‘MAXIMS, GPA. MERE M N’ p-i mlltth wile- Tbe day! 011M, mlketh lmppy n, Guardian, Three (lent; Morning Dally Founded 1,881. ThePe'aper CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1950 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody 12 PAGES MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Excess of wealth Is cause uI covetousnel. Mall $5.00; other Provinces m u. s. srlw. Subscriptions Delivered $6.00. TRUMAN MAY GIVE GO-AHEAD SIGNAL FOR SUPER-BOMB kgislalure To Open 0n Feb. 27 The Provincial Legislature will gpplt on Monday, February 27, it was announced over the tveck-cnd by Premier J. Walter Jones. The Home will be opened by His Ipuotlr Lieutenant-Governor J. A, llt-rttard at the customary hour D1 Jl oclock. 'l ,.\ will be the third session of lilo ltitlt General Asscmbly of luv Province. and while there ltave been four by-elections to hll vacancies occurring since the ias‘. session, the party line-up of {'4 Liberals and Ii Progressive. tv::>ct‘\'ilt.t\'ES remains tutchang- IUppOTIOTS. are Messrs. George 1\1-.<'Ka_v, Fourth Prince; Daniel .\l. ftiaclfae, Fourth King's: J. . St. John, First King's. ,1 i lion. Walter E, Darby, KC, Second Prince. Messrs. Macliay. tlsicllae and Darby were elected by acclamation Mr, MacKay fills the vacancy caused by the rcsignzttioti of Hon, tllll llu..ice Wright last April to bc-i route chairman of the Workmens Compensation Board. Mr. Mac- Rors seat was formerly held by Ilnn. John A. Campbell. who re- szgncd at the same time to be- come farm supervisor at Beach tirovc Infirmary. Mr. St. John rcplaccs Mr. T. J. Ktrkhant, now a member of the llonse of Commons for King's, and Mr. Darby holds the seat va- rated by Hon. George H. Bar- bour. Minister of Public Works and Highways, on his appointment I\, thc Senate last July. Following thc- by-rlcctions last mutmcr, the Provincial cabinet tContinued on Page 5 Col. 1'0 BUILD WIJAIWIIJR STATION OTTAWA, Jon. 2fl~tCPl~Cnn- 247-. and the Ilnitcd States are go- ing to build their fifth joint Arctic weather station virtually at wfiouflqtthqrautlp 0f tfirmndlan soil and only a few hundred miles front the North Pole, offlclnls mid Saturday. Prcfnbrtvlttetl shcl- tnrs and supplies are expected to be takcn ln by plnun this j-‘Pllf and men will go in by piano and hnnt tn the sltc at the northern end of Ellesmere Island. I-IKIIRII-llfh’ l‘lllfl'l.\'l’l",\' STRIKE PLANTAGNET, Quin. Jun. 20-- fCPb-J-‘nrntcrs in this Western Qucbee nrt-a are prctvirillt! '0 carry n production strike unless tho I-‘cdcrttl Govcrnlncnt boosts lll'l('(\ guppnrl for agricultural products. This dclvrntintttiott was cxprcsscd Friday night at u mcct- inc of some T00 farmers, protcst- ms: at. what was tiescribcfl as lhc lurk of Government action to cs- tablish a "folr politgv" of price support for farm products. Coming Events "Whist. and dance, Flat llivcl" llall, 'l‘ttcstlny, Jun, Zltst, "Mail your Films to Garnhun Photo Studio. Charltsttetutvn. social “Come to cvl-iting nud- llllflllnll.‘ party in Bradalhltitc Fllll. Jun. 30. "llancc, St. Ptt ' Ixglcn Hall Monday night. Jarxzl 30th. Cliff Peters Orchestra. ‘(luv 1950 S-rrtl Catalasth- ts now ready. t‘ rl fo- free cnpt‘ Atthur \'£sey. Y "k. P. E. Island. "Hear ISlnn-(T-RTOBIOII. moral ilrnblem discussed. CFCY ‘lucid M5 p.m. "In stock at rctluccd pzices. llarlrgv Meal llotz Grower. Bran. fltl Cake. etc; W, 1. Botvmait. "North ‘Rivvr flmlt litirkcy much tonight, Milton Ilorncts vs, (‘ornwnll Meteors. Game time 530» Skate uflcr. ._.