-'r ' carrier Charlottetown. lenmudde 818.00 W anntnl. llaewh '1 u,p.g'.Lss.00.0therPrarheeaanl U.l.A. ls.ooperannua..” CHARLOTTETOWN” CANADA. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23. 1954 VAKISTAN FORMALLY ;. REQUESTS U. S. MILITARY AID Unruly Mobs Storm Bargain Counters In N. Y. Squadron At Summerside To Bellisbanded March 30 H..ii.fFAX, (CF)-The navy In- iiounced Monday that its Seafury F b 22 C . I C in Marlhmes . . rqliaflfnn V5870 at Summerside, pl-j.I,, will be de-activated March Hanrrax, (OP)-The P minion public weather office here says Monday was the mildeat Feb. 22 on record at Halifax. Moncton, Sydney. Yarmouth, Fredericton and Charlottetown. 1!a.lifax'e 52 topped the old mark of 47 let in l945. while the same temperature in Sydney bettcred a 1930 record. and in Moncton broke a 1951 record. Ya.rmouth's 48 topped the 46 de- gree high set in 1912, Fredericton with 47 exceeded the 48 mark set in 1043. Charlottetown! 40 was six degrees warmer than the former high in 1045. St. Laurent iaiiis 3.) ,The arinouncsmnet was made lw Rear Admiral R. E. 3. Bid- well. flag officer at Atlantic coast. The deactivation of the piston- drii-rn Seafury squadron conforms min the navy'I plan to equip its rr arm with jet-propelled alr- tr off. The move leaves Sumlneralde ugh only one group of navy planes. Avenger Squadron 880. In the same statement the navy l?.lI'l the Avengers would operate from Bermuda from March 29 to May 4. ivill Retain s'alde naae HALIFAX. (Speclal)- A navy gpokasman Halifax Monday ii;ght. said speculation that the navy." would abandon the air arm base at Summerside was unfound- ed. Drrpite the de-activation or the Sea Fury squadron, he said "the miy is definitely not abandoning the base." After exercises in Ber- muda. in April and May. the Arcnqnr squadron would return tn Summerslde--"they won't be moving altogether. that's for sure" llv refused to speculate on the pn:5.l)llli)' of jets being based at Sillimilirside to complete the Air Support Group. He said, however, iliri no jr-is would he going there in tile "immediate future-.',' Young Crowd Greets 0llQQll......-.. Al Slate Ball linl3.'i RT. Tasmania. (Reuters)- A i-nung crowd greeted Queen F.lll.iil)0'h oi. the Tasmnian state iiall llPl'P Niolidxiv night. and in raw . with the formal waltzee of it lirr diiiiizcs she has attended on hrr ioiiiid-tlie-world Commoii- urnl'li tour. there were swing l'il'il5 .-it lrast half the 2.300 persons at um dance were under 30-a i.”'ll.l7n to the 27-year-old Queen and llic Duke of Edinburgh. Tho Qiiccii appeared in at lilac- rrIlnlN'l dress of Swiss embroider- rd i'll”.'.'illdt(”, with a three-tiered Alfll" mid bustle bow of plain or- gandie. Acloss it she wore the blue nbiinii oi the Order of the Garter. llzanioiids sparkled in her hair and IYGi.ll(l her neck. Outside the ball, crowds cheered and called for the Queen. Alone With Prime Minister Nehru NEW DELHI. (OP) -- Prime Minister St. Laurent talked with Prime Minister Nehru of India Monday. alone and informally. Lat- er the two prime ministers con- tinued their discussions at a din- Kiel". The Canadian leader. continuing his world tour. will be in India til! Sunday. when he leaves for Ceylon. The Prime Minister had a busy Bet talks with Nehru. lfehiqt Indian rullunen: while the Prime Minister delivered a foreign policy speech: he met Vice-Pruident Servapalli Radhak- rlshnan and visited Rejghal, where the late Mohandas K. Gandhi was cremated. Check Aduiterutions In Dairy Products discovered L168 cases of adultero- tlon in domestic dairy products during the 1952-53 fiscal year and launched 27 prosecutions. A parli- did not say how many convictions were obtained. The cases of adult- eration were found by investiga- tors of the food and drug divisions of the health and agrlcilltilre du- partments between April 1, 1952. and March. iliiiifil LONDON. (Reuters) - The RA! nm is being supplied with stem Coming Events "".i .1 mbaree” Hall to- at York lliol row night. "Warner Brothers Movie. Fred- rrirlnn. Saturday, February 27. "Card Party. Newton school. Turrday. February 23rd. "(iovahead vs. Dunstaffnage to- ltltllit. Forum 10 p.m. This game mil". be played. "There will be races on Mill- Vllf ire Wednesday. classes for ill horses. "59-rrial meeting. 13. I. 3.. Emm-id Hall. weanmliiy, Fen. all at 0 p.m. J. J. White, presi- fl . "Rcserve Wednesday. Feb. 24 M vemmi River Institute Con- mikn Miliview mu. Curtain a "Pay parade for H0 Squadron T""'l5.V- rn.. 23. 