3y BILL MACKLIN 10MB ON. Jun, l - (AP) -'I‘.ie lnternationz-l Amateur Ath'ctie ptederatlcn is scheduled to rest-h a showdown Monday on wzether ath- igtt>5 should run -for both go'd and ‘wry ._- or be content with churs alone. 5° important is the moposed ¢han§€ in emu eur rulrs that 45 or the 53 countries in tile I A..A F. m. expected to fill their chairs with deiegatrs at. the specially con- venrd M11379”- qh; red letter tepie of the pro- mm is the money mutter - ply- merit of "broken time" Whlcl tas bnon brewing since the l A A F mpgling at Oslo lust August. susqutntly the four Scandin- avia" nations, plus Holland, Ice- land and CZTYYLCSIOVBKIB :equ<-.'.ed a ,‘[)'(‘i3l torerrss so that they could lllivt- the arswc-r prior to the 1943 Qiyrnlfc gtimcs. a nerdy athlete's relative c, ucl be paid up to £1 ($4) P01’ day to com- pensate ifm for loss hf salary dur- fng his nbience from his rcgfiiul w. ‘.\"Iii‘3 trumpeting in !.A.A.F.- i-ypltflVfii ED1195- Qpymsltion zilzcady voiced frcm the western h€mi5l7h9T9 "M1153 llzut ill‘ diictlssion will product ‘gffffl fizcwcrks. Avery Brlzndagc, chairman cf the ulmd stiitts Olympic C ntmi-t c. “no nil! attend tile meet n71. sad m. my 1h‘; ycer that his orga-iz- ntlnn "will nevtr tolerate" l:r .*.n l3"... pnymeilts. lfiilndtlgf‘ recently won (antd- lan ln'f‘l‘f‘Si nwhcn he drew the Caxrdan Olympc Comlnittecis at- lvinllo¢v tn lb, fact that Ba ha a Scott of Ottawa, loutitf l \ t hail. American. Europcnn and _-\voild figure skutlng ckamiplon. had been given an automobile b/ the City of Ottawa tllljn lvr il- umpliarit icturn from cornjeit on. (Bi-lineages comments SIlJlTd up controversy‘ as t0 whether Miss Bcntt hud violated amateur rues and uflcther she should or slruld not rcillfll the automobile. Sh: subsequently did so.) south American countrcs at a recmi meeting put up s solid front _|§dlf\5l broken time. Foes of the measure term it epg... fcr play." Those for it —nnd tlirri- is COPSidBTHJiP support in Europe - 51y it will keep th- de- pcndrnt; of a athlete from hord- lhip oliils he is carrying the bl-i- nor of his country. 0:her proprsal; on the confer- once agenda include: Tfat. n disqualification fem ism- B10111‘ sports be allowed for a min- imiim ri om- year, instead cf life. provided l man has uu-sittinSlY trarrlzressed rmniellr rules. This also is a Scandinavian sltilges i011. That rxpense accounts for corn- .5 he limitrd to an al-pl-ine .' .."illl‘i l2 ($8) per day for b08101 and rocm. Three Detroit Players Are injured (By The Associated Press) DETROIT. June 4-Tllrcc De- troit Tiger regulars were injured today in the first game of a cruc- ial cioiible header with New York Yankees. - Ttiry were George Kcll. hard- htziiic third baseman, Dick Wake- field. left -flclder. and Paul (Dizzy) Trout, one of Detroit's first string pitchers. kins: severely hurt was Kell. rho suffered cuts on the left knee alld right hand‘ front U113 spikes of New York's second base- man, George Sternwciss, on s. close play lit. third. Trainer Jack l-lomri said Kcll probably would br out. fnr three or (our days. Meanwhile. an unidentified spec- tator nbout b0 dropped dead at l crucial point in the game. Parker Still _ Applying Whip To Brundage TORONTO, June B-(Olfi-Ivan. . give us your answer do- lfid don't tell us 33.2 miles is the lrsstciit distance ever covered in one hour by a man on a bicycle. Ivan (Hamilton Spectator) Mil- l" sot both feet caught in the ‘Poke: last week when M l!" that figure as the answer to an “i! query. Now he can't peddle quickly enough to escape gtlirrespnndence that is pursuit’)! m. But one man who did catch him-and land on him with a 51d!‘ ll! full or facts-was veteran lytiist Gus Hogben of Hamilton. who devours bike-riding 1W0?