Kiaxims of a Mere Man II! It Chance is a nickna for Providence. 16 PAGES III all me Premier Iiiacdonaiti Of N. S. Dies Suddenly Of Heart Attack The late Angus 1. Playpen Smashed. Bur Baby Escapes TORONTO, (GP) — A runaway truck smashed the playpen of 15- montii-old Stuart Mackenzie to splinters ‘Tuesday but the tot ea- caped with a few bruises. The truck ran away when its, brakes slipped. It. rolled down an‘ incline. crossed astrect. mount.-I -d the curb and ploughed into the baby's playpen on a lawn in front.I of his suburban Mimico home. I Police said the wheels came[ within inches of the baby. I ,r,. I Thi- HALIFAX. (CP)— Premier An- us 1.. Mecdonald. the almost leg- endary Scot who led Nova Scotia‘s government for 21 years and served as a wartime minister, died Tuesday of a heart attack at the age of 64. Hon. Harold Connolly. a former newspaper man, was sworn in as premier Tuesday night. Mr. Con- nolly holds the health minister pcrtfolio and was acting premier since Mr. Macdonald went to hoa- pltal for a rest and check-up Sun- day. The Legislature. which planned to clean up all business Tuesday night so it could prorogua Wed. nesday, paid tribute to Mr. Mac- donald Tuesday afternoon. Died As He Lived Mr. Connolly made the official announcement of the Premier’: death to the House and said Mr. Macdonaid "died as he lived, quietly and without ostentatlon." "I don't. think in the history of the province there has been any whose death has been so widely felt. For Nova Scotians In iliustrious son has died."- Robcrt Stanfield, Progressive Conservative leader. and C C F leader Michael McDonald, also paid tribute. A minute's silence was observed by the members of the House and the crowded gal- pi'emicr's chair and desk izad been moved out slightly from the government seats and the tartan of the clan Ronald in the form of a 100-year-old shawl cov- (Continued on page 5 Col 3)’ ion CARLOADS or DURING FIRST TEN DAYS OF APRIL Potato movcmcnt. iii iii» Province has been very good during the put six weeks, according to in- formation supplied by Mr. Donald MacDonald, chairman of the Po- tato Marketing Board. For the first ten days of April, 400 carloada have been moved-— sbout. 76 cars more than for the same period last year. The move- ment for March was also heavier. it is estimated that approximately 9,200 cars hove already been ship- ped during the present season and it should not be too difficult to Coming Events “Dance Belle River, April 15th. Thursday, "Wellington Dramatic Club pra- aant. their three act comedy in Thanksgiving Hall, Tuesday, April 20th., 8:30. Good specialties. "At Kensington, Easter Monday, aouris Players present "A Quiet Honeymoon“. Curtain 8.15. "Our stores will be closed Good Friday, April 18: Clayton Morri- son and O. R. Dunsford, Hump-‘ ton. "Our placcs of business will be: closed all day Good Friday. sign- ed: Crapsud Creamery; waddeli Bros: Parker Canfleld. “Will be doing custom grinding and mixing Thursday. April 15th. Cloned P‘rida,\‘, April 16th. P. 1.. Morris Feed Service, Kinkorra. "Dance, Easter Monday night, Morell Hail. Modern, old-time. Burns‘ orchestra. sponsors. Mor- ell C. Y. 0. dance Bcavac Hall, Monmguu. mesday. April 20. Don Menorah Orchestra. Admission so cents. Regular dance Saturday, April 24. "South Shore I-'rot.i\-al meeting, Tryon Consolidated School, to- nidht. at 8:30. Institutes please send rep:-uentativcs. “Come to summerficld Wednuday, April 14. See Ken- sington Y. P. U. play "Cranberry. Corners" sponsored by W. I. I “Ohoicn Easter Beef at your‘. Oo-op store supplied by 0111' W51‘ butcher, Wilfred Prnught, and fed. by Ivan Dochcrty. Cherry Vailny.i