1954 at the stlllldron Room. Keneiagtoa 21:30 hours. R"l'nloadlng car Royal feed. ."-"1 hoe concentrate 85.75: Royal ;"'li'0ont'entrate 35.06. Royal Feed '”'l"e. Grafton Street East. u Willing young pigs all this m"k lyom twenty pounds up at Prlllni. market price. Willard "I9. Breckiey. H:'Cl'Iltk' special. Started New b”':l'D J: White Leghorn cren M,ml- Dlly old prices write or HM; lotlny. Raynor-is Qhlck P cry. Charlottetown. I. R. I. Announces R.A.F. Being Supplied With A-Bombs lboinbsflt was anhounced-in-Pa-rt liament Monday. ' Air Minister Lord dc L'fsle and for them are being set up. In a report on the estimated cost of the air force for the coming year. he forecast that fighter planes would soon be equipped with guid- ed 'rocket weapons which would replace cannons. The last. year had seen the suc- oessful testing of eltparilnental rockets at the Woomera range in Australia. his report said, adding: mam;-A -7?- toontlnued on Page 1:! col. 0 MONTREAL. (OP)-M. B. 70911- erlngharn, president of steep Rock Iron Mines. Ltd., said Moradly that iron ore not only should be re- garded ae a key to Oanedata future but will prove a "new bon- ease for ti-anapori.at.lon compan- fee." In I few years. he told the Can- adian Club. shipments by train and boat to processing centres will mean elso,ooo,ooo annually in tr-amportation es and Canadians can look or-ward to are production of around 8400.000,- 000 a year. Mr. Potherlnghun said that in lean Oenade. "paid out the enti; value of the gold we produced import iron and steel products. and gold was thui our long-odds feeds in the mineral indutry." Butiaetyeerthevalueofircei are produced at steep Rock alone xceeded the dollar value of pro- dwuu from Oeoadre larleet gold OTTAWA. (GP)-The government I amentary return tabled Monday 10.000 Shoppers Began Lining Up ” Sunday flight By annwn cvznerr Mow voinx. (AP)-A will mob of 10.000 shoppers i-loud on Man- i hiatt.en's 14th street Monday. storm- lni He8m'I big department store in a quest. for holiday bargains. Fists flew. windows were smashed. women were trampled underfoot at sales rnarking George Washington's birthday. Unheeded were cries for mercy from people trapped in the rush. Lost children huddled in terror, their walls of bewilderment drowried in the angry din of the bllrsaln-crazed mob. At least a dozen persons fainted or were injured as they risked their lives for such marked down item! 8! 5695 television sets and 29-cent. umbrellas. 3l10DDers began lining up Sun- day night. The early birds were l-flilllied in the store by late com- ers, who burst police ling; to shout. scream and elbow their way inside. Hats and shoes were torn from women in .the de.ngerou.s scramble. Smaller mobs also stormed Klein's department store a block away and I-iea.rn's uptown store in the Bronx. Windows there also smashed in the wildest shopping spree since the door-smashing 1951 price war between Macy's and Glmbel's. First Time Foul'tee.r.th street between Fifth and Sixth avenues was completely blocked to traffic by the restless, ticlellke motion of the massed thousands. Scout Awards Announced By Governor General Yesterday OTTAWA. (OP)-A Scots lord K V.l'o..'-v . and a. 14-year-old Manitoba youth who died rescuing his sisters froml a fire share honors today in a new list of Boy Scout awards. Governor-General Vincent Mas- sey, as chief scout for Canada. announced the awards by the Boy Scouts Association of Canada on, this anniversary of the birthday, of Lord Baden-Powell, founder of the Boy Scout movement. ' Lord Rowallan. chief scout for the British Commonwealth and Empire. and county commissioner of scouting at Kilmarnock, Ayr- shire. Scotland. is the first recipi-l ent of the Silver Fox Award. reili cently set up by the Boy scouts Association for "serving of excep- tional character to scouting" by non-residents of Canada. Lord Rowalla.n's place of honor on the list is shared by Ernest Villeneuve. 