MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN m; good in others. Nothing will ever let a man more friends than sincere admiration of p-f _,__ _,_ ._ Qilariultetown Iqggln‘ Guardian, Founded i881- Guurdlnn, Two Cents. ‘Nazi Daylight Raid Destructive In London Area Waves of Figl-i-tg-bombers give Empire Capital biggest daytime attack c; LEADS 11.5.17‘. IN GREECE Air Commodore J. H. D’Albiac h commander of the British air force bombers and fighters which have aided the Greeks in their llrive against Italian forces Greece and Albania. Says Britain Suffers from Meat shortage LONDON, Jan. 7—(CP)--I..ord woolton. Food Minister, announ- ccd today that Britain is suffer- ilig froln a meat shortage which 1n.- believes will be temporary. At tile same time he pegged prices for coffee, cocoa, fish, poultry and a variety of foods at figures not liighcr than the prices of Dec. 2. Britons faced with the possibil- ity-for the time being-of tight- ened‘ rations were told also that dPspllB the strain of war. their health ls “standing up well." Sir Wilson Jameson. chief medi- clll officer of the health ministry, who mode this announcement dis- closcd, however, that there has born a serious increase in menin- in 1S. lie added that “although we are sllll very much afraid of cerebro- Spinal fever, our great dread of it has ne," because the mortality rate ias fallen to a "fraction of vllmi it once was." Prune Minister Churchill's ap- pnlnllnent of three new executive bodies whose heads form a com- mittee to regulate and speed the industrial war effort received a nllxcd welcome from the prcss. ‘The Dally Herald sold the plan (‘llfl not provide “all the powerful. full-lime government machine for lllf“ application of n ruthless, co- oidinatcd output pilln," while the Tlmcs felt that. the Goverrlmcnt ls not making full enough use of Drlwcrs given it to conscrlpt the SPlVlCQS of the people. Coming Events .'Talki0l—80iiIls Thur . L-l J-l-I. "Taikles — Montague Saturday. My Son. My Son. L-108-1-B-2i. "Horse races at Brackley Point Thursday. Jan. o at 2 dcloclc than». L-i23 ' fililvestock buying 1115-. un Marketing Board good feeder igs, 50 to B0 ti present o er completed. L-9i-1-7-21. "Loading l-lolzs Thursday. Jan- uary 9th at Grand View Station. Signed W. E. Jenkins. L-48-l-4-4i. OI Vernon Driving Club Ro-orlzan- lzation Meeting Kosv Corner. Janli- llrv 10th. 7.30. All interested please attend. L-ll4-l~B-li. "Annual Meeting of Kingston Public Hall Company in Kingston Hall January 9th 8 P. M. L-lill-l-B-Il. "Buying live hogs a; usual for Winter months. Albany Thursday afternoon. Emerald Friday until 1i °°|°¢K AM. A. C. Green, Albany, 9- C. Green. Emerald. “The Wlltshlre in ill a! {z Annual Meeting of the Dalfvinz 00.. will be held :- hall on Monday. January 13th l’. M. Roland Easter, secretary. L-lOG-l-B-ll. “Th? llostpoiled Annual Martino flu‘ lin- Tryoll Farmers Inslltuir will 1f“ held ill Tryon Hall on a l,‘ Jlllllmlv at 2 o'clock. ‘,,'*' Kivrlny. meetinv "Willi!- C. H. Lord. Sccrctarv. 14-105-1-8-11. ' and wounded in weeks. LONDON. Jan. 'l—(CP)-—Waves of German fighter-bomber aircraft gave London its longest and most destructive daytime attack in sev- eral weeks today and killed and wounded a number of persons. Bombers caused several casual- ties in an assault on an industrial midland town and other raiders. taking advantage oi’ better flvirg conditions after being balked last night by snow and dirty weather, struck hard at East Anglia and the southeast coast. But despite the severlt_ of the London raid residents of he cap- ital continued their shoppin and routine tasks and Prime Mnistcr Churchill and the First Lord of the Admiralty A. V. Alexander- calmly silrveyod damage caused at Trinlt House, headquarters of the light louse service, and in the London Tower district