,n MAXIMS 01-BA MERE MAN -12-.- Ma ofliolnll no elected in road cmnng who do not vote. ...:r CI: :2 5, 3,1, soon. Other eminen- -1?? Charlottetown. Bnnuneroldo 315.00 per nnnum. Elsewhere and ll.8.A. 812.00 per nnnnm.) Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CAN ADA. EISENHOWER-TAFT RIFT OVER TRUCE SEEN MAXI MS 0? A i i MERE MAN i , A r A hole is nothing It all. but you can break your neck in it. The Guardian, Pin Cents Morning Daily Founded 1381. OSSIBLE THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1953 16 PAGES B. C. Suggests Isolation Policy For DouicI1oIoors."- 5- Smile iMacNaught Assembling Stonn Mr.Kickham Renorninated At. Liberall Convention Tiioinas J. Klekliain, MP. 5 was nominated to contest Kziics Cniinty for the Liberal Party in inc next Federal election at al -iv conveiition licld .VE5lCrd1Iy 111 Georgetown. It was one of the largest conventions ever held in Georgetown. The nominee won his Federal Parliament seat in the general election of 1949 when heidelcatrd Major John A. Mac- llollaid. Cardigan. His name, the mix; one to come before the con- mmon, was proposed by Mr. B. H. Yeo, Montague, and seconded by Mr. Andrew Peters, Rollo Bay. Among the main speakers was Premier A. W. Mathemn who re- (erred to the present lobster fish- ing situation and mentioned the great losses sustained in the recent storm The Premier said that after iiiiostigziiion it the losses prove as severe as estimated the Provincial Goveriinieiit would do everything possible to assist needy fishermen. He also held out the hope that the Federal Department of Fisheries might see its way clear to offer further aid. Hun. Mr. Matheson urged Liber- als ii:'r'sPilt. to fully organize each cmintv and every poll as he told the group that this actloii with as- sistarire. from the Provincial Lib- eral organization would assure the return of the Liberal candidates, both Provincial and Federal. He also called on everyone there to give full support to the Federal candi- dates. Mr. J Watson MacNaught. M.P.. Prince. Parliamentary assistant to Coming Events pa: "Dance in Mlllview hall every Friday. "Dance in St. George's Hall. Thursday night, May 28th. "Dance in st. Peter": Legion Hall Friday, May 29th. Chaisson's Orchestra. "Try our Purina Finance plan, for feeding your hogs and poultry. Dillon do Splliett. ”Irislitown concert and bazaar in Sea View hall tonight, May 28, sponsored by Womenls Auxiliary. "Rc.wi'vc Wednesday. July let, for Crapaud United Church Sup- per. "sen st Peters C. Y. 0. Variety Concert in Elmira Thursday, May '2tl'h n: 830. Dance after. "Special Meeting Abegweit R. ii. P, Kingston, Friday, May Ziith llth Degree. "li'flllCE at Sandy's Friday. May lbtli. Burke's Orchestra. Yellow ' Cah lP.'U'lllg 0 and 9.30 for ssndyle. "J”l1m.V Power's Variety Con- r-rt. Fredericton Hall, May 29th, 5'lI'l1nn at 8:45. "S:-r Millvnle variety concert in hope River Hall Thursday. May In aid of rink fund. Dance "Iirmcmber the regular Thurs- 1'” ilirzht daiicc, Mount Stewart ljiillill H-ill. Burke's Orchestra caiitcin service. ' ,H"P"llII4il P. U. presents WW?-l VHF) . York Hall. May :”'v Mimi.-cs York United Y. P. l'lIi'inin 8:30. "ll"lm.i' Power! Variety Con- cert in Covehead Community Hall. Monday, iilriion. June lot. Miscellaneous Hkv H "Three Guys Named . l c with Jane wyman and Van Johnson. "Ira a riot-that rollicking 3-act. ;;ml;':'dYv. "A Ready Made Family" F . presented in Murray River on '"l"l'- May 29th. .. . ,mE:'”"l:ii0n hall. St. Peter's Mm" D all. Monday. June I. wmgtgnyle and his Clover Club M hi "L D”-f5 Glitlonal. Sponsor- Y "W I-Gsion and Jayceel. "Plan now to attend the weekly in Wimloe Station Hall. bymfl nllht. May ma. Music mmerun Bi-oe. Orchestra. Canteen "Inirmer: 3:: no C ut the Shur uglzlllarllzeed