MAXI MS 01A . MERE MAN dues ls s Church robber. He whoihill to pay his Church EH9 Guardian, Three Cont: tlornlng Dally Founded 1881, CHARLOTTETOWN, EARLYSHOWDOWN LOOlVIS n U. s. COAL MINE DISPUTE Airline Drops Battle OverN. Y. Montreal Route Cripps Is Heckled As Political Battle Grows In Intensity ..()NDON, Feb. 5 - ICP) - Sir ,--.ilford Cripus, Chancellor of the Ifl\i‘i'ii“]l..l€l'. campaigning tunigllf, for the rc-election of his Lahur Party Feb. 23, was both heckled and cheered. He preserved lllS iUlllpOSlllT.‘ despite the cl‘O\\'(‘l'5 illlli In a speech at suburban Brix- llll. Sil‘ Stafford claimed Labor has carried out every item of its i045 platfernl, has madc more pro- gress for the "ordinary people" in the last four years than "in any other peacetime period of our ilis- I tory," and has set a record for re- covery from the disruption and destruction of the war. Interruptions of the Chancel- lor's speech were so frequent that at one paint he snapped at. Onc n; the women in the audience: "Oh shut up!" The Chancellor said the Labor Government has increased Brit- ain's national production by more than 30 per cent over pre-war out- put. He called f00d' subsidies a "godsend to the people." in an earlier speech at the Ent- nlre Theatre in London, he had expressed concern that "reaction may be sweeping over Europe." ilc said: “There is a very great danger today that reaction may sweep over Europe, and the one great safeguard against reaction is that there should be a Labor Govern- ment or a progressive government ln Great Britain. . during Sir Stafford spoke a truck-end in which Labor and Conservative big guns fought a booming battle for the support of 5.000.000 middle-class votes, Churchill Speaks Winston Churchill. Conservative leader, accused the Labor Govern- ment of deliberately maintaining wartime rationing and controls in order to get "everyhoriys life into the socialist clutches." He spoke Saturday at Leeds, Yorkshire, an industrial Labor stronghold. Herbert Morrison, Deputy Prime Minister and Labor's chief political strategist, in a broadcast Saturday night declared the Conservatives are "longing for a system oi b00111 or bust." Hc also spoke from Leeds. In U. The tends io enact will for farm prices. Rt. Hon. James Federal G. Gardiner, Mi craiion of Agr Niagara Fails. $200,000,000 set Wartime Agricu finance thc sup more is needed ed. blli. I hop enough," the middle-class with no strong ing costs, accele Attack Churchill and most important accomplish by ru new Parliament K. Tells 0f Price Support Government in- legislation which provide permanent support nlstcr of Agricul- iurc. told delegates to thc annual convention of the Canadian Fed- hcld at last week. The aside under the liural Prices Sup- iculiurc, port Act. he said. will be used to port program. "if it will be provid- e that will be Mr. Gardiner said. "floating" party allegiance. 58v Political expel-ts. is that he is the person dnostslikely to base Jim 7°59 nrlmamyrun‘ Jflonomlc coll- siderations. He is considered to be interested mainly in reduced liv. rated illtlonnl rc- eovcry and maintenuncdof stable economic conditions. ' Iiiherslis In their week-end speeches, both Morrison attacked the Liberals. the scomfully third party. Morrison said the most thc Liberals could lining 400 or more candidates for the 625 seats in the would he lo hold voter Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CANADA. MONDAY, FEBRUARY .i 6, 1950 12 PAC ES MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN _i__ inc sword of Common-Sense I our surest gift. I Mall 86.00; other Provinces l: U. S. $7.00. Subscriptions Delivered $6.00. Growing Tlireal To World Peace Given Aslifason Airlines announced to- night that it will drop a court ilgliit to keep Trans-Canada Air- lines from competing with it on the New York-Montreal route. Colonial went into Federal Court here to protect its monopoly on non-stop service between the two largest cities of the United States and Canada after Canada was Dfilmlsfld thc rouie in a new agree- ment between the two countries last June 4. In a statement