I Meeting u "u," Dost G araistood the "mars M! Election of Llll such was the keynote of an Address by Hon. Dr. W. J. P. _Mac- Mlllan at a well attended meeting in Tignish Hall on Wednesday. “mm- the chairmanship of Mr. chum McCarthy. Despite the “my weather the hall was prac- ~ llcslli! MI- ' m addition to the Conservative leader tile meeting was addressed by Messrs. Clarence Morrlssey and Donald Campbell. Conservative: mndidntes for First Prince. On ‘he platform were Messrs. J. Ar- Mnaulh representing the Fisher- men; Union; J. M. Ahern. the 8mm... Legion; J. A. Gaudet; Peter Pater and Anthony Horne, Conservative Party“ DEQEMIEEIL c-4241 I ‘fir. MacM At Tignish while Jack Cameron acted as asc- retary. Altar a few apt raanarks recalling Dr. MacMlllanh former associations with 113mm, m, Me. Cartiiy introduced him to the meeting. . Dr. Maclllllan began by stating that it was Just forty-four years e80 since he made'his first trip to Tignish. and. ho had made many trips since. He felt it a privilege and pleasure to be back now on the occasion of this meeting at a time of crisis in provincial affairs. Reviewing briefly his politlcul career." Dr. MacMillan recalled that in i085 there had occurred the Liberal landslide in which no Conservative was elected. As there was no Opposition the Govern- (Oonfinued mi Page 8) Liberal Meetings in First Queen's The Liberal candidates for First tiucenk. Hon. F. A. Large. Attor- nzy General, and Hon. -W. F. A. Stevrart, Minister of Agriculture. addrwod well attended political mGflliYS ill. Hope River lastnlght and Hi "ipaud on Tuesday night. They g.l\8 a general review of government activities and of the issues ill the compo“!!!- Ilir. Jos. Bolger presided at the l-[Qpg Rivcr meeting and Mr. I-‘rcd MacDonald. Hampton, at Crapaud. Th! candidates were the only speakers at both meetings. John Leo Payne, Former Singer llics o Payne, 66, forms-r pop- ular lllld build loader, who lliififll i My Gui Sal" to Boston at til- tum of ille century and wrote illv‘ national song oi the Fra- ternal (lrder of Eagles, died yes- IPHIIIY at his home. 34 Pebble ave- iiilm Winthrop. lic , had been B. r~<iril~iii of Winthrop for 45 years. .l-l»= letlvrs his wife. Mrs. Putnam Payne; two daughters. Mrs. Velma Wood and fills; Virginia. Payne, and three soil‘. Ariulir, Ralph and Ray- mond Puvilv. all of Winthrop. A funcrzil muss will be celebrated at l0 sin Alondoy ill the Church of St. John Evzlngellstby his neph- ew, (the Rev. l-lonry McLeod. SJ. -The Boston llerald. Nov. 22nd. i947. Mr, Payne's brother F‘rank G. Payne is n resident of this City. JJIIII in IIITIIS. MAIIIIIAIES, OEATNS 50c Per insertion BIRTHS film! -- lit tnflilngu County lf'~“"°“§1 Ill-sinful oll December 341$ W lhlll". and Mrs. George i. t. "to ‘ dmigl Ilabel Ailllc. W“ a’ . 1w“ llaclnitfillblN-At the P. lc. Is. Iflllil lirspiiui, Der; '1 g0 My; and ill-s. hinlrolln MucLauglllln (nee Erma Mlllio a doughy“; GRAY -- A Summcrside. Satur- ihy- Nov. 29. to Mr. and Mrs. Wil- fred Gray. Toronto. Ont. (nos Margaret Emma Chappcll. Ken- ililuioll. PFLI.) u son, Vernon Wil- lrezl. (‘i ills, 8 01$ TAIAISIZIAGES ?AWSO.\' - NORRING _ M m, home of the bride on Nov. 19, 1947,, Y R"- L‘. R. Woodslde. George {Clifford vDulvson, Albany, to 133;. ti’); Rec-ts: Norring, Capg Tmv. -__.. DEATHS ,/ IOLLANn-At Breadalbane on Dec. .l. loll, Clarence rollarld, aged 34 yczlrs. Funeral from the home a‘ “If brother. Borden Polland. Ilx-lallliile, Saturday at 1.30 p.nl.. b°t°fleil by service in 5t. Eliza- pimhs Church. Springfield, at 2 gULLlNS-At her residence. 