i I “GHTIN G FLARES AS CRUSSIANS LEAVE’ Ml Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew he Juice. agfi-hgyhnd not defraud youcl MAXI MS CIA MERE MAN for than you inueaae i; CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, Manon 11, 1946 10 PAGES Ill-LN.“ Subscript-ion Delivered 85-00. f other Prwhaeel UJA. 05-H- Pre-Sessienal Activities Iii Federal Capital OTTAWA. March i0 — (Qpefl -Pre-.sessionai activities are in ml swim! at Ottawa this week-end with all political Iloims r- theii- forces for the openin of ti: second session of the ZOthKPai-ugf inenl on ay n . Indie io it no at present are that 0DP06iCiiJtl1l smug?‘ will be more ac ve s House of 00m. moris this apfbk than the Dfqvi. ous s on. ion leader John Bracken has come out flat- luotedlv for higher prices for but- ler and wheat. and 0.0.1". leader M. J. Coldwell has served melee that his Imup of 20 members will have plenty to say about the Gov. ernmentk treatment of the sua- bects in the Ottawa espionaie ring. Gordon Graydon. Proaresslve 0m. servative member for Peel his file s ed a resolution seeking the an. pointment of a. special minister for the External Affairs Department. a portfolio hitherto held by the Prime Minister. Under the direction of Dr. Arthur Beauchcsne. (r-gait, glqflg q m, House oi Co-mnlons. a mien grimy oi Pubha Works rtmeait em. Dlorees have invaded the main building to Prepare it for the ar- rival oi members of Continua-is and Senate. The huiie stenogr i’ pool in uha basement of the build- lna ls being put in older for the secretarial staffs. and stocks of iood are coining in to the build- iniz bv truck-load 101' the PRIM- mentarv restaurant. 5b! lnaeeete Despite extensive pr radon; in Ottawa for the arrival members of Parliament. top news in the Capital continues to be lions iv charged with ‘rrvral sects t document; m g cum power will again be arraign- etiin the city's old police court On building lamorrowmltw . ery‘ news- oaiicr photogrtohpshere will be eun- plunented bv movie cameras and pictures of the any suspectefieah- ed on the samen- next week EACH“! of every brovinee of Can- 3 a . Speculation is rile as to i-be member of Parliament named by a London Bngialnd newspaper as involved in the espionage web, and both the residence and office of one local amber have been deluged with telephone calls find out if he is still on the lob or been spirited away to the R.C.M.P. barracks and nearby Rockclifie which is the temporary quarters for those arrested on espionage charges. Sale of l-larbor Craft implementing its policy of sell- inc surplus ENDS of all WW6 to Ciiiridians for operation in Cami- cnin commerce and industry. \Vi\l' Assets Corporation has au- noiinced the fo g l0 harbor craft at Halifax mouth. Sydney. Saint John. NB. llllif‘ Dart- Cfilut. most of them adaptable to the fishing industry. rum Yiszsnalvr: Rumors SAINT JOHN, N.. B... Marclhnllfl ~ e a three- unri-y building here for establish- nient of a Maritime Nazarene col- <C P)-- The Church of Nazarene has purchased lfcic Ctg mayo as aktr 1 u" sgthool 0r r an wor ers n f“ TORONTO M r-i 1o - <09) - Emma M“! Nwhundlmdl ‘c5151’? When his wife \.Vl(-S‘lll church this m“ Wm b0 Mil t0 Tlly f‘ 0 i Coming Events _ ..__ Wills at Borden D-IQSMM ""0 ‘Declals with feed (livestock Feedlgjncy. aiir. March ll. Ausplcea Y.P.U. —-— "“'" "r "ll" "°..’:."-."