decision to withdraw its appeal with the United States Supreme Court from a reversal suffered in Federal District Court here last fall, Colonial expressed hope of ob- taining addition-cl routes from the Civil Aeronautics Board. The statement, by President Sigmund Janus. said that “with the increasing gravity of the inter- national situation we have con- ciurléd that it would not be right. in thr- public interest. to challenge the executive power of the Government to make execut- ive agreements with foreign pow- ers." Colonial had contended in op- posing thc- grant cf the New York- Montreal route to T.C A. that it would suffer serious financial loss- es by being forced to split traffic on a run which for years supplied about three-fourths of its passeng- er revenue. Colonial said T C.A, is ready to fly the route with pressurized. four-engined planes. Murder And dllicide 0n Quebec Slreel QUEBEC. Feb 5 —(CPl~- A spurned Ilil-year-cld arsenal worker today shot and killed red-haired Irene Bediard, then ended his own lifo vrith one bulici through the head Paul Letourncau. six-fool former boxing and wrestling promoter shot his pretty 21-year-old girl friend on a street corner at noon as people walked home from church. Police said Lciourneau then ran up the back stairs of a house he announcing its WASHINGTON. Feb. 5 -tAPi-‘ _. Colonial Prospect of buses being employ ed extensively in this Province in the near future by thc Canadian National Railways vas indicated last night by Premier J. Walter Jones on his return from Ottawa, Toronto and other centrcs. Tile buses, it is understood. would be used for passenger and express traffic. and also for hand- ling less than earload freight de- liveries throughout the Island. Details of the plan will be dis- cussed at a. meeting of railway of- ficials and the Provincial Govern- ment on Wednesday next in the Provincial Building. New for improved services such as the buses could provide has been emphasized on several oc- casions. Premier Jones said. l-Ie could not say whether the schemc would involve reduction in the present train services or not. That was one of the matters to be gone into at Wednesday's conference. In the meantime, it is under- stood that the policy of dieseliz- Target Shooiinq Takes BRIDGEWATER, N.S-. Feb. 5 tCP) R.C.M. P. said tonight a target-shooter accid- entally killed Mrs. Murray Con- rad, 43. in her home at nearby Upper Le Have Saturday. Mrs. Conrad was in the room of her five-year-old sell, David. who was sick in bed. when sev- eral bullets came through the wall and open window. when Mrs. Conrad went over to the window to shout a warn- ing. a .22 calibre bullet hit her ill thr- chest and she slumped down dead near her solrs bed. Mounties said Earl Emaneau was target shooting at a tin can after an unsuccessful hunting trip. No charge has been laid Railway Bus Servicesllleserves lwindle Planned For P. E. Island ing the Island division this Spring will he carried out as previously announced. Eighteen diesel loco- motives are on order, in addition oration. and full delivery of th-s equipment is anticipated by early summer. Queried as to progress in trans- Cllllflda lllllhllflly arrangements. Premier Jones said the non-ac- ceptance of the projects by the Provinces of Quebec and Alberta has Cfl/llsfld a delay for the pres- ent. He was hopeful, however. that. the work would get under way this summer. T e Premier attended meetings of thc Canadian Holstein Breed- ers Association at Toronto. out was unable to tako in the meet- ings oi’ the Federation of Agric- ulture at Niagara Falls. Mrs. Jones. who accompanied the Premier to Ontario. is remain- ing in London for a few days. an a. visit to their daughter. Mls. Siegrist. Scientists Urgie U-' Not To Use H-Bomb First but. Lewis Saturday scorned . | lie said such a board could not l _ ltndorsland l-he miners’ problems, i NEW YORK- FM‘- a ~— i5?