1911121915535. 1.248 The Existing Fish g Game Legislation lal consolidation of the Qliilgigfiéish and Game Act and menus amendments thereto. Srntinued from yesterday's Guar- Blah. 1e. (a) n shall be unlawful to! . ent to fish in the “’;"“,°“.,§“¢I. Province or hunt, w.y|u| take or trap any wild ani w] 0i: bird without first procur- a.‘ a license therefor as herein "°'md (Chapter 1s, 194s) (b) A license to hunt game in m; Province of Prince Edward Is- hnd shall be issued to all bonn M; Nova Scotia and New Bruns- wmq, and also Newfoundland re aidents upon payment of the sum ,1 335,00; to all other non-residents "pa" the payment of the sum of ‘3500. Licenses to non-residents shall be limited to a maximum of gwa hundred In an)’ ‘"19 YBBP- The early number to be set by the inlster of Agriculture. (Chapter 16, i947). (c) A' license to angle for trout or salmon shall be issued to any non-resident of Prince Edward ls- hnd upon payment of the sum oi Two Dollars ($2.00) to such offi~ t," or agent appointed to issue the same. (d) A license to hunt game for four (4) consecutive days shall be issued to any non-resident of Prince Edward Island upon the payment of the sum of Ten Dollars ($10.00) to such officer or agent ap~ pointed to issue same. '(Chapter 15. i948). (s) A resident of Prince Edward Island within the meaning of this section shall be a person who is at. the time, and _who has been coil- tlnuousiy for the full period oi ix months next preceding a bona do resident of the Province. Nothing in this Act shall be con- strued as requiring any farmer, rural labourer or any commercial fishermen or their respective fam- ilies. resident of this Province. to procure a license to angle for trout ar salmon or to hunt game in this Province. (Chapter 11, 194-1). (f) Each Licensee shall have his license on his person when engag- sd in-the respective pursuits for which he is licensed and shall then and there produce and exhibit same upon request to any officer authorized to enforce the Fish and Game Laws, and such license, un less so carried. and unless so pro- duced and exhibited, shall not have the effect to have authorized 0i‘ permitted any Licensee to engage In such pursuit. Such license shall not be assignable or transferable. lg) Everyone being a holder of s Fish and Game-License and being in pursuit of Fish and Game ivhu neglects to carry same or refuses to permit the examination thereof, when required to do so by the Game Inspector. a Warden or Con- stable, is guilty of an offence and. liable to a penalty not exceeding Ten Dollars. 17. All fines, fees. or othei moneys received under the author- uy of this Act shall be paid to the Provincial Treasurer. 18. On any conviction for an of- fence under this Act, the Justice shall by his conviction, after ad- Llldllfll the payment of the fine. s herein provided for the offenct sommitted with costs, order and idjudge that in default of pay- ment forthwith. the defendant be imprisoned in the common jail, in the County in which the conviction Is made for a period of not less than ten days or exceeding ninety lays. 19. A license fee of fifty dollars shall be paid by none-residents Io: trapping. taking or killing forbear- Ing animals in this Province, the. raid sum to be paid to the Secie Tory-Treasurer of this such license. 20. Every holder of a Game Lic ensa shall be permitted to carry Province with him out of the twelve birds killed by himself with Province Who is hereby authorized to grant himself liable under sub-section (d) of Section Five of this Act. Said birds must be carried in open sight and be tagged with the num- ber of the bearer’s license. 21. No person shall kill by ang- ling in one day more than five sai- rnon and no person shall fish for. catch or kill in any of the waters of this Province, a greater number of Speckled Trout or Brook Trout than in the asgregate shall weigh more than ten pounds -and no greater number than twenty Speck- led Trout or Brook Trout though said number weigh less than ten pounds, and no person shall in one day catch and retain more than three Rainbow Trout. 