in the “fire raid" of Dec. 29. A number of persons were killed in London when a line of bombs fell across a street. A street car was blown off its tracks, injuring eight persons. The spire and main port of a Baptist Church crashed. A motor show- room and a bank were demolished, trapping a number of persons in the wreckage. In another London section, four soldiers were injured when a gas main caught fire. _At many points, machine-gun fire aloft indicated the British fighters were attacking the Ger- man raiders. British bombers were kept from leaching Gennany lust night by the same weather which balked the 'Germans but the Air Ministry said the RAF. yesterday damaged an enelnv merchautman off Norway and hit an enemy tanker off the Netherlands. The German air force was active alt sen, a bomber diving four t-lom to attack a. trawler off the south- east coast. Coast watchers said the bomber wns held off by the trawl- ci"s machine guns and finally fled when a Spifirc appeared. The admiralty said seven mer- chant ships totalling 37.556 tons were lost by enemy action in the wcck ended Doc. 30. This included lhrre British ships and four allied vessels. The total was approximately hglf the weekly average since the war began. ll. S. Army Man Visiting Egypt CAIRO, Jan. '7—(AP)—Co1. Wil- liam J. Donovan, on an undisclos- ed mission from the United States arrived tonight in Cairo by plane from London. While he declined to discuss the purpose of his visit it was under- stood he will furnish the United states Government with a first- hand account of the situation and of operations in the middle east- ern wnr theatre. 99 bodies were still aboard, Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew cimatorrarowlv, CANADA, From the muddy bottom of the mouth of the River Mersey, where she took 99 men to their deaths in a teat dive a year and a half ago, the British submarine Thetls has been raised, rattled, renamed and thrown into the battle against Britain's foes. Jan. 3, the admiralty revealed the Thetis, now the Thunderbolt, struck past three armed trawlcrs and sank the Italian submarine they were escorting to an enemy. held base. This picture shows the Theus, seen wholly above water for the first time in four and a half months, as she was towed into a. Welsh harbor to be beached. Four men had escaped in safety “bubbles ; Powers is for CHAPEL HILL, N. C., Jan. 7- (APl-William C. Bullitt, former United States Ambassador to France, declared tonight "we know that the surest way to defeat the Axis Powers is for us to go to war in support of Great Britain. Greece and China" but that the American people “at this moment" refer to talkc the risk of a alltarilln victory "rather than g0 to war." To diminish that risk, Bullitt, told the International Relations club of the University of North Carolina, the United States must give those ilutions ‘fwhat they need-not what we think W9_C1\ll comfortably spare." l-Ie listed “merchant ships, war vessels, air- planes, guns. munitions, steel, wlleat~a1l that we give will be used in defence of our own secur- .. y. In his first speech since he re- signed from government service, Bullitt dcclared:— "We hate war and because of that hatred the question of criter- ing this war as a national policy does not even arise. "We know that the surest way to defeat the Axis Powers is for us to go to war in support of He is a guest at the British Ein- bassy. zbamage No developments In feell proposal FREDERICTON, Jan. '1 —-(CP) -— Agrlculture Minister A. C. ‘Payloir said tonight there had been no fur- ther development follcrlng the pro- posal of federal Agriculture Minis- ter Gardiner regarding feed grain rates? and no announcement llrac likely until afici- the dominion-pro- vincial conference at Ottawa this month. . Mr. Gardiner said the Dominion Frld _ . Should ~ All“ first day l “Mk l government would pay half the cost 0i‘ slilplmllr food grain to the Marl- illnes from Montreal if the Maritime Piovlnces would pay the other half. lllilirl- olliclals of New Bruns- luld Nova Scotia considered the offer Sunday. m. a meeting l'il Moucion lost l: (Continued on page 3. Col B) To W517 "Industries In Britain Slzght Newsman disEds-ses extent vital production de- _l_a_yed by Nazi bombing. (Taylor Henry, back from service as a war correspondent in Britain, discusses bomb darn a to British ooiatcd ‘ll... rlter) NEW YORK, Jan. 7—(AP)—- While German ni ht bombers in four months of a tack on Britain have blasted and burned huge chunks out of some cities, damago to the island's essential war indus- try so far has been surprisingly small. Naturally, the extent of damage to military objectives in individual raids is secret. But the aver e of estimates I gathered from a arge umber of observers places dam- age to all war industry in the country at less than five per cent. while damage to the aviation in- ee dustw has n no more than 10 pei' ccnl. Just before I returned to New York as the old year ended. i made n week's survey of the dam- __,_ enter war; Peoplgprefer not. Bullitt Urges Strong U. S. Aid To Grea_t_ Britain Surest way to defeat Axis U. S. to v (Quebec House Opens Session QUEBEC, Jan. 7 -—(OP) -~Mem- bers of Quelbeds legislative rmurlcll and legislative assembly went through the formality of brief sit- tings today and then adjourned un- til tomorrow after the Lieutenant -Govcrnor, Sir Eugene Flset, offic- iated at simple ceremonies opening the 21st legislature's second session. Topping legislation forecast in the speech were education reform and changes to the Quebec liquor act, eflch the subject of close study recently by the government. Italians lose 500 planes in Mediterranean .__._... By Ewnrd Kennedy Associated Press Staff Wrllwl’ CAYRD, Jan. “I-(Alp-Sinw Italy entered the war attain-f"! taln last June l0 more thand” Italian planes have been shot N" in the Mediterranean are; by lied aircraft or anti-aircraft gun-s. British air officials said wwshi- They estimated um about a0 Bri- tish planes were lost. h 1r 11mm; staws planes made ti eh first, uppgargncg with thb Bl‘ i118 Middle East forces in the brew" offensive in Libya and have dong “exceptionally good work. l- R07"- All’ Force official disclosed. First to go into service here we"! Martin bfmlbfln Officers added that terrific 11am- age and demoralization have been inflicted on the mulls l" a WW1 of 1,827 bombing raids carried 0i"- under air command here’. Perhaps the R. A. its cutest achievement was the herrl l0 I11‘ campaign which preceded 10114 advance in the m 4°59" 5nd , re on. This was directcd largely mm‘ Italian north African air fields where much damaBe was inflicted on their planes with a view keeping the Italians cn the ground as much as possible. New tactics were employed suc- crssfully in the offensive, it was disclosed. One was the wide use of Hurri- cane fighter; for gun attwkl from 151w sinuses on convoys and Ilr elda. This compelled the Italians to use more of their fighters in an at- tempt t: r-event such attacks and escorting bombers. "And since their bcanbers ale re- luctant togo out without large escorts. this reduced their bamb- (Continued on page S, Col l) ' hi8." R-AI‘. officers slid. rcdliced t e number available for t0 bridge in the blizzard which swept, MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN T"! "hndshllfs laws are by this :gigxtlli":sszgtihn=lgxérgt the coming, . sjlo lfusll PRDDIIBTIBN oll WAR I Air Training School to open In N. S. Feb. 21 HALIFAX. Jan. 7—(CP)—Nova scotia's first elementary air train- ing school under the British Com- monwealth Air Training plan will open at Stanley Airport, near Truro. N. 