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Rae a emees aa Ben omar THE. BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1934 ig Editor and Lawyer To Duel in France | Bayonne, France, Jan. 30.— (®)—A second duel as a result of the Bayonne bank scandal. is brewing Tuesday with a husband substituting for his wife. A lawyer, M. Simanet, presi- dent of the local bar association, challenged the editor M. Delarue who assumed responsibility for | his wife's remarks on the attor- | ney's duties in connection with the failure of the institution. ~ WALLACE LISTENING ~ PUR FAR REACTION + Chicago, Jan. 30.—\)—Springing a surprise stratagem, the prosecution offered alibi evidence Tuesday for one of the four men on trial for the al- leged kidnaping of wealthy speculator. John Factor, | BOOTLEGGERS MADE” Politics Are Tough * In Long’s Bailiwick | ‘GOVERNMENT TARGET ° Pres y bullet “calling card” that Ulic Burke, political ward leader, left after a visit to Senator Huey P. Long in his hotel room here last week, is still a matter of contro- Versy. In Washington, Senator Long said the conversation had been about jobs. At Covington, La., Burke denied the senator's version and said he had planned to shoot Senator Long if he did not retract cer- tain “insulting remarks” made over the telephone during the aa cent mayoralty campaign which Long's candidate was de feated. Burke said Senator Long said: “I want to say this to you. I was drunk when I talked to you over the telephone. Forget what. I said. I get drunk and raise all kinds of hell and don’t mean what. I say.” He said that, as he was feaving, he drew a steel jacketed bullet from his pocket and handed it to the senator. “I want to leave you my calling card,” he said. “I thought I was going to have to put it into you— instead of your hand. I was go- ing to get you, Huey. Would Extend Time Administration Reports They| | Are ‘Chiseling’ on Legiti- | mate Dealers | | Washington, Jan. 30—()—The ad-| ‘ministration was disclosed Tuesday | to be marshalling forces for a war) ‘on bootleggers, reported by federal | arent a flourishing despite repeal | g their wares into legal ane chalinels' and sat dry states. The house judiciary committee Tuesday morning arranged to hear {officials of the justice department, | the federal alcohol control adminis-| tration and the internal revenue bu-! reau at a secret meeting to chart the campaign. | These agencies, now at odds as to |the most strategic procedure against | jthe bootlegzer army, are known to be! lin agreement on an urgent need for some form of immediate legislative ‘action. | In all, three measures have been, suggested. An effort will be made to weld them into one. One of the officials to appear be-} |fore the judiciary committee is As- ‘sistant Attorney General John 8. (0. P. LEADER U. 8. DICTATORSHIP Mills Sees Breakdown of Con- stitutional Guarantees by Administration Topeka, Kans. Jan. 30.—(#)—De- nouncing “executive dictatorship,” Og- den L. Mills, former secretary of the treasury, reviewed the program of the Roosevelt administration in an ad- dress here Monday night and urged Kansas Republicans to be on guard against unwise public policies. At a banquet commemorating the ‘state's 73rd birthday anniversary, the Republican mentioned as a possible presidential candidate asserted he was opposed to “revolutionary change without popular mandate and to gov- ernment by men without any practical Umitations of law.” Discussing powers given the chief executive in carrying out the national recovery program, the speaker said, believe is an unconstitutional attempt to extend the powers of the federal government beyond the limits contem- plated by the basic law, but the exer- cise of enormously expanded auttior- ity has been vested in the hands of a “Not only have we witnessed what I/tion. Says If Enough Ask Strong-/ Arm Methods They Can Be Used as to Wheat roan, om, FAGTOR PROSEC PROSECUTOR tary Wallace and his aldes Tuesday | figuratively cupped an car for farmer! reaction to hints that if a sufficient number of cooperating pooner | take the request a compulsory pro- duction control plan might be applic od} to wheat as well as cotton. With early replies expected from [Offers Alibi for One of Touhy southern cotton farmers to question-| BMNGE