Msxuis CIA MERE MAN pin- M“, u. m, no: um: of philosophi- Three Cenb. g-"ir M Gun n Founded 1887. itumlns Dell!’ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 194i) 111d 1118C MAXIMS OFA. MERE MAN Amlblflonhbutavukemstflll k06- Mall $5.00; other Provinces & U. S. ‘[00 16 PAGES YS Would Have Truck Traffic Contribute More T o Highway Costs UITAWA. Nov. l6 —(OP) __¢o. ordinated control of all forms of 18nd transportation 1n Canada is urged in a brief submitted to the 30ml Commission on Transportat- ion by the Railway ASsoclation of blirlied Over P.E.l. Vegflables Canada. 5T JOHN Nfld., Nov. 16- The Association, repfesgnflng 10"‘ '1" l‘? "i"! TPIPEYHY" "Id practically all the steam railroads iorlty lint Iarnlcrs throughout also proposed in its brief miuid 1v ‘llttlllltll uni urc becoming wor- public tonight that: highway frang- ymi ovcr the amount of vege- p“, be assessed a greater shun of tvhlus cununi: info the Province [he cost-of building the roads H from PYIIICP l-Zriward Island, “sex “it 2s ftuirt-ti." ihc newspaper The bflef called f u a1 said in u IMWYSPHQC story, “that {he transportation policy lorxllcfildxlgg?“ lmpflll? \\'lII SUFIOUSI)’ cut into 1_ Unuorm regulation and pales of locally grown produce." Tlu- stmgv said thui every bout comm: hero from P. E. I. carried a largo amount of agricultural pro- llllW‘. control of highway transport, which the Association contends is competing unfairly with the railways because it is "subsidiz- ed" through highway construct.- ion. ,2. A study of the cosls of the highway system chargeable no its users. 3. An "adequate and proper" distribution of these costs "WW8 the various classes of motor vehicles. Dominion-Provincial co-operallon in the regulation of highway ser- vices was proposed by the Associ- ation. which declared the railways face a serious threes to their fut:- ure in highway transport that pm- duces "wasteful and uneconomic" competition. "A continuance of the present situation may well lead to a break- down of i-he entire transportation system in Canada. the Association declared. It. called for Dominion-Provincial discussions leading to agreement by the Provinces that their highway "Ellletory bodies would act 1n ac- cordance with agreed national pol- icy and that. Provinou would enact uniform legislation on the subject. Under the Association's proposal, the Dominion would set up a, m. bunal to regulate international and inter-provincial highway irsmsport. The Provinces would continue control of highway transport willi- in thelr own borders. but. an over- all tribunal would be set. up for hearing appeals from both the Fed- eral and Pmvlncinl bodies. This would include representatives of both the Dominion and Provinces. To Loy Keel of Navy Icebreaker Friday OITA\\'A, Nov. 16--(CP)—Thc keel of tho Navy's new ice-breaker will he Illlfl nt. Sorel, Que., Fri- dl_\', opening the Navy's new nine- |hip construction program, Navel headquarters announced today, The Navy also plnnil construction of four mine-sweepers, a gate vessel and thru- iintl-submririne vessels. Coming Events "lllall your Films i0 (Jnmhum Photo studio. Charlottetown. "Dance, ,K. of C. Hall, 8011115, Thursday, bpvember 17th. I 95W“! 50d EWHY at Rlverdale. Frldfly flight. Macblelll’: Orchestra. "Regular Dance at. Skyline. New lmldon. each Ifilday night. "Annual meeting, Hamilton l-Odks. Clyde River, tonight. "Masquerade Dance. Bristol School. Friday. November- 13th, "Card Party, Dance. Little Pond "WNW. November 21st. i.Lila_.l‘"lii:i...§i?“°“li.e.fl;is. Woman Opposes Dr. ll. V. Evall CANBERRA, Australia, Nov, l6- (Reutersl-Mrs. Nancy Wake, a! 36 one of the war’; most decorat- ed women, is opposing Dr. Her- bert V. Evnlf, the Australian Ex- ternal Affairs Minister, in the Dec. 10 Australian general election in a constituency where women voi- ers outnumber men by 3,000. firs. Wake ls holder of the George Medal, the Crolx de Guerre, the French Medal of Resistance ' and the United States Medal of "hum-t- and Dr ' Freedom for secret service work in Shrol. Thultfikisy “Tjzlyyrflowgsg? occupied Fritnce. She wns landed lTlll. ' ' three times in enemy territory»- “North Wlnsloe Women's Insti- pith Cake sale at. Rogers Hardware, cvtmher 19th. "IIJIWO Mi. Stewart Legion “all Pvvry Thursday night. music bv Al Blanchard. "sl-mv. “semi Geste" he New Glmgou [Ml Ii. . Gilly Ctvlptittig‘ ‘t’ 83o. staining "York Concert closes tonight. PiWP-e Arthur Vessey for reserve. 