MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN ,-_-- Km" how sublime n thing u, ma, and be rimmi- It la Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew lfew save the poor, feel for the poor. MAXI MS or A MERE MAN {*7 n, Gnardhli, Three Centl. Margin‘ Daily Founded 181i]. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1949 EST [MATE MILLION DOLLAR DAMAGE IN BROCKVI Fob Development: To Give I0,000 Jobs In Labrador pa. of Mrs. Malcolm Gillis irl00lh Year Mrs. blriicolm C. Gillie, 64 Bay- gieid Smut, City, died yesterday afternoon Ill the age of 99 years. 5h; n-ouiil have reached 100 on February 3 ' Th, late Mrs. Giiiis was born in lleathordnie, P. E. 1., in 1850. She eamo to Charlottetown when quite l young woman and had the dis- tinction or bi-ing a member of Zion Presbyterian Church for 75 years. M tiia time of her marriage in m8, lhe went to live at Grand- 2W. “Th. children born to thia union follow: Angus Allan, John Isaac. Mary Junn, William Heber and Malcolm M. Mary Jane and William Hebor passed away some ycara ago, The husband of the deceased died in 1014. ln i916 she returned to the City iviiorc- she has lived with hcr aon filait-olni M. up until the time of her dc-utli. Almost to the end of her days. llrs, Giiiis enjoyed excellent health and took a keen interest in pass- lng events, When Zion Church lield its anniversary services two years aizo airs. Giilis was present. She also attended the Sacramcri held in October 1948, - lied Pattern lo Be Applied lo All Asia By James D. White Associated Press News Analyst There should no longer be much doubt. about the plans of Commun- ism for the rest of Asia after Chins. It was all neatly laid out last weak. in a speech by a Chinese Communist hunted Llu Shoo-Chi. This Moscoxv-edticated Chinese ad- dressed the opening of the wozld Federation of Trade Unions confer- aice in Potpinz. The topic of the meeting was Asia and probably not since Hitler's "Main Kampf" has there been such a frank statement of intention, with a stop-by-step ex- llllnllton of how it can be realized. Liu Shae-Chi leads the pro-Mos- tow clique in the Chinese Polibburo. Ills grcup. at the momrnt. appears to dominate Chinese Red policy. In thc broadcast text of his speech. hoard in San Francisco by the Assccialod Pre=s, Liu said the killers of Communist victory in china "can and shcud" be applied lo"otlicr- t-cl-tnini and semi-con- trolled arc-as." In tins trrritonv. noted Liu, live ' 3"e3"h““m' "more than one -hri1f of the total world pnp;i1ntioii.. .(with) rich re- sources. hard-working peoples as we}! 3a thc most long-standing cuitu s." Due icrolv tothe exploitation 0f Westriii iaipcrialism. said Liu. these turns have born impoverished. Ind nuts’ unite under a gommzm Eider-ill ll to get rid of imperialism. Imp-nu: ‘ll ma been by two ivn weakened i wars and the victcry Ill in Russia and China _7> l0ll movement." was (Continued on Paga 5 30L 1) Coming Events "Mill your Films to Clarnhum Photo Sitldlc, Charlottetown. "°°"‘° l" the resin» Dance In Mmh“ "fry Tuesday night. "Card “my TuesdlzlgyrvtygovGlalgfllmt| Road 10L. B. A M m" wlldnudov. ngitretmlgei-chhtpriiild "shill" and da libs", tumor nce after at Brad. B row (Tuesday) night. e lure and b, ma.“ on M viii iihiillf“ FAKE?!“ ‘"4 5"" m, °" ,, November ntdount l-lerber t Farm Forum at me of David Mum}, eamlhh com lra] tniz fiifljig; b! explained by vlait- uA *- Norihnlldirhtzlliogtod l" a rink for ‘it the hal] ‘"- “re asked to meet p‘ m_ Mmldfly. Nov. I at "sii ‘T s; p30??? “t CBDe Traverse tonight “"19 lmd lau h ltlt l t! your eyel Ain't! 112:3?“ and Costello in "rc Q¢IC°mS i0 the Warren G | rove °° "m" In Not-oi River mu ll hu d aoo o ‘Jaiyiitliif. m‘ Beginning at taco A. Dec. {and ‘t: It?