Maxims OF A MERE "MAN 1 The Child is father of the Man. By Carries-2 Charlottetown. lulnnses-side in P.E.!. 80.00.. other Provinces and U.9.A. 312.00 per auniun.) 315.00 per anniun. Elsewhere Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1952 Little said is soonest mended. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN 12 PAGES The Guardian. Five cents Morning Daily Founded 1807. RITAIN GIVES TOP PRIORITY TO TWO NEW JET BOMBERS Repori: 'Missiing LinIg' Caught OH African Coast Howe Forecasts Another Prosperous Year For Canada OTTAWA. Dec. 29 -(GP) - rrade Minister Howe today fore- cast another prosperous year for Cnnada in 1953, marked by the heaviest flow of arms from Canad- ian factories in peacetime history. Defence factories. he predicted. will remain in business and turn nut. big supplies of arms even after the current three-year 55,000,000,- 300 defence program terminates ui March, 1954. In a 5,000-word year-end state- ment. Mr. Howe. who is minister of trade as well as defence production, summed up Canada's 1952 industri- al achievements and said that in- comes and employment may in- crease next year. He estimated that in 1952, Can- M111: 1. Exported it record 34.250.000.- 000 worth of goods, up from the )1)sl;gili0U5 high of 53.003.000.000 in 2. Had a peak labor income of about 510.750.000.000. 11 biilion-dol- iar boost from 50.040.000.000 in 1951. This "high" purchasing power would provide an element of strength ,to consumer spending and to the economy as a whole in the new year. 3. Had a total record capital in- vcstment program of 35.200.000.000 for defence installations, develop- ment of strategic resources and civilian industry. This compared with the previous high of 34.600.- 000000 in 1951. "The Canadian people as a whole." said Mr. Howe. "have con- Iinued in 1952 to enjoy a condition of prosperity marked by strong ex- port demand for staple products. substantial investment in defence and resource development projects. generally favorable conditions as regards employment and income and f0iiOW1ll3'1hO”Qile!lOIlflla' sal- vage of wheat. left unhorvested last lllnt-er. by the production of a rec- ord grain crop.” As for 1953, the Minister added: "Present piospccts show little in- dlcation of any major change in 1953, from the generally favorable 11"lr)1:,12ci'i'tion.a that have prevallcd' in There could be "soft spots” in the economy next year, he con- cluded, but "prospective demands Report New TWICE A FATHER - Father Patrick Norton, above. reads his breviary shortly after he 89-year- old Iowan was ordainc a priest of the Roman Catholic Church in ceremonies at the Church of San Girolamo, in Rome. Father Norton bears the unusual distinction of being both a natural. and spiritual "father." Before the death of his wife some years ago, the then Pat- rick Norton raised a family of 14. Following her death the widowed husband entered the seminary to study for the priesthood. One oi his acne is A priest, and another is studying for Holy Orders in the U. S. for defence. for capital expansion and for exports. when taken in conjuction with the present strengthening in the domestic con- sumer market, suggest the main- tenance in 1953 of a generally high level of activity and continued moderate upward movement in in- comes and employment." Secrets Of Life, Disease Found By Alton L. Biakoelee I 81'. hours. Dec. 29 -(AP)- rhe secret of how life makes new We 13 bmullht nearer solution by discoveries announced today. The findings also partly answer unother great puzzle-how viruses manage to force living cells to Make new viruses that cause oollo. 