MAXIMS .1 OFA MERE MAN MAXIMS A .OF A MERE MAN - ;-:-:- Fortune gives help to the brave. Don't make two bites of s ebony. The Guardian, Five Cents Morning Daily a"-oiuidsd iss-i. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Eff-?l."t"s:l5l'c1"l3'&i"-"”r-53:1"-'31"1l-in "-:”:'1-'3-."”'u?.'ll'il""l....'”'.'.'.'.'.'.i.fi'. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1953 RHEE ORDERS RELEASE OF ANTI-RED PRISONERS W Russian Tanks Quell East Berlin Reivolticiion mi N 16 PAGES H wreck A" lTo Announce Aid Plan For Govit To Reject Request To g :t0:;ngfeIi:8;ef::iI;:led Truce Plans iLobster Fishermen Tonight A joint plan for lid to lobster- Block llew Freight Rates Hike av Jor-lN LEBLANC lianadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (GP)-The Federal nmemment will not grant a re- quest from eight provincial gov- ernments that it eleminate the last general rail freight rate in-; crease of seven per cent. informed sources said Wednesday. However. these informants said. the cabinet will probably go part way towards meetinil placed before it by a provincial ielcgation in a formal appeal May. I. in any case. they said. the final decision will not be settled before the federal election Aug. 10. iy will take this form: 1. A refusal of the request that the government exercise its pow-I er to nullify the s38.500.000 a ycarl pitnl E Mary. is 'from her injuries. Commissioners-which. llrving Oil Co. iwins Court Case iicrease outright- 2. A direction to the Board of or flIllnlll1OslRZP:l the increase-that it take a second look at some as- parts of the. case. on which the March id boost was based. The Coming Events --imnce in lilillvlcw hall every l-'i-irla:-H "Dance Lot 65 Hall Thursday. June ilith. "Dance. l-iowea Hall. Bi-acki8.V Beach, Friday night. ..Rw,,.-.3 August 5th for St. John's Church Picnic. Crapaud. "Dance. St.-Peter": Bay HOW xame Hall. Friday, June 19th- Dancing from 9.30 Chaisson's Orchestra. "Pownsl Ladies Aid Cake sale. Moore and Mcl..eod's. -Tune 2031- 2.10. "see CorranC-gun Players in Lorne Valley hall. Thursday. .lune lllfh. Curtain 8.30. Dance after. "Dance. Souris Line Road South School. Monday. June 22nd. Music by Chaisson's. "Reserve July 22nd for Congre- gslional Tea at west Covehead l'nited Church. "Farmers ask about the Shur min Feed Finance Plan. For par- ticulars contact your local feed mill. Farmers who break records use Shur Gain. "Remember the regular Thurs- dav night dance. Mount Stewart l.egir)n Hall. Rollie McKenzie orch- -stra. Canteen service. "Regular Dance, Winsloe Station llsll. Thursday. June the 18th. Cmtesn service. Music by Doirion Bros. "Show. Morell I-fall. Friday and Saturday. "Father's Little Divi- dend." This is a real good show- cne. of the best. "Kerosene and Gas Rcfrigei-ators. Family size 5289.50. Apartment size 3109.50. Electrolux (Canada) Ltd.. 153 Great George Street.. City. Phone 1787. "District Convention of women's liistitiite of South West Queens Will be held at Afton Hall. Friday. June. the 19th. at 2 P. M. Dr. Frank Mac.Kinnon. guest speaker. "Come to Milton Variety Con- fort in Wheatley River Hall Tuesday niizht June 23rd. sale of candy. inoilisored by oyster Bed Bridge "Fort Augustus Players pre- -"nt their 3-act play "The Life "7 Reilly" in Cherry Valley Hall. Thursday. June 18th. Curtain 8.45. Auspices rink committee. "Buying daily. good thrifty sucker pigs. Paying 328.00 pair. 85 lbs. and over. Will also buy smaller ones. Wellington McNeill a; Son. l-luiiiaiii dz Bella Wharf. "Bee Mt. Ryan Dramatic Club. present their three act play. "Rose "Y My Heart" in st. Mary's Parish Hall. Souris. on Friday. June lath. Ciirtsin 8.50. Admission 60 cents. ".linniaguo Players present Weir .'l-art comedy "A Ready Made Family" in Annanrisie hall. 1””S'lHi'. June 2.'irrl. at 8:30 p.m. p”Sandy'a Theatre llnrier the stars Friday the 19th at 9:00 pm. showing "My Outlaw Bro- 'liH'." starring Mickey Rooney. Waller Hendrikii and Robert Picrinn. Free gift for every pay- i the provinces l :88th Death In proposals i jrcntral Massachusetts iagn sharp to Ll board would not be ordered to re- vise the decision. The second point was urged by concurrently with their proposal that the increase be thrown out. They contended the board had not gone fully enough into factors involved in a rate increase. Mass. Tornado l WORCESTER. Mass- IAP)-The ThCi88th death caused rabinet's verdict, it was stated. like-I by a tornado which wrecked widc portions of nine days was recorded Wednesday. Michael Miiano, 77. died in host- whcre his 65-year-old wife. expected to recover HALIFAX. (CF) .