MAXIMS 07L MERE MAN —-—___ Strclrh drrunl fl-"d thrill! deed, Ah. that’: Three Con“. Morning Dally Founded 1881. the octave ‘twist the fllc “d; The Pee's Panama's World Food Bank Vliil Be Considered At F. A. 0. Conference Qohhbwlliclin Sells In Tavern For $10 TORUIVYO, NOV. 20 —-(CP) —- A Q0000 '.'.<>.lll was sold for $10 in a bevcynge mom Friday night, but p01,... inn] recovered it. The GllRIi2PI'.ll\ vzolin was stolen from tile limp.» vi Llrzzl de Kresz and police sazii it was pcddled around illllii the till»! sold it for $10. hbr- msn flirt“ iclcn. 30, was arrested on acl-largc of theft, IN CELL . uv, 20—(Reuters)— . .il> l. l-Zrlch Von Manstein. m, lml iwro for war crimes (hnrpcs. <l~p|u~<l in his cell Satur- d...» 3.0; lwoko ills collar bone. A British .\lnl_v spokesman said he w... PXIlW-YHI tn be fit enough to aitrml "llllli when his trial is gesunwli ncvt wcck. Corning Events "Maul your Films to Gamhum Piloio S".ltiio, Charlottetown "OOmI to the regular Dance, Bonshaw every Tuesday. "Dancc, Bclfust Hall, Tuesday, Nov. 22, Point Prim W I. "Last Dance in Long River Hall fledncsday. November 23rd. "Dance your best in masquerade dress Ill llllslivo I-lall on Tuesday, Nov, Q2, Prizes, rcfreshmenll. "Bingo, Hope River Hall. Tues- Ity, Nov. 2'3. Prizes, ducka and geese. lf not fine, Wednesday. "Don't, miss "Abbott and Cos- gllo" in "Ii Ain't Hay" at Clyde lVEf ionliilit at 5.30. "Dance in St. Peter's Legion Hull everl- Tuesday night. Cliff Peters Orcilrsil-a "Rcizuiar dance. East Royalty nk Ilall ihcntcii). Tuesday. Nov. ..\il '~ o_v Ezlstern Rhythm Boys. a leaving 1_MT_ at 9_45_ "0111 IIiSiIiOIIEII raffle, box so- ial anti lilllFf‘, Travndie Hall. tlluwrl n, November 23rd. Melody Buys flri-ill-slrn. ' "lillrlsircl Show. Crapaud Hall. l"°§“""“l l’? St. John's Church sllllfll Club. ‘flcilnesdal’. November 23rd. B30 T’. m. Sale of candy. "The poorest costume wim g, m?” ‘ll ‘he lwvtrty dance in the Wllll llinrjs Hall, North Rustico, hlonuay. November 21st, w.;‘l.l<’i|lifl in New Perth Hall. i "Ciilllv. Nov. 23rd. Webster's offllvftrll. \ ' i mum I "Wicca Women: In andiirh-hlls“ Clwfl- and Loman l“ Cmllllly Cousins Show in ll liflll. Wednesday. Novem- lrl aid of Institute. "NW" Trvon Presb v . yterian ggiilfi“, "flfl Plum . Supper and "i '1 Frwn Baptist Hull, W . . tr§;"2“;l)llfw. Nov. 23rd. Serving "Burma LIIaT-Fbwl and Chicken “fofg-‘gmfilrlola hiediays 1am 12 . rcss p dglly, “l °lll' Driccs befo akmugan, ‘an; l. I. ' ‘i . “gltrrv Plains Chicken sum;- ewanynce, Vernon River Hall, ~ ~ Novomhcr 22nd. Meals ."°‘~l 0 P. . “mew Omlliilnsag-misaion 00c—30c. , _‘._ £5501"! cgllhumf-rs-Don1 create on“ m” ‘Cm by ordering and vanceuyqopnsllly quantities in ,9 neg‘, ""9 your order for fu- g," ..‘ "ml "Kular deliveries. A émSullivnn Screened Cont". . ma, Livestock Agency. n TTW‘ yw‘ ti“) Brlnding and mixing w,“ mag Your grain to us and h m H, P "l! i-voc of feed you m “fickle stock. We have a com- g, E s" “faced on hand at all "an," Féd élggtlwcuogall. Vernon. ac m "hi? yimnnnume": W0 Iunest ties but fur ma] l“ normal qua"- n l. n" ""1 "illflcllon 1n- liforgnnhesxillvnn Screened Coal" "m: moismlsz: ‘waste; lasts "I Llvéstockllfcedmlhclaelilgkfi‘ a". "Deala". P, - 111 ' "i"! Your order: for E V“ screfilvd Coal today. For ot required lhe mines E -¢ a a. Z . Z m n Z< w‘? I m. fled A. Gillies, Live- By OVID A. MARTIN WASHINGTON, Nov 20 — (AP) — The United Nations food and agriculture organization said sat- urday that northern hemisphere harvests have turned the tide against post-war world starva- on. But food production. it said, still lags far behind world needs. The report, to be presented to the fifth session