Cherry Valley Co—op Assoctationi Ltd. ', "Farmers; Requiring financial help to raise Hogs, Chickens, Tur- keys. do it the shur-Gain way. Contact our dealers or P. L. Mor- ris shur-(‘lain Feed Mills. Kinkora, Summerside, Charlottetown. "It's the talk of the country. What is? 18% shur-Gain Pig Booster. My sales have increased 100% in two months. Got. some for your pigs today. Chcap at double the price. E. J. MacDou¢- all. Vernon. "We have told you that there is none better at any price. Every bag is the same. That is Shur- (‘min 20% Chick Stu-i.cr. Convince yourself by tryiilfl it. for chicks this year. E. J. M:tcDouiiHII. V"- iion. _ "Buying pigs Tittii-\da.\‘ HI Fredericton. Paying S03 Di”. PINS 33 extra for delivery on that day only, for good pigs over 35 il°\ll|dl each. Will also bu)’ Will‘ in nncs. Also rtumhcr nf cows Md hulls for slaughtering wanted. Knud Jorgeneen. hall i W POTATOES MOVED move the balance of t.h:~ supplies in the next. two months. Mr. MacDonald notes that since the selling agency took over. the marketing of domestic seed and table-stock Island potatoes have been commanding a premium of from 10 to 15 cents a bushel on the Quebec and Ontario markets and this fact would indicate that such a premium should continue to be the general rule rather than the exceptiomas has been the case some times in the past. Producers are now and have been receiving 55 cents a . bushel since the first of April and there is still considerable pressure to move supplies as soon as possible, Mr. MacDonald states. However the Province must hold back a portion of its crop to supply mark- eting requirements for May and June. This year will be no excep- tion. In an endeavour to allocate carly shipments among all produc- era, the Board ordered several weeks ago that individual car shipments should be loaded by at least three different producers. This action. Mr. MacDonald says, should have some effect. in enab- ling all producers to make ship- ments in the regular manner and avoid having some farmers sprout all their remaining supplies while others would not. have to do so. The Potato Board also desires that all producers in the Province should plant only cereincd or foundation st-ed. supplies of good seed are available to all and the market return whether for seed or for tableetock is the same. For this season, tabiestock producers are advised to market whatever potato:-s they have and obtain a new supply of good seed for PIE!“- ing purposes. Such action will be good insurance against any dan- ger of disease. In March all Island dealers were advised that until further noti- fied, no export sales of seed pota- toes from this year‘: crop will br- sanctioned unless the price offered shall first be approved by the P0- tato Board. An.V GMICT WU“ 09”‘ tatoea for delivery from the (Continued on page 5. C01 2) s. cffiiiy to} Nfld. Rumored ST. JOHNS. Nfid.. iCPl ——- Thc I-‘voninl Telegram says today that Solon Low, national leader of the Social Credit party. will visit New- foundland this year to organize a party branch. » The ncwspnpcr says the informa- tion was received from local Soc- ial Credit adherents. Thcre is no Social Credit party in this Province, but the news- papcr says all potential Snciai Creditors here ''all seem to be ex- Libcrnls, discontcnted with the way things are going under the present administration." it also says at least one member-‘of the local House of assembly I5 11‘ ported to be interested in forming a Social Credit party branch here. h.§p'i?