‘.r:"t:i.:l= “U1 prempyrepe- u . _. Msmifyfifffi‘ “jdfidnsyfifi He's better than Clark Gablel’ L- Gillespie. - Isl-ll ssrra-aiiir 3’-‘§‘“\l.... in N. Dawson. the sale of the Corporation is offering l9 vessels for sale on the Pacific , gm incorporate m- Church of the Nazarenein this c now have Paiihonan iRghiii O ‘ OI‘! i-l-ol “Crokinole petty. Pownal Gar- F.O. POIRIER, D.F.C, Folly To Ignore Russian Menace -___ NEW voaK. March 1o -—(AP)—'- “it would be folly for the two great English-speaking nations to eat Ii htiy the tigmmon menace‘ of the an gtl y and pro- represen ive gram," Charles A.. ‘hint! (Rep-N. J.) declared Satur- N. fir» Eatgpmnativ a; Pugwasla. the fault FOT A ands de to San mittee i the ‘ Francisco Conference. added: “For our own safety. we cannot permit Russia to weaken and final» y destroy Great Britain as a world power. "The only assurance of safety for our two countries and for all other self-governing capitalistic countries is our continuing unity in peace as wuu. Will Celebrate Motor, Car Industry Jubilee. DETROIT. March 10 ---(AP)—- Tlie Automobile Manufacturers‘ As- sociation announced plans Sal-ur- day for a celebration "around June 1" oi the motorcar industrys golden jubilee. - Highlights will be a cavaicade oi ancient cars through Detroit streets and a ceremori honoring pioneers who helped pu the world on wheels. " Among those to receive tributes and special awards are ltenr Ford. Charles W.. Nash. Ransom .. Olds, King, .1 Frank Duryea, and Bar- ney Oldfield. Ralph de Palms. and other early owners. highway build- ers and industry pioneers. CALL POLICE. Sl-IOOTQ SELF moriiln , Alfred Robeson, 50, noti- fled polce by telephone. that he was going to shoot himself, police said today. Officers rushed to the house-and found Robeson in the basement with two bullet wounds ln his head and s revolver beside him. Hospital authorities described Robeson’: condition as "serious." "IIUBBA, IIUBBA!“ l! COMMENT TORONTO, March l0 — (C?) -— "Huhba, Hubbai" exclaimed North Bay's snow carnival queen, Frances Fralr, after having luncheon yes- terday with Premier George Draw of Ontario. She'd been naked what she thought oi the Ontario prem- .Mrs. A.J. Polrler, Misoou William C. Durant, Clharles Brady ' Irivestiture Held At’ Mis-couche Yesterday Flying Officer Nazairc Polrler was invested with the Disting- uished Fl lng Cross yesterday aft- ernoon y uienant-Governor J.A. Bernard at a colorful ceremony which took place in the Church of St. John the Baptist at Mlscouche T'he Rev. J.D. Kelly, curate, pre- sided. Before the investiture be- gan, Father Kelly read a letter he Rev. Martin Monaghun. rien, who la a patient at the O arlottetown Hospital, in which Father Monaghan expressed regret at his inability to be present. After Governor Bernard pinned the decoration on the tunic of Pilot Officer Poitier and had delivered his address, short speeches or a congratulatory nat- ure were made by Mr. Justice AE. Arsenault, who 15' an uncle of Pilot Officer Polrler; Rev. Nazalre Poir- ier, also an uncle of the young fly- er: and His Worship, Mayor Arn- ett. "ivmmerside. The Miscouche Branch of the Canadian Legion were present at the investiture and were later pre- sented by the Lieutenant-Govern- or with two framed portraits of Their Majestles. An interesting fenturg of the ceremony was the reading by youthful Delore DesB-ocheii on be- alt‘ of the Miscouche school child- ren of an address to the Lieuten- ant-Governor. Before entering the Church If. 2:30, Limit-Governor Bernard in- spected the Guard of Honour and t e Mlscouche Band which were drawn up in front. The Guard of Honour consisted of veterans of both World Wars. The lieutenant- Goverrior was accompanied by one of his aides-de-camp, Lieutenant- Colonel RS. Fielding, M.M., lED. Text of Citation The. following letter enclosing his cittuimi was-received reoenti by PD. Palmer's parents. Mr. and che. from the Minister ofnllltlonnl- Den-nee for Air, Ottawa‘! - “Dear Ml‘. and. Mrs. Polrlcr: 1 am. writing to say that all ranks of the Royal Ca _dlan Ali- Force join me in w mly con- gratulating ou and‘ the memb- ers of your amily on the honour and distinction which have corns- to your son, Pilot Officer Paul Nazalre Poirlci- through ilie award of the Distinguished Fly- ing Cross for gallantry in tile performance of lils- duty while serving with No. 425 Squadron of lilf‘ Royal Canadian All‘ Force. “The citation on which this award was made reads as follows: ‘This officer had completed numerous operations against the enemy in the course of which he has invariably displayed the ut- most fortitude, courage and (le- vollon to duty.