MAXIMS CPL MERE MAN la IIIO once, sdrvi is lb gill-DOING. ":.".'..'..'..'""....'l'.'c"." vll in creatige Ivor‘; 9-1 Guardian. Ioulsdcd 1m. llornlnl cnarlotteiown Guardian. Two Cents. Read by Everybody ‘\. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew A woman wants a proper allhaoa witharnan of betterstuiftban herself and needs anything else. , MAXIMS OI A ' MERE MAN It more rthan l CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1945 Z1 10 PAGES . s a . n Delivered 86.00. Mill. $4.00; other Provinces b U-SA. $5.00. NF LD. lSzllgEADY F 0R SELF -GOVERNMENT U. S. Steel Strike Slated For Jan. .14- Eastem liova Scotia llard liit By Storm HALIFAX. Dec. 11—The eastern half of Nova Scotla was cut off from telegraphic communication with the remainder of the Prov- ince tonight by a SB-mlle-an-hour gale that bore telephone and tele- graph lines down. Heavy seas lashed the coast and snow fell as coastal shipping sought shelte . The comm nicatlcn lines went out of order east of New Glasgow shortly after noon today and ‘ele- graph companies reported they could not get messages through to any point east of the Plctou Coun- ty town. Many _breaks in the wires and telegraph poles down were reported and. no estimate could be made of when repairs could be effected. Five Deaths Caused In Cleveland Storm CLEVELAND Dec. 11 — (AP)- Five persons died and more than, s doaen others were injured to; dav as a fiveJneh snowstorm tru& Ohldl it '.........M..luc 1 Y transports ed as the falling flakes were whip- pohdxdino drifts by a BS-milenn hour w Coming Events 1 ..__._ . "Dance -- Mo - ue Saiturda . 1 W‘ 12-11y-41. "York Friday National Film ‘SN "DWI B pm. 12-12-81 "Cmeant Hamel Grov School “my. Detiemer 21st. e 1112-211 "New Glasgow Thursda N t- ional Film Board Moviesyil pin. 12-12-21 "Wanted Turkeys. Geese. Ducks. Fowl and Chickens. Eastern Pack- lnll 00.. Sourig, 11-29-131 "Dan FrqT-nh ivcdnesdciy, Decem‘ 1% if??? "Clu-istmas Cancer in Sea View H111. Tuesd " w. "1 "mi "Clu-ietmas Got-Togetlm- and Dance, Kell ' c Sqhgg] December 2Q. m“ li-lizggg/Yl’. "Citrlstmaa Corlcer (msha. Hall. Satuday, Deoemge; "Bl-yin: daily all kinda of iivo n.2:=::i:.:""‘"a 511i" w Fraser Ltd. ' “he fiYfim "Unloading W -, M. ,3... wwscgfic lmmfll 0°- 12-11-21. “We require a lot of dressed §§i"i.l..{£.°?‘.3§§i ‘.° ‘°.?.‘i" “d? Q . m. n. 01m r ' °° econ. 12-8-81 "Dance in Ora ud Hull. Thurs- memlbq- 1:5» If stormy. w I - Llmchea sold. Cra aud - - 12- 2-11. '0 Em a" “bmidflfy. Baby Wear. Tax/lat. Ind Pan M M riime n1 - "1'- Slbfiey. Decembe: 15th. 6° s. tarmikvltfir- Fridax: Phone collect. C. Green. Irws astiudwIIobm-o "la-Jo stock '9 cram ‘first: need ma. ' 10-1141. "maoeful settlement portant issue. 12-11-31. lhi PITTSBURGH. Dec. ll - (AP) --Thc United Steel Workers (C.I. 0.). rejecting President Truman's appeal to continue at work. today set Jan. i4 for the beginning of a general strike in United States s teel mills. Unless it is forestalied. the strike will be the largest in the history of American industry. affecting an estimated 700.000 workers at basic steel mills and in the allied alu- minum and iron ore industries. At issue is the steel workers’ demands for a 32-min pay in- crease, reieoted by he steal companies on the ground that wages could not be raised without cvmmeusura‘ 1n- creases in the price of steel products. The action. by the union's i16- man policy committee. follows a strike poll conducted by the Nat- ional Labor Relations Board un- der the terms of the Smith-Con- nolly War Disputes Act. The vote showed more than 400.000 favoring a strike and 83.000 against. In the resolution calling the strike. the union declared: “The