“ qllltsow mu on implored b u‘ “WW concert Glut, s Y North Shore Glee summit}; 12mg?! Prof. W. $150,000 Fire Al Montreal MONTREAL, Nov. 2'1 - (GP) — A lbectactflar 8150.000 two-alarm fire late tonight gutted the inter- ior of a four-storey building on Notre Dame Street in downtown Montreal. No one was injured. Located at a stone's throw from Montreal City Hall, the building housed the wholesale dry goods firm of F.G. Amber and Con-p- any, Ltd, and Wilfrid Carrlero Company, toy wholesalers. Stocks of both companies were practically all destroyed. Move To Sel Up New Federal Depl. OTTAWA. Nov. 27 — (C?) — Legislation to break up two Gov- ernment departments and distri- bute their branches among three new departments was given first reading and general approval in thc Commons Saturday. The legislation eliminates rambling Mines and Resources De- partment and the Reconstruction and Supply Department. The lat- ter iras set up late in the war to plan for the country's return to a peacetime basis. In their place will be three new dcpartments—Rcsources and De- velopment; Mincs and Technical Surveys; and Citizenship and Im- migration. in addition, the Slate Secretary's Department will turn ovcr administration of nattiraiizn- lion and citizenship to the new Citizenship and Immigration Dc- parliment. Prime Minister St. Laurent, in- lroducing the bills, said it won't necessarily mean an immediate in- crease to his ill-member Cabinet. By ROBERT MARJORIBANRS r CHICAGO. Nov. 2'7 — (C?) Canadian farmers, one of them i1 56-year-old woman, won three 0f the major gram championships this week-end at the International Hay and Gram Show hero. Mrs. Amy Grace Kelsey of Erick- son, B.C.. Saturday won the tiilc cf wheat queen, premier award of the show. Today Sydney 1-1. Law- iowslri of Specldcn, Ala. xvas nam- ed rxrts king. The third Canadian award, that of rye king. was taken by Albrrt, Kessell of Rosetown, Sask. The barley king award also was decided today and the winner was L. E. Peterson of Victor, Mont. Mrs. Keiseys victory brought Canada her first major victory in tho Hay and Grain Show, held in conjunction with the Internation- al Livestock Exposition. Canada also has scattered entries in 'lie livestock classes but grain is trad- itionally her strong point. Mrs. Kelsey, who grows her wheat on an experimental plot. on her ranch in the Kootenays, is the only woman who has ever Eye-For-Eye wansaw, Nov. 2'1 — (‘Ari _. Poland rounded up a group of Frenchmen and France deported nine more Poles Saturday iri the oye-for-an-eye struggle set off by the arrest of a French consular attache in Poland the week before lash. Each country accuses citizens of the other of spying. Diplomatic circles here view the chain reaction with some aiaizn. They say the affair might easily get. out of hand and snap diplom- atic relations between Paris and Warsaw. The Polish Foreign Ministry a-n- nounced the arrest of Antoine Boltte. French vice-consul in War- saw, in reprise] for the Hench ar- reat Thursday of Joseph Ozeezer- blnaki, Polish vice-consul at Iiilie. The French Bnbalsy told of other arrests. An Embassy etc-nog- rapher. Sophie Miiczvnslta, and a consular atenographer. 31¢; pan. none-Ohelmonslta. were among those held. Both are French cit- ilem. A Polish alonographer of New Drug For Arthritis Available After Jan. 1 ,______ ‘ produced laboriously from ox bil". the i Canadian Farmers Win 3 Awards At Chicago Poles-French Continue “l NEW_ YORK, Nov. 27—(CP)\. Canadaa Health Minister announ- ced ‘i0l1lflhl that u small supply of cortisone will ho available nflur Jan. 1 to Canadian researchers. Cortisone is tho drug which prom. ises almost-miraculous relief to arthritic sufferers, Paul lilartln said in a statement that if further experience justifies wide use of the drug it l; hoped it mtly become available for gener- al distribution, He said startling result; have been already obtained from the small quantities of cortisone now available, adding however: “Those whose liopos have been raised by stories about this magic drug must remember that it is still in the experimental stage and that arthritic sufferers will probably re- quire continuous treatment. “it is possible. however, that; cortisone might be found to con- trol arthritis as effectively as in- sulin controls diabetes." Marlin said he will announce within a few days arrangements for research distribution in Canada of acth (adrenccorticotrophic hor- moncl. Acth also is employed with dramatic promisc- ln relieving pain and other symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis. (‘ortisone ls a hormone that rnmcs from the ticlri-nalin glands. i-irntcd atop i-nrli kidney, It can l-o First use 0f cortisone for treat- nicnt of arthritis was