them- aif. 5 L 53.00. other Provinces VII”: UOIIIC. use that set also apart. us come only to those who seek curler: ohsrlotastuwa. lsasraarslde 313.00 per asuauna. Elsewhere and U. C. A. 011.00 per annrun. ill. The Pen CHARIJOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1952 IIPERFORTS SMASH NEW TARGETS IN NORTH Second Day Of Bus Strike For Irving-Owned (Io. SYDNEY, Aug. 90 --((7E')-- The strike of Highland Bus Lines Ltd. bus drivers and maintenance men mica its socod day today without sign of a break. Private cars and taxis were re- ported carrying capacity loads in areas served by the buses as the outlying districts began to feel the mike pinch. Union spokesmen said the unions 71 members were deter- mined 10 hold on until their full demands u ere met. A company of- flclal said he had no comment. The union is seeking a general the lo cents offer made by the company owned by K. 0. Irving of Saint John. N B. (As indicated in evidence before 1 Legislative Committee here. Mr. Irving is also owner of Island Mo- tor Transport which operate bus services in this Province). Coming Events "Dance. Lot on tonight. Lunches. Burns Orchestra. "Show. New Glasgow, Thurs- day, "Billy 'l'ile Kid." "Conan to the in Klnkrvrli ljlnll, ust 31st. . rhlcken shipper Thursday. Aug- "Dance. st. Charles Hall. every Thursday, 9.30 to 1. Chaiss'on's Or- thestrn. "Don't forget the pantry sale at Mauls-an'Ii store. Wiltshire, on August 23rd. "Dance. Orwsll Cove Hall. Aug- ust Mb. Morriuey and MacDon- ald orchestra. "werldv dance . in Rustlco Crass Srhool. Oyster Bed Bridge, Thursday night. "Sandy's Drive-In Theatre. shows Tuesdays. wednesdays and Friday! at 9 P. M. "Try our Purina Finance plan. 1" feeding your hogs and poultry. Dillon's; spillett. "ice cream and Pantry Gala in Svfinizbrook llall. August mo. Sllonaorcd by W. l. "5Drclal Meeting Abcgweit R B. P. Kingston. Friday. August 12nd. lhh and 10th degrees. G”Flrmera. ask about the Shun I alln Feed Finance Plan. For part kill on contact your local reed mill "seven Mile Bay Ohioken sup- mfld Bazaar. Wednesday. Aug- ltil. 4.30. Tickets 100 and ado. .n;'""10'if”H8' car feeds at Bread- one. have money at the car. 5. Seaman. ' eekly dance in Tracadls Hall M August 22. Burns Orches- i Ho"?-egulsr Dance in Wlnsioe Sla- ch'IllHIll. Thursday, Aug. Illst. mnr oltetonlsn'a Orchestra. Can- "T0 arrive shortly car of' Old gll',g::Y nggal and bagged lime. Huh". . Russell Drlscoil, Mt. "WW1! Thursday night Dance "iv Egan Ialgloh mu m n........ .-:".-..':.-m "r "”"”' Emerald mil Thur!- w-:ni.”it.f all llllguloflgzn llzusiiil WI. canteen service. '0 ”t "f-In Lesion null Tuss- :.".'i,'3fmW?nIIdar. Ault-Ill: sour gm". - III Supper and increase of 20 cents an hour. double- Eaglghter Sinks, After Col Appeal For Truce On Ta Strikes To Aid Defence Production Is Rejected By JOHN RBLANO WINNIPEG. Aug. 20 - (GP) - A Federal Government suggestion that labor soften the use of its strike weapon during the defence production race was rebuffed today by union chiefs at the Trades and Lalbor Congress of Canada conven- tion. The ca tiousiy-worded appeal for labor-ma agement harmony from Labor Minister Gregg was answered by president Percy Bengough of the 502.000-member 'l'.L.C. and Russell Harvey of Toronto, one of the American Federation of Labor's top men in Canada. Both said labor will continue to exercise its legal right to walk out, despite a, statement from the Min- ister yesterday that Canadian pro- duction now should not be "inter- rullted. impeded or interfered with for even a short time." The convention as a whole made no declaration on the issue. just hearing the two officials who spoke on 9. point of "privilege" on Mr. Gregg's address. President Ben- gough's statement however, could be taken as the official T. L. (7. stand in the absence of opposition from the 500-odd delegates. Mr. Gregg. in office two years. made what was generally interma- ed by newspaper men as a "go slow" appeal on the strike question. However, President Bengough and Mr. Harvey today professed to consider he was misinterpreted. The president. saying he did not think Mr. Gregg intended to say- what he had been construed as say- ing, added: "Labor has certain rights and has exercised them and will continue to do so." ' Mr. Harvey said there should be no inference that something dis- loyal was involved in a trade union exercising its normal strike func- tion. Informants close to Mr. Gregg said tonight it was not