Finance Plan. For per- Wnmt your local food mill. ,F We Shu:l'l3:ii:' who break records "Surnmerside R o A 1' station g;:nm"b- will present I musical mmljll. Stella Maris Hall, North o'clock. Tgh,,"u';g;i;.d Mnbyy 28th. at 5 Women-. In-mm” I Avonleo E Mr. T. .1. Klckham, M.P. Fisheries Minister James Sinclair, was the guest speaker at the meet- ing. He expremed his sympathy for the plight of the lobster fishermen and said a full and complete in- vestigation would be carried out to determine the extent of the dam- age. He expressed regret that the insurance scheme for fishermen was not in effect when the season opened. but said it would come into effect August 10 for traps, and July 1 for boats. He explained that the insurance on traps was 37.50 per 100, and on boats 87.50 per 51.000 up to 37,500. In the event of the loss of a boat the Government would pay 60 per- cent. of the estimated value at the time and the normal deductible amount for partial damage to traps with the Government paying 85 percent of the balance. He said he had personally viewed the dam- age at Tignish. Mr. MacNaught congratulated Mr. Kickham and told the convent- ion of the nominee's interest in the welfare of King's County and his cooperation in all Provincial niat- ters in the Federal Parliament. lie suggested that the Federal election might be held August 10 and prophesizcd. in the light of a. poll Of Dllbllc Oplnion. that the Liberal administration would be i-etumpd, More Ottawa Aid Needed Hon. Walter E. Darby, Attorney General and Provincial Treasurer. -L...m.M..m .. .- ... Continued on Page 3 cot, 4 , OTTAWA. (CF) - Immigration into Canada fell off sharply dun. inc the first three months of 1953, the Immigration Department has reported. New arrivals totalled 22.937 com- Dlued with 42,743 in the same Quarter of last year. ' For the year ended March 31. the department announced Wed- nasday i44,.692 persons entered. a limp of 31 per cent from 211,220 the previous fiscal year, Immigrants from the British Isles rose to 40,152 from 36,000 and those from the United States went to 9.944 from 7.770. but others dropped heavily. From northern Europe there were 56.133 compared with 76.244 other countries C0llil'ltbl.ll-9(l 33.413 compared wltli 89,206 in the previ- ous fiscal year. Largest Influx From Germany Largest influx during the 1952-53 fiscal year was from Germany, with 20,590. but this was it drop from 36.053 the year before. Arrivals from England were in second place. moving up to 25,204 from 21,700. Next was The Nether- lands group with 19,630. almost un- changed from the previous year"; 19.000. Italian immigrants made up the fourth-largest contingent. though the total of 18,016 was I sharp de- cline from 28,402 the previous per- N.B. Started CAMPBELLTON. N. B., (C?)- This year's rpnylns 0-mnllsn against the spruce budworm in northern New Brunswick forests began early Wednesday when 20 aircraft sprayed 14,000 gallons of insecticide in three hours. Only one of six wildemen alr- Itrlpe was used for the start of the 38.000000 operation. As it con- tinues. 'I'I spraying planes will be aloft at various times. About 1,000!- Federal W1 Cooperation Is Being Sought VANCOUVER. (OP)-A plan to isolate fanatical Sons of Freedom Doukhobors will be placed before the federal government by British Columbia. Attorney-General Robert Bonner said at a meeting here Wednes- day that federal authorities will be asked to consider a special law to make isolation possible. Mr. Bonner would have the radi- cals isolated ”untll they change their ways." He said provincial-federal oo-op- eratlon is necessary to solve the Doukhobor problem. "The necessity for making some disposition of the Sons of Free- dom," said Mr. Bonner. "will be apparent when it is recognized that their