\\l. The Peop e’s Pepe Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew cuannorrarowuicauans. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY, 11, 1m Li/Z/ n; w. w. aeacuaa’ wunoar, us. l6-—(AP)—'1‘he ed w h g Q08» Jan. 1s - (OP) — R16 $5.2‘? will ldtfioahw 1m ‘$111113. ‘om “ml-sigh? "My" mm ihe “Hmong?- m. o! mean as south .1 ad within a0 miles oi a juncture W“ "MM the Bin-nor who» Dill! reports that the n: o had smashed forward In last Prussia an lie Y u! taken oit I! miles inside Berlin said that alto ether the Russians were on the o enslve in i1 sectors of the lhstern Iiront. In a late dispatch from Moscow. Eddy Gilmore, Associated Press correspondent. said "the and offensive aimed a lib- Poland and carrying the war into Germany was in full swing today through the vast snow-covered areas of the longest land front in the world.” Gilmore said t almost ulmedistely." and that the Gel-mans "are going to be driven many miles westward before they ‘ Dairymen Ask Increase In Batter Fat Subsidy Jan Counter-Attack ill illzon Defeated »-‘:~ l SOUTHWIST PACIFIC AD- ANCE COMMAND Jan.1'i- (Wednesdsw-Americans on Lus- on threw back the ilrst Japanese counter-attack oi the invasion Bilnday night in the stubbornly- held Pozorrubio nectar on their leit ilank. Headquarters re aame time that pa rols had reach- ed a point 32 miles inland from the Lingayen beachhead. reaching Molicilfil. 10 miles southeast oi captured Bayambang. A communique reported progress on all fronts. Capture oi Moncada put the Americans well along the main road to Manila. approximately 80 airline miles away. ...__.._____ Coming Events "Dan .10 1mm Januarycellithfifunches llvim" 1-11-11. "Loading dressed hogs Prida. Mcfiuisan and Boyle. 1-11- 1 "Buying live and creased poul- try. . limo Cold stfialefnfittl.‘ “ircfiii-ltr. w"°“*“.. “n1.” .."'"- "n! following nisbR ' 1-1031? "Fur a good old time danc- wmc w Kelly's cms School, r115 day. January 19th. 1-17-21. “Loading: Hogs at Hunter Riv- er ever ida till . Bo d Bllnalll.’ y RrIlHIT-lfil-Sein "Card Part and Dance in loll grid tartin goo‘. Under w. 1. "v ‘m’ ‘1-11- . "Annual Meet 0r laud nu- trlct Scarlet Cha. a: Cra Jail-iilfv 20th at a r. u. Installa- tlon of officers. 1-11-21. shhlét’ .1.‘ “ti” “’“‘n....'“" . ow . Game starts at ssofufiute filter.” "Meeting oi the West River Bhorthorn Association at Kenneth 8n. M N ’ Ieilll ‘k1 Thursday. Olw "of &!l:gi'lilCl'lIR:v:t fits yougwiirteqggalbadia" Cyh Char!‘ - n ., . - iottetown. 1-12-01. "No ire —- Loadi n a1- nh °" "‘ ha ELK I4 ‘gcgckg Iflday. Green. ' ' ' 1x14; “Io-dine u ‘Thursday, .1 -' - - . I - all 113th:- "uifihlinawn .111‘; aha‘. Illmer Wlgmore. Bradaibane. H y till 11.00. Bwden Ismail. Mlénter RJNI. Friday man Ewen and Oaslsy. i-lfi-ii. -_._ to the annual meeting "We an handling Jive and aim d fennel: oi ilrelaed “mm ‘mm "W" M, m Cameron, duet o! the "mm Prices. We require larae luv-tine "I! i=- 33:33:‘? 1m M“ $2111“?! 1m mtumw&"a:l"iioi:lw ‘mm. elven ..'..RIf°...‘t'...n'£_ we also of any albstaatial increase Army proper. ‘ Moscow desa-ibed Konev's drive as ' Ildsai rted at the The slam-mes M! Cln hope to hold." Already the second offensive in Poland had outilank- with the Rod Army troops wh had pushed beyond Kielce in the first oiiensive. 398111111“: two days aiter- Mar- shal Ivan S. Koncv began his on Jan. l offensive em- helads farther north along the vis- u a. It is directed byMarshal Greg- ory K. Zhukov. the old cavalry oi- ilccr who destroyed the Japanese 0th Army in Manchukuo in i939 and later wiped out the Gen-nan 0th Army at Stalingrad. At least. 