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COMPLETE DA\7 REPORT OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TO DA V S NEW S XOOA1 In the Evening Paper the News la Complete Up,to <1 1\ M- AUBURN. N. Y.. SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1928 F’RlCF. THRFE CENTS AT LEAST SIX DEAD STORM BEAR ISLAND fishermen Sight Air plane Flying Low on June ,18, the Day Amundsen Left Trom- soe For Spitzber'gen — Fog Hampers Rescue Work | Oslo, Norway, Juno 30— (fP)— Re ports of a plane being sighted near lear, Island were being Investigated Way In the hope that they,might lend r the discovery of Roald Amundsen Li the five men missing with him In French seaplane. Fishermen returning to H a rstad >om Bear Island said they had seen a lane on June IS, the day the Amund- >n party started for Spitzbergen from romsoe. They asserted it was flying try low and was about 24 miles or’thwest of Bear Island. The ministry of defense asked local itboritles at Harstad to question the (bennen closely. It was thought pos- ble that the men mlghfhave seen the allan seaplane piloted by M a jor addalena who was flying along that rate on the eighteenth. Exchange telegraph dispatch from openhagen said fog had, blocked the forts of three vessels searching round Bear Island for traces of mimdsen. Kings Bay, Spitzbergen, Juno 30.— ft—Ice conditions about the en- irapment of the survivors of the alia were getting worse todny and lding to their peril. Fog prevented nnm from approaching them but ipc-s were held that hotter conditions f«ld soon prevail as the weather was proving. Tho wind and currents drove the iivooned men nine mile“ to the oast id today they were nearly nine m i ys ■'tb. of Gran 1 Island nun east •' ipo Leigh Smith. A small Swedish flying boat set out om Hlnlopen Straight in an attempt reach the castaways hut was driven ick by the fog. The ice breaker raganza with two Norwegian fliers loard was still blocked by the ice at orth Cnpe. In the meantime intensive search us continuing bv u.ig tennis for i'i(j iree membeis of thj Nohile Tarty ho started t< ward land. Captain ua with Alpinists and Norwegian lidos was exploring the region alon.g rlons routes which 'hey might have ken. w F I I ne BY [Konia, Turkey, June 30— (JP)— A cry famine is rising from thousands peasants in the Konia plain who been ruined by drought which Mowed an exceptionally hitter win- r. The Turkish government is con- onted by a more serious rescue prob- m than was caused by the recent 'fthquakes. About SO per cent of the peasants ire abandoned their farms and are grating toward the city, trying to !U their cattle sometimes as low as r two dollars apiece and accusing ®>ne profiteers of rushing from wr, cl ties to Konia. President Mustapha Kemal yester- '•v sent the minister of the interior 'Konia to organize relief measures, w Red Orescent is sending train- ads of food to the starving peasants, ■®ny of whom are now eating grass. The president is desperatelv anxious 1 hold the peasants from abandoning 16 Konia plain fearing that the re- on conkl never be repopulated DAY’S WEATHER FORECAST W a s h i n g ^ j une 30 .—West- ern New Y c r k : Partly c!ou<ly wmght, slightly cooler in south east portion; Sunday increasing cloudiness; moderate northwest winds becoming variable Sunday. by t e m p e r a t u r e s (Water Dept. Thermometer) 1928 1927 M in iu m ................ 64 87 62 G5 \i. r luulii •’uumum Sun Sun nses today 4:31; sets 7:35 rises tomorrow 4:31. SOUTH SEEKS ORGANIZATION OF DRY GROUP Bishop Cannon of Methodist Church, South, and Arthur J. Barton of Atlanta, Chairman of Baptist Temperance Board, Issue Cts.ll For Meeting to Be Held July 11 at Asheville, N. C. —Grateful Over Enforcement Plank Washington, June \0.— (JP)—As weary Democrats journeyed home ward from the national convention to day they were confronted with an ap peal to the Irreconcilable “dry\ ele ment of the party to “organize at once” for the defeat of tlie party s presidential nominee, Governor Smith of Newr Xork. The sponsors of the call, directed particularly to Southerners, were Bishop James Cannon, Jr., of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, who appeared before the Resolutions Committee of the convention to urge that a bone dry plank be inserted In the platform, and Arthur J. Barton of Atlanta, chairman of the Board of Temperance of the Baptist convention. Readily asserting that they acted on their own personal responsibility, they called for a meeting at Asheville, North Carolina, on July 11, to take steps to insure “the