MAXIMS OF A MERE. MAN it is settled tithi- y. question is ova settled aiitti ,? 3! carrier i Charlottetown. Iunnoi-side ul'.l.l.l9.I0. Othqprmvlnooo and U. 515-00 P0! Innun. luscwiino I A. ll1.0o our annun. I Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1952 From the death of the old the new proceeds. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN 16 PAGES The Guardian. Five Cents Morning Daily Founded 1581. HOUSING PROBLEM SAID CANADIAN ARMYS BIGGEST Predicts Increase In Canada's Producl:ionExpecietTTo' Queenis Member Urges Govit Fulfill Pledges OTTAWA, Dec. 4 - (Spe lal) - J, Angus MacLea.n, joint. onscr- rative member for Queen's to- night called on the government to make good on a number of its unfulfilled pledges to Prince Ed- uard Island. For some years past, Mr. Mac- Lean said in the Throne Speech debate, there had been promises for a Federal Building for Char- lottetown: for 0. new armory and for a new naval barracks. None at these pledges had been met, ind they are now long overdue. The Queen's member recalled that requests had been made and ire being made to the government to extend the runways of the Charlottetown airport. He under- stood that this matter is current- ly receiving the consideration of the Minister of Transport. and urged Transport Minister Chevrier to accede to the request for ex- tension of the airport. Prince Ed- ward Island, Mr. MacLean said. and Queens County in particular, had received it very small share Coming Events "lrishtown school concert, Dec. 19. "Dance, Millvicw Hall Friday. svei-y "Card party in Sesview hall ionlghl. "Christmas Concert. Canoe Cove. Monday, December 22nd. "Chi-istmas Concert, Darnley llall, Friday, December 19th. "Dance. I-Iowe's Hall. Bracklcy Beach. Friday, December 5th. "Bradalbane L. O. B. A. Annual Tea and Bazaar. Saturday evening, December 6th. ' "Come to Bradalbana school Christmas concert, nesdsy, Dec. 17th. "Bonshaw School Christmas Concert. in Bonshaw Hall, Monday, December 22nd. Village Wed- ”Thera will be a. Legion meet- ing in St. Psierls Legion Hall Saturday night, Dec. 6th, 7 o'clock. "Come to St. Catherine's Hall, htlcnday. December 8th, for Films. cc. "Annual Mating Tanton L.0.L. Brookfield Monday, December 3th. All Brothers please attend; "In stock cod oil. feed. mol- asses. Book chicks now and save "l0M.V. Get out Calendar. Dillon dz Spillett. "Don't miss Christmas Bazaar and Pantry Sale at Fcnnell and Chandler's. saturday. December 6th. Canoe Cove W. 1. "Sec Varisty Concert in st. Charles Hall, Monday. December 3th. starting at 8.30. Sponsored by St. Peters C. Y. 0. "Be sure to attend the meet- lliit in New Glasgow school, Fri- d"Y 3 mm. to consider organizing S5"! Parties for the winter. "The Annual Meeting of the Federal Dairying Co.. will be held in Belfast Hall. Wednesday. Decem- be-1' 10th. s P. M. "Contest Fiddling. Dancing and Smsinaz also Highland Fling. Mount. Stewart Legion Hall. Wed- "?-Sday. December 10th. "sinnhoiie - Covehead Commun- ll.V Hall. Reserve December 29th I” Ray ninety costume dance and cards. Door prize. Admission W rents. In aid of hall. "Muster Feeds, another car or- riving this week. Clark's Feed Ser- VICB. Mount Stewart. Also grinding Ind mixing service. Feeders who teen records use Master. "Buying live and dressed chick- !" and fowl daily. Phone collect for prices and pick-up service". We pay &' Poultry on farm. Central Egg Ph Pwltry Station, Charlottetown. one 2526 day. Night 1300-2. 0 ..16'lg0h0sram Pictures athoms Deep" "lihl only. An Art presents .at Morell to- liur Lake Pro- motion. Starring Arthur Lake, , " Cheney and others. Filmed ll startling Amco color. A real i Rood show. "Come to Mnawart Saturday. rglcembar 0th. at 0 o'clock. "Room md 0M More" with Carey Grant ,1 Betty mm. Rated by critics one of. the but con los this m""f'h”":'hV'.1hI week-an Decem- hnml fgmmiitoyai Tour plus full To P. E. Island g& of Federal public works and of defence contracts. "When a province like Alberta asks for something as the Minister of Mines and Technical Surveys has just told the House," he said. fat least Alberta getsa geolog- ical survey. When we in Prince Edward Island ask for something, all we get. is a stony stare." Mr. MacLean urged government action to strengthen the system of transportation between the Is- land and the mainlaiid. Lack of sufficient ferrics, he said, had been creating traffic bottle-nccks and seriously harming the tourist in- dustry of the Province. The ves- sels on the Borden-Tormentine run were good boats but had proved unable to handle the traf- fic of would-be visitors to the is- land in the summer months, he paid. To remedy this situation. he urged that a new ferry-boat be placed in service for the carrying of vehicular traffic between the Island and the mainland. It would not need