MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN i-Q- hare from the most wise. u, g no stall in the would the least wise have not gov- dh , ‘Three Cents. y Founded 1881. ChARI-OTTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1949 Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like uie Dew 14 PAGES the nuhctpooodsdwietlounovonh be much the better guide. MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN when men and may sometimes Ml“ $5.00; other Provinces b U. I. U,“ ‘ptlons Delivered $6.00 TTAWA OFFERS T0 PAY HALF THAN S-CANADA HIGHWAY L’,________* Tig "fj____i U. N. Votes To Make Former Italian Colony An Independent State llueSpeed In Creation Of Food Bank IVASHINGTON. NOV. 21 ~ IAP) _ Thi- fm-Ffllllltry Food and Ag- riculturi- Oruanizatlon was urged today by its top officer to speed uealloil of t1 51430120001110 WOTIII food brink. . Lacking such a mechanism, d1:- l Norris E. Dodd said. isos and falling prices may d countries to "panic measures" and ultimately to "wide- Ipreaii depression." Dodd offered the proposal In a message to the fifth annual con- lefftfltc or the United Nations body, Earlier he pleaded for a start on a global distribution ma- chinery, even if plans are imperf- cot. The plrin for a food bank, a, re- volving tunil which Docld proposed t0 cal tho “international commod- ir Iiousc." was drafted by ..tr-e of F.A.O. experts six months lino. CONSTABLES SUSPENDED IIIOIVFREAL, Nov. 21 — (CP)— Two n10: lity squad constables have bean suspended and are un- der investigation for allegedly re- " votcctlon money," as- cinr Ernest Pleau of .. . i-ol Police Force an- nouncwi tcdav. Coming Events "Mail your Films to Gamhum Photo Silltlifl. Charlottetown. "iiot Chicken Supper, Marie Church Hall, November 23rd. "Reserve Wednesday. December 14th for Zion Candlelight Service. "Dance your best in masquerade dross in Ruslico l-lali on Tuesday, I\ov_ 22. Prizes, refreshments. “Bmoi. Hopc River Hall, Tue:- dfll‘. Nov. 22. Prizes, ducks and Emu. If not Iino, Wednesday. "lvhist and fiance in Hermitage 5011001, Wednesday, November 23rd. B. ll. (Jrcliestra. “Ruiziimagc Sale. Tuesday, Nov.- embei- 22ml, in the Holy Name flail st. 330. Junior Iieague. Bargains. "Now buying Timothy Seed, Cit-Ilium or Fncieaned. McGulgan ' iiyvic. "Attention! Bradnlbane! Dance lCllQfllllflfl for tonight is postponed for One ivcck. D"Dai.re._ \luz'naghnn‘s Warehouse, “lush. iiicsdal‘. November 22nd. 900d music. orzcllflSl-IJIBS Concert and Dance. msfh 11M. Wednesday, December T-“ll-lul meeting Clyde LO.B.A. ctlnnsp. i atlemtil) night. Members please -.:':::.".~.bei= We" i=- H. l’ - um ‘t 830v a Bradalbolo to "Dflnce and Bingo at. Fort A13- usiiu min an“ hldaydhursday. 24th, not U; I m,“ ‘we Rom mu tonight. Cou-sInLoman and the“ oamnry “mode »\ show of songs, music md Y- SB-Ie of lunches. "NM" Tfvon Prohytsrion “ii-Kittens”? thin em“ a from n P, M_ an m mxkhflulll‘ dance. n. ...*:.'.".;"i":*"- an» l! 0111 yt m B071. 3'" leaving I.M.T. sf. 9.46. East Royalty "l" stock t h wo can Bruntford Hsglfialal all grades at special "H" M’ “I'm/INK this week car "t" P- 3- NW Q Co. urbane I W w 9 h New Perth Hall. ilelfl“",l"y- NM’. 23rd. Webster's "m"; “- Allllllces Women's In- u W -s.,§,,“';§ "lilo-rid. Ami Todd iii Bros. Thesty "w" at MMDOIIIH N. M t pm sormhount storm flo- n ‘*- llallfvfltllidmb came all to Afton m,“ mGIIQ-idlv. November 28rd. sole of lunches injid hlllowgm ‘t B! NORMAN ALTSTEDTER NEW YORK. Nov. 21 -_ (GP) - The United Nations Assembly to- day voted decisively to make an independent state of Libya, the Ilfkest colony of Mussolinib pf“.