election of dry Democratic senatorial, congressional and state nominees for public offices and for the defeat of the wet, Tam many candidate for president, Gov ernor Smith.” They expressed gratification that a specific enforcement ‘plank had been adopted, but declared that the “only hope of preserving the Ideals of and the unity of Southern Democracy” was In the action which they proposed. Meanwhile, Josephus Daniels, an ardent ‘dry, who served as secretary of the navy under President Wilson, issued a statement criticizing Govern or Smith for the message which he sent to the convention before its ad journment yesterday, in which he reiterated his stand for fundamental changes in the legislative provisions of the prohibition law. Daniels declared the governor's statement \unnecessary and ill timed.” He asserted that It fell like “an apple of discord\ upon a convention In which “good feeling and unity pre vailed \ “Time was needed for healing wounds,” he said. ‘‘Instead before the disappointment of those who doubted the wisdom of his nomination could be lessened, the Sm ith letter irritated the situation.” Daniels was a member of the Platform Committee and urged the acceptance of a dry plank. Senator Walsh of Montana, a dry himself, and at one time an opponent of Governor Smith for the nomination, expressed approval of the convention's choice, terming Governor Smith \the most striking character that has ap peared on the political stage since Roosevelt.” Walsh’s candidacy had the backing of W illiam Gibbs Me- Adoo, Smith’s implacable foe at the New York Convention four years ago. He withdrew after he had been de feated in the California preferential primary. McAdoo Silent. \ McAdoo, who withdrew from the political arena last fall, would make no comment on the nomination. He told newspapermen at his home in Santa Barbara, Cal., that lie would havo nothing to say until the nominee has delivered his speech of acceptance. The party \acted wisely” in the opinion of James M. Cox, the presi dential nominee of 1920 \Since he was the outstanding can didate, met all the requirements of character and capacity for high posi tion,” he said, \we would not have deserved the right to even -mention the name of Jefferson if we cowed before the sariie sort of bigotry that Jeffer son so bitterly despised.” Mrs. Woodrow Wilson added her meed of good wishes and congratula tions to the multitude of felicitations received by the New York governor “I congratulate you on your nonv ination,” she wired him, \nnd heartily wish for your success.” To this. Governor Smith replied th/it no other congratulatory message, touched him more or made him feel more grateful. \If I could leave behind me,” he said, “an approach to the noble rec ord of service made by W oodrow W il son, your husband, then my efforts shall not have been useless.” Campaign Plans Form ing W h ile campaign plans are still in an embryonic stage, there is every Indication that a policy of carrying the battle straight to the fore will bo adopted. This belief is heightened by consideration of the temperamen tal qualities of the party’s nominees. Governor Smith Is described as re joicing to be *in the thick of a figh^ while Senator-Robinson, powerful of voice and sturdy of body, is known as a vigorous and forceful campaigner. A campaign program w ill bo out lined w ithin the next few weeks, the date for the notification has yet to be fixed, but it is known the Sm ith lead ers wish him to be officially informed of his nomination before the end of July. Friends of the governor lool; for a vigorous campaign with no letup from Labor Day until the election in November. They expect him to take a vacation at some strategic point and then, w ith Robinson, to carry the fight to every section of the country, in cluding the solid South. Among the first decisions to face Governor Smith Is that of the selec tion of a man to succeed Plom Shaver of West Virginia as chairman of the National Committee. In this connec tion several names have been ad vanced, w ith that of Senator Gerry of Rhode Island, a close personal friend of the nominee, the most prominent. Other who have been spoken of are 'Senator Swanson of Virginia, Sena tor P ittm a n of Nevada, who headed the convention’s Platform Committee, Senator Kendrick of W yoming, for mer Senator Hitchcock of Nebraska, Arthur iMullen, national committee man from the same state, J . Bruce Krcmer, Montana committeeman, nnd Owen D. Young, of New York. FOLLOWING FIGHT WITH WHITE MEN Two Victims, Brothers, Engaged In Altercation With Proprietors of Automobile Service Station— Mississippi Town Rocked By Violent Excitement DEMOCRAT W A Y TO HO AFTER Brookhaven, Miss., June SO.