- MAXIMS lot A MERE MAN shown. It is in the ability to deceive one- self that the greatest intent. is 3, can-Ian Ohnrlotfahwn. Summer-aids 315.00 per umum, muwhgn n P. E. l. 9.00. other Provinces and U. 8. A. 612.00 per nnnurn. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Cl-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1952 TAF T ASSAILS EISENHOWEIVS CHOICE OF LABOR SEC Dairy And Hog Issues Highlight Conference Stresses PEl Dairy Problems All Agricultural Conference OTTAWA. Dec. 2 -fSpecll1l)-- WlIllf'l' R. Shaw. Deputy Minister at Agriculture, today crossed mulls with Agriculture Minister on il1ll(”l' on the moot issue of may rlne. no further called on in. r'.ardiller and his Ottawa ex- pc:-rs in advise the Provinces what should do to protect their ',l.l.l') industries from the margar- lilrl Ilrcnt. Mr. Shaw noted that the Feder- al lvllnister had spoken against a prmmsnl in name a. Royal Com- ln. lDll to study the danger to the y industry in the imporm of slieap vegetable oils. The Minister lie said, had affirmed that these mlllliiissiorls take a long time to in their work. twcll", countered Mr. Shaw. ”if royal commissions take so long any are so many appointed?" Mr. Glll'(llllPl' did not reply. Mr. Shaw warned that his Pro- innce was going out of hog prollct- znn because of sagging prices, and added regretfully, "and they were good hogs we raised." Dairy pro- rliacers of the Island Province were also facing a serious situation with rel.:ll'lls lo the farmer failing to meet production costs. Markets Uncertain The traditional markets in the Ull.:r-d Kingdom for Canadian fond pi-nclucts had gone out of ex- lsreizvc, Mr. Shaw told the con- lnrcncc. and the markets in the Umicd states are uncertain. They llI'(' so uncertain, he said, "that 'Cl1lll:l1ll0Cl on page 13 col. 2) Coming Events "l'il'f'(l('l'lCl0l1 Christmas Con- cert. Xloncioy, December 22nd. "(I-lrrl and croklnole party. Cornwall l-fall, Dec. 10. llrmce, Morell tonight. Bums iinclicstrn. "('arrl party, Mnrgnle school Friday evening. Dec. 5th. "fliuiee. 1-loive'a Hall, Bracklcy P-each. Friday, December 5th. "l.Ff;l(1l1 Auction and Dance, Rt-lfnst Hall. Thursday, December llh. "T.cserx-e December 19th for i”hr:.slmax concert in Mlllview lull. "Tonic to Brooklleld Hall on lvucsrlay evening, Dec. 23rd. for lPR. Christmas concert. "Come to the Ham and Scallop 5lll'lilCl' in Cornwall Hall. tonight, berztllnlng at 5 P. M. "Reserve Thursday. December llltll for New London School Con- er,. "Dance, New Glasgow hall, llcrenlbcr Ailh. in aid of Caven- dish hockey from. Music by the l',lolrnn Brothers. "Xlnsler Feeds, another car ar- lllllllz this week. ll. B. Willis, lnc., Mil-Wlslnll. feeders who keep lccords use Master. "Vml:r.1mnw and tea nt South- llfrt school by First Southport ,'””l,'f Cnmlmny. Wednesday, Dec. W 4.-U to T. Admission 35 cents. 'tDnn't miss Christmas Bazaar ml ll-llllly Sale at Fennel) and glmlllllvrs. Friday, December 6th. anoc Cove W. I. i "Plan now to attend the" Dance dll vwlnsloc Station Hall, Wednes- al. December 3rd. Music by Doll-on Bros. Orchestra. , arrived carload .2 wheat and out D. gllaga. Priced to irkmson. New Glugo ground mixture. sell. R. L. w. h"ln stock cod oil, feed. mol- -5"5- Bonk chicks now and save 'Al0""l'- Get our Calendar. Dillon ' Slullcu. hnllllll be loading hosts at the S Willi! points each Thursday. flmmersldo until 1.30 p.m. and Efvllslnstun until 3.00 p.m. Mae en and Caseley. Lida”-Vl"R Dian and "'35'lRy at Fredericton. 