incorrect to interpret his speeches I. call on labor men to go easy on strikes in the interests of defence production. However. in view of the reception given this part of the speech today it appeared likely a olearer defin- ition of the government's views on the Question might be given the Canadian Congress of Labor by Ms. Gregg when he s to that ong- anization a month from now in Toronto. German Socialist Party Leader lliea A BONN. Germany.. Aug. 21 -- (Thursday)-Dr. Kurt Schumacher. leader of the powerful socialist Party of West Germany. died here today. He was 57. The crippled survivor of Nazi concentration camps died of "acute circulatory illness." the socialist Party headquarters announced. The one-armed, one-legged soc- ialist leader had been ailing for months. Bchumacher was a fighter all his life. His enemies were the Nazis. the Communists and chronic ill- eslth. I-ls battled them all with equal passion. ....- BERLIN, Aug. Z3 - (CP) -- Charles Noble. 60-year-old Detroit camera, manufacturer. told his wife today of his seven years in East German-prisons and concen- tration camps. when every day he waited for his captors to fulfil promises he would be released 'soon." Noble's wife has been wailing here since 1046, a few months af- ter he was arrested in Dresden. He waf released Tuesday. a month after being found guilty by the Communists of smuggling cameras and .of co-operating with the Nuts. He was given a seven- yosr sentence. counting time sl- ready served. - O! the Nobles' two sons. who wore living with them in Dresden in 1045. George is in Detroit, John probably somewhere in Rus- sia. John was arrested with his father, but they were parted in um... sum officials and the iU.S. and Sovlerauthorlties had a continual argument while he was imprisoned over his correct na- tlonsllty. The 11.5. said German-born No- ble was a naturalized American citizen. , for- Iision In "Channel Tanker Rams. Liberty Ship; crew Rescued DEAL, England, Aug. 20-(AP) -The American wartime Liberty ship Western Farmer broke in halves and sank in the storm- laahfd English Channel tonight three hours after colliding with a. Norwegian tanker. The collision tore a gaping hole in the side of the American ship and ripped her bridge away. Lifeboats from Dover and Rams- gate circled the doomed vessel and, reports here said. picked up the crew of 3'7 headed by Captain Gun- ner Utvik, 62. an American of Scandinavhan origin. The "Farmer" sent out urgent calls for medical help after the crash. indicating some of the crew might be in bad shape. The signals had to be sent by blinker because the radio was wrecked. The 11.732-ton tanker Bjoraholm, built last year, was not seriously damaged. . While attention focused here, a small British trawler. the 260-ton Magnolia. sank in just seven sec-, onds off Eastern England. Reportsl said three of her crew died in an explosion that blew up the trawler; eight were rescued. Stalinist Gro Full Control By William L. Ryan Associated Press Foreign Newer” Analyst The stalinlstdictatorahip made it crystal clear to the people of the Soviet Union Wednesday that the Kremlin, through its rule over the Communist Party. intends to exer- cise complete and ruthless control over every nook and cranny of Sov- let life. It indicated that opposit- ion has been stamped out. and ex- pressed an implied threat against any possible new opposition. An announcement that an all- union congress of the Communist Putty will be convened Oct. 5 is the most important political event inside the U. B. S. R. since the war.. Long awaited, the announcement indicates adown-the-line strength- ening of the dl tatorshlp from top to bottom. poaa bly with a. third world war in mind. The army and navy are distinct- ly- warned that they are under the control of the communist Party. So are all organs of government. New statutes of the party publish- ed today-the congress will affix its rubber stamp in October-speak this warning: ”Extensiva discussion. notably, discussion on the all-union scale; of questions .of party policy, must be organized in such a manner that it does not lead to attempts by an insignificant minority to im- pose its will on ihe.party's major- ity, or to attempts at forming fractional groupings, destroying the unity of the party, to attempts at splitting which may shake the strength and stability of the social- ist system." Plan Economic Equality U.S. Man Spends Seven Years In Soviet Prisonsf The Kremlin also made it plain to Germany turned in 1939 and stayed there during the Second World War. Noble said today he emigrated to the US. in 1920. and returned with his family in 1939 for a health cure: They were trapped here by the war. In January. 