K ‘i I I - conducted a one-man campaign ' eyesight. His hearing remained- BANKER IS SURPRISED issued himself when he was a I William Hayward, Manager of to the bank and -it was found the Charlottetown branch of the that she needed anew passbook Bank of Nova Scotia and one of as her old one was completely his new customers had an inter- esting experience this w e ek. Mrs. Drusilla Anstey who recent- ly came to Charlottetown from Twillingate, Newfoundland came filled. She was sent to the manager ago to the very day. to get him to initial it and it was then that Mr. Hayward discover- ed that the book was one he had [the fact that he issued the pass-' junior clerk at the Twillingate branch. More interesting was book exactly forty-three years Mrs. Anstey is now living with her daughter, Mrs-. S t a n l e y Walker, 131 Elm Avenue. Walter Callow Friend Of . Cripples Dies In Halifax HALIFAX (CP) —— Walter ‘Cal- lo , the blind, paralyzed, legless “ uman log," who gave his life to helping his fellow cripples, died here Tuesday night in Camp Hill veteransvhospital. He was 62. His doctors said his heart failed after two months of influenza and broncial-pneumonia. ' — He had lain nearly motionless on his hospital bed for 20 years. Despite weakness and pain he that provided wheelchair buses for hospital patients l”~e and in other parts of Canada. During the Second World War he raiscd money to send more than 3,000,000 cigarets to service- men overseas. His- paralysis was traced to an accident at Camp Borden, Ont., during the First World War. He was an airplane mechanic and in- J'ure_d his back in a fall while re- pairing an engine. A few years later he lost his but in recent years his voice be- came labored and weak. They amputated his legs two years ago. But he never gave up. Until the end he maintained his interest in his wheelchair buses that took hundreds of cripples on outings he could never take himself. COMPOSED FOR FUNDS He raised money for his warm time cigaret fund by composing‘ verses that he dictated to friends. Other friends had them printed and the proceeds bought smokes for boys who didn't get any from home. . Walter got dozens of thank-you letters from commanding officers, padres, men he had never seen. When his work became known he received testimonials from Presi- dent Roosevelt, from prime min- isters, from prominent men in many countries, and a few do‘na- tions. His friends helped him form an organization to handle his heavy mail and the business of selling the cards. After the war he talked about a.specially - built coach to take crippled war veterans out of hos- pitals in comfort in their own wheel-chairs to hockey and base- ball games, celebrations, and for drives in the country. . He canvassed all those who had helped his cigaret fund. Gradually he raised the money. Radio art- ists and other performers donated time for a Walter Callow wheel- chair coach rally that became an annual event. " . The first wheelchair coach be- gan operating in 1947. It had a ramp and a special device for locking the chairs to the floor. COACH PLAN SPREAD The Halifax Forum built a spe- cial reserved section for wheel- chair spectators. Some of Walter’s first passeng- ers hadn't been out of hospital since the First World War. He on‘ cards. The cards were sold 5 cm AND investigated every deatil of bus CENTRAL MILLINERY SPECIALS at Hi Style Great George Street. ADELLA’s MILLINERY Spec- ials, $1.00, $1.5, $2.95. $3.95. 177 Grafton Street. WE TREAT the sic}. well. Gig- gey"s Pharmacy, open 8.30 am. to 8 p.m. WEEK OF PRAYER service tonight, Kirk of S. James, 8 o'- clock. A , WEEK or PRAYER Service_ tonight, St. Paul’s Church, 8 o’- clock. _ VISIT H1 - STYLE’ Millinery. Great George Streetwhere every style is Hi-Style. ' .' MILLINERY SPECIALS also new hats at Hi Style, Great George Street. BROWN and white dog about' three months old found in City. Now at Dr. Kelly's. 203 Great George Street. PROVINCIAL . VOCATIONAL School. There are a few vacan- cies in the Day Carpentry class. Apply at once to the principal or Dial 4647. Charlottetown. NOTICE: Edison Fraser Ser- vice Station at Vernon Bridge is equipped to take care of your winter needs with a complete litne of automobile accessories, e c. PROVINCIAL . VOCATIONAL School. There are a few vacan- cies in _the Evening Cooking Class which begins Jan. 9, 1958. Those interested Dial 3774, Char- l. ttetown. SPECIALS AT KELLY AND Maclnnis up to 20 per cent off on suits, Harris tweed top coats, jackets, shirts, dressing gowns, curling sweaters and many oth- er items. Thursday, Friday and Saturday. N. D. Maclean UNDERTAKER EMBALMER Charlottetown and North Wiltshire DIAL 5549 PLAN SING SONGS — The ex- ecutive of the C. Y. F. S. met last evening at the Y. M. C. A. The president, Allison Gill, open- ed the meeting “with prayer. Plans were made for sing songs on Sunday evenings with the first .