Gating this qucaticn vdiféct } Defendants at Time of the farm administration chiefs turn- | p : ed immediate attention to details of Kidnaping the tentative $250,000.00 dairy pro- duction control. plan announced Monday. Believing that with any transfer of thought from voluntary to compul- sory production control the farm ad- ministration might be facing a eri- tical period, the entire group of agri- cultural experts planned to proceed carefully. From the secretary down, they maintained that compulsion was a weapon they expected to use only after serious study with the backing of a majority of the farmers it would affect Each announcement of a new plan, whether it contained only the volun- tary idea or a hint of compulsion, carried with it assurance that it must first be requested by producers. HAGUE YOUNG WOMAN DIES HERE MONDAY Impressive Funeral Services to! Be Held for Regina Webber however, The state placed on the stand a Hurley. The committee had before | string of witnesses who testified that |it a letter from him calling for leg- | Edward “Father Tom” McFadden islation to permit seizure was in the Oak Park hospital for|mediate destruction of stills and the ( leonfiscation of automobiles, boats pine of the 12 days in which Factor 1.4 airplanes bringing illegal liquor vas a prisoner of kidnapers. into outlets for the tax-paid product. Sixty years old, McFadden is being, He asked more machinery also to tried with three younger men—Roger |protect dry states under the twenty- Touhy, Albert Kator and Gustav/ first constitutional amendment. Schaefer, | ‘The country, Hurley asserted, “is However, the state sought to show’ flooded with imitations of variou: him guilty of the second half of the|domestic blended and rectified double-barrelled charge against the SPirits,” all non-tax paid, while an defendants —conspiracy to kidnap./eVen more serious situation exists in This charge was made along with a) "the sale of bootleg liquor under imi- charge of kidnaping for ransom. ‘tation and spurious foreign labels.” To establish McFadden's nine-day | alibi the state put three young nurses| Federal Land Bank jon the stand. They testified McFad- den was in the hospital from June 20/ Plans Meeting Here St. Paul, Jan. 30.—()—To improve | However, the nurses testified Mc- ‘Single individual, so that the citizen Limit on RFC Loans | Washington, Jan. 30.—(#)—Legisla- tion to permit the Reonstruction Cor- Poration to make loans for 10 years instead of three years, as at present, was sought Tuesday by Chairman Jones of the RFC. He also asked that the RFC be per- mitted to extend the maturity date of loans to. banks and all other insti- tutions, Jones urged the senate banking committee to approve the change, | Saying he was particularly “interest- | jed in loans to railroads. | Chairman Fletcher told newspaper- ‘men after the executive session he |thought it was a “reasonable” re- | quest, and said he thought more lee- jway probably should be. granted. It was developed that railroads now | and im-| at Home Thursday |Fadden came in under an assumed until July 9. Factor was kidnaped early in the morning of July 1. |the efficiency of the appraisal de-‘have total obligations of $400,000,000/! |partment and to prepare for the flood | maturing this year, and that the RFC Regina Weber, 23, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Louis Weber, Hague, N. D., died at a local hospital at 8 o'clock Monday evening of acute meningo- encephalitis. She leaves her brothers, Gabriel, Leo, John, Paul, Lewis, Anthony, Jerome, and _ four sisters, Helen, her twin sister, Eliza- beth, and Catherine, all of Hague, and Sister M. Florella, O. S. B., St. Paul, Minn. Funeral services will be held from St. Aloysius church at Hague Thurs- parents, seven ‘name—the name “McFarlen"—and came in with Thomas Touhy, Roger's brother, and Jim “Troubles” Tribbles, mer. | The state produced the janitor of | a flat building in which the Touhy | |testify that McFadden was one of the band which met there. Another jresident of the building testified he had leased an apartment to “Al” Green, Touhy gangster, and that Mc- |Fadden and the late Willie Sharkey a gunman who was killed last sum-} Rang Maintained headquarters te) “North Dakota meetings will be held coming of spring. experts from the! jfederal land bank here will conduct | | series of meetings in Minnesota an |North Dakota during February, S. R./ | Day, chief appraiser for the bank, an. jnounced Tuesday. lin Fargo February 5 and 6; Bismarck February 8 and 9; Williston February | 12 and 13; Minot February 15 and 16) and Grand Forks February 12 and 20.) Roy G.' Wilde, ‘assistant chief ap- | lof appraisals which will start with the \has loaned them $300,000,000. Railroad Coordinator Hits at Managements Philadelphia, . Jan. 30.