c» Chinrv (vent "with the ‘United l ‘i; {is cyrus thins. Born llerc. llad Varied Career- -_- NGTON. new e - (Wt W551“ e 5.1mm Island farm (cy) Chlnm is the charlo o! xeenlns on“ lll __A Princ hay, gyms B. mail l“ United That lmy a. 1cm; (hen he has 1mm. ffjfff, regarded." n dustriai relations eXW 5- H,; was fl l1 states industri- came Tilda llilcighlasecrvice created bl’ t!" TM!‘ llrlrticy‘ Lnbor Act. , 1 Chmg 15 5 giant 0f I man, BX t w"... inches tail. with russed- iefjokrd fflqturgg, who llelicvcs iungunri "l1nn1nn" relations as $1,‘. ban solution of public and in- '. 1 rsputcs. iisl a word-plctuslo of him “en 1... chairman o! a Iloting 12¢ qncctazlciressed: ‘"}lc nus born - sometimes I H,“ ,, w...- 14 years use. but uguuny m. seems to have the lvistlonl of a greut-great-grand- W511... size _ a v. w 11: me _in _ iapger than last year's 3.21m; m else - you could hide “mm- gg; golf - in the low 80s when he's good, but when he's had like the rest oi us: 118F801“! qualifications - he 1S mt WOTih a dam as a liar; in general he is a swell suli" Went West At 18 A More specifically. Chink wfl 1mm n: Red Point, King's O0llntY~ nellf the northeastern tip of prince Edward Island. Mav 21. 187s - 71 years ago. After college W; a lulslness (lonrso in Chef"!!!- mrn hr» u-Ont west at 19. lperldinK lhrcc wnrs huviua furvn products y... [i rnhhor between Cnlvarv and mnwoton, when. he reca!i<. the in.» Viscount Bennett. Sent-tor Jnmcs lonelier"! 8N! senai/Q!‘ P!“ llnrlt< were getting their start in Calvary. Crfl!) failure ended ‘his western career and he finallv joined the trelr of Maritime wmth to Boston. landing there in 1900 ‘With C31 if! m‘: bucket." no got, n lob as motorrnan on the street railwnv and advanced st-lad- lh- tlil 1n 19l2, at 36. he was head of rolling stock and shops. and "on the side". was admitted to titc Illnssarhusetts bar as a result oi law studies at. night. Thai your o strike on the rail- ‘...- t-hncht him appointment as lndnctrtnl relations officer. One lllFl"l‘4‘J cited n_s typical of him: “Yrn won't strike.” he once told ll union. "We'll nrbltrate._.'_i'm gbing to be arbitrary about it‘ and name ihc nhltrator." He thereupon (from the presidént of the street- car n1cn'.= union. - .~ Rubber Company in I919 as 1' of industrial and public 1s. hv lhc simple expedient 1 them he wanted to help tilvnl run their business. lle hnd been with them since ":1! he lock his new job. except thaw nut on the United States 1 l-uhor Board and for lectures tics and elsewhere, and l; lrrzlliscs on labor pro- (‘oonsels Moderation "Conflict between management and l11i1or is unnecessary." he says. "Na 'i\\'n groups have a greater cemznnniiy’ of interests. 'I'hey have cver_v1hi11g to lose and nothing iv lznin b»; fighting each other.” ills prescription: "Mrnlcrntlon. co-operstlon — sit down and talk it over." Ching has been an American (‘iillvtl slncc 1900, but every <nn1nnlr cxccpt four since i900 he il-ll brcn hack to the Island lsinlrc i:c has three sislérs “and d uiniv lluvk of nieces. nephews and Vilikillfi." Island s" 1,, he was an Island farm time ago. b!" Ill!" been street railway lawyer, conclllator, and the dean of in- aturai choice when . T“ an last September President pfioirgt a. director of the Mediation and Concili- 4 CovonPrhsceEdvvs arm Boy U. 8. Export In Labor rd Island 1.1.0.. 0.6. Sphere SECOND SECTION ltov. Jacob llcansy tiles At Ct. Stephan, ll. B. (st. Stephen. N3. Exchansel Friends and former parishiOnlTl United Church Minister. were grieved to learn of his death. which occurred Saturday evening in hospital after several month! of failing health. He had entered hospital about a week previous. McCoii Church. settled here 011 retiring in 1983 and for most o! that time had resided on Prince" Street. He was born at Clinton. Prince Edward Island. July 1'7. 