‘ ~- Truman has consistently refused Twelve top American scientbts io use the Taft-Hartley law in spite called Saturday for a solemn prom- ise that the Unitcd States never will use the hydrogen bomb un- less it is first employed against the United States or its Allies. The scientists} mostly A-bolnb men. said the United States should develop the bomb for one reason only - to prevent its being used. "its use would be a betrayal of all standards of morality and nf Christian civilization itself.” said the group, headed by the real fa- thor of the H-bomb, Dr. Hans A. Bethe of Cornell University. who discovered how the sun makes its heat with hydrogen. All are attending the annual meeting of the American Physicall Society. Thcy spoko for no group. bllt for themselves as "worried citizens." t They said it is certain that thcl Russians will be able to build the‘ to two diesel engines now in op-E iPresidenTTo ;Acl As Coal l wasnnvcron. l-‘eb s —-\APl- V‘ President Truman is ready to use , the Taft-Ifartley Labor Act against ‘John L. Lcyvis tomorrow and try i“ hull.“ llll its processes. advisers l said today. ‘ The law l3 halt strikes will bei ‘invoked unless Levris‘ soft-coal 31113201‘: arc back at work in the i United Slates tomorrow, white iI-Iouse officials said. The country's {coal pile is down to a 15-day sup- ‘ply in the dead of winter. . But field reports madp it clear ythat the strikes will slat-cad fast ‘tomorrow. not. diminish, unless the ‘Cllléf of the United Mine Workers tgivos the signal. l This signal uias not expected lfnstcad Lewis hinted broadly at ‘a work slowdown if the Taft-Hart- Kley Act forces tile ntEil hack to‘ 1 their jcbs. _ l Under the act's procedure for {halting a strike while contract tcrms are ironed out. a board of inquiry inin the facts first is set up bv tho president. Ordinarily ll reports in about l0 days. Tlhen the ;Attorney-Generztl can ask for an .80-day court injunction against the strike. Last week the President proposed T0 days of normal work while an indepclz-cleni fact board tried lo break thc contract deadlock. This board ivould have made recom- mendations t0 both sides for sei- ticmcnt The operators agreed to ihe plan, l l l l l of strong Republican demands in Crmgress. l-Ie repeatedly said there was no naiicnal emergency just- ifying use of the act. But last week saw scattered ‘strikes svrcii to 100.000 mew-one- fourth of the Lewis work" 10m!‘ ‘in the softcoal mines-after a period of three-day work weeks decreed by Lewis had succeeded in cutting dccp into the country's coal supplies. thus giving him a betlcr bargaining position. Lcvris had "silggesled" the men slay on ibc job, but this mct de- fiance irrm thc diggers who fell back on their traditional “no con- Lraci. no work" stand. Terms of a i948 contract still are in force. because Lewis has been unable in squeeze a better one out of the operators since he first started negotiations last May 26. He has not said specifically what l i German Claims Red Plot 5 To Seize Western Berlin B; (in-urge Boultweiod BONN. Germany. Feb.5—(AP>- Kurt Schumacher. Social D(YIIO'l cratlc leader. said today he has in-, fomiailcnl of a Communist plot to, taki- ovcr Western Berlin on May‘ 28, and said the Alllcs should stop ii with llilrks Tho fiely. talc-dialled St-humach- er spoke at a press conference alf- tcr a ivvo-dzrv rally of chleftains of his party. Ills charges could be part cf a political manoeuvre against the Western German Gov- ernment headed by Chancellor Konrad Adcnuilcr. Schumacher is Opposition loader. This is the plot‘ as he outlined it The planned tally of 600,000 Eastern German Communist youth in Berlin at Whitsuntide-May 26. 2T and 28—is to be the Communist “signal for national insurrection." It is being prepared under the‘ slogan "forward to Berlin" The blue-shirted Communist youths are scheduled to march doiiantlv through the western sectors. named with alpcnsiocks- stout poles five feet long used by mountain climbers. Part of the Soviet ‘wife's “pom, pic's pollce"—virtually an army—’ are to march as members of the youth organization. The marching is intended to paralyze traffic and load to dis- turbances which would provide an excuse for uniformed formations of lilo Soviet-backed policc be "restore order." Schumacher said. About 