of the F.A.O. an- nual conference convening here Monday, emphasized the gap be- tween the living standards of rich countries and poor ones. "The trend over the last dec- ade." it said, "has been that the well fed of 10 years a/go are better off than before. and the poony fed. for the most part, worse off." Rebresentatives of 58 countries are gathering here to see if they can find some way 0f getting farm surpluses to the hungry to hep BOIVe the world's food problems. The meeting will be held at. a. time when some countries are turning to crop control measures to prevent; surpluses, despite the fact; that much of the world is zill- dernourished. This situation exists largely because shortage areas iaci: the money to buy surpluses of oth- er areas. Two Big F. biems The F.A.O. report said that the countries of the world face two big problems in their battle against hunger. One was. said to be the need for supplying underdeveloped areas technical aid aimed at helping them increase their own food produc- tion. The other was described as the need to clear the way for expand- ed trade in farm products. Stand.- irfg in the way of such expansion. the report. said. are currency bar- riers. Director-general NJE. Dodd of the FAO. will lay before the con- ference a plan for making sur- pluses help relieve hunger. His plan calls for creation of a world food bank or clearing house. In broad outline, the clearing house would be ilkP a public corporation, with a $5.- 000,0(YJ.000 capital contributed by participating countrlfi. It would buy and sell surplus commodities offered by producing areas. Transactions would be made either at special cut-rate prices or regular commercial prices. Count- ries ‘able to pay 1n acceptable or convertible currencies would at?’ the surpluses at the'special pricrs. Countries paying in currency uri- convcrtible at present would pay the regular price. The clearing house would hold such currenclts to the credit of producing coun- tries until increaslng world trade and restored convertibility of cur- rencies permit gradual clearinfl 0f the accounts. Jop Whaling Fleet Soils for Antarctic ‘IOKYIQ, Nov. c0 -—(Reutersi — The 10,H)6-ton Japanese whale factory ship Hashidate Maru. with a crew of 1.000 and eight catcher boats, left Yokohama today for the Antarctic whalinfl Rfflllndt- fleet will be joined later by four refrigerator ships. “(L000 FIRE SPRINGHILL. N. 8., Nov. U- (CP)-—Fire today gutted the three- storey Scott building here, causing $60,000 damage. The blaze 1| be- lieved to have started from an overheated furnace. Five persona living in upper- atorey apartments escaped in night attire. The building housed a dc- artrnent atore mail order office, arbor and miilinery shops. 16-Year-Old NAPANEE, Ont., Nov.-20-—fCP) --Aifred Chiidl, 16-year-old farm laborer. Saturday ngiht was senten- ced to be hanged Feb. 10 for the hnyfieid-slaying of Elijah McQualg. 5'7. hers Juno 29. A jury deliberated two hours be- fore finding him guilty of murder after a week-long trial. Chiidl, described by witnesses at the trial as a crack rifle shot. showed no emotion when Mr. Jus- tice John L. Wilson pronounced sentence. McQuaid died an a result of four bullet wounds when he was shot while working on the farm of a neighbor, Archibald Davis. near lslltsll\-¢|.Ag°"°¥- Wholesale m»- thla town 30 miles welt of Kin!