More Man 18 PAGE! Maxims of A nlothrul man never he! hath - Two Bank Holdups Net Vancouver Bandits350,000 Dy KEN METIIEBAL VANCOUVER (CP) - Holdup liarms jangled I wild refrain here Ncdnesday as smooth working oandliS, striking in quick aucces sion. looted two branches of the Bank of Montreal of 851,500 in a new wave of crime. Mayor Fred Hume immediately .-unimonecl the police comissaion min emergency session to discuss means of curbing the crime wave inst has resulted in six hank rob m-ries in as many weeks and more than 40 smaller holdups. in the first of Wednesday's two tiatillili. robberies. three masked and armed bandits forced their way mm the suburban West Point Grey -ianch of the Bank of Montreal. "cleaned out" a teller's cage, icnoped more money from the open fault and escaped in a car driven a foiirth accomplice. THIRD LARGEST HOLDUP their s.'i0.000 loot was the largest obtained in a bank robbery here in 12 years and the third largest in the history of the Greater Van- Ftitfll ZIli(H'I. Less than two hours later a lone ::.-iitily-drcsscd bandit entered the hank 5 main Granville street branch an-i shoved a note at a teller lending: ”Hand over your cash or iii blow your brains nut." Hc v. iilkcd out of the bank with .t' 300 under the rinse of st police- man slaiiriiiig in the doorway and iii!-'ll'lpPr'lltEfI into streets crowderi llih Christmas shoppers. FALSE ALARMS '1'i-.ii-e ninro during 'he afternoon we liar;-ied police force was gal- ianircti into action as jittery bank mnpioyccs touched off alarm bells. Rruh were false alarms. While Mayor Hume. chairman of the l'lnilCP commission. was meeting fir-hind closed doors with other com- viiirvcion members, police officers scniireri Vancouver's underworld -ix seeking leads on the two latest holdups that raised to some 388,000 the amount of money taken in bank robberies here this year, Dozens of men known to pallet,- by their records were checked in 319” h0mES. on the streets and in underworld haunts. Several were taken. to police headquarters for questioning. "CLEANED OUT” ”They cleaned us out.” salri an official of the West Point Grey branch in describing the first holdup of Wednesday's action-filled morn. ing. The bandit fniirsomc um-kcd so ranidl.v they hacl made thclr get- away before police could arrive ni-. the scene. An alert citizen tipped police off as the gunmen drove up to the bank in a stolen green car, thcir face: hirldcn lwhind hlack pa- per-bag masks. "There uas quite i commotion outside before they biirsi in the door." said Mrs. lda M. R.-indie. liability clerk at the branch. "1: must have taken the three of them to force the lock." . in loss than three minutes the men were fleeing from the bank in their stolen vehicle, which was found abandoned a few minutes later about three miles from the bank. The holdup. exceeded only by a lablllolls 5320.000 safccracking of ii New Westminster bank in 1011 aiiri a 1942 holdup here that netted bandit-S 056.500 -- by coincidence. both also branches of the Bank of Montreal-took place at 9:27 ;i.m, PST, almost 40 minulcs before the normal hank opening hour. Two hours later. at 11:30 .1 m, the bank's main branch on downtown Granville street was robbed. 