MAXIMS l MAXIMS OF A O! A MERE MAN MEREMAN A man dedicated to hlowjulge becomes habituated to plenum. which causes no "Come Into the garden. Milli." .5" populjr now Iubstltutel movies for llrden. . Everybody . "A . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY. JANUARY 4, 1952 rho Guardian. Ilvo cents. I: Curler: Charlottetown. huuneralda 015.00 per annun. lluwben unmlu In", Founded 1.". i In P. I. I. 00.00. other Provinces and D. B. A. 812.00 per nnnum. 14 PAGES TWO MEN PULL OFF TORONTOiS BIGGEST BANK HOLD - UP Gel sum Tug Reaches Side of mm 3i'illCii of Disabled Freighter; Bank ”fE""'"em Captain Still On Board TORONTO. Jan. 3 - (GP) - Egyptians And British In Sharp Clash Al: Suez Russia Proposes U.N. Terrorishin Uptown Location For Session To Consider Attack On. Army Recruiting Centre - - 3 mad guards - . l 3:: r:.i:.: ..':.?N2sN-.t:r. :i L. y t d The end of the holiday season needs, will have several offices as hold-up. Police said the loot wasim,.deRhm.e ,er,',d:Zx.0usugwi.'i'1rrT.)llci - v-- has brought a sharp upsurge in well as room for the giving of s5o.ooo. I lhull-cracked freighter Flying En- lor Mr. H.H. Hatfield -1. I CAIRO Jan 3 hmwhh The hhrmy uretcjrugtirtiyg agungefxfghedwlig tlhe M Teislt. 'll;herc will ha tluar- h One 8Itl:iedthVt'il.h1ah sub-mhcll-Jierprisn and her one.man crew, ARE, J I 3 .. ,.. . I ' 8 TI Tn er 3' 9T5 01' E O ICEFS as we 85 an me-gun, C 0 CT W1 3 FEVO Vef, L K L C I ' ' hh Alp oi: today plgposed it special iii; E l' Egypm” I”"”" Mumgy GEM" are daily makins inquiries at the orderly room and a reception the men worked with cold ef- lajixiic laiuerlast.MnSil;rl'1t.m E i level meetinz of the United Na- Pd wmgm "W9 15 3'” h oi 1”” local recruiting station. In order room for recruits. New furniture ficiency of apparent experience ”Prcpal'ations are under way -2- tions Security Council to solve and men were killed today n a to hm... sure the needs of the and equipment is being !UPP”t”d- as they tied up 18 persons in s.ror taking the Flying Enterprise K em and other international clash at s. Suez Canal workshop. public the station has been mov- The recruiting station Will be suburban York Township branchiin tow," said or radio message to HARTLAND. N. 13., Jan. 3 - or ' re gd 1, e S 0 A British spokesman said one ad from the Armouries to an up- open daily from 9 ant to 5 pm. of the Bank of Commerce loot, U 5 ha”, headquhm,” hem to. (CF)-H. H, Hatfield. Progressive problem!-or, move m npfea :1 Office! W35 Slightly Wmmded W119" town location in the Block Bulld- and on Tuesday and Friday will ed the Wm” and wow mad; two dgv '1.mm the U. S. destroyenconservalive member of Parlia- Welstem tn yervgistgs aflll:ctiven- N T terrorists attacked troops guarding lng at 162A Kent Street. also be open from 7 to 9.30 p.m. mp5 with the Cash to 3 wamhh lhhn W. weeks. . iment for Victoria-Carleton. died at mung em . - H: U N R railroad signal box. He said the Heading the station as officer for the enrolling of applicants automobile. No shots were med The Weeks has heeh s,,,,,d1hg'his home here today following I mmsurunp gram m. ,-e ' ' troops involved were two infantry commanding is Capt. E. R. Burke. (ages 17 to 40 years, or if tradcs- and ho one was hurt my to warn Shipping may from lengthy period of ill health. The. 055"!" W50" N" W35 platoons plus the llormal guards. while the personnel Selection Of- men up to 45 years) wishing to The hahdhsh one disguised wnhjthe helpless "an and rescue ca,-1. Widely known in the potato in- MUNSAN. Korea, Jan. 4-(Fri- day)-(AP)-Allied truce negoti- ators today expected the Com- munists to unfold a new plan for exchange of war prisoners -- one of two main stumbling blocks to a. Korean. armistice. tabled in the 60-country political committee after a. long speech by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky. He failed to mention the resolution but attacked the Western powers' plans for stron.