" MAXIMS CIA MERE MAN ,-_-_-1 The Guardian, Three Canto. “Iomin; Dally Founded 1887. 5|" and steady wine the rue. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1949 EEPORTS EVIDENCE 0F NEW RUSSIAN MOVES IN CHINA I Read by Everybody Bggin Mapping Arctic Members Air Views On Titans-Canada Highway; Urge Ottawa Pay More Sufggesls Seltifi llp Maritime Potato Marketing Group 5.. Nov. 2t; _ KENTYI! Lli, icr- “tn, ‘ 5 bushels of ‘ bumpct‘ 220.000- . cczi potato crop . . i..i lwtcil to (into. it wan reroalmi l ll\' at ilic annual meet- ln; of '. ‘ l\'lllt_'~' County Potato tivnltlflll. g n. chief potato inspect- or for l-IP Federal Department of Agricmtzizl» l.'l Nova Scotla, told thc rroaers int- rrop was bigger than list loans and tho stock lycttor There , ad bccn no trace of ring rot in Klllg: ffounll‘ this year. W. A. FlPIIIIIIlIIQ of Truro said loss of th- vJi-st Indies market was due largciy to nn influx of Europ- ean potato and devaluation of the pound .;ei..n,;. lie suggested Nova Scout lzroucrs should make more rftori to si-ll to Nctvfoundland. James MCNBII of Halifax, assist- l-llt direcmr of marketing, suggest- ed approaching the Prince Edward Island pry-notional potato commit- tee with the proposal to form a Maritime organization. Canadians arc eating l5 to 20 For cent less potatoes than farther- y. he said. Potatoes are being re. lllmd by other foods on the nat- ion‘: tlinm-r tables. MOTHER. AND SON SENTENCE!) DOVER, DcL, Nov. 28 -— (AP) -Mrs. Inez Brennan and her i0- year-old son, Robert, convicted of murder in Delaware's "lonely hearts" killing. today werg sen- tenced lo life ‘imprisonment. Sen- tence was announced two months after the plump brunette widow Ind her son were convicted of the shotgun slaying of Wade N. Wooldridizc. 07, Stone Mountain, Va., carpenter, l ‘By IYARCY ODONNELL ()l"l‘A\\’.-\. Nov. 2n »_ (C?) Filo‘ Government today wag 151d in ..ie Commons that it should be p:‘°p"'"“d t“ Pay more than 50 per :.;cnt of the cost of a proposgd 5,. OO-male,‘ hard-surfaced trans- Canada highway. csmm? Opposition members and Jeorgc CrlllCkSllBlTk (L-Frascr V3110?) said the Government should undertake to provide mm; than a SO-per-cont contribution to PTOYIIICPS whcrc thc territory mokcs road construction costlv. Othcr Iiiticral membcrs praised m" leRlfilallflfl and expressed the M09 that the Provinces will agree to co-opccate on the project. Complcted By 1957 _They_spoke after Reconstruc- tion Minister Winters moved seq. °lld F9951"! — approval in prin- ciple — of a bill authorizing ‘tho Fcdcral Governmcnt tn pay hair o; tho cost of a 5300000000, hvQ-lang highway from Victoria to St. John's. Nfld, and tnkc in Princo Edward Island. Tho Minister said "mrk Q" "l? hlFl-‘HYHY is expects-d to begin next sprint: and shouid be wmblvtcd by i957. Route of the hichtvay has not yet been chosen. Mr. Winters said a Dominion-Provincial confrrencc tn clear up “all mattcrs of icchni- cal detail“ will b0 callcd aftcr the present lcgislatlon ls passed. Data of the Ilrrlpnscd (‘nnfnlm "m" hi"! "0! vet bccn lndicntnl when the House npprovr-d mp pfjn. ciple of the bill at the night sit- ting nfter five hours of discussion. Ottawa will bear not only half of llic cost of new construction but will give the Provjnccs 50 por ccnt of the cost of existing roads which become part of‘ the rout:- The Provinces will be allowcd to spend as they see fit thb contri- bution on work alreadv finishcd. At the House oponinpz. first reading was given to a Govern- Continued on page 5, Col. 5 Triple Murder, Suicide Reported From Alberta Coming Events "mi? Your Flln r Photo studio. charlllttelovllfmhum "(lull p" Iiall, Tll>'§lll\_\'_ Graham's Road Nov, 29, "DtSanl- Cr,“ bummer £12m‘ rlstmas mas (Tollcort Cra. r1 n. ,. . - Pa" w‘ V” ‘lllwdtll. Decnnlber 