Entry Of. Newfoundland 0A3 The 10th Province Is important Event Of 1948 99o Kitchen ' p Pegs. Staff Writer) AWA, Dee. 18 —- (CP) -Can- ‘Fponflcgi ,\|]|Q qulekened in 1 gl the Dominion experienced of m. biggest years in the field since Confedera- 0H0 ieglslsti" lion. u for the welcome of a Pu,"- b°0r!“—-NQWf0UhdllIld—lhtO ii tion fsmily was one m. Conic irhlghlights. The crown ed for union with Can- uly and the formal entry a“. mem ,4 the 2"" wichy vot J ffvlfii. place March s1, 194a. M5,, Oh tsp for the Dominion in Progressive Swiss llave llo Rationing WINNIPIG, Dec. 13 — (CP) — some of the conditions of life in progressive Switzerland were out- lined by A. l‘. Suter. of Bienne, while on s business visit to Win- nipeg. In his native Switzerland, said Suter. s caller can pick up a tele- phone end disl to anywhere in the country. "It's all sutornstic: tl-iere’s no long - distance operator." 1‘ hst doesn't mean it doesn't cost more, however; the clever Swiss machine calculates the bill. too. A new Swiss invention was the "robot telephone." said Mr. Sutsr. It records ell calls-and the num- nrig: “GUARDIAN, cnxnnorrrarowu ,. George 53 Today PAGE By STUART LONDON, Dec. l3—(GP)—Organ- lzed hijacking ss well as petty pilfering has cost British shipping and. railway firms millions of pounds annually as looting has surged upward since the war. ‘Illie public-owned British rail- ways faced 628,000 claims for goods lost in transit in 1917. These claims amounted to £2,671,- 000 $10,684,000). The shipping companies have lost smaller, but still substantial, amounts. James J_ Edwards. freightclaims agent for Canada Steamship Lin- organized” Hijacking Is Expensive In Britain; Costs Canadians Millioni Domes To Work In Wife's llat QUEENSTON, Cape Province South Africa, Dec. 13 -— (CP) — The manager of a local store was asked to hr.- the model for a hat. his wifc planned to wear io a wedding Tho husband reluctantly agreed hut soon changed his mind. and fled from the home when his wife turned her back. t i ible general h g 1h ii , ‘iiuctlloeiiil Ylialillihunepg-llzerll admlll" exliezpie ihidkeiira just have cow- es, said Wednesday in Montreal .A re“ mmmm" 13'" l" 3""“ H bells. chocolate and maybe watches the three largest transport sys- 1h“ Sta”- “°“°h31““'l'/ ‘T “d ‘m’ “nation's mandate hoidssilood un- m Jiily, 1950, msny observers pre- m, the, government will go to the wimiry next October. Politically, the big event of the y“; was the retirement of Rt. Hon. “qiiigm Lyon Mackenzie King as prime minister sfter a record 21 years, five months and five days in m,“ m. Hon. Louis St. Laurent. ln the way of industry," Mr. Suter continued, yet the famous insecti- cide DDT was invented in Switzer- land. The Swiss are eating well. They abolished rationing this spring. Switzerland, unlike Canada, had no shortage of American dollars. Oth- er nations scrambled after Swiss terns in Canada have been cites’.- ed out of $1,000,000 in the last two years by a highiy-organiud gang of British hijackers who padded exports to Canada. l-le added that millions of ad- ditional dollars worth of goods stolen on the way. Another ship- knowingly — wearing the new ore- atloii on his hood. The staff symi pathetically sticizcstod that tht boss take a lorii: holiday. ,Two Killed in Truck . Crash Near Saint John exported to Canada had been‘ SAINT JOHN. N E, Dec. 13_ p i .h v preedcfi hlm ll Llbfiflll ldld~ francs. n f], ; 1 > L‘ Ld h f l1. ‘ , _ _> ‘__ _ Er Eli‘.