14-year-old member or the 3rd Scout Troop at The 1'-'as.. Man. The youth was awarded thel Bronze Cross posthumously "norl gallantry with special heroism." Eric Tanton. (above) Boy Scout District Commissioner for the Summerside area. who has been awarded the Medal of Merit by the Canadian General Council of the Boy Scouts Association. Announcement of the award was made yesterday by His Excellency Governor General Massey in his capacity as Chief Scout for Can- ada. Sgt. '1'anton's interest in Scout- ing first became aroused when he observed the skillbd rescue work heing done by uniformed Scouts Sgt. (Continued on Page ii col. 1) The annual conference of the Agricultural Council opens this morning at Birch Court, Experi- mental Station. The Council. made up of botll Federal and Provin- cial agricultural officials. was es- tablished seven years ago. and day conference is held. The Council has several functions: the members are given the opportun- ity to learn and to appreciate the work and services of the several branches of agriculture ill the Province ; the needs for certain changes in policy, for increased research in certain projects, and for the establishment of new re- search projects are discussed; anti recommendations designed to im- prove both government Agricultural services and farm practices are prepared. and directed appropriate channels. The proceedings of the present sessions will be guided by the pre- sldcnt. Mr. G. W. Ayers of Science Service, who. at 9:30 o'clock this Inioriiiiig. will call on Hon. C. C. Dudley disclosed that secret aturuilsaiier. Minister of Agriculture. to I formally ;Actually, the the conference. conference last week when the chairmen of the several committees called their groups together to review their progress during the past year. and to prepare topics and recommenda- tions for the consideration of the Council. The Coulicll is divided into ten sub-committees as fol- lows: (at horitculture. apiculture. toontinued on Page is col. 3: OPEN Declares Iron Ore Key 'To Future Of Canada mine.” Tire Untied states is fast ap- proaching exhaustion of its domes- tic reserves of rich and readily available iron are. he said. Though rlapmdence will cotitlnuo on low- grade Minnesota ores previously regarded as waste matulai. the United states will have to rely to a. large degree on imported nat- ural ores. Oeneda itself does not possess in sufflcicrt quantity the metallurgical coke or the ecrap irvin eded to refine large volumes of iron ore. Within the next. 10 to lo years cenada'a already known major iron depoeita will likely provide :o.ooo.- NO to 40,000,000 tons of high-trade iron ore annually for the steel in- dustry of North Amciea, he mid. These huge quantities wiu come from British Columbia. nor ...st- ern Ontario, the Quebec-I..a.borador discoveries. Urlgava and the "ire- mendous reserves" at Wabang Opening Off Agricultura Council Conference Ioday each winter at this time a three-i into the . opened 1 l-(Continued on Page 8 col. 2) :Parents convicted In lileath Of Child ' COLLINGWOOD. Ont, (CF) - lMr. and Mrs. Walter Bradniaii were convicted Monday Of "l-lll' llawfully exposing a child under liwn years whereby his life. is on-I dangereli." Their eight-months-old son dlr-d in a fire which levelled ltheir three-mom frame voltage ,llt nearby Wasago bench Fell. 12. i'Both were remanded until March ll for sentence. Maximum sentence under charge is three yr-ars. 1 Testimony was that the boy and itwo older children were alone in .il'ieir part-nts' cottage while the adults were visiting a beverage room. Magistrate Gordon Foster term- the He died after rescuing his sisters from their burning home. 200,000 Scout Miles The citation for Lord Rowallan said he was first appointed district east Ayrshire in 1922 and three years later became county com- missioner. It said he has since travelled "upwards of 200,000 miles in the interests of Scouting. des- pite the handicap of a leg severely damagedby a shell in 1917 which at times caused intense pain." Two scouts were awarded the Silver Cross "for gallantry with considerable risk." They were Peter Smith of the 10th scouting Troop in Toronto "for his presence of mind" in rescuing a boy from Georgian bay. and Alastair Wat- son of the 1st Troop in Three Rivers Que. for rescuing a we- man and her son from the St. Maurice river. . other awards annouliccri by the Govemor-General included the gilt cross which went to five scouts. among them Ralph London. 