200.000 youths are to be brought from the Soviet zonc to the outskirts of Berlin by train. Another 400.000 arc to converge on the city by foot from all sides and join in immense columns. The plan for the propaganda spectacle was announced Jan. 3i by Gerhart Eisler, who jumped ball as a Communist agent in the Unitcd States and became infor- mation chief of the East. German flonununist Republic. Sciiumaclier said the wide-open borders of the Western sectors con- stitute a great danger. He added that the Western Powers should stop the demonstrators from enter- ing the Western sectors by station- ing tanks and other forces at streets leading to West Berlin. If they failed to do so. it would be “tantamount to giving up Ber- lln." BERLIN. Fob. 5 --iAP>—-Wcst- crn Allied officials reacted cooly tonight to the proposal of Social- l ____;___._____.__ Berlin's streets open to thc young Communist marchers. but. would enforlc “adequate security meas- ures " "We do not intend to be slam- peded by rumors nor provoked into irrational acts," one American said. Warm Wealhe Comes To B. (l. VANCOUVER, Feb. 5 -— (GP) - Warm weather snapped British Columbia's unprecedented winter cold spell but unleashed new mountain snowslides that today threatened once again to out rsil communications with the east. Officials of both Canadian Na- tional and Canadian Pacific Rall- ways said a night-long battle kept tracks open despite slides in thl Fraser valley canyon. A storm. which brought rain la Vancouver and the lower maln- land. struck the canyon with near- blizzard force. Two feet of snow fell. Two passenger trains and four freights, held up on the C. P. Rf! canyon line, moved westward to- day nftel‘ workmen had battled l! hours to clear away slides. In all but the northern half of thc Province. temperatures were expected to remain above freezing. Thousands of millworkers were sn- ticipating going back to their 10h! after weeks of layoff. Three Deaths When Cur Goes Through lcc MONTREAL. Feb. 5 -- (C?) -— Two persons were drowned and s third died shortly after being res- cued from an automobile which plunged through the ice of a lskn at Labellc, Que, some 100 mile! north of here. Saturday night. First reports said two person! in thc back scat of the vehiclt were drowned but that a man ill the front scat rescued his fiance! “rim is reported to have died latfl of a heart attack. Names of ifhf victims and other details we-rf not immediately available. 4H: HARDEQT JOB is ‘to Loovt tausY WHEN Yonrrzif. ist leader Kurt Schumacher that they use tanks to guard west Ber- lin against a. Communist youth rally next May 26. 27 and 28. Those officials said it was more Betting odds on the election :',';“g§°,,,:;_ WV” b°“"°°" m”: mistook for the girl's residence. nu against him, they Said, and the bmm l the miners‘ demands are. probable they would throw West outcome shined Sngmiy mdny, The Liberals’ Britain“ donmlant intention evidently was to shoot investigation was continuing. “Russia h“ fetched _ throng)“ British bookmakers offered ll puny n. the first (‘uni-tor n, m M"- mbm" Feqml- wldmvf“ lndiscretion _ the most valuablel to 8 against a Conservative cemmm mm only 10 seats i“ H“. “will” "I m‘ vmlémrtihiy hint that our experts helievc the: t victory. compared iyniih 5 “I, 4 last House of Commons. bolrrillligefiionlil? glued/fer: aJe-‘meis “Cogss- (levtelopmtent possible? Said um?‘ , a few days fllw- 1e L“ °f Churchill. himself a Libcml - . i " ’ . Si“ “W” _ _ ° party was a 4-to-7 favorite. l minister years ago. Said that "l" nefnclhtsgv/I etllliigduigrzltanvdis: ikflioilis o o o By "mdiscretlonl. Bethe “Id thpyl - l. e shortening of the odds 0i 4 to “early mien, rasfev vows cast f," J5 mm)", révolver a,“ shot h;m_ ,nieant the publicity given in 3-- 6 of a. week ago. The fillvfilld the“ cnndldntcg will be [hymn] SP1; lm-Ough (he fight lemme, jbilmh dm/Flilpmem- _ t l_i~__i_fi__.?