‘ "The personnel of the Force are proud of your son's fine service rot-cud. "Wlih kindest personal gni-ds." LieuL-Gov. Bernard Foiiotving is the lcxt of the rid- dress delivered bv the Lieutenant- (Continued 0n Page 5 Col. 2) ll.S. Steel Output Climbing Rapidly CLEVELAND, March 10 —(AP) -Steelmakers are trying to meet insistent calls for their products and output has climbed almost to the level prevailing before the steel strike, the magazine Steel reported today. Production rose 21 1-2 oints last week. to an estimated na ional rats of 77 1-2 per cent of ca aclty, corn- pared with 86 per cent ha week of .‘lan,. 12, before the strike, and ‘I0 per cent tihc week of Jan. 19, when effects oi tihe approaching stoppage were being felt. Threat of a coal strike coir-fronts the industry with a possible second ma or setback. The magazine est-i ma d individual steel companies have from two to six weeks supply of coal in stock. XE- Britain Protests Soviet “i! 0mg eleven. while roads °MIJ -—- ' ' ' M h ' ,,;;,, w, WM; up... Activities In anc aria lmmla Maren o m“ ' --—~ 4- M. o. c. darrhmmd-le-Pifiifcai“. coupon. March 1o -( P)-— December China aakeg_ the Rue- oadiaa a"""ia- Davis a 's'i‘ili'l“ii""iif°wu 3 Min an‘; awn»? i"'i2"3-i}'i£‘liiy°°' 1353‘ a“. iuwaflgprh“ Mac as will‘... "or. h" l" “".".-:'..?it:.... as“: 1H1 I. the ltataa eoari- and t received no . - e ee- Britain's note on M a. foi- l lowing by severe days - Oen . was believed to have been d toned to Moscow Sutur- y 3p do! Says Russians Using Aggression Againit Neighbors March 10 —(CP)- TORONTO, warned Premier Drew of Ontario Saturday that "the bare unvar- nlshed truth is tnat unless Russian ssaresslon is stopped we are in the from). 1ine." In an address in the convention the world as that of war or peace. Emphasizing that his remarks were not ant -Ru.saia.n but anti-ag- ression, the premier said the Sov- et. has occupied one land after ari- other since 1940 “prec 1y the same methods adopted by qer- man . "Vlye Canadians have a particular reason for being qoncerned with the course of Russianaggreasionw... “But penba I there is on (thought we s ould keep in mind since man unlocked the secret of the atom. Radium became the most important single military possess- ion. Tlhere are two great known de- page of radium in the world, one ri e re Belgian Con and one in Northwestern Carla e... The in the Belgian Congo is fa r Russia and although it is the ing time from the nearest airfield. ‘ilhe llussian general staff prob- ablv had plans or the occupation of mart area by airborne troops. Al- though the lane might be on a purely speou five basis, so Can- ada's Operation Muskox was on a speculative basis. “But it is difficult to ima ine that anyone is no naive that ey think a northern o atipn of this vii-Y's bit-elite of d y'_t suefl is. . our th .. » its“ “is em o r r011 w co ony pe ssible threat in mind. ok along with them om tary our army this operation a Russian mill observer." , Metric System Question Pope llp Again CHICAGO, March 10 -- (AP) — A persistent question is popping up anew: _ “Why don't the British Empire and the United States join the rest of the world in using the metric system of weights and measures?" Dr. J.'I', Johnson, president of the Metric Association, reports that such inquiries are being received in increased volume from scient- isls, educators and service men who havn been abroad. Since the metric method was nc- cupied iii France in 1799. l! h!