21st. Concert. l\\ , "Arsvlc Shore School wPdtlm-tlrv. Ueccmber 21st. "Nth “Hunt Timnth ganpd : , I ‘ Y t 80x10." ncieaned, Concert. Seed, McGulgan "llancv the cflrdaneliegggefilday Davin: rmi o till r night at Good music "Showing M n, . “acDonAll fies. satellite mm" “m” "M" alas u Phlllck School Concert 5,, m“ " PWnal Hall, Decem- "Calrdnmn I mm“ 2rd _¢8i Concert, womenlxrlngtliulleoclock. Aultrlces nc ‘m c. l0 New Glasgow Hull on hcar varl t Ipo ‘I, e y concert uhIoSbrtlvllzll nfirtzgtil Shore Glee “loner, 3M9 o, cflfilalyby Prof. W. "Radulu o m“ H l uice. m;m’5liii.“°“'°"" u 9.45“ Boys. lint Royalty Tuesday, Nov. Music Eastem Bus leaving I. M, '13 "Unlosai h '13 cl-r cement Tues- vhylrfiimjls°ldly. Special prices “flier River. s. P‘ 1' NW a 0°" n8 m Comerfiililbfrle “nlsht at s30. 0y m wenallfhe crowd and en- “Vuhlon m as "m" by seeing l-o some real lien” "Id then dance mo; "l! music after the uDmN in T Weqnud W Haven School Mn 50ft?- Novemb" 30th. Cen- lty 311153;: 3°°d mlwlc- Sponsored an", Brunch of the Outed. l EDMONTON. Nov. 2s __ (CP) Royal Canadian Mounted Poll‘:- today reported the death triple murder and suit-ids in the Bllverwood district, 270 mllcs northwest of here. The dead: Walter Grubisch, 4. and three of his children, Mdl‘ 1?: Wither, 7. and Joyce, 5. The mother. Mi's. Mary Grub lsch, ts in hospital bullet wound in the head. Police said the victims, nll of whom had been shot, were found in their farm home early today One son, Charles, 1'5, wac- l school tvhon .hr- slayings were‘ br- lteved to have taken place. First reports from the remote community, 270 miles northwest of Edmonton, gave no reason for the slaying. Thcy said only that the four had bccn found dead in thcir divclling today. The farm is carved from the tiinbcrrd muskci! country near the banks of tlic Spirit River. Thc nearest post office is in the ham- le-t of Silver-wood. An R.C.M.l". official and tho district coroner are in the Sil- verwood area investigating. of Il-ur, persons in what was believer: n‘ unconscious l and in serious condition with a; Top Soldiers 0f West Meet In French Capital By CILTN‘; Ii.- Davidson PAPJS. Nov. ‘la IAP) _Threc of tho lop soltilcr.» of the West t0- day tlurttxl inziptiiiiq a yooomne llfilvllci- tut‘ at In.“ Europe from the Norwegian Alrilf’. to 1hr; Aeg- ean. Tho fhicfs of staff of Britain. lhf‘ ITIHWI Siuics and France met in tlir- fut-t nf .i swrlcs of sessions to compioto n lllllllPfl (icfcnce plan for the l2 csuniiios of me North Atlantic Par-t. lirooko Clayton, Canada's Dcfcnco Minister, and six senior Canadian officers also are attending. Simultaneously, it. WAS announced fro-n Germany that (lcil. Thonqng T_ Hatidy, 58-year-old vc ~11.“ Afnprl. can war plaiincr. iviil he chief of the billion-dollar United States arms-aid program in Europe. lie now is commander o! lnltccl States form-s in Europe with headquarters at Heidelberg. Ready For Plnicrgcncy At the same time Defence Secret- ary Iouis Johnson of the United Statcs declared on arriving ln‘l,on- don lhzit American forces in Ger- many are "ready for ally emergency that might be thrust upon the-n.“ Gen. Omar N. Bradley, chairman of the United States joint chiefs of staff, presldcd at the meeting here. Its task is to work out a co-operat- ive defonce plan. The act of Con- grcss setting up the military aid program said thc money, other than 8100000900 for immediate aid. would be released only after the Atlantic Pact powcrs had agreed on a crrnmon defence plan. Tho chicfs mot for three hours in the historic Naval Ministry. No communique was issued. Need Political Approval After nll l2 chiefs have agreed on ii technical plnn in terms of num- bcr of tanks and tons of shells needed to meet any lung» by the Red Army, they will go before a inecting of the