—(4)—Joseph |B. Eastman, federal rail .coordinator, managements” that “unless they ‘ing any control of company unions. is deprived not only of. protection of the fundamental law but is subjected to arbitrary executive action freed from the restrictions of legitimate control.” The NRA, he commented, has much to commend it as long as it elimin- ates “unfair and unsound practices and promotes gound development” of industries national in scope. But, he Ask Dissolution of Chicago N Milk Trust Chicago, an. 30.—()—An injunction bill charging the existence of a milk trust in Chicago and listing four he dairies, the Pure Milk association, the Milk Wagon Drivers’ Union and more than 50 defendants, was on file in federal district court Tuesday. The action was ‘taken Monday by two independent cut-rate dairies, the Economy and Meadowmoor, and asks the appointment of receivers for all the defendant corporations and or- ganizations except the Drivers’ Union. Three North Dakotans|c May Enlist in Navy|, 42s the North Dakota is entitled to three recruits in the United States navy for ‘which enlistments will be made Feb- Tuary 19, according to @ communica- tion received from hedent bag bg oe ing station in Minneapolis, F ULDER recruits are to be chosen from cur- aa eee po waiting lists = bd betas to pton Roads, Va., for Dre- FRESH SLICED liminary training. Applicants must LIVER, be between the ages of 17 and 25 coax. Bs The years, of good physique and reputa- SWIFT'S SLICED ‘They must have the consent of BACON, Ib. . .19¢c 123c 10c New Time Schedule orecks totaling $10/485.62 were ts- PACKING CO., INC. 400 Main Phone 832 Wed. and Thurs. Specials TEND! STEAK, per Ib. wees L&C BABY BEEF SHORT 8c Committee Approves |] Rus, per b. .......... Bigger Navy Measure their parents to their enlistment. GE Bowdon Woman Dies WEINERS, Ib... After Long Illness SAUERKRAUT, Fessenden, Jan. 30—Thelma Carola Bogn, 22, died at the home of her parents near Bowdon, Jan. 19, of a complication of diseases caused influenza and heart trouble. She had been an invalid since 1930. She was a graduate of Moorhead, Minn., added, “this is something very differ- ent from the wholesale attempt to reorganize industry and business by substituting detailed bureaucratic control in place of regulated individ- ual control Treasury Ready to Begin Money Moves “ready” Tuesday to begin immediate operation of the dollar devaluation campaign and indicated he would be Present when President Roosevelt signs the bill with a “whole flock” of executive orders to put it into effect. Roosevelt expects to receive the re- valuation measure from the capitol early Tuesday afternoon. Whether the president will issue the necessary has served notice on “some railroad |executive orders immediately, Morg- enthau did not disclose. Intimation {show a change of heart” he will ask|was given, however, that little time {congress to enact legislation prohibit-| would be lost. One of the orders will lop at least 40 |praiser for North Dakota will be in | frequented it. ‘pral | charge of North Dakota meetings, at | erste Mitmess Has taken into | nich ‘speakers will be Henry Olson, Discussing the emergency trans-|per cent off the gold backing behind portation and national industrial re- covery acts in an address Monday, day at 10 a.m. A solemn requiem high mass will be celebrated with | satisfactory. Rev. Father Niebler, deacon; Rev.