24 mild Avenue on Thursday, Dec. h”- l947. Mrs. John l". Mullins in mu o") year. Her remains are "he "E Ht has lab residence from on re the funeral will take place st Saturday morning at 9.35 to m< 0303:5112; yfntorlnsnt MONAGIIAN-At the Charlotte- , M "Mllital on Thursday. Doc. yum"- Annh Monaah . ms "is Mo“. huidow of the late John mam! rm. I-lszelbrook. Her ro- m‘ m resting at tbs Prank ‘h’ Pfiey Funeral Home, from m‘? the funeral will take place my morning at s.4a w at. a nstans Basilica, thence to the -°- Cemetery, N. ii. MacLsan UNDERTAKEN EMBALMEN Successful Rotary Auction Last Night The results of last night's Radio Auction. sponsored by the Char- lottetown notary‘ Club and held in aid of the Provinces crippled children, were most gratifying not ‘only to those who participated in the auction but alsc‘l.o the public- spiritod firms and individuals who furnished the hundreds of articles put up for sale. Winner of- the grand prize tur- key was Gordon White of Upper Prince Street. Othar winners of turkeys were: First prize O. R. Symons, B’! Upper Prince Street; second prize. P.J. MacDonald. Kent Street; third prize. Billy ficlsean. Mount Edward Road. While the amount of money re- alized could not be ascertained. it was disclosed that over 100 more articles were sold last night than at last year's auction. The bid- ding was brisk from the opening at 6.15 and continued so until one o'clock this morning. Rotary officials expressed the opinion early this morning that the sum realized would at least equal that of last year's sals. SEA SOLLISION Continued from page 1 that an able searnan whose duty it was to observe a radar screen had been on the 10b since mom- ing although Cmdr. Littler later testified at ghe hearing that he should have been relieved at the end of an hour. ' Mr, MacKeen said the rating probably was "punch drunk" from overwork and had missed the sig- nal which might have prevented loss of life and serious damage to tho destroyer. A-t the August hearing it was testified that a "blip" which ap- peared momentarily on the radar screen "at 500 yards” was not re- ported to the bridge when it did not. re-aappear. Radar technicians said the sq- ulpmcni. often was not reliable at less than 500 yards but the possi- bility of it failing to pick up an approaching object "of the char- acter of tho Yul-mouth County is most remote." IIIIIIE OILVLINOSOII Continued from page 1 slons. or mallini Illll-llir 89W"! to beautiful woman." His olvn father, King George V. was "a perfect expression of tile Victorian and Edwardian eras... he believed in God. in the 1n- vlncibllity of the British Navy and the vested privilege of tha royal family. “In my father's view some oi the leading Liberals (during the general elections of i808). Dill/id Lloyd George and even Winston Churchill. wars d-anlcroul. lilmlt subversive characters.’ Tile Duke wrote that his moth- er. Queen Mary. hid l "PYYVA? and encyclopedic memory." ‘Al- though aha backed up my lathe!‘ in all matters of discipline, she never failed to take our aldo when in her judgment he was bsinl harsh with us." ily‘s political life: - "Under the principle of British politics that tho monarch should reign but not govern. Io as I family wm oond II W‘ midst of all intense! ' nmenlhposslw blzlm litlcal" ral but l s at» - The t‘? ofhhlsbirth waa "Brit- ain's g on our.