Financial Year HALIFAX 'CPl—-Nova Scotia ‘had a record revenue of $111.- »220.681 in the fiscal year end- jdeath of a sister. It was written Iwith a thick blue crayon. “Jenia died % Dec. 12:30 in lthe morning. 1941." ‘ Under wa s Bahushka. grandmother, who died Jan. 25. -1942 Then went an uncle. another sister. Under the M was: i “Mama. 13 May at 7:30 morn- ‘ing. dead. 1942." simply: “All dead." under the letter O was "0dna." for alone. in Rus-} .sian. I-ler cold hand had scrib- ‘ bled~ .starving. She died crossing the {lake in an evacuation convoy. Despite their suffering. the _Leningraders managed to send, .‘men to the front and support them with munitions. - in 1943. the Germans planned. ‘one more attack on Leningrad ‘but it was broken up by a pre- 1 veiitive attack by the Russians. i Late in 1943 a Russian breakout ‘ attack was launched from Len-I ingrad itself. supported by an‘ attack from outside. south of‘ Lake Ladoga. ‘ The Germans were sent recl- ing back and the first relief3 ltroops broke ' . 1944. to a wildly*exulting; NEW SCIENTIFIC VESSEL COMMISSIONED phy at Dartmouth. .\’.S. Crui- sing range is 15,000 nautical miles and top speed better than 17 knots. (CP Wirephotoi John Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company. Ltd.. Saint John. N.B. It will work for the department of mines and technical surveys at the Bed- ford Institute of Oceanogra- Canada's new 7,000. oceanographic research ves- sel. tire Hudson. has been commissioned in Halifax. The vessel. of 4.800 tons displace- ment. was built by the Saint ien I reminded one woman.000 Leningrad Commemorales Hour 1ijria:%:z.:s-d:-.:-e.::.-as3“ that Russians were supposed to} Ilike East Germans at least, she; For N.S. Described As Satisfactory ‘ing March 31. 1963. Revenue }was more than 33.000000 above, jestimates. according to the gov~- an -ernments public accoun .letter for J was a report of the - bled in the IESISIBCUFC heft?- Finance Minister Smith de- ' it as “one of the more satisfactory financial years the tprnvince has experienced." ‘ Total expenditures amounted to $98,602.199. about $5.000.000 rless than expected. The province had a net reve- nue surplus of 3151597 after us- ing S3.500.000 for a university assistance fund. $2.700.000 for Later came 8 page Saying capital expenditures out of cur- .l‘ revenue and transferring to serve fund. Mr. Smith said one of the mo; satisfactory features was a the hospital re- _ , ‘. 00.000 ecrease in Nova ‘‘ --A” amne. Tanya" There Scotia‘s net direct debt. which was no date, stood at $168,900,000 at the end ' Neighbors found her later of H5“) 1963' NOT A TREND 5 However. he said he did not: think "this indicates a trend,’ as it seems to be due to a num- ~ ber of favorable factors which‘. are not of a recurring na-' ture." . One factor was payment from the federal government of $1.: 7_80.000 as a result of recalcula- tion of payment due from tax- 1 sharing agreements for the? :f’i1ve-year period ended March; an additional $5,500,000 under} new tax - sharing agreementsl approved in Ottawa last No-" into the city Jan. vem er b . Another factor. he said. was unexpected increase in the‘ yield from the hospital which produced nearly $1.400.-l more than the estimate l revenue of $1‘5.600.000. 