reported last April by doctors of the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn. Scientists of the United States Government now are hunting a species of rare plant in Liberia said to offcr possibilities as a rich source of cortisone. Iifartin salt] that, while in New York as n dclcurilr- to the Wilt"! Nations Assembly, ho has discuss- c-tl tho cffcctivi-ncss of thc dr‘ with its CC-lIlSt‘0\’t‘l‘t"l‘S IJr. li- vvurrl C. Kendall and Dr. Pliilil‘ Ilonch, The Canadian Minister said he had been advised by Merck and Company, Incorporated. of Canada that n small supply of the new compound will he distributed in Canada afior Jan. 1. vxou the coveted vyheat prize at the annual show in Chicago. dire also took the awards in 19443. 5m; was not present to see her extin- it take top honors. The British Columbia woman's sample of Reward hard red spring wheat, weighing 06 pounds t0 the bushel, won her a second uwvltl title within two week“ She was named world wheat champlon Nov. l5 at the Royal Winter Fair in Toronto. The reserve wheat award went. to a United States farmer, Gene V, Peterson of Corvallis, Mmt. He showed a white spring wheat of Early Bart variety. Canadians took the next seven places. Mrs. Kelsey needs to win lac crown only once more to obtain permanent possession of the Ur.- ion Stock Yard and Transit Com- pany 'f‘rcphy_ which must be won. three times to be retained by the exhibitor. Lawiowski, exhibiting a Victory variety sample weighing 48.2 pounds a bushel. gave Canada the oats grand championship for the 10th straight, inzo. United States growers have won tile pip flly eight times since i919. Tactics the French Institute, Helene Kur- czaba, also was arrested. Reports to the Embassy indicated the ar- rest of four Frenchmen in other cities. Tension between Poland and France started with the arrest of Andre Roblneau. Q Preach con- sulate attache at Swzecln (Stet- tin), rm espionage charges the week before last. (Foreign Minister Robert Schu- man of France formally charged Saturday that Poland had broken the United Nations charter in hzr treatment of arrested Frenchmen, particularly Robineau. l-le said in a. note to the Polish Ambassador that the accused Poles "Wiil b0 as- sured of all those rights guaran- teed in a democratic. country," even though such rights are not assured "French now detained in Poland.” (The French expulsion of nine Poles brings to 2d the number de- ported within a week in France's imestiaation of uhloiiafl ind sabotage.) Smallwood Says Will End Nfld. Unemployment By Rupert Jackson Canadian Press Correspondent ST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Nov. 27 — (CP) — A vast, new industrial em- pire that will probably change the face of the North American steel industry in the next decade will be opened up in the frozen wastes of Ungava and Labrador next year. Premier Smallwood of New- foundland lold a press conference Saturday development. will begin by next autumn on the huge, rich iron ore deposits in the area that will pro-bably replace Minnesota's Mesnbi Iron Range as thc biggest iron producer on the continent. Mr. Smallwood quoted corre- spondence from Canadian mining kind Jules R. Timmins, who said a group of American steel com-pan- ics has taken an option in partici- pate. with Canadian interests it! the development. Between $150,- 0000000 and $200,000,000 will be pumped into tho project in the next three years. 10 Million Tons Annually About 10,000,000 tons of iron ore will roll annually south along a new 360-mile railway from Knob Lake, near the Labrador-Quebec border. to a nazv port lo be built a‘. Seven Islands. Que. Production lalcr ivill be stopped up to around 20,000,000 tons a ycar. The Labra- dor-Quobec iron range is known to have a capacity of 500,000,000 tons but deposits are probably far greater than that. This gave rise to spoculntion that thc- American steel inrlustrv \\'('lllI"I bzvzin a t-‘ck to the Allan- tic seaboard and that Boston. or some nihor oily on the coast, might eventually’ replace Pittsburgh _as lb" sicc‘. city of the U. S. The iron clcvclopmcrit may b? licri in with a proposed water power project on the Hamilton River, 200 mils-s ivest of Goose Bay, The Grand Falls there, first discovrrcd