MAICIMS I OF A MERE MAN 1:2.- .1 the heart- be false and full i "Yo.':.h;m:rL the natural Ill1(lIl:G H mm. only founded .1831. -31:. Gulrdll-Ila Th” 0""; Egypiliianii Premier ITeIIs”Brii:isI-l To Get: Out: Read byEveybedy : Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, 'THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23. 1950 I5 KILLED IN LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK Commonwealth Leaders T 0 Meet In London In January, Attlee Reveals l.tlNl)0N. Nov. 22 -(GP) -- Pflillt Minister Attlee announced mdaj. the heads of the Cr.v.nmon- wealth rounlrics will meet here in .lallu.m- to discuss the internation- al or: .s. ,t1tlm- told the House of Com- mons the Prime Ministers of Can- aria, Australia, New Zealand. India, r.l:lls&.u-. and ceylon will attend the : lllfercnce. or Daniel Malian. Prime Minist- or of south Africa who has been N1. M1 mid a representative. The Prime Minister of Southern ltilodrsia also will be present. sllloo desrrllled it as "B meeting ilelwrvn us to discuss questions of cnnlllioli concern. including as- peclx of the present international situation" Talks To Be Private The talks will last about 10 days and will be private. Attlee said. "to enable a confidential exchange of i'it"A'S in take place." spmlllllz for the Conservative Pllrlr, Opposition leader Winston Chllrrliiil told ihe House: "We think may such a gathering would be opportune and that the discussions which will lake place lunv iir f'l'lliiflll." Llhrvsl lr-adrr Clement Davies railed ll "vital" to hold some such Comnlonwenlth conference "at this moment when the international ltlusuoii calls for consultation." This will be the first meeting of C0lll'lll'li”ili'PaIlIl Prime Ministers since April. 1949. They met in london then to deal with the rinilgl-d relationship brought about hv India's decision to adopt a republican constitution. mm The new meeting is believed set tentatively for Jan. 4, The Prime. Ministers are likely to review the fighting in Korea. the Communist threat in southeast Asia. re. lations with Communist China, European affairs and the biiiidiilil up of the North At- lantic Treaty Organization. It is understood Foreign Secret- nry Bevin. Defence Minister Emanuel Shinwell and Common. wealth Relations Minister Patrick Gordon-Walker will have a prom. lnem Dari; in the discussions. Besides Prime Minister St. Laurent. the Prime Ministers who will attend the conference are Robert Menzies. Australia: Jawaharial Nehru. India: Llanuat Ali Khan. Pakistan; Sidney 30). land. New zealand; Don slephen Senanaynke. Ceylon: and sir God. "9! Hulzlzins. southern Rhodesia. South Africa's representative has yet to he named. The median Prime Minister is expected to leave Ottawa, about "18 new .V'i'.i1i' and to return about mid-January. The agenda for the now is the subject of communications among the var. ious capitals. An effort is heing made to strike nrior agreement on the lklllects of the Communist lfnenace which should be taken up rst. Saint John Mayor Refuses in "Be Puppet conference telegraphic Events "Mail your Films to Gunhum Photo studio. Charlottetown. seed daily. "Buying Timothy lilccuigan and Boyle. "Dance, French River Hall, Thursday, November 2 "Sop National Film Pictures in Graham's Road Hall. Thursday. "Card Party. Dance. Little Pond Hall, November 27th. "See "Army secrets'l- at New Glasgow tonight at 8.00. "Dancing. North River Com- llillllli.V Rink, Thursday. Nov. 23rd at 9 p.m. "Regular Dance, East Royalty Rink Hail. Friday. Bus leaving Bl." Terminal 9.45 P, M, "Kmkora llali. Friday. Novem- lslrr 24th. Gary cooper in "Good am." "Show Mort.-ll Community Hall. "fly Till-sdzly, Friday, Saturday. Slww starts 8 o'clock. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. Dancing from 9 till 1 W510 by Western Railiblers: "W" rerlulre quantity pressed llay. Iiflvly Swift Canadian Co.. Ltd. ilvt-stock dept. "Annual meeting Abegweit. S-3-R Kingston. Friday, Novem- rr 2-tlh, 9.00 p.m. sharp. "To arrive. Bulk Wheat. 