110115, ____ once by parachute and twice In "Pnnlrv s l g s A M _ light aircraft. Donttpy, gquflrfin; N5“ '19,_h’uc2 She will contest the seat for Barton, New South Wnles—n con- stlfuency reorganized in the re- _..___ cent enlargement of the Australian "Ccrnwflll_york Pom, women.‘ Parliament-as a Liberal. lfl-lhlll. lwrllngton Women's Insu. More Tumips. Fewer Polaloes Shipped By Rail The henvy marketing of turnips is continuing nccording to the fr“- fic figures for the month of Oct.- obei" released yesterday from the office of the Divisional Superin- tendent of the C.N.R., Charlotte- town, The report showed that 363 cars of turnips were shipped riur- ing the month of October 3,5 fikalnst. 192 for the same month in 194-8. There was a decrease in the shipment. of potatoes by rail. The report; showed that 4m cars of pg. Latoes were shlpped in mmber as against 539 in October 1948. Ship- mcnt 0f hay and straw showed a great. increase as 29 cars were Shipped during the past. month compared to no Shipment; in Qq, obor 194.8. A decrease in the shipment cf Continued on page 5, Col. 5 I Best Spy Story Kept Distinguished Legal Figure Dies At 59 OTTAWA. Nov. l6 -<or>> —Mr. Justice Charles Gerald IQCQIInQy, 59. 0H6 of Canada's most distin- Elllfihfid 19831 flllures. died suddenly at his hcme here tonight. A former Edmonton barrister and member of the Alberta. Legislatum. Mr. OConnor had slit. as a judge l" "N! mchequer Court of Canada for the last four years, TWO 0mm wrru ONE snow JUNIPER. NB. Nov. 16 -(CP)—- Kmln! two birds with one stone should be comparatively easy foi- James Davis, of Flcrenccvllle, who bpssed two deer with one shot. The bullet passed through the neck 0g one deer and also killed a second, sfflndirvs close to the first. anicnal. Morell Co-op Praised By General Secretary Of C0-op Union In Canada Canadian Trade Depends 0n Making Confederation Work HALIFAX, Nov. 16——(CP)—C&n- mllnns fnce the problem of selling ench Province and its products to every other Province, John A. Marsh of Toronto. general mun- ager of the Canadian Exporters’ Association, said today. ' “In other words," he declared In an address in the port of Halifax club, “we must make confederation work. "l-Iow can We in Central Canada give your industries n ‘leg-up’? How can we cullivrite the some appetite for fish in Canada that foreign countries have for our flsli? .. . "The Canadian National Railways and the Cnnutiinn Pacific Railway are two of lbe greatest railroads of the world. Perhaps more than any other factor, they huve mudc confederation possible. “Each should be iised to the fullosg nxtcnf to facilitate oui-‘do- mcstin trndc within Canada and our foreign trnde ns it flows lo and from this country, "Surely it is only right and proper that Ezislern and ‘Ncstcrn seaboard ports should derive all the ntlvnnlnges and benefits which are rightly theirs and thereby en- able the people of Canada to feel the full impact of continental truf- fic. . . . "And there must be a growing reiilizniion thnt Canada's economic nnlurn has vhnnged mightily 1n lhc Inst. Ehroe docrides lo the point whore, ricsplic our huge supplies of foodstuffs, when! and prlmnr products, we are an Industrial nu- iion." . Mr. lvlnrsh said the happenings of lhc next year will determine whether many nations will eat 0r stnrvr- nnd whether this continent will have the greatest depression within our memory or n business bonm nnrl a continuance of the (Cbnwtinued on Pa“ I 0d. I Insintiu» ytun-mnge sale, Market Mrs. Wake has been making ii Bullrllniz. Thursday November house-io-house canvass, and Dr. 17th. a p. M. ' Evnft m... replied by calling in the help of his wife iind Mrs, Elsie "own, g Curiln. widow of Australia's war- Flzptier lav‘) $51126 lnotxhesgzlégg time Prime Mlniner, John Curtln. hlrflllfiS Aid will fl until her notice. .- mublia?