- A damage iaciion against Irving Oil Co. Li(l.. lresuliing from :4 tugboat ex- lplosion at Dingwall. N. S., in g.luno. 1949. was dismissed by Mr. ;.lusiice .l. H. MacQiiarrie in Sup- iremc Court Wednesday. .1. P. Porter Co. Lid.. owners yof the lug Alice. claimed the lhlnst uliicli wi'cr'kcrl the vessel was caused by oil company neg- ligence in delivering gasoline instead of diesel oil into the l boat's tanks. Mr. Jiisiica Mar.- :Quarrie ruled the fault. lay with 'ihc tug's engineer. who started 8 pump to remove the gasoline from the bunkers and left the. pump running unattended. The. lcxplosion was set off when gaso- line fumes leading from the pumping system came in contact with hot surfaces in the engine room. Fourinjuredilii Crossing trash SAINT JOHN. N. 3.. (GP)-Four persons returning to their homes at I-laverhill, Man. were injured Wednesday afternoon when their light. sedan rammed a slowly mov- ing locomotive at a level crossing on the Canadian Pacific Railway branch line near Musqussii. The driver, .lnhn Deblois. 23. was the most seriously hurt and will undergo an operation for head iii- jurles. Also in hospital. were his mother. Mrs. Aldona Deblois. 4'1. and his sister. Dorothy. 17. His aunt, Mrs. Melina Regan. 57. u- caped with bruises. CCF Issues OTTAWA (CPJ-The CCF par- ty fired the first big gun of the election campaign Wednesday with publication of a. i0-point manifesto, while leaders of the other three major parties finishing touches to their own el- ection platfornis. The CCF statement. s 48 page booklet. act out the party's policy on topics ranging from housing and taxes to international affairs and trade. M. J. Coldwcll. CCF leader. does not plan a formal speech setting forth his platform. He began campaigning three days after the Aug. 10 election date was an- nounced. St. Laurent Draftlngl speech Meanwhile. Prime Minister St. Laurent is drafting the keynote speech he will make at Windsor, Ont.. next Monday night to launch the Liberal campaign. A similar speech will be recorded for broad- cast over a BC national network at the same time. George Drew. Progressive Con- servative leader, will start his campaign Friday night at his home town of Guelph. 0nt.. with a formal statement of the party's will be broadcast over a hook-up of 30 privately-owned radio stat- ions in Ontario. Solon Low. Social Credit chief. will present his program in Toron- to Juns 26 at a meeting of the Social credit National Conference to be attended by Csnsds's two social credit premiers. E. 0. Man- lng customer. ning of Alberta and W. A. C. Ben- Outbreak Serious BERLIN (CP)-The Russians threw iin entire armored division into East Berlin Wednesday night to crush a German workers' re- bellion and general strike. soviet martial law was backed up with the largest reinforcements of tanks. artillery and infantry ever used to subdue a European city short of war. The fresh armored division reached the eastern city limits from zonal bases after a day of street lighting by 50.000 unarmed Germans with a soviet armored regiment and 10.000 Communist police. Two anti-Communists were killed and more than 100 wound- ed. The new Soviet force-spproxi- mately 10.000 troops with 200 hea- vy tanks-was rushed up as the anti-Communist strike paralyzed East Berlin. Government Helpless The Red East German govern- ment of Prime Minister Otto Grotowohl appeared helpless in the continuing crisis. The general strike spread to other Soviet zone cities. State