- er collective measures. flcer is Major J. F. MacMillan. Medical Officer for the unit is Capt. O. H. Curtis and the Ser- geant Major on duty is W. O. 2 H. H. MacLeod who is attached from Headquarters of Eastern Command, Halifax. join either the Active or Reserve Forces. There are also many opportun- ities for single young men be- tween the ages of 18 and 25 who have completed their junior mat- riculation to make application for dustry of this province he was one of the pioneer mass producers of potatoes and potato products and to all The injured officer was wounded in the toe. The spokesman said the battle continued for more than" two hours before the terrorists with- drew into the Arab quarter. id so a false nose, the other with thick sen if necessary. . glasses, were waning inside meld Tthe Tufngoil gtanic alhlnngslde tsheh bank when the first em 10 cc Ti”"iZ 5 '1'" 5"" "5 V955" . entered at 8:15 am. Policep sgidlat 11 pm" (6 pm" EST)' . . lhad shipped seed potames they --must have had 3 keys. Carisen neared. the decisive World markets. hour when the lines would be He was elected a member of Tied Up One By one shot to the crazily leaning craft Parliament in 1940 and had rep- The Reds THUPBGEY "Cit980l'lC' The Egypmm uatemem The new 'recruiting quarters commissioned rank. or to under- . - d 1 I - ese ted hi, Vic; - .331 10,, con- om'"”"5 "inn 3113'" P9ieCi9d an A1ii9d P1'0P033i :fJS;nsEgg:g”31J3;)g:eman:::;,:: still in the process of being takeuralnlng leading to a com- As the 13 employees and fivet3,.:).sha:incELc;lr:li-ern ligrlriige ogausselilc lsitiiliqency cler slgilgtj. re vuhhmky hinted ominously It 101' exchange 01 311 9315011915 and renovated to suit the Armys mission. customers who by special arrange- him to order has passengers and with an 1.800-man British force equipped with tanks and artllery. The communique said Egyptian police came to the rescue when war-displaced civilians. Talks were to resume at Pan- munjom on both the exchange problem and on the deadlocked mom came to the bank before i.iic!(,-row vm rescue ships. 10 o'clock opening hour enieredl Eycwitncsses reported that the-W one by one, they were tied up'freiglitcr. though listing 60 or 65 and laid on the floor. idegrees to port and down slight- cvents to come in Southeast Asia. He accused the United States of preparing aggressive measures lcebreakers Tow Barge To Quebec Hong Kong Rumors Hint China may use charges of Am- But tension has been "'"””' Red Chm” m'”3 he” terms for policing the truce at 11 British troops fired on EEYPUID At 9 am heh ,,h . . . ., e L e-lo k ly t the head. was riding stead- wggrizn dzggggih regarded hhe 3-mu ioday (9 P-M- EST Ti1UX'S' State military work5imm' b k . . on the vault dpened the dgdr, Llc1efil,v aln the heaving waters about Mach 8” a warning hm Red day), h . The iatestil fepfhied 51;; min ' ' bandiks untied manager Edward 300 miles off West England's QUEBEC. Jan. 3 - (or) - The United NBHOH-9 headquarters mmwed 3 ml ” 9 3" C 1' 3 Jackson and an accountant, gnd.S0ulllel"n tip. Icebreaker Lady Grey left Quebec . , here and in Tokyg had no gm. fighting. , forced them to open an innel The destroyer Weeks reported today for the lower st. Lawrence to ;'f:,':, 'w;fjfi'f;", ”,;1,g;f';;;,;i;; mediate comment on the Russian m0"MlnK in 15m-ma ill the 5”" sale. They stuffed two brief-ithc 37-year-old Carlsen. who had meet the Icebreaker N.B. McLean. p g y P7990531 in P5-'15 301' the U- N- CW91 ””19' cases with cash and one of tllem Fefulcd l0 10W9 his Ship and its which left Sept Iles with the barge 'thsi countries on her southern border. The full purpose of the resolu- tion was not immediately clear to delegows, but one effect of the Russian plan would be to take the Korean settlement discussions out of the assembly and into the Security Council where Russlo holds the veto. The U. N. chart- er also provides that while any problem is under discussion in the council. the assembly cannot make recommendations on it. Another possibility was that