“ 11th his breakfast each morning. And here they are as Ivan listed them when Gus finally gave him l chsncsj to come up fo/r llr. The one hour. motor-paced un- Ieitrlctcd record was made by 1'» Vandei-stuyft at Monthiery ("MP M») motor track in 192s. where ‘It 00 minutes hs covered 76 miles. M a. 7N‘ In ill, at g motorcycle track 1h Melbourne. Anstriilll H. 0P1)"- "tln rods for M hours ill slate t ‘Movi- ins found n m. end of ‘All time he had covered I00 miles. If yards. me averaged li- _°" N miles per hour.) d“! should Us covered hinted- "fi? 1nd kept covered until com- - ‘Di medtell attention ls obtain- ‘imllltll Io stsrle when so» i Arguments Exp At Meeting Over Pay “In Ulympiq Athletes sa-nllel; wrote the pwpoaul trail the ' acted 1B llorseti Entered For Epsom Derby IlONDON. Jime I - (AP) -_ Blshteen horses still were entered tonight for Saturday's running of ‘he 48M It Erma but it was Predicted that at least three of Wham would be scratched. Post time for the 1 1-2 mils race is 10:15 A.M., ADI. Total value $0 the derby stakq will bl “i, Listed Fleet street racing writers as doubtful starters were iMigtity Maharatta. Combat and Richard III. The entries, their owners and Jockeys: Blue Train, owned by the King, Michocl Bell-y Up. Bhlshma, Mlharfll of BMQ, No BOY. Mighty Maharattl, Maharaja of Baroda. P. Khade. Sayajirao. the Msharaje of Ber- oda, E. Britt. Cadlr. I\’l.M. Bousiic. 3.0. Elliott. Castle Street, Sir R. Brooke, C. Spares. ' Tudor Mlnstre J A. Dewar, Gordon Richards. Tlte Street. Lord I-Ierewood, W. Evans. Blue Coral. W. Hutchinson, 13.1.. Jones. ' liligoll, the Aga Khan. U. Smith. Saravan, Princess Aly Khan, O. Smirke. Grand Weather, 1.1. Kirkpat- rick, T. Burns. Richard the Third. ncll, No Boy. Merqv Quip. J A.. Ran-k, T. Wes- tori. Flrcmester, Lord Rosebery, B. Smith. Parlsien, MJ‘... Volterru. C. Bou- iilon. Pearl Diver, Baron G. De Wald- ner. G. Bridgmnd. Combat. J.A. Dewar. No Boy. Will Renew Ryder Dup " Competition H. Quen- PHILADETLPHIA. June L-(AP) -Presldent Ed Dudley of the Pro- fessional Golfers Association slid today the Ryder Cup golf match- es between the United States and Britain will be renewed this year if possible despite reports to the contrary. - However, Dudley sxplslned that the British Golfers Association advised that because of l heavy schedule it will not be able to send its Ryder team over before late November. - The British P.G.A. accepted an invitation last December to re- some the cup matches after l 10-year lapse but there had been talk o-f passing up the event due to the rising cost of living. Bri- tain's economic position and ex- pense of trans-Atlantic travel. Revision 0f N. ll. L. Rules MONTREAL, June I —- (CF)- Rcvi-sions designed to clarify hoc- key‘: playing rules for the 1a.! and remove certain ambiguities ivere approved today by the rules committee during the National Hockey League's annual meeting. One provided for stopping of play immediately whenever l player closes his lil-nd on the puck. and another rtated that passes made from l team's defending zone must be completed st the red centre line to be legal. Prev- iously, under certlin circumstan- ces, passes could be legllly com- pleted to the opponents’ goal line. ‘Section (d) or rule 1o. dealing with passes in the old code, ssh-l if l player "in the some zone from which l pus l4 made is preceded by the puck into suelsd- in: zones. he elilll bl eligible to take possellifm of the puck in that zone, excqat where ‘icing the puck’ rule applies." This would allow l. phiyer to skate from his defensive lone ls for ss his opponents’ goal ltne fol- lowing a puck passed or lint by l teammate from his own lone — provided that his team was short handedfand the "icing rule thus did not apply. Now such passes must be com- pleted lt the red line, er the player will be called offside u he skates after the puck. The puck handling amendments affects section (i) of rule 5'1. which previously allowed conun- ultion of plly if a player view! his hand on the Diwk 1°? 