| He was George Hanson, a road- Frances Lauringen, sub-deacon; sand house employe, who refused to iden- Rev. Father Friedel, celebrant. tify a picture of Charles “Ice Wagon” Augustin Fox, 0. S. B., will the funeral sermon. mony that prosecutors found not |: his tavern if the company of Edward , preach | Connors as_a man who frequented|McFarland Refuses custody Tuesday after giving testi | cssistant reviewing appraiser; Ht ik"| | Danielson, specialist in farm manage- | | ment and J. C. Chapman, specialist | in soils. | Eastman said: “Company unions are not of them- jselves outlaws, but they must .... | be kept 100 per cent free and inde- |pendent of railroad management. A {company union myst not be in any sense a ‘kept’ union if labor.is to be Burial will be in the Hague ceme- tery. MOORHE AD TEACH LaCrosse, Wis., Jan. 3 id= ing their opponents to two field goals in the first half and one in the second, the Moorhead, Minn., teachers college basketball team defeated the LaCrosse teachers Monday night, 33 to 21. GIVE US GLUEK’S! |McFadden ahd Roger Touhy .two of | To Dismiss Action} |the four defendants. | | As Hanson left the stand, Capt.| Testimony in the $20,000 person-| |Dan Gilbert of the state's attorneys al injury case of E. J. Schultz: vs.! |police haled him into the state's at-|V. J. Wilson and Vincent Wilson, | torney’s office for questioning. "| which began, Monday morning in dis- “I want to know who got to him,” trict court here, was still being taken Gilbert said. Tuesday afternoon. ——__—_.- John Sullivan, attorney for the LYNCH TAMPA NEGRO ‘defense, moved for a directed verdict | | ‘Tampa, Fla., Jan. 30.—WP\—A band|in favor of the defendant Tuesday | jof men early Tuesday lynched Rob-| forenoon before testimony for the jert Johnson, Negro, held for investi-|defendant was presented to the jury. ‘gation for an alleged attack on a/His motion was overruled and he ‘white woman, then moved for a dismissal of the action. | Upon being overruled by Judge | McFarland, the defense began sub- |‘ mitting the testimony of its witnesses \shortly before noon. | ling carpeting and DHdgIne | Tybee exmeceets Cas tie seaae ae in the new State Capitol Building + | go to the jury late Tuesday. | Bismarck, North Dakota will be ceived by the Board of State Capito cities ot ‘| David Fryer Case Is ‘wn a:| Dismissed by Allen As The assault and battery case | {against David Pryer, accused of beat- | ing his wife, was dismissed Tuesday morning by Police Magistrate Ed- jWard 8. Allen by agreement between attorneys for Fryer and his wife, Rose Fryer. Mrs. Fryer has obtained an injunc- tion in district court restraining her = husband from molesting her and has} The maximum price per yard sub-| filed suit for divorce, Judge Allen| jmitted by bidders for carpet and pad |took this into consideration in dis-| iding in place shi a |Five ($5.00) Dollars yard. | mdssing: the, aetion, | bidder will be permi to eight (8) or less samples with hm poaRD oF ene ©. AuAmOL. come price of each, All bids must he ac-| MISS | \Companted by’ samples of carpets and | NONTH DAKOTA joule description of materials aad (tener CAPITOL BUILDING FUND) make. eee All proposals must be submitted inj The Board of State Capitol Com- | duplicate in plain opaque sealed en-| missioners offers for sale and will| |velopes with the words “Proposal for |receive up to Two o'clock (3:00) P| |Carpeting in North Dakota State Cap Monday February 26th, 1931, and liter typed prominently on the eof 1 then open proposals for the pur- the envelope and all proposals shall|chase of five per cent (5%) State He addnesenitce pitol Building Fund Certificates in Mr. Frank Te Anders, Secretary, /the amount of Three Hundred Fitty-| Board of State Capitol Commis: |{Wo Thousand Dollars ($352,000.00), sioners, In accordance with the provisions of Bismarck, North Dakota, Section 14, Chapte L. 1931, The Board of Bidders’ will stand “that ‘the | ge Fund Certifi- amount of Three Hun- Fifty-two Thousand Dollars | 000.00) will not be issued all at HOARD OF STATE MISSIO: TE OF NO! DAKOTA TISEMENT FOR CARPETING CAPITOL Com. | ar ta Chtot dustice’s Chain- ber & Conference Room 9. Conference Room cept ny or all bids or parts of [bids as it may deem best for the in- |terest of the State of North BOARD. OF STATE CAPITOL [one time, but will be issued in par- ‘OMMISSIONERS tial amounts to the successful bidder ATE OF NORTH DAKOTA [by the Board of State Capitol Com- R, MR HWORTH, President | missioners from time to time as funds Bismarck, North Dakota become necessary to pay the con- FRANK ft ANDERS, Secretary |tractors for material furnished and| Bismarck, North Dakota |labor performed