50 'lUlPlly was the second holup carried out by the hricfCasc-carry- ing bandit that other tellcrs and some 20 customers were unawrirc of what was going on. La. SENATE CONDEMNS CONDUCT BY 0'7-20 VOTF Vote To Censdre iMcCarI:Iiy By I-ID CREAGH WASHINGTON (AF)e'I'he Senate has condemned by a vote of 67 to 20 mo conduct of Senator Joseph -llfiiillilly on the first of three can-' 5"”? Cllafxes alzainst him and C-Mftd lite Way for final action in tun niher counts today. The action Wednesday amounted 3" -1. Vote of lluilty on the charge Mct Jirlhy obstructed the Senate and acted contrary to its traditions In failing to help a sub-committee v hich investigated him in 1951 and 19.72. and in ”abusing" the group's hicmlicrs. MvCarlh.V himself did not vote on the censure resolution but de- il-'l!1ll('0fI it as "a foul job" and said inc American people know "I am l'"'lnil censured because I dared to do the 'Fli.lI'lOI10rRblE' thing of ex Pmlnl communists in govern- ment " ww INVESTIGATION The Wisconsin Republican also got a wholly new investigation -llarltd by charging that forgery "Vi Sllmtression of evidence have liccn used against him. . in an outgrowth of this charge. 5--riator William Knowland of Cali- fornia. the Republican majority icacler. named a special committee to look into the alleged checking of xr-nators' incoming mail by unau-. 'hnrizerl Dc-rsons. All the Democrats present and 23 Rrpuhlicaiis joined in voting to 'lrondenin” McCarthy's behavior to- ward the Senate siib- comiltec v hich investigated his financial and nth:-r affairs in 1951 and 1052. gKnnivland and 19 other Republi- Coming Events "Emyvale school Christmas con- cert. Lot 65 Hall. December 22. g "Christmas Concert, South urnniilla School. December 20th. "Crnkinole Party. Wheatley River Hall. December 3rd. "Your Saturday night Jamboree, North Wlltahlrc. Thursday, Dec- Pmber znd. "Criipnud lchool Christmas enn- rnrt in Crapaud hall. Dec. 21st. 830 p.m. "Reserve Wednesday. December '2nd, for Mlllview Chrlstmu Con- Wt. in Millvlcw Hall. "Pantry Sale by Clyde River 1.. 0. B. A. Island Radio centre. Satiiniay. December 4th, 2 p. m. p "Christmas Concert. Victoria glint: School. Tuesday. December I . s "Hlifhfleld United W. A. one Gale. Saturday, December llth, at Holmnna. "Reserve Monday. December '-"llh. for st. Peter's North Christ- rnna concert in Holy Name Hall. Curtain 0.30 p. m. g"Hcar M. .1. Coldivell. National i- C. F. Leader. on the "Nations, Hllsl11&&!' over 0.13. A.. Fridayl Waning. 3.45. "Shur Cain Amateur Cavalcade St Mary's Dec. .1 u 3 fl cents. Stile of candy. Sponsored . l.adies' Auxiliary Canadian Legion. cans hacked McCarthy. The mic came after a series of attempts to spare the Wisconsin senator from censure were defeated by similar bpsirlod margins. Still to be disposed of are Charges Heads CMH'C (CP)-Stewart OTTAWA. Bates (above). deputy fisheries minister. today was appointed president of the goveriimont'a Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation. 1). B Mansur to the 522.500-a-yeai post. Mr. Mansur recently l'P.!lgl'1BCI to become president of a Toronto Investment Corporation. Mr. Bates is a native of Greeti- och. Scotland. and came to Canada in 1936. His first Canadian job was secrciaigv to Nova Scotlats ecc- iiomic council. that McCai'Iliy: 1. Abllsctl Brig.-Gen. Ralph Zll. ickcr v. hen the general appccircd as -1 Witricss before McCarthy's per- intiiiciil invi-stigatinns siib-cuniniit- (C(1l1tll1llP('I on Page 15 col. 2i Polaio Market Levels iSlighilyT Weaker In Montreal & Toronto Pol aln movement from Province during the past neck I-Il9i.lfIllfI Sillppin: points," states )lr.i .SlacDnii:ilii. ll. 5. Jumhos are be- CHAELOTIETOWN, CANADA, Founded ton and Taipeh. said the treat of other U. S. security pacts State secretary Dulles made the announcement at a press confet- ence. He said the agreement will "forge another link in the system of collective security .. . between the United States an other coun- tries in the Pacific area." DETAILS NOT REVEALED While Dulles did not disclose any details. it la understood