- war African empire. With only Ethiopia dissenting, the ail-member Assembly also rul- ed that Italy shall administer It- alian Somaliland under a 10-year UN. trusteeship preceding inde- pendence and that s UN. enm- mision recommend next year dis- position of Eritrea. Libya, the strategic ares on the Medtterraneanb south shore wrest- ed from German and Italian hands by British forces during the Second World War, is to be a sov- ereign state not later than Jan. 1, 1952. The vote on one of the Assem- bly's most historic decisions WnS 48 to 1 with nine abstentions. Can- ada voted with the majority. Rus- sia, France, New Zealand, White Russia, Czechoslovakia, Poland. Sweden, the Soviet Ukraine and Yugoslavia abstained. Paraguay was absent. Disposition of the Italian colon- ies _- which have a population of 3,000,000 and cover an area about the size of Alberta and Saskatch- ewan combined - is the first ques- tion in which the Assembly's de- clsion is more than a recommend- ation. Britain, Russia, United States and France agreed in sign- ing the Italian peace treaty to abide by the Assembly's decision if they could not agree among them- selves. The Big Four and then the UN. wrangled for the last three years over the fate of the three separ- ate colonies which have coastlines on the Mediterranean. Red Sea and Indian Ocean. Britain now is azi- ministering all three except one small corner held by France. While the Russian-bloc countries merely abstained In the final vote, they fought throughout the weeks of debate for earlier independence of Libya and Somnllland and im- mediate withdrawal of foreign trncps. Russia has hinted that the filial word on the fate of the colonies has not yet been heard. Unexpected Death 0f Brookfield Farmer The body of a Brookfield farm- er, Mr. John A. MacLeod was found near his barn yesterday morning about seven o'clock by his hired hand. Time of death was sent at Sunday evening by coron- er Dr. J.D. MacGuigan. Dr. MacGulgm viewed the body yesterday and attributed death to natural causes. An inquest will not be necessary. He was last seen shortly after five o'clock or the evening of his death by his hired hand. The em- ployee iived In a. separate house and upon his return to work yes- terday morning found the body. Mr. MacLeod. whose wife is ill in hospital, lived with a Mr. Dan MacLeod who is also lniiispoaed. They lived about om half mite from Brookfieid centre on the Coi- ville Road. Ho is survived by a brother. Mac Maeheod in the United Sta n-i e, half brother, Mr. DM. Rob nsm, Charlottetown. ti? UURID WITH SALT The commonest Ouudim flab cured with salt are oily fish. such as herring. mackerel or ulswives, and non-oily species such us cod, hake and poliock. By ALAN HARVEY LONDON, Nov. 21 — (GP) — Food Minister John Strachey to- day admitted the government un- derestimiated the difficulties of growing peanut: In East Africa. but aid there was no intention of letting the plan go by default. "With o scheme of this kind you either go on with It or you chuck it", he told the House of Com- mons decisively. "Wc have dc- cided to lo on with It." Ho resisted n Conservative de- mand for an inquiry Into what has become known u Britain's groundnuts melodrama — u plan started three years ago to build a Tanganyika peanut empire n an alternative source of food oil: for margarine and oflior fats. no Commons backed bim ill! 0f ‘M "or; who n»: tlu Hunt of I'M new pom. _ Noronic Fire Probe Findings Made PlilLlIC By JOHN LEBLANO OTTAWA, Nov. 21 —— (UP) - Tighter ship safety laws were forecast by the Government to- day as it made public a judicial report blaming the owners and master of the Noronic for the holocaust that blazed through the vessel and took 118 lives at Tor- onto Scpt. 17. The IIODDO-word report by Mr. Justice R. L. Kellock of the Su- preme Court of Canada sharply censured both Canada Steamship Lines and 86-year-old Capt. Wil- liam Taylor for the early-morning fire that wrote a tragic finish to a gay cruise ovcr the Great Iinkea from Detroit. The master's certificate was Sill- pendcd for a year from today, and the company was penalized by be- ing taxed for the Transport De- partment's expenses in a 17-day inquiry at Toronto. These might run to between $50,000 and $100.- 000. The Judge, who sat as oom- missioner in the Department‘! inquiry, ruled the loss of the ship and the loss of life were due to "failure" of the com- pany and the captain to take proper precautions against fire. At the same time, he found ihcre had been "laxity" in Gov- ernment inspection of the 86-year- old ship under safety regulation! and he expressed belief this could have contributed to laxity n!