MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN Irina-nouns vleeoofthallnll flsovlrtuaa utaoelaiy arellse The Guardlaa. Three Canto, Merrill‘ Dally Pounded llll. CONSERVATIVE _lf Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1949 1.1 HARMONY MARKS N_FLD. UNION DEBATE Returns F rem Visit To Party Leaders Rehabilitation Costs As Former Home In Germany See Red llffer llirect Threat lo Norway By J.M. ROBERTS, Jr. [Associated Press News Analyst) Revival by Russia of that fav- orite weapon of the 1900s, the "non-aggression" pact, brings an ominous note to the cold war. "when the dictators talk about peace. small countries have to ronsider their defence," remarks a Copenhagcn newspaper, remem- bering well what happened to Den- mark when Hitler started tearing up treaties. But the lessons taught by dead Hitler were not. the one: that caused shivers up and down Scan- dinriian spines as Russia applied the hcnt to Norway. All about were living reminders of what Russian treaties have meant to the. neighbors of the Norwegians, ihs Swedes and Danes. They remember well Litvinovb definition of a treaty of neutral- iiy as "nothing but one of the ele- ments in lhe preparation for war." sinca hcr conception Soviet Russia. has been making treaties to ilt. the tactics of the moment and then breaking thorn without compunction. In the cases of Fin- lsnd and Poland alone she vio- lated her signatures on the Sov- iel-Poiish treaty of peace; the Brisnd-Kellog anti-war pact; a non-aggression treaty with Poland; her own definitions of aggression rontnined in lrcatics with nine countries: the convention of the ‘ (Continued on Page 5 Col. l) Coming Events "Horse race at Stanley Wednes- day. Feb. 9, starting at 2 o'clock. "Mail your Films to Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Dance and card party Tracadie l-lall. Wednesday, Feb. 9th. "'Rcserve March 17 for Prince l'.(l\\lll‘(’1 island Hospital Ladies Aid 1M. Zion Church hall. “Southport vs. Milton at Milton rink tonight. League game. Skate B El‘. “l-lazclbi-ookm-W‘. M. S. Pantry Sal'- Rllllers Hardware February will 2 P. M. "Pantry Sale at Priowsc Bros. Saturday, February 19th. St. Char- les Auxiliary. "llzlncc in Vlfislter Connlclds lliloll. Klnkora. Friday night Feb. ‘fl-serum rams East Royalty m” "llllirht. Covehead Red . Royals. Skate after. “Di-me and Card Play. Ifort Auiusllll Kali. Wednesday, Febru- "Y 91h. Good music and lunches. Junior hrvnqa. llwbarlor sucinl at the homo of air‘. and Mrs. Fred Bernard. French fill‘. Wednesday evening. Feb. “Hliriloadtng car of bran. shorts. Cori}. 0M: and mixed feed at j Sm" Wednesday. Feb. o. Cecil ~ lewart. "lflllle same tonllht Hunter frlaver Rink, Charlothtoyn poms. u. ll- Hunter River lhur-Gains. mm! starts I o'clock. Skate ‘b 500d music. "For a mu nl|hl.'a Onhttaln- gill!‘ vlait MacDonald Bros. . "M" lohlrht- Bu Eddie Dean in hmfl" lllrlller. Wild West, plus hm and l-lmlv Short. Plus Jessie < 8 aerial. ghqw g p_ M_ "H0! Starter Hog Iattene- gzilyilllatlon nd all other ra- m w“ "llflllht or assorted cara bmw ode and /or ground oats, M h}, an ‘wheat. Enquiries Invit- mul: "r our buyers. Atlas Grain . 7' 2°"! 1. Montreal. ' ' "Unloadin i‘ 5 I car mixed grain at ml‘ 79M. waterfront. ill day wldnesday 1m, i - "my ash. includ- Ijzuzlldeliiaxxlizelcnoétsawhlala an? ' ll‘ IYIHII n m" "M" oricu for Cash: Annexawgblilzestock Feed _Cll'l‘.l’lll! back with him a con- viction that Europe is in a had way and that the people of Canada do not realize how lucky they are, Mr, Evald Herr arrived back in Sunl- merside on Sunday evening after n visit to his former home in Ger- many. Mr. Herr came to this coun- try nlneleen years ago in July, Since his arrival here he has made for himself a place in Cnnndlgn life, has become o naturalized citi- zen, was married