6th Troop. Hampton, N. 13.. who res- cued Johri E. Riley from the Ken- nebeoasia river after Riley had fallen off ti bridge and struck his head on an abutment. ' First permanent introduction of Quebec in 1626. Gamrna Glob By PRAY;-K-E CAREY ad "rlrlicillnus" a statement by .30-year-old Bradnian that he can- Iaidcred his four-year-old son cap- able of caring for the house and the two younger children in the r..'ii'cntsi abscnrc. Charges of criminal negligence against both the accused were withdrawn by the Crown. Newsiii Brief WASHINGTON, (AP) -State Secretary Dulles assured 15 key members of congress Monday the scheduled Asian peace conference ivili bring ”lio U. S. recognition of the Chinese Communist regime." BYDNVEY. Australia. tAPi-Aiis- ti-alien officials said Monday night. 10 persona were killed alid seven missing in two-day storms and floods that lashed 3.000 square miles of New south Wnlea' north- eastern coast. WINDSOR. 0nt.. (OP) - The Canadian Bait Company went back into full production Monday and all employees of the Canadian in- dustries Limited chemical plant returned to work. Officials said the sudden cave-in that claimed four buildings at the C10 plant was over. OTTAWA. (OP)- The Board of Transport Commissioners an- ' Monday it will start early in May to hold hearings in different parts of the country dealing with equalization of freight rates on particular commodities. SAINT JOHN. N. 3., tom e Company and union representat- ivaa will continue their talks with a proirincially-Iiwolnted conclliator today as the Saint John bus strike enters its fifth day. That wee the only announcement after a meet- ing Monday. the first alnce the trenmortation tie-up begun Friday. V WASHINGTON. (AP)-A com- lmlttee of infantile paralysis ex- lperts reported Monday they Could lfind no evidence that the firstl wide-scale use of gamma 8105111311 in the United States last summer had any effect in preventing or iiiitigiitliig paralytic polio-but they granted that on one score tlielri finding was open to further study- The US. public health service announced that a special 20-mcm-g bcr committee. which had been asked by the "health service to evaluate the effectiveness of the ldrug as used ,last summer. "has ireported that beneficial effects were not. demoristrated" either in I the mass inoculation of children in lepldemlc areas or in the inocula- tion of family and other close .contaots of people already lid! with polio. But. the National Ploundatloii for Infantile Paralysis immediately de- clared this finding did not rule out the possibility of employing gamma globulin effectively in "mass" in- jection programs in mid 10 areas. And the foundation reaftir ed previously announced plans to make 010,000,000 worth of material ta,ooohon doses) available for use in this eummerb polio "season." but eummer'a first large-scale use of the matalal against polio was undertaken after Dr. wliuam Harnmon of the University of Pittsburgh. and a group of as- lsociates, had reported that field 'it-sis in Utah, Texas and Iowa in- !diceted that gamma globulin of- fered "marked protection" against paralytic polio, although on a tem- porary basis. one ouilmiauoin while declaring that the com- mittee of experts" reported it had found no evidence of benclicial ef- commissione of Scouting for north- I cattle to Canada was when Chum-I I plain estabiishcd a dairy farm lnithr coast. here until early in; Twn Cc? membpm mu” Gum Find Little Value In 14 PAGES L A MAXIMS . or A MERE MAN. Ann! i never without reason. but seldom a good one. The Guardian. Five Cents Morning Dally Founded 1081. Indian Pinter Renews Attack On Propogd Pact 1 By ZAMIB IIDDIQI KARACHI. (AP)-Prime Minister All announced Monday that Pakis- tan has formally requested U. 5. military aid under terms of Ameri- can mutual security law. This is the long-discussed pro- gram that could entail establish- ment of U. S. Military bases in Pakistan and which has been bit- teriy opposed by Indian Prime Minister Nehru. He has argued it would top the balance of power between India and Pakistan. Simultaneously in New Delhi, Nehru renewed his attack on the proposed Pakistan-U. S. pact. de- claring: "We do not want to enter- into this cirt-Je of hatred. violence, and fear that is the cold war- and we do not want others to do so, either." Mohammad Ali, former Pakistan high commissioner to Canada and ambassador to Washlnsloll. em- phasized his country had asked for the military aid "for the purpose of achieving increased defensive strength, a higher and stronger de- . gree of economic stability designed to foster international peace and security within the