‘,_ "Annual Hull mecltnli. llflmll- l-m Hall, Tuesday‘, Jun. ill. 1950- l-Jtltvin Ferguson, Secretary; "Variety concert and box s0- Plal, Hampton Hall, Friday, I-‘cb- rtiary 3. If not fine followlnB Monday, "Hockey, Long Creek Rink to- night, New Haven, Royals VI- Nlne Mlle Creek Bitlelozcra. Game ltnrts 8.30. Skate after. "Hockey tonight. at River rlnk, North Rustlco Hunter River Shur-Gnlnr. start: at 8.30, skati- after. “Lady Patricia L O. B. l\-- Cutoc Cove, Anniversary SIIDP" and Social evening, Wednesdlyt February 1st. Derry L.O.L. mun- bum llwltfld. Hunter vr. Game "Annual meeting of the Will- thlre Dulrylng Co. will bc bQItI in North Wlltahlrq Hall on Mon- flfly. February 13- 2 P-m It'll” llatherley, Secretary. l‘;te new mcmbcrs, all Liberal’ l)’, , t l l l l l I For the first‘. time ln its history, the Dominion Steel and Coal Cor- poration has a. native Nova Sco- tian for president in the. person of t Lionel Avard Forsyth, K.Ct. D.- C.L. (above), whose appointment became effective on Jan. 1. He ls County, N. s. BIDS FOR CARPET O'I‘TA\\'A, Jan. 220~tCP)—- Any bids received by the United King- dom lliglt Commissioner's office here for Queen Mary's carpet will be referred to London, 1t was learned Saturday, The High Com- ntissionors office and the United Kingdom Information Office were unable to say how many bids had been received since Thursday's flisclosun: flint the Queen Mother ltad completed a carpet which she decided to scll to bring dollars to Brltuilt. tied “Sfiiiiitig” By John M. Ilighlmvrr WASHINGTON, Jan. 29 —(APl -—.\ nuv Russirtn-Com-munist spring oftcnslvf- in Iltc cold war is expect- ed by many informed Washington officials. Whcthor the main move will come m Southeast Asia. the Middle l-Jrtst or Central Etlrotie IS not. pre- dictcd. This vivtv is reported to be held even by those who con-tend, along with State Secretary Acheson. that Russia is alienating tilt‘ Chinese by taking over huge amas of North- ern Chitin. tThe Nctt" York Times today re- ported lu a Paris disqia-ich by C. 1.. Subihcrgci‘ that Russia has de- ntantlcd from the CIIIIICFE Cam- tnuntst. Government full control of seven kcy ports in North China. tSulzhcrgcWs dispatch says the stratrcie p: is over vchizh the U S.S.R Wants crcnplofo authority arc Cltilttvanztao, Haichow Chcfoo. Wclhnitvti and Tstnfztao. in addit- ion I.l llalrcn and Port Arthur tRyojunl in Mxnchurln. which al- ready arc Russlalt-stipcrviscd. IThc dispatch says three rther Ros-tan demands call for a labor force cf 500.000 Chinese citizens available to the U.S.S.R.; in- a native of Mount Denson, Hunts lBurgIars Get $428,00Q_Wo lThree Lose Lives When Truck Goes Through Ice Manufacturer SUDBURY, Jan. 29 - (GP) ._. Three persons were drowned to- day when a pick-up truck went through the ice at a narrow sec- jtlon of Long Lake, some six miles ,wuth of here. , of Rheault Drowned were: Mrs. Orvo E. Hill, most office, and her two children, ‘Gail, 6, and Johnny, 2. The wom- an's husband managed to free himself from the submerged truck. He climbed on the roof of the vehicle, grabbed the side of ,the ice and hauled himself to safety. l Widespread Search For Missing Plane Continues; Probe Explosion Report By Graham Trotter WHITEHORSE, Y. T.. Jan. 29- (CP) Ground parties swung into action today to investigate a reported explosion 40 miles south- west of here last Thursday night —the night a United States transport plane disappeared with 44 persons aboard. R. . F. officials directing the search described the explosion as one of the