unlawful activities steam, not from criminal malice in the Ordinary sense, but from their philosophy towards life which has been. shaped by their religious convictions." Some of the "Sons" may choose togleave Canada this summer, he said, but the decision to relocate is not unanimous. ttFor those who remain we sug. gest consideration be given to con- ferring Upon them I. special status by statute which will permit their removal to e. place remote from non-Doukhobor settlements until such time as they shall cease so be either a. menace or a worry to iion-Doukhobor citizleris," The homes of the 2,000 Freedom Doukhoboim are West Kootenay, 250 miles Vancouver. sons of in the east of Heavi7Slorm Damage In Aniigonishu Area ANTIGONISH. N.s., iCP)-The sight of wrecked lobster traps and other broken gear Wednesday greeted fishermen inspecting their berths along Northumbei-land strait and St. George's Bay (or the first time since last week-emu storm. Residents along the coast say the storm was one of the most destructive in recent years, The loss in the Cape Breton area alone is estimated unofficially at 830.000. immigration To Canada is Falling Off Sharply liod Scots made up p.653. and there Were 4.526 Irish and 760 Welsh. Among other relatively substan- tial groups. there were 3,242 Fffnch. 1.100 Belgians, 1,882 Danes. 1.336 Finns, 1,045 Swiss. 1.961 Chinese. 4.539 Hebrews, 1,547 Greeks. 1.288 Yugoslavs. 3,360 Poles and 1.448 Ukrainians. Blllzest single employment clas. sificatioii of immigrants was skii- led workers. with 17,942. The;-c were 14,697 farmers and 14.515 un- skilled and semi-skilled workers. Dacia? Spy Siory Faniasiit WASHINGTON. (AP) T h e state Department said Wednesday lthat Russia's story of foui' Am- erican spies being parachuted into the Ukraine a month ago is "too fantastic to deserve comment." "Another dismal example of the phony charges issued from time to time by the communists in an effort to delude their own people." said Lincoln White. a state depart- ment press officer. in brushing aside the soviet communique. The soviet announcement said the four were captured and ex- ecuted by flrlng squads. Budworm Spraying In . Yesterday iooo acres are to be covered. com- ipored with 2oo,ooo when the bud- worm blitz was inaugurated int year, and the seasonal operation will be continued for the next two years It least. It's I Joint man by the provincial and federal gov- ernments and four large pulp and paper companies. Wednesday's flights were launched from a. field at Nietou, southwest of "-mpbellwri. leader Very i Prince Of Wales Oulspokegg College Pass List WW WASHINGTON, (AP)-Senator I Fourth Year Parts List Damage information Finds Eastern Areas Very Hard Hit iJnhn Sparkman (Dem.-Alai says lscnator Robert. Taft (Rep.-Olizrw l"rnay have torpedoed chances for a truce in Korea" with his speech in Cincinnati Tuesday night. island Nlember Of All information he i P"”Srvntiv znssenihliiiz rc n: :"rPnt strirnx ririinigc to it rri ziioi” Ls Third Year Certificate: mcntary Assistant to the Minister The f0u0Wm3 P355 M 7” Taft the Senate majority lead- Prlnce of Wales College was re-l 'rCarlylc Phillips. Arlington. . Sui tld Hi C .. ml ilwni: tor-aaiiiwri in 0” ..v ii". .I. leased foi- publication )'esterda.V'.t iilell lffrglfjtelhe 13nite:cNI:tlf3n5 ;W-ilson 3lir'N'H1:ii'. 