33.10 ilf-I hundred cwt. Book Kenning- ” PWI Service. Kerlaington. . ”Warmn;z - Red stallion nook- ”-ii Yco Ti l M SMuml:;I.re. Montague. Friday ,W"3(lilNins live and dressed Poul- mce ally. Paying top market 3 5: M. 6a A. polars. Market uiidlilg. ,h"5a;lIie Hawkins Dance in the pm,-lay agaev SlehPiet.er's Bay. ' - - aIson'I r- Che.-lra. Door prizes. Income t "'TPr d , o Cornwall Hall Mon- d:;'Cl27lh. You will enjoy the folk n "3 With Mrs. John Mackin- mcklgd dancers. Also reading: by "rein and orchestra music. ""1? I! an elicollent demand V8 and number six ” Nllltry. one thousand 0? more Der car. Get our ,,,,,,.' ;M0If;l:l1A3::. oi-on com- bushel. lli:w' "0 buying aroma fowl 11.::"y"k'x" dilly. Live Poultry on - i will any you to anlnl ..noultry and get our prices ulllnll. w. p. . mm. m, 0" lln llouitryydeliv red emu .warohouse on Tue mo. "lllllled-4 I. .7. SAINT JOHN. N. 8.. Nov. 22- iCPl - Geonse E, Howard. elect- ed as Mayor of Saint John, Oct. la. IOCIEY submitted his resignation at a special Common Council meet- ing he had called. He requested it become effect- ive at once but the six councillors unanimously decided against gc. capting the resignation pending a two-week period and asked the Mayor to reconsider h.is action. Saying he was not prepared to remainin office as only a "putter of motions." Mayor Howard said he had found that Councillors J. R. Campbell. Ronald H. Howard. Harold Prince and W. R. Tippett. representing a majority of the Council. were planning to run the meetings. The formal letter of resignation mentioned private agreemcn-ts among the four councillors re- garding the conduct of city affairs. Councillor Campbell said the group had held discussions'about Council matters but there was "nothing to hide and nothing to be ashamed of." Councillor James A. Whitebone termed the "secret" meetings "an insult to the intelligence of the citizens." Councillor Leonard said the majority group made the Council a "rubber stamp." Deputy Mayor Tippett will pre- side over Council meetings if the Mayor does not attend them, and if the resignation becomes final Mr.'Tippet.t will be acting Mayor until a by-election fills the office. 5 ecfucuiur Lumber F re In Toronto TORONTO. Nov. 22-(CP)-Fire men battled almost two hours to- night to bring under control A spectacular fire in the Edmund Hind Lumber Company yard: that lit up the east end of the city- Cguge of the blaze and extent of the damage were not immediately known. g NEW DELHI. India. v. 22 - iAP)--A Nepalese Dnbuay com- munique today reported sporadic raids by insurgents in the amu- awa and Blratnagsr areas of Nep- al. The communique sold 200 in- surgents who attempted to raid a house in the Bhalrawa district fled when government troops In-ived. Di Emergency in impose Si-ale ihree Ciiies CAIRO, Nov. 22 - (Reuters) - The Government imposed a state of emergency in three big cities today as Prime Minister Nahas Pasha again told Britain to get out 0! Egypt. Troops were brought quell student demonstrations. An anti-British "strike" began in universities and schools. Cairo, Alexandria and Port Said -where an outbreak of fire oc- curred today on a ship loading gasoline for Bl'iiIl5h forces - were declared in is state of emergency. The demonstrations started yesterday when Foreign Sec- retary Ernest Bevin of Britain said his country would not leave the Suez Canal zone. nor agree to Egyptian union with Sudan without Sudan's con- t sent. About 15,000 students marched to the centre of Cairo today. yell- ing. "We want immediate evacua- tion, down with imperialism." Nahas Pasha hurried to the meeting and told the students he was confident of obtaining Egypt's "national aspirations" - the eva- cuation and union, which were de- manded last week in a government policy speech. He was sure Egypt would get her way by political means. "but we have other means in case of failure," he added. "Mr. Bevin's statement in the House of Commons opens - in fun own way - the door for negotia- tions," the Premier said. Steel-hclmeted police and troops cordoned off the British consulate in Port Said where demonstrators paraded through the streets shout- lng "Down