- [iafly convention here in Nor had the republic any Com- 503% lriiOc jllllfisitllnhehiz tmgiiicfng l‘ £2" lid-mas m? dean}; recent,‘ . - u . - - ~ - ‘ ~ ' r en .. s. .. .1 “mush followed him into the prime munism. Living conditions are too "due m ‘he hem“, Saturn}, mp2‘? s‘ Ihlpmghi a rraidwtrllgcear créiih): flood," said Mr. Suter. "Workers have education and Communism cannot influence them." Suter said Swiss watchmakers be- gin their training in government schools at the age of 15. The trade takes four years to learn. gonna ill-health. Mr. Bracken had Mschinerydwpuld be a difficulty if "i ihe party since 1942. _ you wante o start making Swiss ‘The c. c. F. Dsriy also met lh HM?" T““'.°"_ 33' ,M°““?" which" in Wlnnipeiz. Much of it “mo”, mnvflmon “d confirmed tteatre tlollE-l’. is sGCH with police i, "crap and cannot be exported the leadership of M, J, Coidwe" escort after being charged with [mm swiqzer1md_ ures we are devcio lug.“ . ,. ,. ~ iOfiicials of the pCanadiaii Pa- Sig‘ tTgrgjrn"q“cgfl‘::il\\\jlp.?n1f00i:;): clflc and Canadian National Rnil- ,“.n_\.rar_r.,ii Ma','..,_ 5mm“ ways askco for time to study Mr. gm, ‘Rwy’. qmonam ‘ of 2M1; Edwards’ statement bcfnre making p" ' " ' any comment.) , . . M n. panics have their ou-ri police for- M hflgywfl, ‘whb‘_‘p ‘My rammmn (es in action on the dotks and was rgfinflfed ‘ ‘ rallway yards m an "Hon m’ Thomas had‘ been a hos ital break “p m” lamp "mam" patient until lust before thermi- mlnlstcrshill» The Progressive Conservatives. too, hold a national convention and mum it new leader in George Drew. ihs former Ontario premier. He took the job surrendered by John Bracken because of his age-—he was King George Y1 will be 58 yesrs old on Der. 1i. Tradition has It. thnt his birthday is observed and All three Parties revamped and m’ mmdm’ °i M's» SYNC‘ ,3?!‘ But, said Suter. you can make celebrated by the nubile in June, when the weather is more favorable for outdoor crrenionies. Allin Fangs’ The” “n” mm Sm: 0P0‘. ‘HR bodv. lifP-‘llmfibil’ Ewflli refurbished their platforms with sh Mrsiflessetttc. 48, a cripple. Swiss cheese anywhere. Still, it's from a. painful circulatory ailment, the King is said to be. making cncournsritil! imnrnvcnioht and h‘: bflndk Yam rtrcerlitilbsurceicdd f; . firm," m“ 311m“ swam‘ Mum w, u, h 194p Qlgcugn umpumm , ' a vice aim YOm H bfllimfl "Oi- ls good as the Swiss-made pro- general health continues to he good. His lifajesty will broadcast his iinnunl Christmas message perhaps ma mg Sew" 1g r n“ ' ‘ no‘ he located immediatclv and, flfimlnlSiFlPfi rui the Jacques Car- duct. from his lietlsldc. Above at loft and right are two recent photos of thc King, while tho charming picture pom“ . , , l "arch continued tonizht. _ Provincial Elections Um‘ brldlle ill Mflllifffll- 901i»?! in the centre was miulo when ho was two-yenr-cild Prince Albert, Fm“ me" "ecmuv anlizpdmdod _.__.%_ __ _. said 'I‘rudcl had been on a hun- ‘.n the act of looting freight cars, “IACKEREL FXPORTS rn a London siding u-ere senten-i "a to twnm“ mus yearf‘ di The exftori of pickled mackerel “t mlmfl a p0 c9 Hagiquai) to the \‘\'c.<t Indies and the Vniird rr-ilipntiidaéivvfiiltlpsgionswézlive; 0f States i.- Fl Vfllllfiblc part of cah- '~ c ~1n -. -3 ~,:irl.'i'.-c.\'|r>'tiad,' f'_l. those arrested, including two rnil- t k y I r '- m W‘ _.. way employees, were in the Lon- obvious the goods had been rs- don area. These li- are under re- moved before shipment. mand until Jan. l7. Pzlferaize on the railways l-iae A British railways spokesman increased “more than 100 pol said that many thefts had been rent." said this spokesman. add- traced to the point of origin. iiig: “““‘i~"““‘ '" ‘"0" a m“ ‘hush §§§i‘“’ii2..”"i.'§§”il..‘“ ..",.‘?."i“"“.‘; ...§’..“"i".‘i"‘;..'lli’..