l2 Defence Minist- ers hcrc Thursday for political ap- proval. Among items high on the military chiefs‘ agenda, is the question of where tho West must. plan its de- fcnce-along the Elbe in Gcrmnny at. tho line of the press-lit “iron curtai along the Rhine ut Frances border or bchlnd the Pyrenees at tho Spanish frontier. Other qucstiolrs are the contribut- To Aegean Defence Line Mr. Alfred Plckard ion Western Germany can make against any Communist aggression. and hcw llln five-power Brussels Allianco of Britain. fiance. Bel- gium. thr Netherlands and Luxem- bourg can bc dovetailed into the Atlantic Pact. 17,573 Prosecuted In » ~Rudio Licence Cases OTTAWA, Nov. 28 -- (OP) —A total of 7,573 persons have been prnsoruted so far this yi-ar for fall- urc to buy radio licences, a. Com- mons rcturn showcd today‘. Tlu- l'f‘llli‘ll, tahleil for John Dinti-iilrikcr iPC - Lnko Centre), briilrc down me number of prose- follows: cutions by Provinces sis PTIYWL‘ Edward Island 13.7; Novn Scoiia m; New Bmlliwlck m; Qucbcc 1.137; Ontario 4.238; Man- ltoba 517; Snskntchetvan 256; Al- hcrtn 303 and British Columbia 147. Avcrnae fine levied by Proviii- cos; Prince Edtvard Island $1.90, Noti “.3. ‘fl New Brunswick $4 F0: tQi our Manitoba $3.00: - $4.05; Albr-rta Hi5 and British Columbia $2.60. Cost of the radio licence is $2. English Bishop Woul Sterilize The Unfit BIRMINGHAM. England. Nov. 28 -(OP)—Brltaln ts over-populated end should meet the problqn or limiting the size of flmilies and sterilizing the unfit, Dr. E. W, Barnes, Anglican Bishop 01 Err-m. ingha-m. said in an address today. The 74-year-old Bishop, whose ltattments have stirred up many controversies. told the Btnzninghsm Rotary Cltb that the task of im- porting food stifflclervt for a grow- ing population is becoming lncfggg. lrgly difficult. i "We must get rid of the slovenly. vicious, idle wastere of the com- munity," he asid. "Unfortunately. the welfare state is only ton likely to encourage their increase.“ Ninety per cent of feeble-minded- nen was inherited and "g time is quickly coming when sterilisation of the unfit will have to be essential in our social organization." "Such sterilization may well be tn feet the complement of the welfare S?‘ "PM": from a Imtil any Citizens must be educated to have smaller families, the Bishop said. and “we must. have medically-non- trolled sterilization of the gmsrer forms of unfttnr-ss." Ilc advocated medically-controlled euthanasia-mercy killing-for de- fcctlvo babies. More and more per- sons worr- beginning to think this prtotlco should be part of Britain's social policy. Btarllizntion should nod. be re- gflrdbd as a punishment but as a menus of promoting the social health or thc community. Dr. Harries also deplored an tn- flux ol immigrants to Britain. “Large numbers" of Wen Indium. for example, wore coming to Britain where they could enjoy the benefits of the welfare state. Dr. Barnes, who once described himself as "a bold. bad bishop." has said on previous ccaslonsthat lac’; of birth limitation is "the ‘rm-ear menace to humanity's fut- VANCOUVER. Nov. 2B — (CP) ,— British Columbia, snll batter- ed and reeling from a week-end storm of violence, today began searching for its dead. Nineteen persons died beneath the waters of turbulent rivers, creeks and harbors, or in crashes on storm-wrecked highways. Property damage \\'lll he in the millions, scattered across mam- land districts and un Vancouver Island, where the toll on land and sea stood at l5 dead. Four P9?