to complete the con-| Dates of Publication January 20th, |$truction of the new State Capitol February 6th, 13th and ‘20th, 1934, | Building. No bid for less than par puddle aa can be accepted. Proposals will be securely sealed, | addressed to the Secretary, “Board of State Capitol Commission id en-| dorsed “Bida for State Capitol Fund | Certificates.” Full information can be obtained from the Secretary at Bismarck, North Dakota, All proposals must be accompanied by @ Certified Check in the sum not less than one per cent (1%) of the amount of the proposal. The Board reserves the right to re- Ject any.or all bids, or parts of bids as it may appear tothe Board to be in the best interest of the State of North Dakota, and to waive any in- formality in the bids received. M. Rishworth, President, Bismatck, North ‘Dakota, Anders, Secretary ‘h Dakota, January or reject NOTICE TO CREDITORS In ane Matter of the Estate of Gil- be N, Haugen, Deceased. ice is hereby given by the un- dersigned, L. G, Haugen, Administra- tor of the estate of Gilbert N. Haugen Tate of the town of Northwood in the County of Worth and State of lowa, deceased, to the creditors of, and all 101 aving claims against said to exhibit them with the ry vouchers, within six months he first. Bb teation of this no- tice, to said Usher L. Burdick, agent for administrator in the City of Bis- marck in said Burleigh County, dr to the fa A of ape County Court of Bur- leigh unty, at his office in the Court House in City of Bismarck, Bur- FOL leigh Cou: ant il i Ee ‘kota. ttled th Bismarck, ou are hereby further not! led that Hon, IC. Davies, Judge of the Couns | pDate of | Publication ty Gourt’ within ‘and for the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dako~ te he 28th day of July A, D, ae the hour of 10:00 “o'clock in the ‘forenoon of said day, at the Court Rooms, in the Court House in the. uty of Bismarck in gid County and State, as the lace for ring and hasue ne ne claims pina the estate of the said Gilbert Deceased, which have been duly rh regul inbefore * Dated 1; ese = rowularly presented as here jan. 15, A. D. ant Hat First. Publicaties on ae Teh ae Leeaeiance SF February 6th, 13th and 20th, 1934,’ 2 Too Late to le to Classify HAVE your* HAIR « and SCALP ex- given the privileges intended by con- gress in past legislation.” Will Draft Law to Regulate Exchanges Washington, Jan. 30.—(?)—Senator Couzens (Rep. Mich.) announced Tuesday that the senate banking committee would draft a bill within the next 10 days to regulate the New York stock market and other ex- changes, Public hearings will be held by the committee. Indications were said by Couzens to be that the Detroit bank Inquiry now under way would proceed for | some time. An investigation of the Cleveland banking situation is to follow. Accuse Minot Woman Of Illegal Operation! Minot, N. D., Jan. 30.—(#)—Bertha | Dale, Minot, was arrested Tuesday on a charge of second degree murder, the allegation being that she performed an illegal operation upon a young ‘voman who recently died. The complaint against the defend- ant was signed by State’s Attorney Rebert W. Palda, who was with Dep- uty Sheriff R. L. Dierdorff when he | took her into custody at her home in uorthwest Minot, The defendant, when served with | the murder warrant, protested she did not know what it was about. TO ‘DESTROY’ MONARCHISTS Berlin, Jan. 30.—(®)—A decision to “ruthlessly destroy” monarchist or- ganizations was announced Tuesday by Dr. Herman Goering, premier of Prussia’ and minister without port- folio in the national government. WILL PENALIZE DEFAULTERS Washington, Jan. 30.—(?)—Legis- lation to bar financial dealings with nations which have defaulted on debts was held Tuesday by senate leaders to be virtually assured of enactment. “Mary’s got a cold again” en, children catch cold easily, it is onal due to run-down condition. To build up, the advice of modern authorities infeed wire oitamins.and ovineralt, Thats easy now—thanks to recent discoveries. “Tn 3 chocolate-covered tablets you can ad get all the vitamins of 2 teaspoons cod liver oil! Not only this, thi oy these same tablets bring your cl important_minerals (calcium and phos phorus). Youngsters take these teadily—no fishy taste! “tets. Ask the druj for McKESSON’S VITAMIN