with England, we want freedom." Churchill Critical out to LONDON. Nov. 22 - (Reuters) -Winston Churchill tonight chal- lenged the Labor Government on its Egyptian policy and asked the House of Commons to back him up. The Conservative leader pre- sented a "motion of censure" which, if adopted by the Com- mons. would force the Govern- ment to resign or call an election. La-bor has a voting majority of five in the Commons. Churchill attacked the Govern- ment for continuing to send arms to Egypt after the Egyptians had demanded that Britain get out of the Suez Canal zone and the Su- dan. l-its motion. likely to be debated next week. was submitted tonight a few hours after noisy members of Parliament, including some La- bor members. had asked in the Commons that arms shipments bl: suspended. There was a roar of 8DPl'0VflI when Labor member Sidney 511' '7iImtlnueo on page 5. col. a Constitutional Discussions To ilesumeloday OTTAWA. Nov. 22 -(GP) - Federal-Provincial discussions on procedure for constitutional amend to will be resumed vo- morrow by Justice Minister Gar- son and the Attomeys-General of the id Provincial Governments. Their committee. established at a Federal-Provincial constitutional conference last January. will re- new effort: to find a formula. It will study suggestions advanced at the January meetings and also at . session of the conference in Quebec last September. Besides. the tommittee will study the possibility of drafting a. Can- adian constitution that would be domiciled in Canada Irli be a purely Canadian instrument. Meeti - of the committee will be in private. The committee's re- port will be submitted to a plenary session of the constitutional con- lgeorcetlie on fiscal matters. opening Charge Red Party In U. S. Directed By Soviet Govlt WASHINGTON. Nov. 22-(AP)- The Jultice Department today for- mally charged the P 5-? Party of the United states with beln'g run by the Government of Soviet, Russia. The Department made the ac- cunuon in ruin: a petition with tho new subversive Activities Con- trol lnoard. asking that the Party be ordered to register with the Department. " ' its financial and 1m all its members In the Un-' ited States. A Thu 3' -'-'l' ”"!.'.li."3.'.”””' .....n........,n..gnngg,...,. under the new subversive control law. which requires registration of Ali I" ' I and i” met- front organizations. The 4.800-word petition was sign- ed by Attorney-General .l. Howard Me-Grnth and filed with the Board. The Department also served cop- ies of the petition on the Party's headquarters In New York City. The service was marked for the attention of William 2. Foster. Party chairman. and Gus,l-lalll de- scribed by the Department, as "A hint paristgfunq.l9iia.ry,'p' i ML ... Poultry Farmers Urge Price Support As Morale-Booster OTTAWA, Nov. 22 -(OP)-The Canadian Poultry Council today decided to press the Government. to continue the principle of price- support next year as a morale- booster for the Canadian egg in- dustry. Opening a three-day representatives of some 500.009 poultrymen drafted their request and will discuss it with Agricult- ure Department officials tomor- row arrd Pridalh The officials also will discuss the general field of marketing and the possibilities of rs-gaining the Unit- ed Kingdom egg market, lost last year when Britain decided not to renew her egg contract with Can- ada. meeting, Jacques de Broin of Montreal, Council vice-president. said the situation in Canada currently is excellent. Supplies are good, but with no over-abundance and the outlook for next yearis fora slight increase in production. The market is buoyant and it is unlikely the Government will need to spend money in its current egg price- support program. However. Mr. de Broin said the industry still wants the principle of price-support continued next FEET. "The fact that the Government apparatus is there to help if help is needed stabilizes the market," Mr. de Broin said. "If the Govern- ment gave no assurance of support. egg dealers would hesitate to store eggs when they are in surplus pro- duction." Govit To Sell Butter T 0 Trade At 57 Cents Pound Fatally Injured In Building On Prince Si. Wharf A fatal accident occurred yester- day morning while workmen were engaged on R. building at the lower end of Prince Street. The, victim. John Jasper We-atherhir-, was kill- rd almost instantly when an upper floor of the building collapsed. He was sixty-three-years of age, end lived- at -190 - KEHf4i1N8f.