2 moo poultry Pay- I" a pair for good pigs. fljlfhlnsz over 40 nu each. Will ,l "WV Dial over 30 lbs. Knud ""”K"nsen. . H, '3"l'1nlz live and dressed chick- wclnd fowl daily. Phone collect for , ” "ml Dlck-up service. We pay 5, Pmlltry on farm. Central Egg Phomlllllry Station. Charlottetown. no 3520 day. Night lm-2. Canadians Would Like To Have Wives in Germany SAINT JOHN, N. 13., Dec. .. (GP)-Canadian soldiers serving in Germany would be a lot hap- pier lf the army would permit their wives to join them there. Two Maritime members of the 27311 Infantry Brigade shared this view tonight after a. year of duty at Hannover. They were among 165 officers and men who arrived here aboard the liner Empress of Canada on rotation leave. The returning troops, who will leave tomorrow for homes across the country, had mixed opinions about soldierinl; in Germany. Cpl. Norman camel-on, or st. Stephen. N. 23., and Ottawa term- ed Canadians there "an unhappy lot." Conversely, a Charlottetown sergeant who declined to give his name. said things Wercnlt ban ex- cept that a man missed his wife. "You can get rapped on the knuckles for talking." he said. Cpl. Cameron. on the other hand, said he was unaware of any instruct- '7 (Continued on pngeM5Vcol: 2iW lleulher May Head C. l. 0. ATLANTIC CITY, Dec, 2 - (AP) - The CIO worked today to repair a deep rift in its ranks over choos- ing a new CIO president-a scrap not yet over, but apparently won by 45-year-old Walter Rcutllcr. The dynamic, red-haired Reu- thcr, president of the big CIO Auto Workers Union, is widely conceded as having whipped together enough votes to get the CIO presidency in any convention showdown. Gardinerffurns Down Proposals From Producers OTTAWA. Dec. 2 -(CP)- A lzloomy future was predicted today Tm: Canada's Pork producers and dam" lllduslry as Agriculture lilinistcr Gardiner rejected a pro. P0531 -for a royal commislon rm malighrllle and turned aside ap- Deals for maintenance of the 26- Cenls support price for hogs. The support price drops to 23 cents a pound Jan. 1, and F. Wal- do Walsh, Nova Sco'.ia's deputy agriculture minister. remarked bitterly that the consumer will have to pay higher prices in the long run. The price cut would force many producers out of business and probably by the end of 1953 there would be a sharp contraction in the industry. Pork would become scarce and prices rise again. ”Maybe that's the right way to do it," Mr. Walsh added, ncidly, "instead of us pleading for a con- tinuation of the present price." The dairy and hug issues high- lighted the closing of the two-day annual federal-provincial agri- cultural conference which, Mr. Gradiller remarked, was "unusual- ly quiet." He urged provincial agriculture ministers and their deputies to get to their feet and show some action. A bitter wrangle was the result. Urges Commission Alex Mercer, head of the British Columbia Federation of Agricult- ure, urzzed Mar. Gardiner to set up a royal commission to investilzate how the provinces could take measures against butler substi- lutcs. Dairy substitutes made of cheap imported vegetable oils posed a. big threat. .10 ---Canada! -S7o0.0o0.000 dairy industry. Soon there would be nothing but synthetic ice cream. synthetic cream, and even synthetic milk. Mr. Gardiner replied that royal commissions usually sat for three years and accomplished nothing. if that was the case countered Wticr-tom iuued on” page 13Wc'ol.-ilira Commonwealth Prime Ministers Break Talks To Discuss Korean Truce By Fraser Wighton LONDON. Dec. 2 -(Reuters)- Sevell Commonwealth prime min- isters. including Winston church- ill and Louis st. Laurem. will dis- cuss the Korean dcadlcck mm other foreign issues at a British cabinet meeting here Tlllll'SElr'15', Informants said Churchill invited the heads of the overseas delegations nnw mi! the Commonwealth talks here to be present at this cabinet session. All of them ex. Capt the Indian and South African representatives are prime minis- has eight attend- economic ters, Other countries represented are Canada, Britain, Aummllg, New Zcaland. Pakistan, Ceylon and Southern Rhodesia, Anthony Eden, British fol-eigzn 5eCli0l3l'l'. is due to report on his recent private New York nlcctlllgs Would Have Outlawed Two Years OTTAWA. DE;-ICPI A X Manitoba farmer-member or the Commons said today hcls going to try to outlaw strikes on the rail- ways or anywhere else in Canada for a two-year period. John Blnnott. Liberal member for Springfield, criticized