3! ii. Variat- f t K ' a -. M as he Oman vii" is concem i iof Fisheries. said last ni:li'. The names are in alphabetical or-K der. The C0nV0C8:U0'I'ld.tW1l1 (like! James Brown, Westmount, P. Q. ed” p P1808 in the COUBBG all 1'0T1l1m 10-, Blair Brown. Truro, N.S. Re sad he did mt b WV . Personally vzsitinz ilir: hadiga morrow morning. i Randolph Buchanan. Eldon in” UN 1” an "MCI. cl 8 m lint areas he saw ilic, tiamazr at ' 0 uve means tn 'Ti"nisl1 ivliowi it v rsliriiatt-cl i1 Norman Carruthcrs, Augustine: , V . , Fourth Year Honour Diplomas com tniment aggression and that if a run h9,.M.,, 3-, and m PM ,,,,,. Earl Jewell, Charlottetown Donald Large, Charlottetown Florence Matheson, Albion Cross Clara Simmons, Summerside Larry Travis, Winnipeg. Man. i Kenneth Tulle. Charlottetown Joyce Wigginton, Montague, Graduating iuplornns Shelton Adams. Conway Carl Brown, Charlottetown Garth Crockett, Charlottetown Nancy I-lyndman. Charlottetown Gordon Jenvkins. Millview Johanna MacDonald, Ch't0wn. Robert Moase, St. Elearior's Leona Morrissey. East Royalty g ow 'Norma Jean MacLeod. NewGla-- Mary MacNutt. Malpeque Bernice Mac.Phec. Priest Pond Patterson MacPherson, Montague Norris Mizuno. Central Bedequc Merwyn Scott, Meadow Bank Lloyd Seaman, Charlottetown Elaine Smith, Ti-yon Margaret Williams, Parkdale Helen Wright, Lower Montague. Third Year Pass List Marjorie Aker, Eglington Brewer Auld. Freetmvn t 'Margaret Beagaii. Charlottetown Anne Stewart. Bonshaw. .iC-ountiniied orlgtzr Zlvcol 4) Additional P Aid To PEI Strong additional iiiivis for Hill! in the Island's lobster fishcrmen.i hard hit in the storm of lastl wcckr-nil. have he-on made h,v Mr.i W. Chester S. .VIcl.nrc. Mr. Ju Angus Macl.r-an. inc-mlicr of Far- liament for Queen's. and Mr. R. R. Bell. M.L.A.. Leader of the Op- position. The text of the joint telegram forwarded to Hon. James Sinclair, Minister of Fislierics. Ottawa, hyl the two Federal members is asl follows: "From personal inspectioiii of Qucenls County fisliinz stationsi we learn that Prince Edward Is-: land fishermen have suffered a disastrous loss of all gear duringl the weekend storm of May 2.'lrd. XVo strongly urge an investigation with the view nf finririclal assist- ance immediately." The telegram sent by Mr. Bell reads: "I.,1oiri with our Provincial Department of industry in urging the necessity of an investigation of our lobster fisIicrmon's plight in an almost total loss of gear in weekend storm. The loss is the worst in 40 years and is general along all the north side cspeeially at North Rustieov and Tignisli." Garden Piiiiy Al Buckingham Palace Today LONDON. (CPv-Vvcatlior per- mitting, about 7000 guests-double the usual number-will stream through the gates of Buckingham Palace today for the first royal garden party of the Coronation year. Hundreds of Cnnadiaiis will be! among the guests tlironuing thci epiiciciis lawn; outside the west! wing of'the palace. hoping to get 8. look at the Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh and other members of the Royal Family. The Canadian guests will in- clude Prime Minister St. Laurent, Progressive Conservative leader George Drew, Trade Minister Howe and their wives and Chief Justice Rlnfret. of the Supreme Court in ad ition to members of parliament, provincial premiers, lieutenant- governors. mayors and other cltl. zens. ileynaudgfails PARIS. iCPi-The French Na- tional Assembiy early today re. fused to endorse elder statesman Paul Reynaud as the nation's 19th poet-war prime minister. , They also rejected Reynaudk proposal for e n d i n g France's chronic political instability. He first asked the Assembly to confirm him as Premier Wednes- day. But he said even if approved personally he would not form a cabinet until the constitution is changed lo the Assembly can be dluolved and new elections called lfythc Anembly overthrew e. cab- inet during the tint 18 months of its life. leas For ' Fishermen iiiimsiin Under Fire OFF KOREA, (CF)-The Cana- dian destroyer Athabaskan recent- ly went to the aid of South Kor- ean guerrillas and got her first blast of enemy fire in this tour of Korean operations for her troub- les. But the South Korean patrol was saved and the Canadians suf- fered no