membership of the United Steelworkers of America have bent every effort to avoid taking strike action. They have endeav- ored at all costs to accoanplish s. od this ail- "The steel industry. because of its determined arrogance and ad- amant refusal to meet its public obll-ilation. must stand condemned as being solely responsible for the present inzpasse. In another resolution. the policy committee sold it condemned Pre- sident ‘lirumsmk proposed labor legislation for ending strikes. as v iously anti-labor and an at- tack upon our basic democratic liberties..." Quebec Man It Sentenced To iiang QUEBEC, Dec. ll-Paul Henri Dery, 26, of Quebec, was sentenced today to be hanged Mrrch 15 af- ter a Criminal Asslzes Court jury found him guilty of murdering his aunt, Mrs. Alfred Giroux, 57, Feb. 17 Members of the jury deliberat- ed their decision after Mr, Justice Lucien Cannon addressed them for more than an hour on the legal aspects of the trial which lnstcd more than two weeks and during which 2'2 witnesses for the defence and Crown were called. Dery was arrested at the scene of the crime. his aunt's home,sonn utter it was committed and n blood-stained butcher knife and pipe wrench were found in his pocket. Noel Dorion and Paul Mlquelon of Quebec were Crown prosecut- ors while Antoine Rlvard 11nd Ross Drouln, also of Quebec, act- ed for the defence. Manville Sets Wedding License NEW ROCHELLE. N Y.. Dec. 1'1 (AP) — Tommy Manville. t1 took out another wedding licence here today. Msnville. married and divorced seven times. wore a firs, chief's uniform when he obtained licence from l-lcrrv Vandroff. aa- sistant citv clerk Manville is hon- orsry chief of Mamatrc-neck Town- n Fire Departmen . wiu. him was his bride-to-be- British-bom Georgina Oaalrmell. in checkered slacks and red sodrs ‘They had planned to be married at Greenwich. Conn . ast Su-nr day. but that plan fell through at the last minute. "reedine Quality Feed odys- Maybe you can on rare occasions. buy livestock feed’! fifty cents per ton cheaper than "Alias" choice grains. birt if p could talk they'd say-quarto: " t's why tails hang own d we figs. D's". Unquoie-andman im- portant point too Think it over. Livestock ma Agency. 12-11-21. "Attention Farmers Albany and vicinity. I will be loading hogs at g3: .. .. ....:::-.."r.e .c""'*°"*"'"-c%'" ' 3""? c. em... A w“ , vomit; gimme-mag. lllllll» Terming Russia a “predatory, aggressor nation." Sen. James o, Eastiand, (D.. Miss.) urge; g,“ economically strong Ger-rum; 55 5 bulwark sseinst the Soviet. He charged that the U. S. is "starv- inl Germans and driving them into the arms of Communism. Plan Atomic Commission (By The Canadian Press) WASIUNGTQN. DEC. 11—Slgle 599F381‘)! Byfnes said today he will seek Russian co-operation in 9.43331 CFEBl-ifl! l United Nations Com- mission on tomic energy controls when he gets to Moscow this week-end. Mr. Byrnea will leave tomorrow for the meeting with Foreign Commissar Molotov and Foreign Secretary Bevin, It is scheduled to start Satur- day. The Secretary of State hopes to return to Washington in about two weeks i-le will slstants -including Dr, James B. Conant, president of Harvard Un- lverslty, and an adviser on ato- mic nroblcms and also diplomatic experts on Europe, Asia, Japan and Iran. Dlsclnslnc this at a press con. ference. Mr. Byrnes announced that Britain intends to iuke up with Russia the co-orrllnnted withdrawal of British and Soviet troops from Iran at the earliest possible date. Mr. Byrnes said Britain so in- formed him a note reportinz that since Russia had decided not to withdraw her forces from I-nn by Jan. 1. Britain would not trv to do so. ‘ Mr. Byrnes said