- At the time of the accident Mr. We-atherbie and Louis Cannon of 237 Richmond Street were working on the main floor. They were re- moving the forms from under the concrete ceiling when it crashed. covering them both. Mr. Cannon received slight injuries about the left. side of his face but was able to extricate himself and with the help of Kenneth MacCormack dragged Mr. Weatherble outside. He was rushed to tile P.E.I. Hos- pital but was dead upon arrival. Coroner Dr. J. D. MacGuig:ln and the Jury viewed the body yes- terday afternoon. and visited the scene of the accident. Date of the inquest is to he announced later. Members of the jury are as fol- lows: Foreman. Wendell H. Bea- ton: George Macbeod, H. L. Hardy, Michael Langley, Jame: Walker. William Hughes and T. A. Mc- Adam. The room in which the men were working was 25 feet square, and the walls nine feet high. The concrete ceiling had been poured ten or twelve days ago and the contra supporting pillar was lilo only one installed. None of they .n..n..,.nnn,..,n.,..g,g, (Continued on Page 5 Col. 2) I9 African Tribesmen Sentenced To Deuril NAIROBI. Kenya, Nov. 22 - (Reuters)- Nineteen East African tribes-men. members of the fanati- cal ”Cult Of Good spirits.” today were sentenced to death at nearby Kitale for having killed 24 per- sons in a pitched spear-versus- rifle battle last April Two other tribesmen were order- ed to jail indefinitely because they are minors, and seven more were acquitted. The "Cult Of Good spirits" has been outlawed by the British ad- ministration as anti-European and inflammatory Its followers claim to have received supernatural ord- ers to "cleanse" Africa of all Eur- opeans by black magic. Once all Europeans are killed or expelled. they bellow. I "Block Ohrlat"wlll descend on the African people. .......... island Man loses Savings llrioronlo TORONTO. Nov. apron)- Pollce said today a 30-year-oi: mliffied man. newly-arrived fro Prince Edward Island. lost his sav- ings of 5380 to three "film-flam artists." Detectives said that Lorne Show rushed home and got the money after two men he met at an em- ployment office said they knew someone who was I "sucker." Their friend, they said, would give 5100 for every 8100 Show could show. Show Joined his two uquaintancell and the "sucker" in I restaurant. One volunteered to hold the money. then excused himself. went to a washroom and never came back. The other two fled. Said Shaw: "I guess I'd better Jotbduk to the damn." g .., OTTAWA. Nov. 23 - ICP l-Til Government announced today that it will sell to the trade at a baslcl price or 57 cents a pound the but-" ter which it purchased earlier thisi year through its price support ma-: chinery and now is holding in stor-l 38 C. The price will be 57 cents a. pound for first grade creamery butter de- livered in carloacl lots in Ontario and Quebec. Prices in other Pmvinces and zones will vary according to the transportation costs from the areas of production. mg lhliigher In.Mar'itlmea For example, first grade cream- ery butter in solids will be sold in the Maritime Provinces at 57 cents a pound. in British Columbia at 59 cents a pound and in Saskatch- ewan at 53 cents. These prices are trade pl-ices - not retail prices. The amount of butter available was not disclosed but the Agricul- tural Prices Support Board, which made the announcement, said it. was a "fairly substantial" quantity. Under the price support program, the Government buys up butter - thus taking it off the market - at fixed prices in the big butter pro- duction months of early spring and summer and then sells it back to the trade in the winter months, when production is low and sup- plies are scarce. This