the non-op- crating rail unions for rejecting the 18-cents-an-hour pay increase rec- ommended by a Federal conciliation board and accepted by the railways in the current wage dispute. He then gave notice that he in- tends to introduce a private bill to ask the government to ban labor strikes for A two-year period "in view" of the emergency now exist- trig." At a. time when the cost of living was declining and farm prices drop- ping "the demands made by the railway unions are not only totally unwarranted, they have become I chronic disease . . , I have always advocated I fair dnyts pay for I fair day's work but the time has come when labor unions must real- ize they have to be honest and fair with the rest of the country." (The rail unions want. 45 cents an hour more. Federal labor juris- diction covers only in limited area but this includes transportation.) with President-elect Eisenhower and his Secretary of state-deslg. nate John Foster Dulles. Eden returned to London Thur- lsdny after discussing India's plan for ending the Korean truce dead. lock with American and other re- Dresentntives at United Nations. Two Far Eastern problems of particular interest to the Com- monwealth ministers meeting here are: l. The well-being of the Com. monwcalth division in Korea and the legal status of commonwealth forces in Japan, 2. The question of Britain's ex. clusion from Anzus Pacific defence alliance of Austraia, New Zenland and United States. But the Anzus problem is ex. pectcd to he discussed ouuslde the C"hl"l'l "lF9llnl-I since it mainly concerns Britain, Australia and New Zenland only. k The rambling Throne Speech de- FEW Drduced a divergence of views, including divided opinion about Commonwealth trades. George T. Fulford (L-Leeds) said Canada's farmers have reached a stage "where I doubt if they would be satisfied to depend on contracts with the United Kingdom." Canada should have a market in Britain. But if she was going to sell there she had to buy there, too, and Opposition members were quick to criticize the government when there was substantial buying from Brit- aln. Taking a different approach, Howard Green (PC-Vancouvclu Quadra) accused the government of ”smugness" on the question of Commonwealth trade. Trade Min- lster Howe in it recent speech had said "that those who say we are losing markets are talking non- sense." Finance Minister Abbott had "also done some blurtlng" abuit the need for more efficiency in produc- tton. But the fact remained that mar- ket: had been lost. The present prime ministers con- ference in London must come up with some move to improve com- monwealth trade. Predicts Atomic Power In Canada Within 5 Years OHTAWA, Dec, 2 -(CP)- The government is preparing for com- mercial use of atomic energy in Canada within the next five years, Trade Minister Howe said today. lie said in an interview that atomic power will be available in that time and that government of- ficials already are considering llnw best to provide outlets for its ser- vices to the public. The cabinet's atomic expert said the Atom will be providing power in much the same way and for the same purpose as electricity. Cen- tral power plants would generate it. The Minister said he could not the government is conaldc-Ting for the atom, whether they will be operated by the state or by private enterprise or both or where they will be. However. it has been indicated in the past. that a likely f;rst use of atomic energy would be lo pro- vide power in areas which now luck it in large quantities. He predicted that one of the government's key instrumeuls for the new era, the huge new reactor or nuclear furnace at Chalk River will be ready on schedule-ln 1954. Progl-em at C-halk River. he said. has stimulated moves to get ready for commercial use of the atom. Barriers to the lie wera were being solved steadily. divulge what sort of power outlets Inquest Completed In Death Of Three Persons In Highway Predicts Federal Election Next Oct. OTTAWA, Dec. 2 -(CP)-- The Progressive Conservative leader in the Senate today went out on a limb and predicted that xvfcderal general election will be held next fall. The date: Monday, Oct. 1953. Senator John T. Hall; is an old hand at forecasting elcction dates. lie was right on the button when he picked Monday, June 27. 