‘ owners and officers In fire Dre- ventlon. A series of recommendations for improved precautions against lira on inland passenger ships were proposed by the Justice, and Trade Minister Howe told the Commons he would be surprised if early legislation did not follow the report. Tabled By Mr. Bows The bulky document was tabled in the Commons by Mr. Howe for Transport Minister Chevrier, who was lll. Earlier, Mr. Justice Kel- lock had delivered a brief judi- ment from the bench suspend- ing the Sarnia, Ont, captain's certificate. The Captain has the right c? appeal from tihe suspension to the Exchequer Court of Canada The company has no a-ppeal from the findings. Whiic the Justice found that the ship's fire-fighting appliance: appeared to have bccn satisfac- tory and In good working order- he castigated the owners and of- ficers of the dQOS-ton Noronic for failure to take proper measures for the detection, alarm and fighting of fires and for getting passengers ashore in the event of fire, The criticism ‘was levelled spe- cifically nt conditions aboard the Ivessel while she lay berthed. as was the case when the fIre broke out in Toronto writh many of tho 527 passengers asleep in their cabins lifost of them were United States residents on s post-season cruise from Detroit to Toronto and re- turn. Only one Canadian was among the dead. the toll of which novr is ll identified and seven known misslnz. Critical of Small Crew All of the l8 crew members on duty at the time of the outbreak _1n¢1uding the Captain -— e 0d. Fifteen of the crew of 11 comprised the duty watch at the time, and the Judge was critical of the smallness of this number. He accused management and of- flccrs of "complete complacency" with regard to fire precautions. Finds Peanut Farming In East Africa Tough Job tonight, defeating the Conserva- tive motion for u fulldrcss in- vestigation of the scheme by u vote of 315 to 161. Lobor spokes- mgn pledged they will push on with the attempt to de-vclop the African bush for food-oil produc- tlon. Sli-achey said it was “monstroufl to suggest that 523.000.0130 ($71.- 300000) had been frlttered away In a pennlrt project "with nothlnu to show for It." "There are railways, ports, roads, towns. villages, water nup- plles, hospitals, training colleges, and 100,000 acres of cleared land to show for it." . The Government regretted the "initial mlscalculatloril" which led lo optimistic forecasts of the num- ber of ton: of peanuts that could be produced In Africa later Ship Safety ‘Laws Are Foiiecasi: In gommons Montgomery BY Mu Boyd. WASHINGTON. Nov. 21 —-(AP) — Field Marshal Viscount Mont. Evmery said today he sees no 1m. mediate threat of open Connie“ BFUDWIE In Europe. Arriving in the United States for a round of talks with Angerfpgn military leaders, Britain's No. 1 field commander in the Second World War also declared he does not intend to ask for more United States troops in Western Europe. The victor of El Aleoneln, now chairman of Europe's Western Union defence alliance, reached New York on the Queen Elizabeth and came immediately to the capital 1X1 a United stat“ Ali- Force transport plane. In brief talks with reporters, he made it clear that he sees no 1m. Sees No Immediate War Threat mlnent danger o! war. AB 101' 596141118 more American troops in Western Europe, he said such a. question is political in nat- ure and has nothing to do with him. The Field Marshal looked for- ward to a great battle Saturday. however, between the army and. navy football teams at Philadelphia. Where he will be the guest of Gen. J. Lawton Collins, United state; Army chief of staff. who once Ser. ved as a coups commander under Montgomery. British and American officials said the Field Marshal i; iii the United States In a private capacity as the guest of the English-Speak. ing Union, which he will address in New York Nov. 29. He is scheduled to sail for home on the Mauretania Dec, z. Ponder