1667, ono of eleven children of the late Robert and Harriet (Picker- ing) l-leaney. He received his for- mal education at Mount Allison Academy and Mount Allison Un- iversity. where he was graduated with thg degree of B.A., and en- tered the ministry about the turn of the century. one of his early pastorates having been at Deer Ig]and_ He occupied the pulpit of McCoil Church from i922 to 1906. On two occasions he was minister of Carleton Methodist Church in Saint John, and also served for several years in Goban. Sask. Charlottetown and Cornwall. P- EI, and a brief term in Nova Sco- tla. widow, Two Sons Survive He was married July 9. 1901-10 Georgina. McKenzie Sutherland of Morell, Prince Edward Island, who survives him with two sons. Gor- don S. Heaney. Sudbury, Ont, and Bsiold D. Besney. superintendent of the government experimental forestry station at Chalk River. Ont. There also survive two grand- children, and of his awn family circle one brother and four sisters, are living, all residents of Clinton, P.E.I. A brief funeral service. attend- ed by numerous friends, was held at MacDonald's Funeral Home, Marks Street. at 2.30 Monday af- ternoon, Rev. B.D. Earle officiated, and was assisted by Rev. WE. Aitken, Harvey, and Rev. Dr. F12. Boothroyd, St. Andrews. Other members oil the clergy attending were Rev. D.C. MacKensle, Oak Bay. and- 5W1 Lloyd Archer. Wa- wels- . The body was taken to Clinton. P.E.I.. where funeral rites were conducted yesterday at. his boy-I hood home. Accompanying the body were his t-wo sons, who were called home by his death. . - Mrs. H.D. l-leaney arrived here a week before his passing and rc- mained at home with Mrs. Jacob I-leaney who was unable to attend the services at Clinton. An eloquent speaker, Rev. Mr. Heaney was highly regarded in the community, combining with his ability s: a minister an unfailing sense o! humor and a broad, sym- pathetic interest in the welfare of others which extended for beyond the limits of his own congregation. His cordial manner and kindly concern in those about him won the affection of all and his passing is widely regretted. Canadian Gold Production lip ‘ oTrAwA. Dec. a-(orl-lcana- V“ "i"! ills American cronies this year, recording o. seven-oer- zltlalilnost summer fixtures 1n cent increase during the fi:s_t lllllllls Island centres. For many night months, years he has gone to a trout fish- '"K on Murray River. D by the late Sir Louis (h»!;l]v1-\uncnri3~ 100 years ago when ~ ’l' wfls a pun a eri Cilnrlcttetown. 3 x 1w n Iohnother Maritime Provinces much is the Tobique River Salmon I‘ ill northern New Brunswick Eve ‘"19 0f the most, beautiful Mstfilnivn the world," he says summing "Pl chllll’. whose 3:53!‘ Brandfcther came from ‘and lllllhire to Prince Edward Is- public i! a virtually life-long no. omnmfllltlpickfli from a capitalist dam If 0n by a Democratic presi- cmmr sgrve as an impartial can- rmflonil l United Btetes federal ‘on mull fluency. That combinat- Bcymlh the fact that he ls that he ‘all hi! mother's side. pmonlm ll I warm. human my may. a robust constitution. Amermnn success for the first modern muor “hm” t° “p” “ma! .v realistic remedies to In)" ersus labor disputes. ‘A " "lln has said of him: u“ b? Ching gives his word. we sure he'll carry it out." r ilmngllillalultilileiiiil. ' OTTAWA, Dec. 4 40n- um mo! o. 0mm of Ottan and “wanton, Former principal “Pull: Catholic chailiain of the P P" Army. has been aPllointed 3mm Pious 2n as Archbishop n“? Wk». it was announced _ OI tht September total. 14.203 means and conversion. ln Britain since , started new has reached 276.000. Nearly permanent dwellings. WIIIUIIN. The Weyburn adlsn Legion plans to place plaque commemorating the South aashtchswan Regiment on monument near Pourville, France. dim gold production crept higher The Dominion Bureau of Stalls- Llcs reported that production at. ‘he end of August totalled 2,036.- 20.‘ fine ounces, compared with l.- -'r98.“i9 1n the similar period last sur. v During August production was $0.01 fine ounces, compared with 101.39! in July and Ill I October, i946. Housing Figures Reach llew Peak IDNDON. Dec 4 - (C?) More than 11.000 houses completed in Britain during 5199011100!’ which constitutes the highest total since the war. The previous peak was in July when 12.426 per- manent homes were built. were permanent mailings. while new homes were gound for more than 11,000 families altogether by of new building, repairs The number of houses rovidsd k ullding 160.000 of time are ion-c IIISIIIIING DIIPII _...... Bash. - (Q) - brsnch of the Can- a "l! by moms» llltvnluttl. Apostolic nslmte to "arm" ‘W! Newfoundland. where the regiment landed during the Dleppg raid. o! Rev. Jacob A, Heaney, retired Mr. I-Ieaney. who 11m. come b 5t, Stephen in 1m as minister of DECEMBER roule to camouflage lus troops 101' them. A Belgian recently dropped §. 1947 f l a by fellow wwnsman John Hanlon, who was a prxstiiggprbsfiiltie? irl Ehfi war, residents of Winchester. Mass, donated 7'1 bedsheets for the people of Herroule, Belgium. During the 1044 "Battle of the Bulge". Lleut-Col. Hanlon borrowed 500 sheets in Her- snow fighting, promising to retrurn a hint that the sheets were badly needed in Herroule and Winchester residents took up the cause with enthusiasm. Here they checl: the sheets for shipment. , Serious BY DAVE MoINTOSH Canadian Press sun Writer If the bottom hasn't been punch- ed out of the Canadian fox fanning industry it has at least been bfldil’ bent. But ranchers, who have S6911 irwo near debacles before. are hop- ing for a repeat revival. some 2,000 fox farmers in Prince Edward Island, where the industry was first conceived 0n the 1890s. new are busv culling their herds and pelting foxes, but it is prob- able that because of abnormally low prices the fox breeding "OD- nlstlon will be cut by at. least one third. In its hey-day. the lndnstrv pro- duced between 80/00 and 100.030 nefts annually. In i900 Chi!!!“ Dalton, founder of fox ranching- sold 43 pelts in London averaging moronthan $1.000. apiece. In .1014- capitalizotlon nf fox companies in Prince Edward Island reached $35.- 000990. . By the end of this season. which ends December 3-1, Islander ranch- ers will have bet-ween 3060i and 40-- 000 skins to dispose of but there will fetch only an average of $12 each. This represents about half thecost of production. In June- of last year prices were good: $135 for plat- inums, 05% for whitefaces and a little less for silvers. By September they had fallen off by st least 50 per cent. Two Bad Stumps Fox ranchers had survived two bad SlllmlDS. The first came ln 1020. when the United States government slapped a b0 ner cent tariff on sllved Ioxes. Ranchers continued breeding. however, and a few years later lbondqn became tho great selling centre for furs. The second slump occurred at the start of the Second World War and many of the small ranchers were forced out of business. That story is repeating itself now and the minor operators have been unable to survice. The most. recent lull can be at- tributed mostly to the dumping on the market of 103.000 Norwegian pelts - most dealers say of poor quality -- which had been in stor- age during the German occupation of Norway. ‘The skins were brought by spec- ulators and shipped to South America, Mexico and the United States. biggest markets for the Canadian industry. says one deat- er: "Their cheapness and un- attractiveness gave the industry a black eye." Once this trend started. 1t grew. Millions of dollars worth of skins were shipped into former Canadian $3.750 complete with sewerage and fencing. activities to Victoria. to spread to other states in a short time. builders trcru all over Victoria t0 attend a school where the firnfs instructors show methods of con- structional details and their own special qulred to erect the t?!” o! house the buyer prefers. Fox Farming Facing Conditions Japanese ranchers. ‘the Dcmlnion Department of Agriculture was forced to step 1n and set a price schedule lust year to avert a ccsn- plete collapse. 