“ in, Islanders Country Noveimbravellers Blast’ Thursday‘ cha er 17th. Music by (M0739 lipell and Merry Islanders- finance ln Islanders country Omb- Travellei-‘s Rest, Thursday, gyms-r inh. Music by gem. OTTAWA. Nov. 1o -(op) - ‘PWU find Merry Islanders. Senator A. N. McLean (b-New Brunswick). urged today in the Senate that the Government. do something about dwindling Muri- time trade with the West Indies. "l" Smck Asphalt Shin ‘s’ glel. gggflzg-Bslfllnx. Anfl-Freele, Bran, h, r "My Meal, Washing Ma- iuml- W. I. Bowman, Hunter He spoke on a motion by another ""- Marltlmer, Benafor u. Klriley (L- “B . é Nova. Booth). calling ecbenlion to T“, “Yin! Live Fowl and Chicken restricted trade between the Mari- times and the West. Indies. “Strong overtures," said Senator McLenn. "should be mode to the Government of England that. the West. Indies trade. to n. large ex- tent, la the bread-nnd-lbutfler of the Maritime Provinces and that we should, in this country. be consult- ed 5nd given some oomldcmfion “m” Qggmlngly dictatorial d0- inandl no nude on the West Ind- ies lo divert their trade info chen- nels ohher then Canada." m couipiuned my l-‘hll Ouudlnn dollar: gained from trade with t-be Wolf Indies were diverted by Britain for okher p111" poles and that Welt Ixlilan count- of feed m lama n. all rise were being hold by Britain not f0 trade with Canada. limes. ;_ uv-"si-“il-i“ VIM] nu um m m» bum w ml .-. ' Why and Fridays mini I2 ‘éilflssszsrszr Pr“ Mr- mcnouanhvnnoneu nI. E.J. nah ow "o " h, - rell, every Tflfldly. is?‘ smmllll. 5-00 P. M. Coming hmoflplnlv» Mm use. Dorothy lmiie. 14mm‘ 1 q r a Inn. ‘Mather Qzff Tommi per-e m» mu and mixing Irlln co 1a and lfl m» of feed you We have a coni- Blames U. K. For Loss Of West Indies Trade 200 years and the milling-off might well be considered an "unfriendly Ml." He urged" that Canada. give the West Indies aid. if necessary, in order to bolster the trade with the Mariclmes. Canadian dollars earned by- the Islands were being diverted into other channels by the United Kingdom Government which also was encouraging West Indies countries not. to trade with Canada. The west. indies were paying more lo Australia and other lends for goods they formerly obtained from Canada. bade once 10st wls hard lo win book. The Maritime: had pioneered ibis trade and were entitled to consideration. The "pgyoff to Canada" in the lust. couple of your: bu been n gfgjfly lou of this trade. "In the lest couple of years. M 881d. "goods have become more plentiful In the West Indies Ind we have ggflfljnly done our part. in buying Qny gurplul they hid. But there 39031! to be little use in Pmvldlfl! them wilfh um. dollars if those doilu-i are taken elsewhere uid they are not allowed l0 with us.‘ ._ “The intricate, powerful machin- ery of monopoly is growing in Can- ads. and has a terrific grip which may check the development of our democratic society." declared Mr. A. B. MacDonald, general secretary of the Co-operativc Union of Can- ada. at the 12th annual meeting of the Morell Credit. Union last evening. President Joseph Walsh's report showed the past amthmilkeesi. in the hlsinry of Union which transacted over $50000 worth of business. Mr. Louis Maguire rend the finarizial report for the secret- ary, Mr. IFrank Dunn who was ob- sont. through illness. This report showed the Union to be in n healthy financial position. Following n. social interval for lunch. Mr. MacDonald addressed the fully attended meeting in the Community Hall. IIe warned that. apparently, governments in any country cannot effectively control monopoly on prices. I-Ie referred to the lack of action against the bread monopoly in the tivcsl: and the flour milling monopoly recently disclosed. "You are paying more for your bread because of this monopoly," he declared. Morell Has Answer “But you have the answer to these practices here in Morell," he continued. "Strengthen your co- operatives, so that ll. national struct- ure of all co-operatlvrs will have an effect on such monopolies.