1"‘ than three seconds and dropped it lt his feet. y Another snrlirendmfnt 101mm lolfusi lris I rum P)‘ “llltohonlllllbbllfllldl” and “MIND” penalties. The femur, IHQ re- ntsliows his tsQ l Iubetltutd. be muse s. “III! Inisoondtwt" POIQU. U ‘t’ guish it from "mid". w!" for bsldacs s! chrome. All misconduct plnlltlfll I F" lure will carry ln automatic fine 1 sent. Lg llfectedl ol s50. instead of till ll M. 9"" Other rlvlllols wen of l Iliad asses» _-.. _‘M mwessflomforthsbllelsssf, which no substitution b lllovsd g JUNE 6, 1947 rue CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE NINE Mills Defeat Ends Hopes 0f British Boxers LONDON_ June t-(AE-Thcre was speculation in fight circles to- day that American boxers have killed the British goose that has been laying golden eggs in the ring. Lloyd Marshall, Cleveland, de- ilvercd the eoup de grace last night ‘by making Freddie Mills. British light heavyweight champ- ‘ron, lookJike a puppet on strings. knocking him out in the fifth round. Mills was the last big drawing card in British boxing after Joe Baksi kayoed Bruce Woodcock. British heavyweight champion, in April. For promoter Jack Solomons, Woodcock and Mills have provid- ed sure gate attractions when matched against imported Ameri- can talent. In the last year in which they met Lesnevich. Joe Baksi or each other, the two Britons fought to sell-out gates, with 20 guinea: ($84) charged for ringside seats. The liberal purses for the head- liners kept up a steady parade of fighters from across the Atlantic. Lesnevlch came twice, ditto Baksi», and Ike Williams once-and many more were willing to try their hand. Blue Train Drawn From Epsom Derby LONDON. June d-Blue ‘Brain, the King's entry in the Epsom Derby, was scratched tonight be- cause of sore shins, leaving 1'7 probable starters in Saturday's classic. Captain Charles Moore, the King's racing trainer, said: "With a. matter like this. one can only vyait and see how the trouble progresses. ‘ft. is impos- sible to say when Blue Train will run again." Three Canadians had drawn Irish Hospitals Sweepstakes tick- cis on Blue Train. Their pseudo- zlyms were "Junior". with No. AHD1513, “Julia", AA47079, and "Why Not". BA42598. Plan lluge Treasure Hunt At Dak Island HALIFAX‘. June 4--(Wednes- day)-Tho Halifax Seraid said today in l dispatch from Mahone Bay. N. 8., that "the daddy of all treasure hunts for the hidden riches of Oak Island may be launched this summer." The newspaper quoted residents of the area as saying that Ed- ward Relehert. a New Yorker. was planning "a. gigantic project to virtually move the island to de- termine whether 801d. Which 5°- cordfng to legend was stored there by Captain Kidd. is really there. The Herald said persons who talked with Relehert when he vis- ited the island last week learned that he eltpeeted to move in power excavation equipment to seek the storied "money nit" \ lmprudence A/7-4 I Favorite Wins Oaks Y, Bets Against EPEOM. Surrey. Bus. June 5- (A W-Impnldence, thiree-year-old French filly born while shells screamed over the Falalse Gap in the Battle of Normandy, today won the 165th Oak Stakes-secondary feature of the racing week to be clknlxed by Saturday's running of the derby. A firm 7-to-4 favorite. Ionprud- once captured the 1 l-2 mile gal- lotp ovcr the derby course by five lengths to eann £7,165 (128,660) for her owner. Mme. P. Corbiere. Netherton Maid iinlshed second. two lengths in front of Mani-bald. The winner's time on a fast track was 2.40 which appeared certain in be "well beaten when the three- year-old colts run in the derby, greatest classic of all. Imprud-cncc, who earlier ln the season had won the first classic race for fillies-the 1,0110 guineas at Nowmarket-Jwas again ridden by thc Atlstraiian jockey. W. Rue Johnstonc, who flew frcim France to pilot her. The King, Queen and the Prin- cesses were among the thousands in the bflg Oaks day crowd uihicii weathered a. heavy shower before the start of the feature race. Each of the 11 fillies in the field carried 12G pounds. Neihcrton Maid took an early lead but gave way to Impruderlce nfteir the first qlmlrter of I. in-ile. The Hench invade;- enterod the stretch s. length ahead of the field, stayed off a brief challenge by Nethertun Maid and won going away. The King's entry, Pierrette, placed fifth. There i; a wide gap between English fillies and colts this year and British racing fans are looking forwenl hopefully to seeing Tudor Minstrel. hot favorite for Satur- day's 1 1-2 mile derby restore Brit- ish bloodstock prestige. The derby is run over the same course as the Oaks and