8.. Fleb. . it was re- vealed here today. Construction of buildings to house equipment and personnel is already under wa . The school has been organ zed by the Halifax Aero Club through a private company headed by C. W. Stairs, Halifax. Under present arrangements, the, school, one of many to be formed across Canada by the civil aero clubs, will train pilots for the Royal Canadian Air Force. Eight weeks will complete the initial tralni of the classes before they procee to other schools for more advanced work. The course at Stanley will be composed of groundwork, gunnery, navigation and the solo flight for each student. Declares Farmers face “Slavery” TRURO, N. 5.. Jan. 7—(CP)— Canadian farmers face "economic slavery" if present conditions in agriculture are not remedied. H. S. Arkell of Ottawa, former livestock commissioner for Canada. told the annual conference of Nova scotla agricultural workers here today. Mr. Arkell urged farmers to or- ganize for their own protection. "Developments in the world since 1931 have had an impact on ever lilllliz affecting the agricul- tura industry." he said. Export markets had been cur- tailed. surpluses had piled up and the farmer had to pay prices for his necessities which far outbalan- ced the return for his products. “This breakdown of the value of farm products is most serious and will condemn agriculture to eco- nomic slavery if not remedied and this can only be done by a na- tional policy." The devc opmcnt of nationalis- tic policies of self-sufficiency by some of Canada's good customers among the nations of the world was partly to blame, he said. As a result the entire agricultural galley of Canada must be chang- 1mi- Goal-banking Bridge destroyed In snow storm SYDNEY, N.S.. Jan. ‘L-(CP) — Dominion Steel and Coal Corpora- tion officials today announced de-: struction of a large coal-bankinrzl Nova Scotia during the week-end. A l 50-mile-hour-fzale loosed anchoraw‘ es of the structure and toppled the 350-foot span. Company engineers, who estimat- ed it ould take slX to elnht months to m: loo the bridge. were attempt- ing to devise a temporary method of banking the cool A company yvisbNsspXY, JANUARY s, 1941 squadron steamed back to its ltzncs? ' l iaml communications between Top- eleni and Valona. major southwest- ern Albanian seaport. spokesman said (Fvacuated 35.000 sick and wounded r the outbreak of hostilities Oct. H118 " n the wreckage steamship Geneva. barrels of Naotha. hnd. been found $111 the Yugoslav coast near Bar. 3. bv British or Greek warships . Annual Subscription Delivered. $6.00, lly Allrlii P-IL. H.001 Cnnndo and U4, "J9 l ATERIALS‘ Will Take Over Plants Considered on-co-opera tive Roosevelt establishes new four- man group with wide power; W. S. Knudsen getsykiy post. . i l0 PAGES Greek, British Warships go Unohaflenged By MAX HARRELSON Associated Press Staff WrltI ATHENS. Jail 7-(AP)—-A squad- ron 0f Greek destroyers has Cllllln_ ed into the Adriatic. ncnetratrrl bv night into the Albilillnil Gulf 0f Va- lona. and shelled the Italian-livid city with 60 rounds without cven so much as sighting Italian “lar- cfflft. the Greek Marine Ministry announced tonight. Then. said the communique, the "at reduced speed." _ _ The action took place Sunday _ , U‘ night. and coincided with a newl ‘\~‘>°°"“”“. “f” 5m“ Wnt" ' Royal A1,- pome bombardment ofl \NAQHLI\(JIU.\‘, Jail. 7.—(APi - i Valong, 1n which fires were 1e“ T0 iialstcii ulc production 0f Wat l burning 1n warehouses and e159, mnateriills ioi- llUlli bill; United States when; on the “lngerfmng and uiriil Uliililll, Picsident Roose- Greek military 1131,9115 5a‘. the ‘volt today llillllllil\'_ ('.:l1ll)ll$llt‘(l tile Greek farm; are menacing Italian new l0lll'lll.ll r oi‘ production jiiialilagciiitil. u l lllyud nulhgyjlyll lliCllldlilll lill- .)u‘~\\‘l‘ to take over any HKiLlblfiLll mulls considered y non-co-opcratlvc, (he Italians had. As WOfKllil-l lit-ids of the new ag- ,'ency, lic zlplioiiltcd William S. Knudsen, l0l‘lll(ii clllurlilan of Gen- ,ci'zil Motors, lillfl tiicllicv llillnlllihl flicc-urcsidciit oi llic Congress of, ‘Industrial Orgniiizulions. Both wcie! members oi llic o.d Advisory Dc-l ,fence Commission. Knudsen will] ‘be dli‘CClf)l"¥4(.