“ These are the real dangers. I wouldn't wor- ry too much about the other bogics." Speaking of the wide publicity Morell hsd received as a. co-operat- ive success. Mr MacDonald said “although you have done s. lot- there's a lot more you can do. "There's a soul in a Credit Un- ion that you can't see on the bal- ance sheet. Without. the soul the faith in each other, the union o! honesty and trust, the credit. Union is not going to be the pow- er in the community it might be." The speaker urged that. Credit Unions be established in thf schools to off-set the ccmpemivc spirit: and develop ideas in the minds of the young of helpfulness instead. “We have changed the thinking of the adults. We will be doing less than our job if we for- get the. young people," he added. MacDonald congratulated the people of Morell on their "tre- mendous programme" of co-opflf- atlve development. Ha Wamfiil that in changing from the old ways to the new there would be difficulties but counselled them not to be discouraged. "When yuu think buck 15 years or so, you see how fur you've advanced and how your thinking has become entirely different. That's the real success of eta-operation," he concluded. New directors elected were Messrs. Cheater MucCardy and Hymn Webster. Mr. Herbert Mc- Darmid was reappoint ’ m the credit committee and Mr. Joseph Walsh elected a member of the supervisory committee. Chlng llands Coal Dlspule Tllruman WASHINGTON, Nov, 1~6(AP)— The deadlocked coal dllpufe was put In Fruidenz Truman's hands today for action. With a new coal strike 1n the United Stain threatened in two weeks, Cyrus B. Ching, Federal Mediation Service director, turned the whole contract dispute over to JTrumAn u hopeless, As Top-Secret Textbook By DON GILBERT LONDON, Nov. l0 _ (UP) Too hot. to publish, one of the best, spy stories of ull time is to be kept as a. top-secret textbook for future British spies. It is the story of 60-year-old m, Col. Alexander Paterson Scotland, A mil-ii" 5D)’, the close-cropped, grey-haired British officer was on the German General Staff during both world wars, Scotland is currently u defancg witness in the Hamburg trial of Field Marshal Vcn Manstein, He proably has more inside informa- any other Allied official, Although his personal story would earn him a fortune, Britain's "very special agent" has promised nave;- to write for publication. His secrets will stay in the archives of the British Intelligence Service - and in that hush-hush textbook. A nephew of George Bernard Shaw. Scotland doesn't. share the Irish playwrights volubility. “The less publicity directed at people like myself, the better," he said when his spy role was reveal- ed. Villagers of Bcurne End. Buch- inghriinsbire, where Scotland shares a bungalow with his wife Rhona, thought the quiet, elderly officer had found n cushy office job lr. Whitehall when Hitler touched of.’ the Second World War, But instead of keeping a chali- warm in Whitehall. Scotland had heildbd for Berlin. There. his pcr- fcct. German and his short, bris- tled hair made him the ideal Prussian type. He crossed frontiers by devious ways but the public will never know just how. - J-‘i-om German army ' headquart- ers to Bendlerstrasse he relayed information to London by com- munications fncilifies installed in his office. At one time he knew Lita disposition of nearly all German armed forces. While he drew German army pay in Reichsmnrks. Scotland bad his British army salary paid into a bank account back home. And he didn't allow the Berlin work to deprive him of s periodic home leave. “He would arrive home out. of the blue quite unexpectedly," Mrs. Scotland recalled. "I-Ie would be with me perhaps only a few days. then just as' suddenly he would go off and be away weeizs and even months." From 1903-1907, Scotland dld l hitch as i», private in the Kaiser's amiy. He learned to speak and act like n German. His aptitude re- SILILMI in rapid promotion in the Imperial Army with the result that the Russians took him pris- oncr after the fall of Berlin —a‘.'id needed a lot: of convincing before lhcy would release him. tion on German war crimes than _ Hils Al IIIISSIG; Says Canada Nol U. S. Camp Follower By Dough; I-‘low OTTAWA, Nov. 1B —- (CPJ — External Affairs Minister Pearson