to be an all-weather ves- sel or an ice-breaker; simply an efficient ferry for the tourist sea- son. , Mr. MacLean also called the at- tention of the House to the in- adequacy of the present vessels of Northumberland Ferries Ltd., operating between Wood Islands and Caribou. To meet the grow- ing volume of traffic between these two points, he said, a third ferry is urgently needed for the summer months. He called on the government either to provide thts third ferry or to make some ar- rangements whereby the ferry company would be in a position to secure ii. third ferry and operate Economist Paints Glowing Picture Of The Future MONTREAL. Dec. 4-(CP)- A high-ranking federal economist tonight predicted that Canada's national production may more than double in the next 35 years. climbing to 560,000,000,000,000 by 1977. Dr. 0. J. Firestone, the Trade Department's economic adviser, predicted also that Canada's pop- ulation, currently about 14,100,000, likely will rise to more than 23,- 000,000 in the next quarter cen- tury. Comparing the past with what may develop in the future, Dr. Firestone painted a picture of a. strong economy, built on expand- ing consumer purchasing power,- liigger exports and increased in- vcstments. - The nature of Canada's growth holds a legoii for Canadian busi- ness men, he observed in a. speech prepared for delivery before the Engineering Institute of Canada. Those who look to the future with caution and see the bogey of depression around every corner will lose opportunities to the "en- terprising and the bold." Discounts Recession Talk Already there was some talk of recession and yet not many were aware that. "it would require a major economic cili.83l'Oph6. prob- ably originating abroad, to cause a significant drop in employment and national income in Canada." Dr. Firestone said. "The suggestion is that the western Nations may approach a peak level of defence spending u-ihin a year or so and that, after (Continued on pagVeVli?il.:4lT (Continued on P3; 8 col. 0-- LONDON. Dec. 4 - (AP) - Prime Minister Churchill today announced in the Commons is new cutback in the British defence ef- fort to lessen the entanglement of the country's economy in an in- flationary spiral. He did not specify the size of the cut, but he made it clear the action was designed to protect Britain's financial solvency. "Some curtailment must be made," Churchill said. will, to some extent, cancellation or modification contracts already placed." To Spread Deliveries "The reductions will. so far as possible. be brought about by spreading deliveries of equipment over a longer period. It will, how- ever, not be possible to solve the problem entirely by spreading de- llveries forward liito future months or years." This was the method used in the first cutback. Churchill's Con- servative Government. announced last; winter that Britain's long range, s8.400,000.000 rcarmametit program, first put forward late in 1950, had been extended ll. you beyond the originally-planned three years because of manpower and steel shortages and the effects of the country's economic crisis. Referring to aircraft Churclilll now ”Tl1iS involve the of Churchill Announces - Cut In Defence Effort To Protect Solvency reduce somewhat "the production of types now in service, but we shall continue to press forward as rapidly as possible with the intro- duction oi the newer and still more-advanced types." He mentioned that. progress in the medium-bomber program would enable a curtailment of light- bomber building. Further, Churchill stressed that Britain is as determined as ever to carry her full share in the ef- forts of the North Atlantic Treaty Orgaiiizaticn. Original Program Rash Britain now is spending H.462,- t)00.000 a. year for defence. More than one-third of this goes for new weapons. . Under the original defence pro- gram, the prices would have push- ed to 3. total of il.850,000,000 this year. Churchill said. and to E1.800,000,000 next year. The Prime Minister said it would have been rash to carry on the original arms program. "This is not passing censure or making ('Jlli.lCiSln of our tLabori predecessors." he said. "Had they had to deal with the situation as it. presents itself today, they would no doubt have made the neces- sary adjustments and curtailments without. violating the principle of going to the utmost limits of our said today his government. will power short of going bankrupt." TORONTO, Dec. 4 -(OP)- A ban on so-called faith healing may be imposed in Ontario 15 a result of the death in Barrie. ont., of I 19-year-old diabetic girl who, authorities say, gave up insulin after talking with a unveiling evangelist and died in 68 hours. Doctors say the decision of Mary Taylor to take no more insulin a- mounted to suicide. Chief Ooi-onor .5mirlc