Surgery To Separate AIberIa's Siamese Twins TOFIELD, Alta, Nov. 21 —tCPl -Four days old and repcrted "do- ing fine," Siamese twin girls born to Mrs. E. A. Townsend, 20, were being nourished tonight in an in- cubator while medical authorities pondered the question of separat- ing them by surgery. First Siamese twins born In A‘- berta, the children were delivered last Thursday morning in the tiny but modem Tofield Municipal Hos- pital, 35 miles southeast of Edmon- ton. They are joined at. the alb- dcmen in front. Their father said that aside from the union the children are "perfect- ly developed." The attending physician, Dr. W. H. Freebury, said it ls impossible t0 say yet whether the twins can be successfully separated by an op- eration. He said he hopes the girls can be saved although it is unusual for such cases to survive. Meanwhile, the mother was re- ported makin remarkable progress in hospital athough "it was quite a blow" to learn of the condition oi the babies-her first. She had expected twins. "I don't know what to say," said Townsend, a. ZZ-year-old clerk for Northwestern Utilities Ltd., "we can only hope that somehow an op- eration can save our little girls." They weighed a total of nine pounds l2 ounces at birth. Formation Of New Party In China Forecast HONG KONG. Nov. 21 — (AP) —A new party hostile both to the Communists and Chiang Kai-Shell may be in the offing in China. Acting President LI Tsung-Jen is expected to take the lead In it. He has been In hemiiol In this crown colony since his u- rlval Sunday. Ohianiu still is awaiting Li in Chungkinig. The Genernlissimo went there from Formosa last week at Li's invitation. ' Foreigners from inland China said the new party, which would expect United States helm in stemming the Communist-I. likely would shape up this way; Li and hil own friend. Cam. Pat Chung-hsl, strongest Nationalist military rnan left on the mainland. would join forces with three other important Chinese, Gen. Chan Chai- Tong; administrator of I-Iainun Il- lnnd, and Generals flu Seh-Yueh and Yu Han-Mow, In Southern KwanI-Tung Province. These observer: said the new party would adopt s more vigor- ous policy againsi the Communists than Chlungb policy of trsdin‘ space for ilme and avoiding mo- jor battle: with the Reds. Such a policy, the observers slid. might gain the support uf people dissatisfied with the Com- munist administration and might win Iympathy In the United States and nmtantlnl material lid. OLD-TIME PUNISHMENT The first known use 0f stocks 1n mglund u m instrument of pun- ishment n: in 1050; the mt wu in May Increase Livestock Exhibits At IThe Royal Island Hogs Barry Off Coveted Award; Local iircun Enthusiastic liver Air Trip To Toronto. Prince Edward Island may 59nd all breeds of dairy cattle exhibit; to the Royal Winter Fair my; Yea-r. A committee of Allison Prof- itt, Freetown, and H.J. Kennedy, Charlottetown. ivas appointed Jj/ the Royal Winter Fair Committee to lay the initial pliins, The Glue;- dian learned from Mr. Profitt or. his return from the Fair. The. project has been assured all Co- operation and assistance by pram. 1B1’ J. Walter Jones and Minister of A __icult/ure CC. Baker. Repro- senta Ives from all breeds will be included in the Island commit- tee. Showing for the first time at the Royal since 190s and with only two entries In a class of 26 of all breeds, Prince Edward Island Yorkshires won first and fourth place in the single bacon hog class. The comparatively new swine breeder, Willard Proude or Kingston, won the Brcthour Tro- phy awarded for the best Wlltshlre side of bacon and considered tile top win for swine at the Royal. David Wright of Lower Montague was placed fourth in this class. The 3.2 Island bacon hog exhibits were well placed in other classes. The 2i excursionists on the Mar- itime Central Airways’ flight to Meat Rationing Ends In Denmark COPENHAGEN, Nov. 21 (Reuters) -— Meat rationing ended in Denmark today after nearly 10 years, but price controls were lifted too and Danish housewives crowding into butchers shops found meat