‘ “Income ta: was maasurod in my pone; on pflilld lfktlllil. "Socialism was acarcsiy 1M" than.s unm- ‘mv fir" "h: phone was installed in a roya- residsncs only four y“?! PYWIWI" iy. and silht ram would wl M- inn my fill‘!!! IBQUINC IIII "Flt motor car. a small electric vdflall steered by a horizontal bar. It was hard In Imagine that any- thing could shake tho atructurfl 0f the llillishman‘: world- OAIIII OF TNANNS 1U. Iauddplaa family. Ploaaant Grove. than! all for their kind assistance Local Nursing . Sisters Organize On Novsmiber 18th fourteen vet- eran nursing sisters of World wars I and II met in the Ladies Auxili- BYY Rocm. Legion Building. Char- lottetown. . Mrs. (Dr.) CH. Beer acted as chairman and from this gathering emerged a unit oi the Nursing Sis- ters Association of Canada. The election of officers follows: President-Mrs. iDr.) C. I-f. Beer. Vlce-President-Miss Hattie Mo. Lainc. - Sec. Treasurer — Margaret H. Campbell. Leg ‘rslatlon Committee ; Miss Mona Wilson, Miss Vivienne Mac- Rae. Ways and ‘Means Committee: Miss Gertrude MCCIMTOII, Miss El- sie Nicholson. Miss I-Ielon ~Mac- Phee. ‘ The uilns of the Nursing Sisters Association of Canada lire: (1) to stimulate friendship among mein- bers, (2) to work for Nzltl-onol unity and international peace; (3) io giro aid- lind comfort to nurses in need. WES B5 I-fls general outlook onhis fam- ' during and aims irnr- _ Since the formation of this unit lie Nursing Sisters were the guests on Nov. 25th of Miss Elsie Nicholson lit. her home. 124 Prince Street, and Mrs. (Dr.) CH. Beer c16- tertained the following week at her residence. 211 Kent St. Tilt-so social evenings of bridge and conversation were thoroughly enjoyed by the sisters. They assist- ed greatly in fostering tho spirit of drganizatlon and stimulating the aims of the unit. ABITIBLIEMPANY _ Continued from page 1 make the change now, This is in- tel-eating." A spokesman for Pnpor sales Co.. Inc. Montreal. reiterated an crlrller statement that the company has established no price policy for the future and said the Abltibi announcement did not change anything so for as they were concerned. For St. Laurence Paper Corpor- ation. Ltd, Montreal, a spokes- man said: “Up lo the moment tile matter of a price increase has riot been considered by our board." Neither Price Brothers and 00.. Ltd., nor Donnaconn Puller Co ~. Ltd, Quebec. Illlil any comment oli the Allitibi announcement. uncl other companies remained silent. The ail-time high for newsprint. International $1112.60 in 1930. This declined to $40 in 1934-35. years in which‘ mucli of the Canadian industry was in bankruptcy. Prices in re- cent years have been: $50 1038- 41: $54.66 1M3: $58 i944: $60.25 i945; $72.25 194.6; and $88.50 to its current $90 this year. Tile newsprint industry. In a presentation here in October t; a United States House of Represen- tatives committee. sold illst prices, despite tllcil‘ rise. “have been cut- strlpped by tile tivo largest single cost its-ms: flill iziboi- zlnrl wood." Canadian prollill-tiall this year is at all nil-limo lligli of 4,393,030 The Central Guardian This column Ia roles-vol for nun of local Interest. but advertising of a noway nature may In Inserted atflva cuts a anal ttotly pay- ablo In advance. . . LOSES VALUABLE BULL-(Mr. George Godfrey. North Wllishire. suffered the loss of a. valuable Holstein bull a few days ago. The bull, a Grand Champion at the Provincial pldaibltldn hers and at the Amherst Winter Fair. was taken ill suddenly and died en- rcute from Toronto to Charlotte- town. after placing seventh in his class at the Royal Winter Fair at Toronto. ___L FUNERAL AT ARGYLE SHORE --'I'he funeral of the late Mrs. John Angus lvlacDougall of Argyle Shore was held ‘yesterday after- noon from her late residence. The service at the home and. grave was conducted by the Rev. Horace Mcllwen. The pail bearers lwere: Waldron Seller, Fred McPllail. Douglas MacDonald, Gordon Mac- Donald. Donald McPhail, and Gbodwill lVllcPhall. Interment was in Argyle Shore Cemetery. FUNERAL AT LOT 65 — The funeral of Mrs. Patrick Murray was held yesterday morning from her residence ln New Wiltshlre to