‘li lliii.l’“”iiiii in both a wmdfl“ and a h" m0" Yrlwmls have. gocris missing, gin» the and that’; the main tat-ire’ o1 seals had not. been broken it was police" The provincial elections were held rm strike since his arrest as a hi New Brunswick, Quebec, 0m. material witness last Sunday. srlo, Saskatchewan and Alberta. In — ~~~~ *——*— esrh can. the voters returned the iiirrltfirrilliiilpunrthhnn ‘griltfirrioltanftlugsgk: stchewan the legislative majorities ' . d d. “ThereFi-‘diral by-elections were Juvenile Delinquency Is Declining E lrenci—has been evi- M“- OT"l‘AWA. o}; ll _ to?) _ “ma, f -, -, ., There's a good reason, apparently. Mm’ me _B“"°““ repmqed" Sm“ ‘major ll-‘miie iislhehlial 100517251322‘! on! y h-hy there isn't a; much mik now. 1943. The Juvenile courts had B,- an indictable "Heme committed . adays about youngsters going w 265 youngsters beforh them last. b‘, an adult _V mm things as ptilirlnighztithrhglg: aoctroéglihzncéiupggy ___ the d0“ They nrknm‘ ‘ ytearbisbout‘ fivehpert drift less il"i7a’i_l breaking and nnmrn‘; burglary M“\.,,.,Qn,,.p_ in Brmskcnlumhia, ‘ '""" ANSE ST. JEAN. QHP» 171cc.‘ 13 T719 Bilrflau of Statistics rcport- glonlvicifimzsergl; e c130“) W3“ lt-nd cvcn itiul-dcr. .\imcr offences nonm- n in Saskaich - M .' wASHIM-lflviq» D9?- 13 —lAPl -_ (C?) — Not. even the whimsical {=41 i006) that ihcie “ere fewer _t p ll - _‘ -_ ‘rxicnd from ridlns a bicycle on the ' r ‘. 5W5“ a" -- A new "minor pianct" may impuiw; of vmiorp whh aided Juvenile delinqiimitg heihra the fell from 7.906 in 1046 to 7.a4:i qwm‘ m "iammha: Omar!“ M‘ have been discovered travelling ems}; elements in its desecra- courts last venr than at. any time l“! WHY- m-m. Ea“ and Cafletmh in on" B rfllllie Which b10035‘ i! Wit-hm tlon have been overlooked in the since i924 Q- when the population Th! GPPFEBWR 500"?“ "M; LWTgY‘ bM°““'“'“" '“ 140000000 miles of the earth. rfififgrflliuh of Cape Trinity's ev- was m lower. major and minor Hunts I" "is ""°""»‘» Q“ "°- "l "l l’ ' Almlpvli! - The came“? Institution of yeapom mm“ o’ our Lady o; ‘he ._ .__ ___-.. . .. . __._n___ Kinizs. in Nova Scotia. Four new members entered the Federal cabinet and two veteran ministers resigned. l- B» 768F500, under-secretary of stale. was appointed external af- fairs minister; Stuart Garson, fr". nier prcmicr of Manitoba, became Justice minister; R. H. Winters, menlbrr of parliament for Queens- LliilPfliWlfflflild parliamentary as- ll$ldlli to Transport. Minister Chev- rier, beramir reconstruction minis- {SY- ""4 R~ “T hiaiihetv, member for itioria and parliamentary nsgigt. uni to lmiance Minister Abbott, We}: appointed Fisheries minister. _ _" Hml- ‘L L- "Sll-‘y. Canada's saitimt- finance minister and later Justice minister, retired and re. ifilfnrd to private law practice while on. ilmilcs A. Glen, former re. sourrcs minister, left office be. flit; of ilbhcaltlt. There was some llliluta of portfolios among the "ii-flirts cabinet ministers, Woman's Influence Needed In Business haw rank, Dec. 1a ~ (c?) - A wommis place may he in the home but she should be able to talk Ihop with her husband. l think any woman is unlucky if she isn't able to tslk business " "l fquhl with the men of the iamih. says Mrs. Robert W. rllhns of Payton, Ohio, who came. ‘irtwuuth her husband to attend 1 e . animal Association of Manti- mun-rs Congress. Thm ihotisand industrialists "is at the meeting but a few “FTP? “fllllfiil. “MT; Kuhns was a’ director of the "Fiillliliitll, which makes cast. m?