Viahinaky might be making an attempt to sneak Chinese Com- inbo the U. N. through in door. some observers noted that it would be difficult to talk Kolun peace terms with- out participation of Red Chins. Injected By American The surprise Russian proposal for a special Security council meeting was rejected by Amer- ican sources here and in Wash- ington. Diplomatic authorities in Washington said such a session would worsen the prospect of peace in Korea by bringing polit- ical issues into the armistice ne- gotiations. Vishlnsky said: "These illegal - flagrantly ll- legal - acts of the United States. we can be quite sure. will be de- clarsd to be defensive measures against China's aggression when- ever events begin to take their course on the southern borders of China, in Thailand. Burma and Yunnan Province (of Chlna)." He did not explain further what he meant by "events". Coming Events "Card party at Seavlew Hall, Friday night in aid of rink. "Victoria Rink Saturday night. skating. "Buying fowl and chicken daily. See or phone Rex Dawson. Albany. "Dance in Vernon River Hall, January 7th. In aid of O. W. L. .. ”Kinkord I-fall. Friday. January -ith. Sea "Green Dolphin Street". 1.E..M,.snd 8 P. M. "Card Party in Stanley Bridge School Friday. Jan. 4th, 1952, at 8.30 pm. "Hockey practice "for Milton Hornets at North River rink to- nlsht at 8:30. "NI Snapshdts that will not fade mail your Films and Negl tivu to Garnbum Photo studios Charlottetown. "Crapaud. District Lodge meets Lorne Lodge room. Desabley on Jan. 8th, meeting starting at 130 pm. sharp. "Our store will be closed Janu- 'l'! 3rd and 4th, Thursday and Friday for stock taking. J. MOMS. Kinkora. . "Hockey North River Rink Saturday. Jan. nth. Covehead Red Winn vs. Nine Mile creole Buli- gllml. Game time 8:30. skate after me. I Security Council to intervene in the Korean armistice talks. French Premier Gets confidence Vote PARIS. Jan. 3 - (AP) - The five-month-old coalition govern- ment of Premier Rene Pleven won a nanow vote of confidence tonight in the National. Assembly. si.avln1;.orr for the sixth time the threat of a fall. The official count gave the gov- ernment a vote (L254 to 247. Pieven had called for the vote 011 izeneral issues, declaring it would mean the assembly "rec- ognizes the nation's need for I balanced budget." The deputies were not asked to vote directly on any specific bill. The question before the house was whether the deputies would even debate the govemmenrg controversial plans for reorgan. lzms social security, reforming the nationalized railways and in- creasing most. taxes by 10 per cent. Th9 bilge” opposition, as al- Wtlys. came from the Communists and the right-wing followers of Gen. Charles de Gaulle. Britain's Largest Helicopter Tested 331-STOL. England. Jan. 3 -(Reuters)- Britain's largest heli- copter. the Bristol 173. left the ground for 10 minutes today on its maiden flight. with twin motors the 173 was designed as a "comer- bus" to carry 13 passengers on inter-city routes. It has a top speed of -14.2 mp.h&l, cruising d speed of 105 m p h. a ceiling of about 19,600 feet. HEAVY PORT TRAFFIC SAINT JOHN. N. 13.. Jan. 3 - (UP)-Port. officials said -today that continuation of the recent grain shipping trend would mean a record volume through saint John by spring. More than 1,000,- 000 bushels have gone to overseas marlreta since the winter shipping season opened and about 2.500.000 bushels remain in elevators and on railway tracks here. some 20 ocean-going vessels were 'in port today while another awaited a pier. Before the Suez clash. British authorities said terrorists laid off ottucks for the last three days be- cause Ragunath Rao, Indian as- sistant director-general of the In- ternational Labor Organization. is in the Suez Canal zone. Rao and his investigators to- morrow begin probing Egyptian charges that the British army is using forced labor in its camps. News In Brief ATLANTIC CITY, Jan. 3-(AP) - President Truman asked