the treaty provides for peaceful measures as the prime reliance for settling dis- putes. Geiicralissimo Chiaiig was understood to have pledged that his Chinese Nationalists on the island of Formosa will refrain from any use of force except in defence and avoid any provocative acts against that Communist-held Cluna mainland. In saying the treaty iiill follow Kai-slick cific security pacts. Manila Asia. ircccntly cniicliidcd pact .covering Southeast mutual defence ,South Korea. iN0 (TOMMITMENTS niitmciit for nutoinatic yaclion in specified circumstances. The area of the Formosa treaty, Dulles said, includes livcll as the western Pacific uiirlcr U. S. jurisdiction. 3 Dulles did not say in his pi-e- PM mmbm me hm... mmdcd mp l pared SI.l'IlDn1PlIL whether an altar icrit Seeking us... Revenue Sources WINNIPEQ (CP)- The Ciiiiari-. study the . nightfall. trucks 0l';p.'ellld9nl. George E. Gardner sriicl .ian Pacific P.ailway will possibility of hauling frnilcrs for private overconic its declining rail N. R. Crump, of Montreal, vicr--pi-csidciit. said l.Vc.clncsil.iv. He said in an interview the traffic iheen "very hczivy." "We ivlll look at .will allow us to earn anything that an honest has not hr-en heavy for this sr.-.i-I jng will in wont.-ml at 53.00 pet-idollar." said Mr. Crump. 50" of thc ivvir and far less ill-lllilfltl lhs. ullii'lt would intlicatc tiiatl a year ago Mr. D. M.ii'l)nu1ilil. Chiiirman nrid Al;ii.;,rr of lIlt' P. E. 1. Potato Markctiiig Boiiitl said ycstt-,rda,v. However. in spite of the volume .-liippctl. niarlicl price levels in holh iliontronl and (llorontn are :-liglilly lVOBIxCI' than- they were the latter pail of last week. Montreal reports Island 75's lie.- lng sold at mostly S-100 with con- sumer demands slow wliilo the Toronto market Wllll'Il has linen 52.20 nvcr the lrtsl, wool;-I-iitl was offering S215 for off track rollcrs on Monday and on the following day new shipments were offcrcrl at 52.10 with 50 1h. papers at 31.50 and 10's at 34 1l2 cciits. "Those Montreal and Toronto prices should ivarrnnt our pro- tiuccrs fPl'PiYllIl2 Sl.fl;') in 31.40 per 75 lbs. hulk tiililcslnck at rill Ix- Srmiiinal Tracr Maintenance Men Gel Wage Boost MONTREAL. (CPI St-nsoital track and niaintenniice workers on Canadas ninjor railways were awarded a seven-cent hourly tinge increase in a federal conciliation board report made public Tuesday. The employees. of whom there are 10.000 throughout the country during peak periods, are nit-mbcrs of the Brotherhood of Mainten- ance of Way Employees tAFL- TLCI. The report covers employs-cit of Canadian Pacific and Cftnlldlall National railways. A ma orlty report was handed down 1.) Professor H. D. woods of McGl1l University. chairman. and Michael Rubinstein, a Montreal lawyer who was the iinlon nominee. lie rci'civiil:: premium for Ili'lt' slioiild .-iih-it Illlt ial '.".'tiu hrs ri vt'i',v such stock when it is avIiiliihle."iivorklng out well. (CP) - Stora- , WINDSOR. N.S. ikccpcr Alfred E. Reid won the lNov:i Scotia legislature seat of Hanis East for the L.l)crals Wed- nesday in ii coiirt-supervised re- count which gave him I one-vote edge over his Progressive Conser- vative rival. Mr. Reid held 2.257 votes when the liiiiil tabulation was completed :iucr two days of sitting through ballots cast in the Nov. 16 provin- c.:il Irv-clevtioii. Undertaker Ernest Eli.ngcr finished with 2,256. Hanls county court. Judge B W. Rot-can uill sign today the certifi- catr.