\scheduled for the Y. M. C. A. on January 12. FUNERAL TUESDAY -— The funeral of Mrs. Mary Doherty was held Tuesday morning from The Hennessey Funeral Home to St. Dunstan’s Basilica where Requiem High" Mass was celebrated by Rev. Fr. ncis Cor- coran who also conducted ser- vice at the‘ grave. Interment was in the Catholic Cemetery. The Staff.of The Prince Edward Is- land Temperance Commission at- tended in -a body. Pall bearers were: Joseph S-helfoon, Alfred Crawford, Fred McCabe, Dr. J. E. Corrigan, Emmet Callaghan and Ambrose Weatherbie. The funeral was largely attended. PERSONALS Mrs. H. E. Bowan, who has been a patient for two weeks in the Prince Edward Hospital, has returned to her home 168 Dor- . chester St. Mrs. Daniel MacLean. Char- lotte-town, returned by plane af- ter spending the Christmas holi- day with her son and daughter- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jerrold MacLean, Halifax, N.S. BIRTHS I - MacD0NALD—At the Charlotte town Hospital on January I, 1958 to Mr. and Mrs. Marcel- lus MacDonald, a daughter. C.".RRAGHER—At the Charlotte- town Hospital on Saturday, De- cember 4th to Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Carragher, Reserve St. a son weight 7 lbs, 51/2 ozs. HOGAN — At the Charlottetown Hospital on Monday Janu- ary 6, 1958 to Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Hogan, Charlottetown, a daughter. McKENNA — At the Prince County Hospital on Sunday. ‘January 5, 1958, to Mr. and Mrs. C. D. McKenna. Central Bedeque, a son. weight 9 lbs” 1‘/2 ounces. BEAIRSTO -—- At Prince County Hospital, Summcrside, on Jan- construction, seeking the beside- sign for comfort and sight-seeing. Later he raised money for sec- ond, third and fourth coaches and sent them to centres all over the Marit-imes. In 1954 Lethbridge, Alta., became the first city be-. sides Halifax to have a wheel- chair coach. Eventually, the Callow wheel- chair plan reached out to includ paraplegics. at home, cripple children — any crippled person who hadn’t been out of the house for years. ' . Walter never drove in or saw any of his coaches but he rode them in spirit every trip. His staff grew. He had a perm- anent secretary at the hospital and each coach a driver and nurse-attendant. _ Bill Lynch, who operates a Mar- itime carnival show, has an an- nual free day for all wheelchair» coach customers. The telephone, company spoilt a special 7 telephone for hi calls. The receiver was on a swivel close_to_ his ear. It had .a‘special amplifying .mouthpiece. » People came from all over to digcuss his coaches at his bed- SI e. . ARGUES ron KIDS Last year he argued for three days, with the engineer from a bu_s-building-_ company about low. ering the windows in the newest coach. Some small crippled chil- dren, he s heard, couldn’t see out. In an optimistic moment he pre- dicted he would eventually have fleets of the coaches across Can- ada and the United States. _ He was born at Parrsboro, N.S. in 1895. He would have been 63 on Jan. 23. In his youth he played hockey and baseball and went to school in -Saint John, N.B., where he used to race on skates at the old.Victoria rink. He was a mechanic in the Royal Flying Corps when the ac. cizlent happened at Camp Bor- den. In 1930 his legs became paralyzed. His wife and mother died the next year leaving him W1“? 3 10 - year - old daughter, Melba. He managed to send her to college and nursing school, She became a nurse and mar. ried a doctor. Now Mrs. J. K. Morrison of LOUCIOH. Ont-. she is his only close relative. Funeral arrangements await her arrival here. 2ND RACE CANCELLED ‘ ADELBODEN, s witzerland (AP)—Roger Staub of Switzer- land won the giant slalom in the international ski tournament here Monday in» conditions described as "impossible for good skiing.” Staub’s time for the 1,700-metre run was 1:45.6. Race directors cancelled a proposed second run, as“ “we could not expect good skiing in conditions such as this." llary 6. 