+E'ic~onan -3-umiN1'n_ r(‘P\ (‘nnariian Na- limial Exhibition niflclals have in- Iurm-ggd producer Jack Arthur to prncced with plans for ll stand- stand show built around the R0‘! Rogers troupe despite I diapu _ between the Toronto Musicians Association and the American Guild of Variciy Artists thoth Ari,» \\‘hif‘T’i ihrrnirns to keep most performers of! the stage. Read by Everybody i Founded 1872 CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14. 1954 Russian Spy Case Breaks on Canadian air defence Canadian Orenda jet engine RAAF Sydney, C..N.R. To Lay Off Up To 800 in Shops STRATFORD. 0nt.. iCP)——Fifty- six men will be laid of! April 2] from the Canadian National Rail- ways motive power shops here in what. is expected to be general staff reduction of between 700 and 800 workers in motive power and car shops across the system, CNR officials said Tuesday. The layoff hero represents a staff reduction of eight per cent-- to 90! workers in shops here. Expect RecordTAir Traffic Ai Easier MONTREAL. (CP) -— Trans-Can- adc Air Lines expect to carry a record 19,500 passengers to and. from all parts of Canada during} Easter week-end. a spokesmani said Tuesday. ‘ The giant siriiftr—an increase of 16 per cent. over last year's figure—wiil bring 90 extra flights into operation. The spokesman said heaviest booking has been received on the Montreal to New York. and To- ronto to New York routes. Extra heavy air loads are also expected on tha Toronto-Windsor, Toronto- Cleveland and Vancouver-Victoria runs. A sppocial flight of four Dakotas will fly an “Easter blossom air-: lift" from Vancouver to Toronto a n :1 Montreal f o r distribution throughout Eastern Canada. DIES IN PRISON BOISE. Idaho. (AP) --- Harry Orchard. 88, a Canadian who in 1905 murdered a former governor of Idaho, died Tuesday in the ldaho state penitentiary. Born Al- bert E. Horsiey on a farm in Northumberland County, Ontario. he confessed he planted a bomb which killed formcr governor Frank Steunenberg during a per- iod of labor violence. His death Jet Aircraft Attracts sentence was commuted to life im- prisonment. while are (left. to right) French Parachute Ammunition Ai Dien Bien Phu By Lanry Allen HANOI, lnclo—China, (AP) I-‘rench air force planes parachuied tons of ammunition to Dien Bien Phil's dcfenders Tuesday and plastered rebel bcsiegers on the rim with high explosive and flam- ing gasoline bombs. French patrols sailicd out to knock out new rebéi trench positions. Warpianes hit heavily at the eastern fringcs around the fort where the Qommunlst-led Viet- mlnh launched six counter-attacks in the last three days seeking to Lake back it dominating hill which the French captured last Saturday The rebels need the hill as a take-off base for a direct. stab into the heart of the fortress and to link tip with troops which might be able to brcak through from the northwest. corncr in the next gen- eral assault. Hnnnl Key Area A French aimy iicadqiiartcrs spokesman said a new massive gen- crni attack could come at any moment. If It falls. the French foresee the attack possibly shifting to the Red River delta around lianoi. That area is still the key to an over-nil victory in the war. N0 HANDICAP WELLINGTON, N 7,, tCPt_ Matthew Penman. 60, lost both hands in is mining accident some .