reporters at Beokhamptonn Wiltshire, where Tudor Minstrel is trained, have written this week that. the "Tudor"l is the biggest certainty ever turned out by this famous stable. Today's showers ITESNEHEC the grass on the Epsom track and more rain ls predicted but the course is still hard and will remain so no matter how much rain falls be- tiwccn now and Saturday. Th0 threat of rain apparently doesn't worry anyone around Bcckham-pton. The correspondent of one London newspaper told the sports editor by telephone that if it rained from now untlil race time Tudor Minstrel would still be "the best thing ever to leave Beclchuntp- ton stables." ‘Blood, Sweat And Tears—'l‘o The Irish g It's Called Hurling By Jack Sullivan I Carlaldian Press Staff Writer IJONDON, June 5 -—(CP)—Take a. dash of hockey. a pinch of all-in wrestling. spice with some lawn tennis, w.hip_l.n 30 tough guys (Irlshmen. naturally!) arvmed with sticks fashioned midway between hockey and lacrosse sticks, churn all for an hour, garnish witlltapcd noggins and you have it: Hurling. “A good clean gammwith hardly anybody getting hurt at all." said an Irlshmarrat. Mitcham Stadium in London as he settled down i0 watch what the uninitiated would call 60 minutes of mass murder. . Every Whiisun holiday a. couple; of lrlsll clubs ccme to London to give the lassles and laddies “who've. emigrated a spot of their national‘ game. This year it was Cork and. Tipperary-the rebel county ver- sus the stoniethrotvers." The pink-checked collecns added- Iots of color to the crorwd and they cheered lustily in Dre-Some 00"" monies enlivened by grceIn-jerktlncd Irlsih pipers. their kills swinging iv the ll-l-t of lalmenis they played. It, shure was a. foine day—76 above. and. the sun beating dcvun hard. Bundles of hockey sticks. pardon, "cameos" were canricd by a lines- man and these, it was explained. were simply replacements. Mcn of the St. John Ambulance Corps took up strategic spots on the 3 l-z-ounee. cork-centred. leather- sidelincs. somebody tossed in the coated ball. The riot was on. The Tipperary fifteen, in blue and gold, got the bail ln Cork ter- ritory. Four Cannons and a Cork player were left on the turf after the first scramble. Two amtbulailcc men retrlved the playc-r and a substiittute took ovcr. The ball is to be caught. not. carried; lashed as a golfer might do on his tee-shot. or snicked. lt. can be hit-excuse ib-“puckt-d‘ by 801’ h u w [maria Found Guilty 0f iMurtiering Wife l GEORGETOWN, British Guiana June 5—-.(ClP)—Nool‘ Mohammad. 36-year-old East Indian golcismitii, was sentenced to death today for the Sept. 17 "morning tea" mur- dcr of his second wife. Prosecution said Mohammad put poison in his second wife's tea and also suggested that his first wife. who died suddenly May 17, 1944. may have been im- llarly poisoned. During the three-weeks-long trial, defence counsel argued that Mohammed's second wife had committed suicide because he had shown callousness and indiffer- ence toward her. Defence counsel Lionel Lucklioo said he would ask permission to appeal the sentence to the Privy Council. NINE-DAY QUEEN Lady Jane Grey-was Queen England for nine days in 1553. SWEDISH "BROWN-OUT" the shillelagh whloh is wielded in any, and all, directions and if somebody: head happens to be in the way it just means more ad- hesive plaster. Catmans were hurled through the air, the ball was pueked and belted and the aimibulance men, it seems. worked as hard as the players. Here's the summing up of the Whitsllri game: Result: A dralw. Casualties: Two players curried off, 11 itnuckcd out. u p0. twill llot Take ‘Derby Favorite IONDON, June 4-(OP)--Tuclor Minstrel, the “horse of the cen. ltury" in the estimation o: the majority of British race writers. fend fans, represents so much ‘denser to bookmakers that tlley refused to talke bets ggsl-ngl hi. Ichances in Saturday's Derby dur- lng tonight's callovcr at the V_l.;. toria Club. London's gambling l headquarters. Meantime one of the that had figured as a possible pthreat to the guineas-wl-rining .thrce-year-old, the King's Blue Trill". was scratched from the Epsom classic. Fred Darlinm-ace trainer of both the Minstrel and ‘Blue Train. reported that the lRoyal Horse was suffering from sore shins and "it is impossible at this moment to say when Blue ‘Train will run again.