1958 to Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Beairsto (nee Lei- la Townsend), of Malpeque, a daughter.- PICKARD_ — At the Middleton N. S. Hospital, January 6th, 1958. To Ft-Sgt. and Mrs." Charles H. Pickard a daughter weighing 6lbs. 4ozs. Ft.-Sgt. Pickard is = presently stationed at the R. C. A F. Station Greenwood, N. S. DEATHS GILLIS —- Suddenly at Nanaimo, B. C., William Gillis, formerly of Upper Montague in his 39th year. Funeral from the resi-. dence of Ernest Shaw, Uigg, on Friday, January 10th, at 2 p.m. Interment in Valleyiield Cemtery. BRADLEY—At her home, 194 Grafton Street, on Monday, January 6, 1958, Mary E. Bradley. in her 53rd year. Her remains were forwarded on Monday evening from The Charlottetown Funeral Home to her late residence from where the funeral will be held Thursday morning leaving the house at 8:45 for Requiem High Mass at St. Dunstan’s Basilica at 9 o‘clock. Interment in the For Week Of A congregation that taxed the seating capacity to the limit crowed into the Kirk of St. gregations in. the city joined in our Lord’s Epiphany. ' OTTAWA (CP)-Former health ’ minister Paul Martin says he can return the Liberals to power if he is elected party leader at the national convention opening Tuesday. What’s more, he told party vot- ers in a pre-convention letter, he would reappoint Lester B. Pear- son to his old foreign affairs post so that the “greatest” of external affairs ministers ‘could return to international conferences. Thus did the 54-year-old Mr. Martin, veteran of some 22 years in Parliament, launch his appeal for the leadership. The 60-year-old Pearson, con- sidered by many as holding an edge, also has "written the 1,500 delegates, but in more subdued tones, making no promises’ other than to follow the essential prin- ciples of libearlism. . The two letters, both dated Jan. 4, were written to the delegates who will meet here Jan. 14-16 to decide on a successor to 75-year- old Louis St. Laurent and‘ to strengthen the party for a new election. CROLL IS CRITICAL Senator David Croll of Toronto, a Pearson supporter, said Mr. Martin's reference to Mr. Pear- son “hit below the belt.” Rt. Hon. James G. Gardiner, former agriculture minister, took a difserent view. He said both By DAVID REID PARIS (Reuters) NATO’s permanent council meets here to- day to harmonize views on Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin’s let- ters to each of the 15 NATO heads of government last month; The permanent delegates to the council will discuss drafts of re- plies already prepared, including those of the United States, France and Belgium. i_ There is tremendous interest in British views following Prime Minister Macmil1an's suggestion Saturday for an East-West non- aggression pact. Macmillan did not consult -other NATO countries before -his radio speech. ' SOFTEN IMPACT ‘ Since the weekend, Britain has been trying to soften the impact of the Macmillan suggestion. A foreign office spokesman said Monday it should be considered as complementary to a “wider settlement." ' Soviet Deputy ‘Foreign Minis- ter Vassily Kuznetsov said in Moscow Monday night, after an- nouncing cuts in the Soviet armed forces, that Russia is “positive- ly” considering Macmillan’s sug- gestion. Bulganin’s letters listed Soviet proposals for easing international Prayer’ Service Held Monday‘ At ‘Cornwall. \ A well attended service held in Cornwall United Church on Mon- day evening marked the open- ing ofja series of Week of Pra- yer services. The service was conducted by the Pastor of the Church, The Rev. R. A. Pat- terson, assisted by Rev. George Killen, of the. Clyde River Pres- byterian Church, and. Dr. _E. Arthur Betts of the Highfield United Church. Rev. Owen Cochran of the N‘Ol“l!l‘I. Rim/ter Baptist Church delivered the sermon taking as the theme ‘.