Lawson, who will conduct the inquest into the girl's death, speculated that the jury's verdict might recom- mend a legal ban on the activities of faith healers. Attorney-General Porter of On- tario soid he will personally watch "moat carefully" the evidence. "If anything emerges from the inquest, we will have to act." he said. Mary Taylor's brother, Bruce. ducribed the faith healing of Pastor R. W. olmes which he said led to his lateris death yes- terday Is "a silly kind of religion" He sold it was the preaching which led his sister and his mother to believe the girl could stop tak- ing the insulin she needed to keep alive." A Toronto diabetic specialist Ban On Faith Healing May Follow Girl's Death who treated the girl when she was younger said: "Anyone who becomes a diabetic as a child, as this girl did, is com- mitting suicide to stop taking in- sulin. fifteen years' experience of caring for her should have taught her parents that." Another Toronto doctor who specializes in treating diabetics snide "Mien like that evangelist are a menace.” Meanwhile the evangelist, Hol- mes. said in North Tonawanda, N. Y., he is willing to attend the in- quest. He told police the girl attended three of his prayer meetings but no mention was. made that she in- tended to discontinue the medi- cine. ''I preach the Bible and the indi- vidual must make the decision," he said. "But I know through ex- pcrlencc that I person whose faith is strong enough can be healed of anything," , ' Mr. and Mrs. George I-fart, who live next door to the Taylor fam- ily. laid Holmes told his prayer meeting audience about the curing MONTREAL. Dec. 4 -(CiP)- Members of the executive of the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities demanded wid- er distribution of taxes to mUnCl- palities today and said fl brief to that effect will be presented to the Federal Cabinet tomorrow. The executive is holding a two- day meeting here before going to Ottawa tomorrow to meet. Acting Prime Minister C. D. Howe and the cabinet. Yesterday Mayor A. J. Mason of Springhill, N. S., president of the federation, attacked the govern- Mr. Mulch Outlines Ferry Siiuaiion Al Wood Islands The traffic situation at Wood Is- lands was outlined to the lim- keepers Association at their an- nual meeting last. night in a letter from Mr. R. E. Mulch, president of Nrirlhumberland Ferries. who was unable to be present due to illness. Mr. Mutch said that his posit- lon has kept him in close touch with the tourist industry of the Province and its difficulties. llc stated that he could well under- stand the trouble faced in giving satisfaction to tourists when on arrival in the Province they found they were on a dirt road, had no electric lights and with a rural telephone exchange the only curi- nection with the outside world. People tended to become gruntled when faced with situation and a great deal is required to handle the ion. He said his company has had to take a lot of blame for the unsat- isfactory conditions facing the tourists and thought that the dc- velopment. of the route had been so rapid as to be a stumbling block dis- such a of fact situat- "Ttcontiiiued7in7;HzE'5E31fs7- Fined For Selling Butter Substitute MONTRIEAL, Dec. 4 -t'CP)- Ten Montreal and district mer- chants were fined .7-200 each today for selling it butter substitute in violation of a provincial regulation forbidding sale of such substitu- tcs. Five other merchants Arraigned today pleaded innocent to illegal- ly selling the substitute and were ordered to appear for trial Dec. 12. Police said they were the first to be arrested here since the Que- bec Legislatiire recently stiffened provincial anti-margarine regula- tions. A Nehru-TT-leaded For Re-election NEW DELHI, Dec. 4-(AP)- Prlnie Minister Nehru today ap- peaied headed for uncontested rc- electlon as president. of India's governing Congress Party for a two-year term. With noniiiiations closed for the presidential elec- tion at the party convention at Hyderabad Jan. 17, 1953, the names of two challengers have been ent- ered, but both are understood to have already submitted letters of withdrawal. U. S. Boosts Wages To Hard Coal Miners WASHINGTON. Dec. 4 -fA-Pl- The government today approved a daily wage boost of about 31.90 for hard-coal miners. Economic stabilizer Roger Put- nam directed the Wage Stabilizat- ion Board to tell John L. Lewis and hard-coal operators that their contract has been appdoved. it calls for the lncci-ease. Putnam sent a letter to "the Wage Stabilisation Board," saying that President Truman's soft-coal decision" of course would extend to any other similar contract in- volvlng coal mining." Truman last night approved a 81.00 rise for soft-coal miners. over-ruling a decision by the wage Board that 31.50 was all that of -two,ai-ibeuo cues