Maxims of at Mere Map 'Advice when most needed ll least heeded. 10 PAGE India'sRobinHoodSaysHe's Retiring To Hindu Shrine NEW DELHI (Reuters)-India's ftobinvldood, Man Singh, has told his followers that he is retiring from his lifetime career of robbing the rich to give to the poor. He headed for retirement in I lrndu shrine as police rallied for a final attempt to catch him. Every available policeman in the rlistrict is trying to shoot him down before he reached his destination. ll shrine in the jungles of Nepal it here he said he intends to devote the rest of his life to God. Now 65, he told his loyal friends and followers he wants to give up ins past life of terrorizing rich land- owners and merchants. and making the police the laughing stock of the countryside. his band of Indian "merry men" in their "Sherwood Forest" among the deep ravines of the Chambal river in the state of Uttar Pradesh. to embark on a solitary pilgrimage to Muktlnath shrine. 120 miles northwest of Katmandu. Whether this destination is just a rumor to decoy police. no one knows. But many police believe India's No. 1 bandit will never be captured. Once a rich landlord, he was sent to jail in 1928 for his part in A family feud with a Brahmin fam- ily. the Tilafis. He came out of prison 10 years later. swearing to wipe out every member of the Tilafi family. The last member was shot and killed Police have heard that he left two years ago. i Talks Aimed Ford Strike B WINDSOR. Ont. ICP)-The latest talks aimed at settling strikes at three Ford of Canada automotive plants in Ontario collapsed com- plclely Monday. Ontario Labor Minister Daley. u ho had invited the company and the Unite Automobile Workers tniion (Cl -CCI.) to resume negot- iations under his guidance. said the fun parties deadlocked over the question of province-wide bargain- lllC. He said ltrs department will take no further stops in the dispute until invited to do so by either the com- pany or union. Only top officials of the two part- ics were directly involved in Mon- day's talks. Mr. Daley met first ll ith union spokcsmen Emil Mazcy. secretary-treasure: of the UAW in- tcrnational. Torn McLean. acting Canadian director of the UAW and .lohn Eldon. Mr. Mazcy came from Detroit. on special invitation of Mr. Daley. TALK TO COMPANY He then invited company repre- sentative T. J.Emmert, executive rice-prcsidcnt of Ford of Canada and Wallace Clark, vice-president ..r industrial rclations. to his rooms for a brief conference. The two groups came together only for A few minutes before Mr. Daley called in the press to an- nounce the failure of the meeting. "I have found two immovable f.vrrM." he told reporters. "At the prctrrrt moment there doesn't seem in be any compromise in either." The company has refused to .- Coming Events "Hazelbrook Christmas concert. December 17. "Dance Fortune Hall. Tuesday. December 11th. "Lady Pane school Concert. Dec- cmber 23rd. "Variety concert llfarshfleld hall. Dec. 30. "East Ttoyalty Clrrislmas con- ccrt in school, Dec. 14. B p.m. "Cltcrry valley School Concert. Dccemmber 21st, 8.00 p. m. "Christmas Concert. Dromore School. December 22nd. "South Melville Christmas Con- rcrt, Tuesday. December '.llst. "Dr. J. D. Reddln has resumed practice at Mt. Stewart, full time. "Special mnetrng Borne Lodge tonight. Royal Arch Purple De- ITPP. "Bingo, geese and chickens. North Ru.-tico, this Wednesday 8 am. 50:-. for 20 gamcs. At Settling reak Down meet with the union except on a separate basis. starting with Local 200. which represents the 5.700 workers in Windsor who have been on strike for 10 weeks. The union has insisted that repre- sentatives from the three striking locals-here. in Oakville and in Etobicoke. a Toronto suburb-be present at the bargaining table. REFUSE NEGOTIATION Both sides have refused to ncgoi- iate until this question is resolved. The strikes now involve more than l0.000 workers. of whom 7.500 are on strike. The others have been put out of work because of tho shutdowns. .In Oakville 800 as- sembly workers left their jobs nine weeks ago and 150 workers at the Etobicoke parts depot walked out three weeks ago. Workers” demands for wage in- creases are spread from four cents an hour in Windsor to 15 cents an hour in Oakville and Etobicoke and also demand fringe benefits. Average wage of the workers is 81.57 at Etobicoke and 31.69 here and in Oakville. Truckers Plan I I Cop!