St. Ann's Church. Lot 05 where Requiem High Mass was celebrap cd by Rev. Eugene Murray. Rev. Wilfred Keefe was present in the sanctuary. Interment took place In the church cemetery. where ser- vices were conducted by Rev George McCormac. The pallbear- ers were: P.W. McGee, Frank Egan, Peter Clarkln, Amos Malone, Vin- cent McCloskey and Matthias Mur- ray. IIEORIIITINO Continued from page 1 Ported enlisting for an invasion. In Palestine. British forces sep- arated Arabs and Jewish groups to prevent new outbreaks of riot- ing and nrsoll after enraged Ar- abs attacked a British kindergar- tell institute in Baghdad, Iraq. and demonstrated ‘elsewhere in the Middle East. The major crisis Thursday was ill the Arab towll of Ramle on tile Jerusalem-Tel Aviv road where i i i crowds of Arabs shouting insults attacked two Jewish bus convoys ,wlih stones. sticks and guns and based on price at Nclv York, was. were fought by Hogans escorts using guns and grenades. Unoffic- ial reports said at least four Ar- abs and three Jewish passengers were wounded. The bloody area between Jewish Tel Avlv and Arab Jaffa was com- paratively quiet, but Arabs were reported to‘ have attempted one new sally and there was occas- ional sniping, with the result that the bodies of two more Jews and two Arabs were picked up. There was scattered violence and death in Jerusalem, Haifa, and elsewhere. American publishers still short all ions, of which more than 80 per estimated. 236-000 tons of current cont gees lo lllc Uniicrl States. with yearly tlCmlllltl. THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETQWN For Mount Assurance that the Conserva- tives. if elected oll Dec. i1. would construct a new steel bridge at Mount Stewart was given by Mr. J. A. Gillies. Progressive Conserva- tive candidate for Third Queen's, at a lHrBclv attended meeting held at Mount Stewart on Wednesday night. _ Mr. Gillies stated lic given the assurance that replace- ment of the old bridge by a new steel structure was rl definite frot- ure oi the Conservative yiolicy. ills statcmmt was received with loud applause. ' His colleague in the campaign. Capt. J.J. MacDonald. u-as also wurlznly applauded during his ad- dlwoss, in which lic dealt cllicfly with veterans‘ affairs, Otlhcr sneakers were Mrs. Robert Sutherland. president of the Worn- cn's Progressive Conscrvativc As- sociat-on, rind Dr. l..T. Farmer. Thcrc was an cnisvablc rrilislcal nrotracnrve sponsored by Mrs. bud been Sutherland. Lullc-il was served to a large attendsrlcc bv the Mount Stewart branch of the Woman‘; Pv-vi-essive Conservative Associ- atlnrl. Mr. Louis MacDonald presided at the meeting. By-elcction Held In England Yesterday EPSOM. Surrey. England, Dec. 4—(CP)—Polllng in Epsom by- Llection in which Malcolm Mc- COTQUOGGIC defended a traditional Conservative seat against Labor and Liberal candid-ates ended at. B\p.m. tonight with .tlie vote esti- mated at betwaen 60 and '10 per cent of those eligible to cast bal- lots. Results of the by-election-Soil". since the Labor Government came ‘o power in 194.5 -is cxpertcd to be announced at nocll i7 a.nl EST) tomorrow. Resignation of Sir Archibald Suuthby, wlio held the House of Commons seat for Conservatives for nearly 20 ‘years. created iilc lacancy. Sir Archibald polled 27,- Lbl votes against Labor's 20.533 Qild a Liberals 6,643 in the i945 general election. McCorquod-ale 46, was a mem- her of Winston ChurchllTs war- time Government. TIP TO HUSBANDS ,____. BRISTOL. England (CP) The judge decided there was no case against llellry Leonard, 49. who explained lie gave his Wife sedative tablets to stop iier nag- ging him. LONIION ~ (C?) —— Britain's Central Office o," Information