helps to keep prices stable in the summer, when supplies are heavy. and prevents them from rising too steeply in the winter. when supplies normally run short. Expect stable Price The Board said it expects the prices announced today can be maintained. however, the butter picture will be reviewed "from time to time in order to determine what adjustrnents, if any, are necessary in the program of butter distribu- tlon." Sales to the trade will start Dec. 1 The prices will be equal to the cost to the Government of its pur- chases of butter in 1950. some of which was bought in March and April at 58 cents a pound and the remainder during the summer at 53 cents. They also cover carrying charges and delivery costs. The Bcard will deliver the hut- ter to the city or town in which the purchasers place of business is situated, "to maintain. as far as possible. uniform prices at the low- est possible level to all collsulners." The Board's butter purchases in 1949 totalled 4-8.000.000 pounds. Wholesale Prices OTTAWA. Nov. 21! -- (GP) -- wholesele sales in Canada averag- ed five per cent higher in the first nine months of this year than in the corresponding period of 1949. the nureau or statistics reported today. . At the end of the none-month period the value of inventories held by wholesalers was l: per cent higher than at the correapondintz date of IMO. The Bureau said that in Septem- ber. wholesale sales were six per cent higher than in September. HMO. but were five per cent below August, 19150. During September. sales of whole- salers in Quebec were 12 per cent- hlgher than in the corresponding month of 1040. Ontario reported an increase of eight per cent: British Columbia. seven per cent; the Mar- ltimes. four per cent, and the Prair- 'Statea, and by far the worst wreck 16 Sialled "fialn is Sirucll from Behind Disaster Occurs On Eve of United States Thanksgiving Holiday NEW YORK. Nov. & - (AP) -- The worst American rail dis- aster in years, : rear-end coi- iiaion between two Long Island passenger trains jammed with Thanksgiving eve commuters. killed a. police estimated '15 per- sons tonight. The 'estlmat-e came from Chief Inspector Joseph A. Curry. in com- mand of rescue work on the scene. The last time an American train wreck took that many lives was ill 1944 at Ogden, Utah. It appeared to be the worst wreck in the history or the Long Island. the third oldest road in the United in New York State history. Trains Packed An estimated 2,100 to 2.300 pass- engers were crammed on both trains, some standing in aisles. Many were home-bound. Others were going out to Long Island for the American Thanksgiving holi- day. About 100 passengers were sev- erely injured and scores of others shaken, out and bruised by flying glass or jagged. twisted metal. Dr. Randy Wyman. a director of the Municipal Hospital System. told hospitals to "be prepared lo receive 50 bodies", Inspector Curry said 20 bodies had been removed from the wreckage of the two trains. each of which was composed of i2 electric cars, It was the second major Long Island rail road dLsaster in nine months - 31 persons died Feb. 11 in a nearby Rot-kville Center crash. The motorman of the . first train said his brakes locked as , he slowed his tija Hid!-, ybout- 6:30 P. M. E.S."I'. ' second train. coming from behind. knlfed into the standing train. The front and end cars that took the shock of the impact were tel- escoped or sliced apart "like a loaf of bread." From all over the New York City area poured rescue workers with power saws, jacks and acetylene Continued on page 5. COL 3 21 ilelieved - Dead In Crash MORAN. Wyo.. Nov. 22 - (AP) A Twenty-one person:-rare believed dead in the wreckage of la charter- ed plane which apparently crashed into the side of jagged Mount Moran Tuesday night. All evidence pointed to the fact ll. missing twin-engine DC-3. car- rying members of the New Tribes Mission, a. religious organization, caused a fire spotted 1,000 feet be- low the crest of the mountain. A resort owner said he believed he" saw a glowing fuselage in the flames. 