-er Service ST. JOHN'S. Nfld.. (C,Pl-Three city truckers said Monday they are planning to operate a helicopter service between here and Bell Is- land in Conception Bay. The three. Gerald Summes. Douglas Ledrew and Bert. O'Brien. said preliminary plans for the ser- vice had been ironed out but no applications have yet. been filed with the transport department. Bell Island. an iron ore mining centre, is about eight air miles from St. .lohn's. A ferry service operates across the three-mile bay but because there is no hospital on the island residents have been seeking rt helicopter service for some time. NAB IINCLAD St-'SPE(”.T TORONTO lCP)-ll was well hr- low freezing early Monday but no- llce said Allan John Smyth, 18. was wearing only long underwear. a shirt and black gloves when they discovered him shivering in the shelter of a lancway fence. Police charged Smyth with shopbreaklng when they found his suit and over- coat at the rca- of a busincss for his scanty attire. "Rennie's Road Christmas Con- t'Pl'l. December l'lth, 1954, at 800 sharp. l "Mcllar-'s Mills are broken dtlwn. will be closed until further notice. It. A. Mcltae. "Bingo and dance. St. .lIImI's'l llhttrch, Gcorgetriwn. Monday Dc- c-mber 27th. "Bunday School and Choir Con- cert. Dcccmbcr 17th. in Btanhope Church. 8 p. m. "Crapaud District Scarlet Chap- tor meets in Lorne Lodge. on llcr. 16th. "Bpringvale Concert. Wednes- day, December illih. at I p. in. Art- mission 30:: and toe. "Annual Mectlnz Kingston Tele- fthnne Company. December lath. 500 p. m. Edgar Newson. Becrstary. "Come to the Clir-rry Valley Y. l'. U. Christmas concert at Cherry Valley hall. Wcrlnrsdsy night. Dec. I5. ”ltcrtul.1r Dance, Stanley Bridge R.nk Hall crcry Tuudly "ill"- Music. Rollie MacKensie'l Orch- eetra. "Community Bingo at Morell to- morrow. Wednesday. 3 p. m. Twenty l-uh prizes, plus Jack not. To win lhc -'ark pot you must have the top and .viHom lines on your card. Ad- ln Won 35 vents. Farm: rs sltnrt roursr. December 2! all young mm "”Junro-- -- stionu lchooi, '0 31. Open to "Al u-orrcn between the lbring television to the classroom OTTAWA (CP) - Upshot of a country-wide trial last, month to may be further experiments. Reports from principals and teachers of some 200 scohnls whichl participated in the four-week ex-I perimenl now are being studied, analyzed and tabulated by CBC of-f flclals in Toronto. Results of the survey will form a report to be presented to the OllC's national advisory cottnctl on school broadcasting meeting in Toronto Feb. 9-11. Officials ars tight-lipped on the results; and won't say whether the teachers" re- ports offer a trend of approval or disapproval. ONLY BEGINNING However. one expert view is i'.at the first attempt to broadcast edu- cational programs to cimrooms equipped with television receivers was only the beginning. There is doubt that on the basis of the returns there would be any recommendation for a series of television school broadcasts com- pnrsble to school radio programs started several years ago. one source said some tcachcrs and broadcasters hope there will be a recommendation to continue expand and improve the experi- ment before a definite decision is reached concerning the value of television to education. However. it was indicated that the response of teachers and the cxpense involved in producing edu- cational television films will be major factors. WIDE INTEREST Another question is whether simi- I young KIN at V3 and J0. Appl'l Depart- "'i 0? A3I'I"'.Il0!lr: Box 9. mi-. lotutnvn. '; ' ' l 50112115 Tl'llGMiV1 In rcsulta at lower cost can be obtained by uslnl "IONOD Dltlllfa establishment. They gave no reason! Founded 1872 OEARLOITEIOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14. 