“ spread to all major territories cx- cept the British Commonwealth and the U.S. The gains have been noteworthy in the wake of wars. Germany, Austria-Hungary und their satellites adopted the system after the Franco-Prussian war, and Russia, China, Japan and Turkey after the First Great War. Dr, Johnson, head of the Math- ematics Department of Chicago teachers college, says metric has these advantages: i. Simplicity. The metric system has iliree basic units — metre (length), liter (capacity), gram (weight). The British and United States systems have many, includ- lng Inch, foot, yard, rod, mile, flllllfl, peck, bushel, ounce, pound, hund- redwelfht and ton. Then, the metre s as simple as the doil-ir -- 100 centimetres to a metre; 100 lo a dollar. 2. Decimal division of the units. A change from one metric unit to shifting the decimal point. rentlmeires and .646 metres. method, requires pad and e.g.. 6ft inches equals BS and 1'! li-ld yards. --i feet ahl uni. weight. of length, capacity For instance: one the metric system legal in i860 W iii‘ .")l<' ‘tllilf/‘lll l . ' C, /'\ Pi . f..." "v ~ 1'" Warn ~ for leviet f ure wimlrew “or. w -- Marsha‘: mail-ms toughen of the Credit Grantei-s “minim; body of John Cardinal Gleniion 01 CHI-Ida. the Ontario pnmlgfdgg. was borne mda through Dublin cubes the hnmgdfigtg m“; begun streets lined wit mournin crowds any; dgvglg do git, i; 1,5 high requiem mass at Mullingar ed frqm usaia £mnxiy in Cardinal Glmnons home dio and much water. us, m9 cese, Bernard Cardinal Griffin, deposit is .... “about three archbishop, of Westminster. also sfliibchi For another la accompllhed quickly by example: e46 millimetres equals 64: comparable change, using the oilin- tici - 3. There's a 0Y\Q-fD--0Ii6 relation- between the ‘metric system's and cubic centimetre of water weighs one gram. The United Staten Congress made permitting use but not mlklfil’ it com lsorv. DREW BLUNT u WARNING AGAINST SOVIET UNION Cardinal Clcnnon Dies In lluhlln DUBLIN, March 10 —-(AP)—'l‘he to All Hallows College. T ere a requiem high mass will be sung to- morrow for the St.. Louis Arch- bishop who was elevated to the sacred purple less than three weeks o B! . in a biting wind the mile-long funeral procession moved slowly down the wide driveway leading from the presidential mansion in which the 83-year-old cardinal died newly-created cardinals were ex ecied to be among the dignitar es of the church attending a Wednesday funeral service. President, 0' elly said James Cur- dinal McGuigan of Toronto and John Cardinal Gilroy of Australia would leave London Tuesday by clal plane, provided by the Eire overnmant, to attend tihe solemn hopes to be present. Moscow Radio Comments 0n Wotlrl Affairs.-. . -_.._. Iloubofi. March 10 -_ (c?) - The Moscow radio asked tonight “why should anyone exipcct the United states to defend British colonial policy?" and declared that Soviet-American friendship was essential to world peace. In lmidon. meantime. a Foreign Office spokesman said the British Government has instructed its charge daffairs in Moscow m "press for an e-arlv reply" to a note asking whv Russia has not withdrawn Red Army troops from Iran. The Moscow commentator said it appeared that certain people iii the; United States were making “attempts to plant the seeds of a new world war. to poison tlic bub- lic mind against the Soviet Un- ion." “Those who want lo prevent mlonial peoples from gaming frec- dom and independence are not very happy about proceedings tit, the Security Council. 