ttuoiigh prayer. could be allowed under the anti- j inflation progrgys Ferry Transportation N eeds, Strongly Stressed By Premieri Mayors Will Ask Bigger Slice Of Tax Pudding ment for centralizing powers so that municipalities felt. like "beg- gars living on grants from some government nvcr which we have. not enough authority." l Today, Mayor H. E. .iiariiicn of, Edmundston, N. 13., said the fed- eration will . "give the Ferleral Cabinet an ultimatum on this matter tomorrow." "The Federal Government is at present making some grants to us through the pi'0I'lnClfll govern- ment. That's what. we don't want. Under the grant systcni. ilie mu- nicipalities are placed in the po- sition of having to beg off ollicrs." Be Discussed Al Oiiawa Meeting By DOUGLAS HOW OTTAWA. Dec. 4 - (CF) .4 The army is aiming to provide every major unit with a home station of its own. preferably near the bright city lights. The long-range problem of get- ting enough accommodation to catch up with the post.-Korea expansion is described authoritatively as the No. l army issue of the moment. Taking the hypothetical view that Korea is going to go on. that the Atlantic Pact commitment will con- tinue. that manpower will he some- where between 50.000 and 60.()tl(i for some years. headquarters has draft- ed a plan to house the army that IHCCS this situation. Conference Begins Need for more expeditous trails- poriaiion of farm produce on the Boi'clcii-Tormentinc carfcrry was strongly enipliasizcd by Premier .1. Walter Jones in flil(ll'CSSllii; the an- nual mceting of the P. E. I. Inn- keepers Association last. night. "I am aslmmed of the Liberal Government who keep six cap- tains and a host of engineers there," the Premier said. "We must get. better accommodation as lhis cannot, be endured. We must' make a lot. of noise. The officials seem to have forgotten that what we asked for years ago was aux- iliary fcrrics niaking the trip ev- cry hour or two and operated by 10 or 15 men, night and day, i'e- gardless of trains." Two things were promised the Island when it entered Confeder- ation. the Premier continued. "One was i.hc opportunity to buy out the laiidlords and we borrowed the money to do so at 5 per cent. The This accommodation problem is expected to figure in the discus- sions of the annual conference of the army's top officers which start- ed here today and will continue un- til the end of the week. Geiierals. bi-igadiers and coloncls from all ncrcms the country as well as from Canadian posts in England and the United States are attending the conference. Lt.-Gr-n. G.G. Sim- niids. chief of the GGencral Staff , is mcsidiiic. y l Reserve Army ' Steps to improve the reserve army setup are among the other subjects Tenders Being Called For Kensington Federal Building fIT.Ti. 0. Gets New ifieneral Secretary I Lorne W. J. Hurd, B.S.A. has been appointed General Sec- retary of the Agricultural Institute of Canada to take office April 1. 1953. Mir. liurd has a disinguished (Sask) scholastic: history, a military re- cord and extensive journalistic and administrative experience. scbcciulcd for discussion. The accommodation problem is one the army nuts under t.he head- ill" of home stations. The traditional arrangement. is! that each of the large units has al base of its own. Before Korea this. was possible because there. werel just six large operational units. Now tlwrc are four times that number. The plan is to have a home sta- tion for every large unit so that when men go overseas they will know their wives have a home and other was to provide adequate daily comniunicatinn with the mainland. They did not event think of this latter item for 40 years, and if it is not done quick- ly now the Island will he in ii. bad fix. Bctwccn two thirds and three quarters of our produce cari- not get off the Island fast with trucks, and this shortcoming also applies to fish destined to the United States. Two scheduled trips a day is what we are getting now, which is entirely inadequate." He pledged strong support to the Innkeepers Association in im- proving and advancing the tour- ist business, which he said was of paramoiint. importance to this Province. "Ten or 15 per cciit. more tour- ists are coming each year and that is about. all we can carry with the congestion at Wood Islands and Bordcn.' he said. "Wood Is- lands should have something coni- parable with other places in Can- aria where such congestion is avoided." "I cannot find out myself whether we are to have a. cause- way or bridge over portions of the Traiis-Canada Highway which are of deepest concern or inter- est. but. in any everit the job will icoritimicri on poccA8Tc'o-l. 5) that they will return to that home when their time overseas is finish- ed. The aim is to keep the home sta- tions as near cities or large