— (-P*— Quiet and a little bit apprehensive. Brookhaven carried on as usual today with no traces of the violent excite ment that rocked the town last nigh I when two Negroes were lynched by a mob. Early this morning the mutilated bodies of the victims were swaying from huge live oak trees beyond the city limits. Even the most curious hesitated to visit the spot after mid night. Other Negroes who might have cut them down were in their homes w ith doors locked The lynching resulted from a fight early in the day between the two Negroes, brothers, nnd two white men. Claude and Cabby Byrne, auto mobile service station proprietors. Claude suffered a broken hip, his brother. Cabby received a scalp wound from a pistol shot, and the 'chief of police, W a lter Smith, was slightly hurt. The Negroes fled but were cap tured and jailed after one had been shot three times by officers. W ith dtisk, small bands of men gath ered on downtown corners and when night came they joined to form a huge mob which immediately moved* to the jail. Sheriff Blister and his deputies were overpowered but they did not surrender their keys. Heavy timbers were used to batter down the locked doors nnd the mob en tered the cell rooms where the wounded Negro nnd his brother were screaming for mercy. Again held off by locks, the mob sent for an acetylene torch to cut through the cell bars. The- Negroes, James and Stanley Bearden, were carried- to “the street where one was placed in an automo bile and the other dragged through the town by a rope around his neck. Still screaming, the prisoners were driven slowly to separate points on the outskirts of town and hanged They were simply drawn off the ground by a rope thrown over a limb. Then the bodies were mutilated and the mob dispersed. A third Negro, taken from jail by mistake, was released without injury. He returned to his cell. Convention Just Closed Nominated Vice Presi dential Candidate W ith Same Flourish That Named Smith to Head Ticket — More Than 1,000 of 1,180 Votes Placed to Credit of Rob inson OF Thea Rasche Abandons Plan for Trans-Atlantic Flight New York, June 30— (^P)— One dis appointed woman filer today bad tem porarlly abandoned plans for a trans- Atlantic flight while another was sail ing for Europe to prepare for a west ward hop across the ocean Miss Thea Rasche, German stunt flier, whose projected flight to Berlin has been hampered by legal difficulties with her former backers, announced she had abandoned all plans for a trans-Atlantic flight this year and would shortly return to Germany Meanwhi.e. Miss Mabel Boll, who was at Harbor Grace, N F . preparing for a trans-Atlantic flight in the mono plane Colunbia when Miss Amelia Earhart and her companions made their successful flight in the Friend ship, sailed fit midnight on the He De France to prepare for a flight to the United States, probably within three weeks Miss Rasche. who after her break with her former backers had been in Quebec planning a flight tinder spon sorship of Mrs. .Tames A. Stillman, said She was abandoning her efforts until such time as she was cleared of legal entanglements. “It is a serious, a heartbreaking thing for me to do. to abandon this flight for which I have worked so many weary months.\ she said. “Yet there Is nothing else to do in fairness to myself nnd to Mrs. Stillman, who has been so loyal a friend in time of need \ Mrs. Stillman, at whose home Miss Rasche Is a guest, issued a state- l ment simultaneously with that of her protege. Mrs. Stillman's statement said: “Mrs. Stillman’s advice to Miss Rasche is to let these people have an empty trium p h . Miss Rasche is young and a wonderful flier- W h a t are IS months, after alP Mrs. Stillm a n has no regret— only sorrow that she was of so little use.\ The reference to IS m o n ths indi cates the length of time Miss Rasche’s contract w ith her former backers, Howard W . Harwell and the Hollis (’orporation, still has to run FOR THE WEEK New' York, June .30.— W e a ther out look for week beginning M o nday • For the region of the Great I-akes- Showers about Monday and probably again near middle or close of week: temperatures mostly near seasonal normal . North and Middle Atlantic States A period ofshowers about Tuesday and again about Friday; cool most of week in north and moderate tem peratures in south portion. Paymaster Robbed. Chelsea. Mass., June .30.