'flu,' and other diseueg, They do it by slick. subversive Work that would make fifth-col- umnists jealous. , tThe discoveries were reported 0005' to the American Association for the Advancement of science by Dr. Barry Commoner. associate professor of plant physiology at Washington Univesity here. By one approach. he tackled both mysteries. . I-MEET celk reproduce them- selves turning out materials to make new cells exactly like the Parents. A virus does about the same lhms. To reproduce itself, it must enter a living cell. - - plrhere. it not only rob; the cell Coming Events "Unloading car of Coal, Tug. day. J. 1'. Morris. Kinkora. "Din" It K0115”! Cross school Friday night. Jan. 2. "Cards and dance in Vernon I-fall. WWPOHIY. Decembe Slat. Orch- estra and lunches. "Flrmerl. ask about the shut Cain Feed Finance Plan. For part- .culars contact your local Ices mu; "C0ma'to the opening skate lgitntn Years night at North River "m- . A "Dance the old year out and the new year in at Bcnshaw Wo- m'n's Institute Hall. Wednesday. Dec. am. Sale of lunches. "see st. Peters 0. Y. 0. repeat gieir variety concert in st. Peter's av nob Na 0 Hall. Tuesday. De- cember aotn. tsrting at I.” P. If. ' "The salvation Army, , Oharlol.te- own. P. E. I. Watch Night service. P ednesds . December, list. 11.00 - M. Al are welcome to this lmlilue service. "Pray out the old. of nutrients the cell needs. but does far more. It takes over the cells. own machinery. forcing the cell into slave labor to make nun. dreds of new viruses. The cell normally follows elabor- ate, .lntricate steps to make a new cell. The virus manages to gwitcn W50 559111., to turn out viruses. Dr. Cominone and associates re- P01”?-Gii finding some of these chemical steps and the changes that occur. Learning these steps could open the way to preventing some virus diseases, by interrupting these steps, and since the mechanism of reproduction is so similar. the findings also could explain more about how living. healthy cells reproduce themselves. i As a tool, Dr. commoner used the tobacco moelao virus. which infects tobacco leaves. Much al- ready is known about this virus. Like living tissue. the virus is com- posed of protein. .s...i WAKEFIELD. Yorkshire, Eng- land, Dec. 29 - (AP) - Dr. Aigin Nunn May - who peddied a m secrets to the Russians for 8700 and two bottles of whisky - slipped out of prison a free man today. After completing six years and eight months of a 10-year term, the slight, bespectacled scientist. who once worked in Canada. col- lected a new ration book and a third-class train ticket. Then detectives. using all their police lore to elude :0 reporters at Wakefield Prisonis great front gate. spirited him out into the free world. , . A prisoner shouted to reporters through his cell window that May left the prison at about 1.30 cm. today. Another prisoner scrawled on a window the word "gone." Prison Governor F. C. ltaiislsy told reporters: "I can tell you now that Nunn May has been dig. oharged. That is all I can say." any honve of a brother, Ralph, in the village of Ohalfont at. Peter, 3) miles from London. He would not see reporters. A friend of the fam- ily said Ms! appeared pale but PM! in the new." ' rled flight to reach the showed up later at the of apparently was in good health. Fish Had-Reen lhoughi Exiincl 50 Million Years DURBAN. South Africa. Dec. 29 -(Reuters)-A scientist radioed tonight that a mysterious creature caught off the Madagascar coast is a genuine coelacanth, a fish once thought to have been extinct for 60,000,000 years. .1. B. L. smith sent. the message from the plane on which he is fly- ing back to Durban from the Comoro Islands. l-le said he was "elated" with the results of his examination on the little isle of Dzaoudzi, where the specimen was caught. The creature is about the size and weight of a small man, with fins shaped like crude arms and legs. The coelacanth is suspected to be the "missing link" between the stage when evolutionists say or- ganisms crawled out of the sea and began living on land. The specimen was caught off the Comoro Islands. between Africa and the Island of Madagascar. Prof. Smith, an lchthyologist from Rhodes University, made the hur- creature before it could rot. First Caught 14 Years Ago It wasn't until 14 years ago that the first coelacanth was caught. off