1t will do the same this year. N. S. Reaction ' Meanwhile. fur farmers here have noted that American fox breeders have expressed fears of the con- sequences on their own industry us n result of large imports Into the United states of foreign furs and of government subsidization of the industry in other countfies. One dealer said the market would improve if the federal government would remove the 20 per cent sales tax on fur-timmed garments. as had been done in the United States. At the same time. duty on fox iursUenteting the PAGE F IFTEEN Css Lina May Bring Industries To Western Towns , . WINNTFIfi. Dec. 4 — (OP) -- Induatrlsl development in small Western towns was foreseen last night as s logical outcome if th proposed CWDCOIOO natural- gn points extending as far east er Winnipeg. However. both Ool. b. D. M. Baxter, president of Osler Hammond and Nanton, who announced the project was in the organization stare today. and Mines Minister N. 1!; Tanner of Alberta said that there was no definite assurance yet that it would materialize. 4 Mr. Tanner said a surv of the natural gas reserves wil start within a few days and will be tho first accurate examination of the Provinces gas potential. Unofficial estimates have reached many billions of cubic feet. This survey has been approved both in Alberta and by Recon- pipe line n 111a from Alberta to‘ 3 struction Minister Howe for th’ Federal Government. _ Until ccmpletion of the ex- amination. the Provincial Govern- ment's strict ban on the expor‘ of natural gas across provinclrl‘ borders still stands, Mr. Tsnne added. Dominion interest in the project was natural, Mr. Tanner. said since fuel shortage is a nat1"ns. problem in many respects. Th! Canadian dollar shortage has els commanded Federal interest ir- cny sch"mes which s“0w promise of cutting down On ‘Jnitv Statee imports. Col. Baxter sslii plans call for a 700-m1ie pipe line from a point near Calgary to W'nninev wl'h sub-lines to Regina, Prince Albert. Sssk-ioon and other intermediate points. The line w1uld,be privately owned. he added. with Osler. ‘Tammond and Nanton prepared to undertclre financing to the ex- tent of 545100.000. Gets Cnc Year Killing lVife U. S. is 37% per cent. As things stand nclw, there is not much lto-pe for recovery in thE industry for at least. another year. Farmers in the province are hop- ing that a lessend world market. better quality pelts and possible slicing ot‘ government excise sncl sales taxes will restore the industry to its former lucrative position. In the meantime, ll‘ a woman wants a fox fur. now is the time to buy one. nan on ruom: run new nous: MELBOURNE, Australia, Dec. 3 — (GP) A building‘firm here has "invited house hunters to order a home by mail or telephone and claims to be able to deliver the house within six weeks of re- ceivlng the order. The house they advise has two bedrooms, lounge. kitchen and bathroom spread over its 504 square feet of flooring area. and will cost intending purchasers So far the firm is confining its but hopes They have invited a panel of building procedure re- The firm will provide the frame In Tiny Sailboat small lifeboat with l0 others after a transport was tospedoed in the South Pacific two years ago. Dur- ing their IAN-mile trip so the 0i but; first land they . Mater said he decided that 1 had been saved to bring rel gion to the island natives. markets by Russian, Chinese and To Clihsrt Isles VANCOUVER. Doc. a - (C?) - Plueo men in a 35-foot gaff-rigged sloop with bright new canvas are m Vancouver planning to sail no the Gilbert Islands to do mission- ary work among the natives. Jack Meier. Harold Gray and Marvin Noretod. all of Beilinglsam, Waabiustoa. pooled their life sav- ings to purchase the vessel and came to Vancouver where they nope to obtain aid from groups symplthetic with their missionary with. I Mater was adritt s: days in a of the house to country builders. and leave them to supply minor