‘Paradise Lost”. The speaker said that God had created the first man Adam 111 His own image and likeness. Adam disobeyed God. End in doing so destroyed that image and likeness. Thus Paradise was lost. Dr. Arthur Betts invited mem- bers of the choirs of the Chur- ches represented to assist_in the service Wednesday evening in the Highfield United‘ Church when Rev. George Killen will deliver the sermon. C. C. Young People Meet The Central Christian Young Peoples society held the first meeting of the New Year in the church annex Tuesday evening. The meeting was opened by sing- ing the hymn “True hearted, whole hearted” followed by Pray- ervled by the president, Wallace Platts. Prior to the devotional period Mr. Platts led the group in a hymn sing. Margaret Jean Mac- Donald led the devotion on the subject of “The all seeing know- ledge of God.’.’ During the business session the president gave the details on a new attendance contest. The group was divided into two teams under‘Captains Lee Kitchen and Annie Laurie MacLean. Each team will receive points for new members and will lose points for absentee members. The losing team will give a party for the winners. Catholic cemetery. _ After the business meeting the James last evening for the sec-: ond service of the Universallthe direction of the organist, Week of Prayer. Ministers andlMiss E. Lillian MacKenzie, sang people of practically all the con- the introit “Cast Thy Burdens The minister of The Kirk, Rev. Prayers T. H. B. Somers conducted the answer.” Large Congregcitioii At Kirkl Prayer Service worship assisted by the Rev- erend Canon J. T. Ibbott who read the lesson. The Kirk clianccl choir. under upon the- Lord” and as an the mighty acts of witnessandianthem the 121st psalm. Th_e serviceonwednesday psalms and hymns in honour of Church where Rev. Mr. Gibson will speak on the subject “The that God does not Martin Says Can Return Liberals candidates are able men but that he would vote for Mr. Martin be- cause he is younger. Some party veterans believe Mr. Pearson will take the leader- ship on the first ballot. But others are not so sure. They observe that Mr. Martin is putting up a stiff fight. Mr. Martin, a lawyer and mem- ber for Ontario’s Essex East, em- phasized in his letter that con- vention decisions may determine the party’s fate for years to come. ' “We have a vast and important reorganization job to do, from the bottom up,” he observed. At an- other p oint he said that, if elected, “I am confident that I can,lead the Liberal party to of- fice and help restore to Canada the sound prosperity that it has always enjoyed under Liberal ru . QUEBEC FOR PEARSON? One former cabinet minister from Quebec said Mr. Martin may get some Quebec support but most of it would go to Mr. Pearson. Party leaders usually rotate among French - speaking Catholics and English - speaking Protestants. ’ Mr. St. Laurent is a bilingual Roman Catholic from Quebec. Mr. Martin also is bilingual and Catholic while Mr. Pearson is an English-speaking Protestant. NATO Leaders Meet Today To Consider Bulganin Letters tension. These included a non-ag- gression pact and, in his letter to President Eisenhower, direct top-level talks with the United States. SEND U.S. REPL ‘ A draft of the A erican reply to Bulganin was sent here Tues- day from Washington. It is gen- erally believed it will insist on lower-level negotiations to test Soviet sincerity before a summit meeting of any kind. A French foreign ministry spokesman said Tuesday night he does not believe the contents of the proposed replies will be re vealed ‘in the immediate future. On the Macmillan suggestion, he’ ‘said: “There is no reason to assume that divergencies between the NATO allies have in any way in- creased since the NATO summit eeting when once again our ommon interests prevailed over our divergent interests.” Informed sources here said the NATO countries will keep the door open to East-West talks, probably by sounding out Soviet intentions in a series of questions. If the questions ' are answered satisfactorily, an East-West sum- mit meeting might result eventu- ally. ‘ group divided into three classes under the ‘direction of Mrs. Pres- ' ton Beck, Mr. Allison MacRae and Miss Kathryn Beck. Follow- ing the classes the group re-as- sembled and Mrs. Beck dismiss- ed the meeting with prayer. Find. Sccillops And Shrimp Beds Off Nfld. OTTAWA (CP)—Several prom- ising beds of scallops and shrimp have been discovered by scientists of the Fisheries Re- search Board of Canada in in- shore and offshore waters around Newfoundland. Dr. Wilfred