in i090. have a ptltPn- ital of 10,000,000 horsepower. enough to supply all Canada. Grand Falls is about I00 miles cast of the. site of the iron ore development. Manv soc export of iron ore to the Unit=d States as helping to ctirc (‘Austria's rlnllnr shortage. ov- cltzcling tho original American dol- lar investment. Some 10,000 men ~- 5.000 from Quebec and 5.000 from Nev‘- fottnfilanti --_ mvill be cmplrtvd on (the initial construction lob Premier Smallivood said this would virtually eliminate un- employment in Newfoundland. Some 5,000 workers now are on reficif in the Province. Observers said creation of the new industrial empire in the heart of the wild territory that Jacques Cartier called "the land that God gave Cain" would do much more for Newfoundland than solve her unemployment situation. Aid To Fisheries Fisheries, chiefly suit cod, have been the mainstay of Newfound- land's economy for 452 years. Be- cause of lack of enough internal industries the island has always been sitbjcct to fluctuations in her economy according to ilic slate of the fishery markets. Ob- servers said tho northern Bou- zinza would undoubtedly be of enormous benefit to the Province‘: GCOIIOIYIY. V/ork winter road, wthich has been built 40 miles along the railway route. Before spring, it is expected that this will be pushed through to Seven Islands. This will enable heavy machinery to be placed at various points along the rail route andconsfruction on thc railway will start at about N different points at once. The railway itself will take about three years to build. Whilo this is being done, the other con- struction work will get under way. Move Royal Court To Windsor Castle IDNDON, Nov. 27 -—(AP) -—The King and Queen Saturday moved their royal court to stately Windsor Castle. It was the first time in 40 36ers the royal family has held court during the autumn In the llflwua old castle 21 miles up the Thames from London. RAINI-‘Alifi HEAVY NOVEMBER SAINT JOHN N15,. (OP) -— Heavy rains have filled reservoirs throughout New Brunswick and raised thc levels of rivers at power generat- ing sites. The normal November rainfall for,$aint John is 3.81 llwhfll. and the total ao far this Nov. 21-- this month ' month ia 0.00. i l ' turn‘ has already begun on a‘ ‘ Western Chiefs Meet To Map Strategy In Event Of War With Russia PARIS. NOV. 27 -—tCP) -—'I‘0p soldiers cf the Western World met-t here tomorrow to figure out how to stop Russia from trampling Europe 1n case of a third world war. Chlvfs 0f staff of the IZ-country Atlantic defence treaty face first. tho problem of integrating their separate defence systems. Vlmsn such a plan is outlined. in terms of men and anns, the United States Congress will free nearly $1,000,000.- 000 to pay for tanks. planes and ammunition. The money was voted to pay for military aid for America's European partners in the North Atlantic Treaty. Congress tied a string to it. requiring the fiotmtrics to produce an integrated defeat-e plan. subject to United States approval, before the money is available. The defence plan is the target for tomorrow when the chiefs of staff of Britain, ‘the United States and France convene at the Fremlt Naval Ministry in a preliminary session. Thcy are to moot for two days. with Gen. Omar Bradley cf the United States as chairman. Political Angle Too nirn they w.1l join Defence Min- isters of the l2 countries Thursday; for a itiecting to wrap up the deM fence plan politically as yvt-ll. Dc- fcnce Secretary Louss Johnssn of the United States, with Brad-icy, arrived in Frankfurt today, en route here. D8f€nce Minister Brooke Clzuctwn of Canada arrived in Paris today. lie was accwnpariicd by sr-ziinr offic- crs -.i the Cnnaditiu Army. Navy aurl Air Flttice. At, noon tomorrow Claxlcn iviil place ‘l ivrcstl": (JTl the tcrnth of the at the Arc do A <..,..it;h from the ilngtii- said Ciaxtcn is ercpccted lo visit the Nethorlauds Dec. 6 and 7. following the meetings in Paris. Sharla To Be Faced Politically and technically, there are snarls to be faced here. Right now the European countries joining the Atlantic Pact have only a ‘iiiiit- more than l0\‘0.0."t0 nion un- dcr arms. plus another 750,000 in natal and air force strc __th Without. Llniiui Sta