1954 1,300 En Route From The Far East SEATTLE. (CP)-Thirteen hun- dred Canadian soldiers who served in Korea and Japan with the 25th Infantry Brigade returned here Monday. bound for their homes and Christmas leave. They landed from the U. S. navy transport Gen. .lohn Pope. which also carried 1.900 U. S. army offi- cers and men. It was the largest draft to date in the current movement. which Iulll see two-thirds of the 6.000-man force home for Christmas. Senior officer aboard was Lt.-Col. J. W. D. Symans, commanding of- ficer of the 3rd Royal Canadian Horse Artillery, of Victoria. He has been in Korea since January. Canadian Troops Land At Seattle 1954. The troops returning comprised ,men of the iird Field Regiment, Royal Canadian Horse Artillery. of Victoria. He has been in Korea since January. 1964. The troops returning comprised men of the iird Field Rcgimcnt. Royal Canadian Horse Artillery. ard Field Squadron, Royal Cana- dian Engineers: 3rd Transport Company. Royal Canadian Army Service Corps. and personnel of other smaller units. The men from British Columbia travelled to Vancouver in special buses, the others boarded five spec- ial tralns here bound for homes in eastern Canada. By ALLAN JACKS VATICAN CITY (AP)--The Pope. although still reflectirtg improve- ment from a near fatal collapse 12 days ago. was reported some- what weaker Monday. He was hav- ing difficulty eating. An authoritative source said the '18-year-old Pontiff's condition re- mained grave and required con- stant watching. Prof. Arttonio Gasbarrinl. one of three medical specialists consulted alter the Popels icollapse Dec. 2, was called here from his Bologna clinic and examined the Pope again. This was called "purely 8 checkup." After his first examina- ltlons, Gasbarrinl prescribed an al- glaine washing of the Pontiff's Istomach and a special diet to build his strength. Until Monday. the Roman Cath- olic leader had been eating in- creasing amounts of food. Hiccups that harassed him intermittently since last. January ceased after Gasbarrinrs treatment was started. The Popes slight weakening was the first break in his steady im- provcment for more than it week Vatlrrtn associates attributed it. to a. fivc-minute speech recorded Sat- urday and to extreme emotion over the consecration Sunday of Msgr. Giovanni Battlsta Montlni as Arch- Dumaged Freighter Towed From Halifax HALIFAX (CP)-The New York tug Joseph H. Moran sailed Satur- day for Baltimore towing an Amer- ican freighter that had lain in port here for more than a year. The 7.250-ton cargo vcssel At- lantic Water was damaged when she grounded off Goose Bay. Lath- rador. she will be repaired at a Baltimore shipyard. 'TV In Classroom Needs Planning .Canadran schools with television rer-ctvcrs. compared to the outlay for printing and distributing mo- tion pictures and buying screens and projectors. is an important consideration. Last month's series of eight tele- cast: for gradcs five to eight orig- inally was scheduled to be carried to '15 schools ncrctss Canada. How- nvcr. about 120 more schools ob- tairrcd television receivers on their own initiative. and took part. in the t-xpcrimcnt. Their views lso will be studied. They were se n in all provinces except Newfoundland and Prince Edward Island. The programs were specifically linkcd with the Ontario education program. but had some applica- Report Pope Has Trouble Eating; ls Somewhat Weaker bishop of Milan. A statement issued by the Vat- ican press service said the Pope's condition continued to show "a slight improvement." However. two high Vatican officials said the statement was originally written in ,a ”somewhat less optimistic" vein -and had toned down at the request of the Vatican secretariat of state. (By Harold Sieve) PARIS. Reuters)--Atlantic pact military chiefs met here Monday to complete a new Western plan for immed- iate atomlc retaliation in the event of Soviet aggression. ' The two-day discussions of the Allied chiefs of staff will pave the way for final decisions at a conference of the foreign and defence ministers of the 14 North Atlantic Treaty Organization powers Friday and Saturday. NATO D l l T ll.! TC” "T first maldlrudisplitell allr aoriistllt oflngm'”'bcmb" wln.”' Equlpped the "new pattern" strategy forlwllz FTBGF Sabre