Templeman, direc- tor of the biological station a.t St. John's, Nf-ld., told the annual meeting of the board.Tuesday the ‘beds were found by exploratory fishing this summer. New scallop beds of possibly commercial value were found in St. John Bay,’ Ingornachoix Bay. Bonne Bay and Bay of Islands W along Newf-oundland’s west coast. Similar finds were made in For- tune Bay, St. Mary's Bay and Placentia Bay on the sou-th coast but the beds were less favorable for commercial exploitation. Good sh rimp catches were made within a large area in the Gulf of St. Lawrence extending about 100 miles south from Port «aux Choix’ on the west‘ coast of Newfoundland. Fair size shrimp beds were found on the southwest coast between Ramea Island and the mainland and from Bu-rgeo to Recontre West. Small areas in Fortune Bay and Bay d’Espoir also yielded good shrimp catches. Dr. J. L. Hart, director of the For Prompt, Courteous Delivery CALL V‘ SempIe's " “ Pharmacy DIAL 4171 By GERALD FREEMAN Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) —- Conser- vationists were told Tuesday that the last survivors of great herds of wood caribou which once ranged over 11.000 Square 1131195 between the St. Lawrence River and New Hampshire now live in a 400-square-mile area of the Gaspe Peninsula. Gaston Moisan of the Canadian Wildlife service at Quebec City told delegates at the northeast wildlife conference that about.90 per cent of the present range lies within Gaspe Park. Caribou hunt- ing in Gaspe has been closed lSurvivors Of Wood Coiriloou Now Live In Goispe Peninsula \ s and forests department of land 5’ method described his province Page 2 The Guardian Wed_. January 8, 1953, \IlIEATHER\ (CP) — Tempera_ TORONTO tures issued by the Toronto i,ub_ D. F. SIGSWORTH ‘ Made Honorary Fellow Of R.-E. S. In a recent letter of notifica- tion received from the Society’s Secretary-General in London, Mr. D.F. Sigsworth was inform- ed that “in terms of a special resolution of the Society,” he had been named an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Empire Society. Mr. Sigsworth’s name was pro- posed for addition to The List of Fellows in recognition of his aca- demic achievements. Mr. Sigsworth is the son of Mr. and Mrs. F.F. Sigsworth, Charlottetown. At present he is reading Law in England, and holds one of the ten post-graduate scholarships awarded by the I.O. D.E. in Canada last year. Be- fore going abroad Mr. —Sigsworth was a student at Dalhousie Uni- versity, Halifax, N.S. Blackout In City, North End A portion of the North end of the City and the people on the Malpeque Road were plunged into byackness temporarily shortly a ter midnight. A Mari- time Electric Company spokes- man said at one o’clock this morning that they hoped to have the power restored in about one hour’s time. ,CI1urch Executive Holds Meeting The executive committee of the Park Royal United Church met last evening with the chair- man, William P. MacLeod, in. the chair to discuss the business.» of contracting the new church. later they were joined by the official board to make a suitable presentation to Bliss Lockhart who has done outstanding work - on the financial committee. Business items discussed in- cluded the progress reports which will be presented at the annual meeting on January 16th. Judgment In Taxi By-Law Case Reserved 1 ' The validity of the city by-law relating to taxis was argued‘ yes- terday before the full bench of the Prince Edward Island Sup- reme Court. The City Corpora- tion was represented by attorney Allison Gillis. Mr. J. O. C. Campbell, Q. C., represented the taxi drivers. At the conclusion‘ of the argument, their Lordships reserved judgment. I PARLIAMENT AT A GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS Tuesday Prime Minister Diefenbaker an- nounced government suspension of the latest railway freight rate increase‘ until March 1 to permit cabinet hearing of ‘an eight-prov- ince appeal against it. The Commons defeated 163 to 27 a CCF motion proposing fed- eral grants to the provinces to relieve the crisis in education. Lester B. Pearson (L—Algoma East) said the Liberal party's policy is to move towards “freer trade and expanding trade be- tween all free countries.” Mines Minister Paul Comtois announced the government plans a two-year extension to 1960 in