C.» guns, which are condnioxia; on a plan Preswienv Truman and Congriss must approve, the armies of Europe me littlo more than wooden sold- lets The job is to figure out a way to delay any aggressor from the East until the full might of Western hemisphere force can be unleashed. On the political level. a lot dc- pcnds on whether all 12 countries can agree to a definition of the “North rulantic area." ivhich they hc-pe to be able to defend. Agricultural Scholarships OTTAWA, Nov.. 2'1 — (CP) _ The Agricultural Institute of Can- ada. will establish pennaneiit scholarships to assist unlverszty students taking post-graduate ag- ricultural courses, it was announ- ced Saturday. Plans for the pen-nunent schol- arship program were drawn up by delegates attending the annual three-day A.I.C. convention that; ended here Saturday. A report read at the convention showed that the A. I. C. had awarded 62 scholarships of $800 each during the last four years to assist stud- ents taking post-graduate agric- ultural courses. Delegates also voted to hold thc annual meeting next Junc at Charlottetown. The 195i meeting is scheduled for Winnipeg. Borrowing From Form Loon Board Increases OTTAWA, Nov. 27 — (CP) — Canadian farmers borrowed $4.- 9l9,300 from the Federal Govern- mont during ithe 1948-49 fiscal yoar and more than one-third of it wont to enlarge farms. It. was the laiggcsi volume of loans in 12 yeans for the Canadian Farm Loan Board. set up in 1929 to make ILZiQt-nqrwylgafi? loans to farmers for paying ciehts. buying livestock. land and equipment and making farm improvements. The board's annual report for the year ending March 31. 19-19. showed today thaw loans during the year were 42 per cent higher than in 1947-48. 14 PAGES l Mail Six SlorgAre Destroyed, 100 Left Homeless BRAOCKVILIE. Ont., Nov. Z1 — (CP)—Damage estimated by fire- men at more than $1,000,000 was caused early today by a. fire which destroyed six stores in this East- ern Ontario city and left 100 por- sons homeless. No one was reported injured irr the blaze. The blaze, believed caus- ed by an exiplosion in a hard-svare store. at one period threatened to destroy l0 stores and aPBIY-mems above. Stores of persons evacuated the! apartments anclmcstofthem man- aged to remove some furniture. The fire started just before mid- night saturd-ay night in Smarts Hardware store near the west end of the block and was brought under control three hours later by fire- men from six different fire depart- ments. Fire-men still WW9‘! VIM‘? on the smouldering structures this afternoon as a precautionary measure. The Brockvilie Fire Department was aided by men from the B01731 Canadian Regiment at the Brock- ville military camp, from Prescott, Eitniths Falls and Athens Fire De- pgrtmfllts, and from osdensbura. N- Y.. across the St. Lawrence River- The American company crossed 0Y1 the Brockvlllc-Morristown ferry with a, large aerial truck and pumper. stores suffering complete 1°55 were Reynolds Grocery 5W‘?- ‘he district National Employment 5"‘ vice. smarts Hardware and Sheri- dan's Furniture Store. The furnit- ure and hardware stores had stocks in the basements and on the sec- ond and third floors, and the worst of the blast was in this section of the block. Paints. oils and linoleum stocks fed the flames which shot about six gtorpys high with huge showers of sparks and burning 3581091115- A large crowd that gathered ran quickly for shelter when acraflfiflii- ion in the hardware stock Sfaftfid exploding. The shells, s-suncllnz like maChinc-gllll fire. were mixed with nuniermts explosions of paint and t,“ drumg An hour after the alarm was given the VIEWS-Ms ‘mm °r the hardware store blew out and two hours later the from wall col- lapsed in the street. Charges Plot To Give’ U. K. Super A-Bomb (By lilarvln L. Arrowsmlth) WASHINGTON, Nov. 27—(AP)— Senator Edwin C. Johnson (Dem. Colo) charged Saturday night that David E, Liiienthal is the ring- leader in a "nefarious plot" to give Great Britain the secret of an Am- erican super-atomic bomb. Johnson asserted that working with Liiienthal. retiring chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission. are "certain politicians, scientists and publications in this country." All of