1 Less than 12 hours later a B-36. largest of the world's land-based bombers, crash-landed 25 miles south of Fort Worth, Tex., killing two men. Seven others were injured. and another seven parachuted to safety. The giant bomber. on a gunnery- training flight, was trying to reach its home base at Carswell Field with three of its six engines dead. The plane burst into flames, de- tonating ammunition. Aboard the missing Wyoming plane were eight children. follr women and nine men. Three of the men were crew members. A ground party this morning he- gan the slow. difficult job of as- cending the rocky peak. No man is the wider (or his learning; wit and wisdom are born with a mun. MAXIMS I OIA. In MERE MAN . 1-2:. PAGES TRAIN WRECK Subscriptions Delivered moo; auu 65.00; other Province: 8 U. 8. 87.00. Explosion And Fire In l iWreckage Of Trains; Death Toll Reaches 20 Island Soldiers Injured In Wreck Two Prince Edward Island .301- dicrs - Gnr. Valerie Joseph Ber- rlarcl, Alberton. and Gnr. James Allan Donovan, Bayfieid, King's County - are listed among the injured in the train crash near. Jasper, Aita., on Tuesday. Gunner Donovan is a son of Mr. John J. Donovan, now living in Boston. Prior to his enlistment last slimmer he resided with his sister, Mrs. John Miller at Bay- fieid, King's County. Two other, sisters. Mrs. Ronald Gilli: and Mrs, Alex MacDonald. also live at Bay- ficid. Two brothers are at pru- scnt working in Nova Scotia. Gun-l ncr Donovan served in the military forces in Canada during the last, world war, and since that time! has been engaged in farming and fishing at his sister's home in Bay-l fie-ld. Gunner Bernard is it son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bernard. of Al-?. bcrton. and is 22 years of age. He! has been in the army three months.i as a mechanic. Prior to enlistment; he was a garage mechanic in Mon-l treal. . No particulars as to the nature. of the injuries received by the ac- cident were available last night. Lisi Soldiers Killed In B.C. Train Wreck OTTAWA. Nov. 21 - (GP) -De-1 fence I-Ieadqulirters today releasegll lt'Ii!t ofl!1 soidiersilkiliedsnnd two others mtssing, believed killed. in the troop train-passenger train col- lision in the Rocky Mountains Tuesday. Five of them were from New- foundland. Killed Gar. Robert Arthur Graig. next of kill, father, William Craig, Foam Lake, Sask. Gnr. William Norman Carroll. next of kin, mother, Mrs. 0. Car- roll, Pennant. Sask. Gnr. Robert William Manley. next of kin. father, G. W. Manley. 765 Simcoe St. Niagara Falls. Ont. Gnr. Basil Patrick Mcxeown. next of kin, father, Anthony Mc- Keown. R. R. No. 3. Moscow, Ont. Gnr. Austin Emery George. next of kin. sister. Mrs. Muriel Cameron, Continued on page 5. col. 8 Declares Stalin Semi-Invalid LONDON. Nov. 22-(Reuters) - The Evening star uys io- lilght Prime'MinisteI' Joseph Stalin is "a semi-invalid, accord- ing to some western observers." The paper says Stalin's health is "a current talking point in London embassies." According to reports in em- bassy circles, the paper says, Stalin has been spending most of his time under treatment for an unknown complaint at a Black Sea resort. Diplomats in Moscow. the pa- per says. believe that Stalin is still guiding the Politburo. though less directly, and keeps in touch with soviet. affairs by . calling soviet leaders to ”l1ls se- cret seaside home” for short vis- its. All-Dutch Banquet For British King LONDON, Nov. 22 - (Reuters)- Queen Juliana of the Netherlands tonight entertained King George and Queen Elizabeth at a brilliant banquet i.ri London's fashionable Claridges Hotel. , Only e4'guesiA. the cream of Dutch and British aristocracy and govemment, were invited to the hotel's great ballroom where the Queen and her consort. Prince, Bernhard. welcomed them. The banquet was a totally Dutch enterprise - from the food to the moss under the Dutch-grown flow- ers. seven chefs. ill footmen in gain uniform, two women of the Dutch royal linen department. and two "Yeoman of the Silver" came from Holland for the occasio . Thousand of flowers decorated the led one