in 1945 and has two children. His visit to Germany was his first since he left that country and W“ "lam! llfimllfily’ l0 sec his fil- ther and mother. who are elderly and not in the best of health. He travelled all the way by air, to London by Trans Canada Alrllncs and from London to Frankfurt in Germany by British European Air- ways. He left here on Salurflny. January 8th. and after spending n day and a half in London arrived at his old home near Cologne Tues- day morning. The reception he received from hi| family and his neighbors was something that Mr. Herr says he will never forget. He was, to them, a person from another world. His parents’ home is in the country in the British occupation zone and. while the people find the 0t‘t‘\lp_\'- ing authorities very fair. Mr. l-Ierl- found conditions very hard. Prices Very High \Vhile there seemed to he work for all and wages are fail-Iv good. prices are fantastically high and the black market is everywhere. '\ half pound of butter costs 12 marks. about $4.00 in Canadian money. and an egg is worth about Voice Welcome To New Province By George Kitchen OTTAWA. Feb. 7 ——lCPl -— On a general note of harmony and approval. the Commons today bc- Ban the task of cementing the uglion of Newfoundland and Can- a a. Before a crowded chamber and well-tilled public galleries. Prime Minister" St. Laurent. who helped draft the union terms, moved the legislation necessary to implement those terms and open the u-ay (Continued on Page 5 Col. Ill Much As First Worhi War Says Federal Election Certain This Year WINNIPEG, Feb. ‘I - (CP) —- Senator Ian Mackenzie of Vancouver. former Veterans‘ Affairs Minister, said today ln an Interview: that "there la no doubt" a Federal election will be held thla year._ two marks. Tha introduction of a (Continued on Page 5 Col. 2) llarliament Nears Annual Million Dollar Mystery (CP) annual so. OTTAWA, Feb. 7 Parliament received lis million-dollar mystcry story day, hundreds of pages thick. It was the yearly report of un- claimed bank balances, tabled in the Commons by James Sinclair, Parliamentary Assistant to Pin- ance Minister Abbott. There's a‘ total of $4,260,000 which nobody; seems to want. ranging from thel 824.608 which Mrs. ML. Maitland- ‘Pennant, care of Barclayts Bank. London, left in the Dominion Bank in Toronto nlnc years ago to tlio l0 cents left by Henri Letiecq in the San Celestin. Que. branch of the Provincial Bank in 1M3. The report hints at hundreds of incid- enta of (be recent wnr. such as the hundreds of dollars deposited in Halifax and Saint John. N.B.. banka by Crock scamcn such as Georges Styllanldis who left $4.605 in the Royal Bank at Saint John in i042. and vanished. Nomi-clans. Swedes. Britons. they all charit- in frcm the wartime sons. loft some of their money. nnd vanished. There are ‘the I7 R.A.I".. men who left "as much as $30 apiece ln the Royal Bank at Charlotte- town and never came back for it and there is the 835 l!" lll l‘ Sussex, NB. bank by the men's Mr. Justice Tweedy Prize Winners In Navy League Essay Contest Winning a gold medal. a visit t0 the fleet and a chance to win the All-Canada diamond nlcclnl. Kalil- crille lllacLcan. 17, 295 Richmond Street, Charlottetown. a sturiclit at Prince of Wales College. topped the senior entries in the Provincial Navy League Essay Contest, lin- iiouuccd Hon. Mr. Justice Tweedy. president. at. lhc annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Division of the Navy League of (Zanadl. held in the Supreme Court Build- ing yesterday afternoon. The first prize amongst the Juri- iors was awarded tn Robert Thomas Botvlcs, 12. 22 Granville Street. Charlottetown, n pupil of Queen's Square School. who wins a Gold Medal nnd/ a hllndwme wrist watch, with the chance of winning the All-Cnnnfltl Junior Con- lcsi and a visit in the fleet. Mary Creigllau. 