South Africa. and it deterior- ated before scientists could got :1 good look at it. The new specimen was partially preserved in formalin. the only suitable chemical available on the island. The first one caught off Madn- gascar in the same vicinity. and at the same time of year as the new one, was a weird monster weighing 127 pounds. Steel blue and about five feet long, it died three hours after amazed trawler fishermen brought it ,iishore. It decayed rapidly. lletgln Brief i.oNDo'N. 93.7213 -(CP)- In- formed sources here today sai Prime Minister Churchill wil urge President-elect Eisenhower to consult fully with Britain before the United states undertakes any new moves in the Far East. PARIS. Dec. 29 -(R.eut.ers)- Georges Bldault is expected to ask the French Parliament for far- reaching new powers if he suc- ceeds in rounding up enough sup- port to become France's new pre- mier. , MONTREAL, Dec. 29 - tCPt - The Federal Board of Transport Commissioners today took under advisement a proposal for a ll.- 2.'10,000 Lmdei-pass at suburban Vai- ois which would eliminate the level crossing there, scene of 14 fatalities during the last four years. OTTAWA, Dec. 29 - (CP) Kenneth W. Taylor has become act- ing deputy minister of finance fol- lowing the death Saturday of Wil- liam Clifford Clark, 12 Finance De- partment official said tonight. VANCOUVER, Dec. 29 - ICP) .s The Federal Government has ap- proved plans for British Columbia to become the first province to un- dertake research into the sociolog- ical aspects of narcotics addiction, it. was learned today. Police say about one-third of Canada's 1,300 addicts live in Vancouver. First Convicted Atom Spy Freed F rorn Prison soviet records at Msy's' trial- showed he got money and whisky for his secrets. 1-ie admitted slip- ping the Russians samples of uranium used in making the first U.s. atom bomb. May never repented. He said he gave secrets to the Russians "for the safety of mankind." The U. 5. Joint Congressional Committee of Atomic Energy said in 1001 that May and other atom spies - Bri- tain's Dr. Klaus Fuchs and Am- erica's Julius and Ethel Rosen- berg - "advanced the soviet :- tomic energy program by 18 months at a minimum." Mary was a trusted physicist at the heart of the Canadian - Bri- tish - American atom set-up un- til a soviet. embassy clerk in Ot- tawa named him as a key man in a Soviet spy ring in Canada. Tha'. Canada's spy probe of Fuchs later got 14 years in Jail for funnelling a-secrets to nus- a. The Rossnliergs await death in the electric chair at sing sing. They were convicted of funnelling. a-secrets from Lon Alamoa, N. M.. cradle of 11.8. atom efforts, to the Russians. Army Manpower . Shows Increase OTTAWA, Dec. 29-- (CP)--The army increased its manpower in November for the first "time in six months. Recruiting figures released to- day showed that the army had 47,702 men at the end of Novem- ber compared to 47,540 at the end of October. The high point was reached in May when the army hit 49,983. The Defence Department's re- lease reflected a familiar pattern for all three forces. They took in 2126' recruits in November but discharges cut the net intake to less than 900. At the end of October, their total strength was 99,702, by the end of November 100,592. The air force now has 37,962 men und women, the navyll-1,928. Annual-Pull Show. Sole March 10-11 TORONTO. Dec. 20 -(CP)- The fourth annual. bull show and sale of beef bulls will be held March 10-11 in the sheep and swine arena of the Royal Winter Fare building. All entries must be in by Jan. 10. c.P.ii.Torders Ten Diesel Locomotives KINGSTON. Dec. 29 -(OP)- The Canadian Locomotive Com- pany here has begun construction of 10-diesel-electric locomotives for the Canadian Pacific Railway an official of the locomotive com- pany said today. He said the order for the 1.800-horsepower engines is valued at 31.200000. , C. P. R. EARNINGS MONTREAL. Dec. 29 -(GP) -- Net earnings of 52.89.1112 for Nov- ember were reported today by Can- adian Paciflc Railway Company. compared with 34,134,528 for the corresponding month in 1951. Gross earnings were s38,948,6-14 and working expenses 536,053,532. In November. 