lashed out at. Russia today for marked "acceleration“ of her tyr- annies. He also proclaimed Can- ada's determination to be more than a “camp-follower" of the Uni- ted States. _ He called for U. S. action on at least six issues-—lhe Si. Lawrence seaway, an exchange of arms. Newfoundland military bases, bor- der bars to certain leftist Canad- ians, a Japanese peace treaty and a bilateral air treaty. Around the World In a 90-minute Commons review that took him around the world. he charged that Russian efforts to absorb "a wider and wider area" poison and distort the aspirations of Western Europe and have re- duced mosi of Eastern Europe to an "abject subordination” where complete identification with the whims of Moscow has become the basic demand. Iniliating a debate on for- eign affairs before a well- filled, attentive House, he pro- phesied that in time the flame of liberty in Eastern Europe will help lo lift the shadow which has obscured if and. by implication, he linked that development with the "un- happy people" of Russia her- self. Points In Speech These were among the points Mr. Pearson made;_, i. Canadian reiailofi! wlch the U S. are friendly, complex and continuous bul. cannot be taken foo much for granted. Canada must recognize the importance and exertions of the U. S.. but the US. must look on Canada as a "oc- operallng partner, not as a camp follower." by containing conflicts in Pales- tine. Kashmir and Indonesia which could have sparked major war. 3. Military obligations under the Atlantic Pact will be charted "before long" but ifs l2 member nations also should start at once to implement their pledge of ee- onomlc collagoratlon. 4. Russia ls using every means to heel" and to "extract from it the kind of unqueslloning and slavish obedience the Kremlin commands." 5. Emphasis in the evolution of Soviet tyranny has shifted from Continued 011' bifgfifcoi. 4 HALIFAX, Nov. 16 —(CP) —-More than 51.000000 worl-h of stipplies will be flown from Halifax to Unil- ed States military bases In New- foundland, Labrador mid Greenland annually in a new iiir shuttle ser- vice expected to start operation!‘ shortly. H. Merreli Bennelnghoff, Ameri- can constil here, said planes oper- ating our of neartby Dartmouth will take tons of fresh vegetables, 058i. butter. milk and other stores to United States bases. He said a central purchasing agency office has been established in Halifax uld that. the supplies-formerly pur- chased in Sydney. NS. Charlotte- botight. 1n Halifax. - Capt. John Taylor of uie United Sfates Army Air Force. 1111"". con- iractlng and purchasing officer. said the first shipment probably would be made next week. As many as seven flights daily were planned ut of Dartmouth with supplies r bases at Argen- tla, Harmon Field and Fort Pep- perell in Newfoundland: Goose Bay in Labrador and the Bluie West bases in Gr nliind. Cost of the system wcu be negligible, Capt Taylor said, because the flights would take the place of regular training flights. Flood prices were cheaper here than in Newfoundland and it was more economical to ship fm-n Hali- fax than from the United Slates. Mr. Benninghoff acid that in the past. the USAF. had purchased some supplies in Sydney and Char- lottetown but. the plan now was to cemralisc purchasing in Halifax. ‘rho $1,000,000 figure was the amount spent. on supplying troops m the hues luf- ymr when most. of the supplies were purchased in Newfoundland. This centralised pur- chuing wee being curled out u In town and Newfounclland-Jwould be Plan To Fly Supplies For U. S. Bases From Halifax economy measure. Al: Summerside Mr. Elmer- Offer, proprietor oi’ the Ideal Dairy. which supplies Harmon Field, Nfld, with milk, said he had heard of m de- clsion to discontinue the twice- weekly milk run. A US. Army Air Force- plsme takes 330 gallons f1. trip. It is the only purchase made for the bile. but members of the plane crew make substantial purchases for themselves. their families and others who do not OOme over on the flights. They buy groceries, house- hold equipment and other items. T119)’ bring their watches to be re- paired by Suirmerside Jewellers and