-. confirming the outcome. This is merely it formality. Mr. Reid and Mr. Ettinger ivound till election night with 2,260 votes ap.crc. The Progressive Coti- srivritivn tlciiianrled R recount nn clcrlainiion day Nov. 25 when the reiiiritiiig officer's tie-breaking vote gave the riding to this Liberals. HOLD 21 SEATS The rcsult gavles Premier Henry D. IIicka' Liberal administration 21 seats in the legislature. The Pro- s:i'i-ssivi-. Conservatives have 11 and thc CCF. two. I The 37th seat, Pictou Centre. was' left vrivant last week by the sud- rlcn death of A. B. Dewolfe. min- ister without portfolio and chair- man of the Nova Scntla Power Commission. It was the second time that Mr. Ettinger and Mr. Reid had fought down to the wire for an electoral E The rallwayinomlnce. S.W. Crabbe of Toronto, dissented. The report also reduced the ivnrlt week to so from 54 hours. Basic hourly wage rate under the award will be 81.02. ,decI:ion. A one-vote margin see- ,saivrrl bark and forth between .Ihcm lifter the provincial general election in 1953 and the entire icnnt,-est. was subsequently voided by itlic provincial supreme court INCREASES WILL COST iz12o.oo'o,ooo ANNUALLY British Boost Welfare Benefits LONDON tmutern) -The anv- crnment Wednesday rrilseii wel- fare benefits by .ci20.o0o.00o a year by increasing pensions to the aged. the war disabled and others. Osbert Peale, minister of pen- Hill Sourlx. Friday. plans and national insurance, made 7”" A''"””i"" 25 ""1 the announcement in the House of Commons following months of lpollticu controversy on the issue. Both government and oppoi-itinnj were agreed that pensions had to- be raised to meet the rise in thel cost of living. but Labor spokes- man had recently accused the gov- ernment of delay. Under the new benefits Britain's 4.200.000 old age penaio men at 65. Women at 60-Will let these in-i Totally disabled war pensioners siilililltts and slxpcncr. rrfllsfsf liberal Wins Hanls East Seat in 1N. S. Legislature In Court Recounl:;:r.i:::.r:. Hc said the C0ll1p(lIly'5 experi- ment in hriuling its min iriirks be- tween Montreal and Toronto was which upheld Mr. Ettiugt-r's legal action charging iv-regularitit-s in the balloting. Wedneatlziyks result. ii-.11 stand unless the issue once again lands before the courts. By RICHARD KASISCIIKF. Moscow (AP: Rcri (lliiiials -'lfTlh(lSSilfI0l' tn Mtisciiw siiicl Wed- nesday his country's iiiilliuiis stand "shoulder to shoulder" with Riissia and are "not afraid of ii ixar di- rected against aggression." lie as- sertcd the Western )ti)wci's will "stiffer a fate worse than Hit!ci”s” if they fight the Conimuiiist coun- tries. Chang Wen-Ticn. iiho is also a member of the Chinese Communist party's central committee and polit- buro, addressed the S0vicl-spun- sui-crfEiii'opcan SCt'!ll"Ily(l(ll'lIO1'PnCi'. lie is an nbscivcr at the unifor- once. which the Wr-stcrn powers cic- clincd to attend. Delegates arc. pres sent from the Soviet llnion and seven Communist-governed Euro- pean countries. Western n b s e r v c r s inter- preted Chang's speech as ii Chinese offer to come to the defence of Russia In the event of war in Europe. He stressed Chinalii 000.000 people." Russia has about 220,000,000. - HEADED BY SOVIET , Chang acknowledged fiaiikly that Communist-bloc states are "headed six pence a week. hringiritl pension to 40 shillings. Married couple: ll shilling.- weekly, giving them 65 shillings. Peake announced that the same increasea would be given to the unemployed and the blind who get the same rates as the aged. will get. an increase of 12 shillings. the general pattern of other Pn- Dulles appar-p cntl,v meant. there would be react- ion to any attack on Formosa "ln Liiccordaiice with coiistitutioml pro- Tlic 47-year-old deputy succeeds cesses.' This is the provision in the Seven Missing agreement with Such language avoids any coni- fIl'l'lIGfi 1'8- firms to help that a scnior im- ipact of trucks on the rziilwiiys has their. 