1 Mr. Smith said his depart-‘ m e n t‘s experience indicates : ‘. tax revenue wss “sbnor- sion and $1,210.01!) for hospital at and cannot be relied on in c on str uction rants were the future." lmainly responsible for the large BIGGEST SOURCE ‘greductlon in expenditures be- e 19-cents-a-gallon guolineihw the Estimate" . l CALGARY -cP)"DW¢I°Pm£flI- biggest revenue sou;-cg? The highest spending depart-- the vast Athabasca Oil Sands aside from federal grants, pro-‘‘m8|1¢t ‘"88 d¢;I£c;S0‘:|00 Wigioclt duced 8460.000 more than esti-359611 8 P8001‘ . . .8 II mated for a total of $19,709,000. i$1.60o.oo0. more than the previ-4 Mr. Smith said that the yield;0“S record Veal‘- from this tax also increased‘ The highways department'1962 fiscal year. m0|'€ Fallidly than usual. ‘with record spending of $5.-l The health department was The finance minister said un- 473,000 followed a close second. lthe third highest spender with der expenditures of $1.500.000 for This department’: spending was labout sao,2oo.ooo. ._ approval ol so rls Recommended W "heme- ; If 'I‘h tax. barrels of crude. rr sum: IS 2 EPA. ALWAYS Fl.lES oven rue WEATHER. PASSENGER courorzr ALL THE TIME. WY! IT SURE IS SMOOTH AND BEAUTIFUL UP HERE IN THE CLOUDS. EIISTEHII FHUVIHEIHL niniunrt uuo omcs: union. uswrouuoiuo s-r. .iomrs—osuoes—-sees unis-..srmonivii.i.s—eoosu --- usiinx_nsnou..-mni uu.s—IIssuas.-nun: nuns auuo nu.uousIIt—Isu u.susIi—ueoAi.ni isuusf .8821 :__ unnnissunl nnnnngnn-n German Blockade Was Broken L i PRESTON GROVER Qto scramble. Survivors around shipped out much vital machin-l LENIINGRAD (AP) — At the time the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. people of this city were eating hides. dogs. cats. rats. grass. glue. pine needles- anything at all to remain alive in one of the worst sieges of modern history. Now, 20 years after it ended. the city commemorates the hour that the German blockade was broken by attacks from within and from outside. Before the blockade ended. a third of the population had starved to death, 632.253 people by official count. Disease had little part in it. They starved. Dying cold and alone in bed. falling by night in the snow in the streets. or on the threshold of the factories they tried to reach to perform their daily tasks and earn their ration cards. To the people who sur- vived. that they did it. The Germans. aided by the Finns, threw a blockade around Leningrad in the cold fall of 1941 and twisted it so tight that for weeks and months all but the tiniest trickle of food was shut off. EPIC OF SUFFERLVG Finally a thin dribble of food, gasoline and other supplies be- gan coming in over a road across the ice of Lake Ladoga. where the Russians held a na row beach head. The story of that road itself is an epic of suffering. disaster and sheer human determination. Trucks loaded with starving people be- ing evacuated across the lake in the night plunged through hidden shell holes. dumping scores of people into icy water from which they were too weak "1 u so through spillage ond llully reduced. I 50 ER REALLY FRESH FEEDS IN BULK-JUST GIVE Packers Ltd. 1.. it seems incredible now- FROM BIN TO BIN THE MODERN. LOW COST WAY OF FEED HANDLING NO HIUFF NO PUFF NO FUSS NO MUSS "-You can SAVE MONEY by buying your SHUR-GAIN feed in III.I(—and have savings in labor a ll d handling too. Losses mus-out sivision them were too weak to pull lery ahead of the Germans. and‘ them out. ‘more than 600.000 people, and That is how it was. even some foo I came here to talk to some of when the besieging armies the people who had comeifinally closed in. in midSep- through it. The story of thatrtember. 