1949, as the dnte of the last election. However, he said ' n during the Throne Speech debate, he may not be as successful this time. Many government supporters would like an election in May next year and one must be held by mlcl-August. 1954. He said he has too great a respect for Prime Minister sf. Laul-er.'.'s abilities to believe he will kthrow the country info the turmoil of a general election just before the colclmtion" of the Queen Julie 2. A "quick" election this spring would not give Canadians a proper chance to pick out the best men for Parliament. "The temper of the people is such that they want. a full. frank discussion of the country's and world's problems," he said. No Hope Nlld.. Girl Can Ever Eat Normally ST. JOHN'S, Nlld., Dec. 2 -(CP) -Nineteen-year-olcl Fay Parsons. flown to London hoping for a medical miracle to restore her taste and enable her to eat normal- ly, is coming home apparently destined for a tasteless life beillg fed through tubes. Dr. R. W. Raven of l.ondon. lop expert in treatment of destroyed digestive organs such as Fay Par- sons suffercd 16 years ago when she accidentally swallowed sonic lye, wired here today that there is nothing he can do. Dr. Raven's nlcmage was to the Newfoundland Health Department which sponsored the girl's trip to England after she had read of the doctor's work on cases similar to her own. She went. with high hopes, say- ing she was willing to undergo lengthy treatment if necessary There was no lndlcallon here whether she has yet been told there is no hope. The Health Department said ar- rangements will be made immedi- ately for her return home to Sandy Point, on Newfoundland's west. coast. Following her accident 16 years ago she underwent treatment in local hospitals but all efforts to remove scar fissile from her oesophagus failed. She has been fed through a tube ever since. Two Fatally lniured On Icy Highway DURHAM, Ont., Dec. 2 -(CP) - Two persons were fatally injured tonight when a car skidded on the icy highway half a mile west, of here and crashed head-on into a truck. William McKinney. about 04, of Hopeville. a mall courier, died on his way to hospital and his pas- senger, Mrs. Mary Carlyle, a (0- year-old widow, also of Hopevllle. died in hospital 15 minutes after the crash. The truck driver escaped without injury. Accident A coroners jury last night brought in the verdict that Edith MacKin- non, Cecil Naddy and Gerald Dunn came to their death as a result of being trapped in the cab of an overturned truck driven by Edith Macxinnon on November 8th.. at approximately 1:30 A.M. at New Perth. Death was caused by asphix- iatlon frclm fumes of gasoline which was flowing from the gas tank. No blame was attached to the driver or the other occupants of the car. The inquest was held at the Legion Hall, Montague, with Dr. G.S. A. Inman presiding as coroner. Mr. S.S. Hessian represented the Crown. The first witness, Jean Jamieson. 17, of Gamereaux, sald,thaf,,lwith Miss MacKlnnon she wcntif-to-a dance at Millview on November 7th, accompanying Mr. Cecil Naddy. Mr. Gerald Dunn, and Mr. Wilbur Naddy. After attending the dance they left there shortly after one o'clock, Miss MacKinnonrwas dl'lV- mg the V, ton truck, and all five were in the cab. The witness stated that Miss Maclilnllon had asked Cecil Naddy if she might drive the truck. but he would not consent at first. However. he finally consent- ed. She said that Miss MacKlnnon Wilbur Naddy. She was sitting on the knee of Mr. Wilbur Naddy. The truck was proceeding about 30 to 35 miles per hour. the witness thought. and was unable to give any reason as t.o the cruise of the accident at New Perth. She