- Read by Everybody Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1949 CANADIAN DESTROYER RESCUES 18 AIRMEN FROM OCEAN President Ousted AHergCIash With Police Ted Kennedy Involved In Fatal Accident TORONTO, Nov. 20—(CP)—Ten. your-old Robert Armstrong of su- burban Scarborough township was fllllllli’ lfliureil and his compan- lU". liarolfi Sllophnrd, 13, suffered lnbroken lcg Saturday night who“ lllt by a car driven by Captain Ted (Teeter) Kennedy of Toronto Maple Leafs. Kennedy told police he hit the two boys when he swung out. from behind a trllck. The boys Were walking along the highway at the time. Kennedy took the lads to hoa- pltni in his car but the Armstrong ll°.\' was dead on arrival. Police suid it was snowing nnli visibility was only 50 feet nt the time of ulc accident, Provincial Constable E. Hardy. who investigated. said no charges will he laid but an inquest will he hcid. Kennedy, 24-year-old centre of the National Hockey Lea- ilut lcam, was driving to Toronto from his h0me in nearby Whitby. Billh buys involved are wards of Was Zealous the Chiirirens’ Aid Society here. The late Mr. Humming Of _Britain’s (By Paul S. Underwood) LONDON, Nov. 20——(AP)— A self-made millionaire with a social conscience is the Moses of Bri- tain's reviving Conservative party. Lord Wooiton, director of a string of muiti-mililon doiihr con- cerns, was handpicked by Winston Churchill to lend the Tories out 0f the wilderness of defeat and disorganization. Suave, studious Lord Woolton. has. Dlilmtiduthe, Contervativp for a flizht-to-the-finlsil in the g neral elections which will come some- time before next summer. As chairman of the Conservative central office, the rich Baron is organization chief of the Tories, working hand - in -glovc with Churchill, the political loader. Lord Wooiton brought a gamb- ling spirit and the rough and tumble of big business into the pnrty. Already it has shown rc- suits. Last spring. in local elections throughout England, Scotland and Wall-s, Conservatives won hundreds of city and rurnl government posts from the Labor Party. One big factor in the Tnry re- surgence has been the liberaliz- niinn of tho party's thinking and po]ic_v~--m0sily due io Lord Wool- ton. Some of it has been so liber- ill as to mllke old die-hard Con- servntivoa squirm. Lord Wooiton has Consrvvntive long. In his youth he was a member of n group of socialists lcd by the ngyugllgf, H. C. \Velis. Lntcr he bo- camc a nlcnibcr of the Liberal Party. Still laicr he listed himself as nn Indcpendent. ' , A tall man of 66, with impec- cable dress and manners, the Con- gcrvativa chairman has a ready smile and a genial manner. His shnrp bluc cycs sparkle with hum- or under shaggy gray eyebrows. His greatest fame cnme during the war when he served as Min- isle-r of Food in Churchill's war- time coalition cabinet. His sucrrss nt this job of feed- ing 45,000,000 people led Churchill not been a Thc- T0 Be Hanged For Murder aton. A helper, Ronald Rosa, was to shift Lord Woolton to the post of Minlslor nf Reconstruction when the food situation became less critical. In his new job he laid the groundwork for the rebuilding of the bomb-blasted cities of England. NEW YORK, Nov. 17-—(AP)- Bernard M. Baruch plans to be- quenih hla entire estate to the promotion of physical medicine. But he's not telling how much that will be, The cider statesman and philanthropist, who is 79, mode millions years ago speculation on Wall Street and developing sui- phur oompaniu and various mines. Sentenced injured in the groin. It: and arm- Thc crown brought out evidence to ahnw that Chllds, employed on the fnrm of Ephriam Robinson at nearby Sciby, wan hiding in a barn about 170 feet away and suddenly opened fire with a .22 calbre rifle, killing McQunid and injuring Ross. Mrs. Robinson, wife of Child's gmployel‘, said that the boy spent all his spare time reading west- ern fiction. ' Chlids waa being nought at the time of the shooting in