rall- way workers walked out in sym- pathy with East Berliners and crippled zonal communications. Despite the Soviet martial law decree. violent clashes occurred Wednesday night in Alexander. Platz, Potsdamer Platz and Stalin Aiiee. Russian troops and Com- munist police fired repeatedly at demonstrators. Anti-Communists raided an old Communist store at Potsdamer Platz and set it. ablaze. They also put Haus Vaterland. a Communist restaurant in the vicinity. to the torch. "Ivan go Home" During the day the rioters burned police boxes. hauled down Red flags. smashed a dozen gov- ernment cars. manhandled Ger- man Communist. officials and shouted "Ivan go home" in a spontaneous outlet of emotions piled up through the post-war years. soviet tanks which blazed away at massed rioters in East Berlin also turned on crowds of specta- toigs standing on the West sector border. Between 10 and 20 persons in West Berlin were wounded. Zone sealer! of! West German reports said Rus- riaii troops had sealed off East Berlin from the soviet zone fol- lowing the mass entranca of East German workers to join in the anti-government demonstrations. The reports said strikes. protest marches and demonstrations against the Communist govern- ment were spreading rapidly throughout the entire soviet zone Election Manifesto put theiiminating hunger and poverty and policy and program. The speech continue&"Ji"riie is Col. 4 lo-Point nett of British Columbia. The 10 major planks the CCF platform are: 1. "Canadian leadership for peace" to avert communism by el- listed in building collective support of the UN. 2. An immediate national health insurance plan. 3. A social security prop-gm with sickness benefits and in. creased old age pensions and farn. iiy allowances to offset increased living costs. 4. A housing program to build 100,000 new homes a. year. imple- menting it with lower interest rates and down payment; gm- liome-buyers and subsidized low- rental housing for tenants. 5. Marketing agencies for inter- provincial and export sale of farm and fish products. 0. Guaranteed advanced prices, based on parity. for primary pro- ducers. 7. Economic arrangements with Commonwealth and other ster- ling-ares countries to "regain and expand overseas markets". 8. Complete revision of rates "to eliminate tion." 9. Extension of unemployment insuranca to provide higher bong- fits and sickness protection. coup- led with is national labor code to guarantee union and job security. 10. Reduced ' me taxes for low-income groups. higher cor- poration taxes and new taxes on excess profits and capital gains. The CCF booklet. titled "Hum. anity First." stresses the idea of "fair shares for all". security and freight discrimina- justice. casting. political broadcasts (By Wllmot llarehor) WASHINGTON. (AP) -Justice William Douglas of the l'nited States Supreme Co rt granted an indefinite stay of execution Wed- nesday to Julius and Ethel Rosen-l berg. condemned atom spies. out six hours later Chief Justice Fred Vinson called a special session of the high tribunal to the order. Vinson. acting on.the request of Attorney-General Herbal-i Brownell. announced that a spe- cial term of the court will be convened at noon Thursday. This is 10 hours before the Rosenbergs were scheduled to die in the elec- tric clinic at New York's Sing Sing prison. The court has been in summer recess since Monday. but Vinson has authority to convene it if he can muster a quorum of six of the nine justices. Some of the including Douglas. are out of town but six are here or near enough to get to Washing- ton on time. in the explosion of reaction following Douglaa' decision. Rep- resentative W. M. Wheeler. Dem. Ga.) moved in the House of Rep- review 1 resentstivel to have Dougisl im- peached for "high crimes and misdemeanors in office. The Rosenberg's. centre of a world-wide. storm of controversy, were convicted of conspiracy to! betray some of the most vital l'.' 5. atomic secrets to Soviet Rus-. sia. Q Douglas doubts whether .senlencecl the illle right to impose the penalty. He said iiic. should be resolved hy courts. lfnlr.