did not remember the truck leavilltz the road nor the events which followed. She regain- ed consciousness at the hospital where she was under treatment. The next. witnes, Wilbur Naddy, I9, of Greenfield. said that he and his brother had left home about 8 P. M. and had called at the home of Louis llyncs. They remained there for a s ort time and proceed- -(bcTnilnu?d-"ion"-faage”"a Rife) was driving, Mr. Cecil Naddy wasl seated next, then Gerald Dunn ancll EDMUNDSTONE N. B” Dec. 2 g May Sighal Big Struggle in Congress By Rowland Evans. Jr. WASHINGTON. Dec. 2 -(AP)- Senator Robert A. Taft, in an ex- plosive protest which could fore- shadow a great legislative struggle between two wings of the Repub- -lican Party. today labelled Presl- deut-clect Eisenhower's choice of a labor secretary as ”incredible." The Ohio Senators blast over the sclection of Martin P. Durkln shattered the outward show of harmony which prevailed during the election campaign between Eisenhower and the man he beat out for the Republican nomination. Who sows 1 field. flower. or plant: I. tree, in more lhln Ill. MAXI MS OIA MERE MAN or trains I 14 PAGES. Thu Guardian. W00 Cents. Morning Daily Founded 1887. 1st Patricias Home After By Bill Boss l TOKYO, Dec. 2 -rCP)-- The lst Patltclas ale liomeward-bound.i sailing back to Canada after al year-long tour in Korea's frontl line which didnit budge an inch. (lllrinfz lllc whole time they man-I ned it. But it was sulljcclcrl to an ever-l increasing pasting from Chlnesel Communist mortar and artillery, which made "sitting and taking it" a punishing W11) to earn a liv- ing. The Battalions principal on- (Tharges Selection An "Affront" In a statement. from Cincinnati Taft described Durkln, 58-year-old head of the AFL Plumbers Union, as a "partisan Truman I)emocrat.' He said the selection was an '.il- front" to labor voters who backed the Republican ticket, and also l.) Democrats who jumped party lines And he brought the matter down to more immediate political cases tby asserting that Herbert Browncli has been ”the key man ill cabinet appointments." Erownell, picked by Eisenhower to be attorney-general. has been closely associated with the Re- publican group around Governor Thomas Dewey and was Dewey's campaign manager in 1948 when Tico.ii..:.22i7r,;.;.'s7e;.i.'if News In Brief SEOUL, Dec. 3 -(Wcdnesdayl- (APi-- small 40-man units of grenade-hurling Chinese infantry harassed South Korean defenders on snowy Sni Ridge Tuesday in the only slgulrlclnt fighting on the bitterly cold,Korean front. WASAGA B,EAcr,l;rOii.:15ec.. 2 -' lCPl- Searcherh think a plane from Alberta bound for last Sat- u1x'l.1y's Grey Cup football game in Toronto may -hme crashed in Gecrl2ian'Bay. What appeared to be traces of an oil slick were sight- ed today a mile out in the water near here. OTTAWA. Dec. 2 -(cpl... A total of 675,423 Canadians are re- yceiving the &40-a-month pension paid to persons 70 and over rc- gardless of means. (CPr Guy Thibault, five-year- old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul- Emlle Thibault, was drowned to- day in Lhe Madawaska River when he fell through recently-formed ice. The body was recovered. JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Dec. '2 ..-4Rcutersl- Nine Afri- cans were killed by a heavy torm which today devastated Paynevillc, about .10 miles from here. It was the second death-dealing storm in this part of South Africa in three days. Last Sunday it tornado killed 20 Africans and injured 405 in Al- bertynesville, I suburb of Johan- neshilrll. By Norman Altstedter today rejected a Russian demand that a (Tine-illlfl be ordered in 'Korea without waiting to solve the prisoner-of-war deadlock. Western Nations insist that some agreement on repatriation of prisoners must be. reached before the fighting is ended. The political comnlittec voted 41 to 5 against. the Soviet. resolu- tion and concluded a month-long debate on Korea which left m'r1P-Y delegates exhausted. Only the Soviet