connection with robberies of his employer's home and that of another farmer. Police said he was in possession of Millionaire Is Moses Tory Party Two Ch'iown Men Injured In Crossing Accident Two Charlottetown men narrow- ly escaped sudden death or serious injury when the car in which they were driving was struck by a west-bound freight at Travellers Rest. crossing about 3:30 Saturday afternoon. Charles Beer, retired fire marshall, has a broken left wrist and a fractured right knee joint while the driver of the car. Arthur Campbell escaped with a bad shaking up. Both were rushed to the Prince County Hospital. Campbell was later discharged but Beer was ta- kcn by amblilancc to the Prince Edward Island Hospital Saturday night. This crossing has an open view but it is understood that their vision was obscured some- what by a string of freight cars on l siding, When Mr. Campbell saw the approaching train he applied his brakes and brought the vehicle to I 510D lust at the side of the track. The train struck the car on the right front fender swinging it around and throwing it on the op- Doslte shoulder of the road. Tho car was badly damage/j, At the time of the accident the men were on their way back to Charlottetown. Mr. Austin Mac- Donald of Charlottetown was the driver of the train.-—S. Strike Al General Motors Plant Ends a OSHAWA. Ont, Nov. 20 -(C~P) —-Workcrs at the General Motors plant today vote-cl to accept settle- ment tenrns for a strike started Oct. 25 after the dismissal of four union employees. $0012 5.500 members of the United Automobile Workers (C.I.O.) out secret ballots during yesterday and Willy- The majority in favor was not. announced. Where's The lobby? IDNDON, Nov. 20 — (AP) - Dawn broke Saturday on a startling sight at Westminster. the tallest spire which towers over the House of Parliament was wearing a policernanm hei- met. The top of the apire is 250 feet from the ground. The lest 1d feet are bare of foot- holda. ‘There isn't a guess on how the helmet. got up than. Some London newspapers noted that London medical students had a dance not far from west» minster last night. London mad- lcal students traditionally go in for punks. TO BUILD BEFINEIY EDMONTON, Nov. 20--(CP)-— British-American Oil Company Sat- urday announced plans to build an oil refinery at Edmonton which will have an initial capacity of 2.- 000.000 barrels a year, Imperial Oil Limited now has the only ro- fincry in Edmonton with a ca- pacity of 21,000 barrels of oil daily —largeat in Western Canada. Mo Coll Frontenac Oil Co. Ltd. ha: 10M from me Robinson home when examined in NaPflMl- announced it. will build a $10,000.- 000 refinery next spring. Promoter Of Community Progress Charlottetown lost one 0g n, moat highly esteemed citizens in the death at the Prince Edumd Island Hospital last evening of Mr._ H. K. S. Hemming, retired lm5lll955 m5". Who had been llct- lve for several years in pronmg. ing improvements in the business, industrial and community life of the Province. He was ninety years of age, and had been in frail health for some time, Mr. Hemming came to Char. lottetown from Montreal in 1932, and formed the H. K. S, Hamming Real Estate Company, which he conducted, together with his audit- ing and accounting practice, un. til his retirement two years ago. In Montreal he had boon a member of the Canadian Club, St. James Literary Society, the Safety League. Civic Improvement League, Montreal Board of Trade and Chamber of Commerce, Ha was vice president of iiif’ Montreal League for the Hard of Hearing. and devoted a great donl of time to the prevention of deafness in children. He interested public- spirited men