44 other nerala were in the field with int. With virtually the whole of the Eastern llrcnt ailame. the Red veze o! some Army was on the oi the victo s oi the war-inside Budapest, at ihe gates oi Warsaw. only 25 miles from Krakow. deep inside East Prussia and within 40 miles oi Germany Iiront line dispatches ‘o’ aimed direct! sior Krakow and German - id it was moving like a s mroller. (By The Canadian Press) BIBINA. Jan. l6—-The dairy farmers oi Canada in annual tiimdu?” "’l‘€€.°"io.l...’°".i’" a y comm c t at ' N6l'"'ht"sube1dyand the price ps for cheese be i11- crelled in i945 so that domestic an; export demands would be 1n . Recommendations included: l. That the cheese price in 1945 be 96 cents a pound, 1120.13. fac- tory shipping point. plus prem- iums now being paid for quality. basic price now ls 20 cents a pound. ROB. shipping point. 2. That the present butterfat "ubsldy o! l0 cents a pound paid .0 encourage butter production be lncreaaed to i2 cents a pound at Mal’ 1 and continue to Oct. 1 when it would be increased to l5 cents until April 30. 1946. thus c11- couraging production in the win- ter months. 3. That the subsidy of 55 cents pel- 100 pounds on iiuid milk be continued throughout the year. The present subsidy drops to as cents from May l to Sept. s0. organisation said it viewed with concern the position ot the dairy industry as a whole with re- spect to its capacity to maintain present levels of production or to meet commitments and . require- lnenta of the coming year under wartime conditions especially view oi the "very definite down- ward trend in production in cer- tain branches oi the industry." (lt is understood that, Mr. RA. Pl-oiitt, Freetown, is lepresentin the Prince Edward Island dairy- men at the meeting.) Officers Elected REGINA, Jan. iii-Directors for eastern Canada. oi the Dal manners of Canada and directors from associated organizations were nflfi at the annual convention y. Dairy Planners oi Canada direc- Quebec-P. D. McArthur. How- ick; J. K. Dickson. Ormsinwn; JP. ROUIQIII. Chsrlesbourg and H. 0. Bots. Montreal. New Brunswick-H. C. Green- law, Millville. “larva Scotia—1l. R. Mae. Oak- e . Prince Edward Island-I. A. Prod“. Directors from associated organ- isations: Holstein Irlealan Association oi sheds-J. J. Mccagtle, Alliston, Canadian Jersey Cattle Club- Plank Sllcox. Iona. Ont n Canadian hire Breederas As- sociation-Gi rt McMillan, Hun- tlnr-ion- Que c dian duel-my Breeders As- aocIantIon - hush mu. meal-h. RIXSINA. Jan. 10 —(OP)— W.O. Cameron oi Ottawa slid in all ad- dress here Wily l“ draw it "lily d‘iiicult i0 ineetJn Over-INN“); ___ m! emand or dairy not I G UIIQG 31-1 , contribute it! mm ior dairy Inlin B I 5Q- productian in any oi the United announced o oi Agriculture here today 1,0 1;. drive from the Baranow bridge- awn"- head 1202mm: south oi Warsaw new crged from the two other bl-ldge- M Island Minister Cf Agriculture Visits Agricultural Schools era. ANNBDEA POCA enact the operations oi’ the School lems with school officials. The del- egation included: Hon. I".W.A Ministt of ioul ' for Prince lidwalrd Rt$? Maxwell of the ultural School Woodstock and Eric . .8, Bouni-in i th more, 21.8., - cultural school. A“! ‘m? defigattionlwill leave tomor- row or onrea to inspect . ulturel school; in that distrigflc Probe 0n Taxing 0f Co-llps Continues VANCOUVER, Jan. l8 — (CIP) _ If the nature oi co-opelat ve technique tends to block certain channels oi government revenue. ‘the duty of the state is to chang the incidence oi taxation, the ‘Royal Commission on Co-opera- tives, under the chairmanship oi’ Mr. Justice Errol M. McDougall 0i " 1. was told today. L.H.C. Phillips, manager oi the Wholesale Society