the United Steelworkers anew today to cancel any steel-strike plans. The union indicated it will com- Py- PARPS, Jan. 3 - (CP) -Just- ice Minister Garson arrived by air today to head the Canadian del- egation to the United Nations General Assembly. ISTANBUL, Turkey, Jan. 3 - (CF) - Sixty or more persons were reported killcd today by an earthquake in Eastern Turkey. The quake centred between Erzl'l- rum and I-Iasankale. both military establishments. It struck short- ly after 8 A.M. (1 AM. EST). Montreal Man Charged With Purder MONTREAL. Jan. 3 -(GP) - Victor Farrcse, 31. today was loharged with murder in the death New Yea.r's night of Adeiard Lslonde. who lived in a rooming house Farrase operated, Farrese told police , he struck Lalondc while struggling to take a bottle of spirits from him Preliminary hearing was set for Jan. 9. U. 5. Government Deep In Red WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 -(AP)- The U. S, Government wound up the first half of the current fiscal your 57.467.242.215 in the red -a deficit about 13 times as big as that for the some period last year -the treasury reported today. With defence spending up almost 300 per cent. the deficit was the biggest ever at the half-year point, except for war years. - N. Iran. Jan. 3 --(R.eut- ers)- lme Minister Mohsmmed Moeudegh today ran-cted the World Bank's proposals to revive Iran's oil industry. practically idle '' since British oiimen were kicked out last. July. ' He said it would discuss the propouis. which reached him this morning, union the bank agreed to act solely as agent for the Ironien Govern- be useless to Mossadegh h Rejects Plan To Rev-ive Oil Industry of the bank's two- n mission. which arrived in Iran earlier this week to study the oil fields, is useless. He complained today's proposals are not the same as those outlin- ed to him by the World Bank dur- -states. and has naked Washington for clarification, The bank. which stepped in last December to settle the Anglo-tram by-election to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Oliver L. Varcly from Premier Joseph Smallwood's cabinet. was announced today as Feb. 6 with nomination day Jan, 20. Arthur Johnson. who entered -tcstant. The Progressive Conser- policies. election the Liberals lost the aeo- qld seat in the dual riding to Pet. er Cashin, Progressive conservat- ive oppositlon leader. He defeated provincial affairs minister J. Spratt. house after Mr. val-dy's resignat- ion: Liberais 22. Progressive 0on- aervatives four, vacant two. rador voting was int his recent visit to the United -019 W0" ""0"- Missing Nfld. Hunters Found ST. JOHN'S. .Nfld.. Jon. 3 - (CP) .. A ski-equipped rescue plane landed on an un-named Newfoundland lake today to fly out two hunters missing since Dec. 21 but sluggish weather kept it from taking off again. The plane will take off tomor- row.-if weather permits. I Air Home corporal Steve Trent. a native of Athlow. 'Sa.sk., and Jack Barton, manager of the New- foundland F-lylngr--Club here, rad- ioed they were in "good condit- ion" despite days of wandering in the desolate. snow-covered barren- iands. , h . Trent. attached to-the R. C. A. F. 103 Search and Rescue unit at nearby Tol-bay. and his pilot. com- panion had intended to hunt caribou. Their llgiht plane made a "normal forced landing" 14 miles from Thor-burn Lake. near the headwaters of Bonavists. Bay on the northeast coast, Cause of the emergency landing was not known immediately. It was presumed their aircraft ranf into bad weather and the piiotl risked a landing rather than belngi blown over the ocean. A. coast guard plane from American air base at Angcntia spotted Trent. and Barton early io- day near Thorburn Lake. A mes- sage was dropped by parachute. instructing them to go to a nearby lake where ice was strong enough to support a plane. By-Election Date in Newfoundland ST. JOHN'S. Nfldn Jan. 3 - (GP)-Date of A St. John's West the cabinet as Minister of. Natural Resources