in this cause and was instrumental in promoting early school examination of children's hearing. In Charlottetown Mr. Hamming devoted himself to the study of the needs of the Province, He dis- covered that due to lack of lu- dustries the youmz people were leaving for the larger centres. causing depopulation of farms nllrl lack of labor for the fisheries, lic gathered together a group of tho young thinking men of the Island nnd formed a Research and De- velopment Council, and some of the ideas which originated there are now coming to fruition, such as the deepening of the Charlotte- town harbour nenr tho. Railway wharf, the development of peat. hogs. potato flakes to feed hogs. Trish moss, etc. - He was a rrlemhor of the Char- lottetoyvn Board of Trade for a time, and vice presidr-nt of the Charlottetown Chess Club which provided recreation for young nir- men during the war. He was also a frequent contributor to ihr- press on matters of public interest. nl- ways having available a wealth nf information which he had gathered at first hand. Mr. Hamming was tsvire married. first in 1890 to Margaret Louisa Armed Strife Averied By Diplomatic Corps PANAMA. Nov. 20 —(AP)- Presl- dent Daniel Chants resigned today in a clash of authority with Pan- amals police chief. and Vice-Pl-csl- dent Roberto F. Chlari took the oath as president. Challis‘ ouster came on hi5 53th birthday after four months in of- fice and followed a feverish night of plans for battle. Bloodshed was stayed by the last-minute inter- vention of the diplomatic corps. The President tried to force the resignations of the three top chiefs of police. Panama's only armed force. Instead. they threw him out of office. At 4:30 A.M. Police Clliof Col. Jose Antonio Rcrnon announced that Chants had resigned uncon- ditionally. Al. 6 a.m. President Chiari was sworn in by the Supreme Court. The police force recognized the new president immediately. - The deposed President said the battle was caused over monopolies. He said the three chiefs ilEld in- tercsts in virtual monopolies in the beer-slaughtering business and commercial blls routes, and that they had refused to recognize a Supreme Court order throwing the business open to all. The crisis devc-loped without warning and terminated swiftly in a coup. The ropuiblids 700,000 people first learned oi’ it this morning-when the excitement was all over. and newspapers were allowed to resume publication. In less than 12 hours Chants changed from a firm rejection of police domnnds—“l am remaining President until I am killed"— to compromise. and finally to capitu- lation b0 an ultimatum. To Report Todd? On Noronic Fire Probe OTTAWA. Nov. 210 —(ClP) -<Mr. Justice RL. Kellock of the Sup- reme Court of Canada Monday will give his findings in open court on the probe into the burning of the steamship Noronlc in Toronto har- bor last month. The supreme Court will sit at 8 a. m. AST under tho Canada Shipping Act. It is mandatory to make the find- lngs known in open court when answering questions involving the (Continued 0n Page 5 C01. 3) ST. GEORGES. Bermuda, Nov. 20 —(CP)-— A 33-year-old veteran Canadian Navy skipper told late to day howJB exposure-ridden United States airmen were rescued frcm rising Atlantic seas 79 hours after their four-engine bomber ditched in soupy weather. Lt-Omdr. T. G. Madgwick of the destroyer Haida berihed his 1,900- ton warship at the U.S. naval op- erations base here after a (lash in from a point 330 miles northeast of the island. The 13-29 went into thr- sea. early Wednesday While en route from March Field, Calif» to Britain. Two of her crew died when the aircraft splintered into the