their shoes to the cobblers. ‘Ilhe service started in May. 1946 and up until about a wear ago it was on a three-trip per week basis. At than. time eggs were also pur- chased. short of war to “bring Yugoslavia ‘ launched a search for Bermuda with 20 men aboard. cs southwest. or northeast island where weather cover 75.000 square miles. that the big plane “high-rankliig" United given. Kindley also tomorrow. Bermuda-based units. l Plane WI: L050 bearings. Air Force base at. Kindley in five minutes. stations on the alert. came with the crash 8-29 in Bermuda. waters of the engines. . The ‘aircraft missing been in continuous nature of the difficulty given. Shlpa Warned t t 600 kilocycles. l At Omaha, Ne-b., headquarters of the US. Strategic Air Command. (if. was said plane 5289 was from 0f the find B0mbnf<lmel1t Group and left March ,‘ Field. Calif, for Britain by way of night. It was f the Second Squadron ; Bermuda Tuesday due here at. 8:10 am. the search. l rotating training systtm. I ii‘; lLong Bridge Planned Across Mirumlchi FREDERICTON. Nov. —One of the built at Sinclair. dcrsttn announced today. Construction is embankment approaches. feet in the clear, two reinforced concrete beam , . h i l ill . ut to sen, spans each 2B feet 1on3. with fur- bsgizeiynllqlrgmtln (Inland? 31th show “l” “Pl"°“°h°“ h" m“ “"1 ers ih much of the district. Thurs- crvlh embankment illl. skirts cf Newcastle. Officials at nearby Kindley Field said they believed the four-engine plane “'21s down in the sea 150 mll- of the conditions were reported good. The hunt would There were unconfirmed reports canled several States Air Fbrce officers. No elaboration was said an BO-plane search armada. would wing sKYWBYd Ten search aircraft flew in from McDil‘. Field at Tampa. Flt». to Join Kindley Field tower said it lost contact with the bomber at 1l:'4.5 AM, AST, shortly after the alr- crafi reported its navigation 38M‘ our of commission and that it w“ 10st. Poor visibility prevented taking Four planes from United States Field began a. search for the Bupei-fort- ress when it reported shortly before 8 am. that it was "going to ditch‘ Soon the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Bibb picked up weak S 0 S calls. The Coast Guard sent four am- phibian planes to join the search and puf all its eastern seaboard Less than two weeks ago. tragedy of another when a weacher reconnaissance plane from Kindley Field fell imp the sea a mile off shore, burst. into flames and sank, Nov. 3. Only two of the 13 crew members survived. The pilot had been haying trouble with one today had radio contact with Kinclley Field lIILl-llvthe mes- sage was received saying it; was gn- ing to attempt a crash landing. The was not The marine station here broad- . ., . 2. The United Nations has been lgggllgigglllecgiorggmfigsafiewgtgll: strengthened in the last year andlshmp lookout {or me B49‘ N0 has helped reduce world tensions ; 528g The broadcast 581d the "my ‘ lng plane might transmit signals on The plane was one of s, number of 13-295 which have been arrivlns ‘in Bermuda at. intervals. Fifteen c-f thcvm already were here. They were ordered to remain to take Pfl-Yl l" t Groups of B-29s have been based .in Britain for some time under a 16—-(CPl longest highway bridges in New Brunswick will he Northumber- land County, ncrir the mouth of the Northwest Miramichi River. rc- plricing a bridge destroyed by fire two years ago, Works Minister An- cxpccted to start early this winter. The bridge will b» 5.882 feet long. including Plans call for four steel spans each 282 fcciin the clear, one steel span 194 two steel plate girder spans each 80 feet long and The site ls 350 feet upstream fmn a railway bridge. For the past your a Bailey bridge has been used where highway route No. B crosses the river from Sinclair to the out- Subscripcloue Delivered $6.00 B PLANES SEARCH FOR MISSING B 29 DOWN IN ATLANTIC p255» Launches Foreign Affairs Debaie In Commons Rumors High-Ranking U. S. Officers Aboard HAMILTON. Bermuda. Nov. 16 — -(CP)~Thirty-f.hpee aircraft tonight a UrsLted States Air Force B-29, missing on a flight from March Field, Calif, to One Farmer Wins Two Grain Tilles TORONTO, Nov. 16 — (GP) -- were judged best in the fair com- petition that brings entries from States. a world title for their Theodore Despafie Ont, near Sudbury. fair. International tion. titles ~ Mr. Despatie‘: Canada. title yesterday. classes are open to exhibitor: all nations. ifs Etisv row w w ronstauap. (o LE '- Euftusk —- Au.