15. 294 Sytlnov Sti-ccl, Charlottetown. a student (ll Nciirc Dame Academy won a silver medal. with thc second best csshv in the senior section and Ronald Albert. Leard. 15. Summersida High School the third place and a bronze medal. The second and third winners in canteen of the 8th Anti-Aircraft Unit. DUDAPET, Fob. ‘l -~- (OP: -- Joacph Cardinal Mlndszellfy. aus- tained by his religious faith, pray- ed alone in his prison cell to- night as the hour of his judgment on treuon charges drew near. Verdicts against the Cardinal and elk col-defendants will be an- nounced by the Peoples Court of Communist-dominated Hungary at 9 A.M. tomorrow (4 A.M.. ASTL The thin Roman Catholic Primate and the others face pOsslblg death by hanging. While the court deliberated. Hungary's Government-controlled newspapers hammered may at Cardinal Mindasenty - the man who had asked in his final plea kturday that the love of his Church be extended to the state he is aecuud of betraying. Protests against the trial mount- ed in the Roman catholic world. Many Protestants and Jews Join- (Continued on Page s Col. i) Cardinal Mindszenty To BeSen.tenced ThisM0ming ed in these expressions of indig- nation. The Hungarian Government re- jcctcd Britain's protest over re- fusal of Hungarian authorities to allow British observers to attend the trial. All published comment on the trial In Budapest portrayed the Hungarian Government's view- point that the Cardinal was not indicted in his capacity as leader of the nation's 711104300 Catholics but. as a "political adventurer." A groop of important and fer- vent Roman Catholics here told one reporter they were simply un- willing to acknowledge that oar- dinal Mlndssenty was anything other than a vory strong defend- er of his faith. The verdict in the Cardinal's case will ecu-lo M days after he was jailed. Besides treason he and others are accused of spying and black- market money dealings. .J. Morris: Judge Tweedy Re-elected At Navy League Meeting The annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Division of the Navy League of Canada. was held in the Supreme Court Building yesterday afternoon. Hon. Mr. Justice Tweedy. president. in the chair. brought in the following slate of patrons and officers for the Cll!"li{@n15 BY DOUGLAS HOW OTTAWA, Feb. '1 (C?) Canada now has spent as much to rehabilitate and care for her vet- erans of the Second World War as she spent to fight the first one. The figure the Finance Depart- ment gives for tlte cost to Canada oi’ the first war is 51.696.000.000. By March 3i, the costs of re- habilitation, pensions. hospital treatment and other phases of (he program unfolded after the Sco- ond War will be beyond $1.700.000.- 000. or an average of more (nan $130 for r-viery Canadian. Towering far above both is the 818.000.000.000 t o 819900.000. - 0000 which (be finance Department gives as the cost of the Second War. The Veterans Department gener- ally estimates that Second War re- habilitation alono will cost. $1,500.- 000000 by 1050 but this does not include pensions. war veterans allowances, hospital costs and Vot- erans Land Act roqulrcmcllts. The l l total bill by that. time will pro- The nominating committee ibabiy be beyond $Z_OQO_OOQ_OOOV The big individual rehabilitation have been war service rent year. which yves unanimously lgratuitics costing $469.000.000. re- accepted: Patrons: The Lieutenant-Gov- ernor. His Honour J. A. Bernard; l-hc Premier. Hon. J. Walter Jones; the Leader of the Opposition. Hon. Dr. W. J. P. MacMlllnn. OB.E.: the Attorney-General. Hon. F‘. A. Large. K. C.: the Director of Edu- cation. Dr. L. w. Shaw: the Di- i rector. ,0! Phltsllf-ll. Ahmad-Brian; ~ dier W. W. Reid. 13.50.. E.D.: Captain W. S. Gordon. I-lon. Presidents! Chief