— (JPi— Four arfed men held up the paymaster of j the Marlow Shoe Company, today and seized a payroll of S6 000. They .escaped in a closed automobile. The | robbery occurred hear the entrance to the factory. NETS IN CHICAGO Dos Moines, .Tune —C/P)—A call for the national convention of the Prohibition Party to meet in Chicago July 10-11, a t which drys, farmers and laborers are expected to join In nam ing a common national ticket for the November election, has heen issued. John B. Hammond of Des Moines, prominent dry worker, announced to day The meeting constitutes the regular national convention of the Prohibition Party, but according to Hammond a move has taken form to chance the name of the party nnd formulate a fnrmer-lahor plank in its platform In a telegram summoning Hammond as one of Iowa's 30 delegates. Dr D T.elgh Colvin, national chairman of the Prohibition Parry declared the Pem ocratic plank on the liquor question Was not satisfactory. Prevloush Col vin has evpi-e-sed dissatisfaction with [the Republican liquor declaration and also with Secretary Hoover's pre«iden rial candidacy. Prominent among thoce considered as likelv rresldent’al candidates h\ the Prohibition Partv lenders is Gif ford Pinch^t former governor of Penn jsyUania Hammond ®aid [Firtaneial Help For Non-Aggressive I Nations Provided Geneva. June .30 — (^P> - F inin'iai help for the nun aggressive nation in event of war or the threat of war is provided for in a projei t before I he League of Nations Committee on Ar'.i tration and Security The scheme also provides that a country threatening to start an ag gressive w a r shall be warned that if actual aggression develops thp victim will be furnished with the financial means for defense. If the plnn should hecome operative it would affect signatories of the pro posed Kellogg treaty to outlaw war. because violations of that pact would fall under the ban of the league A special convention open to non men. liers of the league, like the T'nited States, is provided for If approved by the League Council (By Brian Bell, Associated Press Staff W riter) Houston, Texas, .Tune 30—(/P)— After adding another oUl-fnshioned name to the 102S ticket, the Demo crats are on their way home, leaving the destinies of the party In the hands of \Al” Smith and 'Moe\ Robinson. The convention which has just eomc to a close can not be charged with do ing things by half measures. When these Democrats started out to nom inate candidates they were nominated with a flourish. It was so when the presidential choice was made Thurs day and again on the vice president yesterday afternoon Senator Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas was off with a great lead when the vice presidential nomination came up for consideration and his friends said it with votes until he was credited with more than 000 at the close of the poll. Senator A. W. Barkley of Kentucky and Mrs. Nellie Taylor Ross, former governor of Wyoming, changed the votes of their states .from their own account to that of the Arkansas sena tor as soon as they could work their way to the platform, the enthusiastic delegates yelling for Robinson, and when the books were finally closed the Senate minority lender had more than 1,000 of the l.TSO votes. Probably he never will know how many voted for him, for state chair men were still shouting for recognition to give him some more when the bands drowned them out. Followers of boxing would have said that the nomination was \In the bag\ for Senator Robinson. He must have had a suggestion that lie might be promoted from permanent chair man to permanent candidnle, for ho kept his modesty Intact by remaining away from the convention hall. Old Campaign Songs. The delegates, alternates and visi tors started home with the strains of \The Sidewalks of New York” and “The 01(1 Gray Mare, She Ain't W hat She Used to Be,” ringing in their ears. Some of them never again may hear of the decline of old gray marc, and possibly they will not be sorry. All the six hands furnishing music for the convention seemed to have a yearn ing for presenting in tragic notes the sad fate of the old gray mare. ‘‘The Sidewalks of New York\ was expected to carry as a campaign song for the Democrats. Just behind the two favorites was another folk song, “I ’ve Been Working on the Railroad,” and every band at the convention played “Dixie\ many times every day The visitors probably will relish some jazz pieces when they got home. Cer tainly the passing of the activities of the gray mare will be tuned out by those who fought the battle of Hous ton for Al