22. Every one is guilty of an of- fence and liable to a penalty of not exceeding ten dollars nor less than five dollars who knowingly hunts or fishes on any enclosed properly without the permission of the own- er thereof. 23. The Game Inspector or such person or persons as the Govern ment shall appoint are hereby em- powered to issue Game ‘ Licenses and angIer‘s Permits on the form supplied by the Provincial Treas urer and shall make a monthly re turn to the Provincial Treasurer for all moneys received for Game Licenses and Angler's Permits and shall retain as compensation teii per der this Act. offence and liable to a penalty not poultry. (To be Concluded) Bobby Broen Pays, Makes Apology I-LAYWAY. Wis, NOV. 24 -—(AP hours a. posse ' spent sloggin ing for him while he relaxed in hotel under an assumed name. payable at. once. dY said they would not bring charges against toPlY Breerfs apology. he said the Associated Press from all-out for me." agriculture are to be studied by » in the Province without rendering Smoke a pipe-full of Ploobsc to find why so many smokers say “Barley is best"- Seehoweasllyispsdis. . Jiossvsmoothly It draws . . . how slowly it burns . . . how coolly It smokes. In Picobac’: happy blending of l top-grade Buriey leaf you'll find the happy, coding to your search for a satisfying EUOISQ Tsycpipeo]... WETITeI Pick o icobac f Pipe Tebaccos v centum of all fees they collect un- 24. Every person is guilty of an exceeding one hundred dollars and not less than ten dollars or in de- fault of payment to a period oi not exceeding thirty days in sail. who hunts. or kills, attempts to hunt or kill any fox not in captiv- ity, except between the first day o- November and the thirty-first day of January in each year. Providcd that farmers are hereby empowered to kill. at any time, foxes found ill the act of attacking or destroying (Chapter 15, 19482 —A public apology and about. S303 gram“? I.s the price Toronto-born singer Bobby Breen will pay for the 36 through snow-choked forests look- The apology - Breen's idea —- wes isued early today. The mon- ey - Sawyer County District At- torney Winslow Davis’ bill —- is Breen spent most ‘of yesterday explaining to Ashland and Saw- yer County authorities why.he didn't, try n little harder to report his whereabouts after his chart- ered plane wns forced down Sun- a . Officials of the. two counties any thq 21-year-old former child movie star. But Davis presented Breen with a bill for lust under $300 for expenses in- curred ivy the Countiy in the false search. He said Breen had agreed last night in g gels-phone interview wtigh e sheriff's office sit. Ashland was directed "to all the guys who went STUDY AFRICAN AGRICULTURE MOMBASA. Tanganyika - (C?) ~—Pr0blcms likely to be encounter- ed in the mechanization of African mission from the United Kingdom. They will visit Tanganyika, Nyasa- land, Nigeria and Uganda. Poultry Market lieporteiliitrong, Prices Good The poultry market ls the best in years, Mr. F. M. Nash, supervising poultry products inspector reported yesterday in a Dominion Depart- ment of Agriculture egg and poul- try‘market report. Prices beinz quoted presently for both live and dressed poultry are perhaps the highest on record. The market is strong and local prices paid are in line with prevailing prices through- out Canada. The marketing of tur- keys apparently has not begun therefore no forecast can be given cngprices. Poultry prices are cer- tainly remunerative enough to en- courage the proper finishing of poultry for market. I I Local dealers are quoting for dressed poultry basis rail grading. chickens five pounds and over Special Milkfed 47, A Milkfed 46, B 42, C 25. Fowl over five pounds Special 33, A 32, B 30, C 20. Capons six pounds and over four cents above chicken prices. Turkeys young under eighteen pounds Grade A 47-50, B 45——47, C 30. Over eighteen pounds Grade A 40- 42, B 38, C 30. Old hens all weights A 42, B 40, C 28 and for old toms all weights A 41, B 39, C 25. Prices paid _for poultry live weight throughout the Province are gen- erally, chickcn six pounds and up No. 1 35c, no. 2 22c, fowl five and one-half pounds and up No. 1 27c, No. 2 18c. It is