, Wild Mink LONDON, April 2o -"<or) Q‘ The Hudson's Bay Company said there was strong competition s: the, sorta: fur ailction today for Wllltd fox and wild mink gldng, Some 90 per cent of 13,886 whim fox offered were sold. Limp dc. mend resulted in blue foxes sne- merten being withdrawn. ,_ ., A _ , (helium-toasted “SUALLY Eros’ in A stair» TORONTO, Apr. 30—(CPi-Mlnn: fir-um and maximum temperat- urea: Vancouver 8d. 63; Edmonton 28. 40; Regina. 34. 49; Winnipeg 32, 63; Toronto 47, ‘ii; Ottaua 44, 00: Montreal 46. 47; Quebec 39. 40: Saint John 35, 42; Moncton 34,47; Halifax 32. 64; Charlottetown 34. 56; Sydney 32. 50; Yarmouth 34. 42. l-IALIPAX, April 20 — (CP) _._' Weather synopsis and official in- land foreoasie issued by tho Dominion Public Weather Office tonight. Synopsis: The weather was dull over the Maritime; Tuesday with generally overcast skies. in tho evening there was rain and drizzle in the southern regions and some coastal fog. There was some snow especially over high groumL A disturbance approaching from LakeOntai-io will cause incress. ing southerly winds in the south- ern sections. Colder air from Labrador had spread into tho northern regions by Tuesday even- ing and will cover the entire district by Wednesday night. This will cause clearing weather for Thursday. Forecasts. valid until Wednesday midnight: Prince Edward Island - Interq mittent rain and drizzle. For] patches especially near the cossfl Not much change in temperature. Light winds increasing by morn- lng to southwest 15 and stiiftins Wednesday afternoon to north 2n gusty. Low early Wednesdnv morning and high in the after- noon at uicrlottctown 35 and so. High tide this morning at 9.08 and tonight at 0.22. liln so‘: this evening at 6.5.1 gang rises tomorrow morning as Full rmcn April 28rd. 9.3 A. M. Summer-side tide eighteen min- life." - ____ _____,___ ______ __ hike utes lates- than dierlotlctnwn. and. i . _ 155-.