casualties. Heavy iliain Dims fioronation Glow UONDUN, tRcntoi-st-Toi'reritial rains dimmed l.ondnii'.s Coronation glow Wednesday and created con- cern for the survival of tons of gay street decorations for the crown- ing in six days. Weather experts were the villains of the piece. Their confident pre- dictions of an early return to the splendid weather of the last week didn't help matters. They had Just as confidently predicted no rain for Wednesday. Thousands of siglitseers in sum- mer suits and light. cotton dresses became as rlinuiclicd as the decora- -tions when the skies opened up. But the downpour failed in cool the Coronation fever of the great crowds which milled again in the centre of Loiicloii mid hrought traf- fic to a virtual staiiclstill. Police have been wngiiig a losing struggle rit:.iiiis', the siiarlod trai- fie. (Pairs and buses for few days iinxc stood for long spells bumpcr-tv-lv:m;iri- nith no ap- parent l'.':ii Ii - n: 'lie jams. Decor- ations pmt 4 into the street. and barf-icnrlrs to control crowds on Coronation list)" have added to the traffic complications. News In Brief - DETROIT. -APt--Chrysler Corp. Wednesday iziglit. amended its five-' year contract with the 010 United Auto Workers to include all the benefits grmiteel the union earlier this week by General Motors Corp. and the Ford Motor Co. NEW YORK. AP) -Mrs. Anthony Bcauchamp. the former Barth Churchill. daughter of the British prime. minister. lost a 200-year-old SL000 diamond ring before taking off by plane Tuesday for London, police reported Wednesday. MUNICH. Germany. (AP)-'For- mcr German Reich minister Otto Mcissner, who headed the chim- ccll-:-ry nf Adolf Hitler. died in hos- pital Wedncsday of cancer of the stomach, He was 73. NAIROBI. Kenya. qkeuterei - African troops, police and Kikuyu militia killed 17 terrorists and wounded three in a concerted drive on anti-white Man Man cult. gangs in the Kiombu reserve in Reynsud was premier at the fall of France in 1949. the last 24 hours. A government statement said Wednesday night. the last ; speech. Sparkman told a reporter, ifamounts to telling our allies- iEngland, France, India and others -that we don't need you and don't want you'." Sparkman, the Dcmocrats' vice- presidential nominee last year, is a member of the Senate foreign. relations committee and a former lAmcricau delegate to the UN. (fiiargcs Poor Timing I-lo protested that. Taftts spccrli. read before the National Confer-i encc of Christians and Jews, was badly timed, coming at a. crucial ipoint in the truce negotiations. v Sparkinaii said ”ComrriunistRus- sin. has been trying to drive it wedge between the United Nations allies. and now Senator Taft.'s speech appears to do it for them." officer. native A veteran radio got this city, was a member of the when the Thunderliird Sqiiitiron. R.C.A.l7. Air Transport (Vniiitviiirl took off over the week- lrnd from Dnrvai for the 500th 5trip on tho. Korean Airlift. He is lFl)'lllE Officer D. Bentley (above). The UN has just made 8. nl"Wlsinn or Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Bentley. truce proposal to the Communists? F. 0. Boniloy is a former De- and is awaiting their answer. purinicnt of Transport. radio oper- l yritnr in 1.ahr.1rlor and the North- iwcst Torriinrics. . , - .. , i Pr:-sent plans of the Transport vvmle Tan Vi" Mymg ma" Hen'(Zonimrinrl call for special cere- the best truce under present con- . g 1 I , ' H moth dmnns win be” extremely uxlsiiili: i ?i1i::ri1lli"SVA lirfii riltailixlilfls .1P:ivo Ahack 15. Int their lioinn hnso June 5. St. Laurent Leads Cheers Forgpueen . ('l'PiV Eisenhower Statement , in meeting legislators from Som- B-VALA5 ":tRxEa,”e monwealtli countries. George VI C3"'”"”' "'55" t a r ' ,was principal guest at a similar LONDON. (CPI--Prime Ministeri .cheoii lll Westminster Hall in St. Laurent brought to a close the 1337 first m?l.l0I' Gllllailenlema 05 WC SI. L.'iu:'cii'. said none of the Coronation SMSOH by hiding 750yfo:'ces binding the Coiniiiuiiiiealth Commonwealth leaders in three is stronger --than our common cheers for the Que?