‘lll3‘3fl.l and Hillman as- 1 sociltLc dircctiir-ucilcrzll. and they will act. Mr. ltooscyclt said. as a‘ is pygsumabhl 15 one of “w, “m- tcuin or lilirlilcr. ip ill wielding the iqn glmnw chins sunk Off g“ Jam ‘llfilllQllllUllS won't-rs at their dispos- -al. sccrcluiics liciujv Stimson and Frank Knox of the War and Navy deparuncilts. respectively. are mem- bers ex-officio. “(The President announced last, tended t0 set up‘ llv lil('ll.\lil) L. TU] Tflfllfzht the Greek military om Valona a‘one and that since 28. Fascist losses could be counted the tens of thmlsrlnds." (In Belgrade. it was reported ‘hat from the Italian including 500 ) . Dispatches from the Central Al-l banian front stated Italian defend-l 1:“: of hrllqurrl. cad of Tewleni had] flwlmonth that he in been endaneercd by Greek capture of a iirlfl-fonr nook north of me “UV I H b _ >_ btiyvgivtlgrylysd to the Wm of me FflsrlFtgOiTlrrs xlsfilllhfiilxlclbflill‘Lltllfiili: . smvhors o’ m" N°'“"‘gi“" "e9 Dav-toI-dav reports continued t~ undisclosed (lotiiils of the agencys l he“ sunk by a 68mm‘ 5"" mid“ bring s"ow increases-usually of 100‘ authority). ' lyer” gum“ M Hm‘! Kmg i“ my‘ or more—in Greek announccmcntsl All,“ M1‘- ROQwl/Clli had BXI-‘tlain- l ,','§B0v'}§'“‘ Gpcux “Von Lavina cf DFiSOIiGTs taken with reports of ed 111-8 01110118 ill. 21 press conference l 191647 l’ a, eimrflt it.“ d"?! . the booty in war material mounting‘ a lrufllwl‘ fir-Rad: "Mr. Roosevelt. i, u, ‘PM. “ ‘ a ‘w ‘"3 “"91"”! iusg as sgefldlm why is it that you do not want to “ ° “m” and India" ‘WWII-fi- flmicint u single l‘l‘5l)Oi’lSlbl€ head F0 u r de s IOTA: ‘zijecalled. re- l I I ll R 0 c dl N I k s I IN-VIRI, Title Prc ' _ in obviously Rood‘ ' I lsuliits l llfliV ailslvcrcd that he l Casualty llst F c - - --—- what is to be done. RAIDING AGAIN? or. I absolute aqrecnlcnt. he added. as to l new l statement (f 1 cent chilrges that the defence bro- lzrzlnl is looming down for the lack of a single responsible administrat- ‘llad zipnriiilicd rl single head. ‘Fllfi name 01 the now ofilclal, he said. is Kiludscil l-Illlinun. The two are in OTTAWA, Jan. 7-40?) — Death The foilr members of the of four men was announced toililztit llrrellcv issuer! a ioint by Naval Service hcadqumtmg in which Mr. Roosevelt said wils OTTAWA. Jan. '7 -l(‘l’l s\vrit. the 23rd o iclal Roy l Canadian great iinnortaiicc In it they °llCS§ _ _ ,, Navv casualty list issugcl since the rd the uiucncv of the defence pro l Wank) Pa Iw“'*‘-"'ll till-Klimt. war began, ,blcnl, assured labor that it woulrll “d 99193119111“ W» li- 581111011- The deaths raised to 255 the total not bc called upon for sacrifices not lsummemid?» p-EI- fife included in lthe names of 18 ratings u! m, lR-Oyal Canadian Naval Volunteer ER/Bfierye "vVhO have been selected for commissioned rank, a naval service yhenciquarters announccnlent rcrca}. fdf-Qllllflit. The 18 will undergo ltrairung at Halley Park, officer‘: naval casualties reported. The latest ciemandcd or capital as well, and rc- lisi. with official numbers and next nucsted lhc co-omratlon of all. of kin:-— “To achieve the I‘(’Sll'ts which the country expects from the office of Missing. believed killcd- production mailnsrcnlcnt." the stuff‘- Ab. Thomas C, Wormlvorth, RC. ment said. “we rxncct and lnust N.. 3201. Mrs. Florence Wormworth have the kind of co-onorntinn from (mother) New Westminster. BC. everybody that counts no sacrifice ltd-aim“ esmb -< I . -, (Ab. Wormworth was on service __ _ imp; $5 Q hhmem "Om hm-n" overseas). "‘*"*"" '“' " " i ’ _________ Lost overbolard- (Continued on page 9. Col 3 l Ab. Ralph Shelley. R.C.N.V.R.. -~--- , Mrs. L. Skeflev (wife) 15 Sinclair St.. Dartmouth N.S. (Ab. Shelley was lost overboard last Dec. 21). Killed in motor accident- Ab. Lorne Mackay Russell. R.C.N. R.. A-1l007. Mrs. Dora Russell (mo- ihcrl Snonlch. BKC. (Ab. Russell was killed in a motcr accident Dec. 23. 