towns as possible. Experience has taught that that is a wiser course than planting an army community miles from anywhere. ' Huge Addition To Saint John Hospital SAINT JOHN, N. 3., Dec. 4- tCP)v-Tile municipal council to- day authorized a 300-bed additlor to the Saint John Hospital at an estimated cost of nearly 54,000,000. It will be the biggest construction job here in years. The hospital": board of commissioners was auth- orized to start the work as soor as possible. UNITED NATIONS. N. Y.. Dec. 4-(AP)-United Nations sources reported tonight. nine American UN employees already have been fired in 1952 for refusing to an- swer questions on alleged aub- versive activities and nine more are expected to be dismissed to- lllOi'l'nW. On Treaties By Richard Knsiclike RONN, Germany. Dcc. 4-tAFt --Chancellor Konrad Adenriuer to- night reversed his plan to force a prompt vote on the treaties to rt-arm West Germany in alliance with the West. It. appeared par- liameiit's filial ratification will be postponed at least it month. The postponement grew out of) back-stage political manoeuvring that went on while several huii- dred Cnmmunlsts staged dem- onstrations and chanted, "We don't want any American weapons." The Chancellorls surprise move was made after the second day of debate in the lower house on the bills ratifying ll. peacc contract t.o end the occupation and pledging West Germany to raise an army of 500,000 men for the six-nation European defence community. A final vote had been expected to- mm-row. But. Adenauer's Christian Dem- ocrats. at a meeting of leaders in the t.hrce-vparty governing coalition. proposed to postpone the final test until the federal supreme court has given an opinion whether a simple majority or a two-thirds vote in the lower house is neces- sary for ratification. The Socialists had contended rearma ent was iinconstitutlonal and therefore the treaties would require a two-thirds vote. Aden- auer had maintained that the constitution did not forbid rearm- ament and so only a simple major- ity would suffice. The lower house will still com- pleta its second reading of the bills and vote tomorrow. But. the West Germanyis Vote Postponed i iii'i3EiT'andTfiTnT1-iiaiiding'iuii-7:1 postponed, probably until Jan- nary. Adcnaiicr forces said the delay "will save time in the long run.” It was better to be sure of their legal ground than to pass the Farm born and raised, he has an appreciation of the problems of the producer and an intimate kiiowledge of the broad fled of agriculture. He spent three sum- mers working in dairy industries and for t,wo years has been assist- ant to the Secretary of the Na- tional Dairy Council. Mr. Hurd is married. and makes his home in Ottawa. His appointment was made fol- lowing acceptance of the resigna- tion as General Secretary of Ru- pert D. Ramsay. who leaves to as- sume the post of Director Exten- sion, University of Saskatchewan. Saskatoon. Sask. C.I.0:iElecls A Waller Reuiher As President By Norman Walker ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Dec. 4 -(A131-Dynamic Walter P. Reuth- er was elected president of the CIO today in a political scrap winding up the labor groups annual con- veiition. Reuther. 45-year-old chief of the CIO's Auto Workers Union, was selected in a hotly-contested bal- loting over Allan S. Haywood, vet- eran 64-year-old executive vice- president, of the organization. The voting was 3,019,181 for Rcuthcr, and 2,613,103 for Hay- wood, based on the C105 claimed membership of 5,692,284. Reuther thus won by 466,078 votes. The red-haired Reuther. per- haps best. known for his many proposals for social change in the United States. succeeds the late Philip Murray who had guid- ed the CIO for a dozen years be- fore his sudden death Nov. 9. Despite the bitter battle between the opposing Reuther and Hay- viood forces, both sides pledged afterward to bury the hatchet and work logctlicr. After Rcutlicr was elected CIO prcsidciit, Haywood. amid much praise for his long work in the labor movcincnt, was unanimous- ly re-electcd as executive vice- prcsitlciit James B. Carey, head of the CIO's Electrical Workers treaties and possibly have parts: of them knocked out by the court l Union, was rc-clcctcd secretary- il'D.'l5lll cr. Temperance Clash At Co OTTAWA, Dec. 4 -tCP)- The all-out "total abstinence" faction of the Canadian Temperance Fed- eration lost one major fight. but won another at the federations annual convention today. Its efforts to get total abstin- ence and the elimination of the liquor traffic written into the stated objectives of the federation constitution were defeated. But the group was successful in getting passage of resolutions ad- vocating voluntary total abstin- ance and the ”utmost measure of restriction of the traffic in alco- holic beverages