-ss reversed by the fully Supreme Court. l)0uglas' slay Will said he had serious the judge l Rose-nherizs who had; dcallil qiiPSiI0lii the lower applied to the Rose-nbcrK'S P859- This law. passed in 1946 after the specific offences charged againsti the Rosenbergs were commitiedn pmvldes that a death sentence can be imposed only on the specific; recommendation of the trial jury; and when it has been found that; the offence was committed in an. attempt to injure the United Statesf Douglas said neither of those. requirements was met in the case- of the Rosenbergs. I To Attend Red Cross High School Leadership Training Centre In N.B. will Canada's Shipping Fleet May Disopiiear OTTAWA. (GP)-The operators of Canadals deep-sea shipping fleet say the fleet will "inevitably disappear" iiniess the federal gov- ernment provides financial aid. Banding together under the new- ly-iormsd Canadian Shipowners Association. the operators said Wednesday they are faced with two major problems: high operat- ing costs and high costs of build- ing new ships in Canada to re- place old vessels. The organization. representing owners of 140 ships totalling about 1,000,000 gross tons. is headed by M. G. Angus of Montreal. presi- dent. A. L. Lawes of Montreal and E. F. Riddle of Vancouver are vice-presidents. Appointed manager Fisher. formerly deputy transport controller. lmprohireiffr-o;tm;nt For The Mentally Ill TORONTO. (CPI - Health Min- ister Phiillps of Ontario said Wed- nesday better methods of treating the mentally ill will result in 1. 40 per cent drop in the number-of is W. .7. federal such patients in Ontario hospitals during the next in years. He said. however. that no such change could be expected in the number who were low on natural intellig- cnco. TV in Campaign OTTAWA. iCPi -- Canada's four major political parties have agreed not to use television in the current election campaign. A. D. Dunton. chairman of governors. the CBC board of announced Wednesday. He said the CBC had offered free television time for campaign broad- bui. the parties decided among themselves not to use the new medium in this election. The CBC has divided a total of 18 hours. 10 minutes of free-time on English- ianguage networks among the four parties after they were unable to agree on the proportions of time for each. The division wil give the i.ib- ersl party 33 per cent of the time. the Progressive Conservative: 30 per cent. ccr 20 per cent and Social Credit 11 per cent. Mr. Dunion said the broadcasts will run from June 22 to Aug. 7. NEW PAMIENGEB 8-CIVIC! MONTREAL. (Flhwl-tome announced Wednesday that, the liner Sydney will inaugurate s new passenger service between Quebec and Liverpool with four westbound and three eastbound sailings this summer. A fourth sailing from Quebec will be direct to Genoa. First. departure of the sydngv from Quebec will be July ll. Lines l The following delegates were selected this week by the P. E. in Junior Red Cross Committee to at.- tend the Red Cross High School. Leadership Training Centre at Sackville. N. 13., next. month: Miss. Jean Skerry. Tignish. Miss Eleanor. lfaywood. Suinmerslde, Edward Le-1 Clair. Miscouche. Miss Joyce Mac-i Kinnon, Prince Street. School. Miss Suzanne Francis. Rochford Squarcl School, and Miss Belly Kelly. Notre Dame Academy. Charlotte- town. Carl Reynolds, Bioiliajzlltifilifl: Miss Rebecca Jardine, Kensiiigtonl All high schooLs in the Province were given an opportunity to sub-i mit applicants to attend this! training centre. Home and school. Associations. the schools them-1 selves. as well as the delegates are sliarlng the expense in conneciioni wii.h this conference with the Can-l adisn Red Cross Society. It is the! first of its kind to be held in the; Atlantic Provinces although others have been held in the Western Provinces and in Ontario for al number of years with very success- ful results. Scheduled from July 7th-16th.; with its headquarters at. Mt. Al-i. lison University-and with full use of the accommodations and facilit.