Justice Thane A. Campbell: John 0. l-lyndman. Esq. Hon. Vice-President: I... B. Mac- Millan. ESQ. O.B.E. President: Mr. Justice Geo. J. Tweedy. Vice-Presidents: Finance. Mr. J. Sea Cadets. Commo- l NEW Gales}? us. Feb. v-Yiiohee. dcro Godfrey M. Hibbert. C. B. E; i with him. Lt. Cn-idr. J. N. Kenny and Ian A. Burnett. Publicity Committee: ivlr. Oscar Dlamrnd. chairman; Norman. M. Satindzirs. Secretary: J. E. Burnett. Treasurer: Li. Col. Leo F. Mac- Donald. Auditor: Mr. W. P‘. M8559)’- The president. Mr. Justice Tweedy. presented an encouraging (Continued on Page 5 Col. dl Mr. l.‘ i i I I establishment credits of $236000.- 000, and other benefits such as university and vocational training. running to $260-000.000. Hospital costs, including construction and treatment. |13\'I' run to $247.000.000 since I945 but. some of those costs involve firs-i war men. Meanwhile. the lingering ‘(more of»! the First War are far from finish-- ed. 'I‘llr~y will run about 580.000.1100 for its veterans ln the next budget. Vote To Build Sports Centre In New Glasgow (CP) -» Ratepayers voted today in favor of a l.0\\‘n guarantee 0n bonds to build a sports centre here. The approved resolution ("R115 for application to the Nova Sco- (ia Legislature by Town Council k0" “uflmmy 1° Ewaram” ‘m 1° President Truman today formally $75,000 to build a modern rink. BRIGHT VAN DYKE In his cxpcrimcnts (n develop the incandescent light, ‘Phomns Erl- ison fried cardboard and illc wills I crs of n man's beard for filaments. ‘Lpglslaflon h, Cnnflnue Report L. Preparing Blast At Canadian. T.L.C. ll Charge Canadian Union With llarhorlng Communists. MIAMI. Fla. Feb. 7 -- (AP) The American Federation of L;- Fuod PfiSkagQ bars-executive council is reported lndlan woman drafting a statement blasting il-i Canadian Trades and Labor Con- gress for harboring Communists or Communist. sympathizers in Canadian unions. A. F. l... president William Grccn told reporters a three-marl coun- cil committee is preparing a store- ment for approval at: tomorrow's council session. He said it will outline recommendations for elim- irialtini! pro-Soviet men from the Canadian '1‘. L. C. The council is nearing an end of its n-inter meeting and prob- ably will adjourn tomorrow. In the discussions of the Can- adian labor situation. Percy Ben- gough. president of the T. L. (7.. and Prank Hall, its vice-president. and head of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks in Canada. both appeared before the council. Hall charged the T. L. C. with being too inactive in weeding Red svmpal-hlzers out of the T. L. C. {The council was reported to have Jlskfll Bengouah to take a more militant stand but he is reported to have declined lo make any specific promise. Several council members said privately that. as a result. the A. I". L. will sharply criticize the T. L. C. in n. statement tomorrow and call for prompt acllon'in elim- inating Communist influences. 9N PEACETIMEQR)!!! LONDON —- 1C Pl Civilian work worth 81601100000 has been handled by Britain's royal ordnance factories since the end of the war. Cootcrete houses. concrete sleepers and ceramics are among the things that have been manufactured. i l l \\'ll\'l‘l('l\V ROCK. Artz. Fell i»- tAPl- -An Indian wnmnn was re- ported killed yesterday hy a food package dropped from an air lift plane. The accident occurred when n package. tossed from a carrying supplies to snow-bound Indians, fcll directly into the r100" yard of a Navajo dwelling and hit (he woman. Normally packages fall about 300 yards distant. Two-Year Sentence For Saint John Robbery SAINT JOHN. N. 8.. Feb. ‘l - (CPl -_ John Morris. of no fixed address. was sentenced today to two years in penitentiary on charges arising from a robbery and attempted robbery Dec. 27. Wit- nesses had identified