1940). Kfllcd by z\ln5hOi/"" OB. Georlze R. Bishop. R.C.N.. 3898. _ Raymond Bishop (father) Vancouver, (OS. Bishop was killed by gunshot while on leave). Food Blockade Will Be Lifted On MillcLWizieat ff HE Aufllorz or Snow BEAufll-"ul. snow’ EVlDENTLY NEVER QHOVELED ANY \ War - 25 Years Ago Today JAN. 8, 1916—Czartoryslc in Vol-l hynla finally fell to Russian troops, after changing hnncls several t-mes. Frl-ilch fro-ps withclrsul fr m positions in Vogcs Mountn: ncnr Hlirtinrinnszvclh rkcpf, TORONTO .l;lii. 7 --l(‘l‘l-- ‘Mini- mum and nlzlxmuni tomplunntllrcst 4 o , 71:; W111 allow U. S. Red Cross to lggg I 1U I send certain amount 0f supp ies ,,, i. ' ' be 3 to Spain, unoccupied France. 3511,21... It; s___ . ___._..__ H 1 . .~ . l u A“ W’ ' ' ' I Chnrlquitctmvn l0 WASHINGTON. J . '7.--(APl _ . ‘ l . Brlltishlhnutilwrlttligs Bay? bRIRTBGQ tol l FOREFA-‘T TC RX (‘P o6 e. re a. G SOUTCCS “id tonight w Benn“ the Amm-b fBiglrltirli;‘rfrfflkillfvka Allfilorvaic in 32“.....l“”°l.fi£°‘t ‘3.8€2Ssié’i“°i~.§%‘é; At A Gian“?lT.1fll‘--?‘=lllllid". and. wheat to Spain. mfallfll“ - “PH “Pl l —- — -- l a The amount of supplies to he shipped was not disclosed. but the CAIRO -— ;-\—i|\'illli'i‘ forccs thrllstirlltll Red Cross was reportcd to have 70 mllcs ivl-st o1‘ captured llardir qlric r \ l“il1\ vir‘ planned to send a shlpload of WllOllt izcclllliwul: "Mi-HIV ll-‘filllrl SBFYIHK kn: ‘ll(‘\\‘.'l'.‘ "Li. snow ‘in to Spain iltilrnk; lilo grollllllcli Fumes “l” “rd in .\' l ‘lhrl and ‘ho The shipments to unoccupied my; 500 1 rlinn plant's slmt flown in Sulicriol- ll, on. France. it was understood. would in- 31,.M,.,.,,,,,,.an 1n...“ Sin“. Rome m. , spokesman said that unless the en- gineers were successful. the 0a Breton mines would be unable operate at full time this winter. The structure was used to bank coal mined during the winter when the Bt. Lawrence is closed to navi- DC w 1 gation. It was 80 feet high and‘ had a ba tum. nkinlz capacity of 450.000‘ Cllldfi (‘Olldfllfififi mm! M113 Vllliml" lcrlvl war. ‘ lllzh tzdc lhis nlornlllu .lt nil?» products intended to rclicvc suffcr-j LONDON ___ yup-L." ha,‘ “sh-m. and H,“ ovomng R, M», inn among French children. "n, drflixht __ “Roma, brn;“|_ - Th” United States ‘zovorm“p"ticasiing-hllllsc hil ' In two recent. Sim \i“.l~' tllk all» rnnnn .l1 i3: h“ been neflumm with Br“"5l“l'f\idq several killed‘ trmll-“fllfvkwld riscs tofnclrrflv moinxic o‘. Much“ 0n m‘? Drolect ‘or 5cm“ meat’ shortage annouhccd by Lord :7’37 ' i v N time but Britain previously lied woolton- fiflfllls of new Bnihn ‘ withheld permission for such shlo- m, efln_i",mhrr'd|q,‘mwd _ _ _0 I ments to nasa through the blockade» i’ ~ . ~ ‘; - __ Full m a," Jfll- V‘ l l J")- Finland also mm, Woolw- ro-q TOKUY — Jail-RE ‘B59140 m‘ Fulnlnclzsldc ldc lll nlliluwl ‘.11- ‘shlpments latcr. it was rcnorisul. ' """“ "§'~'~""I “'"“ "i l“ l. than Cllil“l"l'.4‘lf\‘.l\. The British derision "aninst ma" < l" """"'"-='- mlttinfl flllv food silnblies to Germ F" ,-~ "lib 5i.“ ~11“ ill", our rsnav smlxns man-occupied countries was said ll» ‘ "If"! [u llubll =‘~ »\‘\I\ lullllwr» y --- - - l .S“"|~\ T ummm‘ |"""‘ m n"" 1 lienrcs Borden 94:3 A ‘.\l l0" l’ \l- (Con ti ' l" ', .l\ N1, is (lrrnlllli lrunps" i‘i'llliill\ll' 11,90 ‘Ill p ‘lllrlllclllllll- nnlss on frontier. loll vvs nued on page 3, Col 2) LL15 P. M.