CO! ENTRATE TAB- LETS at eo ee ANS Be sure 7.8 heft cy KESSO! use they LY 0 ‘ones ein minerals in whicon Babine ed" Phosphere 1 Gat marl rain. McKESSON'S VITAMIN CONCEN TRATE TABLETS OF COD LIVER | OIL are a food, not a medicine! Give them tothe children... take them y after meals, Never before have yeu Ia Lied such an easy means of buildi we rate ie oe bon after a few weel ehildren yy greater resistance to : Yaga more eee ee every dollar. Morgenthau intimated strongly that currency stabilization discussions with Great Britain were not far in the off- ing. To Designate Cattle As Basic Commodity Washington, Jan. 30—(#)—The house agricultural committee Tues- day approved a bill to make cattle a basic commodity under the agricul- tural adjustment act and to author- ize appropriations of $200,000,000 for benefits to the industry. The committee's action followed Any youngsters’ room means a sizeable outlay of money for furniture, clothes, and sport equip- ment. Would your insur- ance come anywhere near replacing these plus every- thing else that a fire might ruin? ‘Ask us to insure your household goods and per- sonal belongings in the Hartford. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Get a free Tony Sarg book of these eighteen advertise- ments.GotoanyConocostationordesler, whowillgiveyou & postpaid, self-addressed postcard. You will receive this At the Sign of the large book of enteftaining sdvertising illustrations by mail. ed Triengle CONOCO BRONZE GASOLINE INSTANT STARTING—LIGHTNING PICK-UP—HIGH TEST Blemarck 218 Broadway Phone 577° ‘ "REPORT AS OF DECEMBER 30, 1933, OF CORPORATIONS WHICH, UNDER THE TERMS OF THE BANKING ACT OF 1933, ARE AFFILIATES OR HOLDING COMPANY AFFILIATES OF extended hearings during which cat- tlemen generally favored the Jones bill, although persisting in their op- position to a processing tax, fear of which caused them last year to be successful in keeping cattle out of the list of basic commodities. The public is fast returning to the use of liquid laxatives. People have ieernetl that the right of a preety prepared liquid laxative will ring a fect movement without any discomfort at the time, or after. The dose of a liquid laxative can | be varied to suit the needs of the individual. The action can thus be regulated. A child is easily given the right dose. And mild liquid tives do not irritate the kidneys. Doctors are generally agreed that senna is a natural erties It does not drain the system like the cathar- tics that leave you so thirsty. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a Hard laxative which relies on senna for its laxative action. It get mesily Fees see te ayer person's regularity, You can always get Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin at eas 91 037 +5 apa ready for use. Member Start the children at Bog ‘on these tab- vigor! FIRST NATIONAL BANK Bismarck, No. Dak. Federal Reserve Distriot Ne 8 BY REASON OF COMMON OWNERSHIP OR CONTROL DIRECTLY OB INDIRECTLY VESTED IN FIRST BANK STOCK CORPORATION (Tite report to mode tn complience with the requirements of the Benking Act of 196) Charter Ne 2434 te ite a fd i en id STATE BANK OF LAKE £1260, Late Sime, tan. STATE BANK, Loketatd, Stine. Penerel Banking ‘THE NORTHWESTERN BAWK. Langéen, H. D. ‘General Banking eraTE OF LITONPIELD, LatenSete, worn MANTEATO LOAM & TR. 0O.. Mnatate, Mae. MENNEPIN STATE BANK, Misneapelis, Msn. PRODUCE STATE BANK, Minneagette, Stee. SB enera Raaking 1 AM Miserwecten, &. D. STATS BANE, Phitigebers, Ment. SECURITY STATE BANK, Robbinsdale, Minn. mone, STATE BANK, Rotheng, hime PARMENS & MERCH. OT. RAK, 08 Poa, ton FIRST TRI - COMP Any. St ‘Paul, Mian. GRAND A} STATE BANK, St. Poul, Minn Geanrai eacking Ax Ot Pent pen. FIRST STATE BANK, Shot, Meot viet STATE BANK, ‘South Meart, H. D. bes V7 Sree savinas: ‘BANK, Aberéeen, 6. D PREUEEEEtttl isbbanssearsareinsiisiit ntl COPE EEEEEEEEE tt TEETER EECEE Cte eee eal CORP., 64 Poul, Mian. "RESET IES . == ‘Eanes: a2 ee er are COPED COPE COPE OEE COPE CE EOE Eee eee TILL BLM ITT ELE ii iii iii ii PEEEE CURE CUELECEEECUD COEEOUE EEE EE EEE Otr el PEUPE DEEU EEE EG PEEP EU CECEU Eee cece eee eeeiiel MLTR ELOMLiLiti tie eeiereiiiieiiiiiitieiaiiy h compony iffiltate Geseribed tt the above echetete G chore statement ts true to the best of ms