1051, gross earnings totalled 537,914,345 and working Govlt Combs Records For Reply In Famous llHorse Scandal” Case OTTAWA, Dec. 29-(CF)-The Government has officials comb- iiig the records to see what can be done to tame the horses that reared out of the Currie report to become nationally famous almost overnight. The signs now are that the Cabi- net will indicatc when Parllamentv rcconveiies Jan. 12 that it doesn't-i agree with that celebrated line in the report which says the horses got on the army payrolls as non- existent laborers. Of all the statements in that controversial report on the Army Works Service, few hit the public with the impact of the one which said that during the clearing of an area at Camp Petawavta. 0nt., "horses were hired by army person- nel and placed on the payrolls un- der the names of iion-existent laborers." The -horses have emerged int cartoons, in endless wisecracks both in and out of Parliament, in cluster, higher Three Civil Airliners Also Gel Green light LONDON. Dec. '2li-tR.eutere)- Super-priority ratings for produc- tion of Britain's two new revolut- ionary jet bombers-the crescent winged KP-00 and the triangular Avro-089-were announced today hy Supply Minister Duncan San- dys. i The I-I-P-840, R four-engined monster with a crescent shaped wing, flew for the first timi- Christmas Eve and came off the secret list last Saturday. Its mak- ers. Handley Page. say it can fly and farther with at heavier hombload than any other bomber. The delta-wing Avro 689-a fly- ing wing-came off the secret list last summer and made its debut Summeriiile Station Group Captain A. G. Kenyon, C.D. Cotnniaiidimz 0ffiCPl' R.C,A.F, Station Sunimerside, yesterday at- teriiooii received confirmation that the Air Navigation School at Sum- merside is to be moved to Winni- at. the Parnborougli air show. Saiidys also extended super- priority to makers of three com-i mercial airliners, likely to become Britain's most valuable export, These are the Comet. jetliner and two turbo-prop jobs-the Viscount and the Britannia l The super-priority means that manufacturers will be able to get scarce materials from six to 12 months earlier than if they had to wait heir normal turn. doggerel, in telegrams to mem- bers of Parliament, in newspaper headlines and feature stories andv mons order paper which will be answered when the House recon- venes. Worried B,v,Nag1I One veteran Liberal Party stra- tegist said privately, "If it weren't for those d--- horses, this situa- tion wouldn't be too tough at. all. But those nags are going to gal- lop from coast to coast." The government's answer prob- ably will be that it views the mat- ter in a different light than Mr. Report lie.aTwTilun A Of Hogs To Market EDMONTON, Dec. 29 -tCPl - Llnes of trucks loaded with hogs today besieged gates of stockyards and packing plants in Edmonton as producers marketed their animals before the year-end reduction of 53 I hundred-weight in the federal support price. , Before the Edmonton livestock exchange closed for the Christmas holidays. 7.762 hogs were delivered to the public stockyards in three days. Another 1,140 head arrived over the week-end to await opening expanses 533,779,819. Both the landed quantity and landed value of fish on Prince Ed- ward Island show an increase for the year 1952. reports Mr. J.J. Lar- rabee, supervisor for the Federal Department of Fisheries. Cod shows a small decrease of 9.461 hundredweight in quantity landed with a decrease in landed value of 35,355, while haddock has an increase of 9,103 hundredwcight. with an increase in landed value of 942.478. l-lake has an increase of 23.070 hundredwelshi: and an in- crease in value of 351.311. Plalce shows an increase of 8,841 hundred- weight and an increase in value of s3o,937. These increases are due to trawlers operating out of souria and the new processing plant loc- ated in sourls. Lobsters, which are our most im- portant fishery and account for about half the value of the fisher- ies on Prince Edward Island. show an increase in quantity landed of 1.170 hiindredweight with an in- crease in tended value of 8147.076. 