framework of the United Nations charter." Pact With Turkey . i He added that "Pakistan has not at any time intended and does not .now intend to take aggressive ac-l .tion against anybody." "Pakistan's position, both in the. East and the West. is of vital im-l portance to the security of that region in which it. has been placed I by nature. In co-operation with other friendly and freedom-lovlnz i i I t I . limportant contribution to strength and stability of this pi-egiori. As a preliminary sill) in that direction. it has recently an-i 'nounced its llitsllhon-or achlevln:' . (Continued on Page 5 001- 3i ' lHeavy Ice Off iiloasi of Nfid. p ST. JOHN'S. Nfid.. (CF) -Hcavvi iron is reported to be floating off, the coast. of Newfoundland as, inorth winds push the slob cakes! ldown from the Arctic. p Along the north east coast oil the province, the ice is r9D0l'lN'l, to be exceptionally heavy for, AF:-brilary and fishermen in Con-i rcption Bay say an onshore wind, would block the hay. i Ice is not usually heavy around, March. ulin Vaccine T ulin either in man; inoculation pro- grams or in the inoculation of family contacts of polio cases, the 1 health services announcement lgave this qualification: "observatloil of the Z! commurl- - gltlrs in which mass inoculation of ichildren was carried out did not ,pl'ovide enough information to per- ,mlt the committee to conclude Iwhether or not gamma globulin had an effect in preventing or alleviating the disease when llsed .lxi this way. the committee said. , "Among the cities where gamma ijlflbullll was administered on at l mass basis to all children last. sum- i mer, the committees report said. that in most of them the inocula- p tiolis were given after the peak of the epidemic had been passed,, to there was litt.le chance to de- monstrate an effect of gamma ic 1 i i i OTTAWA. to?)-A former sen- ior lawyer with the Canadian Na- tional Rellwiwe accused the rail- ways Monday of letting rail busi- ness drift to competitors by keep- ing freight rates up. A. K. Dysert of Vancouver said before the Board of Tranmort com- Imissionevrs that the railways have is. habit of "locking the barn door' iafter the traffic is lost to other i carriers. l Mr. Dysart. who resigned about a year ago as senior commission counsel for the ONE. was before the board seeking to have "hard- board" and "composite board" placed in the same category asi lumber for freight rate purposes. These products. made out of Federal Control Upheld 1 In Priyy Council Ruling By ALAN llanvu I Canadian Press Staff Writer i LONDON, (OP) -- The judicial! committee of the Privy council has ruled that a United States bus service operating from Boston through the province of New3 Brunswick to Halifax and Glace Bay, N. 5., is an operation solely with the jurisdiction of the federal; governments. 1 Giving the committees reservedl judgment Monday. Lord Porter said that New Brunswick as a province has authority over its own roads. but that authority 15 at limited one and does not entitle it to interfere with connecting undertakings, such as a bus serv- ice. . Legislation which denied the usel of provincial roads to such an undertaking, or "sterilized" the; undertaking itself. was som.e.thlngl within the prerogative of the Dom- inion, Lord Porter said. The case, of considerable con- stitutional interest in Canada, wall brought from a judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada in Ocl Coffee Prices Go Up Again TORONTO. (GP)-Coffee price! in Toronto have gone up again. Well-known brands are new cell- ing at prices ranging between 81.- 19 to s1.33 a pound. compared to 06 cents to 3120 last month. Coffee in cafes is still 10 oenu a cup with no prospect of its going to 15 cents at the present time, the Restaurant Association reported. The price boosts have been at- tributed to frosting of last year's crop in Brazil. sliglifllreak Ill Skate Plant Strike K.ITOH.ENE'P.. Ont. (GP)- The longest strike in Klu:herler's his- tory cracked sllghtly Monday when three employees of a striking force of 70 returned to work at the Can- A where the journey was wholly with- globulin in modfying the epidem- p - Charges Rai1waysHDrive' Traffic To Competitors tober. 