costing half as much again as on Saturdav. P. E. I. Men Charged With Armed Robbery BRANTFORD, Ont., Nov. 21 — (CP) — Accused of holding up a dice game Sunday, James M. Ro- bertson, 21, and his 18-year-old brother, Allen, formerly of Souris, P.E.I., in magistrates court todav elected trial by higher court on Charles 0f armed robbery. They were remanded in custody to Nov. 28 Police said the two youths held 11D l1 dice game at the rear of a confcctinnory store here Sunday morning and were arrested a few hours later in bed at their suburban home. Murder And Suicide Verdict ANNAPOI-IS ROYAL, N. 8., Nov. 21 —(CP) -—A coroner's jury today returned a verdict of murder and suicide In a double slaying at near- by Victory last week. The Jury decided Myron R. Selig. 37, shot and killed Mrs. Irene E. Morro. 44-year-old taxi operator, then took his own life with the r1 e. Mrs. Abbott Dewey testified that Sellfl had been at her house two weeks before the slaying and had told her he would "get oven with Irene if it's the last thing I do." Why he wanted to "get even.” did not come out. in evidence. Mrs. Dewey said Selig had thrown himself on the floor and complain- ed about severe pains in the leg. She quoted him as saying: "I must be crazy." Police evidence was that there were no signs of a struggle In the car-in which the shootings occurr- ed-and that Mrs. Morro had not been criminally attacked. Mrs. Maynard Rosencraniz. moth- er of Mrs. Morro, said Selig had come to her house twice during the afternoon of the shooting. Selig had been drinking but the two did not quarrel. The second time he came to the house, Mrs. Morro left with hiim to drive him to his brother's home. The two men were to go (Continued on Page 5 Col. 4) hunting the next day. OTTAWA, Nov. 21 — (CP) ~- Ruddy, weatherheuten Capt. Wil- liam Taylor, 66, of the disaster ship Noronlc was denied use of his master's certificate for a year today and exposed to biting com- mentary by the Judge who probed loss of his ship and an estimated 118 lives by fire Sept. 17. Mr. Justice R. L. Kellock, in n Bil-page report on his court of in- vestigation, found tho Sarnla, Ont. skipper and the shIp‘s owners, Cunnda Steamship Lines Ltd., cc- sponslble for the fire because of "wrongful default" In their “fail- ure“ to provide adequate safety measures. Informed sources said the report could be used as the llllll for criminal action In the courts, Civil suits would be Initiated by surviv- ors or by relatives of those who perished. Mr. Justice Kellock, one of the seven judges of the Supreme Court of Canada, did these things to Capt. Taylor: 1. Ordered his sengoing cer- tificate suspended for s year from ‘today. 2. Sold he was “extremely naive" in some of his evidence. 3. Maintained that both he and his officers and the com- pany were "completely com- placent" about fire prospects and precaution. 4. Charged that he should have organized and directed the waking of passengers In- stead of acting as “an ordin- ary sailor In such parts of the ship as he could reach" amid tho flames. 5. Said he showed neither "resource nor initiative." 6. Raised the question of whether he was "intoxicated" and quoted evidence but made no clearcut decision. Under’ the Canada Shipping Act. basis for the inquiry, Capt. Taylor has the right to appeal tho sus- pension to the Admiralty section of the Exchequer Court. In Montreal, Capt. Norman J- Noronic Owners Stand By Suspended Caltain changed. . . he \vII] have the full benefit of pension fund provis- ions." Cnpt. Taylor is due to retire on pension In “about two years." The Kellock report recalled that the Captain returned to his berth- cd ship In Toronto harbor about 1:25 tun. Sept. 17, shortly before fire was discovered. He had been out for the evening with a lady passenger. The Cnplnln himself testified that he hnd Ono drink that night nnd two Toronto policemen who encountered him on the dnck ns the fire razed said they smelled liquor on his breath, but saw no other Indication he had been drink- ._<< legislation Is Introduced In Commons OTTAWA, Nov, 