Britain would seek an agreement with the Rug. slans on lnint withdrawal as soon as possible. Disbarred Montrteal Lawyer Sentenced MONTREAL Dec 11 —- (OFF- Richard Robert. disbarred Mont- real lawyer who was arrested in Iowistcrl. Me.. was sentenced io- day to three years- in penitentiary by Judge Amcdee Monet aficr he pleaded guilty to a charge of six thefts totalling $2.566 The sum involved represents monies which Robert received from ‘take Fwithihlm six as- pgg flames 0f Soldiers Allegedly Murdered AURICH, Germany, Dec. l1- (Cl? Cablel-Jlamea of 3'1 of 48 Canadian soldiers allegedly murd- ered by the Germans while pris- oners of war at the time of the invasion of Normandy in June, 1944, were disclosed here today. The bodies of the remaining l1 Canadians were found but could not be identified. Eighteen Con- adians were shot at the ancient Abbey of Ardenne, France. All of these were named, as well as the seven shot at‘ Mouen and 12 of 23 murdered at Authle, near Caen. ‘The soldiers. members of the Canadian 3rd Division, were from the North Nova Scotia Highland- ers of Truro and Amherst, the Sherbrcoke Fusiliers of Sher- brooke,Que., and the Queen's Own Rifles of Toronto. Following are the names and reglmenwl numbers as released at Aurlch:- Those shot at the abbey were:- Lleut. T. A L Windsor, She:- brooke Fusiliers; Tr. J E. Bolt. Sherbrocke; Pte, I. L. Crowe, F-56043, North Novas; Pie. W. M. Doherty, F-400898, North Novas; Pte. C. Doucette. F-553l7. North Novas; Pte.-G.R. McNaugh- ton, F-53l00, North Novas; Tr. T. H. Henry F-301l43. Sherbrooke; Pte. n. keeping, rose-n. North Novas; Pie. G. E. Miller, 04.00130. North Novas; Pie. T. E. Monti, a-soiovwnérrtn “Novasiq Pte. core. -i 5N r ovas; . T. Lockheed, 15-48262’ Sherbrooke; . J. A. Moss. 1145200, North Novas; Pte H. A. MacDonald, F- 5361. North Novas; Cpl. J. F. Mac- Intyre, F-55009. North Novas; T1". HG. Philp, 13-13-1704. Sherbroolce; Tr. G. V. Gill, 0-38300, Sherbrook- es; Pte, H. L. McKell, F-50i75. North Novas. Those shot at Mouen were:- Sgt. T T.C McLaughlin, 43258; 144191; . . 42652; Rfn. J. Campbell, 13-134348; Rfn. E. W. Cranfleld, 84384.83; . . . Perry, B49476; Rfn. G. L. Willett, 3-138240. All of this latter group except Perry were members of the Queen's Own Rifles. Perry was a Sherbrooke Fusllier. Those identified as being shot at Authie, all members of the North Ncvn Scotla Highlanders. were:- Pte. Joseph S._Arscnault, F-504l4; Cpl, Thomas R. Davidson, F-452l0; Jeffrey Hargreaves. 0-52751; Pie. AnihonyJulian, F-55216; Pie. Rod- erick N. MacRae, F-55282; Pie John Melcalfe, F-55243; Acting Cpl. John B. Murray, F-OOWI; Prc. William Nichol. P415694; Acting Cpl, Douglas S. Orfopd, K-264l2; Act. Cpl. James A. Taylord, F- 40829; Pte. Douglas V. Tobin, F- B. 55206; Pte. James S Webster, F- 88456. National Defence Headquarters said that home addresses of the Meyer victims announced at Aur- clients to be deposited with the court clerk but which he kept. ich today were not immediately available. Nazis Had Slave Labor Extermination Policy I By NOLAND NORGAARD NUERNBERG. Dec. 1l—(AP)-— Men, women and children in un- counted numbers were torn from their homes and shipped to slave labor camps in Germany in a cal- culated Nazi "program of exterm- ination by work." the Internat- ional Military ‘Tribunal was told today. Taking up the forced-labor case against the 21 Nan leaders on trial, United States prosecutors said the labor deportations were carried out through "terrcr. fraud and arson." with an utter disre- gard for the dignity of ‘ ‘ ‘. He produced a document signed by Heinrich Himmler. which cun- talned phrases such as these: “Whether nations live in