1872 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1954 WASHINGTON. (AP)-The United States and Nation- alist China announced completion of a mutual treaty Wednesday pledging U. S. protection of Formosa. A joint statement, released simultaneously in Washing- security 1 ty follows the general pattern 1 in the western Pacific. say. on Q-iemoy or the Tachen ls- zlaiids-wliich he close in to the -China mainland-would lie. consid-, iered a threat requiring U. S. action. l However. he left that point open lbv saying the treaty ”will pmvidcl l for inclusion by agreement of other lferritories undcr the jurisdiction of the parties" iU. S. May Coiisider Hthina Blockade WASIIINGTON. tAPivSIatc ' Secretary Dulles said Wednes- day the t'niti-d States may coiisitior a naval hlockarie of Coinniiinist China it poacciiil iiiciius fail to protect the rights of Anic,i'ii'an uitizcns. 3HopesK Dim For Aboard Aircraft . MILAN. NH dimmed Wednesday night. for the SllI'l'lliIi of seven persons missing more than 30 hours in a Northeastl Airlines plane downed in sub- F”””n5a "" ficezui tem crtitures in the ru - self and the nearby Pcscadores. as ' K D E islands mms zed. snow-mvered White moun- While Rl'Dlll1(l and air 5P'.ll'CiI- a ram along the ziircraftts Loconixi- to-Berlin route without siiccess. an expert mountaineer termed the siir- , vlval chances of the six men and -ll ironiaii "very slim''. Sent-i-liars were called off at but Noitheast Au-linos' plane will be flown ovcr . the. area from time to time dur- ml! the night to watch for a pos- isibilitv any survivor might have ri fire to keep from frccziiiz. With temperatures sliding toivnrd 'Icl'n in the high elevations. Joe; Dodgc. managci' of the App:ilach- ian Moiiiitain Club's Pinkham Notch camp, said any siirrivors of; the landing could not live anoth- cr iilzht without proper eqiiipincnt. and clothing. p l jFAINT MESSAGE 1 i The slim hope that spurrrd ii-eaigv searchers was A faint amt fading l'i'ICll0 mlssnge, "plresum- ably from the pilot." that Sildf - down five miles hill. hut. . The message initiated a close air combing of the Bald mountain area. about five miles northeast of Ber- lin airport in Milan. However. II1i' scarcli by helicopter. private plane and service aircraft failed to turn up the missing airplane. Red china Warns West Against Fighting commies. (by the Soviet llumn " , Ho lIf'IltitlllCCfI tlic Pails agicc- lniciit to l'C-ll in West Gcrmriiiy. c:ill-i ing it iia scritiii: priixncatioii on tlici IDElI'l of the l'nitcd Slate: and thcir supporters in I”. n g l a ii cl anti i France." ”Al the present time the :iggi'c.:- .siio circles of tho liuilctl States and their British and Frciirh stip- .prirtvrs pin their liriiics on the rc- militarizatinn of Western Gcrniany.l . ”Thcy think that West Gernianl .7 troops will be their shock hrigadcs ' They do not see that the Germany of today is not the Gcriiiany oil World War 11. They do not I'0.'lli7.Fi lthat today there exists a peace-i "loving titlasti German deinrvcratir ircpublic which has become .1 strong- lhold of the forces of peace and dc- :mncracy." MORE rowr.nci'i. He asserted Russia has "bOCtlIll!" still more powcrul than in the past" and addcd: I "Shoulder to shoulder with it stands the Chinese People's repub- lic . . . A mighty and united camp .ItRI therefore her-nhrniight inti lPXISI0llCP headed by the Soviet Un- tinu. . War vi-irloiis uiih children and litirlnws over 40 will get 10 shill- ings and sixpcnce more to 52, lshlllings rend sixpeiice. with