him as one of two man who first attempted to rob Rev. Eric Strain in the Gospel Tabernacle here and then forced n tobacco store clerk to hand over I00. First Television Sets Turned Cat At Nallfax HALIFAX, Feb 7 --(CPl ~I-'irst complete television sets turned out at a new Halifax plant. (Cosaor Canada Ltd.) are on their way to Southern Ontario display rooms to- day. The company said the sets were the first Canadian-designed models to be turned out. Retail price would be about 8615. __ the Canadian new - i shall Plnn for 15 more months and 'ailihorizo ‘Congress fndny. Tile amount called ‘ first 15 months of the program. plan" ‘ By-electlon Results OTTAWA. Feb. 7—(CP)— Pro- gressive Conservative memhor of the Commons tonight cheered and lapplauded loudly when it was an- inounced that their party's candi- ;daie had won the Nicolet-Yamaska Irv-election. Rodney Adamson (PC-York West) rushed into the House shortly after Press had reported Renaud Chapdelalne, Progressive Conservative candidate. had won. ‘ "Nlcoiet-Yamaska has been con- lcedetl." shouted Mr. Adamson and inlnlcdintely the cheering and ap- plause started. ' G. H. Cnstloden (CCF-Yorkton) had the floor at. the time in the Newfoundland debate and his re- {mnrks were interrupted for almost la minute. j - As a rcsult of the luv-election the TCommons stnndinzz is: l Liberals. 124; Progressive Con- servatives, 68; C.C.F.. 32; Social ‘Credit. 12; others. eight; vacant 1; total 2-15. n. A. i..i...;.;ff ‘llefeat llalhousle l i HALIFAX. Fob. T-—(CPl -- A iMoilnt Allison debating team fo- lllifihi defeated Daihoilsie University horn h)‘ a split (lccision. The dc- haic “as a scheduled argument. in ‘the. winter series of the Maritime Intercollegiate Debating League. . The Sackville debaters supported isucccssfully the ncgntive of tho l resolution: "Resolved that a general move- ment in the direction of the sur- render of national status in favor of world citizenship would be bene- ficial to world peace.“ News In Brief I WASHINGTON. Feb. Tm-(API- lNonvzty/‘s Foreign Minister today isubmiitctl personally tn Dean Acheson. Secretary of State, ques- tions his country wants answered [before deciding whether to join in lihe North Atlantic security al- ilirince, Russia has hroilght pressure inn Norway to stay out of the al- l LONDON. Feb, 7—lAP)—Britain nnd five Commonwealth countries will begin trade talks in Tokyo Feb. .15. hoping for a RIlC-XPHI". $300,000.- 000 agrcomcnt with Japan. 1 WASIIINGT-CN: Fob. 7—-(APl-~ ‘nominated Laurence A. Steinhardt Ins Ambassador to Canada. Stein- -liardt succeeded Ray Alherton to | the Canadian post last October. WASHINGTON. Feb. 7-~(AP)— the Mar- 7i.530.0ll0.fl00 of new spending on it was introduced in for is 51.580.000.000 more than Con- ‘gross ncitlally nilprorlrilitctl for the NANKING. Feb. ’7—fAPl—Evi- (it-lire grew tonight of a split bo- .l\\'("i"Il China's nciini! president I.i lTstlng-Jcn and lilo Sim F0 cabinet inn whclhrlr to surrender in the iComnlunists or rcsumc fighting. OTTAWA. Fob, T--(CP)—-A new step In strengthen Canada's defen- sive sot-up was discloscrl today: when tho All‘ Fort-c announced that "Mull float was aver achieved without enthusiasm. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN PAGES M... Subscriptions Delivered $6.00 $5.00; other Provinces b‘ U. l. {[00 “ELECTED IN NICOLET-YAMASKA Conservatives Cheer lchapdglaing Has 196 Maiority Over old Progressive Conservative, today two-county St. Lawrence River rldln dale. Trahan, 7.999: and farmer Romulus Some last-minute confusion was encountered when it was discov- ered that one parish in the l03rd poll reporting had been included in the count of 102 polls. This was corrected and an amended final count which gave Cliapdclaine a plurality of L96. , 'EVEll with these figures Trahan