federal subsidies to gold mines. Senate Opposition leader W. Ross Macdonald protested the government has asked the Senate to approve too many bills with- out proper consideration. ednesday The Commons meets at 11 a.m. EST to debate government legis- lation. The Senate sits at 3 p.m. station at St. Andrews, N.B., said promising s c a llo p beds were found on the southern part of New Brunswik’s St. Pierre Bank. Commercially profitable catches of good-sized scallops were made. . since 1949. "L game study group, a highlight of «tending similar study groups and Bros., built the’ dredge. the submerged quarters and en- He delivered his paper to a big- the final day of the four-day con- ference. Most of the 800 regis- tered delegates spent the day at- lecture sessions before the con- ference disbanded. _ D. A. Benson of the Nova Scotia- Meets Sister After 28 Years MONTREAL (CP) -— Mrs. Be- linda Jerrett of Toronto Tuesday was reunited with a brother she last saw 28 years ago in their hometown of Trinity, Nfld., _a small fishing village on the 15- land province’s east coast. “I wasn't sure if it was her at first,” said the brother, John Pottle, a watchman in suburban St. Laurent. “But when she spoke I heard that Newfoundland . ac-‘ cent and there was no mistake.” The pair and four other mem- bers of their family were separ- ated after the death of their father, a fishing boat skipper who owned five vessels. O_ne brother stayed in Trinity while the remaining members moved to scattered parts of the country. Mrs. Jerrett, 67, came here to visit her brother and do a little sightseeing. She lives in Toronto with one of her three children. “I'm not as young as I used to be but that won't stop me from seeing the sights,” she said. “All a woman’s got to do is keep her tongue in her mouth and her friend in her pocket and she won’t get into trouble." _ A reporter asked her who the friend in the pocket. was. “My pocket book," she replied. One Lost When Dredge Ccipsizes HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — A dredge christened less than a month ago capsized in Galveston Bay Tuesday, drowning one crew member and trapping three men inside the 250-foot vessel. Two other men were injured but the remaining 23 members of the crew were rescued. Deep sea and skin divers worked in the murky waters to de- termine the fate of the‘ trapped men. One was believed sleeping at the time the vessel toppled over on its side. Crew'quarters and the engine room on the star- board side were under water. “Three men are trapped in- side,” said an official of Parker the Houston firm which Reporters said the divers found gine room flooded. There was no indication anyone trapped could have survived. ' « The 50-foot wide oyster shell f Rub with new, large, economy size Cough Syrup 98¢ ‘Generous iar o minus Just love the wild cherry flavor . . . and It soothe’, relieves so fast. éiA@CI<3-sséli/itt; THE CHILDREN'S owN COIIGII SYRUP With Vitamin C TWO BUCKLEY PRODUCTS MENT’S RE 217 ou FULL C Dinner served from 'ARE FEATURING ON THEIR SECOND ANNIVERSARY 'AT oun NEW LOCATION. THURSDAY. JANUARY 9th V ROAST GOOSE DINNER Adults $1.25 — Children 75: STAURANT EEN ST. OURSE of obtaining and analyzing i!1‘l,c weather office; formation f1‘0m_h01d‘§}'5 of deer Min. M licences, a techdniq_u¢iaStr:1vt<eil(lnsu:lt:‘<% Dawson . . . . “Hum 3 4?. to 8 Small 13 Services of 3 Vancouver .......... 3o 47 d0e§ "_°t_ emp °y . familiar with Victoria ............. 41 45 statistician whot isof game mam Edmonton ........... 27 39. the reqlllfemens Regina .............. 5 37 agemc;:_. Winnipeg 33b 27 i ENT ACTIVE Toronto . 32 99 PE“.dCmore than 99 per cem‘Ottawa 24 34 ofHl\I<is\i1e Scoti’s hunters return. M°"t';r°3l _ _ ec .............. :1 their i“f°m‘at‘°" cards’. pmvi 1<Q‘i'leedericton 21 33 ' ‘ 1 useful in ‘ orgfimz‘ . 34 ing matelrla. and mm bio. saint John .. .. 41. mg’ amiiytzmgor administrative M°“°f°“ ' 28 39 logicaé 88 . Halifax . . . . . . 33 42 reooiiies;-e is 3 strong psychological C (iiirlottetown 22;) 33 n .........-u-.. value in the use _of a“full I'etll:‘_:I‘l);‘- ggrfiiuth H U 35 Q Mr. Benson said. . St. Jam”. N‘-1d_ 23 36 N.B. Certain additional work sciously or subconsciously eV°1'Y hunter is made aware that he has a part to play in game manage‘ ment and that he is a necessary and sought-after member of the team.” HALIFAX (CP) -—- The weather office says rain will continue another I 24 hours over Nag?