‘ new Hes f0 po is tier . f0 A Coupe: or?" l, {Bugkgpmvcsn a TORONTO, Nov. 16 —— (CP) -- Minimum and maximum temper!!- tures: ' 4; Edmonton 18-40; Regina 25-38; Winnipeg E- 35; Toronto 35-44; Ottawa 32-40 Montreal 40-46; Quebec 35-3B< Saint John 32-40; Monclori 2747i Halifax 36-50; Charlottetown 35-481 Sydney 29-43; Ynrmouth 38-54; St. John's. Nfld, 33-38. HALIFAX. Nov. 16 —(CPl —Of- ficial inland forecasts issued to- night by the Dominion Public Wealher Office at Halifax. Synopsis: Wednesday was a cloudy day in most of the hlzirltimcs and Eastern Quebec. Only in Cape Breton and Northern Nova. Scciln did $111111)‘ skies prevail. During the curl; evening it began to rain in South ern Nova Scotiri rind along thi western border of New Brunswick and it has since spread northeast- ward. The rain appeals to be due ic a snail disturbance which appeared this afternoon off the New England coast. With this disturbance mov- ing southeasnwurd the urea of dill’. . Regional forecasts. valid until midnight Thursday. Prince Edward Island-Thursday cloudywifh wide ly scattered shoppers. Temperature: much the same as Wednesday. Light winds. Low early ‘rhlrsday m°mlnl Seeking New Round Of Tariff Cuts From U. S. By HAROLD MORRISON UITAWA, Nov. 16 -- (OP) - Canada and 31 countries are pie- parlng for a new round of negot- iations to reduce tariffs. The main aim, c, trade expert said today, is to try to get stF-l further tariff concessions tron the dollar-rich United Staten. Some concessions were obtained by exporting countries in negotia- tions at Geneva two years ago and m‘. the Annecy, France, con- ference, lust summer. Groundwork for the mulN-na- tion tariff-reducing conference will be planned at. a trade-tariff meet- ' lng in Geneva. attend. . The conference itself will not lake place until next. September. One of the jobs of the February meeting will be to decide locsflrn of the September conference. Meanwhile, Canadian trade ex-Q peris are prepnrlng s list of com- l, Lv. Borden modifies on which they will seekt lower U.S. tariffs. They include such things women's clothes. chemicals, flower seed. next February. Some 33 countries - including the United States and Canada - will toys, and a range of agricultural prod- ucts from condensed milk to sun at Charlottetown 37. high in the afternoon 45. High tide today at 7.41 A. M. and 8.01 P. M. Sun rises this morning at 7.11 A. M. and this evening an 4.43 P. M Summerside lde olghiecn min utcs later ihnn harlottciown. W00; 15in.“ _ cwimzon DAILY FERRY Leave Wood Islands BOBDEN - TORMENTINE FERRY WEEK DAYS Lv. Capo Torrnentinl 9.10 A.M. 10.85 A.M. m) PM. 2.40 PM. ns 4.10 RM. 7.30 IKM. SUNDAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Capo Tommi-inc 9.10 A.M. 10.35 A.M. Hi PM. M0 PM. A Hairy Hill, Alla., farmer wary won two Royal Winter Fair world grain championships and the dis- tinction of being the ilrst man to take two world titles in one ymr. John Eliuk’: lviontcalm variety barley and Victory variety oat! throughout Canada and. the United Chippawa variety potatoes won owner of Hanmer. Neither of the men intended tiha Mr. Eliuk has grown registered seed in his farm sl Hairy Hill, 70 miles north-east of Edmonton for several years and ls a regular ex- hlblior at the Winter Fair. About 55, he took the oat. king title last year at the hay and grain show held in connection with Chicago Livestock Exposi- Only one of the faii-‘s six world potato championship -— went to Eastern Mrs. A. G. Kelsey, of Erickson. B. C.. won her second world when! She 1.001: the championship at: the fair in 1947. The rye title wen! to Albert Kes- sel of Rosetown, Sas'k., and corn to Albert Kcssel of Rnsewmi, Sask. The six world chnmplondil '1! A.M., 11 A.M.. 1 PM. 3 PM Leave Caribou 3 A.M.. 11 A.M., 1 P..\I., 8 EM. v