refused to concede until official returns are announced Feb. I0. The total vote of 16.726 was 1.151 more than the 15.515 ballots cast in the 194-5 general election. Neither of the two major con- testants was able to poll 50 per cent of the vote. Mr. Chapdelalne came closest. with approximately- 49.5 per cont. and Mr. Trahan had about 47.8.. , Mr. Chaprielaillefs victory was reported by the. Canadian Press at 8:50 P.M. EST (9:50 P.M.. AST). tiwo hours and 50 minutes after the polls closed. At that. time 85 of the rldlilgs 103 polls had re- ported. Even earlier. on the basis of in- formation supplied by the Canad- ian Press, Paul Sabourin. Pro- gressive Conservative leader in Quebec Province said "Mr. Chap- delainefls victory is assured and complete, and it. is a great vic- tory also for Mr. Drew (George Drew, the Party's Federal lead- erl." On the first poll reported, Mr. Chopdelaine trailed by l2 votes, but all later announcements from the headquarters of returning of- ficer Charles Edouard Vllleneuve sholuied the Progressive Conserva- tive candidate ahead. His margin at one time reached 550 and the late returns began to cut into this sharply but not en- ough to change the final result. The late reports were largely from Yomaske County. which until re- distribution of I933. was a SCDBTB" constituency and had last V0190 Conservative in I887. Nicolet. as an individual riding, last. returned o, Conservative in I911. Up to the time of his death Mr. Dubots had held the seat since 1M0. In the general election of 1946. Mr. Dubois defeated Mr. Trahan with a phiralily of 1.3115 much larger than the margin Mr. Tra- han lost by today. » The poor shflwing of Mr. Man-l seau meant. he lost. his $200 de-l posit. ‘ Chlna’s Postman Able. i To Continue Mall Service : l NANKING. Fob. 1 . (Am -- . China's postnlcn find it much easier than do peacc ilegollalors tol penetrate the "bamboo cilrtain" be- tween Nationalist and Communist. China. Mall service between Com- miinsl. China and Nnnking mnvcs l l llll its signals nclivllir-s have heon , plncod uildci" (inc mnn. Air Com-- [lnodorc W. A. Orr. C.B.E., of Wet- nskiwln. Alia. and Ottawa. l WASHINGTON. Feb. 7 .~ (CPl ; - Eleven countries agreed today ltn join forces in protecting tho 'rich fishery resources of the northwest. Atlantic. Tlicy approved n treaty -»- tho first muliilalcral pact of its kind M setting up the International Commission for the. Northwest M.- lantic Fisheries. The formal sign- ing will be, 1.1 A.M. EST (12 A.M.. A.S.T.» tomorrow. The agreement. subject to ratt- iicntlon by the ll governments, is (he, result of a 13-day conference attended by representatives of Canada, Newfoundland. the United States. Britain, France. Iceland. Italy. Denmark, Norway. Spain and Portugal. Stewart Bates, Pbderal Deputy Fisheries Minister. will sign for Canada. Other members of the Canadian delegation also will sign —-Dr. A.\\'.H.. Needler, assistant. Deputy Minister; S.V. Ozere of the Fisheries Department; PM. Tov- ell of the External Affairs Depart- ment, and I.i-f. Woodlng. accre- tary. - It was the Canadian delegation. ‘Agree On Commission i iTo Protect Fisheries smoothly. Postmcll refilse to say‘ Iloiv it is accomplished. They fenri revealing it might joopardize ser-i vice. ‘ ‘led by ‘Bates. which front the oili- set took the stand (hat the pro- poscd commission should have no powers of rrgulation. Olhcr coun- tries. originally favoring n. United States proposal to make it a rog- ulntorv body. swung in behind the Canadians as the confrrcllce pro- grossed. The commission's long-range program will be a scientific in- vestigation nf fishery resoilrccs and collection and distribution of statistics. . ' To make tho task caster. (hero will br- a panel for each of five areas: Grcenland, Labrador. N"?!