Smith and Joe Robinson. .Tust before the adjournment of the convention sine die, a message was read from Governor Smith, accepting the nomination and giving his views on pending Questions, including prohi bition. The New York governor reit erated his previously-expressed opin ions on the question of national prohi bition nnd told the men nnd women who nominated him for the presidency of his conviction that there should be fundam e n tal changes In the lnw. Governor's Messago Read The governor’s words, read In ring ing tones by Senator Pat 1-Iarrlson, presiding, did not provoke much com ment among the delegates as they left the- hall. Most of them wero discuss ing the hour for departure of special trains. They may have thought it too hot to talk further of politics. Many of the departing political visitors wondered what was to be the fate of the huge coliseum in which the convention sessions were held. It will remain at least for a time, however, with two records regarded as safe from nttnck. Not in another four consecutive days will ‘‘The Old Gray Mare\ bo played so many tlmos In its picturesque Interior, nor will so many speeches be made In four days—or four' weeks—from its platform. As the delegates hurried away, they left behind them gayly decorated streets with banners nnd pictures of candidates to remind Houston for a day or two that a political convention hart been to town, done Its work In a jiffy and hurried away. The work of the convention Is not yet all done. The winning candidates must be notified of their success- Claude G. Bower, New York, tempo rary\ chairman of the convention, will advise Senator Robinson. Governor Sm ith w ill hear the good news from Senator Key Pittman of Nevada. Sen ator Pittm a n as chairman of the Resolutions Committee fell heir to the job th a t would have been assigned to Senator Robinson as permanent chair man, had not the senator been '’“slg- nntod to receive rather than deliver nom ination tidings. Millions of Dollars Dam age Caused By Tor rential Rains and Windstorms In Both States — Breaking of Dam Adds to Ruin Comments of Other Nations on Nomination of Smith and Robinson Are Conservative London, June 30.— (/P)—Only two morning papers commented today on the nomination of Gov Alfred E ■.Smith This was perhaps due to the fact tlmt Herbert C. Hoover was so well known here through his war work that his nomination attracted more editorial notice. The Times said the Democratic Party had chosen “n man whose pow er of attracting and retaining follow ers Is comparable to that of the piper of Hnmplin \ Nevertheless tile paper thought that this task of winning the necessary number of votes in the electoral college would not be easy In comparing the two candidates, the papor said •‘Hoover's special strength, ns re von led in seven years In high office. lie1. In improving the productive ca fjicltv of the country by conferences nnd agreed economies, by the ellmlnn- tkn of waste and by the development <•* foreign markets Smith with an nvpnrlenco as concentrated as Hoover = h;i< heen varied, has no superior ns a snide to the possibility inherent In « I sp and humane administration of public business. lie combines a great record of progressive legislation with outstanding efficiency nnd an In«stin--t for the due limits of government nation \ TI ip Dallv Chronicle said 'Whether Hoover or Smith is elect ed the l’nited States will have a strong executive and ruler. P.oth men are forceful nnd have mnnv s rled abilities and unblemished rec ords Nashville, Tenn , Juno 30.— (iP)— Scattered reports from Middle Ten nessee nnd Kentucky todny showed that at leasi six persons had been killed and millions of dollars damage caused by torrential rains aud wind storms tlmt swept the two states yes terday The breaking of Cookeville's municipal power dam on the Falling Water River sent a huge wall of wat er down the narrow valley toward the Cnney Fork River, already above flood stnge, but rlld not cause any deaths as far ns could be determined. In the same .general area, the small daughter nnd wife of a farmer were drowned when M artin’s Creek washed away their home ns they slept. In Buffalo Valley the two young daugh ters of another farmer also were drowned while John S. Lewis, Nash ville deputy sheriff, was electrocuted when he stepped on a power wire that had fallen in a puddle. Three wom en in scattered sections were reported seriously Injured with a score or move slightly hurt. At Alexandria, Tenn., 23 residences were destroyed and many other build ings damaged. In both