-l ies there-the ten day project. is de-. Sltlned '0 Dffpare approxiniaiely 60 high school students from the four. Atlantic Province: to pmmoig rm-l high school phase of the Junior Society): program in their aw... communities. and in leadership training. Guests from the Juniorl Red Cross in the Province of Que- bec and in the liuitcd States will be nmonirthose attending. . An inkling into the wide rang:-l of interests and activities being arranged for this training camp; has been provided witii the an. nouncemcnts regarding appoint- ments to tile centre's staff. i Mr. G. Forbes Elliott. principal oft Simond's Regional High schooii East Saint. John, has been namedl iiirector of the (icntre. The select- on of the director was annnuncgd by Dr. F. E. Mr-Diarmiri. Director Continued 'onWP:rge 15 Can-l C3 C- Employment Figures ileleased OTMWA lcpl -'EmDi0ymsnt rose in the month up to mid-May.l the government reported Wednes. day. Canadians working a full week during the week ended May 16 totsllied 4.720.000, the bureau of statistics estimated. compared with 4.466.000 a month earlier. Persons without. jobs and look. ing for work fell to 114,000 from 165.000. It was the second successive month that the number of full- time workers had picked up sharply and that the number of jobless looking for work had fall- en. The annual spring--summer upsurge was gathering momen- tum. In general. the bureau said. de- mand for workers in agriculture, fishing and transportation is in. creasing. Logging employment is still below last year's levels. and in Eastern Canada is at its sea- lK0l'Eall prisoners of war gllnited Nations POW 'South Korea. lremal" 1" 'm."il "Mil lollericommuiiist Korean prisoner; or. Doptiitinciit. He was guest speak- ilhouns have de("d"l. M'."”m Spoltiiis day, June 18. 1953." The pres- rr lust mizht at the Charlottetown lm" 10 M U” Nam” hnprgy Adlidelil said in a statement at a diuncv tendered him by the men who suffered losses in the storm of May 24 will be announc- BUL-l.-ETIN ed tonight by Hon. James Sin- TOKYO. MW-A lP0k5lm'-" cl.-iir, Federal Minister of Fisher- nt Gen. MINI W- C11-I'll" 'ios, who will meet with Premier headquarters said ind-.V 2-in ja. w. Mnllieson and members of 000 miriifantly anti-Communist North Korean prisoners of war hlirat. from South Kor- ean prison camps today. SEOUL, (AP) - South Korean President Syngman Rhee Thurs- day announced he had ordered the release of anti-Communist North held in camps in line Proviiicial Caliiiiet this morn- iii: Aicl uteiidcci to the fishermen for loss of boats and gear will be on a Federal-Provincial basis, it is belicvcci, with each Government siiaiiiiu equally in the outlay. lloutvr-r neither Mr. Sinclair nor Pit-uiicr Matlieson would make any slatctiiciit last night. The Federal Minister was here as part of a cross-Canada tour in connection wllh the work of his "I hare ordered on my own res- ponsibility the release of the anti- "The reason why I did this wlth- Queens County Liberal Associa- out full consultation with the Un- mm on thy; occasion of mg 11”; lied Nations command and other ;0ffi('lal visit here. in a short rs- BUIHOYIUPS 0009917195 i5 l00 0b' 'ft-rciicc In the recent election in i'i0US 10 explain-" g illlS name Province of British Coi- The D1'15””?T5 Who Milled ill?” umbia he dryly remarked that it ll”-'d0m 93l'1Y Thumdiy 3”? was it it-lief to come to Prince Ed- ainong 46.380 North Korean and ..,...,1 Island -tyne bastion of Lib- Chinese. captured personnel who ..m1.5n..--l In an unexpected out- hale 5””: tn" dm” lmm m 5” break of candor he also admitted home in rice the 9"” I" 3" 3”"'5P that "ti swclied head is an occu- pationai riiscasc of politicians". Mr. Sinclair stated that his pri- mary purpose in coming here was to work out a solution to the problems of the fishermen and this will be done this morning. He From Four Camps The a.nti-Communist rows are held in seven camps but only those ' f r '.d i. f' cl . . mThr:.';e :35: rm? mlfnemonzu Nam said he was speaking last. night San. Masan, Pusan and Sang- lllwxpeugdly gndullmcd pgfpdaerug niudai holding about 30.000. '"lk' He SM 3 E 6 " Gnvcrrimeni. was attempting t.o l.i.