them, Johnson said. are “actively engaged in a conspiracy." Distrust of Germany Is Problem In France By Preston Grover PARIS, Nov. 27 ~tAPl —-I“l‘I\llC0 stiffcreci nponly today the niiseiixs of at country that cau‘t make up its mind. By a reasonably solid vote-32T to Mil-the National Asstnihiy Satur- clny omit-overt a imiiiy nirnvrl at. re- Germatly tutu the sccicty of Elllupt '1hc Assvnilmy also ap- proved agrccmctrts tentatively‘ mad-z earlier by Foreign liliiiisicr Rrliort Schumnn. such as permitting the Western Germans to kcop some of the industrial plants which made equipment that helped dtfoat France in 1940. But many of those voting for ilic program did so only after voicing reservations. France is afraid of Germany. In years past. France has always been allied with Russia against Ger- many. Now in an increasingly direct sense, she is balm: pressed by thc United Statcs to approve buildinl up Geimany as a. protection against Russia. What is France given in return? Sho is assured of support through the North Atlantic Pact. ‘Marty Frenchmen question thc deal. Thcy don't know how 1cm; Americans will remember about the old German danger. But worse still, for most of Franco's political parties, concess- ions to Got-many put thcm on tho defensive against the Communists. French Communists use the fear of Germany as a trouble issue. They charge France is being steadily led toward agreement on a. rearmccl Germany. During the all-night. debate in the National Assembly, Premier Georg.- Bidauivs Government gave repealed assurances that there had been no agreement to rearm Western Ger- many. It. was quite the contrary: Chancellor Konrad Adenuuer of the West German republic has pledged his regime against the building up of armed forces of any kind. The general strike of Friclay~ costly evcn though not fullscale— and the public reaction to it showrd how umertain the country is on another front. The Government. can't make up its mind wheather to be hard with labor or hard with big and smell business men. Few l-‘rench business men pay the amount of taxes they should under the law. Yet the cah- inet lacks the stability to get tough with them about either taxes or ex- cess profits. Nor does it dare get tough with labor because Socialists make up a part of the Government and the Socialists are trying hard to court the support of Labor from the Oom- munists. It was the Socialist-led woirkers force that inaugurated the QA-hour strike Friday. Eight Deaths In Severe Storm On Pacific Coast VICTORIA. 3.0.. Nov. 2'7 -—fCP) -~At least eight persons were killed. six or them in the capsizing of a tug Saturday, when week-end gales lashed the Pacific Coast, Floods fol- lowed torrential rains as the high winds moved inland. Slides and wasbouts out eff Van- couver from rail connection-s with tho east, isolating some rail pas- sengers in stranded trains. Six men aboard the tug George McGregor were lost when the ves- sel overturned whilc inbound to Victoria from Bamerton, BC. G. Anderson, a seaman who escaped, said others aboard were Capt. John the outside world- The Senator also linked the Washington Post to "this unwise scheme". He made his charges in a letter to the Post replying to n Post editorial critical of him, John- son made the letter public. Lilienthal could not he reached for comment. The Post article Johnson television broadcast in which he discussed super-atom bombs. The newspaper had soul Johnson was the first person offi- cially placed in the atomic energy program to say what he did. Johnson's accusation (‘time after a high government official hadi said privately that the Senatorfisi discussions of atomic weapons onl a television program were a hi: factor heliind President, Truman's crackdown on talks about dcfenrc concerned a $5.00; other Provinces & U. B. {[00 Sirbscriptlona Delivered $6.00‘ u; FIRE N. B. Youth Loses Life In Storm Mnaparir, ma, Nov. 21 - (on - Lost in woods during a, snow. stonn Saturday, Daniel E. Bren- nan, l6, vras found dead late Sat. urday night three miles from Mc- Adam. A coroner's jury decided that death resulted from exhaus- tion and expostuc. Brennan. with three other ‘teen- aged youths, loft McAdam Satur- day morning on a hunting trip. They huritcd in pairs, and