estimated that Canadians, consume between seventy and eighty thousand cases or one hundred to one hundred and twenty carioads of eggs weekly. The nearest Canadian production: has come to meet that local de-i mund this fail has been 69,000 cases l therefore ihc demand for eggs should remain steady until n sur- plus cxisls. When egg production' reaches 70,000 to 75,000 021505 per week. there is a surplus of eggs over Canadian requirements for ex- port. Once a surplus exists, re- munerative prices to producers for the products depends on the ability of the trade to market the surplus. The British egg contract affords a market at good prices for the surplus up to approximately January 21, 1949. Production pf eggs In P. E. I. de- clined nine per cent from previous ) week but operators of registered stations report receipts thirteen percent higher than for the corresponding period last year. The quality of the product is good and although all available supplies are moving to Maritime and New- foundland points, prices have been depressed somewhat due to tho importation of Ontario eggs. Grading station operators arc now quoting for ungraded eggs Grade A Large 51, AM 46, AP 30, B 42, C 29, and receiving for the graded pack AL 55-56, AM 50—51. AP 43, B 46, C 33. Wholesalers are quoting retailers for the graded pack AL 58, AM 54, AP 45. B 50, C 37 and retailers in turn are selling to consumers In cartons Grade A Large T0, A Medium 09, AP 55, Grade B loose 55c and up. (Note: As cartons cost 2c, loose eggs should be sold at 2c per dozen loss.) E 8 Britain's lluge Cycling Industry Holds Exhibition By l-LL. Tories LONDON. Nov. 24 -—-lCP)—.Brit- closed out a dazzling exhibition of its latest 1048 models with estim- ates it. gained millions in export orders from the iveek-long show- window. of cycle-loving Britons to Jam the exhibition. s motorcycle by the industry. Truman Backs i sin's huge cycling industry tonight Foreign buyers Joined thousands spacious Earls Court Hall for the opened a week ago by Viscount Montgomery who likes to‘ ride himself arid was presented with .'Ilhia time Britons could also buy. ____ I_'HE__G_IJ_ARDIAN. New British Milk Legislation Mooteil LONDON. Nov. 2o - (or) - The Labor Government made public today a bill aimed at wiping out tihe menace of tuber- culosis from milk. When the measure has been passed by parliament, it will be- come illegal to sell mil-k which is not from tuberculin-tested herds. pasteurized, or sterilized. Food Minister John Btraohey has gathered statistics showing that 1.500 to 2,000 persons, most of them children, die every year of bovine tuberculosis in the British Isles. ' Efforts For World Wheat Agreement WASHINGTON. Nov 2t —-(OP) — President Truman pledged w- day that he will Mk Congress to approve an international wheat agreement, 1i‘ one can be negotiat- ed. And in a. surprise move he in- vited Russia to join the United Natons Food and Agriculture 01'- ganizatlon. "I think that if we could dis- cuss with the Russians our mut- u-ol interest; in agriculture, it would not be so difficult to discuss our differences in some other fields," he said. The President extended the in- vitation in an address to the fourth annual met-tiling of the F.A.0. here. He said that he hoped every country, old and new. would’ become a member of the international food group. In ad- dition to the Soviet Union. he specifically mentioned Argentina. “Hunger has no nationality,” lie said. "Abundance shcruid have none, either." The President. who during his successful campaign for re-eiec- tioii strongly supported an inter- national wheat agreement, today expressed regret that the pact drawn up last spring was not rat- ified by the United States. His latest bid for such a wheat pact. folio-wed a proposal by Ed- ward Cale, a State Department official. thath full-dress confer- ence of the 58 members of the F.A.O. be held next Jan, 25 in an attempt to draft a new agree- mcnt. Cale told an F‘.A.0. committee that the United States had asked Charles F. Wilson of Otto/wit, chairman of the ill-country wheat preparatory commit-tee. to make inquiries here and determine the feeling