‘ Scotia and southern New Bruiij. wick, while up to a foot of saggy, dredge toppled over in 15 feet of can be .expe°t§dE1;;sft)ea:t5 °f NS!’ Water Brunswick an 1! Qu The Parker spokesman said heavy seas and extra weight on one side possible combined to let in the water that capsized the $1,000,000 dredge. The man who was drowned was identified as Garland Franklin. Gale force winds will blow in‘ regions of the Maritlmes. _‘ Forecasts: in Northern Nova Scotia, P ’ Edwa-rd Island, southern half‘: Eastern N.B. counties. southfin half of lower St. John River ‘vh- ley: Rain, occasionally heavy;__ tremely mild; southeast wind; _ , increasing in afternoon to ' east gales 35 with gusts «)5, Low-high at New Glasgow 35 M 50, Charlottetown and Monctoiigg and 45, Saint John 35 and 45. Northern half of eastern N'_ counties, northern half of lower Loses- Leg In Full From Trcii-n PORT ARTHUR, Ont. (CP)—A youth front: dspring 811:. mofgfié) e or e in air 0 - _ evlilse Ieoliidition. in hospital Tues- St-ild-7°_h‘n ii-1V?Vd V2ag19_Y1 Rain; day after falling from a frelght T“ fer’ 935 twm sth ' in‘-T935111, - tram . in a te_rnoon o sou ea-s gales 35, Jack Gillis, 21, formerly of In- DOW-hlgll at Chathflm and Fred. verness, N.S., had his left leg e1'Ict°n 30 and 45- _ -8 amputated Just below the knee UPP€1' St- J°h“ BN9? VaIle§, and right foot amputated after Bay of Chaleur: Snow, occasion. they were crushed by the train. ally heavy; not much change in Gillis crawled almost half a temperature; northeast winds 20, mile through snow and a 14-be increasing in afternoon to east low-zero weather before help ar- galesy 35. Low-high at Edmund. rived. He fell from a train which soon and Campbellton 25 and 32, left here at 9:30 p.m. and was Bay 0f Fundy; East gales ‘Q’, found flour 1101115 late!‘ by P1‘°Vm' increasing in the afternoon to cial Doice- ea t 1 so with u Gillis said he was en route to 1.aisn.gav§:ibi1ity neagr stieip 7%; S“db"’’y with. 3 3"°“p °f me“ ‘nd heavier rain, otherwise one n'u'_I¢~' had been riding on top of a box- extremely mfld_ car. High tide today at Charlotte- . town at 12.59 p.m. At Rustico at Labrador 8.20 a.m. and 7.32 p.m. Summer- side tide eighteen minutes later than Charlottetown. «Do Old ‘Job , breaker in the winter and spring and for Arctic duties in the sum- mer. The ship’s responsibilities would increase rather than di- minish. ~ * Mr. Chevrier and George Ma}- ler (L — Montreal St. Antoine- Westmount) argued that the La- brador could not carry out the same Arctic duties under the transport department as it did un-‘ der naval direction. * OTTAWA (CP) — The Arctic patrol vessel Labrador "will con- tinue to perform under the trans- port department the same type of Arctic tasks -it previously carried out for the navy, Transport Min- ister George Hoes said Tuesday. These -tasks involve Arctic ex- ploration and convoy duty for cargo ships hauling supplies to the DEW radar warning line in the Canadian Arctic. The Liberals have recently crit- ieized the government’s decision to transfer -the Labrador from the navy to the transport department. Mr. ‘Hoes informed Lionel- Chev- rier (L-—Montreal Laurier) in the Commons that the Labrador -now is undergoing refi-t at Saint John, GRAIN EXPORTS DOWN 5"" OTTAWA (CP) -— Exports of oats, barley, rye and flaxseefi during the first quarter of the 1957-58 crop year dropped to-153-I 600,000 bushels, 23 per cent lower’ than the 30,700,000 bushels a year ago, the bureau of statistics re- ported Monday. The figure wag 39 per cent lower than the five year average of 38,600,000 bush-r els. ‘ would be required to convert it to; civilian crew of 85 compared to a naval crew of 200. V He said the Labrador will be used as a St. Lawrence ice- ',«. JANUARY CLEARANCE sums . surrs cl AT 6 ‘5““s cidiNeeArs 1 W /2 PRICE BOMBER and CAMPUS JACKETS DRESSES All Sizes‘ _ Clearing HousEcoArs if and DUSTERS 0" I COATS BALANCE or srroon 20°/o Off THE FASHION SHOPPE {gm PROWSE BROS. LTD. Slore Will Be Closed I T hursiluy Morning Until 10.30 A. M. To allow the staff to attend the‘. late Miss Mary E. Bradley's fu- neral. She was ci Director and Secretary-Treasurer of this firm for so many years, .-1 11to2and5to8