‘ "Hots. until her two sons Rrned from the war. Hell: still doesn't. feel left out hwhirl‘ ‘Swailfgli-italk’ st home. mum." - t ey do every ‘finial:- Myra Glazier. of Wor- makin- - ass, who owns a plant for m u‘ "lllrlopes, started her car- amangxdw-fil-a-iveek cashier and h P “l ""01. up from there." know “h” l1 sntall business so l ‘My krm ihc ‘Fifi! and men and fir! new“ m0. she said. "My of- “ m “it is never closed. When m’ l“ m in summer on picnics, I “rm ‘ t? bus with the others. "m! “T” i" know about the rom- and the weddings; and it Mr. row 5i 1 “ml ‘golf! l home, I know about 3-0.Woman’s llohby ll iilay Modelling ‘Ysncouvan. Dec. 1s - (CP)—- mflylhl 63-year-old womsn hss onus" n lifelong dream and n "l s career through attend- ‘ "i art class. Mflfsaret Charlton always Now i0 model clay figures. mm ll" work is praised by q h; "Hr artists. who term some r satirical little figures "true M lug-gas." l! lbonsored by the Com- muTw Che". Mrs. Charlton found Xliresslon she had sought for i. ,,,§",,;l°ne in the world," she d-u“ llve in two little rooms. t, do ‘:11! something I've wanted - my life," Washington said in its annual re- port today that astrcncmeis of its Mt, Wilson Observatory in Pasa- dena had photographed the "trail" of the asteroid-tentatively named "i648 AA" Further study will be required in determine whether the object is ncw or just an old-timer mak- ing a new appearance, its next close approach will be in Jilly. i949. There are about 1.500 known, minor illaiir-ts. bclieicd to liei remnants ct larger celestial bcdies; which shattered, They vary in diamctcr frtm half a mile to 500 miles. Consumption 0f Electric Power At All-time liigh OTTAWA Dec. 13 —-tCPl —-Can- adians used more power in Oc- tober than nt any time in their lii~.=ioi'y—3,544,29l,000 kilowatt hours, At. the same lime, the Bureau of Statistics reported today. power production sagged about 80,000,000 lnlotivatt hours below the amount zurncd out in the same month of I947. This, was lust. before de- mand titinliy bcgnri to outrun supply and brought daily power blackouts in Ontario early in No- vember. In addition to the consumption of 3,544,201,000 kilowatt hours of primary prwcr, the country used another 114191.000 kilowatt hours of secondary power. In October, 1047, consumption was 32941072000 kilowatt. hours of primary rind 434,161,000 of second- iiry power. .Pi‘tlnar,v power is the basic electricity that is used when a householder switches on an el- ectric light. Secondary power is essentially a surplus, available at times when primary demand drops c-"ifl On the output. side, howevs-nthe picture was different, for October Il,78fl,'l96,000 kilowatt. hours was produced, compared with 3,862.- 690000 in the same month ti year earlier~—a decline of 81,000,000 kilowatt hours. Wit-bin ihese figures there was s substantial increase in produc- tion of primary power, offset by a heavier decline in sdcondary power. Generators produced 3,- 656,151,000 kilowatt hours this October opposed io 3,506,108,000 last- Octoher. Production oi’ sec- ond power dropped from 456,498,- 000 to l24,645,000 kilowatt hours. Net. exports to the United States dropped from 131,563,000 to 122,- 314,000 kilowatt hotlrs. The decrease in production were spread over Ontario, Mani- toba and Quebec. Ontario's mit- put fell from 945,557,000 to 937,- 071,000 kilowatt hours. The Mani- toba. decline was from 100923.000 to 165525.000 kilowatt hours while Quebec's was from $297,279,000 tn 2,li8,0il5.000 kilowatt hnurs. CLASSES FOR DP‘! WINNIPEG -- tCP) -- The growth of elementary English rlsss- es for displaced persons has been so rspid that the public school board has opened s new centre in the city's west end. There