Jew th."em”' immediate atomic retaliation. Re- "V3 m "rope la '19” 5" iNAT0 arr defences. .Girl Crushed lwlien Huge Pipes Spill Off Truck QUEBEC. (CF)-An 18-year- nld girl was crushed to death liable sources said some European members. especially Denmark. will insist that permission for an atomic counter-attack must first be given by member governments. The mtltt.ary argum.er1t. is thatthcl initial battle could be lost if polit-. ical consultations were required first. Allied sources said a compromise probably will be worked out where- by different types of counter-ah M,”'"l3-V ,Wh,9" 35 "asi l"f”' tacks. atomic and otherwise, will be P'P”5- W"-”c'l”"3 ", '”l51 "l 22-' planned to meet every situation. 000 P”"”d5' 5l"”9d PTO") A truck, thundered over a side- NEW ARMS EVOLVED walk and into a garage park- The sources said NATO cannot lllll 101- match Communist military strength PW"? "ld ll” VlCllm- 3”” man-for-man and must therefore llaflflle Fullfnltr. 0! nearby depend on technological superior Cllaifwl 'l'l'-'-""- W” drdililid ity. In the last year. a technological 50 l?" W ""3 "llllnl NW5 evolution has taken place in West- and llMll.V fTU5hFd- Sh". Md ern M-mg, Mamie cannon are de. hecn walking along the side- ployed in Germany, the newest jet Walli- fighters are stationed at NATO air Dflv" 07 "'9 truck W" Bertrand Gagnon. Four cars bases and new gunsights have been fitted to Allied tanks. The military committee mat for four hours Monday with French Gen. Auguste Guillaume presiding. ”'" "TTTTT It was learned that the committee MI report will reoommcnd the main-rlsyueh tenance of well-e i ed d forces as well as liltlol')rl)lc air gril;)vltlEr.I a Syrian Plane parked nearby were damaged. A police investigation was opened. The U. S. 12th Air Force an-. nounced simuliancnusly that two i National Farm Unity Sought Sunday by Irsaeli fighters. Clarion West Is By Walter Gray WINNIPEG, (CP)-A clarion call for national farm unity in Canada was sounded across the Prairies during the last few wceks. The question is, was it heard loud and clear or did it fall on dcaf ears?- Leading the trumpet section was Albert Cormack. president of the Ontario Fe.rniers' Union, who sounded the same note at farm union meetings ln'Maniloba and Saskatchewan. He called on .1. f.. Phelps and Jake Schulz. retiring presidents of line Saskatchewan and Manitoba farmorsi trrrions respectivclr. to form a team in the organization of a national farm union. , The name of Henry Young. prea- ldent of the Farmers Union of Al- berta has also been suggested as a third partner. CONNECTION WITH EAST ”Wo have a definite connection between east and west Problems are arising of which we knew noth- ing until we had a farmcrs' union," he said. Mr. Cormack said requests for .1 ttnion in Nova Scotia have bcen received and with the proposed formation of a union in British Co- lumbia next year. thcrc would be five provinces from which to draw support for a national body. However. in Winnipeg. Mr. Schulz said formation of such an orgnnt7.st.ion ”ls a little rcmotc at present." BEGAN TIIREE YEARS AGO p The seed of a national organiza-1 lion was sown three ycars ngc-' with the formation of an lnierpro-, vincial farm uniort council, rrowr headed by Mr. Phelps. It cmbrncesl B. (7.. Alberta, Saskatchcwan and Manitoba. , The MFII rcccntly joined with the Si-TU in strengthening the court- cll's expansion plans by agreeing that each union contribute its share in proportion to mentbcrship. not cation to the programs in other provincoa. SUDBURY. Ont. ICPJ poscd west-cast natural gas pipe- line would give Canada new energy equal to four st. Lawrence power projects. A. P. Craig, vice-president. in charge of sales of Trans-Canada The pro-' Pipe Lines. Ltd.. said Monday night. Mr. Craig. addressing the Sud- bury Chamber of commerce, said contract negotiations for sale of the gas to community distributing companies . arily take a long time but this should not lead any- one to conclude that the saoo.ooo.