Bren- nan became septaraterl from Rus- scll Blair “IIIIP following tint-r tracks. A search party was organ- ized after the. trio failed to locate the missing youth and his body was finally spotted in a clearing near a railway track. Air Cadeiatflose To Authorized Size FREDERICTON, Nov. 27—(CPl -The number of air cadets in Can- ada is close to the authorized maximum of 15.000, G. M. Ross Ottawa, general manager of the Air Cadet League of Canada, told tho league's New Brunswick coni- mittce at its annual meeting last night. Ho reported a total of 189 active squadrons, an increase of eight over last year. Special attractions such aa in- ternational visits, flying training and summer camps will be contin- ued next year, he announced. Find unexploded Shell In Amethyst PLYMOUTH. Elngland, Nov. 27 —- (Reutersl-Workmen found an un- exploded shell in the Royal Navy sloop Amethyst, a relic of her es- cape from Communist. guns along the Yangtze River in China. It was found in the radar room and may be preserved as a souvenir of tht ship's exploits. TORONTO, Nov. 7i — (UP) ._ Minlmux and maximum: VICIKJTM 5i, 554; Edmonton 37 4H; Regina 29, 57; Winnipeg 24. 34; Tier-onto 17, 2-1; Ottawa lb. 13: Montreal y, 13; Quebec 1, 13; Saint John _, 20; Halifax 24, 25; Charlottetown 2i. 26; Sydney 33. 3s; Yarmoutii 23. 29; St. John's 49, --. HALIFAX. Nov. 2'7 — (CP) _. Official inland forecasts issued to- llifllli by the Dominion Pubji; secrets. _ On the television program, wlilchi emanated from New York Nov. I. Johnson took the position that; thcrc has not boon cmouuh socrcrx-I about tho atomic program of thr- llnitod States. Durln: llio telecast‘, ho snirl tho United States: l l. Has developed an ntomic bomb‘ six limcs ninre powerful than the‘ one dropped at Nncnsalcl in 1945. , 2. llns mnrio much progress in work on n bomb 1,000 times more potent than the Nazasaki weapon. 3. Ia well on the way toward development of p device which would explodi- an enemy bomb lio- fore it reaches the target, In an editorial Nov. 2i, the Washington Post criticized Johnson for his television remarks, Johnson's blasts came on the eve of resumption of atomic r-n- ergy talks by representatives of the United Strttcs, Canada and Great Britain. Thr- second phase of the discussions is slated f0 l!" under wny hero tomorrow. Weather Office at Halifax; Synopsis. Sttnriav ivas a very wild day ovcr the Maritimes, Quebec and Ontario. High temperatures in Noia Scotia anti Princo Eduard Island ivero mostly in the mid 2t!‘ niirl in New BI".lllS\\lf‘k and East- crn Qucbec bvtivccn lo and 20. The very cold air will conthiut to covor the (listrict. Monday, bu: somcivha‘ higher temperatures will be experienced in most rooions. Pressure should remain higl over Quebec and little change is expected in the weather over most of the forecast district A disturbance south of Cam Cod is movinc: eastivard and is expected to cause snow in West- ern Nova Scotiu Monday. Regional forecasts, valid until midnight Motiday: Cloudy with snowfllurries. 00n- tinulng cold. Light winds. Low early Monday morning at. Char- lottctoivn 20. High in the after- IIOOII 30. High lids- today at 4.00 A. M. and Bf. 5,44 P. M. Sim rises this morning at 7.27 A. M. and sets at 4.35 P. M. Stimmcrside tide eighteen min- titcs later than Charlottetown. Mason, Chief Engineer A. Johann- son and crew members Loo Dofoin- son, Bill Hunter. Harvey Reader and A. Mathews, all of Victoria. The winds began to subside Sun- day after leaving a trail of de- struction from the Queen Charlotte Islands to Southern Oregon. Raging waters of the Capilano River Satur- day night tore out 40 feet of the Capllano Bridge, gateway to West Vancouver, and also washed out 100 feet of road approaching the span. An emergency ferry service r4!- rnained the only link West. Van- couver's 13.000 residents have with WOOD ISLANDS — CABIBOU DAILY FERRY Leave Wood Islands 11 A.M.. l I‘.M.. Lcavo Caribou 1t A.M., 1 PM" 8 EM I RM. 5 A.M., 8 A.M., BORDEN - TORMENTINE FERRY WEEK HAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Capo Tormentlna 0.10 ILM. 10.85 A-M. 1.00 IKM. 2.40 PM. 0.80 EM. 7.30 IEM. SUNDAYS Lv. (‘ape Tonnenttne iii. A.bl. Lv. Borden 0.10 AM. L00 PM. 0.45 EM. I v“. --.w.»»~,-"‘b' '