of British Col- umbia, made this suggestion as he outlined operations of the society to the commission investigating the quution oi taxation oi co-oper- atives. At prment, co-operatives are tax exempt. Agreeing with E31‘. Parker of Halifax. commission counsel. that co-operatlves tend to supplant " rivate profit-making" enter- prises, Mr. Phillips said co-oper- atives were not “robbing the state and the state could ‘ reve- nus sources lost 'by increase‘ in co-operstives by placing levies else- where. , The state could replace revenue lostthl-cugh increase in co-oper- ativcs by raising income taxes and customs levies. ~Questioned by J.J. Vaughan of Toronto, the society manager re- plied lle did not believe co-oper- lltives should be taxed as that would not be “democracy? There is a “greater measure of democracy in ell-operatives." Mr. Phillips told the commis- sion that ii it was possible he would substitute “surplu.s" wherever the word "profit" appears in the pro- vincial act under which the soo- ietv is incorporated. The advantage the aocietv has in being a member of the 13.0. Co- operative Union is in helping to promote the co-cpcrative move- ment. to Jews In Canada Plan Big War Relief Fund TOR/ONTO, Jan. 10—-A resolu- tion that $l,5w,0il0 be raised for reliei or European Jewry ln 1945 was passed at the closing sesslon oi the sixth plenary session ot the Canadian Jewish Congress today. Congress officials said 0500.000 was raised tor this purpose in ~l044,11nd the higher quota was to enable extended relief work among Jews in liberated parts of Europe. Another resolution passed asked Lila Canadian Government to ad- mit "an adequate number oi im- migrants" to relieve the problem oi displaced persons in Europe alter the war. Urgent Need By XIII! L. EDISON. Associated Press War Analyst With the German bulge In Belgium all but flattened out and Brit- lah and American armies on both aides oi it on the offensive. Moscow I now discloses a Red Army attack of tidal wave proportions rolling across _ the plain oi Poland. The east-west ultimate squsese play long ago protected at Teberan seems to be taking shape at last. flow long it will take to throttle Ger- many into submission is beyond calculation; but there is new and grim warning in the ioe on the purpose behind It. “The war will go on until unconditional surrender has been ob- tained.” Prime Minister Churchill declared in London. Moscow lslt no doubt oi the tremendous scope of the twin attacks launched during the week-end in Poland. fence front from the north flank of the 6.. athians to Warsaw and beyond is urrdercouecrted Bed Army pressure la revealed in Berlin. Russian bulletins covered two main thrusts boring in beyond the Vlstula. In the west-front line, reports estimate that the German bulge driven more than 40 miles deep into Belgium at high coat. has been eut. to a bare l5 miles. Less than m square miles of the maximum oi l,- 000 the enemy once held than remain in his hands. 0 OH That the whole German de- By Warsaw ; Front. rapidly. Mandalay; aged Llllfllli For Recruits In C. W.A. C. HALIFAX. Jan. l6—'l‘he demand for Canadian womenuAr-my Corps recruits has never been more urg- ent than it is right now, LL-Ccl. Mary J. Dover. special assistant to the director oi army recruit for ax. Col. Dover arrived here ior apes- atuted on the Pacific Coast last noes u amt now." an remarked. "We are in oi womein ior the 0- fil-"Elfoli-“ill-‘lf-in-Ff: . =_Tle'fluen=’unaato?i-o All. _ t the o.w. mntfi"a'i'eumla'libsegllh— - OITAWA. Jan. i6 — Deiemanlilinietcr ‘McNaughton will l marrow or 3:2... headquarters cl his ior the Norm Grey GAEIL terday