- ooo project is faced with anything but normal problems of an tinder- I I l oqulwlna , taking of this also and scope. to exceed 50 cents per membership unit. The FUA voted It straight Gives Outline Of Gas Pipeline May Dwarf Seaway Power The sialcmcnts were ('.nlllRlll'!t1 in a prepared address issued to the press before delivery. The company had the problem of offering gas to distributors at. as low a price as possible. and at the same time offering producers as high 5 price as possible. LINKS ECONOMY Despite contract and financing problems, preparations were well under way for s start of construc- tion this spring as planned. The project. a 2.200-mile pipeline from the Alberta - Saskatchewan border cnstwnrd as far as Mont- real. was comparable in many three members of the plane's crew TEL. AVIV (Reuters) - In-aer.Hish School Where Phi” , Monday released five more of the 0f the YM-C-A 81'? SDOMOTIHB 3 10 persons who were aboard a Sy-Hnlelililnmenl IOY WQ 3' rtarr DC-."i airliner forced down on M midnight 3 TOWN (-739 Freed were two passengers and Ralph Krohn Hansen of Wayne. Call In N.Y., American agent for an ag-r rlcttltural machinery company. was. rrleased immediately after the' twin-engined airliner was forced Prince mo MILITARY CHIEFS nrrnrr NEW STIIATEGY: MAJOR DISPUTE POSSIBLE Covers Edward Island Like, The Dew. P310550 I Pilot Keeps -Clear Oi Houses Blazing Aircraft Over Dartmouth . HALIFAX ,prlol. stuck to his burning aircralti I i only occupant. l.ieut. Robert. T. Illrnirc. Ziil, nil. Carnlough. County Antrrm. Nflrlll-1 ern Ireland. said his Avcngcr anti-Ii submarine plane was only 250 fcetl from the ground when the trut;er'l at the Sheaswatcr navy basc sent, a radio warning that the craft was on fire. i Moore said he noiiccd the flames at about the same time. ''I had decided at first to land the plane. I thought the trouble ;wasn't serious htrt things got worsc r i lquickly. I wanted to get to some- lvvhcre that was fairly opcn. Thc .harbnr seemed to be the bcst tCPl- A Royal Navyiplat'c " "Tito last lifll" l lrmkhrl ;u "me Monday long enough to aim it away altimeter it was about 600 fort,” from nearby houses. including his he said. "Then the cockpit got so own. and then made his first para-if chute jump to safety. He was rtsii U bur and jttmpcd out. ull of smoke I couldn't see a hing. I armed her towards the bar- By the limo his clinic upon-"rl W! was only :00 fcct from the El4l'lll”l. He landed on the s'a'.ron's football field Llrltl'l.llirPCl. The plane tlrunriar-cl into shallow: harhm tvatc" off the and nl A J"'”Y about a quartcr rrrrlc away lrcrn Shc;tr'water's c r ow dv d marrucd quarters uhcrc the pilot's faintly ltvcs. Many other homcs also are in the district. Moore. a Sccond World War com- bat pilot, jriincd the Royal NavY in Dcccrrrbcr of 1041 and tratncd in the Unitcrl Stains. lie is on luau tn the Cannrlian Navy. 3 Plan Inauguration Cl 1 Plans have been finalized for the. official inauguration of Centennial Year in Charlottetown. On New Year's eve a dance will be held at the Charlottetown Hotel as well as at the Queen Charlotte groups n oungcr set. r in pcrtod the dance. costume Will read to ipatrons the official proclamation from the Mayor and City Council declaring Centennial Year opened. Centennial novelties will be in evidence at botli these Olllcliall functions, whlch,will be attcndeclt by Mayor Stewart. Year”: morning, thc, ldlml to land at Lydda airport 153,000, the Jordan border. However. the 28.000-member FUA refused to endorse an Sl-"U- spnwned plan to march on Ot- itawa to demand guaranteed parity (Continued on Page 2 col. 3; Boats Deliver Food In Flood lAreas of Ireland I l DUBLIN vcstigatlons." on A Cairo, was land. The Israelis said the plane intruded nver Israeli territory. The pilot said he did not. Both tReut,9;-5) .. 1-rrrng.