spent {$231303 ( ,2.:)iu> making documentary in the ye“ ended 502i mlaimpliaity as they stroll sanity tbroush tho wo Mi o! ‘during their honeymoon. iIielllI n. i. Si i o n Princess Iiaaboth and a» husband, mum. lam auras-Roll. ssaulsuwro a aoono of charm- tiia Imadiands estate in Ramsay. Inland. Pledges New Bridge I Conservative Meetin Stewart At O.G.F. Meeting At Sporting Gluh Criticizing Pl-cmicr Jollcs‘s state- ments on tile recent strike ill Charlottetown. Mr. J. A. Nichol- son. Halifax, told a 0.011‘. polit- ical meeting at the Sporting CIllD last night that when tile Premier said lle was llot gollig to allow '10 strikers to dictate to 12.000 far-ul- ers, llc "betrayed his utter lack of knowledge of the irlle situation.” “l! tile PItllllCl‘ had said.” Nicholson continued, "that he was not going to allow Calladzi Pack- ers to dictate to tile 12,000 farm- ers llllLI the '10 workers. he would lluve been saying something." Most of lvu. Nlcllolsolfs speecll was devoted to it summary of the activities of tile C.C.F. Govern- ment ill Saskatchewan, the only Government in the world. hc claimed, wilicil allowed its civil servants, Liberal. Conservative, or C.C.F‘.. a month's leavc of absence to contest an election with the assurance of their positions should they be defeated at the polls. The population of Prince Ed- v/ardflsland vras 2,000 less now than it was 75 years ago, Mr. Nicholson stated. He attributed the emigration of 70,000 young pcople frc-m the Province during‘ that time to the inability of the old parties to provide employment for them here. Mr. Douglas MacFarlane, C.C.F. candidate for Fifth Queen's, said lie predicted agricultural prices would soon be falling rapidly while feed grains and fertilizer would continue to rise in price. l-lc said it would not surprise him to see a ceiling placed on potatoes on Dec. l2. " Referring to the recent strike in Charlottetown. Mr. MocFarlane said Nominations By Districts _i.. , \ Following are ths candidates who have been nominated in the Provincial general election of Dec. ii. with their political aifiliavian 1r brackets: First PrIncc:- For Counciliorzi. “ed C- RlmF-fly. (l-tb.) Montrosc. armor. Donald Campbell, (P.C.> Alber- ton, farmer and merchant’. Dfilicl MacKay, (OCR) Bloom- field. farmer. For Asscmblyonan:— Joseph Hector Richard, iaowlan, lumber rniller. D. R. Campbell, (C.C,F.), Albcr- i ‘.011. farmer. t Clarence l-‘. Mol-rlssey, (RC1), “'Tco'i._linu€d'LiTi55§J" a» k (Lib), woulmilvsuruli: Continued from page 1 tilt-ll come down zigairi. There is a . rcal danger of ihc lltilc fellows.‘ and I mean by that the snizlll-' scale grower and tile consumer in the lower income bracket, suffer- ing from these advancing and re ceding prices. r Need For Action “This sort of tiling causes much concern. loss of money and dis- satisfaction on the part of grower and consumer alike. I'm not a hard and fast price control advo- cate. but I do feel that there is real need for some governmental‘ action to stabilize our potato mar-l kci. There is danger of the pllbliv: being exploited by the middle- man." Speaking of price control, Mr. Douglas quipped; “One thing that does need lo he controlled in this country is the heat in those C.N.R. sleepers from tile Maritimcs to Montreal. Tile car I came up in was so hot that we were all nearly boiled. They need to put sCme more air in their air-conditioners." the Provincial Liberal party Gov- ernment seemed to be trying to prejudice the farmers against la- bour. Such an attempt. he said. would fail because every intellig- ent farmer knew labour was the biggest collsulnel" of illc farmers’ products and that without a de- cent wage labour couil not