materials themselves. All houses ordered for erection within a 30- miie radius of the city will be aupplied and erected by the parent rm. - At present they are delivering onyi six to eight a week but with help from the Victorian govern- ment. they sweet to overcome delays in getting supplies and greatly increase production. The dwellings are mm] but ‘ table. and are built. to allow additional units to be added to meet increased family needs. BALTIMORE. Dec. 4 -— (AP) — Larry Reimer, the meek little piano player who amaled everyone, by marrying the tattooed lady and’ then surprised everyone again by‘ killing her. got. a year for it to-; day. 1 Judge Joseph Sherbow said lti all goes to show what a woman! can do to a man. ' ‘ i A jury convicted the 37- year-l oldhusband of manslaughter last week The evidence was that. Agnes‘ Reimer. 57. and covered from hear‘ to toowlth exotic needlework badges-ed him into taking her ou' on the town the night they ha!" been married four months. Riema- spent most of the evening trylnr to keep her decently quiet. Finally he strangled her with his belt. Hr said he didn't remember it. In imposing the one-year Jal‘ sentence. Judge Sherbow said: "This is the amazing case of or unassuming. passive individual content to go along quietly harming no one. and happy thati he is left alone and not- bothered i "She urged him to marr her‘ She bought the licence. She hadi the apartment. "Hc put up with an incredlbl amount of obscene abuse. Eo- four months he was able to toler- ate the situation. Then, suddenly, he strangled his wife to shut off her torrent of verbal abuse." F $9,100 Paid For Sllorthorn Bull CHICAGO. Dec. 4 — (C?) - A record International l7 ‘ion price o! 80.100 was paid yesterday for Kelburn Banker Royal, Cane- dian-owncd grand champion Chort- horn bull of the 46th annual International Livestock brposlcioxl. e of the bull, owned ‘m; shown by Richardson stock firms of Winnipeg. was the biggest transaction (i the day at the Exposition where buyers paid an “erase o! $1.000 a head for Short- horn cattle. The champion was sold to one Illinois breeders, Dr. A. 1-1. wnum of Pawnee and Alfred Miller of Bhflflllburl. who shared the cost Ind plan to use the bull on their SLIGHT III-OI! FUNK‘. Mick. Dec. I-(Gel- When Leonard l.’- lireemsss. regis- trar of deeds for Genesoe County. received a cheque for 050,000.05 he sent it back to the bank-it was just 850.000 more than it should have been. The cheque was sup- lklsed to be for as cent: to cover easel-listings mortgage. About employee apparently forgot clear a cheque protector machine. to most I4 houtl, and throw them across the made. Previous a Shot-thorn bull at the International show nus 01.000, C llsd sill." tm____ on DOUOLAEIUWR. Dec. l-(OP) -A severe storm lashed the Oaspe peninsula during the week-and, blwkills lliihwayl. delaying rail- way service and causing consider- stia damoae. The storm, lasting al- farms. sale neord for uprooted large trees > . i l i; l. l v ‘r , Ki. fjr;i<:~ e D0 not believe the whispering campaign of the Liberal candi- dates and canvassers. v Family Allowances are paid‘ by the Federal Government and no Provincial Government has any power to stop them. In the interests ‘cf your welfare, the Progressive‘ Conservative Party advo- cates, among other things, the following: .T.. Continuation of Family Allowances. 2. Continuation of Cid Age Pensions at increased rates, but without property lien, and to become effective at the age of 65 years. '1 “rs-trainerslotsoprarrfor a ‘conrefciiili; 4. Establishment of a Convalescent Home for T. B‘. patients, and adequate extra-mural grants for patients obliged to return to their homes. Increased salaries for Rural Teachers. C. Adequate grants to Women’: Institutes. 5. 7. Preference to Veterans _in Civil Service pointments. ' nnsron A CllAilCE VOTE PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE . Inserted by the Pregreadva Conservative Part7. \ l