‘ sons died on the mainland. The toll includes six seamen drowned Whcn their tug founder- ed Saturday off Victoria harbor Five dicd in the plungi- of a taxicab into the harbor at Port Alberni, 53 miles wcst of Nnnaimo at Vancouver Island; thrcv drotvn- cd near lfantlooivs. oil lllf‘ 01MB‘ lend, when thcir car sklddt-cl from a rain-soaked highway into Trapp Lake. As the trailing gusts o! the storm blew out, work crows la- borccl to rcstoi-c tronflilllfl-“lllll arteries to the cast. Train service. halted since Sat- urday by rock and mud slides in the Fraser canyon, 150 nulgs east of here, may be restored tonight. Highway traffic to suburban West Vancouver was resumed. on n limited basis, over an army- construcbed Bailey bridge across the Capllano River. The su-burb of 12,000 was isolated Saturday when the Capilann bridge was washed out. Dead in the taxi cab crash at Albernt were driver Tom Mc- Donald of Port Albc-rnil Elias Grande, Christian Ungster, Jean Charlton and Jean Treluck, all of Vancouver. The three persons drowned ncar Kamloopa were: Donald 'l‘. Kler of Vancouver, P. Payers of North Kamloops and Mrs. Ruby A. Berry of Kamloops. The waters of the swollen Capi- lano claimed the life of 24-year- old Gordon Fullerton of Van- couver. He slipped into the wat- er while piling sandbags. Two met death when their auto- mobile struck the cement sidewall of a bridge near Nanalmo, in a ure.‘ _ J "ling rainstorm. They were John New Deputy Director For Bank of Canada Appointed Mr. Alfred Pickard Appointed lt-irector For Prince Edward Island OTTAWA, Nov. 28 — (UP) __ J. E, (Jim) Coyne, 39-year-old Winnipeg-born lthotlt-s Scholar, today was appointed tlcpuly-gOV- ernor of the Bank of Canada. The banks securities advisor since i946, he succeeds Donald Gordon, 48, who becomes prest- dent of the Canadian National Railways. The changeover is ef- fective Jan. l next. Mr. Coynes appointincnt was announced after an all-day meet- ing of the Board of Directors. headed by Graham ‘routers, Gov- ernor of the Bank. The board also announced the names of two new directors. Al- fred Pickard, Charlottetown, RE. 1., merchant and trust company director, fills the vacancy created by the death of a former direc- tor. J. L, Holman, Summersldc. PEI. Hazen A. Russell, President of Job Brothers and Company Limit- ed of St. John's. Nmvfoundland, fills the additional directorship created at the last session of par- liament to cover the entry of New- foundland into confederation. Their terms expire Fob. 2H, l95l A wartime flying office-r with the R.C.A.F., Mr. Coyne is tho eldest son of Mr. Justice J. B. Coync of the Manitoba court of appeals l-Iis parents live in Win- nipc-g. His career has been closely lln-kcd with that of Mr. Gordon during and after the war. For a period he was assistant to Mr. Gordon when the latte/r was chairman of the prices board. I-Ie later became deputy chairman. leaving the appointment ‘in 1042 to train with the R.C.A.F. as a pilot. In the years he worked with the hank and with governmental fin- ancial organizations, lVlr. Coync has garnered a wide reptitation in tho complicated fields of econo- mics and finance. I-Ie graduated from Manitoba things he University in i931 and was award- ed a Rhodes scholarship to study law at Oxford University. Death Toll In Fierce B. C. Storm Stands At 19 Brentzer and Oscar Steinberg. both of Prince Rupert. Another man. Donald McDon- ald. drowned near Sayward on Vancouver Island when he fell from a tree into a raging creek. Aloysius Andrews was drowned when hll fish trawler Westhope was wrecked off Nootka. on Van- couver Island, Hundreds of rail passengers, strand-ed in Vancouver, expccted to leave tonight. The _C. N. li- scehduled two trains and the CPR. raiounced a similar ser- vice. Seeking Solution lo Sewage Problem HALIFAX. Nov. Llll ~- (C?) - J. F. Connolly, Prince Edward Is- land director of industry, arrived here tonight to consult with town planning authorities on a plan for Charlotitctowns “outcr fringc." Mr. Connolly said one of lhc would examine hcrc was the