- foundlend. Nova Scoiia, (he New England States. Panel representation limiicd In each case in countries (vhoso nationals rogu- larlv fish m the Tlhrllvlllfll‘ ares. Each voilntry will furnish the scr- vires of its scientific pI-rortilllcl and equipment where herded. The commission's headquarters. although to be in North America. have», not been decided. Halifax has been one site frequently man- tloried. be those (rill Liberal Opponent NICOLET, Que" Feb. 7—(CP)-Lawyer Renaud Chapdelalne. 87-year: won for his parry the Nlcolet-Yanu aakn seat In the Hostile of Commons, breaking the Liberal hold on thin g for tho first time alncn I911. In a Federal by-eloction, brought about by the death of Lucien Du- bnla who was elected in I945 us an Independent Liberal, Mr. Chapdelalna beat back a determined hid by lawyer Paul Trahan, the Llheral candl- Flnnl figures from 10S polla gave this vote: Chapdelalne 8.29M Manaeau, Independent-Liberal, 482. llrew,St.Laurent Comment 0n Election Results OTTAVHA, Feb. '7 —(CPi -< George Drew, Progressive Conser- vativc leader. said tonight that tllo victory in the Nicolet-Yaruaska by- electlon "offers the most convincing proof" that. his party is "on tho march in every part of Canada " In a prepared, statement, Mr. Drew said: “.\lr, Renaud Chapdelainek vio- (ory is a splclldid tribute to a ful young Canadian by the people o his own constituency. “The voters of NlcoIet-Yalmaskn ‘have demonstrated in no uncertain manner their firm belief in nation- al unity based upon respect of out Canadian constitution. “The result of today‘s voting of- fers lhe most convincing proof thas the Progressive Conservative Party (Continued on Page s Col, 5T 4R5 090:1 WM TOR A LADY 1'0 PRBVE hens i5 A REAL SKIN lS _;i'o as a SEA»! Feb. 7 Minimum and lnaxlmuln tempeiu TORONTO. -—tCP) -< alures: Victoria 36 41; Edmonton 15b 8b; Regina 11b 3b; Winnipeg 15b B; Toronto 28 30. Ottawa I 34; Montreal fi (l9; Quebec 5 321 Saint. John ~34: Moncton 3b 3t; Halifax 9 3F»: ChHTlTlHWOXVTT 4 J0;- Sydllcy 1 27; Yarmoutll G 38. B-below. HALIFAX. Feb T -(CP 47h ficlal inland forecasts issued by the Dominion Public Vveaihcr Ol- ficc at Halifax and valid until mid- night. Tuesday’. Synopsis: Monday evening stlmlg SfllUllPTI ly winds are bringing milder all into the Xiarliimos. The. sfnrrfl causing the WlllflS also giving snow “illCll is snmctim = llPlHY‘ but ill the souilicrn rcgiruls of lilo district lempcraillrcs rose in not! 40 drgrcrs and raill was fallin: in ihcsc sections. T1115 storm had moved rapidly along the United States roast and was centred in Southern New Brullswlrk Monday evening. and lt ls expected to continue to move rapidly‘ towards Labrador The 01d ;stnrm that moved from the Grcol iLakes to James Bey is also crin- lllflillnf! on towards the northeast. Rchiild (llcso iwn storm-hr. ihrrc ll ‘a i'lll‘I'(‘lll of roiclcr air from lilo ‘west which will push into the lVlBllllfllCS. This will cause the (cm- peratilres to fall azalri nlld them (will he a few silnwflilrrics Tilcsdoy. 1 Regional forecasts: | Prince Iiclivrird Island: Snow, m"- casionally mixed with rain. dilrinq illlt! night ending h_v morning. iCloudy Tuesday with widely scat- |tcrcd snowflurries. clearing in thl ‘evening. Very mild during thl night becoming colder again 'I‘iles- iday‘. Soiltlleast winds 25 shifting [during the night. in vvcsi. 25. gusty and diminishing ‘Tuesday; cvcnlng gin west ‘l5. Low and high Tuesday at Charlottetown 23 and 27. High tide this morning at G.‘l( and tonight at 5.08. o ‘ Sun rises this morning at 7.11 Valid sols at 5.17. | Silmmcrsidc tide olgnlecn min- utes later than Charlottetown. WEEK DAYS Leaveo Borden 9.10 A. M. and arr-Ives at Cape sornemline al 10.15 A. M. _ Loaves Cape Tormentlne M0 PM; lhd arrives at Borden 8.85 P. M. No Sunday schedule in effect.