on Mr. vo.rdy's depart- ure, will be the Liberal party can- if lve party announced earlier candidate would be Malcolm Hol- ictt. defeated by Mr. Vardy in the Nov. 28 general election, Mr. Vardy quit t e cabinet I month ago in I spit over housing In the recent provincial gbneral James Standing in the 28-member Lab- deferred until ASSAULT cas-: nnloouwn-fin. N.S.. ...n. 3 (Hong Kong. main listening post for reports seeping out of Com- munist China, is buzzing with rumors that Communist Chinese intervention in French Indo-China is expected within the next three months, similar reports heard dur- int: 1951 proved unfounded. The following dispatch deals with the latest reports obtained from a specific but unidentified source. No hard-and-fast check on this information is possible.) By Rick Stevens HONG KONG. Jim. 3 --fReut- ers)-Unofficial.;reports filtering through this Far East listening post; point strongly to a Chinese Communist invasion of French Indo-China early in 1952. Hardest indication of this came today from a source who claimed to have authentic information that Chinese Communists were prepar- ing to turn Indo-China into kan- other Korea" by throwing 250,000 troops into nn offensive against the French and Vietnam. in sup- port of the Vieiminh rebels. This man told me that more than 80,600 Chinese troops have infiltrated into northern Indo- Chlnq during the last 12 months. and nearly 200.000 more are mass- ing along the border in the prov- lnces of Kwangsi and Yunnan to Join forces with the Viettnlnh rebels when lnvasioll preparations are complete. Believe Reports Reliable The man must remain anony- mous owing to dangerof reprisais. His information cannot be check- ed at the source. But responsible persons in this colony who have checked his background say they are reasonably satisfied that his information is in general. reli- e. Unconfirmed but persistent re- ports in the anti-Communist Chin- cse press support his claim. These reports mention a force of 100.000 to 900.000 troops. with is likely invasion date within the first three months of this year. The Chinese Communists have never denied these reports. They make no secret of the fact that their sympathies are with the Vietminh. The official Communist continued on page la col 2 ;.Al.. M... Search Continues For Armyiurse KINGSTON. Oht.. Jan. -tCP)- Army provost corps of- ficials said today that the only hope of finding Lcut. Elizabeth Sansom. 26. lies in the R.C.M.P. or the Provost Corps turning up some new evidence in Montreal or Sherbrooke, Que. Lieut. J.C. Charles McManus said virtually every possible lead has been investigated in this dia- trlct in an effort to trace the at-, tractivo brown-eyed nursing sister who was last seen at the Kingston railway station Dec. 24. The gm is it niece of Lt.-Gen. ll.W. sansom. retired wartime corps commander. she has been on the stiff of Kingston Military Hospital. tn E took them to the car. They then donned the coats they had ta-1 ken off earlier. unlocked the front door and left quietly, L A spokesman for the Bank of, Commerce head office said it had! been decided not to make public; the amount of money stolen. i The police estimate was 350,000.: which would make it the iargestf bank robbery in the Torontol area. The previous high mark was 335,000 in a suburban Lea- sidc hold-up some weeks ago. Whether Edwin Boyd. an e - oapee from Toronto's Don Jai believed implicated in the Lea- sidc and other recent bank rob- bcrles here. was one of the two Continue; on page 15-c-ol3- Pope Pius Reduces Number of Audiences VATICAN CITY, Jan. 3 -(Reut- ersi- The Pope has cut the mum- ber of his audiences in the last few days and the few visitors who were admitted remarked he looked tired, Vatican quarters said today. He recently -received in private audience his friend professor Lor- enzo Cherubinl. a. prominent phy- sician. The Pope will be '76 Marchh 2. rich 2,650-ton general cargo. .was ”very cheerful and grateful" for