Kentucky nnd Tennessee roads wero . practically impassible with telegraph and telephone lines badly crippled. Crops were washed out, bridges carried away, trees un rooted, nnd in many places, railroad tracks undermined. Because of the difficulty of communication, it was impossible to obtain an accurate esti mate Of damage. At Louisville, Ky., one child was drowned in a flooded cellar. I Paris. June .30 — Gov Alfred K. Smith and Senator Joseph T Rob inson picked a hod time to be nomi nated from the standpoint of public ity in the Fren-h newspapers. The nomination of Smith wns too late for the morning pnp-'rs yesterdnv And with the ticker completed today flip spnee of the morning papers is de voted to Premier Poincares rew leas? on life until October and the arrest of a new blueheard who coRrt- ed hundreds of women, some of whom aro missing. Some papers commented on what they regarded as the unexpected dry ness of the Democratic platform There was less interest in Smith be cause he Is not so wen known to Paris as Herbert Hoover I t wns the governor's smile that caught the French eye nnd the pic tures of him which have been run ning for several days all show him laughing There has been almost no comment ns yet for the editors have n<h had time to digest the sicn’flcnnce of the lJemor ratio ticket TliP.v had expect orl that Smith would lie nominated onsi’y but they had also experted an outspokenly wet dei la rat ion ill the party platform I - Cork fr sh Ire\ Stnto June j (.•P1-. The < ork I \anunor tod.ij I ‘ I r M i folk In uhan-wr <• irner nf j the glnln* they a-e lo. i.id \ 'l l I\ ■tirred f in- the news that iiovern. r j Sm ith has been nominat'd by th-- i Democratic Partv as ••nndidate f'>r 1 the W hite JIniw I ‘ The Amer'ciin Declaration of indi' perrlence began bv dr* it m .- all in n I free nnd oqinil nnd (iititbd to e,|ii:u i r glits before the law without i.„,irl ' to race or i-reed yet for i n ntur) and a half Vraeninr1. hnie nphe d an unwritten law In r - m ! t ■ th ’ prr«ident s faith ! • F.very Irishman no m a ti'r i> his faith is wl’l «K h bin vie. | F.ie~ Lir.d!)pr,'h’s P me. Curtiss Field V V .Turn’ '!*» I'1 ;Capt Emilio Carranza M'-ucnn good | w ill flier currying \ V Mnrt'm-z a' , tache of the Mo\i •> i enilm \. it 'W a s h ington as a passonge- I ■ <- ' off at 12 OT p m ' ac ith >' 'n I r ' timo toda\ for Detroit ir. 1 «l ‘ A Lindberghs neu 1- an m..n i i’’» Carranza was escorted <\ ( \1 I. nd jberch who flew alone in a < urtiss I Falcon. | TRAIL OF CMS ARREST OF ALLEGED SLAVER Marseilles, France, Juno 3Q.— (/P)— A trail of drinks from Marseilles to Africa led to tho nrrost In Algiers yesterday of the alleged Bluebeard of Southern France. Ho was identified today as Pierre Rey, alias Jerome Prat. Ho wns accused of tho murder of three financees. For four days Rey fled with the po- llco looking for him throughout France. He bought drinks for'every one ho met- He treated chauffeurs nnd portors nnd even iuvlted a passing policeman to drink with him when ho nuiat havo known that tho whole force was tracking him. Algiers police telegraphed that Rey admitted that ho was the man wanted I and that ho still carried a woman's ' wntch. supposedly belonging to one of I his victims, lie nlso had n check for ! 12 0fK\ francs (STc/>) obtained from | one of the three women whoso bodies police found buried I Some of the l.'» women at first ' thought to be missing have turned up. i Police feared that other victims would ■ he found however, when they had in vestigated the correspondence of \The Strangler\ ns they term him because , that was his method of killing his finncco • Attempt to Kill O’Donnell Fails (\hi. ago 1'it.e \ —'.Pi An unstic- rr*.-fii1 ii: :n|■' to 'i«-:i«s:nato Ed- wii’ii i .s| iki i (> 1 >onni*l', who the po ll i harm ter.zo ns the dean of Chi- i-igi cr runni rs wns made last lizlit t!i> ,'itt.ii I. its following close- 1\ tii<- m'-Miods employed in s'.ayiug Id.' T i.i Murphy Tuesday night n[)onneM wn=> tired on from a cur- tii nol Tit. mobile, as he stood in f-' n of bis lioine He saved himself ii.v dro, ping to the ground behind a mo r f i r purged at the curb Ir wns the fo ir h attempt in the [ ii; feu \oars ii, nssass nate O'Don- pi I j , * 11 ci • rt cords show R'a:l> to I.e.Hc Azores. Ho- -i I - f i ! i • 1 \ f I’ i ' a ’ \7ore= June M i T” v ith r* ' i r« n!iiio>t com- i.'f • '-jit Kr i ’ k 1 I'oiii-M.cv Brit- [. : \tl\. to . t> •irn.'rt to tp.- i imi .iii '.i H i i i i i x pro- v i<Ii■ i_ tl.f uiviilu r r i.orts fioin New- f m o a r d aud No\.i Scotia are. favor able.