buy. Mr. S. L. Hardy. Charlottetown, presided. Arguments In Freight Rates llcaringfiontinue orrawa, Dec. 4 - 1GP) —Th¢ ‘II. S. Puts Ban 0n Goal Exports WASHINGTON. Dec. b-(CPJ- Export of the grades of coal most .onimollly used ill American homes was banned today, effective im- mediately, by the United States coal operating committee. Purpose of the action Ls to as- sure Americans of supplies- of these popularly used types, technically known as "lump and double- screened coal." Tile ban does not apply to coal shipments to Canada. officials said. Commerce Department officials said the embargo on shipments abroad will increase the amount. Maritimes today called for specie) "protcction" against the effects of‘ freight-rate IllCFPIISFPS and attack- ed fiscal policies of the Canadian, Pacific Raillvoy before the Board. _(,'f Transport Commissioners. The Maritime Freight Wales Act of 1927. WIIICII provides iolwered, rates on some freight Iiallls in that arca- oras cited by one counsel 8S specifically barring the full im- position of raic hoists sought by the railvways, C.J. Burchell of Halifax, assoc- late Maritime-s counsel. put for- ward this contention us a barf)" against some rate increases and called on the Board for other mea- sures to guard Maritime industries against what he termed “disrupt- ive“ effects of higher freight charges. Col. J.L. Ralstcn. former Defence Minister and senior Marltimes counsel in tile rote case. followed with what was expected io be a three-day presentation. opening with a financial assault on the CPR. Under Mr. BurchelYs surprise invocation of a particular clause of the Maritime Freight Rates Act. he contended ihe railways could not now increase tolls on infra-Maritime rzlil irnfiflc or on Marltlmes-originrited freight mov- int-Z wcsiiward out of that area. lic said tho not — under which ZO-per-ccni, ralc reductions are financed by the Fedrral Govern- ment -- provided that the affect- ed rates could he increased only when the rail-ways proved their costs went ahovo 1907 levels. While the railways had made a._n application under this clause oi the Act. lls argued they had not given any evidence regardipg 19H operations 1n iliell- case. Hence. Mr. Bllrchcll held. the Board could "do nothing" undcr the present application to change the Marl- times rates protected under the Act. If the railways wanted tiieas rates boosted. they would have to make a newiailllllcntion and ‘pre- sent new evidence, Mr. Burchell said. As fol" Maritime rates not under M.l".R..A. protection. Mr, Burch- ell declared, the board In dealing with them should give considera- tion io the "special position" 0f the Marltimes, both geographically and economically. He proposed that. if any increases were granted. they should bl lim- lied in their Maritime application by fixed maximum chhrges or by louver percentage increases on long-haul traffic. These would en- able Maritime producers to con- tinua to ship their manufactured goods and agricultural products to other Provinces. liking: “Steady as 1S available to domestic consumers by. nDOLlI} 500.000 tons a month Governor W. Gibson of Ver- nlollt meanwhile told reporters he has asked the State Department to curtail shipments of coal and fuel lil to Canada because of fuel sIlOftugGS in New England. He said Canada had recently placyl all embargo on certain pro- oucts from the United States but not fuel oil and said he would ask for an investigation as to whether Canada is not importing more United States fuel oil than usual. UNDERGROUND HERCULES PONTYCYMMIIR. Glamor-gen» slllre, Wales — (OP) — All rec- ords for one miner's coal output are believed to have been broken May Be Scarcity 0f Heavy Chicken For