from a tour oi the constit- uencv to attend to Department business. WARTIME SECRICY M wanna widerAl-ficlatign th O.W.A.C. at Na orlal De en badges r m 80¢" - Eeelallfiqusrters. declared today $31.23;, vllstblo only under Ipeoill TCYI. 513116 WESTERN FRONT—-Iritish 2nd Anny launches attack north of Sittsrd between Mans. Roer Riv- en; llouflallze captured and U. S. 1st. 3rd Armies link there; man Ardennes Ger- salient dwindling POLlTlCAL—Churcbiil tells Bri- tish Commons war will go on "un- iil unconditional been obtained." AERIAL-Almost States planes hammer vital Ger- man targets in Leipzig area; ILA. F. heaviea reported out. in strength Tuesday night. BURMA—Bril.ish llth Army ior- ees advance within 35 miles o! armies pressing towards junction to re- open land route to Chin PACIFIC AERIAL-U Fleet carrier planes sank or dam- oi Japanese nhlvlplng during three-day strike at Hang Kong, Amoy. Swatow. PHILIPPINES-U. S. 8th pushes inland 32 airline miles on cnunter-httaok .' s. 3rd 101,00!) tons Japanese near left flrrlk repulsed. McNaughton Returns To No. Grey Today <or> - Owen Soullid. by-ekcuya; ported United States coal subven- that. lean ‘ “" toward conservat- ism it. cost the Germans 00,000 men. more than twice American losses. togain nothing but a briei delay in the Allied winter offensive. That the respiia will be llrici at beat and may already be over is indicated by the British attack in Holland on the Mouse sector and the American counter-thrust down the Moaelle Valley approaching the Si “’ anchorage oi Trier. The scope of neither the Malice nor the Moselle operation is yet elear. It is too early to classify the twin British and American offensive moves on both flanks on the " lgian bulge as resumption of the winter campaign. The mere fact that they could be undertaken within a month oi the launching oi the enemy drive is significant. It llespeaks both Allied intention of resuming full seals offensive operations In the west with minimum delay and the possibility that enemy weaknesses in those sectors have been detected and are being fliiliimd» Importance Of N. S. l Coal Mines Stressed Royal Commission Opens Hearing At Sydney; Transportation Problems To Central Canada Aired. International‘ At A Glance (By The Canadian Press) RUSSIAN — Moscow announces new Soviet offensive has gained S8 miles on ‘IS-mile front in Poland. captured Radon-l. M) miles south of Berlin says Soviets at- tacking in ll sectors oi Eastern By JACK-“QWILLIAMS SYDNEY, N. 8., Jan. 10-(0?) -Payment oi Government subven- tlcns to assist in the movement o1 Nova Scotia coal to inland points in eastern Canada will be neces- sary after the war to assure full production from Nova Scotia coal mines, the Dominion Steel 3°81 QOTD- said in a brief pre- sented today to the Carroll Coal Commission. The Royal Commission, compos- ed oi Mr. Justice W. l". Carroll of Halifax. chairman; Angus J. Mor- rison, United Mine Workers ofiic- lal, and Mr. Justice C. C. Mc- Laurin of Calgary. opened its heaTQlngs tod ' minlcn Corporation. had not been completed at. thc adjournment. it will be followed by supplementazy briefs from the with specific phases of its opera- tions and of prCblonls of the Nova Scotla cool industry. Mr. Justice Carroll, opcllin tile hi! public hearings or the Commfsslon, 1.300 United said the enquiry it was lmdertak- lng was regarded ns one of nati- onal lmportance. The welfare cl the country as a whole was to some extent dependent on the coal in‘ y. The members of the Commlsslo 1 were welcomed to Sydney by H. J. Kelley. vice-presi- dent and general manager of tile Dominion Steel and Coal 60.. alld Freeman