\‘cars 380, Now he‘s president. of the Huntiv Bowling Club and one of its best. players. He has twice won the club cliampiorishlp, play- ing with artincial arms. Attention Canada's all-weather fighter, the CF-100 attracted the attention of airmen of three na- tions yesterday as members of the R.A.F. specialist navigation course received lectures visiting’ RCAF Station Summerside. Inspecting thci Squadron Australia, S/L R. H. Fry, RAF, Major Floyd Ethridge, USAF, of Ran-' foul, Illinois and S/L Alex Wilson, RAF of Reading, England. U. S.. BRITAIN TO SEEK NATO-TYPE PACT OF 10 POWERS FOR SOUTHEAST ASIA Leader Jack Finlay. I I . LONDON, (AP) -—- The United‘ States and Britain agreed Tuesday to seek a NATO-type military ai- llmce of 10 powers, pivoted on Southeast Asia, in an effort to safeguard peace from Indo-China to New zealand. They declared Communist ag- gression. looen in lndo-China. threatens to spread over all that rich lands extending t.o Australis,I the Philippines and Thailand. The decision to press for the ikirmation of a new Southeast Asia defcnce system was announced in a joint. British-.t\merican commun-I, tone after a t.wo-day coitfercncc, between U. S. secretary of Slate, Dulles and Foreign Secretary Edciii and other British leaders on a "united action" program. I A top-ranking American official said Dulles was "vciy satiJiied"i with the meeting and felt the talks "went. far towards establish-I lng the unity of purpose which he sought. on Southeast Asia defcnce."i Dulles was leaving by plane icrflximwn at Conlcdcration in ism s..‘ Paris to line up France in what the official said might become a “Southeast Asia Nato." Dulles iolri airport newsman: "I have had the best. series of talks in 48 hours that I have ever. had." . A split. in Labor ranks opcncd wide Tuesday night when party leaders assailed Aiicuiin Bcvaii, leader of the left.-wing faction, forl his bitter attack on 'l'iicsday’a joint Anglo-American declaration on Southeast Asian defence. I it was reported that some Labor. lenders are so bitter about the mat-‘ tar that they propcw-d IIIP parijxi should issue a public slatcmcnt ciisowning the remarks of the fiery Welshman. HUGE TANK!!! GOTHENBURG, Swcclcn ICPDI —-A super-tanker of 32,000 tons. largest ever built. for a Norucgiani ship owner. the Barrie Ross was launched at a shipyarci here. I cl I In Australia; Rocks Russian Official Granted Asylum; Wife Goes Back (B_v Stan Hutchinson) CANBERRA, (AP) ~- Prime Minister Robert G. Menzies announced Tuesday an official in the Soviet cm- bassy here has asked for asylum and i)l‘0Ll£{IiI with him documents and oral statements of Vladimir Pct- rov, third sccretary of thc Soviet cnibassy, who rcnoun- ced Communism and ficcl from his embassy post sev- eral days ago. The case appeared to be a strik-I ing parallel to that of Igor Gonz- enlm, who quit his post as com clerk in the Soviet embassy in Ot- tnwa in 1945 and barcrl cx:s'ciicc of n Sovict. wartimc atomic spv ring in Canada and the l'nit-(l States. Stunning Impact Menzies‘ s atnmcnt in the lions» of Rcprescniatives had A stunning impact on Australia. \\‘l\Fi‘f' BI‘!i- aln has conducted her sccret atomic ‘.lIiil‘Il hrovn hm-n /1li’t"(I hpfnra. nndi ;n 3 spnech April 21 at San Jae- '(‘nyitiiiiicd on page 5, Col 2) I OTTAWA. (CPJ ~ f)ppnsition-— iliitéiiecvtiinisier Stresses Need For City Loader Drew urged the govern- ment Tuesday to summon a leci- N‘3I'D1‘ovincial conference on tax- aiinn and conslittttional issiics which he said are weakening Cana- lan unity. Mr. Drew, entering the Com- mons budget debate. said that bitter things have been said in various parts of Canada since Fi- nance Minister Abbott‘: budgct last. week rejected Quebec's rc- quest for full federal deduction of its new I5-per-ccnt income tax. He did not argue the govern-‘ ment.'s decision, but said he re- grets thai. Mr. Abbott uscci an un necessarily provocative manncr in presenting the government's deci- sion. Mr. Draw said Prime iiiinistei Si. Laurcni. should say before the Commons adjourns today for “T0 Eaflr recess that he will lnvig, provincial premiers before the end of May to a federal - provincial conference. Mr. St. Laurent was in the Com- mons but did not. makc any im- nicdintc i-cply. it was time for the govcrnmcnt to show the some kind of states- manship, vision and goodwill that "we may seek to rcbuild thai fcrlcrril striictiire. of which we are all so proud." The prime miiiisicr‘s rocr*nt four had strc.