ap-1 pl'0pf'IlIlP increases for children. Industrial injuries and full in- dustrial disablement benefits will: .he raised from 55 shillings to 6'1” The wicloiiil rair. now :17 shill- Single person; seven Ihillingnlaiiipeiice to 67 shillings. uxpenceuings, will be raised to so shillingsl Covers Prince Edward Island . Like The Dave PRICE 50 l. U.S. Pledges Formosa S.curit In New Pact Will-i Nationalists Visi ' St; Kotclawala. Ceylon. will Rt. Y-inn. Prime Minister Sir John of make a five-day visit to Canada starting Dec. 2. Sir John. also Minister of External Affairs and Minister of Defence for Ceylon, iiill visit Oltawr. Toronto. Niag- ara Falls and Montreal. OTTAWA (CPI - Canada wants Ceylon tn remain as a strong link in Comnionucallh unity. Pi line Minister St. Laurent said "APl-Sllm 110033 Wedncsdziv thcre will be no spcclaliM0,,. n,...,,,.en,.l p,.,,,,. p.(i'Jlcms to discuss when sir John Kntclaivala. Ceyloii's prime. minis- ter, tirrircs here today to begin l'l five-div Canadian visit. But. lie added. there will be. con- Vl0l'Il to niiikc Sir John continue to fr-el that Canada values lils coun- trv's picsciicc ;ii the Common- .vlPIlili1. ”VVc unllt in make him feel that there are advantages to ourselves rind to his miiiii:y in this personal irlationsliips." Mr. St. Laurent told rcpoi'ti-rs. Sir .lo1iii's trip will mark the first visit to Caiiada of a prime minister of Ceylon. It has been billed as a iroiirit-sv trip returning Mr. St. Lwurentls visit to Ceyloii during his iinrld tniir earlier this year. I'I0u'('l't'l'. it .s uiiderstoori the two leririri-s will discuss the Common- wealth prime minister cnnfereiicc to be held in London at the end of Jaiiiiarv. Mr. St. Laiiiv.-iit recalled that sir John hfid szzven him a great re- :-rplion rliiriiic his world tour Iii- rlurlcd was It "very brilliant func- tion" at Sir John: home ivlicrc stage pcrformois .-unwed of! native dances and there were opportuni- ties for guests to ride elephants. Mr. St. Laurent. said he declined the. elephant. ride. Consider Taking Over Dockyard HAMILTON. Bermuda ICP'-TIIC Canadian navy is considering tak- ing over a former British naval doc,k,vard here. Rear-Adriiir:il R. E. S. Bldwell. flu! 0lilCPl' t'0l1ll1lal1CIllW the Cana- dian Atlantic coast station. said the question of acquiring the Royal Navy clock.i'ard at Irclancl island is being considered at government lcvcl. Admiral Bidwcll with four staff ,nllIt'Pi'S nrriicti here Monday to, disiuss "matters of tmuiual inter- est" with Vlt'l'-ACIITIIIHII J. F Stev- ciis. commaiidcr-in-chief of the Roial Navy's America and West Indies station. He said the Canadian navv uses Rorniiid.-4 fl good deal becaiisc of had iicather at Halifax during the winter He was iiitcrcsled iii the dockiarrl for this reason. gs. :2-in--1- Appointment at Bishop of Bharlottetown Annou Malcolm of Our OTTAIVA. lCF')7Rev. A. Macliachern. pastor l.a(iy of Mount Carmel Catholl: lChurch in New Waterford, N.S.. ihas heen appointed Bishop of the :Diocese of Charlottetown. ' The successor of the late Bishop Jrinies Boyle. who died in London last .liinc on his way to Rome, was HllnfIUnt'PfI ycstei'(1a)' l1).' Most Rev. G. Panico. Apostolic Delegate lto Canada. 1 Bishop-Elect Macflachcrn, born Oct. 5. 