Jenkins, president of Dis- trict 26 oi’ the United Mine Work- ers oi America (C.C.L.) Outside Market Needed The Company in ils brief. pre- sented by Dr. F. W. Gray. assist- rmy ant general manager. said while the Nova Scotia and New Bruns- wick ccal mines were unable meet the whole oi the solid fuel needs of eastern Canada some market outside the Maritimes wa Bliléflt-III to maintain lull produc- ton Use oi Mal-ltilne bituminous coal ior the production of coke in be used as a substitute ior the anth- racite now burned in Ontario and Quebec homes was particularly emphasized as a possible outlet. To meet tile competition oi im- flank-which were introduced in 1000 and continued until t-he war -would be neeessa y. The produc- tien oi Nova Bctola mines could he stepped up 25 per cent if mar- kets were found for the coal. “The livelihood of Nova Scotlsns is n-linently and admittedly bound up with the state oi the coal in- "- ell/print???‘ - ' ‘ ‘ 1 sar- “‘ Quality that Satisfies mm“ ‘I intake I us-ssr...~1.s-:°l..::.z.¢. .23‘. TEA fi GCFPEE a). e 11m brief. that of tile Do- w“ company dealing h First S. S. Division Commander Captured U.S. 'T'I'H. ARMY HEADQUAR- TERS. Jan. l6 — (AP) -- Gen Hans Lingner, commander of ihe 17th 5.5. Panzer Grenadier Div- islon, has been captured by the US. n11 Army, it was announced tonight. He is believed to be the first 8.5. Division Commander captured on the Western Front. Mulldleli hiallpower Policies 0f Cov’t tinder Sharp Fire RDOKLYN, 0NT.. Jan. 16 — (CP)-—W. Garfield Case. Progres- sive Conservative candidate in the Grey North Feb. 5 try-election, he called the Government's "mud- d .. er policies" and ior the heneilt oi an audience oi farm people told oi one Grev North farmer who harvested his crops with the aid of two ‘zombies’ nl- though his own two sons were o- verse . conscription as such" hut was in favor o1 "total obiliastlon oi man- power and resources.” “w. Case reiterated ‘hi: chgrage "hd- n ' r- oered’ "Ind "peddlcd around" by tile Government. He also made 1e- ply to Defence Minister McNa h- tank statement to the press 11st week that thn supply problem was shortage last. tall. "That. is directly tied to the man- power muddle." he said. “Under a propel" manpower policy, production cou d have been kept up and men would have been serving where thev could servo best. No Defence Minister could then nave said he wanted supplies." Paying tribute to the rzlilitary ser- vice oi both Gen. McNal hton and Air Vice-Marshal A. Ear Godfrey 0.0.1". candidate in the three- b -election, Mr. Case said ser- vice o the two men was not an is- sue. "As soldiers and politicians. though. their position is difareolt." e said. "A grateful Government has sought to discharge its oblig- ations to them and they deserve the treatment they got from the lov- ernment. Godfrey has a pension of S10 a day for everv workin dav in the rest oi his ilic and b r. Mc- Naughton gets 838 a day {or his life. I am not opposed to these pensions. but I am for usiitv. "Smoky South. the ony Can- adlan private to win the Ianpirefis highest award ior gallantry (the Victoria Cross)._ receives l5 cents a day for his llfe Let these oeu- plc who talk oi equality think oi these things". 