__ figure in each case represents away-t and “mm have m, m“ h, - The scientists said the bombs, H ‘Africa marked the start of s new. iilc amount one would irdilfll‘ decldjng the un-emgndous 155.1%" c; "—*-‘“*—'"-* LONDON‘ Feb 5 ___(AP) __Lord power would be limited only by the; IOITONTO, Feb. 5 ~ cCP) _ erg o! Canadian nr5c0ryi_ t and the first represents ivhai» whether 3mm“ keeps sochusnh L I c - Norm“, who headed the Bank qr amount of‘ hydrcgcn tvnicn could There ll be country-wide celebra- It was the first time that Can- | eve rosslng Engl-and longer than any other be carried in the bomb. U0" "115 J88!‘ in the dwindling adian units. as such. fought shoul- he would win if his party came through. The reason for tho emphasis J11 Coming Events "Mail your Films to} Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Rummage Snlc. Salvation Anny- Tucsday, February Tlh. 1-30- "Vnriely concert French River hull, Monday. Fch. ti. "Dance. St. Peter's Legion Hall. ‘Tuesday night, February 7th. Cllfl Men Orcheu . "IOur 1950 Seed Catalogue is now ready. Send for free copy Arthur Vesey, York, P. E. Island- "llockcy at, Long Clock rink to- night, New Haven Royals vs. Lung Trcck Beavers. Skate aftcr Infill‘- “Hockey tonight in llunler River rink, South Rustieo v!- l-lunter River Shur-Gilins. GMTW Iisrts‘B.30. Skate after. "Show, "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" st Cape Traverse in- night at 130. Also songs by J1!" All-still. "Afton Hall and surroundina districts: Federation of Ailflclll" lure meeting. Wednesday evenimz. February 8th. at 730- 500m" lbeskers in Federation, marketing Ind rural electrification. Social at nary 8th Calf Club "Dance and Basket Canoe Oove Hall, Fcbr sponsored by New Argyle Bagpipe selections. Ladies butch tree. night. . ___. "North River Rink. lllluo lame. Charlottetown arch; vcnu; Mllto d-lorneu. Gums time 8.30. S nlc Ill"- Cl0w"| truck leave: Market Still!" at l o'clock. with If stormy. 101W" l"! tonight. Mon- fishing on ncarh frigid water. He water for l5 min rived. dog feet onto the lc survival in the this month, can voters today "l9 eral Government nppes declared: m once to the This could when greater P flocted in it"?! document Mill- Libernls, lhc r eralinn ago hut 10 members in t mom, are ifflll comeb between the ll‘! o! Labor and C erals are Con! chance of Ill" 4min- |plltlin| o Thursday when the way and he plunvgcd into l5 fcct oi In thc meantime. watched from fusing to venture more than a fow only be didates in the ¢l9¢ll°|l~ LET DOWN BY DOG LA FORTE. Illd.. Rb. 5 —iAPl —\Villiam Jdbloliski. 31. still shivers ivhcn he thinks of man's best friend. Jablonski yvas ice- y Fish 'l‘ra.p Lake surface gave fioundered in the utcs before aid it!‘ his pet t-llc shore, rc- c Firemen and police fin-ally got. Jablonski out. British Liberals Foresee No Early Tax Relief " (By Fraser Wlgtnnl LONDON, Feb. Tho Liberal Party, ;-,_._ (Rcutersl - fighting for general clcclion didly told British y could expect no immediate tax reliefs from a Lib- Thc Liberal election manifesto. ling for the support of the world's most heavily taxed people. “Wc can mous savings in Government ox- pendiiure. but we cannot he Ills- honest enough to pretend that the whole saving would he PM!“ 0" make enor- taxpayer." achicvrrl reduction Wns rc- ler exports, the ulinu pnrly n Rt"- reduccd nowlo hc House 0f Com- giing lo make a ack with more than 400 enn- Squeezed g forces t opposin l Lib- onservatism, idered to have scant lng power-though f votes may have Fatality In N. S. LIVERPOOL. N.S-. Feb. 5—fCPl Edwin E. Howard. 51. and his wife Myrna, 43, were killed near this south shore town tonight when their car was struck by a Conan. ian National Railways locomotive at a level crossing. There were no othcr occupants of the car. How- ard ‘was assistant customs officer herc Tile car was dragged about 50 feet by the locomotive. Howard was pinned in the wreckage and his wife was thrown clear. considerable hearing on sull. The manifesto Party policy thus: l-Iconomics —- Full employment; government ssvlnl by the scrap- ping or merging of government departments; cuts in food lllb- sidies balanced by increased so- cial security benefit: for pension- ers and those with Inge families. International trsdc- Reduction of tariffs, until all are