are new Saguenav. Repairs to the famous white Vir- gin near the summit of one of three immense peaks included a roomy plaque for initial carvers. Another small plaque nearby asks would-be sculptors to: "Re- spect the statue; write on the tab- lct." The RS-font-high statue carved out of white pine means a Brest deal to the people of the. Sagucnapu and La Societe l-llsiorique de Sague- nay employed six men for a month restoring the statue after s public hue nnd cry at lis state of dese- craiion- The people contributed $4,000 toward the job. Whole pieces of the pine. Virgin had been carried away s mement- ocs by visitors who also ad cover- ed its lead surface with thousands of initinls. Rain had almost fin- ished the job. The pine had rot- ted and the statue was nenr coi- lapse. Difficult Task Repairman found the most diffi- cult part of their work portaging the huge amount of lumber that had to be replaced. A rough sea kept them from landing for two days nnd then the lumber had to he carried up an almost perpen- dicular cliff some 600 feet. Sculpiurcd in 188i by Louis Jobln. it was erected by Charles Napoleon Robitailie. one of the first commer- cial travellers to visit the Saguenay. Stricken with an incurable dis- ease on one of his many trips up the river, he made a vow that if he lived 10 years longer he would erect a statue to the Virgin on the l,800-foot cape. After 10 years he kept his promise and in spite of his illness lived another eight years. Excursion boats on the Saguenay river at night play searchllghis on the immense statue while ship's orchestras play Ave Moria. ll. S. Army Improves Air Rescue Methods WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 —- (AP) ~— The United States Army Air Force is experimenting with towing methods to increase helicopter range for serial rescues. Present ranges are generally less than 300 miles. With n tow might be extended to 1.000 miles or more. An officer confirmed that experiments are being made by the air material command at Wright Field, Dayton, O. The Air Force magazine, en in. dependent publication, described a theoretical long-range rescue op". stinn in this way: The helicopte would take off in tow of a large transport plane, up. ing its rotors to help out until cruising altitude was reached. Then it would cut its power and depend "l!!! 0n the tow. Over the rescue Ive!!!‘ the helicopter would cut its tow line and land. In tow, the helicopter would the" return to base. 1f en Qirflgld w" within 100 miles of the scene, the helicopter could be towed to m, field and then operate entirely on "I 0W" Dower in s shuttle to the scene. KING’! PLAT! The King's Piste is the slam atshe event in horse-racing ii-i North America. It was first run in (our centres with 3'! classes. Quebeo in 1636. If you suspec mediotely. Yo ground|ess—or i cure you. For Cancer Information Contact.‘ DIAN CANCER SOCIETY ' 110 Kirk Street, SIIIIIIIIGISiIIr, I‘. E. I. CAN/A A straight line is the shortest distance between two points. The shortest distance to health security is an annua semi-ennual—medica| exemina is the direct contact with ‘the cancer cen- ires of the world. He knows the dangersigr" of cancer and also knows that Early Ceincel l5 Curoble. In fact your doctor is convinced that cancer is the most curable oi all maior diseases, if detected in time. Willi free Biopsy service and improved Diagnostic facilities. Prince Edward Islanders were never to c. better position ‘to conquer cancer than they are today. i- cancer see your doctor im- u may ‘Find your fears are bet prompt treatment cen i--preierebly a tiomYour doctor l