-y Syria and Jordan protested to the tfamllles marorined lll widespreadlumled NHUO"-I ll'UF9 3UDCl'Vl!l0n lieadquartcrs in tfloods suanrping the Irish country- side Monday loaned out of top-r lstorey windows to grab eagerly for. lfood parcels brought to them by. lrescuer-s. r L , A fleet of small boats left thcldla” c”'- 3- E- 14- C'5lO”F”5Y- 'town of Athlone t.n deliver the food to people stranded in the surround- lduring the wcckcnd. police said Gwizrl. four ing countryside. On the way. crews 'saw farmhands itt other craft. tow- ing cattle to the safety of highlB"”"d3 ground. taflcr s l The floods - which began lastl week - are the worst experlcnccdt . . in the Republic of Ireland in ltv- illlllnrllles will ling memory. The rrvcr Shannonj 'and its tributaries have put more than 60 square miles of farming ;country under watcr after ab-t lnormally heavy rains. l 1 About 4.500 farms are floodedi And in Dublin itself the river T01-l ka. a little ambling stream turned; into a raging torrent b has invaded 5,000 homes. Dies Following - 'owr-st in rec rrt rears with the .- sung Two Bees ll-cptron of 1921, fl-ports Mr. Donitlt! SAN DIEGO calm (Ap),gDavidlA. MacDonald, chairman of the Leach. 66. A part-lime beckccpcr, P'TF' LY, Rita” M”l"d”"5', 3"”: Sunday nrler being We llll crop Drn Uclilon Cabl- stui by to bees. the .roncr' "m" lm ll" Unlled Sul" Wm omlcg repmwllcdl M 5 not be available until next Friday, iDrc. 17. In the meantime. the po- Hl” WU" told ll” ””""""' L””h.t.at.o markets rcmaln rather dull. pr-regs." stars; My, MgrcDm.n1d,.('alKal'.V became ill after the first sting, - g but. thinking little of it. retllrnedlgicum5E1g::e:l:du;;;;.lhE::t1153:- l" m” PW” "id W” "”"V "l"l"- third of last. year's movement. up ll” ”'"l ”" "W" '”'"A ilntil t.his tzme. Loaded cars have tl)OPl'l bringing II!) to 8l.85 per cwt. F08. The expected shrink- age in Mattie stocks is now becom- lng evident and is expected to rclm-sent st. inst. 25 per cent of their total production. Almost. 2.000 cnrloads of poor quality potatoes ;have already been delivered to trays to the hurlrl.ng of the Ir:-at gIf0lg1:e"gl,:,-r,l,(,i9.-lzlollpe: traits-corrtlnenisl railway and. like r..;,.mR mM',h; About nu” mgr”. ,sout.h- cast. of Tel Aviv and six miles from Two Syrian passengers and two Centennial Committee. will lcrew members were still being de-letthcr of the two Charlottetow ltalncd at Lyddn airport Mondayihospltals where inlght. ttpcndrng completion of in-lthe New Year has been born. Jerusalem about the Leillslal-1V5 the plane's detention and both are QUCEW3 C0Unl.V mCmbEl'S Oi Pafll-3-l expected to raise the issue at the merit. the Chief of Police. the next meeting of the mixed armis- Chief. the heads of the various c'il.V ice commission headed by Cana- departments and all former living: TORONTO lCPl--Two Torontaitown Ministerial Association and ai liabics were accidentally suffocated l'EDF9ff'lll3lll'8 Of ll" ROTMI1 Calh- weelts. died he became tangled in her conipletely hed clothes and Joseph Auger, sixlsupervlsion of months. died after choking on food, The City Hall lPotato Storage H & Marketing Board Report Potato storage holdings in Can-;F.0.B. Prices ill New York Sratc y the rains. ads as of December lst are esti-l lmatcd at l9.523.000 bushels which: is substantially below the 2a,m.oool mu d,.,mm, M111"? "T H 593? 880 Mid 1! U1! ample supplies for present l'PQllll'C- I On New l Clerk Mayor, accompanied by the City) and the chairman of they visit) n. the first baby of; The will presented with a child be Isrncli authorities said t.he planeusterlrng silver mttg and the mother flight. from Damascus to intercepted over the north Isracli coast and obeyed a signal from Mustang fighters to;the Council Chambers at City Hall.lold Halifax stceplcback. rcninrrrerf -will receive a bouquet of flowers. l At 2 p.m. the official opening of: Centennial Year will take place in- Prescnt for the occasion bcsrdcs the Mayor and Councillors Will he Kl-Its Honor. Lieutenant Governor 'Prowsc. Premier A. W. Mntheson. the two Charlottetown members of; Assembly. they Fire i l mayors. Clergy will be represented by the President of the Charlotte- , olrc Bishop of Charlottetown. I The Cotrncil Chambers are bcing: renovated under the Barry Btrgden . Will be brilliantly outlined in colored lights During oldings and Pennsylvania range from S2 25 to 52.40. Montreal l :1 st F;-may moderate v rih rcpor lcd was lmcnts. Island 751: were bringing slim to M35. Small packagcs wcrc Sin weak demand because the trarlc iwas buying some cheaper Matncp Jand New Brunswick potatoes. To- lrnnto reported some 753 being soldl tat 52.05 with slow trading-cspcci-1 ally on small packages. "Those i "would warrant, our product-rs re- ceiving about 3100 pcr bulk hushcl at all Island sh:pping points." Rail movemcnt. from this Prov- pince has been averaging about 25 cnrloads per day for the past. scy- lersl weeks. Sccd movement to the southern states has been fair. but .th.