1945. the German Foreign Office said the family would be repatriated under an ex- change of nationals arranged by the nod Cross but the order was cancelled and Dresden was taken over by the Russians four months later. The Russians ordered 50.000 cam- erss and gave Noble "every help" in going to Jena. occupied by us. troops. for lenses. Hi, son John went with him and they were arrested on their re- turn for trying to smuggle cam- era parts from the us. zone. They spent 14 months in Drea- dsn Jail under "horrible condi- tions." Noble contracted crippling lhaurnslism in s six-foot-square cell with water ooaing down the walls. In T948. they were trans- ferred to notorious Buchenwsld concenir-sfiun camp. , In Februgyy. 1850. a political of- ficer said is son had been re- leased. but the prison grapevine Two Die When Welding Torch Causes Explosion QUEBEC. Aug. 20 -(GP) -Two men were burned to death today when an acetylene torch touched off a. gas explosion and fire inside a 21,000-barrel gasoline tank being dismantled. Killed were Ronald Sudds. 28 of Kingston, Om.. and William Ruethcr, 24. of Peace River, Alta. Two others. Roger Kennedy of Kingston and Pierre Bedard, 42, of Quebec. were in the tank when the mishap occurred bat escaped through an opening at the bottom of the tank. The steel tank. owned by Mc- Coll-Frontenac Oil Company. Ltd.. was being dismantled by a crew working for Spaldlng and Davis ompnny-. Kingston contractors. tEedard said the four men were building an iron scaffold inside the tank when the fire was started by a torch held by Sudds. He said sudds and Ruether were cut off by the 'fire. while he and Kennedy were near the opening. large enough for one man to pass through. IVIEXICAN FORCES The peacetime strength of the Mexican Army is 51.000 and she also has a small navy and air force- up Gives Notice Intends To Keep In U.S.S.R. ...LL....L....(.g in the ainouncement that the U. S. S. R. will put on all the steam i'dt."'ita commarid' to reach economic equality with the West. By im- plication it informed its agents in the went through the a nounce- ment that steady infiltration and disorganization of Western political groups must be stepped up through 9. form of the popular-front tactics, to maintain an effective fifth col- umn abrond in a. state of alert. Prime Minister Stalin may speak at the congress. if he fol- lows past procedure, he will use the occasion for a major pronouncement on the U. S. S. ills position in world affairs. It should be a massive propa- ganda blast. aimed at convinc- ing the world the soviet Union is the bulwark of world peace abroad and is "progressing to- ward Communism" at home. Wednesday's a nouncement. pub- lished ill all Moscow papers. in- ciuded a draft of new party statutes which leave no doubt as to the total control of the party from the top, and total control of the country's 200,000,000 by the ii.- 000.000 members of the party. There is little pretence at demo- cracy. The intent is clear: The law must be laid down unmistak- ably. The man who will lay it down in the keynote speech is Georgi M. Malenkov, 50-year-old protege of Stalin who now seems more than ever in line for Stalin's dictatorial mantle. Malenkov appears to have been the architect of the new statutes. He forecast this five years ago in a published speech announcing that the central committee was prepar- ing a new party program because the one in use was obsolete Union Head Opposes No Strike Pledge TORONTO. Aug. 20 -(CF) - George Burt. hesd ofthe United Automobile workers (O.l.0.-0.0. l..). and president of the Ontario Federation of Labor (O.C.l..). said today he does not favor a no-strike pledge by labor. I He was commenting on a plea by Labor Minister Gregg that unions refrain from striking during the roarmsment program. - Mr. Burt said labor was already seriously confined in its right to strike and "doesn't think the pru- ent emergency justifies any no- strike pledge." "There probably wouldn't be any strikes if Mr. Gregg would see to it that legislation is passed to make them unnecessary. Mr. Gregg should look for the cause of in- cluszrisl trouble in his own back- , Mr. Gregg made the request dur- ing an address before the Trades and Labor congress