abolished. Defence-Abolition of peacetime conscription "because it creates inefficiency. weakens economy, im- pairs family life and yet leaves far fewer troops ready to fight." World Affairs-WU. N. must be kept in being-We must hold on to the security council at nil costs. for it offers the only machinery through which the development of the hydrogen homb and other hor- rors of science can be brought un- der control." Nationalization-Liberals oppose further Nate ownership, including iron and steel. Monopollcs, if they can not be broken up, should he controlled in the public interest but without change of ownership. the re- Jisted Liberal‘ man in its 256 years, died in his sleep early‘ Saturday. The spruce financier. Whose trademarks were a Vandyke beard. conservatism and secrecy was better known as Montagu Norman. He ivas 78. Ho was made a baron in 194-1 when he retired after 24 years as governor of thc Bank of England. 10 years longer than any hf his predecessors. Lord Norman was known as “the sphinx of Tbrcadncedle Streei"— the address of the institution which was banker to the government, lending its funds, carrying its ac- counts, managing its gold and is- ning its money. There rarely was any precise news about. Mont/ecu Norman-only rumor. speculation and surmise. It was said he thought in ffllliilOfli and spake in monosyllables. In his career he gave just two ncWBPBDQI interviews and made one speech. The fhlerviews totalled ll words. In I926. upon returning front the Ilnited States. he was asked what he had been dninc. and he replied. "my mind is a complete vacuum." in the midst of Britain's i931 financial crisis, he told reporters: "Don't believe mil you hear." Montagu Norman foug-hl. 1n the Boer War. He was mentioned in dispatches, decorated and promoted to captain. His home was on an estate in Kent. when.- he enioyed his only recreations, glide ‘l; and furnit- ure making. "Even if the power were limited to 1.000 times that of a present atomic bomb. thc step from an A-bomb to an H-bomb would be as great as that from an ordinary TNT homh to the atom bomb. “We believe that no nation illS the right to use such a bomb, n0 matter how righteous its cause This bomb is no longer a weapon of war but a means of extermina- tion‘ of whole populations." N. S. Mun Fined $10 For Killing Cal LIVERPOOL, N. S., Feb. o (CP) -~ Harry Croft, 31. of near-I by Charleston Saturday was found guilty of unlawfully killing a cal and was fined $10 and costs of $26.50 by Magistrate Roger Rand Evidence was that Croft. a licensed guide, had shot seven cats belonging to Mrs. Josephine Mills. Croft said the cats wcrr catching partridge in ihc woods near Mrs. Mills‘ hunting lodge. James Donly and Baird, governors of thc and Hobie Tufts. authority on bird life. testified on the amount of damage done by cats in the woods. Mr. Tufts said in reply to s prosecution question that he had never seen a cat kill a game bird. Commons To Have Sound Sysl m UITAWA. Feb. 5 — (C?) -Tlie familiar shouts of "louder!" and “we can't hear you" will be s thing of thc past in the House of 00m- mons by nextayasr. The Public Works Department has awarded s contract to Acoustics Ltd. of Mon- treal to install a modern amplify ing ‘ in the Commons cham- ber. {Is REPORT AIR ATTACK CUXl-IAVEN. Germany. l-‘l-b. 5-- (Reutt-rsi six German fishing trawlcrs which arrived here s11- urday reported they had been ni- tacked by aircraft near Hclgn- lsnd. Two fishermen said there was more than one plane. and that they were British. In London, British Air Ministry and United States Army Air Force officials denied that their bombers were over Helgoland Friday night. ranks of Canada's veterans of the South African War. , It will start Feb. 24. on the cue ‘of the 50th llllniVPrSilfy of Can- iadas greatest triumph in that iconflict the battle of Paardeburg. Civic banquets will be held that night to honor the fewer than 1.500 5\ll‘\'l\f)r‘5 of the first force in carry Canada's banners in a for. ‘eign land. l Many other "jubilee" pvcnts 51-5- planncd for laicr in the year, A committee headed by Mo], 53,1, McCormick