that consitutlonal powers will warrant and public opinion will sanction and sustain." The issue. produced A lively clash hctwccn the militant total abstin- cncc group and moderators not favorinit total ahdtinenco by pro- hibition. I Eventually, the constitution was affirmed with slight changes, Factions In nvention mild tei-ms winch observers con- eluded were calculated not to dis- courage moderates who might want to take part in the work of the federation. OTTAWA, Dec. 4 -(Special) - Tenders are being called by the Federal Department of Public Works today for a federal building which the department plans to erect at. Kensirigton in Prince County. Cost of the project, in- cluding the site, is understood to be in the vicinity of sl00,000. Decision of W UTA.) Minister Fournler to proceed with the Kenslngton building is subsetllieiit to representations made by J. Wat- son Maclxlaught, Liberal M.P. for Prince and parliamentary assist- ant to Fisheries Minister Sinclair. In recent years, residents of the area have complained of inadequ- ate postiil facilities and these will be improved by the new structure. The building will be two storeys in height. fireproof. of steel and brick construction, and will house the new 1S.EllSlllgi'.Ol'l Post. Office, a detachment of the Royal Canad- ian Mounted Police, and officials of the Federal Department of Agriculture. It will be located at the south- west corner of the junction of the Summerside and Charlottetown Highways, and .will have ample parking space both for the staffs who will occupy its office suites and for visitors on official business. Early In January I Tenders will be opened and an award made within a day or two of January '1. Asked by The Gua.rdia'n if actual construction work would begin in January, Mr. Ma.cNaught said this would necessarily depend on the condition of the ground and the depth of frost at, that time. If there is only light frost it is quite possible excavation and foundation building will begin without delay. in event of heavy frost and unsuitable working con- ditions, the contractor will have ample time to assemble the neces- sary matei-lals so that. it start may be made the esrliwtrdays of spring; In the case of the present Kensington federal building and in others built in Prince since. 1945. Mr.. MacNaught has learned the all-Important factor is to choose I suitable site without delay. Once I site is agreed-on and chosen the Public Works Department is gen- orally prepared to act speedily. llery often, the Prince member said, there are different points of view in a city. town or community about the suitability of one site as opposed to an alternative. Sharp differences or a deadlock over a building site. he has found, usual- ly mean either that there will be long delays or even that no build- ing will bc erected at all. TOKYO, Dec. 4 -J-(AP)-Kyodc news agency today said Japan and Britain had agreed on it civil air pact and probably would sign it this week. Kyodo said the agree- ment set up two routes between Tokyo and London. one would go through the U. S. and Canada. The other would touch Okinawa, Hang Kong. India, Pakistan, Rome and Paris. F ARE l'liC.tifY. UNl NflLREs'i'lN(C' MO ll lint 'fXiv,,-,g ' IA HALIFAX. Dec. 4 - (CP) .. Official forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Office here and valid until mid- night. Friday. Synopsis: Skies were clear in Eastern Que.- bec and Northern New Brunswick tonight. In Southern New Bruns- Resoliiticns included: 1. No relaxation on civilian laws in connection with the sale of liquor to minors in service can- teens. 2. Commendation of the 030 for i-ejecting liquor advertising on television and I decision to explore the possibility of co-operation he- tween the Canadian and United States councils of churches on this point. 3. Compusory chemical tests for driinkennc.-is and drunk driving. 1. Appointment. of a commission in ouch province to investigate liquor problems. such as British Columbia has set up. At the closing meeting of the two-day session. W. 0. Good of Brantford, ont., was re-elected stating objectives in relatively president of the federation. wick, Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia the weather was mostly cloudy. A high pressure system over Quebec is almost stationary, and the northerly flow will continue on Friday. Not much change is in- dlcated in the weather. Regional torsouts: Prince Edward Island: Cloudv with is low iizht snowflurrlm 1-"- tle change in temperature. North- erly winds 15. Low and high Ffle day at Charlottetown 27 and 32. at 12.00 A. M. and L56 P. M. High tide on the North Share at 8.33 A. M. and 7.42 P. M. summer-side tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 1.35 A. M. and sets at 4.32 P. M. mgr, tide today at. Charlottetown I, I A