-Gen. Won Yong Duk. provost. marshal-general. said: "We believe that results of the measure will be. to the benefit of , . I g H I the United Nations." ncciioii ililll armeis. e a so won Sam smnh Koreans mm. lllPllllOllf'I'i that one or two of the sufnllnw Hm Wm of their m....nm.:baiil;s wcre definitely interested. forefathers” in their effort. to unify HIS Wk Gm": ,P”m”lY "'h the. nation and defend the right of Ulleml W"-V l7"lmC” lmd ll” 5”" Irppdonqi cd it was the plan of the party not. H, Mud his ,,..d,.. was b..,..d an to ”build a ceiling. beyond which provisions of the Geneva Conven- "H 0116 ""1 7159- bi” 10 "ea 'l mm or 1949. floor below iiihch no one can fall". The U. N, command mired mp In dealing with conditions in development it "co-nrdinated niass ilcnrrnl 11!! said 9! WM ll D0l10.V 0i breakout. attempt.” and said it was'the Liberals to take. a percentage ”partially successful." of the. profits of corporations in work out. a scheme with the banks to permit loans to fishermen on a basis similar to that used in con- Order nnmmd ifrionrtiiillcdwon-phgn5?-C-01. 3 To Print Braille Magazine in P.Q. The ll N command said order was restored in four camps after guards used tear gas and vomiting gas. It said there were no injuries 7 to UN personnel. Uptil the prisoner-of-war devel- 7ilON'1"REAL. ICP)--The QUWEC opmcni. only the final check of.division of the Canadian Natiohlil the armistice agreement by inter-llnsuiiiie for i.he Blind will start. pi'ete.rs remained at Panmunjomlprlnlink its (Wm Emilie m38!3ln' before an armistice could be coii-incxt fail in -WW8 QU8beC'3 5-000 ciuded. blind. it was announced Wednes- day. i A Rr.-iiiie. stereotype and print- th lint: prcss has been presented to the OKNIR by a local service club. To be Red frontline loudspeakers blaredl;?&,;:wSbr::.a';A' flsillrginicrgillgioggel ".l.1.n.t..'.h.e. IT” lmul.rl...bf ,. 5lRE:d,isiciseot.i'pe and press will print. up to Continued on page 5. Col. 2 Draggers Operating Out (if Sourisllepoi't Good Season .. . .-.......l Almost one million pounds oflliilizabeth Alice with 34.988 pounds fish has been landed this season tin tun tr:P5 '0 ma yum"! bank!- at Eastern Packers for processing! Most of the fish caught by all by the di-aggers operating out of boats consisted nf large haddock the port of Souris. Mr. Paul Gal-lyand flmiiidcrs with the two types lant. of that company stated lliSlwM'Cfi'illllliK ll” mflfe than 600.000 night, may gm. bong wen; enjoy. pnumis. Other varieties included in, gxcgptjonglly fine guccegs this larizc qiiantitiea of scrod haddock. 3,,.mn- ;stcak cori. iiinrket cod. cod scrod There are fire draggers operartng and hakc. out of Smii-is with one. Souris No The .'Vl.'ii'jt1itlIi and Marvbcile. 2. also working at. pm-tg in Nova uiiicii niadc five trips during May Scotia. and landing approximatcivlartd dime. Y0 flair. ililtlilrd 43.775 350mg pOund5 in "lumen to the .pniinris of large haddock; 16.306 174.130 pounds landed from local .iil0iiilfi5 Oi SFl'Ni h8dd0CkJ 3.815 fishing grounds. mounds of steak cod: 20.988 of The ,,r,h,.- boat, an the Min-.jniai-kc: end; 6011 of scrod cod: jorie and Maiybelie. with n calctiil28.tl:I6 of flnundrrs and 2.445 of 231.959 rioumis; the Paula Marie. .pOIlllFlS of links. In general the lti9.9.'i4. pounds; Murray Hiirboiirlsame proportions were taken by No. i. 179.387 pounds: and the lihe other draggcrs. U.K. Denies Charges By U.S.Senator McCarthy ” ' vessel: and"rh14i'ri"imnagiraCanril "Y Will"? Di”! Iiviastt-rs would become Truce l.lne Settled Washington sources said truce line has been settled. . liable to li:)NDON, iReuters)- The Rrii- scvcrr penalties" ish government. has denied thail Nutiing was rcpiyiiig to cilai'K95 British ships canted Chinese troops made liv U. S. Senator Joseph Mc- and strategic materials to Com-mat-rm-'s Senate investigating