most. promising clues received since the four-engined U. S. Air Force C-S-l disappeared on a flight from Anchorage, Alaska. lo Great Falls, Mont. While a road crew struck out from the Alaska Highway into the Offensive In Cold War Predicted creased food shipments to Russia fmm rluh Man-churta. althatigti Ohina herself is threatened by famine; and bread concessions by the Chinese Committilsts to “min- orlty" groups tn Siltklang, In-rlez‘ Mongolia, Maitohurla and Tibet. (Sulzbcrgerba informants indicate that the Chinese negotiators have not yet acceded to the Russian terms but have been counterln: with equally-ambitious demands of their own.) On the broad scene of Cztirtnnun- Isl-Russian pushing and probing at many points around the cold-war front, snmn officials; here believe the Indication is this: That an lmpcrtzilt driving force ln prcssnt Russian policy is n trcmcltdctts sense of trtttmp-‘t horn out of the vlotoryi in China. By this line of reasoning Russia now ts primarily ilivlercstcd in keeping the influence of world Czmmunism rolling forward. Mcst officials. ltowever, seem pursuadcd that. Russia's greatest concern now is to wipe out Tito. the devlatlcnlst Yugoslav leader tight€n ccnstcntlv their control over Eastern European satellites and fasten their authority firmly over the Cc-mmurllst leaders of China. l l t Flight Gets 20 -tCPl— mercy flight northeastern l AIONTREAL, Jan. ;Thf\ second R.C.A.F. to tho italic-stricken Qucltoc vlllntzo of St. Augustin he- tznn hero Saturday when n skl- cqttippcd Dakota left with medl- col supplies for the Strait of Belle Isle,- hamlet. It was tho same plane which brought six children here for hoa- pltal treatment Friday after a 1.- ooo-mtu- flight from st. Auflllfitlll- The Dakota was expected to land first at the Goole Bfly. Llbfldmh base before continuing the flight to St. Augustin today. Meanwhile, the llX Frnddlc Maurice, 7, his sister. Ardolln, 9, Marina Luvalee, 4- Nancy Clcnch, 10; Gerry Bursey, fl, and his cotutln, Eleanor Bursey. 2, nII were reported in "fair con- dlllon." ' wing Cmdr. Erie Campbell of Toronto and Saskatoon. Ml C- A. F. doctor at Goose ‘BHY- Wm accompanied the children on the Friday flight, said he will exam- Inc other children in the vlllale and decide if any new cares will have to be brought to Montreal. About a0 children are tnolmd in st. Augultln with vufylnl de- greed of the disease um renal-w! n week ago when o villager Id- vlgod Grcnfell Hospital nuthflrlllel at Harrington Harbor, 10° "m" went. of St. Allkllltltt. children, Second Polio Mercy Underway Since than four children are reported to have died and F0. Pegy Corbett, 29-year-old R. C. A. F. nursing sister, said It is pos- sible- lhnt all of tho 200 children in the villule 0f 300 have the disease. Miss Corbett. before leaving on the second trip to St. Augustin. cultics in reaching the village. She originally set out from Goose Bay Wednesday in a Norse. man plane, lighter than the blg two-engine Dakota, hut a snow- storm forced tho B. C. A. F. crew back, They were forced to lnnd on a small Labrador lake where they found themselves short of rations. "The worst part of this whole lrlp was the fact that we hadn't been able to get through to St. Augustin." she said. "I wasn't a bll nfrntd, evcn when we made tho emergency landl and would huvo enjoyed the witch: trip lf lt hadn't been for wondering how those poor kiddies were. By eight o'clock the storm had cleared a bit d we were able to make radio ontact with Goole Bay. We got back to the