1941. the city had sup- siege, known to every Russian. lplies of food for hardly a month lhardly saw the light of day in ’for its 2. .000 people. ‘the West during the war. A cer-r Officials rapidly cut rations. tain amount was written aboutrThe army at the front had to it, but what chance had it to»be fed first. make the front pages of the‘ world‘s newspapers against the‘B0“'ED COWHIDE dramatic battle of London. the A" empmyee °f,["'°"fi‘," “'h°! sinking of the American fleet in “'35 14 at the i”“‘’‘ Sald _},"5 Hawaii. the entry of the United zgrandfather once returned V\lI.I1 States into the war. °°“’h‘d°- _ - e the German siege e burned the hair off. then ..w ‘ - - - igrandmother bnile it for hours of Pans m 18,0 had a great‘ n the little stove. We all hud- ' ld ‘t ff d h r° . . Eiglge. l?I‘it3l’ersl:inieiIoTincead hilsngiiix-idled '“ ‘he k”°h°“- Ml“ 59”‘ tention to starve Leningrad into .eral hours of boiling the hide surrender. then to obliterate it. 5I‘“"“°d ""0 3 5°” °f jelly’ when ‘PLAN CHANGED it was cooled we ate it. It was . ‘very good. At least it seemed l The Germans swept almost so than into the city in mid-September.» "Every morning ,1941. At the last minute. theiwem, our_ ;plan was changed. p ' ‘ There is controversy about‘other survivors told the same that. Soviet authorities insistisior mile? W35 be_3Iel'1 81 _L€l1ifl8rad.f Finally a truck route across give up trying to invade thegthe ice of Lake Ladoga was city. and set about starving it. lworked out. but it was a con- ;Much evidence points in anotherlsram halal-d_ The Germans gdirectiorn At the crisis hour. injsheiied the road and bombed it. September, after their lightning:'1‘he mule had to be changed SWEEP 3CI'05S Russia. German often. and it was not easv. for troops stopped within easy Sigl1l=huge snowdrifts had to be of the city. Its onion-domed?mo\-ed. it was almost impossi- cathedrals loomed ahead. At ble to find people with strength that hour. the armored spear-jenough to stay out on the ice head was withdrawn and sentto shovel away the snow. against Moscow, a more impor- Among the relics of tlic Lenin- tfihl target. grad siege is a tiny diary of 3 But the hunger Siege llllhb 10-year-old girl. Tanya Savich.» erred. and held. is no Anne Frank diary. it ‘ Leningrad was lotally- unpre- records only deaths rpared for siege, and apparently The little notebook had an jsoviet authorities thought for a alphabetical index. ind» a small time the city was lost. 'l‘he_\’ dictionary. Under the Russian, when we vermin. which can be costIy—wil be dras- US A CALL food service -L, in IN STYLE-...THEN SPEAK TO Inside and out,Dodge is a finely designed fashion plate. Dodge says beautiful things about your good taste. And Dodge handles the Way a gal wants a car to handle: finger tip easy. 'liy this car on for size. People just naturally CHRYGLEH CANADA LTD. Phone _cliei-tomvown .... 8'92-1275 svesii on some MILE POWER-TRAIN Suninetsldo . 436-2211 WARRANTY %0lI I9 Covsvspsnssndlsbour. - Ieoyourdoeluforcomplm details IF YOU’RE A GAL WHO LIKES TO TRAVEL YOUR MAN ABOUT DODGE look good in a Dodge. 112 fig Gnu-dun, (mgrlottigtown, Mon, Feb, 11, ]_1fi4,‘g:tl:l&O 10%-O3 increase tn nos-its: hospital insurance commie sands an ‘set-vet-lou loud. i-seo:im:,cd:: the recommendation ; ldwtod by the Alberta govern: appeared in the offing Friday '“e'"' 6"" C'"‘”“‘“ 0" Sana) as the Alberta Oil and Gas Con. Ltd. will be authorized to ex, ' ’“"". tract 45.000 barrels of crude 0,] lup more than $2,000,000 over the y 3 day from the northeastern M iberta sands, estimated by "1; board to contain us_ooo_000_M Dcu:Ig¢=.- in every way... the years most beautfizl car WENDALL G. BARBOUR LTD. I23 - I27 Euston St. Phom 894-9623 ¢ YOUR DOD GE DEALER ALSO HAS A WIDE SELECTION OF WIIITERIIED DEPENDABLE USED CARS. RIGHT NOW.