com- munisi. China. mlllee. He said the United States "All information indicates thesc pt'll'Cillmf'lll has made no repres- allegations are completely tin-it-titminiis to Britain on the mat- fntinded." foreign tinder-secretary 1Pr. Anthony Niitting said in the Hourci But l'-iritain will cnriiiniie to trade of Commons Wednesday night. in sun non-strategic Ronda with China. written -answer to a question lxuttino said lie added. "We can- Rritaln. he added. is carryingynor. live without. trade. and we out "with rigor" the llniled Nat-lmiisidrr that lhis trade. in non- ions resolution embargoing thclsti'ntr-gic goods is to the advantage supply of strategic goods to China of the free. world." ”lf any of our ships were to Tim Panamanian-registered sonal low point. Employment. indiistrieu is about steady. in manufacturingl would be liable in be hunted dfiWrl.irhnpg wcrc not subject. to British contravene these regulations ihe,v'-shin: said to have carried Chinese Fisheries Minister In New Brunswick SAINT JOHN. N. B. 4f7Pt--- ”Lack of cold storage facilities is one of the greatest difficulties facing the Canadian fishing in- dustry." Fisheries Minister sin- clsir said at I. meeting of south- ern New Brunswick fishermen Wednesday. Public cold storage. plants wert being built through funds supplied by the National Harboursl Board and industrial bank loans supple- mented by government subsidies. he said. In some cases "outright gifts" of 310,000 were extended to fish- ermeiiis co-operatives which made the freezing facilities available to the public. Under the federal insurance plan for fishermen": boats and traps, effective July 1. fishermen will be as good loan risks as farm- era, Mr. Sinclair said. V The Fisheries Minister is mak- ing a Maritime inspection tour. New Discoveries 0f Uranium confirmed SUDBURY. Ont. ice)-Report-I of uranium discoveries in limit and Spragge townships along Lake Huron. about 130 miles west of here. have been confirmed by bill?- t.he sudhui-y and sauit ste. Marie mining record.-i offices. A toi.al of 360 claims has been recorded at both offices within the! last. 10 days. Sixty have been listed here and another 300 at the Saul! Ste. Marie office. file Cw who says no Women EVER Mew. Moot or HIM NEVER gr ANY TORONTO. (CPI-Minimum anl maximum temperatures: Min. Mot Dawson . so 71 Victoria .. . .. . 50 S9 Edmonton . . 5i 5-!) Calgary .. . .. 46 54 Regina .. . . . 5.0 an Winnipeg S4 71 Toronto .... .. .. Si 75 Ottawa . . . .. . 57 83 Montreal . . . 65 R5 Quebec . 51 33 Saint. Jnhrl. N. R. . .. . 52 71 Moncion . . 6i 77 Halifax .. .. . 53 so Charlottetown . . . 63 75 Sydney . . . . , 5.0 76 Yarmouih . 5-1 58 St. Johns Mid. Si? 73 HALIFAX, iCPl-- The Weather Office here says the southerly flaw of warm. moist. air over the dis- trict will continue Thursday Willi little change in the weather. Cooiel air is advancing slowly from tiil northwest and is expccted to rtansul showers in the northwestern re- gions Thursday eveninit. Regional forecasts; Lower St. John river valley: Cloudy with ooastzil fog and on casional drizzle; not. much change in temperature: south winds is. Low-high at Fredericton 62 and 73. Saint John 52 and Gil. Prince Edward island. eastern N. B. counties: Cloudy: not much change In temperature: winds south 15. Low-high at Charlotte town 00 and 70. Moncion 00 an 7.'i. l'pper St. John river valley. Ra, of Chaleur: Clear with a. fawcioud. intervals becoming overcast. in If( ternoou: showers bv evrning: 1 little cooler with south winds 1 Low-high at. I-ldmundston 57 an 73. Campbellton 5'1 and 75. Bay of Fundy: South winds 1.5 Cloudy with extensive fog bank and occasional drizzle. Vlsibilii near yarn in fog "ccasionally ims proving to eight. miles. Temperate urea in the .'in's. High tide today at Charlottetown at 1.20 A. M. and 2.57 P. M. High tide on the North shore A4 9.50 A. M. and ll P. M. Summerlide tide. eighteen min utos later than Charlottetown. sun rises today at. 4.25 A. M. an( on the high seas by British nsvalilaws. he said. sets at. 8.02 P. M.