bloc voted for an immediate cease-llrc but there were 12 abstelitions. including As- sian, Arab and Latin-American countries. Russia will have another oppor- tunity to press her formula on the UN when the plenary session of the General Assembly meets. probably Thursday, to give formal approval to an Indian peace plan. The Indian proposals. which in- slst that no prisoners be repatri- ated against. their will, was ap- proved Monday by a political com- mittee vote of 53 to 5. The plenary session probably will endorse the Indian plan by I margin of 54 to 5 because Leban- on. abseut during Monday's voting, will be back. Lebanon today ex- pressed support. of the plan which calls for sending all prisoners to n demilitarlzed zone under a neutral commlmion where the prisoners could say' whether they wanted to be repatriated. Ecuador and Yemen were ab- sent ln the voting today on the Soviet resolution which the West rejected on the ground it would leave UN prisoners now in Com- munist hands as hostages during a idssians Lose Demand !For Immediate Cease Fire UNITED NATIONS, N. Y, Dcc. 00"C9"ll"K K01"- I2 A ICPI -- The United Nations, l I I l l discussloll of pdlltlcal probleinga If the Assembly gels to a'fillal vole Trlursclay on the Indian plan -which Russia has rejected di- rectly and Communist China has rebuffed by implication the propoaal will be dispatched Friday to the Chinese and North Koreans Assembly President L. B. Pearson ,gagements during its l2 months here were the repelling of several lcnemy attacks and a number of llirst-rate patrols. An indication of lhc leadership fro the job done, related lto eionomy in casualties The 1st, lliattalion Princess Patricla's Can- adian Llght Infantry, leaves in the United Nations” cemetery at Pu-, snn 36 comrades killed in action. Other casuatics listed are lwn mis- sing, believed killed, and 196 wounded in action. l Brought over and led until May by Lt.-Col. Norman Wilson-Smith of Winnipeg. the Patricias have, been commanded since by Lt.-Col., John Cameron of Ottawa, who , taking them home. 1 Among its awards for action in: Korea are two Distinguished Ser-g 4 and one Military Medal. May Be Record During the autumn of 1951 and! ,the Battalion was in the Lwlthout if not world military total of 233 successive days- 2:-: -1951 and its last was theigf ntinncd on page 13 CPL 3) An overall in-crease in the inim- iber of passengers, automobiles and trucks ferried by Northumberllmd Ferries Limited during. the May to November season this year as compared to the same Dflod 1351 year is noted in figures released by the Company here last night- This season there was an in- crease of 3,895 passengers over 19a1. ll2.639 was the figure for the cur- rent year as compared to 78.744 last year. 606 more automobiles were carried over the Wood Is- lands-Caribou route this year than last, the figures being 20,664 for this year and 20,058 for last. A substantial increase is shown In the number of trucks ferried this year-'l,174, as compared to 5.031 last year-an increase of 1,222. The figures for the month of "November are also RlVCll- L551 years figures are shown in brack- ets passengers 5.182 l4,Bl2l. in- crease 3'70: automobiles, 1.025 1960. increase 81 and trucks 1.153 11,059; for all increase of 94. Tile report. which is the filial one for the season, reveals that since 1941. 666,657 passengers. 111,080 automobiles and 43.624 trucks have been ferried over this route. ST. Tl-iOMvAS. virgin, Islands. Dec, 2 --IRP.lil.