convention in Winnim Tuesday night. LONDON - (or) - sir nsllss Tho . chairman of British Over- aoar ii-ways Corporation. asked I pilot to bring him a parrot. The bird. before delivery. was night In The Russians claimed he felted his citizenship when he re- i said John had been carted off to Rlldllfl. ' say "more pay for aircrew." g 0 Princess Margaret Observes 22nd Birthday Today LONDON. Aug. 20 -(CP) - A touch of sadness will almost ceri- ainly shadow the thoughts of Princess Margaret when she cele- brates her 22nd birthday tomorrow within the granite walls of Bal- moral Castle. " Presents and greetings will be brought to the Princess in hcrl suite. But the occasion will be dif- ferent from the happy times spent within the same castle walls when her father was alive. On other birthdays, Margaret went eagerly to the breakfast table in search of a. famiiilar card. It contained mysterious instructions that would lead her to a present- if she could figure out the message. All things considered. this first birthday since the Kings death marks an intangible but real change in the life of the fuil-1ov- lng young princess. since her sister became Queen. Margaret in a sense has been living in ”her sister's house." Buckingham Palace and Balmoral are no longer her own homes. "Close as Princess Margaret is to the Queen." said a palace repre- sentative. "that makes quite a dif- ference-evcn to a. royal princess." it is believed that this as much as anything else will take the Princess from. Balmoral before the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh lbattered Red capital. liorce headquarters that any of the U. S. B-295 were lost in the raid. uniformity of the Grades 11 and i2 is still consideration; no action has been taken nor is it Iullown that any will be taken duriiigvthe coming school term. Premier J. Walter Jones. who is Minister night mean that the curriculum for these grades would be the some schools of the Province which teach them. They would be years at Prince of Wales College aminations would he set. llowever, who would set the examinations is leave for London in October. Mur- 7c6'rI(lEi?Eu”un'"Pu1;e"s'cbflf would be put into effect. ..mL.-....-..... . .- Movie Inspires Hanging Game; Boy Almost Dies OTTAWA, Aug. 20 --NC?) - Police and civic officials today linked the llenr-deatll by hanging of a 10-year-old boy with a movie attended by at least one of tile playmates who strung him up to a pole. Garnet Rlchens was hanged with a six foot-long piece of silk during a game. When his face turned blue. his playmates cut him down. Quick treatment with oxygen by a fireman saved his life. Paul Sullivan, 13. one of (lar- net's playmates said the game-in which a. five-year-old also was hanged but escaped injllry-started after he saw the movie Golden Horde. The picture is a Hollywood version of the invasion of Europe by the mongol Emperor Genghis Khan several centuries ago. Police Chief .Duncan MacDonald said: "It is not the first time an idea got from a movie has caused trouble for young people. and plenty of trouble for the police." Mayr Charlotte Whitton said the incident "could be attributed to a breakdown of our censorship. But parents should make sure that their youngsters do not attend pictures unless they are classified for juvenile viewing." The movie contains a scene in which Genghis Khan points out saveral corpses hanging by the roadside as n wsming of his pow- er. . ln.the game one of the children was caught and hanged to n clothes-lino post. Jimmy Mason. 5. the first candidate, twice slipped out of a plastic noose. Then it was Cisrnet's turn. This time the group used a length of silk. The noose around his neck. Civilianslhd A Been Warned To" Leave Area SEOUL. Aug. 21 -(Thursday)- --(AP)- Okinawa-based super- forts smashed two new Communist targets in the North Korean cap- ital of Pyongyang last night with more than 350 tons of bombs. Civ- ilians were warned in advance to leave the area. Reports from Okinawa today said B-29 pilots reported "good to excellent" results after the raid. one of the targets was in the western sector of Pyongyang. The other was in the eastern part of the There was no indication from air Earlier Wednesday. Allied planes smashizd a huge Communist troop and supply centre on the north- tvesiern Korean coast in n renewal of concentrated attacks on prime targets. New Policy Wednesdays air blows appeared to be part of a new policy of wall.