towards calling a confer- cnre Jan. '25. Cale. associated chief’ of the State Department's international resources division, said that Wil- son. one of the worlds leading wheat experts, came w Washing- ton this weck at. the request of the State Department. The preparatory committee, in- cluding Canada. was set up this year alter the iviieat agreement of last March was scuttled. The purpose of such on agree- ment is to divide the world mar- ket. among the major wheat-ex- porting countries, and to set up a system of maximum and mini- mum prices for the bread grain designed to protect both growers and consumers. The agreement drawn up last spring. and approved by Canada andeAustralia. provided for those countries and the United States to export a total of 500000.000 bushels during the next five years. The 33 importing countries were to have paid prices ranging from a s2-a-bushel maximum to a minimum oi’ $1.50 in 1948-49 and 511.10 in 1952-53. Heavy Grain Movement To PAGE SEVEN It’: a cinch te please hubby, nephew. 46d. l" qrondpo. Just moke your selections in our furnishings department and you're safe. Be- sides the items illustrated, there ore hundreds more, so come in today. ALL WOOL SWEATERS Foncy Norwegian designs, pIoIn col- ors ond panels, pullover or cool styles. PRICES u. ..... . .. $3.95 to $7.95 DI-UXE SHIRTS Fancy stripes or plain colors, also white in such famous makes as For- syth, Brill, Forden and Bond, oII with the popular fused collars. PRICES $2.95 to $7.00 ‘L. Norrow bells in brown or block top groin cowhide distinctive hardware all styled by Arrow. PRICES . . . . ...........$l.00 up , Medium weight flannel robes In oII wool solid colors, o lasting ond use- ful gift. PRICE .. . . . . . . ..._._........$I6.95 b‘ his GREENIIAL O0. Ltil. Neckties in all the newest patterns including panels, stripes ond pois- Ieys by Forsytli, Brill ond Majestic. PRICES . up SHOP EARLY FOR BEST CHOICE USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN PAY A SMALL DEPOSIT DOWN AND YOUR SELECTIONS WILL BE RE- SERVED UNTIL CHRISTMAS. WEAR PHONE 1500 MEN'S AND BOYS‘ I44 GREAT GEORGE ST. sums. AFTER. 88 YEARS MODERN FURNITURE srupy Biurisss mrmsriuas Cabinet Seating Arrangement To Be Revised LONDON — (CP) — Fulfill-ll" that. cant be scratched or scorched with a cigaret, is fireproof and acli-f-resisti g. was on show at the Council o Industrial Design ex- hibition. It was among new devel- opments of synthetic boards and plastic laminates. BANGALORE. Indie. — (GP)- Mysore minister of industries and finance, H. C. Dasappa. is touring Britain, Europe and the Unit-ed States in connection with the state's expansion scheme. He will study iron, steel, glass, aluminum and paper industries. NOTTINGHAM, England -—(CP) -Opening two tins she had kept for 33 years-one of asparagus, the other of "iron rations-Mrs. R. Hinton, found the contents in good condition. The “iron rations" dated 1906. comprised cocoa. and hard biscuit. (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Nov. 24——Prl.me Min- ister St. Laurent will have Trade Minister Howe, a senior privy councillor, as his right-hand desk- mate in the Commons when Par- liament. opens in the new year. Agriculture Minister Gardiner, third-ranking minister in the cab- lnet, will be seated on his left. The retirement of Rt. Hon. Wil- liam Lyon Mackenzie King and Mr. St. Laurentfs accession to the prime ministership will entail some rearrangement of Cabinet seating in the chamber. The 245 seats in the Commons are divided equally, with the Clov- ernment members sitting to the right of the Speaker and facing the Opposition members who sit on his left. cabinet members oc- cupy the two front rows of ben- ches nearest to the Speaker. Mr. King. as former prime min- ister and senior privy councillor, still will rate a. front-row seat and may be given the third seat to the immediate right of the Speak- er. This will place him just at Gillette Makes IiEosy To SIiop FOR MEN ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST! _ Gillette GIFT SETS Are Sure To Please AnyMun These attractively pork- uged Gillette gift sets make it easy for you to select the right present for any man. Every one Is o gift that will he treasured for months to come. Though many models had "export only" stamps, there was plenty for the domestic market too. But oi’-‘ ficials admitted that the prices for Halifax, SLJohn the home market were about 100 per cent above pro-war prices. plus purchase tax. But they declared these models cannot. be compared wit-h the pro-war ones. eigh) reported a $1,000,000 order from Canada and the United States. Other huge export orders for special models came from var- ious Commonwealth countries. South America. the Scandinavian countries and from India. 