water. The renlaining lit-weak and chilled after tossing about. the ocean in water up to their knees~are in hospital here. The Canadian warships left Hali- fax Tueaday for a ZI-day West Indies cruise. They were diverted from their first port of call, Charleston. &C.,.to aid in scorch operations. While the biggest air search armada 1n peacetime history comb- ed the ocean, the vessels took up the hunt. Lh-Cmdr. Madgwick told Nport- err: "We were steaming fast but searched all day Friday without any luck. Magnificent and Swansea were with us. "Early Saturday. the Maggie's planes wept patrolling, taking off and landing in relays. The whole 18 saw service before it ended, Satur- day morning. the seas were plenty high and heavy gales lifted the carrier's bow 30 to 40 feet in the air. While she rose and fell. buck- ing waves which crashed continu- oualy over the flight dedr. her air- craft kept flying." "Except in unusual circumstances tho carrier's planes would not bc launched in such conditions." "About 1:5 p.m. (AST) Satur- day, all the planes but one were but on the carrier when the signal petty officer of the watch on the Haida sighted a 13-17 of the Yank Air 1001-00. "shortly afterward it was seen circling. It was spotted dropping a parachute-equipped canvas boat and we increased to full speed. "Then we sighted t/wo small yel- low life-rafts. One of the llnidirs men managed to get into the can- shlpfls officers. Canadian Skipper Tells But bear todly wlutder To-dny may bring; ‘Tia the one way to mnlne ‘lb-moq-ow ling. MAXI MS OIL MERE MAN Mail 12 PAGES Survivors of HAMILTON, Bermuda, Nov. ZOl (APT - Eighteen survivors of, a B-29 crash arrived here todav. rescued from the sea by the Call- adian destroyer Haida. Fourteen of the survivors tvalk- crl off tile boat, Four were carrirdr tn the hospital at the Uniical States All‘ Force base at Kindiey Field. Given Ovntinn Hundreds of spectators appear- ed as the Haida entered the ha."- bor and cheers rose into a grcat nvatlnn both for the survivors and tlic rrcv.‘ of the ship. Survivors were transferred from the destroyer to the crash boat which was used as a photograph- ers’ boat First man off the Haida was Capt. Joseph A. Petrosino, the navigator nf the ditched 13-29, H». W115 brought off on a stretcher. Three other stretcher oases follow- ed him. They were: Staff Sgt. William H. Pratt, Cpl. Bryce W. Neal and Sgt. Roy H. Coulter in that order. The other men followed on foot. and as each man was transferred the sm-all flotilla of pleufiure bOBlS cheered each one individually. The survivors then were taken to Klndley Field. waving their last farewell to their rescuers. The condition of the men was considered quite good. There were some who suffered sprains and some salt water sores. but the majority seemed fairly fit. Only one survivor. Petrosino, ap- peared in an extremely weakened condition. The survivors were moved t0 the Kindley Field hospital by am- bulance. Two of the 20 men aboard the crashed 13-29 died at sea. End of Search The survivors were taken from the chill waters of the Atlantic latr- Saturday by the Haida, not. l0 miles from the spot, where the search co-ordlrl-ator said they would be. It was the culmination of one of the biggest air-sea res‘- cuc hunts in history. The pilot of the B-2'7 search bomber which first spotted the men on their two rubber life rafts said some were so weak it took them 45 mlllufles to transfer inm a. lifeboat dropped by parachute- He added that his own plane must have passed over the rafts at least. 15 times on Thursday without see- ing them. It had been intended to trans- fer the men to the Canadian alr- craft carrier Magnificent for bi".