airport without any diffi- cult ." T q ntorm continued Thursday, and Friday Miss Corbett and Wing Cmdr. Campbell were sent III l Dakota. l i l Wile 0f Hosiery t l l t Provincial Police from Sudbury. as well as a number of residents of IS Victim the Long Lake area, later helped, -—~- - a diver free the bodies of that NEW YORK, Jun, 20 tAPl mother and her two children from‘ Almost half a million (Iflllllrs ut- gcms \\'1ls stolen from the mid- town apartment of n wealthy hos- iery nmnufacltlrcr Saturday night, the cab of the truck. Hill, who was too dazed to sup- ply any details of the mishap. said he and his family were drlvmg and tho Federal Bureau of In- along the lake when suddenly the "eslllzillln" -l°l"“'l Imll“ l" l‘ search for the burglars. ice gave way. He tried to help his wife and children who were seated on their mother's knee, but was unable to do so. Police said residents of that area have used the lake as their road every winter. Value of the loot was first cs- tlmatcd at $300,000, but tonitzht tllc figure was raised to $428,000 after a detailed count. or jewel I)ll'f‘9,lIll'}.' within 48 haurs.l The new thcft was in the apart- ment of Stan-‘cn D. Sanson, 49-‘ year-old president of Sansnn iery. Incorporatrd Tht- glittering array of stolen jewelry belonged to his wife. Maxine, a folmct- ntcdcl. Spurnihg near-perfect. synthetic stcnas and less-valuable gents the smooth-worklitg burglars lcatcvl a l l merit and pockftcd the pick of thc collection. In Philadelphia. Snnson said, that the thoft appiwtrecl to be an‘ Inside job. "They took only the very large platinum and fliflfllOllfl pieces.‘ settings from which the stones could be taken cut \'f‘l‘_\‘ ciisilv." ho said. i The theft followed tn 4B hoursl the burglary of the fa hiona-blcl residence of showman Eilly- Rea? I Burglars forced their tvay’ into the Rose home Thursday night, tied up a butler and fled with gems and furs va-lucd by Resc at $100,000. Mrs. Sanson returnctl ltozne from a late movie to find a dozen, jewel boxes lying empty in a. living-l dense bush toward the scene of the reported explosion, search planes scoured the area. hamper- ed by overcast weather. Para- rescue tea-ms were poised for im- mediate action and a bulldozer was ready to tear a road through to the scene. Meanwhile the greatest armada in the history of the north fanned out from bases stretching from Whitehorse to Great Falls. Fifty-four planes and thousands of military per- sonnel were involved in the search. air I l It was Manhattan's second maj-l’ Hos-l score of jewel boxes in the ap1rt~, told Saturday of some of the dltfl- I‘ The planes swept a corridor 100 miles wide from Whitehorse to Calgary, 1.500 miles southeast. The search was principally con- centrated in the Yukon area, bu‘. officials were taking no chances. They calculated that the plane could have gone more titan 2.500 miles after its last radio report to Snag, Y. 'l'.. near the Alaska- Yukon border. A blizzard, which cut down visibility to 1 1-2 miles yester- day‘, died down to minor flur- rics today, but temperatures sank below zero throttghout the search arca. jeopardizing the safety of any survivors on the grounded plane and knocking 20 U. S. air- craft out of the search with me- chan..ca1 failures. Aboard the plane were eight crcw members, an expectant mother. Mrs. Joyce Espe of El- mcndorf Air Base. Alaska, antl her young child. and 34 U. S. mili- tary personnel. bound for their, homes from their Alaskan bases» Search authorities vhere are con- vinccd