('l'sl--- Blackbenrdls Castle, named after the cold- blnoded prale who once terroriz- ed t.hc Spanish Main, was clestro,x- ed today by f.le. Man) lrensuresi including pictures, were lost lll tllcl fire. l.e:end says lllat Blackheardi is directed under the resolution to send the proposal to the Com-p munlsls and report to the As- sembly on their reaction. l himself stayed from lime to time in the towered castle built in 1674 which nvcrlooirecl St. Thomas harbor. VANCOUVER, Dec 2 -- 1CP) - The British Columbia fishing ill- dustry is having its rocklest year in "decades. Though the herring season nor- mally opcns around the end of October. operations were still hamstrung today by a price dis- pute between the fishermen and operators. During the summer. the sock- eye salmon season was interrupt- ed by a one-week strike and ill the fall the 3,500 salmon fishermen stayed in port for 41 days, long- est strike in the history of the west coast fishing industry. l Even before the salmon strike was settled, the argument over the prices to be paid fishermen for their catches arose in the 38,000.- 000-a-year herring industry. Oil and meal are the chief pro- ducts of the fishery. The oper- ators say the world price for oil is only half what it was last year B. C. Fishing Industry Having Tough Season because of increased production by other countries and a surplus of oil stocks. They add that as the season progresses. the oil decreases in value. The operators today rejected the latest move by the United Fisher- men and Allied Workers Union t'l"LCl at settlement-arbitration. The union proposed last week in A letter to Premier W.A.C. Bennett that the men would fish while arbitration, which would be bind- lng on both parties, was in pro- great. The operators, represented by the Fisheries Association of B. C., originally offered :6 a ton for he - ring. The union held out for 88.40. last year's price. The operators withdrew their offer Nov. 10 on the grounds that delay in start of the season had made the fish worthless. With the better part of the season now lieved a record in Commonwealth canon G0, history-5 Oregon, in. a swift series of cabin- On Way Setting Great Record In Korea IN POSITXON WHERE HE COULDN'T REFUSE Prmldent of General Motors Corp, E2-year-old Charles E- Wll' vice Orders, two Military Cl'05555- son is seen during a press confer- one Distinguished Conduct M'd3l7ence in Detroit prior to accepting appointment as U. S. secretary of defence in President-elect Eisen- hower's cabinet. Wilson told news- mcn that ”in the present situation no real American could X81115? .lhe subsequent winter and sprlnE.,5uCh a position.” Eisenhower nam- ,l”l”'ecl his secretaries of state. 5 break fl” Wh” 13 ll” Foster Dulles, defence and the in- John Douglas McKay of et-maklngimovcs before he took its first action was fought 0Cl- 9;; ,(m-,,,Kme.a, to try to settle war, l on a journey that will' be blacked out in the news; 3”” Large Overall Increase In Ferry Traffic Figures Railways-Unions Meeting Called MONTREAL. Dec. 2 -rcrn - A conference between representatives of the railways and 17 brother- hoods on their wage dispute has been called for Dec. 10. Frank H. Hall, chief spokesman for the unions said tonight. The conference date. was propos- ed in a telegram received by Mr. Hall from the Deputy Minister of Labor in Ottawa. Prior to meeting the rallwayrep- rcsenlatives, the negotiating coni- mlttee of the non-operating rall- way unions will meet Dec. 9 to study their position on a recent government conciliation board re- port. f MORE l Iilslolllll ' lWiLL' POWER is LARQELY A X Marfca or "Wt0N”f' POWER! HALIFAX. Dec. 1 -(CPl- or- ficlal forecasts issued tonllzhl. by the Dominion Public weather Of- fice here and valid until midnight Wednesday. Synopsis: It was clear and frosty in the Maritime: during the night. An area of snow and rain stretching froln the Great Lakes to New York and Montrea.l..is moving eastward. snow is forecast to reach the western regions Wed- nesday afternoon, but the eulem part of the district is not likely to be affected by this Weather W9" Thursday. Prince Edward . Island-Clear with A few cl0l1dY lflt9'V'”5' Cm” Linuing cold. Light Wlndl. LOW End high Wednesday at Charlottetown 15 and 33. F ...., High tide today at Charlottetown at 12.32 P. M. and 11.29 P. M. High tide on the North shore at 7.12 A. M. mid 624 P. M. Sun rises today at 1.33 A. M. and gone, negotiations are still stalled. sets at 4.33 P. bi.