1952 of today's market. Substantial increase Shown in Fishery Figures This Year which is very encouraging to see our lobster catch holding up under the extensive fishing that is carried on. Oysters show an increase of 11.- 522 liundredwciglit and 539,096 which is also encouraging and in-l dicates a good profit to those on-r gaged in the industry. Irish moss shows an increase of 30,378 liundredweiglit in catch and an increase in value of 336,969. This has been the best year for Irish moss collection on Prince Edward Island. The following figures show the quantity of fish landed in Prince Edward Island with the landed value for the period January. 1952 to November. 1952 inclusive com- pared with the same period for 1951. It will be noted that the stat.- lstica given are to November 30th only and in some cases does not give a true picture of the fisheries; for example smelts now show a de- crease but. when December totals, are available. this decrease will uii-, doubtedly not be so marked: 1951 Quantity Landed Qiianiiv Landed Increase or Landed Value Landed Value Decrease Kind of Fish in in in in Cwt. it Cwt. s Cvri. a God ,. . 34,3411 00,903 43.11217 102.3111 17.411 5.355 Haddock . 11.3114 52.4152 2.2171 . 9,974 9,103 42,471: I-lake 40.743 93.5511 2.7.303 41.947 23.17711 51.011 Plaica .. . . 9,075 33,1100 an 2.1729 11.1741 30.937 Winter Flounder ...; 110 220 269 429 159 200 Herrins 49.739 42.971 02.7129 00.307 111.090 23.910 Mackerel 11.110 30.0411 15.1011 39,053 4,050 9,207 Alewlves too 00 so 25 .50 :15 salmon 11 1105 1 i 440 A 10.. Bmetts 4.0117 01.2115 am 77.502 2.770 16.217 Tomcad R1 205 :97 am 310 can Eels 1.7.1 1.276 2-1-1 2.225 172 040 Lobster . . 94.1190 1,049,130 33,420 1,702,054 1,170 147,070 Clams - Bar .. . 7001: 10.7177 1771 1,279 5.105 15.491 Clams-Soft-Shelled 10,494 79.035 5.020 12,210 4.94:. 2s,s2.-1 Qushauss . 14,441 41.750 2.325 5.502 12.110 30,193 Oysters . 2.5.07.7 107,955 14,351 07.359 11.522 39,090 Crabs . 1,205 2,971 220 1,100 1.040 1.1171 Scallops . 130 9.144 as 2,000 121 0.544 Irish Moss 101.500 51.1130 04.531 30.371! 311,909 Toma 2,.ss2,2a:1 310,049 2.202.079 73,000 379,005 Full production of the Comet jeytliner and the Britannia will put Japan within one day's fly- finally in a question on the Com- mg time of London by 1955' ski Ml". Mules Thomas, rhalrnian of Brit- ish Overseas Airways Corporation predicted today. BOAC plans to fly Bi-itannias carrying 100 passengers and with Ffcomritlnucd on'PaTge'TlliCol.-ll” Put Extra Long-Range Fuel Tanks on Liner SOUTHAMPTON. Dec. 29 -- (Reuters)--The 84.000-ion Cunard liner Queen Elizabeth, undergoing a thorough overhaul in dry dock here. is being equipped with ex- tra lbng-range fuel tanks. A spokesman of the Cunard Line refused to comment today on the new range of the liner. put at 7.000 miles in a report published in a London evening newspaper. With the new tanks. the Queen Elizabeth will be able to make the trans-Atlantic crossing with- out refuc-lling. Nancy Oakes Weds German Baron NASSAU, Bahamas, Dec. 29 - (AP)-Radiant Nancy Oakes. who will inherit a huge gold fortune, was m:u'1'led tonight to Ernst Lys- sard Von l-loynlngen l-luene, young German baron, at a brilliant wed- ding service in this British colonial town. The candlelight ceremony took place in the A glican church of St Mary the Virg n and was perform- ed by the Lord Bishop of Nassau. Rt. Rev, Spence Burton. A glittering society crowd from the Bahamas, the United states. Canada, England and Mexico pack- ed the church and hundreds stood outside during the ceremony. The Governor of the Bahamas, Gen. Sir Robert Ross Neville, with