that the plane has crash- ed or becn forced down some- where bctwccit Snag and White- horse. Poor weather for aerial search- ing-it was snowing when air- craft took off from Whitehorse field at first light today — has covered the Snag - Whitehorse rotitc since the transport was swallowed ltp by the bleak timber- cd and mountainous regions. Mountains loom 6.000 and 7,000 fcct ovcr snow-covered valleys and frozen lakes and streams. Unemployment In Canada On Increase OTTAWA, Jan. 29~fCPl ~The number of jobless walking the streets locking for work is stead- ily climbing, Tltcy now total about 323,000 persons, the Labor Department re-l ported Saturday, an increase of 100.000 over the some time a year, K0. This latest report of unemploy- ment: covers those without jobs on Jon. 12. On Dec. 22 last, the lotnl was 261.000. The climb since then was 62.000. Unemployed workers now make up alx per cent of Canada's labor force, but lt. doe: not mean n gen- eral decline ln the Canadian eco- nomy, he Department said. It attributed the rise In unem- ployment. to "special factors", such n5 abnormal weather conditions. declines in logging and tn export markets. Quebec led lltc unemployment parade with 99.000; Ontario, ‘rec- 0nd with 79,000; then came the Pacific coast with 54.000: the Maritime; with 46,000 and the Prairies with 45.000. WAKE UP "BIT Scientists any you won't freeze to. death lf you felt uleq» ln freezing weather. unless you have comp- letely exhausted yourself lrytnz to lstay awake. l with room cltalr. She ran to a closet where other boxes had been kcpzl and fc-uitd many cf thcm stripped‘ too. Then she phoned police. I t l Air Commodore Kerr Visits S'side Station , Pride in the navigational train-l lug system of the R. C. .-\.I-'. which’ "is one of the \'€l‘_\' best" was cx-l pressed by Air Contmodore J.G.l Kerr, CBE, AFC. deputy air mcm-l bcl‘ of operations and training at‘, Summcrside on Saturday. i Air Commodore Kerr was corn- pletlilc, a, visit: ln thc Summersidcl air station and mct the press bc- fore leaving on return to Ottzt\\‘ll._t While in the Maritime» llc also visited Greenwood and Chathaai , stations. . In the R.C.A.l-‘. crcat stress is, placed on giving the HHYIRIIIIOIIl student. ntuclt expericttf-t- in act-l ually directing the pilot where to- go, he explained. To carry out this tflca only two student navlgators| are carried on training trips and, ,durlng their course they get '15, lhours of time as first ltavigutars. , l Air Commodore Kerr said that! twhile in Summcrsldc. he had flownl the basic trainccs and in- spected tho school and "was ntuixh pleased with tho progress being made here. I-Ie stressed the itnportaltee that ls placed on character and leader-t ship qualifications in cadets as,‘ well as in their ability as student- navlgators and by way of illustra-i tlon, he pointed out that one-hill, the students that ltavc not. grad- uated have failed because they dirt‘ not: show "the spark of leadership‘ and Initiative" Air Commodore Keri" said that. the number of recruits llcillg a-x- ceptcd ls sufficient to kotp the classes filled but that thc Air Force ls constantly striving to increase the quality of thnsc hclllg taken‘ In. i At this same press cottfercnce tho station commanding offlccr.,' Wing Commander CLRF. Gross (Continued olTpagifllA-Collf-fi’ BRITISH LFRXPORTS LONDON. Jan 29 -fAPl -Ex- port. of British bicycles and motor- cycles broke records last your, more than £28,000.00tl t$t36000.f>90) worth being sortt. abroad. India took the most, bicyclcs-.'l.'v0.T76. it was reported by the British (‘_\'cle and Motorcycle Manufacturers‘ and Traders‘ tlnlcn RETAII, (‘LERIIS ON STRIKE , t MONTREAL, Jan. 2E1 t-fCPl M 1 The Rctnll Clerks Iulcrttnlloltal Association 1A . F . I..l Saturday ordered picket lines in front of l7, strike-bound branches of Domin- lon Stores Ltd. on Montreal land. The union's 200 members went on strike Friday drrnandinc l. $5 weekly pay increase and the 40-hour week in place cf the pr?