1t i5 i-hel dissatisfaction until the lliziit thrown 0n outmoded British col- onial policies that explains the re- cent thinly-veiled hostility to the United Nations. "But whv should anv American feel that while. British actions in the colonies and elsewhere are severely criticized. America should turn away from (lie United Na- tions and start getting readv for another world war? “Wliv should anyone extinct the Americans to defend British coi- onial policy? “Clear-thinking Dcolilt‘ in lhr United States. uiio have the in- forests of their own country and of general peace in mind. turn away. of course. from" this lliird world war propaaahds- Telephone 704 Years Olil Sunday WASHINGTON, March IO-ACP) ~Before lotng travellers may be ab- le in pick up a telephone iii a priv- ate booth n a speeding train and talk to the r homes or offices 1,000 miles away. Tlhe same service may be avail- able to passengers on luxury air llrisrs.. The United Ste/tee Federal Com- munications Commission says that wartime research has unlocked vast new fields for the telephone, at used 70 years ago-March 1i). iThe F..C..C.. predicts that in tlie a eraon may be able to dial l straight across the con- lnent. with the charge eulo- niatlcally computed and st. the telephone exchanges. Liz ‘to USE ;~ii.a~COOKIESt, l i , . 33 Killed In Sports Tragedy In Britain BY STUART UNDERHILL BOLTON, Laiicashlre, England, March 1O — (OP Cable) —- This industrial centre of 177.000 popul- ation was a city of mourning to dsy 1n the Wake of Saturday's foot- ball stadium catastrophe which took 33 lives in the worst disaster in British sports history. Eyewltnesses gave graphic ac- counts of "how a giant crowd, caught by cup-tie fever," equeez ed and trampled to death 33 per- sons and sent scores of others to hospital when two retaining bur- ners of a grandstand collapsed. Two of the dead were women. As the barriers at Burden Park Stadium gave way before the eurg Lng crow , hundreds of screaming spectators were tumbled forward upon s ctators below and bodies were pl ed four deep, The near-record crowd of 65.000 had jammed the grounds to see an English Football Asaodlatlon quarter-final match between Bolton Wanderers and Stoke Cit)’. The game, resumed after the tragedy, cndcd in a scoreless tie. Blames Gate Crashers Chief Constable WJ. Howard "d of Bolton blamed gate craaharl for ‘ the disaster, He said between 80.000 G and 70,000 persona already had packed the stadium to witness a soccer cup tie game when several thousand persons forced their way into’ the stadium enclosure by IQHYIHI; down a fence. ‘These thousands created press. life by surging forward with the result that two of the steel barr iers _colla red." Mr. Howard added. With t e collapse of these harr- iera, erected to restrain standing spectators, thousands tumbled for- ward to an equally-crowded lower tier befqre . . Some ever-e- cruslrad to dea against the steel barriers before they gave way, but the majority died in the frantic pile-up which resulted when the wave of pe la toppled on to the spectators be ow, Chests and heads of many of the victims were caved in. Bits of mm socks. coats. shirts and ties littered the area where the zici-ldeni: occurred. Vince Williams, chief of the am. hulnncu SGTViCP at Bolton. 25 miles northeast of Liverpool, said most of the victims died of suffocation as their faces were pressed into 1h» mud. "People all around me were go- ing black in the face and shouting hut no one could help them." said Harold Gllman, 42-year-old truck- rlrivor who was one of 500 slightly injured. Court Martial Opens At Winnipeg Today WINNIPEG, March 10 -(CP)— lii the sombre surroundings of Fort, Osborne, in suburban Tuxedo. Cpl, (A.Sgt.) John Hugh Harvey of the Royal Army Medical Corps, iriil go before a general court martin Monday to answer charges of col- laboration with (the Japanese. A member of t-hc Br tlsh forces as. lion Kong, liarvey will face an all-Britlfi court with ltlal-Geii. J W N liaiigh, British War Office. London, Eng, as president. called on to answer cha s ranging from manslaughter to il-ireaiment of fellow prisoners. A veteran of the Imperial Army. Sgt, Ilarveyis home is in London. Eng. lie is flat-years old, The crimes are alleged to have been committed at. Oeyama Prison