<.v~rt the impnriancc of goodwill beiwccn (‘anaria and other colintrics. But goodwill ho- tivccn tho fcricral and provincial guvcinniciiis was infiiiiicly f‘llLll‘C impurtniit. No Discrimination It did tint hclp national unity to make the prnbicm room an isol- ated one bctivecn nne province and the if‘(iFI'liI govcrnnicnt Last year's htidgct, Mr ilrcw said, giinpni'ir-ti the princiiiie that no federal legislation should dis- Crlminntc against I |lf‘f‘i\'lilr‘9 \l'I‘il(‘I1 did not l'IiI(‘I‘ A tax agiccrncni. with the fr-dcral fl0\'f‘i‘l‘il'YiI‘hT. Qiiclwc is ihc only prrwlncc which has nni sign:-d a federal- provincial lax agi-m-mcnt "This year the mcrc failure to accr-pt such an agrccmcnt." he (Coniiniicrl on page 5, (‘oi SI OTTAWA. (CPl—Ig0r Gouzenko says Russia had at least. nine apy rings operating in Canada during the war. He says. too, he can believe re- ports there were around 26 oper- ating in the United Gt-atass and he ‘knows a “t.remendoue" volume of information went from the Us. to Ruaaia. However, the man who uncover- ed the Canadian spy network in 1945 has told a group of United states anti-utpionage investigators that he has no up-to-date infor- mation on the work of Red agents in the U. B. The Commons: Tuesday l'N'.t‘I\'MI I-with a few deiet.ion.s—t.he 40,000- word transcript of evidence which the former Russian embassy code clerk hen gave Jan. 4 before the Jenner internal security sub—com- mittee of the U. G. Benate. The questioning. subject of an international flurry while it was being arrsoged lata iut year, pro- vided little information not pre. viously made public in one form or another here or in the United States. Tables Transcript Justice Minister Carson. in tabl- ing the transcript minus 32 words, said it contained no security in- formation not previously known to Canadian and us. security auth- oritiea—the RCMP and the F31. The examination of Gouzenko, at a rendezvous in the Laurent- lane, came about at the request of the senate sub-committee under William Jcnncr, a requcet that was first ttirnad down by the Ca- nadian government on the ground G0'JZ£llkn'A useful information hed been txhausted in questioning by the RCMP. A second request eventually was granted. on condition Canadian officials approve any publication of ti-atimon_v. The U S. eventually agreed to make public the trans- cript In its edited form. The former Russian clerk, now living in seclusion under RCMP‘ protection, was questioned in thei presence of Canadian officials. Hon. Douglas Stuart, us, ambas- sador tn Ottawa. and committee members. Chairman at the one- day hearing was Chief Justice J. C. MoRuer of the Ontario Supreme Court. Much of Gouz.enko‘a statement was devoted to urging that gov- ernment; such as Canada and the us. hold out inducements to Sov- iet agent.» both Russian and do- mestic cltizcnskto quit their spy‘: activities and walk out with docu- mentary iniormatton such as he did in 1945. Gouunko aiipped out of the Russian embassy here that year with his clothing atufled with doc- uments implicating Canadians and I others. The Canadian government gave him citiaenahip and a police guard for his family. IGouzenko Meeting Report Releasedi some of the points: 1. while he was with Riissiav. intelligence in Moscow in 1942-43. a trenuendous amount of undcr cover information flowed in from U. 8. agents. 