1951. The supreme Court's ma sun Manufacturing com- decision permitted Isarel Winner of pany, the MacKenzie Coach Lines of The glue, men was uoogtad Lewiston, Me.. to pick up or set through a picket line by police. down passengers engaged in an There was no trouble. , interprovlncial or intu-national The '10 employees. member! Of journey. It prohibited the carrying 9119 United All?-0ln0bUe WOTKON of persons between two points (GIl0'CCL)- milked Wl1”lM5Y 14 to demands for an eight-cent an-hour wage increase. and union tcontinued on Page 13 col. 3t security. i Parliament Gives Approval nations, Pakistan could make 511;. i .To cabinet Pay Increases 5;... orrrawa, (OP --Thb Libsrelal Monday gained the support of two . CCF members and the social Credit group for salary increases to cabinet ministers. KEEP IN 1741-: NOODLE or 11-42 W ALI. cw-uNc.5 A measure raising the prime minister's salary to 83,000 from BU'1' 4)-IE PU 315.000 and the pay of 21 other cabinet members to Il5.iX)0 from sloooo was given second reading -approval in principle and clause - by - clause approval. The cabinet also receive 310,000 in ln- I dc-mnities and allowances yearly t plus a non-taxable 32.000 car al- lowance. The bill now needs only third and final reading befora going to the senate . split From Party (Cape Breton South) and Thomas B.-irnett. (Comox - Albernii. split. . from the rest. of their party as ' V”--W - members voted 110 to 44 to give TORONTO. (GP)-Minunum and the measure second reading, 5o::- maximum temperatures ial Orediters and two independent v. v Min. Max. Pr-ill Gannon tchlcoutimil and i Dawson 29b - Fr-rnard Glrnrd tLapointel. alsoivancouvrr 42 47 Voted with the government. VlCl.0rlI 44 47 Opposed to the measure we-relEdmonion 19 44 Progressive Conservatives. who, Calgary 30 47 w.-nted an independent study ofiRFfZ1M 31 40 the question by a select. Commons .W1llIl1D8R 18 29 committee or roval commission. T'lT0lll0 36 38 and 19 of the 2'4-int-mhcr CC'FiOtlawa 35 39 party who felt the increase was too I M0"”"l 39 43 much, 1: Quebec . 36 44 Tlic salary boosts. on top of a i 53”" -"lb" 30 43 H.000 increase in parliamenlaryi Mm"3”'n 33 52 irrlemliiiv which became law list I Hamax - 3" 57 rzt-ck. xi-oiiiri mean an ovcr-all ln- rCh””"'l””W" 35 43 mm to swim from 523.000 for ;iYai:lrl;g'uth 5:5; the prlnin iiilnister and to 527.000 St. John: 4 34 -so lznm 318,000 for cabin:-t niliiistcrs I sum. 1!" I HALIFAX. (CPI- The Dominion i pPublir. Weather Office here says Acting Prime iulnlsit-r mm much colder air has reached the "H mm. at Drug”; opmsmnn St. Lawrence river and will spread .castward .ovcr the district Tues- day: following the arrival of the . colder air. skies will clear. Both Mr Drew and Mr Si L1llt'- 3 !l?SI”':3:3;;;'::;5”i."nd: Chum, .wiih a few ahnwere clearing dur- ing the afternoon: extremely mild l-Illtnlnl colder about noon: Iighl wind: increasing during morning to north 20, lsarly morning and mid-afternoon temperature: at Charlottetown 40 and 35. lllasicrn N. R. counties. lower St. John river valley: Cloudy with a few showers. clearing during morn- ing: colder with northwest winds 20. Early morning and midefter- noon temperattlrrs at Moncton 35 and 32. neciericton 35 and 30. Saliit John 35 and 32. Upper at. John river valley. Bay of Ohaleur: sunny: much colder; northwest winds 20. Dow-high at Edmilndsion and Campbellton 15 and 20. Bay of Fundy: Northwest winds 25: lhowrrs. changing in the 8fl?T- noon in siiowflilrriea and clearing 1..-nricr Dl'PW is bring paid the same as Prime Ministcr Bi. Laur- rcontiniit-rl on Price in col ill i-... .. .. at plywood. now are carried as "hard- ,warc" and take higher rail rates than lumber Mr. Dysart said the current? rates are an "intolerable burdeti"l land, unless lower ones are given, hardboard will have to be ahlpped ' to the east by some other meansl such as vessels and tnlcka. This. he said. was an example of how the railways lost busincssp lw,,mmpd"w"" . hv evening; visibility three in six lmem” m:m'y "5, ''h''h:”I;::: ": ; miles in precipitation. otherwise 10 3”” ";fm”t""mn"o;"inunum” W imiles or better; turning colder. tutenteee." Mr. Dysert said. i Muchofthebusineulostbyrail-l ways to competitors could not be lregained. It was time the raliwsva tried to meet. the cortntpemitm whilol High tide today at Charlottetown at 2.06 a. m. and 1.50 p. m. Sumrncrslde tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 7.01 a. in. and feet from the uee of gamma gldo- I waste from the manufacture oil it was still in the potential ltege.'oeis at.5.51p.rn. - I. t