- CIUI, 47-hour writ. Pw n wage is $40 37 wceklv IYITJRT" Is- , rl:I1 OI Gems In N. lEvidencei-Thal Grave Decision Expect Hot Prices At C. F. A. Sessions Death Sunday 0f Mr. A. F. Mclluaitl Unc of the Island's lung and citizens, Mr. From lllcQuaid. K.C., Souris, G8, died leading Arthur tabove). in the Charlotte- town Hospital early last, night. Mr, lllcQtlaid had suffered ill ltt-ziltlt for n number of ycnrg but, his condition became critical only» about ten duys ago. l Ila Wits well known- throughout the Island for his outstanding law practice in Souris and his po- litical affiliations with the Con- scrvativc party. His lcgnl profes- sion commenced in 1909 when he was ztdmittcrl to the bar alter studying with the late Judge A. L, b‘rasct~ of Souris. llc lcccix ed his primary educa- tion in Suuris schools, and later ultcndctl Prince of “inlcs College ntttl Snint Dunslan's University. IIt" graduatctl front the latter in- stitution in 1905. ll;- hcgan his purtitcrship with his tutor, Mr. l-‘rascr, forming the firm of Frascr and McQuuid. When Mr. l-‘ruscr was appointed o. judge, Mt. lllt-Qunirl continued in his "W" llrncticc. Ho also scrvcd as ltlitgistrnte of King's County for a lime, His political activities saw him offcr as cunditlate in First District King's on three occasions. He was also sccrctary of the King's County Conservative Party fm- n ‘s law practice in number of years. lllr. McQuaid was n staunch member of the Roman Catholic l l l t Debate On Mil! B9 Nell By Don Whitehead WASHINGTON, Jan. Z0 ---AP) -— There was mounting evidence today that PTOSHZIPIIL 'l"ruman tnaf/ bc nearing a final and grave dc- ‘ bulldur; the swipe-- n Df.‘flll)"llil$$.l)i t’ Ily Pllllflfli DIIBOIS - NIAGARA FALLS, Ollt., Joli — tCPl --- I" ‘:11 pl.. a and got.‘ ill IBVQ!’ crnmcnt. pncc-sttpport utll fornf A "F395 01 Stllflffli‘? ml l“ the hottest topics of discussmnl laltd cvcnts added weight to ‘.h.s during the 14th annual meeting ell Spffullalio" which “'53 baud the Cfllllllllftll Federation of Aq-l Wlmfirill‘ on reports that Tru- ,I'ICUII»I.II‘I‘ tlllvlllll; here tomorrotul ‘nan-S 91°59 advlscrs bdlcvc m? ll “'05 lllfllCillltl toliigltt, fcarsolnc vvcapon, perhaps 1.00’! 30m 1111111,- C_.,UIC,,UU,,S, that“, times more destructive than the atomic bomb, should be added to the atomic arsenal of the United States. Herc are some of which sccm to point ion in the ncar future: two SUIljBClS ran fur ln the van of all pro-convention talk among del- egates from ltine Provinces who arrived today. Newfoundland is not’ rcprcscntt-tl i It was itndt-rstood that protests‘ 1 A member of me Sena,“ genléqgfcslnaalf ,1,"cn‘_,.al“8ng Lilli, :03 House of Representatives,Atomic FE,” ' o, m ma cqumh 0i Energy Committee said a ma- (eral Gommment 5mm “"3" jority of the legislators favor port, granted recently on p303“ buildmn me bomb, chficse and eggs‘ 2. Ar-iothcr committee mem- .,rhe dmli-V fulfill“ OI Cmmll ber said he expects an "author- m‘! ask “lat me n00" Price c‘ itativc statement“ on the hydro- cheese b" boosted from m” Cm". gen bomb to be made soon. rem factory Tm“ "I '37 Gems i‘ Truman apparently is the only pour“! "0 3° "m5 Ill“ 1949 Plifle- person who can make or author- Repmsenl-“LH” OI the Poultry ize a statement of that calibre. lndustrv meanwhile indicated He said Friday that the decision 50m“ dls-‘allgfllcllcll Pll- ill!