Ghristmas Trade Possibility of a scarcity of heavy chicken for tile local Christmas trade is seen by Mr. RM. Nasll. senior poultry products inspector Dominion Department of Agricul- ture. Mr. Nzisll said yesterday that if them are not enough heavy chickens in the Province to supply 'tllc Christmas demand. it will be bcr-ausu of lilo large numbers ivlllcil are being transported g1. most wreckiy by truck to Mane. Already. he sold, 30,000 chickens have I¢l‘"Il trucked from tho Prov- iilci- i1» Malillc during the past, few Wvvks. Tllc supply of ducks nnd geese also rlppoalrs to bv scarce and IIIPFC S“PlIls' little likelihood that lhcrc will he a sufficient quantity for IIII‘ Chrisillllls sr-zlslm. On IIH‘ riiilr-r hand. turkeys arc ill uuud supply with PPICCS now at 40 r-rrlils. IJPI‘ pound for Grade A IIIIIIS lllifIPF 1i] pounds rilld 35 (‘i-‘hiilpl-l- pollllfl for those IJVCI‘ that irulg . Less Unemployment in This Province Tilt: unemployment. situation in the Province is better than a yea: ago if figures of the local Nat- ional ErnpLiwmerlL Office are any crilcrloll. Mr. J. B. Murley. man- ager of the local office stated yes- terday. a The Charlottetown office. lie said. is paying 400 claims for un- employment insurance at the pre- scllt time as compared to approxi- mately; 600 claims one yweclr ago. Those 400 claims cover Queen's and Kings Counties vritll about bait of that number being paid to residents of Charlottetown and adjacent areas. Mr. Murley said the Prince County claims for un- ompioymcllt insurance are looked lifter by tile Sulnlllersidc office. The open fail, allowing more work to be done on the fax-ms. and several big building projects in the City. including work on the new Y.M.C.A. building and tho Nurses’ Home of (he P. Islallcl Hospital. llad considerable effect in keeping the unemployment fig- urcs CIOWII. Mr. Murley said. Foreign Ministers Make No Progress LONDDON. Dec‘. 4 - (Cl?) -- Cllurging Britain, illc United stator lirld Frailcc with “interfering with Austrian independence and seek» in; to enslave ller by the provis- ion of ccollolnic aid." FOIBIEI Minister Molotov of Russlu today blocked all efforts by the three other Foreign Ministers at their conference here to get to grips with the Austrian problem. LQNDON (cpl British doctors are experimenting iwith in- jections of vitamin K as a cllilblaln cure. North River Liberal poll committee meeting In hall tonight at 8.30. All inter- ested please attend. by Edwin Greensladc. 3'7. when he hewed 120 tons in six days. PROGRESSIVE 15.—PIIOVlNOlIIL creased, but revenues penditure of public iu which it is levied. We promise that o under review. Abolition of Lond and lic services will be secured through the Conservative policy inaugurated in when Lond Taxes were reduced 209'. (To Be Continued) Inserted by the Progressive Conservative Party he Goes!” hauled by lnncdva (‘onaarvatlva Party -t->oo@oo<@oo§oo’ CONSERVATIVE PLATFORM TAXATION — (o) Taxation for budgetary purposes will not bs in- required for improved pub- sone ex- nds. The Health Tax on liquor and tobacco now er- roneously cotegoried as ordinary revenue will ra- vert to, and be expended for, the purposes for Complete refund of gasoline tux to formers and fishermen on go: used for productive purposes will :aploce the partial fox allowance under thc present Liberal Government. proper annual accounting of oil receipts and expenditures for the current your will be intelligently mode and submitted of the next following session of so that representatives oi the various electoral districts may be kept adequately informed us to the conduct of public oifoirs during the yeor the Legislature Rood Taxes in keeping with I927 l-