-IL loyalty to the Crown and our devo- The Canadian Prime Minister mm to the covereign." was the last of NYC Speakers 85 Ki S2 Laurent. who sat at the head Wednesday luncheon stven by the mom four places removed from Commonwealtli Parliamentary As- mp Qup9n' then led the assembly sociation for the Queen and the in three cheers for Her Majesty. other Prime )llni.lr-s Duke of Edinlnirgh in Westminster. Hall, part of the British Housesi Bcsmes chunhm and S, Lwp of Parliament. l C ” . g . ,. . min, four other Commonwealth :la()A'l1i'plIllS('(Pl”niii3lP l nriiiie iniitistei-s a i tend c d the . l l I .7 A . guislied audience by saying that ill" p itggsligfgdxgggbgn1,Q:':i”?f5Ngfv 23: iiallfi, Moliamiiicd Ali of Pakistan and Godfrey Huggins of South- ern Rhodesia. 'I had to be par'icularly careful what he said about the constitution of the United States. "But I can say,” he added amid, applause. "that no ooiistitiitiori was ever niittcii in better English.” included mem- o ".50 guests also ii-i-aiikin: piizlzaincntary various Common- I.0ND()lx'. ICP)--Prniec CililltiPSiCilTilIl"S ' will have his own Coronation party 1 taken mun 'lio l):i.coir'. 1-1 IMHO to at Buckingham Palace June zlpmnlc nll?S'u'1P 1119 ll-I--1?”, while the Royal grown-ups are at! Clinilcrr l)l'1Pi iisi: in the abbey Westminster AUDEY. mill”-' mt" "”'m"'”' WM 1" ms Many of his frlcl1dS- and timse.rcn'niti for bruit; n soofl ml the Queen's palace suite. I . Ten of the guests will be god-Imuitllflll v”XilhN'nll('c on oll'W( children of the Queen and the casions lef' ilif'hl wrmdcrinz 1. Duke of Edinburgh. Most of thctwoulrl brliavo with tho i'il':l1liy nec- others will be children of palacmessaitv ml 511611 N1 flcfdslmli officials and servants, 4' The children will watch from N1. cession swings into the palact-imtiit and ilivtlim, forecourt beneath them. circles. VHIPII ll? H-qvlnfil Queen Victoria's statute and dis-lllls 5131101116! 'F-R-"- Mid ' appears clown the Mall. The::. lll")'I('99d9d gill 5i This qlllflill ' will gather around a television smith? 1'. Hm" (M I CHUNH Ff-'Tl1(l'l to watch the rest of the pageaiitryz, Charles himself won't. be at the party all the time. He will skip off to the abbey for the actual only moment. when crowned. When 1 the abbey. briefly. liowt-ver. haiisiing for him. Charles returns about cream. I the procession route. truce cannot be reaclie the Unit- . . . Bl"), Beers. chmlottewwn Briar Chandler, Charlottetown ed smug Should ulet Filngland mm ;In the eastern )7-"iii of the Island June Bowman, North wmsmre Shirley Ctlaii, Pagkcxilaleg W p your other allies know that we aw the found eiorxi D101? damage uvnlr EH1 Bruce. High Bank IYilgll"l(l:a,d o in, Clo ol may V as. wlthdravving from 5” further peace ifslllllales nut . oith I4i'ilxC it hr-re of. Margaret can.u,Iher5' Augusmm Jalui Gtlunioignum afrioeteieoi n negomnions in Korea.” p .:-ioalts are aged iunn.rig ifl”,550,()lIll C0” ' lVl)aii'Iie 1-iaivSe'n (l3oiron'ls1 ct-eeir Snarkman said this in "a die-1 3K'l'itii)i5f;t:i anvil anlallniti-,:xI'1ua)ii.0”:1i” . .,, , g g ... ...-. i:le:ynHI)i;:J:1:??Iu?1lg::1?&Lv:ifwn .(V;lIliliiam Maccannell. Ch't0wn. 'i:l9U'1C31g C0ml'hdlyCtl0U" I-tvf Pfeslv-1 tho cquipniriit of swine fishormcn ai. Maclleod. Bonshaw Cm E1SEI1h0Vl9F5 D0116). T5115 lliad been so madly riRnl1;.:Fl'i or ricslroyeri that they will he unahiri to resume fisiiirig this year. He expressed gr:-at regret. that the insurance scheme was not in oper- ation. Siiggcsiiniis ii-to iv-on avlv-an. end in several qtiziitcrs that a fail fishing season he established in areas where the ti rnuge was most 0XiFh5IV(' as flSil' in those sections cannot ic. - rl.ir..