‘ EOV- on developing the new bontb emmellll? Price-support program is his to make, but gave no hint of 38 cents a. dozen for eggs an- when it might come. nounced by Agriculture Minister 3. A senator told a reporter Gardiner in Ottawa late last week. that he is certain Slate Secre- Eastem delegates held a. eon- tary Acheson favors an H- fereitt-e following their arrival bomb program. Saturday. IE. Walsh of Monctou, 4. Chairman Tom Connally N. 8., represents the Maritime tDem-Tex.) of the Senate For- Federation. eign Relations Committee came out openly in favor of the H- bomb. 5, Dr. Harold Urey, one oi.‘ the country's top atomic scien- tists, said Friday night the United States has no choice but C.F.A. directirs will review r95. olutions from provincial federa- tions and several other bodies af- filiated with C. F. A. across Canada at an all-day nteetixig tomorrow, No other sessions are on the pro- gram. The most, contentious and pressing of the lot will be sent to the convention floor for discussion to go ahead with the bomb. 8. Military opinion is report- ed to favor strongly mzrking the bomb in view of the belief that Russia has the lhcory off it: ton. If tho United Slalcs should undertake to develop hydrogen bombs, it could theoretically write its own ticket on how devastating to make them, a Washington selen- tist said. of Dr. Alan Shaple‘, member - ~--------~-_..._ ._* -.__ 4 KCOXIUHUBQ on Page B Col. 4) during Public sessions Tuesday. Founder Of Sydney Curling Club Dies SYDNEY, N.S., Jan. 29 _.. ,¢p, Onc of the founders of mg Sydney Curling Club, SH. Steph-l enson. 80. died here Saturday. He was a na-tivc of St. Stephen, N. B. if isn't tncessow 4o Have A ttunftoo ‘IIAD (‘LOSE (‘ALL nxlgpaio Roy's. to. 2a Al; UcENcF. ‘to hum‘ '1 e carryng nine c. d" officials including Exterriaalla QUBLE! fairs lvfinistcr Pearson. blctv two . tires landing here Saturday and slithered within I00 yards of Hong (‘hurt-h and a lending ntcmbcr of tho Knights of Columbus Councibl He was Past Stale Deputy of thc} Knights in tho Province and also, a l-‘otirtlt Dcxzrct- ntembcr, lIo married the latc ‘Maud! Knox, in 1913. She prcdclcascdl him ln I946. Ile is survived by‘ one brother George, in Saskatoon.‘ 5=1$I<l1l¢h°\\'flll. und two sistersp hlartlrlrct and Josephine in Souris. i l-‘ritlay Three brothers and three sisters ltavc predeceased him EARLY INDUSTRY Bcforc the advent of steel ships‘ after 1865, Quebec and the Mari-l ilmcs \vcrc famed for thc.r shipl building. 0 l Legal Battle Oil lie Due T0 Open Today By llarold Morrison OTTAWA. Jan, 29 tCPl Tenants will linc up against laud_ lords and government will oppose government in a legal battle over rcnt colttcpls which opens to. lllfll'l‘fl\\' bcfnrc the Supreme Cottrt of Canada. Scvcn Supreme Court will hear the case and this Federal Government tion: "Arc thc Wartime Lcaschold Regulations ultra vires —- outside the jurisdiction of Parliament —- cithcr in whole or in part and if so in what particulars or to what cxtcnl?" The answer likely \\‘llI affect about 4.000.000 tenants and about Justices consider ques- Ftflttflfltl landlords and about l.