21—(CP)—LegIs- latlon authorizing the Federal Gllvemmht to rev 50 P81‘ cent of the cost of a Trans-Canada High- Wfly Was sponsored In the Com- mflll-S ‘Gd-IV by Reconstruction h7'""icr Winters. He dld not estimate the total 00st, Iiut there has been specula- tion that the Federal share will range between $150,000,000 and $200,000,000. Mr, Winters spoke on a rcsolu. tlon to a bIll that would allow the Government to enter into agreements with the Provinces on plans for completion of roads that would form links In a Trans-Can- ada Highway, Not Enough George Drew, Progressive Con- servritive leader, said the offer to pay 50 per cent of the cost of such s highway was not enough. A Do- minion - Provincial conference should be called to discuss how the Provinces would finance the In- creased burden they would assume on undertaking new road con- struction. Mr. Winters said that curly In September he forwarded letters to the Ministers responsible for high- ways in each Province, seeking agreement on broad questions of policy which might ultimately form the basis of agreements. “Replies indicating agreement In most principles have been receiv- ed from nearly all Provinces," he said. "Concurrence of others in a general way has been Indicated verbally. Some technical details remain to be worked out: between the Federal and Provincial Gov- ernments, and specific routes re- main to be defined by formal agreement.” , Tables Correspondence Befnreintroduclnz his resolu- tion, Mr, Winters tabled correspon- dence regarding the highway with Seven of the 10 Provinces. He in- dicateil the other Provinces had asked that the toiiespondence not he tabled at this time. The latter Provinces were British Columbia, Nova Scolla and Manitoba, The correspondence Indicated various stages of negotiations with each Province, Premier Smnllwood of Newfound- land suid he was "most eager to be in on the proposition from the start." Construction of the highway would be held back unless a real Dominion-Provincial conference was called to discuss how projects will be financed, The Provinces ing. could not assume added responsib- ility wlthcut, knowing where riddi- tinnal revenues would come from. For Instance, an offer to pay 50 per cent of the cost of a highway across Newfoundland would not solve that Provinces problem. The cost of such n road would be such as to bear too heavily on the Pro- vince. Al: the night sitting, Ilazen Arline (CCF-Asslnlboial urged the Federal Government to pay the whole cost of building the Trans- Cannda Highway. He suid the proposal that the Federal and Provincial Govern- ments split the cost 5050 would be unfair to some. Provinces. It would mcnn Ii per cnpitn cost to the people of Nova Scotln of $28.70 compared with only $3.50 In Quebec. CANBERRA -- (CPl Aris- tralizfs plan to divert the waters of tho Snowy River into the Mor- rriv basin will require RCO miles of‘ tunnels. 500 miles of canals and seven major dams. It will employ anon men and cost about $70),- OfXLOOO. ‘New Turmoil Brewing Over Fate of Jerusalem By NORMAN ALTSTEDTER LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y, Nov. 21 —(CP) — New turmoil over the fate of Jerusalem brewed today in the United Nations. Australia delivered the first pro-debate thrust, submitting a resolution calling for a permanent International regime for Jeru- salem. The Israeli delegation In- dicated bitterly lt believes the Australian plan is old and unac- cepiable. The struggle slated to break out later this week In the lib-member special political committee of the U. N. Assembly revolves around this Issue: Should Jersualem become an In- ternational city totally unda; U. N. rule, or should only its hol_v_ places be under International sup- ervlrionf Top delegates expect the debate on the question will last about l0 days in committee. The outcome Reach, general manager of C. S. L. laid the company is "standing by" the skipper, that Taylor's "posi- tion with the company in uh- could have for-reaching implica- tions — renewed strife in Pales- tinefibutldintt of the