water and sewage system of Woodside, on the opposite side of the harbor. “We have a similar problem in Charlottetown“, he said. "The outer fringe is not within the city limits, and as we don't have a county form of Government the matter falls into the hands of the Provincial Government." I He added: "We want to provide water and sewage service for the people in the outskirts district and by consulting with authorities here and comparing notes we hope to be able to reach e solution which will please the residonts of the district. please the City Coun- cil, and please ourselves." __j____________. ASSISTANT ELECTORAL OFFICER OTTAWA, Nov. 28 — (CP) - E. A. Anglin, an Ottawa lawyer and deputy assistant adjutant gen- eral of the First Canadian Army during the Second World War, has been appointed assistant chief electoral officer. it was announced today. l l I t Policy By Powers Philip c. Jgup Speaks Before U. N. Political Committee. LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y, Nov. 29 —iCP)--Phlllp C, Jcssup of ihn Unitcd Suites siiid today thorn is evidence of nnothcr Russian al- tempt to dis-member China. Ho called on the Soviet Union and nil countries everywhere to keep hands off China and let the Chinese settle tholr own futtQrc, Jcssup, Slate Department oxpcrt on China who will Far East after the United Nations Assembly adjourns, put before the U. N}; Sfl-mcmhr-r political com- IlllllGP a rcsolutlrin sponsored Irv the llnllcd States, Australia, Mox- lco, Pakistan and tho Phiiippinas. There is n serious question, Jessup said. as to whether tlzcl Russians had acted ln good faith with the Clllncse since the Second World \’l’:ir cndr-d and tho Moscoxvi lcndcrs signed n trcntv of friend- ship with thr: Nationalist Govcrn- mant in 1945. Cause for Grave Concern’ “Some of tho cvidcnco and re- puffs (con-tint: to thr- State Depart- mcnll crcato crow» catise for con- (‘Qfn mar groundwork is in fact once again hcinr: lold for s further Russian attempt. to dis-member China," Jessup said. Russia has IlPOTI accused in the pnst of making n puppet state 01 Outer Mongolia und of taking over large part; of lllanchuria. Jogsup plnood before the com- mmr-rs mo resolution culling on all countries: "l, To rcspcct the polltlffll lndcpcnrlonco of China rind t0 ho guidcd by the principles of the ll. N. charter in their re- lations with China. "2. To respect the right 0f the people of Chlnn now and in the, future to trhooseireel_t' their political institutions and to maintain o Governmcnt. tn- dependcnt of forclgn control. "3. To rcspecr existing Welt’ leg rotating lo China. "4. To refrain from (at seek- ing to acquire- spheres of tn- fluanco or to create foreign- controlled relzimcs within the territory of China; (h) Seek- ing to obtain special rights or prlvllcges within the territory of China." The Nationalist Chinese dele- gate. T. F‘. Tslnng, promptly show- crl his (llsappolntmcnt, saying the five-country resolution did not 1:0 far enough. The Soviat; bloc showed no 1-1- terest, maintaining its boycott of the discussions. Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky has said Russia will not rccognize any dcclslon the Assembly makes in this case. Tho committee ndlotirncd debate on the Chinese qucstion until after the Assembly acts on n \Vestern statement, of 12 essentials of peace. I Britons Hear Coal To Continue Scarce LONDON, Nov. 2B -- {Rctitersl —I3ritons got news today that un- official coal rationing might. go on several years more. But Alfred Rubens, parliamentary secretary to the Ministry of Fuel, added that when freedom to buy was restor- ed domestic consumption would not rise above 135000.000 tons a year compared with 45.000,000ttsns in i939 because ofgthc great ad- vance in fuel-saving appliances. Report 2,006 