Lady Neville, attended the cere- mony. 1 Lady Eunice Oakes. mother of, the bride. was present, with liar? son. sir Sydney Oakcs, and Lady Oakes. The couple will honeymoon in F.urope before going to Mexico. where the baron is completing languages and economics studios. French To Try Nazis For Oradour Massacre By CHARLES C. LANE l PARIS, Dec. 20 - (AP: -Nnir- teen former Nazi SS (Elite Guard) troopers go on trial before a mili- tary tribunal at Bordeaux next month. accused of responsibility for the sack of the village of Oradour-Eur-Glance in 1944 and the murder of 682 inhabitants. only six citizens of the t.iiiy farming community survived the massacre. Oradourls ordeal began at 1.30 p.ni. 011 Saturday, June 10. 1944- two years to the day after the Ger- mans, in a similar fit of anger, levelled the Czech village of Lidlce, shot all its men, sent all its wo- men tn concentration camps and scattered the children among Ger- man families. On that awful Saturday after- noon in 1944, Der Fuehrer Regi- ment of Das Reich SS Division rounded tip all the villagers of Oradour in the market square. Maj. Dickman. the German commander. accused the Mayor of sheltering resistance flgliters and hiding arms. The Mayor denied it. The Germans searched and found noth- ing. - All the women and children were locked in the village church. At 3.30 there was a burst. of ma- chine-gun fire and the massacre J 3110 men, peg, Manitoba. some time in the fall of 1953. 1 The Operational Training Unit and 103 Air Rescue Squadron now stationed at Greenwood, will take over the facilities of Station Sunimerside when it has been vacated by the Navigation School. As-'ui'aiice was given last even- ing by Group Captain Kenyon and by Mr J. Watson MacNaught. M. P., that the cliaiiize in the role of Station Summerside would not imean a decrease in the number of lpersoiiriel stationed here except Iperhaps during the transition lpcriod. MacNauclit stated that he had been informed that the ,changeovcr will mean some in- crease in personnel. He stressed the point that the permanent na- uture of the building program at R. lC.A.F. Station Summerside should be sufficient indication that it will be maintained as at perman- ent station. He made reference to the new modern control tower, a !large new supply building. and other construction now underway on. the Station: and as further tevidence of the permanent im- ,poi'tancc in which the Summerside gstation is regarded he referred to .the call for tenders now published ,for the cniistruc-t.ion of a. new well. pump house and storage tank of concrete construction, the cost of which may exceed 3500000. The new well, 6 inches in dia- meter, will be over 300 feet deep and will have a storage tank for 200,000 gallons. The fact that the present facil- ities are only about one-half this capacity. and that permanent con- structinii coiitiitues at the Sum- mersidc Station. should indicate M1". MacNaught said. that any change in the number of per- sonncl will certainly not be less than are now stationed here. An operation training unit is the stage at which the various types of aircrcws are brought to- gether after graduating from their basic air crew courses, and form air crews pertaining to some op- eratinnal role. The role played by this parti- cular operational unit is primar- ily, .at the present time, one of Maritime reconnaissaiice: and the search and rescue squadron is, as its name implies. engaged in search and rescue work. While both will be stationed at SllnllIl'3l'5.ldi3, the Operational Train- tiiig Unit and the Search and Ros- cue Squadron are separate units ,and are not connected in any way. ' S. (ITTAVVA. DEC. 29 -(CF) -The ,:ii'm, will close its emergency of- 'ficrr-ti'aiiiing school at Camp Bor- deii, Ont. at. the and of.ianuary, it was annmiiiccd today. The Officers Candidate School was established in June, 1951, to meet an urgent need for junior of- flcers for formatlniis assigned in Korea and