offers of help. but determined to remain aboard until the vessel reaches port. Carlson said he would be able to handle by himself the first lines to be shot aboard the Fly- ing Enterprise by the Turmoil. He decided, with the others concur- ring. that his ship should be towed stern first. If good weather holds .il1e Turmoil will head for Faimouth, Eng. after making the tow llncs fast. Brest, France, and Bantry Bay, in Southern Ireland, were selected as alternative ports. After three vain attempts. the Weeks finally succeeded in deliv- ering coffee, sandwiches, candy. cigarttcs, newspapers and mag- azines across a line fired to the freighter. Eddie Worth, Associated Press photographer who flew over the ship in a Royal Air Force plane. said it was lying "quite steady" in bright sunshine. Worth added: "The destroyer is pitching and rolling. The freighter is so heavy and down in the water it Just rides like a rock." The British tug which has un- dertaken ihc hazardous task is 1.- 136-lons with engines developing 4.003 horsepower. and has a crew of 31. ''In a general way I would ex-A pect farm prices to ease some- what. in 1952. with the possible exception of dairy products," Mr. W. R. Show, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, stated yesterday in A survey of agricultural prospects. "Costs of" operation at the same time will possibly rise. he said. with fertilizers higher. labour scarcer and higher. and farm equipment u-p in price at least 5 per cent. Following are excerpts from his report: Greater supplies of pork. and no material change in beef and mut- ton. are the prospects for the next twelve months. swine herds have been building up in both Canada and the United Slates. This trend will likely continue into 1932. and an exportarble sur- plus of hog products, estimated In the millions of pounds. may be expected. with prpspcctive lower prices domestic consumption of 1952 Farm Prospects For P.E.I. Reviewed pork should increase. but sufficiently to take care of estimated surplus. As there are no contracts this year for sales of hog products to Britain. the normal outlet would be the United States, and as prices there have been consistently be- low Canadian levels, the United States quotations will naturally decide to some extent hog prices in Canada. While this market is Open to our hogs. ours is open to theirs. and during 1951 our imports from the United States in poorer priced pork were high-h er than our exports to that coun- i try. and at present United States supplies are heavy. ..To further complicate our pos- than there is no doubt that the Western farmer will this year materially increase his hog hold- ings and further add to our mar- ketable product. It may be just cEriirTm:dT:ETY5E?3A1-c'ol'5-R not the .A.... TORONTO. l Jan. 3 -fCP)- Toronto's street-car and bus oper- ators voted tonight on the date and time of I strike to force settle- msn of it wage dispute. Threatned was a. transit tie-up by Saturday night of Canada's second largest city. ' voting be an at midnight at a meeting 'of 'me 4.700 members of Transit Strike .'Looms For Week-End In Toronto is l.'i-cent-an-hour wage increase that would bring their basic rate to 51.55 an hour. The 'I'.T.C.. in line with a majority recommen- dation of s conciliation board, has offered a five-cent hike to 81.45. This would include incorporation into the wage structure of e 10- cent-on-hour cost.-of-living bonus now being paid. Talk of a strike has been heard for weeks. Easton in tow. The McLean had gone to the aid of the barge which was caught in the ice of Sept Iles Bay. if ice conditions in the river per- rmt. the three ships will reach Que- nec tomorrow night. or Saturday morning. . A is A tiniest RULE A MhRRiEb MM, is A MAN OF fit!-i,oRDs A HALIFAX, Jan. 3 - (GP) - Ol- flclal forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice here and valid until midnight Friday. Synopsis: About four inches of snow fell in Nova Scotia Thursday. In Prince Edward Island and Southern New Brunswick two inches fell while farther norih amounts were no!