Deaths In l 16 PAGES make ii per-l sonal inspection of the turbulent; MAXI MS CIA. MERE MAN Music's the medicine of the mind. Mail $5.00; other Provinces 5r L‘, B. $7.00 Subscriptions Delivered $6.00, ll- 5- Slllllléflllili lDr. Steel Is Honored iUrges Hands-Off l By Faculty of P. W. c. l I .._____ _§ l l l ‘l l l Dr. (l. D. Steel P.E.l. Seed Quota For U. S. Filled Word has been received from Washington by Lt-Col. C. C. Thompson, nianagci‘ of the PEI. Potato Promotion Committee. that the quota for Island seed potatoes in the U. S. Market has been fill- ed. as from yesterday. The tqtal quota allowed was 2.500.000bushcls. This rlritc is a week 0r more in advance of the usual pericni at which this quota is filled. Querlcd with regard to reefer cars. Col. Thompson said the situ- ation is now satisfactory, with ovor 800 roofer! ahead of the number available last year. Ontario Woman Fatally Stabbed NAPANEE. Ont, Nov. 26 —(UPl -Stabbed through the heart while standing outslclo her home on the outskirts of this Eastern Ontario town, nus. Juno Falsburv, 26, col- lapse-d on the sidewalk tonight. and died in a fcw minutes. Police said the man who stmlvhed her left tho dying woman on the street and walked to thc county jail, where ho ghve himself up. They» did not disclose the name of the suspect. They said he will be charg- ed with murdt-r. Mrs. Palsburv. mother of a three, year-old girl. has been separated from her English-born husband, police said. Heavy Ruins Cause Wcshours In Nfld. CORNER BROOK, Nfld.. Nov. ZS‘, — (CP) train service rcsumNl today Ul- lowlng a ttro-day ticup caused hv urashouts in Saturday": south of this west-coast. town. Trains from St. John's to Port aux Basques, on the stiutliwostci: tip of the island, con-d get rnziv as for as Corner Brook. Passenztrrs and frclcht bound for malnlinl Canada wcrc plvkR-(l up horn l>v opcratcs bPttYCwll Strait normally ncy, N. S. Uranium Mine Disaster By THOMAS A. nanny BERLIN, Nov. 28 (AP) -- Unconfirmed reports of a disast- rous fire and explosion in a Sov- let-zone uranltun mine in Germany which caused up to 2.000 deaths were published today in Western Berlin. The British-licensed Telegrrf. with Socialist underground sources in the Russian zone, said the fire broke out in the Johann-Georgett- stadt Mine, deep in Saxonyh Er: Mountains 150 miles south of Ber- lln. A similar report was broadcast by the American radio station Rina, which said it came through "relinble“ channels. Its sources listed the number of dead tn the ‘hundrcds." United States army lntelligenni- sources said tonight they had not thus far heard any raport of an East-Zone mine disaster. The Berlin "Fighters Against In- humanity," an organization of Germans opposed to Soviet-sour concentration-camp methods. said it had lcarncd of a "cable fire" in the Erz mines. but had no details. The press office of the East- Zono Communist Government, let up by tho Russians, callcd tho rc- porl. "llllll‘ll(’.' Thr- Tclcfirafis toll figurc o livos would make it the greatt, nunc (IISRSl/‘l’ in Gcrnuin history. A coal minc ut Kamcn. in the Ruhr, blew tip tn i946 with a loss Of 41S llvcs, In tho Johann-Gcorccnstnci tl:=- aster only 300 minors were saved from a normal shift of smoothing less than 2.50.1 the Tqlcgmf sitd. The min» and ncarby workings nic reported to cmploy more than 5.000. The fire broke Thursday, accord.- lng to the Tclegraf, when u-ozn insulation on electric cabins caus- ed a short. circuit. it spread P: thrcc uranium workings and sot off an r-xploslon of a dynamite dump. Most of the miners. the paprr said, were trapped and were <uf~ focaterl from poisonous gascs owl smoke», or burncd to death. It charged the fire was CflllfiPtl by "negllgenco." and added that the bulk of’ the workers wcrc pol- itical prisoners. recovered. l ‘ Last evening Dr, G, 11 SQQQ] ~ woll-knotvii Illai-iiinlo orlucalor an: Irv-tiring prini-iptil of Prince of Wnlos (‘tillcilr- i» Pflltillllltlfid zit.