- export market. for tablcstock phas bcen very small. It. would ap- pear that is heavier movemcnt from -rthc Island. New Brtrnswlrt; and lhiaine will he rtcccssarv bcforc lnnl long in orrlr-r lo prevent loo largc A hllllfllln of suppll:-s lllc East. the railways. would be a powcrful force for integration of the can-l adian economy. said Mr. Craig. The impact of a new fuel or source of energy on an economy was immeasurable. csptclllly when the area was rich in othcr natural resources and occupied by a pro- greasive-minded and highly-skilled population. Under these circumstances. a new economic fuel could start a chat nactltj of industrial de- velopment and improvement in liv- ing standards that would continue-man of Kenslngton Palace. trip to expand as long as skill and im- duchc-ss' new home. as saying: ”We aginatron were applied to its use. -are interested to hear it ourselves. LONDON. IReuterat -The sun- nay more-as has published what it calls an "official" denial of rum- .m-A Wewccpinl llurnpesn capitals for i the lAAt few days" that the Duchess i of Kent. ca, ll soon to marry Crown Prince Olaf of Norway, bl. The newspaper quotes a spoken- Deny Talk Duchess Tdlff ed But. we are certain more are no grounds for In ..no far as we know " TM Slmtllv Express says the French magazine Paris Match stet- ; ed that the story orlginatcd in um- don "among people who usually know what. is going on in royal circles." The duchess' husband was killed in an air crash in 1N2. Prince Oisrs :1”! tires lastl April in hospital tom s vs at meat. - r . . .........i.l.:. City's Centennial Year the opening ceremony. Wlltch Will include the reading of the Procla- rnzrtion by Mayor Stewart and the cutting of a huge 100-pound birth- day cake by His Worship. a publvav address system will carry tho pro- ceedtngs to citizens in the strccts. Of special interest in the C(lliEfIlllll:v' will be recorded greetings from the nine Mayors of tho Pr'ovtn.r:wl capitals across Canada. A Ham- mond organ will prottdc. suztablo music. Immediately follow.-tn: the da- lrberatrcms at City Hall. Hrs Wor- ship will leave for his home for tho annual New Years Day rcccp- tron. at which the blrthrlrty rain! will be served. Plans call for n ris- tributron of the rncnrorahlc ml-'ra to the various public. ln5'.llill.'t)llT which will include the two orphan- ages. The Centennial liirtliday cake has becn generously donated by the F. W. Woolworth Cornparry. CONDITION SEl'lI0l.'S FREDERICTON (C'Pl--The rvvrtn dition of James Bambury, l9-ycara serious in hospital here Illorrdayi night. He suffered fracturcs of bold lcgs and an arm when he fell iii feat off a smokestack at Chlpmaq Saturday. re-ts. .. 7 33.-ya WHATS Br-:coMt: OF THE CENT WHO WORE A PLUC. HAT 'R0l,lND Tug 5s”E”i.”-ioE?f;L m. s. 2 Kl n Qtliil. ii. ngtk . ,. ll (C).4fArv'- TORONTO t('l"l v Tlitnrrrvim arr! maximum temperatures" Min. Mat. Dawson . . . . . . .. . Rh ".h Vancouver . . Al 47 Victoria 3.0 All Edmonton . . L'l 7lS I '34 -ill cgrna . . l'u IV) Wrnnrpcg . I4 .37 Tnjnntn .- . . . 2". .l.'l Ottawa . . 2 '33 Montreal .. 1.1 :5 Quebec .. I7. - Fredericton . - - '23 Saint John .. 17 24 Moncton . IR 3? Halifax .. 24 .10 Charlottetown . 28 201 Sydney . - .ll Ynrmoulh . 7 30 St. John”: 27 30 HALIFAX (CF!--Tire Dominion public weather office here savs a high pro-satire area moving crut- ward Tuesday will bring mild air to the district and fine weather will continue in all rcgions. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island. eastern NJI. countes. lower St. John river valley: sunny and milder: south- west winds 13. Low-high at ("hur- lettetewn 10 and 80. Moncton. Fred- ericton and sum John I and so. If h tide today at Charlottetown at 1. I. in. sag!!! p. m. Sun rises today at 1.43 a. m, ma sets at 4.31 D Ir