C.er1nn.iiy. lt graduated WK? Oil. Then the Geriiiniis entered and in a mid clinsc among the pews and before the altar the troopers shot and rliihbrd the women and cliildrcii in death. Tlicii they threw inreiidiary grciiaclos into the church to set it. alire. One wnmiin. shot five times, sur- vived. Five other residents were away from Oradour that day. Ex- cept for those, all were slaughter- ccl. Who is giiilty? In eight. years of lnvrstigatiniis French authorities have identified 65 men they be- il('VE to he most. responsible. only 19 of these survive or can be found. Those to go on trial at Bordeaux Jan. 12 include a dozen French- men from Alsace who claim they were forced into the German army against their will. The man per- haps mnst directly responsible Maj. Dickman - was killed a few days later while fighting in Nor- mandy. The croiviiiiig irony is that it probably was a mistake. The iii- vestigators believe the village the Germans actually were looking for was Oradour-Sur-vayres, 15 miles away. which actually was a resist- ance centre. and not Oradour-Burn RCAF Air Navigation School At Summerside To Be Moved To Manitoba in Fall Of 1953 Operational Training Unit And Air Rescue Squadron At Greenwood Will Take Over Facilities Declares. Farm Income Lagging TRURO. Der. E-(CPJ-Farm income has not kept. pace with that in other walks of life, W. S. Marin-an. said in his presidential address to lhP annual meeting of the Nova Scnlia Farmers Assoc- iatirin here torliiy. "Although our country has en- joyed the greatest, prosperity in history the past, year, it was not so with agriculture; many of our farmers are receiving their pro- sperity income from some source other than the land," he said. Farmers were finding that the price of produce was dropping while costs were increasing. Add- ed to this was a bad year for disease. featured by the province'l first major seige of Newcastle disease which resulted in heavy loss to poultry producers. Coldwell Undergoes Minor Operation 29 OTTAWA, Dec. -rOP)- M. .i'. Coldwell. national OCP leader, today underwent is minor surgical operation and hospital authorities described his condition as ”good." The 64-year-old member of Pan liament for ' nosetown-aiggai-.sas.' katchewan. entered Ottawa -Civil Hospital for a check-up last Sat: urday. Trenton Women will Be 106 Thursday TRENTON. 0nt., Dec. 29 -(CP) Mrs. Jane Mitchell will be 106 Thursday. She has never seen I movie. Now confined to bed, she jokingly adds another year to her lage. An ancient Bible kept in the farmhouse where she lives some 15 miles west ,of Belleville and says it shows she was born Jan- uary 1, 1847. she has 18 grand- children and seven great.-grand- children. WAS1-IINCTONF Dec. 29 ---'Al?) The Italian Government complain- ed todav to the United States a- gainst ew immigration regula- tions which require detailed in- vestigation of foreign seamen coming to American ports. xiii: Boaaowaas Mario is "TOUCH HALIFAX. Dec. 29 - (CF) - Oificial forecasts issued tonlglit by the Dominion Public weather of- lice llf'l'c and valid until midnight Tuesday. Synopsis: The storm that caused snow in the Maritimes over the week-cncl was centred north of Newfound- laud tonight. In its wake moder- ute to strong west and northwest winds drove cold air into the dis- trict. A ireakeiiiiig disturbance near Montreal is moving southcastward. As it passes off the New England coast Tuesday, it may cause snow- flurrics in Western Nova Bcotias Elsewhere in the district little change is expected in the weather. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island - Clear with a few cloudy intervals. Cold- er. West. winds 20. Low and high Tuesday at Charlottetown 8 and 90. High tide today at Charlottetown at 10.47 A. M. and 9.40 P. M. High tide on the North shore at 0.45 A M. and 4.51 P. M. - suminerside tide eighteen min- utes liiter than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 1.51 A. M. and Glance at all. sets at 4.40 P. M.