Camp in Japan. between Sept. 2, 1943, and Sept, 10, 1945.. The malor charge. manslaughter. concerts the death of a member nf the Winnipeg Grenadiers, Pic i~4 German Scientists Are Worry To lI.S. WASI-DIJNGGON. March 10—(AP) _Obvious concern is seen in Unit. ed States Government document‘ "W the Clemens will find a spot in the world where they can turn out atomic bombs. unobserved, be- fore they have been educated out of their run-the-world complex, One such document - the recent tote Department "blue book" ._. points by innuendo to Argentina gs a. possible spot. But it also 1m. lilies that the work eould go on under the protection of any amen. abégherrolgelri-ntéltlierit. Bind-es Dian to meet this fear is suite comprehensive. In the American occupation 80M in Gvlmsny the oomimandina izeneralhia om to prohibit ai reaearc on rv weapons one either to destroy the squipmem or parcel it out amour Germany's neighbors. German scientists. if they are not Nazis. are Permitted to work only in such peace-time sciences as medicine. psychology and sociology. The American Government is also making every effort to trace such men who are abroad, particularly in neutral nations. In the Allied Control recall lands to Germany. scientists who ccntrlbilted to German war machine. Australian Plane Crashes At Sea lilwl-BOURNI. March io-(lteu- ters) ~-- 2b persons are believed to 95w have" or a taaigiietwiisrr-m dust-it B ha,“ t males-i atihoertlei ‘Transpoiét m ‘was P ne CF81 I0 Q SCI 0 .' ._ H b t’ T" m,‘ “d “m, h, with P Arthur tn the aouth. cl ‘ stirs“ "i" There is little hope that there are any survivor-s of the disaster. The plane, carrying 21 passeng- era, a hostess and a crew of three was on its way here from Cam- bridge airfield near Hobart. C.C.F. Convention Slated For August OTTAWA. March 10 — (OP) — Annual national convention of the 0.0.1“. will be held in Regina in early August, the arty's national council decided t ay. The couri- cil concluded a three-day rnnfer- ence at which domestic and inter- national affairs and organizational work was discussed. A formal state- ment on the deliberations will be issued tomorrow. Stanley Knowles, COP‘, member of parliament for Winnipeg North Centre, a member of the Canadian delegation to the United ltiations Assembly in London who later visited Europe and Moscow, said western fear; of Russia were a counterpart of Russia's fears of the west. nvcirfifffiliivafii? mas TOR/ONTO. March 10 - (CP) - Cliarlea S. Logan, 69, vice-presirlvnt and general manager of the WK. Buckley Co, Ltd, died Batiirdiy at his home. Born in Plctou, N.S.. he was co- oundt-r, with WK. Buckley, of llf‘ Buckley Company. \Vlll(‘h manufacturers cough and cold remedies. pofi “ieizcoviznan GRAND FALLS, NB“ March 10 — (CF) — Th!‘ body of Felix Al- hi-rt, 28, who was flFDWYlFfl in the Si, John River Thursday, was Jolm Frinseii, who died in Febru- a.r_v, 1944 Food Conf WASHINGTON, March l0 members of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Adminis- tration will meet at Atlantic City March 15 to seek means to appor- tion the world's short food supply as fairly as possible. The conference brings U.N.l't. RA. back to the city where it was organized three years ago. It comes at the peak of U.N.R.R.A.'a work. and may be its moat harassed meeting. It expects desperate pleas for more food from delegatq of the countries where malnutrition ls widespread and starvation threat- OHS. Poland, Czechoslovakia, Greece. Byelo-Ruiisla, the Ukraine, ital , isiitania. China, India and the Phi - . p lies. e answers must come Rom the only countries with food our iusee; the United States, Canada, netn- lla, New Zealsnd and Brazil. UNJLEA. '\' tin-vols!