- ilig until -the Reds build up supplies' near the front and then wiping them out. That strategy was explained Wednesday night ill Tokyo by Vice-Admiral Robert Briscoc. com- mander of U. S. Far East naval forces. l tiThe problem of knocking out all communications lines and keep- ing them.knocked out requires an effort that probably doesn't war- rant the expenditure of that a- mount of effort.” he said. "Youill certainly see a stepped- up operation against the things that hurt the: most-stockpiles. MAXI M31 OIA MERE MAN) the ages on hashing purpose runs. and the thoughts of men are widened with the process of the suns. Morning Dsily,Fou.ndsd 1881. The Guardian. Hvo Cent. 16 PAGES Eisenhower Charges Truman Government With Leftist Course BOISE. Idaho, Aug. no - rselilrft or far rlsht ,(;cn, D-A-igm D, Ey5enho..,.,,,. ml; The General said solutions the day accused me Truman ndn1ln.lIldfTllfllSlFl'lilOfl proposes fnr prob- isiration of travelling "the ciearilem-5'"d0 "”' fmlnl Wt "'0 1'9”: road to the left" in labor-ma-i-giltlm 01f"0f-"W055-" Then he 8114' llgcmoni relations. medical can-,l0fl? and farm policy. He called it the ”ThriY "9 ll"? C153? 1'0” 10 U19 road ip tyranny, left. Tlloy have come from the The Republican presidential mind of men who have liiilr-. nominee said the administration is limit I" lht" WW1" ' a hill Rl"”il'- in their own infallihiliiy. one which "with new names and 15"” , laces seeks to perpetuate itself" "1" H1" Md. I1 W0 HCCQPL H1059- (hmugh ey9,.H,,n of (he pemo. answers and follow that road. we oratic candidate for the White will fall in ranch the human sonls Housoi Gmwrnor Adi” Stevenson we have sat for ollraclvclr, but we M Illinois. ' will sucvnrrd in losing our free- In effect. the General in the dam" I speech, mnod by M: awe, the (The Deinocrals, Eisenhower con- first ”frankiy political" one iiinqe landed. are seeking to nationalize ms nominmiun, sounded "new 3 medicine. to ”rcgimont our farm- nmv runuliur Republican cumpallin ers" and ”wiIimut authority. in theme; that Stevenson us presi-iSPigP i3r0iWri.v and force our dent would be captive of the Tru- Workingnwn to work for the gov- man people. ,”"m9"t'” In the speech from many, Capn The latter remark was an obvi- ltol steps. Eisenhower prcs4'rll)uli0US reference to, President Tru- a middle course for the lYiii'crl,miIn's recent selztlre of the steel Stnics. saying tyranny is at the mills. on "man the. Supreme end of paths either to the exlrenir-I Court ruled ul'if'f)l'l5iIlllllfinIll. Weather Favors Crops In Prairie Provinces 0T'l'AWA. Aug. 20-(CP)-The Prairics' chances of reaping anl estimated peak 632000.000-buahell wheat crop appeared strong today with the Bureau of Statistics re- porting "very favorable" weather in (he West:-rn Provinces. However, the bureau, in the seventh of eight telegraphic rue- stores. bunkers. gun positions and artillery." The Admiral said he was speak- ing not just for the navy but "from the overall point. of view.” No lleoisionI0nI Uniformity Question The long-ihoIught”.of matter of school work,of under of Education said last that the proposali would in all similar in the first and second courses to and it is possible that common ox- not known. The Premier stated that univer- sity mniriculatlon would be obtain- ed on completion of Grade 12. He could not say when the proposal just touched the ground. Then his playmates-ranging in age from 5 to 13-left. Later. they noticed his face was blue. They cut him down and called a neighbor. l.ucien Dube. who called in firemen.- Morris Berlin, manager of the theatre attended by Paul Sullivan. one of the participants in the game. said ilicl-e might be some- thing in tho Golden Horde to in- ports covering crop conditions across Canada, said warmer weath- cris needed in northern areas to speed mnturi y. Swniliing s well under way. w'ilh ille biggest. advances shown in the southern areas. About one- illird of the grain crop has been lllTF!Sllf'fl in Southern Manitoba and il1l'r-siting and combining arc unrlnr wily in some sections of Snsknicliewan and Alberta. in other parts of the country. the bureau noted that harvesting of Ontario's spring grains are well ndvnpccd in the southern and central parts. Yields sllll ll'Prf' hr-low last your but some- what higher titan previously an- iiripnlcd. Rain lust, week helped relieve drough conditions which prevailed in all regions of Quebec except Ahltibl and Temlscamlngue. The rain harvest. is- well under way with yields from early-sown crops sllowing promise. The early potato crop is rather light but. fail vari- U. S. FOR TREATMENT - Chiang Kai-shek. who IN Madame seems plumper than she was when she was in the U. S. last. arrives at San Francisco, where she will receive medical treatment. The wife of Nationalist Chinals Leader is suffering from a skin ailment. (lllla) iiiilfnn woops-Tocl(.'Nfl3.. Aug. no A (CP) -- Three-yc.1r-old Ilcalht.