“ Tudor Minstrel closed a firm 6-5 favorite even before the news of the Train‘; scratching was known, and bcttors clamored to take him at that price. But bookies, after laying £22,000 ($88,- 000) against the public choice. turned down further bets. Odds on Sayajirao. QtLOOO-gulnel beauty as s yearling and signifi- cant winxler of the Derby trill stakes at Lingfield recently, held solidly at 11-2. Odds of 100-7 also held siiaion- ary on the third favorite. Grand Weather, winner of the Irish two thousand guineas and a. "topical tip" until thunder-storms today halted Britain's record-breaking Junc- heat wave. Thus Tudor Minstrel, quoted at evens at tiie last cailover, was the only favored entry whose price shortened tonight. The big question was what tac- tics champion jockey Gordon Richards would adopt with the Minstrel Saturday. For those who iliked omens there was Richard's failure to win a race during to- iciay's opening session of the four- ‘day Epsom meeting while Edgar -Britt, who'll straddle Sayajlrau. Ewen twice. ' horses tFour Divorces lln Province During 1946 l I OTTAWA. June orces in Canada are on 5—(CP)—-Div- the in- rlisclcsed today in announcing lthat last year 7.554 divorces were granted in Canada, compared A with 5,076 for the previous year. New Brunswick topped the list of provinces with the greatest increases at 123 per cent, and On- tario was at the bottom with 29 per tent. British Columbia. and Ontario granted more divorces last ycar than other sections of Can- ada, but percentage increases In these two provinces were lower than the average for the Dominion as a whole. Divorces last year fo-r- the prov- inces, with 1945 figures bracketed. follow: Ontario, 2.510 (1.940); B. C. 2.005 (1.366): Alberta. 962 (575); Manitoba. 636 (405); Sask- atchewan, 505 (282): New Bruns- wick, 362 (171); Quebec. 290 (177): Nova scolla. 26o ass); Prince Edward Island. 4 (2). ereasiflrie" lam-car's! I Stalls t ic s ' FOR KITCHEN ARNFAST COAL AMERICAN SOFT $15.90 DELIVERED PHONE 249R AND FURNACE COAL CO. Downs-Manila: _ f Wedding = In the Glasgow Rood Presbyterian Church the marriage took {Ylce Wednesday evening June 4th a‘. seven o'clock of Mae Matilda Mat- Rae. daughter of Mr. and Mrs Frank MncRae and Barry Leland Downe. son of Mr. and Mrs. waiter Downe. Charlottetown. The Revm 1“..N. Young. officiated and Ms Philip Motheson played the reli- ding music. During the cigniii- 0i the feglster Miss June Mae h r- son sang "O P:rfect Love " The bride was given in marr age by her father. Her brldesmrd was Miss Ruth Roberts. Garth DUN! was best rran fol‘ his but/w and the ushers were VELITOH MacRae. brothel" of the bride and Hnri; barter. The bride's dress via; txhltc 0i satin with net insert at yoke and the full skirt felling in a train. Her full length veil was o! net. and she carricd a bouquet cf Ame loan Beauty Roses. The bridesmaid wore a floor length dre-s of psvwder blue sheer with matching shozildcr length veil and carried an arm bouquet of Tailisman R0505. Mrs. MacRaes dress was of black crepe with floral design with which she wo:e u flower hat and a cor- sage of red roses. Mrs. Dnwne wzs wearing dcve-grey crepe with I rose trimmed lat and .1 Corsage of talisman roscs. At the conclusion of the c.re- mony the bride was presented with a white Bible by the officiating clergyman on behalf o1’ tire eon- gregation, M.s. Downe. being the first bride to be married in that church. The reception was held at the home of the bride's parents, where a buffet luncheon was served to a large number of guests. Mrs. Major MacRae and Mrs. Alexaniey Mac- Rae pcured tea while a number of girl friends of the bride assisted in serving. Mr. and Mrs. Downe left. the following morning for Annliolls where they will spend their honey- moon. On their return Evhfiv will re- side in Charlottetown. t Out of town Ellcsts wu-e Mr Frank Shearer cf Blsbee, Arizona, grandfathe: of ti"e bridx, and Mr. Henry Shearer 0! Montcrty Park.