1111 Ottawa today a Defence Headquarters statement said that Defence Minister McNaughton will accept no Armv pension during his tenure of. office. The statement did not disclose the amount. of tile Ecnsion. but estimates vrere that he entitled to $8.123 annually.) Crossword Inventor Is Dead (By The Associated Press) CL-EARWNYER, Ila. Jan. 16- Arthur Wynn. credited with ill- venting the crossword pumle. died Sunday at his home in Indian Rocks. Wynn. a formal" Sunday editor and artist for King Feat- ures Service. was born in Liver- aool, lhlgland, and came to the nited States more than S0 yll" ago to enter the newspaper busi- neas. Pelt Prices llown Fran Last January MONTREAL, Jan. l6 - (GP) — Price trends were genel-all down- w-ardiutodaksalesonteCan- m Pur liyliilibllllhalhrktét. d pc ee a a e- cline from l0 to 50 per cent lower than in the January sale oi last year Lynx offered during the day WON ll Par curt sold. at a decline cent- lynx cats 100 o. c. line S6 per cent; beaver par csrlt sold. decline from 10] I) per cent; otter M per cent H. decline l0 per cent; raccoon’ 56 Per cerlt sold, 40 per cent de-l cline; skunk '76 per cent sold. 50 per per cent sold unchlnfldi white fox ‘l4 per cent sold 20 p" centd line; f 00 W!" ec “or: ox per 10 PAGES 2ND ARMY IN SURPRISE Reds Advance 38 Miles In 3 Days struck out again tonight at what. pg as He said he was "still opposed lo a; more serious than the manpower he Piummer oi the Women's Auxil- lfl Ah bee. —(CP-Reuiers)-Britisil irols. treacherous ice. Throughout the night gunners Hllrfllhtflllfid their usual desultory e n, at 6.30 a.m.. the British guns. light, medium and heavy, suddenly let. loose heavv barrage aimed at the German lines and rrnan gun positions-guns with which the Germans have been shellln Slttard. i6 miles northwest c! Aac an. intermittently ior weeks For an hour this murderous bar- rage ripped into the German pos- itions without answerlng iire. At 7:30 asn. the troops charged across snowy fields, their white winter ttle tunlcs making than almost invisible ln the snow and the pre- dawn fog. The only light came from the flashes oi guns reflected brightly off the snow. The Germans. who have had al- most three months to dig themsel- ves in, had sown mines thicklv in e area, Officers in charge oi operations reported “things are going very well.” Houflalize. the road junction which Von Runstedt had hoped would hold together his now- shsttered Belgian bulie. fell intha American 2nd Armored Division, which crashed into the town past aps of wrecked and burned-out enemy equipment. With tile l-loufializc-St. Vitil hIBhWBY cut and American forces p g towards the town from two sides. the Germans found Houffalize untenable and yielded i; without their usual street fight. U. S. Armies Meet 3nd Armies came together this morning for the first time since they were split by the German cr- fensivc a mollt-h ago. The meet.- ing occurred 011 a trail iour miles west of Houflailzc when a 1st A1- my patrol bumped into 3rd Army elements. A field dispatch fmm Leslie Hawkins. AP war correspondent. said armored columns oi the 3rd Army also linked with troops oi the United States lst Army in Houfialize after 1st Army patrols entered the town Monday night. Elements oi the 3rd Army also were on the move inside Germany south of the crumbling bulge. where they cafitured Borg in a new two-mile t rust east of the Mosellc River despsite counter-attacks. ‘ First Al-lny units were withmsix miles oi s1. Vitll. key enemy base 29 miles northeast of Houflalize and only foul- miles from the Ger- man border. St. Vitll is the inst important communications centre left to the Germans through vi-llicll they can extricate rem- nants of two nanzer armies, alld Lt-Gen. Courtney Hodges‘ 1st Army infantry were slashing sav- agely agalnst the northern shoul- der of the wedge in an effort i0 reach the desperately-defended town. enemy Fog Grounds Planes Fog and low-hanging clouds held Allied tactical alriorces to lea. than 200 fighter-bomber sort- ies. most of them in suilixiri °i ti 6th