of Toronto and an. pointed by the Toronto Association of South African Veterans, hu ibecn making preparations since ‘last Juno. The sponsors will seek to have Canadians recognize that the send- llll; of volunteer units to South By Alton Ii. Blskcslee. - i NEW YORK. Feb. a —tAP| Hundreds of tuberculosis patients will be treated this year with s new drug. born in Germany. and called TB-f. It has been given to 7.000 pcr- sons in Germany in the last two _vcars, and credited with many flood effects. American doctors are ‘Hlust beginning trials to learn what ‘it may do. Their tests will take about a year, hilt they have grad ‘reasons for hoping TB-l will b6- v come anoihcr major weapon l xignitlst. tuberculosis 3 'I"hc hopes are based oil the r»- isilis in Gclanatiy. studied last fail by Dr. ll. Corwin Hinshaw of Stanford Llnivcrsitv, and Dr Walsh McDermott of the New York Hospital-Cornell Medical College German doctors reported re- lmarknble recoveries of many pat- iitnts wiih lung rs. nltcr getting ‘New Germ; ‘Drugl Is ' yAid In Fight Against TB Lawrence , Nova Scotis Fish and Game Association.‘ t der to shoulder with men of the} Imperial Army and from other‘. parts of the Enlplrc. The Canadians‘ heroic charge it Paurdeburg, vrhich brought thc surrender of Boer General Cromc and his men. is considered a turn- nlg-point in the war. In that sanlc year the Canadians proved their. mctilc. thc last or the British gal-M rlson rczilncllts left Canada. Chic banquets Feb. ‘i will .5 "in followed illv nest clay by uhurclnbcc parades and special services. Otlr, cr ceremonies planned for Springi and summer are the placing nit wreaths of sllvcr leaves from Table‘ Mountain on all South African‘ monuments in Canada, and n ser-‘ ins nI band concerts to coincide. with thc anniversaries of Hale king, Pretoria and other battles. .. ._._____,________ l p . ong wiih the bed rest,‘ for four lo six months. Lung TB. is the hardest type to cure with present drilgs. But TB-l was used at a time when the Ger- man people began getting better food and car» So there's a quest- ion ‘mw much thc recoveries were due to better living. and how much tn the drug. TB-l also wasn't as dfiprntiflblo or as quick in action against lung vilborcillcisls as streptomycin. German doctors said Ono big hope is that TB-l ivill be a holpnlaie for SiTPDlA/JlyCih in 95TH’ fighting lung TB. Streptomycin usually’ loses its punch aftr-r a few wocks or lnonih< duc to develop lncnt of I‘!\.\lSi.’lilI'(‘. (C?) ‘Minimum and maximum temillelll’ TORONTO. l-‘eb. 5 — titres: Vancouver 34. 422 Vllllflll" 32, 4.3: Calgary 5b. 2: Regina 8. l3; Winnipeg s. l0; Toronto 20. 32: 0t lawn 4h. ll; Montreal 8b. ‘i; Que- lgh, 3h; Saint John l; Moncton 10b, IlJllllZlX 6. lo, Charlottetown 4b. 4h; Sydney 5. 8‘ Yarmouth l2. l4; st. Johns l. ‘.11. b-brilmv o HALIFAX, Feb. 5 -—(CP» —Oi~ ficial inland forecasts issued t‘:- nlght by thc Dominion Public \‘i'cat‘ier Offivo at llaiifax: Synopsis: All day Sunday strong north westerly winds blouthi hitter-ll cold llll‘ from thc Arctic By lain i-vcnin; temperatures \\'rrc nlrcari.‘ i‘: hclnw or colder ill the northcfl? half of Nova Scotta. in Prince Ed ward Island and New Brunswick i and as much as‘ 25 below along i.h| the north shore of the Gulf of Si Lawrence. Only in Southern Novl Scolia were temperatures slit above zero and those were fore cast to fail below before morning It was about the coldest flight thul far this winter. Monday will be sunny and thl lempcraturcs a little milder than: on Sunday. hut-it will be still as extrnncly" cold day Regional internal‘. midnight hlondnyt Prince Edward Isond-Ciear and r-xtlrmelyl cwid Light winds. Low Monday morning and blah in thr afternoon at Charlotielrwvr l5 bclnw and zero High lldc valid unti‘ 12.45 A. M today at TB-i belongs lo an entirely-new and 1.744 P. M. family oi drugs. known as thicscmicarhazoncs. Its anti-T. B. effects were discovered by Pro- lessor Gerhard Domagk. Nobel prize winner for dcvclopnont. of the sulfa drugs. BOBDEN-TORMENTINB FERRY SERVICE WEEK DAYS Lv. Borden Ly. Clpg Tormenlins 0.10 AM. 2.40 PM. I a