2. During this time. a ['8 ma- chine-gun was shipped to Moscow by diplomatic pouch. 3. He had been told that I. “scr- retary" in an Allied embassy iti China--~pei-liaps the U.S. onibassy —-was looted by a "secretary" rc- cruited by a Russian official in 1948 He was uncertain about whether it was a diplomatic sorro- tarv or a secrctai-mi marker. 4. woman who was a Russian agent He did not know her idontity,drs- cribing her as mung, bionde and attractive. 5. He cannot say if the Commu- nist party in the us is Sil’l]fl'1t‘l' now than when hr descrtnd (Continued on page 5, Col it ‘pimtiiiig and fuiance. Does Not Reply I ;trca.surt‘r. sat ‘find cxpnnuinn, which smaller cit.- At Moscow into-liigoncr hcnd-, qtiarirra, he had met an Amrriran‘ IPHnce Like The Dow Covers’ Edward Island PRICE Sc 4. J4 . ‘Atomic Scieniisi 0 Charges He's Doubifui Security) By Ell (‘rough I \\'ASlil.'\'i"iTVi.‘»'. ‘AP! A sen-I ,'1"onal <"i‘ili‘I'_'.‘ Faro brnkc Tues-I ‘iI.'i) iiimiiiri I‘ Icrin, nr-i\'rHi= ft:-I of llr. .7. Roticrt Oppcnlicims-r.l man who directed the huilt‘I- Ililn ‘mi: of the first A-homo and one of Iiilh first to rnn"“l\-A the hydrogen‘ httnliv. i n;.- iirifinimi miiar n( ]‘yr~<ir1r~ni i".:~cuiim\r~r, (lppciihcimcr has I’1rH'I\‘ l'r‘iil”i"fi ir'm1 nil a"‘r‘r-tr to sari».-ti ,:!nt2~ .-tnri .<-:=prnvlcri as one of the, Il’r.iieri Stairs ;;o\~criinicnt's fore-f mrci £‘iIDi’ilii' rlcfcnce advisers -‘, ;l"liI‘IllI: i'Ilf‘i'i( of 16 FBI-zalh-I ll"‘II i"i r-: again-‘i Ililll ri‘..iii‘ir ('Iifli’:7" lhrit hv iiiifi ricln_ir~rI, ticynlopmrnt‘ of tho ii-bomti, Dthcr allegations, .I‘i't\r‘fi tho ‘i‘i"Y\ii\I uiiii i<n')\\‘.1l '(,'i.'Vl.'ililiiiK'< and (‘ommiinirt ac- i.\'it~.r~< mcn :i.’icr Iii‘ look ilmrzc, in IN‘) of tin» .\-Ivmrh (i|“\I'Inp» i-..»-nt prngzrtlni Ln‘: Aianios, N. a flit!- ITOIILVITI, HI Atomic Iiu/'r;_v f'.nn1misslo1I tli.-it a spcciifl thrrnc-I ‘irnn poncl licarlori by Gorrion‘ :<ii.ij. iircsitir-nt of the l'nivcr.<ii_\", of .\'i'ii‘lIi i‘;iroiiii:i and inrmcr scr- l'(‘I..’tl’}' of tho ai'ir.\'.l1n.= hccn named ilfl which iiib chrirzz-5 -most of .\‘I This I n'1il«'>iIl’1r‘rH’i I r‘cr-id" ivhathar Opp:-nh»imei"s han- Urges dttawa Conference i ifill‘i‘l"l' pill!‘ ppenheimer ishment should be perasa§ieat..*" Never A ('0 _ ‘IV Oppenheimer. 49, Ofoflfflla institute for Advaflfl It Princeton. N. J.. red ldmowi- criged working 102' ‘ Cflmmuflili causes in the pllfidtl‘ laid he's .i7l cv-f‘nmmunls$—InB [find that in l.'i4D-50 he 0 I ITIZ Ml p§:’¢dl|,Tl‘ H-bomb. page reply "that (it he ‘ munist and sympathy 'f2t Once .,.1‘ruman ordered "toned. he drop- -'and helped de- to ncvnr has IMTIK has with the ‘.ln ll-bomb W \clop IL.,,”-‘pi-It .3 The Agaflg ‘gergy Commission caid the changes against. Oppen- i-timer raise "considerable ques- tirn" whether he is a danger tr. national security. Public disclos urn of tilt‘ case came after an r:»rII9t‘ charge by Senator Mc- Carthy that U. S. development of thi hidrogen bomb “is: deliber- niely stailad for 13 months, pre- ‘uimahiy through Communist. activ- ii_v, McCarthy is reported plan- ‘rnng to any more on the subject I into, Tax. Planning Services I MONTREAL. iCP\ — Municipal, Affairs Minister Yves Prevosli Monday night. stressed the nocd' ‘for City planning services, giving as an cxaiiiple one municipality which swv/-d 5160.000 on I $580,000 pi‘o)cit through such an agency. Adrii-cssing the 12th annual con- fcrcnce of the Qucbcc chapter of thc .\/Iiilllvlpiii l-"inrmce Officers‘ nssociatinn, Mr. f‘i'cvo=t emphas- iz:-ri the rinse i‘PI5lIif)llSIiIp between‘. P i Q r r e Bachand. sherbmoirei d I:'il‘I;f". cities face a rift’-ll)!’ probicm of slum clcarancei IE: must. p"O\’lt'iP. for expansion. “In Shcrbi-ookn last year. a cli whose population is increasing. by 2.000 a ycar_ the ratepayers ob- jcctcrl to an increase in assess- ment, as did the Montreal rata- pa_vcr.-:," hc siiid. Ml‘. Bélcilallti said municipal fl-‘ Lhf‘il' mince 0filt'Ei‘S l ulcl base Reporisiiewn Price Schedule i?F‘.(‘.iI\'.-\, it'i“' The Leader - Post sniri 'l'uc.<riny that an agrecdj ]\|ii‘(‘ tI.iIf‘l'i'|iIl2lI hctxxccn gindes; of hug ('1il’i'.\FSf_‘5 uns csiablishcd i\lnniiw_v :iii~n_<-\ (‘:iiinI1a. I Tim ng|'('f‘VVl'_‘il'. uirtcncrl lhci, I§pi‘l‘Ii(I l\cl\\'ocn gradc A and B-1 imp: from 40 ccnts a luinrircd to‘ $i Ilii in R.(‘gi!"t.'l this means that‘ giatiiv A hugs brought $31.60 I I\ilii4Il(‘Vi‘\t‘l',:IlI, uliilc B-1 hugs hiuiiglit Siifi ‘xii (itiirr ling grnrics it.-ivc also both prii~r~ri as in rr-lative valtic, by ;ir.:icci1iriti, imimiiiin: a higher si>i<~.-iii for prciiiium giados. Grade ( i--i’ c\'aiwiiiii~, is ii4I\',' priccrl at .<1‘i:.'ili iii Tiilglitii, \‘.Ili('I'l is $2 00 tilirII‘i niacin Bi and 53 00 uncicr :i:irir- /\ Thv 1»iu;mcr~ of this ulrioncd Iiif frrcntinl, trarlt‘ .<nili‘«"CS said. was in cur'n'i:'.'i:c lwccriiilif fl.’ boticf qiinliiv tings in Canada by estab- iisliiizg laigcr prrniiums for the inn 5:i'ntlc.< 'l‘hc i.cndci’—i‘ost said that de- tails of how the agrccmeni was l'(‘Rt‘il("(I, and who are partics to it, \\'(‘|"t" not available in Regina. . Former Vaudeville . Actor Dies Ar 69 Gi1i':ENWl(‘.H. Conn. IA?‘ Jnmns A. Mars:-iilee. fnrmcr vau- rlcvilin Rflfll‘ and a native of ‘Glirlph. Ont, died in hospital licrc T'.insd:i_v. He was 69. Hr appeared on many American ftnvi Euiopcan stages in the early t ,ycars of the Century in a novelty “"1 sum 10''“ u "M u up ncrnliniic act bllicd 3.! the "Gi’elI:m“nd"m| Ind C-mpbenum 2. "M .\‘l i:'~f‘.llc.< " I rmuu‘ coins A(‘ull0i'N|'I (‘/il\'iDi-'.l\'. N ..i. with in-at ing A lorry ihn Dclavuire Iflnt for if) hours until freed ‘managed to pull the ferry free. _ ua: himvn off course cross- river Monday Innd rcmaincd grounded on a mud at nightfall. Scnrcs of passengers and ‘va-hirlcs wt-re strandcd until three ‘IV’ was aidcd by it coast guard cutter As Economy Move plans on a six-year period. He said it has been established that one policeman and one fireman are needed for every 1,000 of pop- ulatlon. Joseph 1'. Clark of Chicago. :2- ecutive director of the Municipal Finance Officers association of the United states. said a. change is oc- curring in his country. with polit- ical thinklng removing the cm- phasls from central to local gov- ‘ . ernment. ifs Fuuwr 3-«AT IN MOST st-tows ‘ft-IE ' MISSEI5 ’ ARE U§UA\.\.Y ‘THE ‘t—\\‘\’S’9 TORONTO. iCP\ — Minimum and maximum tcmperaiurcs: Min. Max linu son 5 31 Yaiicoiiver 44 53 , Victoria 47 51 Edmonton .. 34 M ‘ Calgary . 29 64 Regina 31 at Winnipeg 39 5| Toronto 39 65 Ottawa 33 51 1 Montreal 37 -'5l Qunhec 23 4.‘ Isitnt John . 7.4 40 ‘ Mom-ion I9 39 I Halifax . . 2‘ 42 ‘_ Charlottetown as so , Sydnt-y 25 29 I Yarmouth 26 41 ,St. John‘: 29 3| HALIFAX, (C-Pl — The weather office here says a h:gh pressure area. will dominate the weather picture river the Msritim-A Wed- nesday. and it will be generally fine but cold. Regional fort-casts: Prince Edward Island and New llrlsnlwwick: Sunny and MM: i_llghl norlheuk-fly wlnda. Low- ihign at Charlottetown 21 and I5, Moncton 25 and 40. Fredericton I '40. I Ray 0! F‘unriv: l.i:i\t l\Ot’II\I|lI»' Irriy winds; clear, with visibility I5 mile.-. little chanae in tamper- Iaiure. High tide today at Charlottetown at. 8.29 am and 8.32 pm. Summeralde tide is minutes later. sun rises today at 8.31 am. and sets at us p.n\ '