1001. at Broad Cove Chapel. lnit-rnoss Count). Cape Breton, was orilaincd in the l')ioi'cse of Antigonisli. N. 5., in 1927. Follow- ling additional study. he spent 1S .ycars it-aching philosophy at St. iFrancis Xavier l.'nivt-,rsity. He was appointed to the New Waterford Church three years ago. The new spiritual lcadcr of .Priui-c Edward Island's Catholics iis the ninth hishop of the Diocese .of Charlottetown. He is the. sec- ond prelate hearing the name iVI:icEachcrn. Most Reverend Angus Rcrnaril Mzicbiarhorn was the Diocese-'3 first. hisliop and died in 1833. Fol- lowing Bishop MacEachern'sdeath. iMost Reverend Bernard Donald iMacDonald was raised to the epis- copacy. Siiccecdlnz hishops wluc Maclntyic. Most Reverend .l.1mer. Charles .MavDnnald. Most Reverend Henrv J. O'Lear.v. Most Reverend Louis . O'Le,ary, Most Reverend J. A. iOiSullivan and Most Reverend James Boyle. Bishop-iii:-ct Macliachern is -the second Nova Sccitian appointed to Child Killed In Coasting Accident SAINT JOHN, N.B. tCPi---Three year-old Gail Henderson was killed Wednesday when a tobnggan no .which she was riding with a play- lmate slid under I car. Thomas McCann. 4. was injured. iNew Shhha; Engine Trouble I-lAI.lF.kX, (CPI --The master of the 12.700-ton freighter Sunrip re- ported late lX'ednesdav ho was in- iwrirll hound for Halifax in piakc t'aiijiistnients" to his nrigim-.3 which had given him trouhlo since. his deprirtilre from Qiicbec Satiii'd:Li'. The Siinrip is on her maiden- vrxiagv from Quebec to' Parts l-Zsqiiivel, Jamaica. She is the largest ocean-going merchantnian ever huilt in Canada. I The Siinrip will he used transport aluminum nrc frnni Ja- match to Kiliiiiat. Bf. where the Aliiniiniini (Vinipnny of (';in'iil'i has a giant smelter. BREAKS to l on. LINE l Rf-IGINA tCPlvA gay-.:pr 0! ml spoiited 70 feet high Tuesday frumi .a break in the irltcrprovincial pipe line near Craik. 50 miles nnrthwesti of Regina Company officials said 1.-in estimated 15.000 to 20.000 barrris of crude oil I-acapcd. i l JAILI-ID FOR METER THEFTS LONDON. Ont. tCPt-A I.4'1I1l'I1Vl1 man and wife convicted of stealing icoins from parking meters wcrc Scnlcnccfi Wednesday to a mini of night inoiiths in jail Donalri Ellis. 38, was givcn a six month Jaill term. while his wife. 23. rcccivcd it. two month sentence Churchill Apologizes For German 1 Arms Speech He LONDON. (RhllIPI'Il -- Prit-no tlinislrr Cliurcliill said Wcrliiex. day his coiitroversiril tiarllmo Ir-lrgirim oitlciing that Nazi nrnis he slarknil for possible flermmi iisr agniiist tho. Riissians m.1v never have Iiccn sent-hut he vic- nrnilsly tlcfondnrl the spirit anti aim of the telegram. whether it w.'i- cent or n.ol. The piinio IIIINHIFI Itilll a stir!- INI House of Foniiiions that he mlkht linvn hcon mistaken whcn he void .1 political gathering last urick of ti iiiossngo he had sent to Field Mrirslial Viscount Mott'- gnmcrv in the spring of 1945. III.- ripologirrwl for the possiiilc ciior, lh-in tlcfciivlnd his reasons for con- :iilr-rin: using German ti'oo;iI against tho Russians while th-i Second World war ..-S. mil in progress. lie tloilaiml that all the ar-4'.'1rn- nlisllnwnfs of the war might have gone for naught if much of I-Zu-.-- ope hail fallen in 1045 lo "a to- talilarinn regime from the East." "The ritlitiiilc, of our Russian allies at that time gm.-n crnuml for this fear." he told the Houso. . . amnlel Made last Week 1 i His statement on the possihlc rm-siiing of arms In tho Germans was criticized lVcdncsda)' as ,"inost iiniorliiuate and Inoppor- lune" h.v 1-Emanuel Sliiniicll, for- i7llFT l.:ihnr defence niinlsler. l ('hiircliill told the House that ipciliaps the telegram rirvnr was actiially dispatched and acknow- ledged that he had horn is ronz to inter! llil-, controversial slat:-niclil into what was piirelv a political speech of his cnnstituoiils at iWoodfortI, near London. Montgomery. on a visit to New Ynik. told reporters last was-k he recalled having received the tele- gram. . Infliienlial Riilish pap:-is-, lu- mliirlirig The TIIIIFI of l.i-irirfon and the Manchester Giiarditiri. immed- intoly rritirir.