‘ zones ea they were liber- To Open March l5 (AP) — The 47 countries which are ChLri has been beset by from the start. First, lt rhips to move supplies in found Saturday al the spot vahere he fell through inc while fishing. QPGIICQ riled-Yugoslavia, then Europe, now a. It: initial fund oi 81.850.000.000 ran out recently. That money was accumulated through contrlbut-ons from member countries of sums equal to one per cent of their an- nual income in the year ending June, i948. Now a second uree almost as large has been ped ed by second donaflons from the nited State-l. the United Kingdom, Canada. Australia. New Zealand and the Dominican Republic. More dona- tions are expected to bring the second sum u fo the first. New, also, .N.ReR.A, has plenty of ships and crews but railroad equipment is short in two count- ries with surplus wheat: The Un- ited Btatee and the Ar entliie. llut. tbs real reason or she food she es llea in the wi eapreed crop fa lures of last autumn, mostly due to drought: In Southern Eur- o , Nbrth Africa and in the rice felda of Bunna. The hriurea have meant increase demands the wake of the Russ . into the district due to the ores- Reils May llut Be 0n Way lliili 0f Manchuria CHUNGCHUN. March 10 —(APY —Street t razed in Mukd ‘the ese Govemm proc aimed martial law and Chin o»; ese Communists moved to encircle that greatest Manchurian city in" inn withdraw- al. ress tches rep , l ese Ch ese accounts blam the abrupt and unannounced c parture o! the Russians for the d. orders. saying the IQ arrison was left. heavily outnume ered by bssieging ist Ho Ping Pao, hinese usaisris o Chinese authorities who were ed to impose martial law because Communists east. north and aouuh of Mukden ‘ ised themselves to encircle the c ty," Ho Ping Pao said the Central Government proclaimed martial law in the citv of 2.000.030. once e greases industrial city on the Asiatic mainland but now ely stripped of its machinery by the de arting Russians. e Central News Agenc also declared the Russian wi draws! from Mikden apparently was riot a general movement out of Man- ohuris since six trains from there had arrived ohun. at Chang the capital to the north. and unloaded more than 600 troops. 20 tanks, 2O artillery pieces and 40 automobiles. Changing Panled Burden. Wiggly: thG P1118 The terious It Ohu Chou. m taln army. navy and air forces. licllm M BtfoRt ‘lltY . llfllllfib Crtuvlim 9 tifui lldlsitl-Kt Gil’ ‘wwwq CAL l0 —(CP) mum and maximum temperaturcsi Vancouver 39, 54; Edmon/ton 23. 45; METEOROLOGI Toronto. March “Piifih Regina s below. 30: Winnipeg below. 16; Toronto 19. It"); Ottawa l0, 24; Montreal -. 25; Quebec - -. 20; Saint John 26. 34: hlohcwh ‘~- za; Halifax 29, 37; Charlottetown 25. 20: Sydney 25, 37; Yrirmouih HALIFAX. March i0 — (OP) Following ls weather synopsis at 8.30 pan. Sunday. issued by the Do- minion Public Weather Office at Halifax: A storm northeast of Newfound- land is moving away rapidly but O is still causing strong gala northwest winds i the northeast- ern portion of th Gulf of Saint Lawrence. cool and relatively dry air is flowing fmm the northwest ence of an extensive high pres- sure system over the continent. This influx of cool and div air la expected to maintain fair weather for the next thirty hours. westerly gale waminga are displayed in the Cape Breton and Gulf of Saint Lawrence areas but these will be ordered lowered as soon as coni- n-iunioatlons are reestablished in the morning. Official marine weather fore- cast issued by the Dominion Puibiia Weather Office It Ktlifa! t 10.8 pm. Sunday and valid un Mon- day Northu-m rl Strait - Mod- few scattered clouds. Vieibilit ll miles. not mum change in {em- Defltllfi. Gulf of M. Lawrence: Strong northwest. winds of 25 m.p.h.. be- - coming moderate west winds of l0 to 15 mash. Cloudy with a few snow inries. becoming clear- Vilililitr more than l0 milea. 0on- tinued cool. . uh rises tomorrow m greatly on KIN. .R.A. and on the supply- ing powrrl. moon March ,1‘) 2.1.1 P. lit-meow. utel later