per cent; ....,--- .l And Queen four persons two days to arrange em. The white linen of the table, laid with Dutch gold and silver plate. was splashed crimson with 4.000 dark-red Dutch "happiness" roses, nurtured specially for this night. The table plate had seen more than ii. century of Anglo-Dutch his- tory. Most of it was dated X313. After the banquet both royal couples went to I British Govern- ment reception in the ltlth-century Middle Temple Hall. Earlilel" this evening Queen Jill- ianll and Prince Bernhard attended busily. Juliana this morning as she drove in state through the city streets for luncheon at the Guildhall. his- H. reception at the Netherlands l;m- I Thousands of Londoners cheered , EDMONTON, Nov, 22-(OP)-An. explosion and fire today thwarted efforts of salvage workers to rench the last of 20 men. lost in the! mountainside wreck of two Cana- dian National Railways trains. Twelve bodies were taken from the wreckage after the trains plowed into aach other head-on about noon Tuesday. Two injured soldiers died on route to hospital hero. The bodies of four missing locomotive crew members and two soldiers were believed still buried in the crumpled mass of steel when flames licked through the debris. Origin of the blast and fire was un- known. it destroyed the remains of a baggage car. three sleepers and the two locomotives. The wreckage was strewn over the C.N.R. main line near Canoe River. B.C.. 312 miles west of Erl- monton. The whistle stop. at 2,723 feet above sea level in a rem-Ve section of the Canadian Rocki.-s. also is 1919 miles northeast of Kamloops. B.C., where the has- senger train was returned after the wreck. Tile collision occurred as the trnop train-running late pound- ed up an incline carrying 340 artil- lerymen of Canada's special form. They were en route in Fort Lewis, lVash.. and possibly Korea. A; it rounded in bond on the snow-covered slope it plowed head- on into the laronloiive of the pad- houllri express. the Continent-'21 Limited. Salvage workers were still iri- lng to clear the track today when the fire broke out. They expel-led to complete the job by midnight. Meanwhile an ir-l--encrusted --rm erxency Crain made up of the l-r-- mains of the trooper reached Erl- Continued on page 5. col. 4 ' 4iii! crux full-lo. THAT KEEPS Us Fnon Becoming RICH I3 MONEY 3 TORONTO, Nov. 22-(CPD--Milly mum temperatures observed b. tween 7:30 p.m. Ind 7:30 am. EST: maximum temperature: he-4 tween 7:30 am. and 7:30 p.m. . Victoria 40. 40: Edmonton 163. 58; Calgary 108, 2B: Regina 23, 2B: Winnipeg 14. 16: Toronto 25. 33; Ottawa 21, 26: Mbntreal 24. 30,1 . 28: Saint John 30, :; 33, 35,'-Hallfax 39. 41!: Charlottetown 38, 40; Sydney 46,. 50: Ylirmouth 33, 37; St. John's 39. 50 HALIFAX, Nov. 22 w (CP) - Official forecasts issued by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax. Synopsis: Temperatures remained below the freezing point all day in part! of New Brunswick. In Prince Ed- ward Isiand and Nova Scalla maximum temperatures were most- ly in the dos Tonight the weather was gener- ally cloudy over the d-istrict. and there were ii few very light snou- flurries. Sonic snowflurries will continua in the northern regions on Thurs- day, but over most of the district there will be only variable cloud- iness. Regional forecasts. valid untlb midnight Thursday: Prince Edward. Island: Variable cloudiness with. scattered snowflurries, clearing its the evening. Little change in temperature. West winds 15 be- coming light by afternoon. Ln-vr and high Thursday at Charlotte- town 24 and 36. . High tide today at 10.19 A. M: and 9.40 P. M. Sun rises at 7.90 A. M. and sell it 4.39 P. M. , oonoriv -. can Toll-brEN1luvl rcrmv SERVICE Leave Bordu Leave (l. '1'. 9.10 A.M. 10.35 AM. 1.00 P.M. 2.40 7'.M. 1 4.30 l'.M. 'i..'til I'M. Sunder l Leave Border Leave (1. I. no A.M. ' 1ii.85 A.M. 5.45 PM. am PM. '. WOOD ISLANDS-CAIHBUU ' DAILY FERRY leave Wood lalnnds 8 AM. 11 AM. 1 PM. 8 PM. Leave Caribou hotel entrance and ballroom. It took ernment. . tori seat or the London city gov- , C -..I,jA.M.1l.A.llLl.P.ll-If-,Mi