- tlflflfifltl dwellings still being utaiutaincd under recent col‘- lugs, Ftvc parties-the Federal and Ontario Governments, Canadian (fongrcss of Labor, Canadian Leg- ion and tenants generally -— have lhnkcd forces to defend Parlia- l at a student Kong hat-bot". No one was injured. Pearson. Fisheries Minister R. W. Mathew. their wit-cs. amt 59cm other mcmbr-rs of Canada's drloqat. ion to the rcccnt Colombo conifer- cltce were aboard tihc plttllc. SLA (‘Ks c/irsi; momma; VANCOUVER. Jflll, 2,0 -_tCPt _ .\rc slacks. cspccally- peg-bottcmtdl full-kuocd “dt-aluts," too "tang-M. ton: ." This controversy broke out “flu-it the principal of 343791: lllflll Seltool ordered nine Kiri. some for yvcztring Principal E. A. Munro dism ~¢l questions with “I refuse to (li u~.< it " But a student spokesman > 1d the lsstte will be raised ticxt week] - un- mot-ting. H _ 'l"ORO.\"l‘O, Jan. KIT-lites.‘ , Min. and max. temps: Vancouvrr 20 -< fCPl ll ‘.14; Vlctoixa lfl 26; Caltzary 17B zero; Regina 43B 23B; Winnipeg lllB 23B: Toronto 3S 49: Ottawa 21 43; Montreal 25 44; Quebec l6 __ 43; Saint John 47; Moncton fl Till; . Halifax l2 48: Charlottetown 6 43; Sydney 4 40: Yarmouth l8 4n; s1, John's 4 2r. B-—Bclotv. HALIFAX. Jan. 29 - tCP; ~< Official forecasts issued by tho lDomlnion Public Weather office _ here tonight. two grottpr. — the Canadian Pro- SYIWPUS? p0,“. O\\]1‘W]<$ Agmnaihn, and. The weather turned cxtrcntcly‘ thc Govt-rnttictt‘. of Qucbrc. llllilfl filial" sundll- Rlllll- SPYCHII Quebec and Ontario. only l‘:"o\'-“‘l'f‘l' m“ fire-II" Pa“ "I Illc Mari- iitccs to participate in the hcar-lll-‘llffi- bull l" the Norm Show N‘ lnél- are utipositi: cach other. ltzlon thcre was sno-v. In the even- Qticbct- _\Zl_\'5 the (lovcrttlttcltt battling the rain was replaced by fol no l‘l,'_'llt to start thc Controls; land drizzle along the south coast! Ontario says I‘ill’li;llll('lll. should tof New Brunswick and Nova Sco- be allotvvd to cantmitc a policy tin, and temperatures continued to of ordcrly dccotitt-ul. risc. At Moncton the temperature It is that question of orderly reached 50 to equal the record dccontrol that has SDSTKCG the maximum for this date set. in 1910. Federal Government's request to Cold air will sweep into the dis- thc Supreme Court. The controls trlct from the northwest. This rt- PXPiYC Mfltfll 31- The Govcrn- sultcd in generally clearing wea- ment claims they should he re- mo; Sunday evening, but libero ncwcd for another year tn allow was some snmyflurrles; for an orderly system of dcwn- Regional forecasts valid uulll ll'°l~ - midnight. ltlondnt": Ilotvcvvr. thcrc is auuthcl‘ as-l pm,“ Edttm-d 151mm; Pcct. tlmllflbll’ HF "lllmllfilli 1° ll"! Clottdy ‘with showers tltzuiztnt; Federal Gnvtirnmcnt as the uurs- m 5“m\-n,,rl-\95 Mommy “pygmy, lion of rvtiis. It is vhcthci" aII,Extl~pmcIy mild fuming folder lw ls"“"’ll°d "°"“'l'g““ lwll-‘lillmn vritiutz. South winds 2t) hrcuniilt". ,<‘llfl¢l<‘d uhdrr the ‘Ttaitsitllllid Ighl. before dawn nttd increasing _ l Aicasurcs Ac‘. of 194i, are valid. ‘by nflpmom, m north 2m Low and If the court shtiuld indicate thaltmgh Mo“d,.,,'. M Chmlnuetmv“ 4,, the rent controls are beyond Par- and 4i liamcntis grower because tho "cm- _______,_ . BURDEN-TOR)“. TIN!‘- ntcntls right lo continue the crcfncv" created by tho “or is; controls. over, thcn the Govcrntncnt cnuldl FERRY gflgyujg In the opposite crimp, mgin- be chargrcl 1r. Pai-ltatncnt with W55]; nAYs “lining that the controls are un- OPPYRI-Y": unclct qucFllflofllll" l0!" Lv. Borden Lv. Capo Tonnenttnc | constitutional and invalid. are islahon. ' 9.10 AM- 1-40 P-M-