0n view were bikes of improved light alloys-one weighed a little more than 15 pounds-built-in dynomos, theft-proof forks locks. and four-spted sears. ‘ Motor cycles featured streamlin- iniz. piston springing front and back. with and vrithout sidecars that looked the last word in up- holstered comfort. One model was collapsible. One British cycle company (Rel-I MONCTON. Nov. 24 —The first large scale movement of grain to Maritime winter ports this season is en-liute from the Lakehead and other sections of Ontario and tram |Quebec, Edgar A. Robertson, gen- eral superintendent of transportat- ion. Canadian National Railways, ireported here today. The initial |shipment includes 826.000 bushels of wheat and 51.400 ions of flour. In all it will require 513 C.N.R. cars. “We expect a steady flow of this traffic frcnn now on. said Mr. Rob- ertson. "Our facilities to handle freight from Western and Central Canada to the Atlantic seaboard were never better. We have in- augurated a new fest freight train service to Halifax and Saint John and have improved our freight handling facilities a‘. the Maritime winter ports themselves." I STIILLION A Meeting of the P. E. 26th. or 8 o'clock. I llllllli-IIEMARETL avian AND THOSE INTERESTED IN COLT RACING held III the City Building, Chorlcttetown, Fridoy night, Nov. J. P. HOOPER hesident P. E. I. Harness Racing Club OWNERS I. Harness Racing Club will be the start. of the Cabinet row. Labor Minister ‘ Mitchell and Defence Minister Glaxton, both of whom now occupy second-row seats. now may move to the front. Second-row seats now must be found for three new ministers- External Affairs Minister Pearson. Reconstruction Minister Winters and Justice Minister Carson. all appointed since the last session. On the Opposition side oi’ the l-louse, Progressive Conservative leader Drew will take seat No. 145 es leader of the official Opposit- ion. This will place him opposite Mr. St. Laurent. John Bracken, the former Party leader. will be on his left and Gordon Graydon. former acting House leader and member for Peel. will be on his right. The chamber. though member- ship ts only 245. has seats for 272 members. The membership will be swelled to 262 when Newfound- land enters confederation with its seven members and l0 additional are elected in the next general r-lection as a result of redistribu- lion. ilew T. ll. A. Services To The West Indies MONTREAL. Que. Nov. 23 - Accordlng to essages received in Montreal from m! West Indies following aimouncsesien‘ of Trans Canada Airlines now service to the Bahamas, Jamaica and ‘Trinidad. beginning Dec. I T.0.A. will re- ceive s royal welcome in the Caribbean. Chairman of the tourist boards of the islands hailed the service as a fi-csii proof of Cans- ‘ _ ,i_ _ _______..._i_. dian enterprise and a means of girsliy facilitating husinrss. MILORD RAZOR gator-grain covering. GILLETTE TECI-l RAZOR SET Contains an all-metal Gillette razor and l5 Gillette Blue Blades. GILLETTE ONE-PIECE with 5 Gillette Blue Blades Durable case in alli- $3.79 GILLETTE DLlDE DISPENSER DIET SET Latest thing for shaving convenience-makes hlnde changing a cinch. Contains 3 of the handy new Gillette Blade Dispensers, each holding 20 Gillette Blue Binder-GO blades in all. o0 For uaewith any Gillette razor... . . .. . .$3- 98¢ GILLETTE SHAVINO KIT includes a Gillette Tech Razor. 1S Gillette Blue Blades. and a tube of ‘élifiiiiffiisl-M GILLETTE ONE-PIECE ARISTOCRAT RAZOR Complete with l0 Gillette Blue Blades. Rich Tazef- ‘on covuedtrsveiilngcase.‘ '