largest in- ternational police force in history. and setting up the first truly Un- ited Nations city administration. Canada. which played a key role in framing the U. N. partition plan of Nov. 29, 1947, which led to the birth of Israel. is expected to sit on the sidelines In the com- ing debate. It is understood the Dominion‘! delegation has an "open mind-on the subject." Moshe Sharett, Israel's Foreign Minister, Is here tn argue against any total U. N. rule of the holy city. His government is willinfl. however, to co-operate in U. N. supervision of the holy places in and out of Jerusalem which would leave the Israeli Government a free hand outside the holy places. Israeli forces hold the new city section of Jerusalem and have dis- counted sny suggestions it be given up. The forces of King Abdullah of l-Iashemite Jordan o8- cupy the old city section. They appear no less adamant about keeping their possessions. A major question is whether Israel or I-Isshemite Jordan can afford to stand uainst world op- Ropert Subsidy On Eggs Is Planned TORONTO. Nov. Z1 --(OP)' ficials of the Ontario Federlfiefl Agriculture said today a plan for Canada's egg nnrkfl being planned by the Fledaol - ernrnent. The plan would c org the effect of the British Govern- ment's decision to purchase her eggs from Denmark 1n future, the: Official! slid. Find Children Tied. Alone In House VANCOUVER. Nov. It -- (C?) -In a poverty-stricken homo, irwo small children were found tied to a bed, and the third—only two years o1d—toddled about a barri- caded room. Policewomen found the children Saturday on u call from the Children's Aid Society. Two girls, one aged three, and. the second five years old, were tied to the bed with rope. The door was barricaded with chairs. The father. an unernipfloyod. hos- pital orderly, said he ‘bound the children "to keep them out otf mis- chief." He was away from home and the mother at work when the police arrived. Policewoiman C. Halcrovw acid "there was nothing for the bgjby to eat. Salami and mustard was all we could find for fhc others." The case Is In the hands of the Children‘s Aid Society. Svveepsiake Tickets King-Pin Arrested LlNDsl-Y- Ont. Nov. I1 — (GP) — Thousands of books o; 11,1514 sweepstalre tickets were seized dur- ing the week-end when police u- rested "Babe" Heels, described as king-pin of distribution in this area. Police said Heels was head, of a r111! which did 535.0(1) to $0,- 000 business s. year. VUBUC OFHCIALS ARE ViRbT ‘Swoon- nu-Auo 111mg.’ tussro our: TORONTO, Nov. 21—(CP)—Mh\i- mum and maximum temperatures: Victoria 34, 49; Edmonton 19, 55,“ Regina 03, —; Winnipeg 03, 19; Toronto 28, 30; Ottawa 24, ‘ ; Montreal 28, 29; Quebec 29, 82; Saint John 25, 36; Moncton 82, —; Halifax 39, 42; Charlottetown 34. 35; Sydney 40, 45; Yarmouth 31‘, 42; Si. John's 32, 49. HALIFAX, Nov. 21 — (t?) - Official inland forecasts Issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Office st Halifax: Synopsis: liiondny evening thcre went vzidely scattered snourflurries over the Maritimes. A northerly cur- rent of cold air ls expected to continue to flow scrum the d18- trict. This will cause variable cloudiness with widely scattered snmvflurrics Tuesday. Regional forecasts, valid until midnight Tuesday. Prince Edward Island: Cloudy Tuesday with snawflurrles during daylight hours. Little change In temperature. Light winds. Low early Tuesday morning and high in the afternoon at Charlottetown 28 and 38. High tide today at 12.37 P. M. and at 11.49 P. M. Sun rises this morning at 1.19 A. M, and 4.30 P. M. Summi-rside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. "Dance every Friday night It the (‘iordon Lodge. Good music. Dancing from 9 till 1.. iVOOD ISLANDS - CARIBOU DAILY FERRY Leave Wood Islands l1 A.M., l IKIVL. Leave Caribou 11 Al“, 1 P.M., 8 A.IIII.. l RM. 8 AJIL, 8 EM. BORDEN - TORMENTINE FERRY WEEK nAYs Lv. Borden Lv. Capo Tonnenflns 0.10 A.M. 10.35 AM. 1.00 PM. 2.40 PM. 4.30 PM. 1.80 EM. SUNDAYS Lv. Capo Tormentlno 1035 AM. Lv. Borden 0.10 A.M. Inicn 8.45 PM. 3,00 PJL four _ g~ llklvk