‘ dinnoi’ at Tho J nriottctotvn Howl by tho hnuity. Man)’ fricnds unit associates jolnr-rl the staff in hon. firirul’ llr. Stool who this year r»- tirnrl from ii"ll\'t' vix-itliing. lllr. l-"rnnk Slur-Kinnon, piosc" [iriniignil of Print-v» of \\'nlcs f‘ loge, welconiml hi". Stocl rind Mrs. Steel and introduced the vicr- principal, Mr, J, Fl. Brow, who prcsentad Dr, Stool with an illum- inntod nddrcss and ‘Jill of nppua cirilinn from lhn staff. Mrs. Stout, for rniiny yours ilu- yrzicious lll> Indy of illc (follctgc, tuna prPSCnlH: with a bouquet of roscs. ln his reply to the address. Dz. Steel expressed his surprise ht bo- lng so honrircd and rcvlillcd that, ll was "just forty yours ago thi- fnll that I joinozi the staff‘ o!’ Prince of Wale; Cnllctzc." IIe th-u went on to rcczill the growth o the College from the old building serving two hundred and flfiyl students when he come to tench i2 to the new hllllfllfli; of today. l-I- lrecallcd too that. “onc of the great- lest joys of touching is the con- tacts with young people" and iisi he watched their careers he felt that there were not many teachers today that "has hnd a. Cardinal among his students, and front whom he rcccivcs many kin-l words of greeting from time to time." Otiisr Speakers I-Ion. Frederic Large, Minister! of Education, remarked that he was very happy that his first, of- Continued on page 5, 00L 4 4th; FELLOW Who Docsrrf Kuow n’ CAN'T BE DONE GOES AHEAD AND DOES-if! w‘? % /4 z 7 Trnns-Nctvfounrllandl torrentiali rainstorm. The unshouts occuricroem Ammmps n“ Monday mug“) lby [1 illsltirlmulcc WlllPh ,‘,iit‘:ii" tho ICTTy Cabot Strait. Thr- Cibot. ‘ Port aux Basques and North s; cl- (_ f Lrwfll coming nvcri-ast, The newspaper said rescue tcains are still at the scene and that by Friday night osa bodies had been TORiONTD. Nov. M —(O?i__. Minimum and maximum: Victoria- 45 50; Edmonton 30 45; Regina 33 45; Wlllillpcg 33 42; Toronto 17 3'1‘; Ottawa. 2h 16; Montreal 10 19; Que- bee, 19 _; Saint John —Z8; Monc- ton l6 2G: Halifax 23 30: Chlrlotl. town 2i 25; Sydney 26 35. Yarmoutfi 23 3-1; St. John's 3i 37. HALIFAX. N0". 28 — (C?) - Official inland fort-casts issued b t-hc Dominion Public Weather O14 lfice at Halifax. Synopsis: 'l‘here W35 snow in the Bonita- formal Capo Cod on Sunday. Tim flblllfllllllf‘? is nmv cast of Sabld Island and thr no“ pica has mot- cd casttv-irc out of the distrlc‘. thcrc ucre a {v.2 of tho tiistriit. but. soul. . purists in Nova Scull: and Prince Edwin-d Island. /r i.nr void ui-illirr is Pxpcctci early ‘Pur-sday but u tlisturhaiau, 8.D‘pl'0fl('hII‘l_q front t.lic ucst “.2; criusc lflCfPflHIlQ rtlriudincss. Snolv ‘or rain nrc forot-‘ht. for many rc- plons in illc evening. Regional forcr-asts, valid tint‘ midnight. Tucsddv: _ Prince Edward island ~- Clfill‘... lclrraring Tucsdriy morning hut. lit - utlfilll in tho n: Intcrmlttcnt snow begin- ,ning in the rvcning and mllclr; Light winds increasing by aftcz- ‘ noon to south l5. low carlv "Di"- l tcruoon. day morninz and high in tlll evcning at. Charlottetown _‘(l I 3 High tide; today at 5.15 A. M. m’ l sets at m4 r. M. l Sun rlsos this mornlns: at 7?? A. M. and sets at 4.34 P. V. Sirnmcrside tide clrzhtor-n min- utcs later than Charlottetown. woon’ isTaxosM-jri-iainou oanlv rnaav Lcnva Wood Islands 8 A.M-. ll A.l\l.. l l'..\I.. 8 PM. Lravr- Caribou 3 A.l\I., ll A.M., l PW S FEM. l BORDEN - TORSIENTINE FERRY “EEK DAYS Lv. Bordon Lv. (‘api- Tormcntlna 0.10 A.l\l. 10.85 A.M. 1.00 P.M. 2.40 EM. 4.80 RM. 7.50 l‘.M. SFNDAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Capo Tonnenllnt, 0.10 A.M. 10.85 AIM. 0.40 RM. 8.00 I'M