- llgibic. An area of high pressure is an- proaching from the Great Lakes promising fine cold weather for Friday. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island - Vari- able cloudiness with sn0wf1im'ie5- Cold. Northwest winds 15 becom- ing light by afternoon. Low and high Friday at Charlottetown 5 and 25. Summary for Friday sncwflurrlcs and cold. no-h ide today at 3.44 A. M; and 1.18 P. M. Sun rises today at 7.52 A. M. and sets at 4.44 P. M. summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. MCA AIR SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Leave Charlottetown for Mountain szso A.M.: lmo A.l-1.: use not Ar. Charlottetown from Monctoo 1:25 A.M.: ms P.M.: 0:55 EM. Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow - Halifax ”T:t0 AM. New Glasgow 1:50 l'.M. New Glasgow 0 llalifal Arrive Charlottetown from New Gloom and Halifax 11:00 A.M. from New Glasgow ms PM. from New Glasgow and 0:10 AM. Arrive Sydney from New Glasgow. , 10:15 AM. An-In New Ghsgow from Sydney. BUNDAI ONLY Halifax. . MONDAY. WEDNESDAY. IIIIMI ONLY lure Charlottetown for Innate! lx - fl pre-Christmas walk- the street Railway Employees. Ur;-. wos averted when Charles -(cP)- Katy Ritcay today was ion (A.F.L.-T.L.c.) in downtown tan dispute. said it would provide mm! "mwm Snow In Scotland, msnt... l :0 All. out An-In cliarloustown from blooms It "D i . h, This meansfthe bank must agree the money in run the Abudon re- ch!-"894 Wig" , souih"izcu'sic'lcoivi3si:eril-diilia 'iiil..i'. to return to Inn all the proceeds finery, the world's biggest. and bodily harm in connection with at Northern England Massey Hall. When the rteolult 32101; d m0hi,itmI duh-nbttber '5 PM- iaormlttlng. Canteen. The mm. mm the sale of on after dsduot- outlined "general principle)" for December backwoods argumen would be known was uncer an. no Du - Minister said yesterday that his meditation effort had failed with neither side budging from its po- was not expected the But. A walk-out before Saturday night when usual week-end easing of traffic that sent Beverly smith of nearby EN g O”. mhmxwmn Fill! IIIVIOI LONDON. Jan. 3 --(Reutersi - Desp snow blocked roads and de- ing expenses and the commission. reviving the industry. ban: proposed that profits. These include the right of, the no.” I omm"'"'. o"h"'"' Stanley section to hospital with u "U . ox nun were old. should bsnlc to mine, refine and distribute cashed I-cm Smith. cut from chin lsyed rail traffic today in Soot- 5 Po i'.'331""cf.i5i.9"i'E1i.3'""e:: ii".'im.r.'.? into um: puts-one oil. It also reserves for itself the to en. told police the unused land and Northern nnmnd A cold would emf 15" d"1m"t''" ”' "if 'm”'”" -- only ll-olualu sunny) 5 mail, super groan pellets: big to non. one to the wholesale right to hire or fire board officials. woman swung an axe at him dur- was gpfegd ,oug,gh mhgmg ,0”. public than mweek-day deadline. The 'r.T.U. huh said that it my. gorge. guy. a, 1-. be 1'. call meal pelletl. dry buyer and one to bslheid in trust The shah of Iran has turned for I" spat over wood cutting in com.-.1 ma solgth-Weltern At issue in the dispute between cannot ply the mans full demands ,1.) AM. an AM. o. and fitting ration. flour etc, mm by th'e bulk. . Moasadegh to tread carefully in rights. A doctor said the blow nar- England with ice, London and the the union and the publicaly-owned without increasing street-car and Loo EM. I00 PM. it 3?". Central Royalty. phone Mossadogh said first unless hit his relations with the U. 5.. u:- rowly missed cutting his Juslar southeast was milder"gLil,li periods Toronto Transportation cornmls- bus fares to lo cents. They now no PM. 0.00 us. i 30944. t s conditions are accaptedftlii visit cording to court circles here today. vein. of sunshine. . slon is thsoemand of the men for are three tickets for as cents. us PM. 0.00 rm. .i I