-d the di-rlosiirn for ,iniplying. at A time iihon it Ger- IIIIIII ronimamcnl is still It deli- yriile issiir-. that Britain might iliavc joined with the Nazis to ifight licr ally. The speech was invited upon by the Soviet Com- .munist party newspaper Pravda Min. Max. Dawson " 1'85 75 Vancouver . . P0 -12 Victoria :15 42 Edmonton 22 24 Calgary 0 :12 Regina 14 1'6 Winnipeg . 14 13 Toronto 30 3”. Ottawa 22 37 Montreal '13 TR Qiirhcc 1.1 "G Fredericton .. 12 34 Saint John 17 2.”; Mnnrton . 13 1:2 1 Halifax . 26 "JP. ('harlott(-towtt . '20 123 S.vdnc.V . 24 25: Yarmoiith 20 BR St. .Iohn'.I . . . . . . . . . .. M 20 and other Iron Cut-tnin iniirnals M "Proof of Western vi:ir-mong- loring."n . !”1':F.”' n - I need lwts The Ilia Cliailotletviwn Sr-P. Bishop Boyle win a .Vlr.-rland, Anligonish Coiini,-. Scotia. No date of the, coir-eci'aI.cn ”ri'.' the new bishop has been l'llv1':& puhlic. lLLl'STRI0l S (LASS ', NEW WATERFORD. NS 'C'P'-4 Dr. Malcolm Angus Mac!-Zachern, 53, named Wednesday as bishop of the Diocese. of Cl'1:1l'lOlleimi n. is H six-foot. five-inch native of B:'in(l Cove. Inv':i'ii(-ss. and the ilird) member of the 1023 class of Qw- bcc's Grand Scm.nai;v to he tall:-D to high office in the Roman Cath- olic Church :n Canada. He is also the fifth lnverncss County itativig to be nanied a b;:linp. His Grand Semiiiaix at. their orcliiiatioii to tho p"-i-xi. hood included Archbishop G”l'1lrl Berry of Halifax and B'.5i'l"tp Wile liani smith of Pembroke. Om Bishop - elect MacEach0m born at Broad Cove Ortohri '1 1901. A son of the late Ail'XFlll'iP'. .SlacEachern and Florence Maw- Lellan, Dr. MacEachern is one at around 30 priests from the par sin of Broad Cove, a short dzstahcn from Inverness town. ciii-V-iii;-t 11 was ATTENDED ST. F.X. He attended school in Broad Cove and later studied at st. Francis Xavier Unlvrzsity. Antigo. iiish. He entered Grand Seminary" in 1923 and was 0l'dflLl1Nl June 11, 1027. Father MacEacl1Prn was assistand iii. Immaculate Conception parish, Sydney Mines. from October. 1027, to July, 1930. Then he was an. pmnterl professor of philosophy at: St. F. X. He mEl'llFd a dcgrre ii: Doctor of Theology in l932 and than went to the Ul'ill'PlSilj.' of I-ouvaiii, Belgium, where he uas aivartloq. the degree of Doctor of Philn:-oph'.'f in 1935. He. iv.-is professor of philo- sophy at the Antizniiish l'ii:'.'ersif'1' until 19:31 uhcii he was miiicr , parish pl'l05L of Mount C.'l'l1lP Parish. New Wrltcrlorri A lirniiwr . Father Dougald ltf.'irEachr-rn. i. . pastor at Mahou. Another brother ; Dan. llV'9K at the familv liomcstca at. Broad Cove Sister Louis Flor- ence. a iitcmhcr n.' the Sistvrr. rig ChFil'il)'.I.PH(lhfl1i av. Nmv W.-in-rd lord's St. Agnes School Anmlir,-Q' sister is Mrs. John Alex MacLr-l1.1.gi of Dunvcgan, Invcriinss County. -- 0 19 W”.-"'sF.a. .. 7 DA)? MANY A CHEAP 5lfATE TAKE”: His GIRL fo Tut: Pouo 9 3 I TORONTO (CPI S-l:mmiim and mnxtmiim tr1n1pei:itii:r.: HALIFAX I("l"i This tinntltm of. fice says A not-lhweslerly flmv nq cold air will continue on Thursrlnw with little change in the weather. Regional forecasts: Prlnca Edward Island and New Brunswick: Cloudy with IlIOVTfllI'v' rleiz cold: nnrthwo-at winds 15. Imiv-high at Charlottetown 18 am 25. Moncton 14 and 22. Frerlrrlrtolvs I7 and 22. Saint John II and 25,. Edmtumlaton and Camphellton 15! and 22. Bay of Fundy: Northwest winrlt. 15; snowflurries; visibility 15 miles) lowering in flurrles to four milesi" continuing cold. High tide today at. Charlottetown. -no at 2.00 at. m. and 3.32 p. m sun rises today at 1.31 a. in. I . I I i I