Army group in inc 500th- (Tile BBC, quoting a correspon- dent wliil the United States 1th Army. reported that American forces had launched a D°W¢f1i11 attack against the German bridil!" head across the Rhine north 0i Strasbourg in Alsace. The broad- cast said the attack began with a barr e from 300 guns alorlti l six-mic stretah. a‘nd qvgs 53:; from e ar. ere regrecegniirmeficn oi the 'lth Army attack from other sources.) Author Of Merriwell Stories Dies In Sleep (By The Associated Press) SAN D . Calif» Jan. 10- Gilbcrt Patten, '18. who wrote un- der the pen name of Burt L. Standish in reducing the popular "hank Merr well" stories, died in his sleep today in the home oi his son. liarvan Ban- Patten. in sub- urban Vists, Calif. IDNDON, Jan. lS-(CP Reut- ersl-Wing Cmdr. J. B. ‘halt. ill! airman who led the raid that sank the German battleship ‘Pirpltmwli married at Brampton Oratory t0- day to Flight Officer Betty Elli!!! aeeaaathgeod. good courage. and let Ia Qnfaraur {b . . . Lord do F: which I-lll. “M: sill Pruvlleal ".00. Ia gage, Delivered. "Pusll Troops Claajge In Pre-Qgwn Icy Fog By CHARLES LYNCH Reuters War Correspondent WITH BRITISH FORCES NEAR SITTARD, Jan. 1d infantry and tanks advanced through icy fog just before dawn this morning to launch a surprise attack in the “neck” of Holland where, during the last two weeks, the Germans have sent out offensive pa- Behind a crashing artillery barrage, British troops struck into the German lines in the Sittard area, wherq the neck of Holland is at its narrowest-a five-mile strip between the Belgian and German frontiers. Tanks moved into position over roads coated with zz RBy-l-Iletiion T Decide Session (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Jan. i0 -- Prime Minister Mackenzie King a11- nounced today that. the par- liaments y session. now ad- journed. would be proroguell Jan. Si. but that the Govern- ment would await develop- ment; In the forthcoming Grey North by-election fore lei»- ting a date ior a new session. ll. W. L. B. Refuses More Pay For Miners OTTAWA. Jan l6 — 1GP) -< The National Wan Labor Board made known in a Judgment today that it has refused to grant we?! ingrggggs and two weeks ilfllldliyl with ps1" to coal llllnclis ill Nerd Scots and New Bruusvnck The appllcaflfifl for the wa rates and tile Ilfilldfilyg we. 11 on behalf of some 9.000 coal mi I g the United Mine Workers '1 America lC.f 0 ‘I ' It Was disclosed that the 1st alld- w). W -~- »~ 1 -".o....ln...1fs.;".;;;..‘ Col. 4' it: Win flours i AND Runs AWAY Must B: FASTER on ills FEET (RAN (no QTHER FELLOW ! 10301110, .1z1l1. 1i; —- 1C1’) — Minimum and maximum lenlliel- aturos: Vancouver 4i, 45: Eglitlltllk - ‘ llnl- ohgflnflftlflWll 3A 3'3 REC STS rowan s1". mwlulucuzsuom winds; partly cloudy Hid Illegal" telv cold with 11am snow!‘ ‘l! flurries. chicflv south u! iii‘! 3i- “Zififlfsr. JOHN: Fresh winds. generally fair and moderaleii‘ C011)- GULF AN AY D g cl-lalsun: s‘ “m” and 1e; wt snow N0 Til strong Cloudy In c,“ ‘f, ill-st; followed by stroll | 1th .now “l'v'1“lf1fi'ri'1‘.l’§§'.“'§l§-?n? Rind; -n gale; with rain and snort". flflrlhl and colder at nilhi- mgn tide this afternoon at 2.3K .01. ““§....°°“§§§§t {Risa afternoon at 5. and rises tomorrow nlorninll ll lalgirst, quarter moon January 20th mgtnflinlevlrsle tide elahteen min“- DAILY AIR SERVICE Cbarlottetowrhoamaummerslde -— Leavea Charlottetown 7 A Bl- IIJO AJAS 5.15 EM. Arrives Charlottetown ll l5 P M 5.45 EM. 7.30 P. - SUNDAY SERVICE heave Charlottetown ll.” AA! . M. "M; Charlottetown S P- I and B.“ P. M. CIIABLOTTETOWN — NEW GLASGOW (Daily ersept Sunday) Asa-vs‘ Clllrlettetowablli Qfldtain