- ter medical care, but later mes- a-lges said they were too weak even to talk about their experience and they remained aboard the destroy- Of Picking Up Airmen Plane Wiih 30 Children Missing OSLO, Nov. Zb-(lvfnndayb-(AP) -—-Aero Holland announced toduv they consider their chartered plane carrying about 3O Jewish refugee children nnrl n crew of four lost. and that relatives of iile Dutcll crow would be so informed. The plane was reported missing last night nn the lust lap of n flight from North Africa to Oslo. N. S. DENTIST DIES SYDNEY. N.S.. Nov. 20 --(CP.l— Dr. Ralph Dalglcish. one of Nova Scotlais best-known dentists. died Saturday. l-le was 51. A llfllivn of Bridgewater. N.S.. ‘he is a former president of the Nova Scotla» As- sociation: ST. I-IYACINTGE, Que, Nov. 20 —(CP)—Aiertness of a 48-year-old splnslcr bank employee resulted Saturday in a swift conviction and sentencing of a. Montreal policeman and two accomplices for m $8,600 armed holdup. Less than 18 hours after Miss Corinne Vlgneault was thrust with her 77-year-old mother into a closet of the bank in the little vil- lage of St. Hugues. the three men were arrested. arraigned and sentenced to penitentiary terms on pleas of guilty. Real Vlnceieite, 38-year-old Mont- rcnl policeman who has been on llick- leave. was given a five-year term. (krard Labrie, 28. of Mont- real received the same sentence and Armand Lapiorre. 26, also of Montreal, was given a four-year sentence. Vinrelettc. with nine years service as a constable on tllc Montreal force and fathcr of threc clliltlrcll. has been on sick leave for several months because of a back ln-jtlry». About 7 pm. Friday three men walked into the branch of La Banque Canadicnne Nationals at (Continued on Page a_CoL d) Montreal Policeman One Of Trio of Bank Robbers 61‘. Crowded Into Rafts The rescue craft. pilot, Lieut- Edward Lynch of New Haven. C0hn., said the l8 gmen Wflv crowded into rafts intended to] carry only seven men Bflllh- Al- March Air Base, Calif. the W0 dead fliers \\‘Pl'E identified as: Cpl. Raymond Breit. 32. Arling- ton Calif. Pfc. Robert n. Dobson. 19- Der at-ur. Ill. Sgt. Ralph E. I-Iawes. spotter on thc rescue plane. was credited \\'l'.l\ sighting tho survivors of the 8-29. which ditched Wednesday molninZ after running nut of fuel and sui- navigation nlcll in the rafts." Aftrr dropping the lifeboat and watching the survivors board it. ihc 13-17 (‘IPW made contact vvitn east of Montreal. \ Miss Vigneauii was in charge as manager because ‘her aged mother Mrs. Jean Baptiste vignf-ault. was ill. Two other daughters, Miss Marie and Miss Gracia Vigneault. were also in the bank. All were ordered into the closet, tied up and told to “keep quiet." The armed trio then ransacked the bank and fled in n car, subsequent- ly discovered to have been rented in Montreal. Miss Corinne Vigneault managed to free herself and the others and immediately notified Prqrlnciai Police, who broadcast an alarm. Three hours liitcr Vinceiette. alone 1n the car. drove up to the toll gate at the southern end of the Jacques Cartier Bridge spanning the Si. Lawrence River at Montreal. lie showed his police badge as a pass without, toll payment. But Provin- cial Police al the bridge recognized thr- rar from n broadcast descript- ion, found the motley and iwo re- volvers in tho glove compartment abri arrested Vincelctte. Labrie and Lapicrre were arrested later when they showed up a! Vincelcltcl: home whore. police said. 5t. Hugues. about 40 miles north- tbo moncy was to be shared. $5.00; other Provinces d: U. B. Iii Subscriptions Delivered $6.00 B-29 Picked Up By Haida the Haida. and aent her to thf scene. Lynch Fold the Haida pick- ed up the 13-29 survivors an hour anrl l5 minutes after the lifeboat was dropped, The 13-29, commanded by Lt.