-ig the present season. NaiioiHl.b.i).i5. Officersgflecled EDMONTON, (GP)-Mrs. Kath- leen G. Di-ope of Toronto was cl- ectcd national president of thl Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire as the 53rd annual enn- vc-iition concluded here Wednes- day. She succeeds Mrs. John H. Chip- man of Toronto who hold the post: for three years. Mrs. Chipman was made the honorary first vice-pre- sident. Delegates decided on Sainhloliii, N.B, as the location for the next national convention, which will be held beginning May 29. 1954. Among the other vice-presidents are Mrs. E. A. Skene, Fredericton and Mrs. F. A. Lane. Halifax. Mrs. P. L. Bonnell of Saint John. is national standard bearer. 0 its Just. its Easy (0 i-toe: g As oizsemae he His parents stepped up his i.rain- lug, t.akin.;z him rerrularly to church the windows as the Queen's pro-land teaching hini dancing. deport- top marks at then auc- through It was decided he would be there The whole the Queen 15 2': hours was considered too ox- He will be taken out before the half an hour later. all the cliii- communion service and returned to dren will have lunch with iceiBuckingham Palace along part of Clement Attire. Labor partj: . , lmdpzll M1059 Cm ii 0' Us'isent:itii'cs ilio(li)ii1riqdhaildblrcepii':i- coiisti llllrill iii a icccnt Comnioiiswmdm Mrs Sp Lauren, who Em rrngggxz-1'0. rcpt .M;mmum mg address touched off a traiisatlantic 1;” ,0 CMFHFJII WV hogs M". nmmmllm ".mpm.nm..M. gt-yialaxtgxHyoiiirpdnviiikcthe laugiitri. add WV Spmkm, hf me cnmrmm. Sim. Manx. ' ' i ” rl (Triiniiioiis. and Mrs M' l”"il-"ll "t QUN" SP9-"iks l :-:1:l F.lir- Bfiiiiicg .LVl('ifil'lil 4.0 59 Cliuii-lii'.l and Si. I.aurc::! ueic S, of the Seth. and .Vlr.:.,Ffimoiitoii 50 G2 replying to the Queen, who in a Rm . ..o' Tiicrc uoir. lll zitlrli-lcnli-”ll'.l' ii liricf speech said she was glntl to, 'lil, sonic -i:'i Caiiadzan lczislnfots Ti-f'l:'-I13 40 W 'follow the example of ”m,v dear p liy from Oiitarzo and xi.-lW1F-Illllfl - 39 "3 father,” the late King George VI, im v Tniflliln 'el 00 --- --- ---- -- - - - -- - ------v----w- ----- , twig”, . 3'1 iii. . liinn: l'(l ;l so an x .- Qur-bee 44 "M Prince Charles I 0 Have ... Moncton 34 53 O llialifax 40 53 Own Coronation Party Esvdnov 32 5'3 rm” .,s . .. .. --.Yarnioii'h 43 97 As rimri as F.I;;ilir'l: :'r'p".ii'iis,,s,. John-S. Nnd 35 53 li.s. sitlr" uni be g ,,h,,,. . 1 HALIFAX. iCPri-N-The Dominion ll"uiiiic Wcnther Office here says .thc wcatlier remained line, over the iMRi'lilm0S .-ind easiern QilFi:iNl g g ' ixvcdiicsrlriy. l.ittlo change is in i- of Princess Anne - have been in-i F.li7.abeth and thc -Duke always; rmrd rm, Tmlrsdmy vlted to watch the IWOCFFSWI ll""””l ”” 4”-l'"'”"”d mmwi nnginnal forecasts from the first-floor windows of heir to ihr tlii-one, to he in the EH1.” K. B. munum Pd". lahbev for the. crowning. But. his , Edward Island. St. John river vul- llor, Bay of (Thai:-ur: Sunny: lit- tle change in temperature; light winds, increasing in afternoon in northwest '30: lnw-high at Mnncloll 35 and 60, Charlottetown 35 and 57. Fredericton 35 and 70. Saint: John in and 68. Edmundaton and Campbelllon 35 and 70. Bay of Fundy: i.i:ht. winds bo- mmmz nnrthivcst I5 hv evening: A fcw clouds with llSil7lll'V 15 miles; (Ihirlcs was assured of a trip to&1lti10 Cllmlll" 1” l"”ll"””””'- High tide todn,v:t. Charlottetown at 93'? A. M. and llfil P. M. lligh tide on tho North Shore at 4.52 A. M. and 6.13 P. M. Summersirlc tidn eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. Sun rises ind.-iv at 4.32 A. M. and sets at 7.48 P. M. i i