-r Finnlo was killed today when run ties are expected to show improvo- W" h-V " "Wk Wm” V1”-V3”? '" mpnr, iho street. near hnr home. The In the Mariiimea. good rains d'iV"r Fmhc” C”””'s "I Rm" mond Corner. had warned away a group of children before backing the vehicle. during -the last 10 days have im- proved crop prospects. The Prince Edwnrrl Island oats crop is being harvested with good stands nnd yields. Nova Scolia'.I early-sown grain is being harvested with yiclds about the same as last year. Yields from late-sown crops are expected in hr doun. Drought in New Brunswick indicates the grain crop there will be light. The apple crop is reported light and infected with scabs. Warm and very dry weather is i-cporicrl for British Columbia. Harvesting of grain crops is un- dor wny jlirougiinui the south and Inn second crop of alfalfa has been mt. BRIG!-ITON. Sussex. England A (CF)-The council has agreed to buy two lnorc swans for a. lake in the main park here. Weeds in the lake are growing faster than the two current inhabitants can eat them. .. . X ONE or in iiixaorsr fines do tier is A iiokfoata - MF.l.B0l'RNE. Auslrrllla. Aug. llll --IR:-lltorsi-Australia's lnp-rank- lniz mlrirllmvclrzhls, Al Bourke nnrl Ron 'l”nnliov, uili moot hero next month for tho Australian and Bril- ish l-impll-c liilc: held by the lain . Tim-is Srlnrls. promnicr R. Leon said. inrhy. Sand: wns killed in a ll'llF.( ar-rirlr-ni. . . FIRST BIBLIIT spire the hanging game. "it's a pretty gory picture. The: plctlire isn't graded as tadult enter-l talnment' by the Motion Picture Board of Ontario..." l OTTAWA, Aug. 20 - (CF) Canada's housing activity in the first five months of this your lags by severhl hundred units in both starts and completions compared! Wllll 1951. i in May for the fifth month row. compared with the month last year. May starts dropped to 9.801 from 11,699 in May i951 and com- pleilons to 5,868 from 6,876. This brought the total of new dwelling units started in the first five months to 24,l9G compared with 28.951 in the January-M,ay period last year and the total of units completed to 24.259 compared with 32185. A fold of 43,706 units were lin- Garnet was hauled up so his toes dc-r construction at May (it. com- H BgIIL2Eging In Canada This Year .. strucfion at the corresponding date The Bureau of Statistics rcpml-' Prairies where ed today that starts nnd imnple- to 2.412 from 2.010. Hons of dwelling units were down homing starts dropped to 3,650 in .1 from .1 sumo from 4 The first Bible printed in North America was John Eliot's Indian Bible. issued in Boston in l86i. H.ALlFAX. Aug. 1t -(CPi- Of- ficial forecasts issued by the Do- minion Public Weather office in l-ia'.i.'ax am valid until midnight Thursday. , Synopsis: The weather was fine over most of the Maritime: tonight. A weak disturbance in Labrador caused showers in the Gulf of St. Lawrence north shore region dur- ing the day. Another disturbance moving southensiward from Hud- son Bay expected to cause clouds "I" ""1'"h" '3" near the mouth of the st. Lawn " Que 5" ence late Thursday. in the east of the district the weather is forecast to remain fine. Prince" Edward island---Clear with little change in temperatilrr-. soutl-iwc-at wlnlds ls. .oa"r,ll' Compleiinnh were lower in Ma THUTMW m0mM Md 3 in '9 in all regions except Quebec wher); l"5m00" ” m""19"'9'”'m 5” ”'d the numbgr rose to 2,303 from 1,- 75- ' 497. In nlarlo the number de- ---r-pr"-' cllncd to 1.3547 from 2,971. in the mfiiehc ttlilfw It Oh-'10”? Prairie Provinces to 847 from 1173. W" R - in British Cplumbla to son from High tide on them”! 350" it 537, in the Marilimea to 241 from 3.67 A. M. and OM Ella ,. -. 2m and in Newfoundland to as sun rises may at 511 Ali and from 138. sets at 1.10 P. M. mrjT pared with 55.903 units under con- a year earlier. The Bureau said fewer slnrla were made in May as compared with the corresponding month inst your in nil regions except the in Ontario to 2.766 G53 frfllrl 807, in Provlnrca lo 321 from 460 and in Newfoundland to 79 from 120. KOREA