- Col John Grable, 31. was one of b. group of 13-29:: being sent Britain unrltzr a rotational training system. Th» search for the plane cost lllr: lives nf five other 13-29 crew mrmbers. Their ship, taking off Friday from MarDill Held, Flor- ida. for a search sweep crashed at the edge of Tampa Bay. Four men survived. That crash, and a series elf oth-l crs to B-29s recently _ six crash- ed in two weeks _ resulted in an. order Friday grounding those B-Es not engaged in the search. for inspection and modernization work, A 8-29 costs about $1,000,- C00 The Haida, the Nlacnifirent and the Canadian frigate Swansea we~r~ hearted south from Halifax for ex- ercises 1n the Caribbean area. with Royal Navy warships when they were diverted to join in the search for tho (Titrhed plane. TTIB Haida. n Tribal C1355 dp. stroycr of 1,927 tons, was commis- sioned in 1943. Tells of Search Lynch told this story of the trip which rosulted in the rescue of the 3-29 survivors: "We left about 8:30 AM. EST. assigned to an area 380 miles northeast of Bermuda. We anivez‘. at. the area at; 11:09 and at 12 noon had sighted the aircraft carrier HMYCS. Magnificent. The sea. was of fairly good size and there were swells and a, spray. “There was good weather gener- ally in the search area. You could see a ship probably 10 miles av.'a.g,-, but. a. life raft not; more than five miles off. “At 1:30 PM. the left acannl-r (Hnwes) called that two life rafts were spotted about a half mile off. (Continued on Pa-gerlrfiol. 6) it"s (‘ill-men (o Have Lovao AND‘ _. Lost’ 111ml END UR, 1N ‘fut Dlvoncla COURT ! , TORONTO, Nov. 20——(CP)—Mini- mum and maximum temperatures: Victoria 18, 40; Regina 20, 24; Win- nlpeg 22, 24; Toronto 36, 40; Oltrlwa 32, 34; Montreal 34, 37; Quebec 28, 33; Mcncton 26, 37; Saint John 25, 35; Halifax 35, 49; Cilflrifiilflifiwn 29, 43; Sydney 2'7, -l‘ Yilrnlnutil 3S, 50; St. John's HALIFAX, Nov. 20—(CP)—Offi- rial inland forecasts issued tonight fcrlutr a ftlllll" °l by u..- Ilnnlininn Public Weather equipment. _ , Offici- n1. Halifax, "Certainly I was Pxrllttl- ‘ii/l gynqpsig; H-‘HYPF. "wileillllly when I "MW Slliililiy vvonlng thr-ru was Ill- tcrmillolll ruin over illr southern prlrt of iilf,‘ hlrlriiimcs nnrl temper- rliurr-s were nrulr 5O rlcproos, In tilc northern part of tile district it was snowing and temperature!- wrrr ln the 20s. A disturbance centred nonr Prince Edlvnrd Island is exported tn move: eastward and cause n northerly current of cold nir ovcr the entire district. This will give cloudy weather with snmvfiurrirs on. Itionday’. Rogionni fort-casts valid until midnight Monday: Prinro Iirllvnrrl Island: Cloudy and colrlcr lVinnduy with scattered snolvflurries, clearing in the eve- ninrt. Winds north 20 gusty. Early morning and midnftcrnnon tem- peratures nt Charlottetown 40 and 35. High tide today at 11.44 A. M. and at i101 P. M. Sun rism this morning at 1.18 A. M. and sets at 4.39 P. M. Summcrside tide eighteen min- utes iater than Charlrittetoxvn. WOOD ISLANDS - CARIBOU DAILY FERRY Leavn Wood Islands fl A.M., ll A.M.. I l‘.liI., 8 EM. Lvavr Caribou 8 A.M., ll A..\I,, 1 I’.l\I., 8 BM. nonnnlv - TORNTIETNTINE nmnr warn nnvs Lv. Bordon I.v. Capo lormentino 9.10 A.M 10.55 A.M. - 1.00 IKM. 2.40 RM. 4.80 IKM. 1.30 PM. SUNDAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Capo Tonnentino 0.10 A.M. 10.35 . 0.45 PM. 8.00 ARM 4 i’ fl ' -. i i .1 k r,‘ Z7. » i i I ., \ i l, i l‘ l} i i ,, Q. , i. '- , f . 'l, I i ; l. ! pgJJJ-i o U Ltzzk -.. ‘v42: . -. I~ _E?€""‘