‘ Oalifornm, uncle of the bride. Change Ontario ~ ccmplioturp J (By The Canadian Press) Farmers kept a weather eye open as the} hurried work on their quickly-drying farms Thurs- day. The weatherman had pre- dicted thunderstorms and the On- tarlo agriculture department said that a few days of clear weather might completely change Ontar- io's gloomy crop picture. Statements from agricultural of- ficials were more optimistic than they had been earlier in the week when torrential rains deluged On- tario and led them to warn that farmers could expect a 50-per- cent out in their incomes during tne next six months. Work was progressing favorably in Bruce and Kent Counties. but oflielals warned that further heavy rains might destroy completely l-uwr rigjarvttv van he g " Weathedllay j Four Treaties Ratifietl By llnited States WASHINGTON. June 5—(AP)~.. The United states, through its Senate, today ratified the first 3°"? lleflce treaties to come out of the Second World War-those Wm‘ 1'51)’. Bulghrlfl. Romania and Hungary. The 79-io-10 roll call vote so. "tilting the Italian treaty and tho >voice vote approvals for the other three, however. did not signify unbounded enthusiasm for Lhg pacts hummefld out by the Big Four foreign mhflgfgr; Speaker after speaker voiced fears that Italy. like Hungny, might be engulfed by Congmun. ism when United States occupa- ation troops pull out, The majority. hOweyer. accept- cd the arguments of the '5ts.ie Department and those of sen“...- Ai-thur Varldenberg (Rep-Mien) that the alternatives to rim-flu- tion are confusion lnd loss o! 5g. lief in the integrity of Amerial. Just before the roll call or. rat. iiicaii-on, the Senate relectei‘. on a count of 67 in 22 a motion by Senator J. William Fulbright (Dem-Ark) to delay action on all the treaties until next January 26. Senator Tom Connally (Dem.- Tex), ranking Democrat on the foreign relations eomimtte, told the senate the alternative to rat- ifying the treaty with Italy is no "efliy at all. That course. he Said. would lead the way to "chaos utter confusion and lay mo? open to Communism." "If we don't ratify this trelty, we will be in fact inviting in- filtration of Communism from Yugoslavia. and all that critical ierltory that stretches eastward into the Balkans," he said. United States ratlfkailon cf the Italian treaty came almost seven years to the day (June 10. i940) after Mussolini put Italy into the war with what President Roose- veit eluted a stab in m. back o! prostrate France. Occupation troops are to be m. moved from the countries affect- ed within 96 days after the four treaties become finally effective. However. Russia. still would bl permitted to maintain forces to maintain communication lines to Soviet-occupied are“ of Germans and Austria. The treaties bceorns dfoctlvt when ratified by tbs U. 8.. Iri- tain. Russia and France m4 tu- mal notices o! ratification art filed. — 'BFAfrEiR*YIBQ~PIHHQCTIhB'IYQHIA s s France is technically in process of ratification and Soviet lull: in yet to isct, it wu said at. cm State Department. CANBERRA, Auotmiu -_ (Q; —-Royal Australian Mr lore: plflnee he“ begun periodAol-i olgml into the Antarctic to make mete- orological dbservations and their reports are hoped to assist weath- er forecasting greatly. the province's out crop. Agriculture Minister T.I... Ken- nedy said that a late autumn might permit much of the farm yield to be salvaged. Other officials said that s few days of clear welthls might make all the difference in be wnd to farmers whose soedlnl IDIIIIOM have been dellyed b1 be. loH, wet weather. f/iach/ The Peacock is "Perfection", on achievement of nature. lt is o fitting symbol of the “Periection" of Sweet (ups, created by neiure plus the modern magic sf "Perfection . . . (hack /". YESI Perfection . . limit o’ is the "wmiilvi m" iitdt checks, tiny Inenti lay out, every step ln the manufacture of Sweet (ops from pleolstlsn is you . . . Kfllillssrsitsperledlsnlnfrsslineeeinsmestlmosssndintssto. "Tlepssnsljorm inssfiehloblocboon bcsmokel" (SWEET CAPORAI. icrioancrrcs i .,,