ty or starve to death ts me only iusobr as we need than as aiavea- for our lldtur. We must be hon- aat. decent,‘ loyal and oom- 1 he of our own bl and to no What lisp to the and Isa does oat me la the alilhtaat. , This phase of the case was oz shed altar the l1 dcfandan s uirmed throu i1 hours ‘cl a med history o Nuiism. The documentary movie, not- uatad. the hvarshlrtguthm the Ituis ease coyqredi the rise and decline of aaism all tllelwsy from to the lit- ior bomb-plot trials in i044. A Comic Prelude The sis t of Rudolf Ions fa followed—the brutal treatment of Jews. the torch-lighted congresses of the party, the grinning Hltbr strutting before his hysterical fol- lowers, the parades of the labor front under flabby Dr. Robert My. Time and again the faces of the B1 on trial appeared on the screen. The prosecutors went immedi- ately lntc the forced-labor case. They produced a document detail- ing s program a proved by Al- fred Rosenberg, azf Jliosopner. and a defendant at the trial, for seizing 40.000 000 Polish to , youths from 10 to 14 ycars cf age sand sending them to Germany aa ' ‘QnPIfiTOOLU n kn ma mi 1110': 811732.”... seduces“ R03 Describes Murder Of ' Two Canadian Soldiers French Civilian- Is Witness At Trial Of Nlaj» Gen. Kurt Meyer. By ROSS MUNRO AURICH. Germany, Dec. l1- fCPl-Murder by German troops of two Canadian soldiers, one wounded and th~ other as he was about to surrender, was described today by French civilian witnesses at the war- crimes trial of Ma].- Gen. Kurt Meyer. Albert Guilbert, a mason in the village of Authie. near Caen, tes- tifying on the second day of the trial, said a Canadian soldier ap- proaching a German with his arms raised to surrender in Auth- ie on June 'l, 1944, was machine- gunned to death. Guilbert said he also saw a wounded Canadian soldier bayon- etted and shot to death as he lay unconscious on the ground. LL-Col. Clarence Campbell, as- sistant prosecutor, read into the record statements from other Authie residents. One of them, Maurice Hilkert. described the same slayings 11nd added that six Canadian prisoners later were shot with their hands up. The 33-year-old SS. general is charged before a Canadian Mili- tary Court wltlg, responsibility for the execution of 48 Canadian prisoners during the fierce fight- ing immediately after the D-day landings in Normandy in June, The victims were members of five Canadian regiments _ the North Nova Scotia Highlanders of Truro and Amherst; the Sher- brooke Fusiliers of Sherbrooke, Que; the Cameron Highlandurs of Ottawa; the Queen's Own Rifles of Toronto, and the 1st Hussars of London, Ont, Watched Fighting Gulibert watched the fighting in Authie from the first-floor win- dows of his house as the Germans were attempting to smash the Canadian beachhead and drive the invaders back into the sea. He said that for the seven days following these incidents the bod- ies of 3'1 soldiers lay on the streets of Authie, crushed and mutilated b (Continued on Page '1 Col. s) Russians-Chinese Reach Agreement CHUNG-KING. Dec. 11 - (AP)- Chinese Communists intensified their raids on Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shell's northward supply lines today as Russia agreed to permit the alrbome reinforce- ment of Central Government ‘ troops in Manchuria. The Russo-Chinese agreement facilitating Gen. Chiangs operat- ions in Mnnohuria. reached after weelu of tense negotiations. was announced by the official Central ‘~News Agency. It said the Chung- king Government had won permis- sion to plant itself firmly in the vast northern territory deemed vital for the recovery oi’ war-rav- aged China. " Central Government troops will be pennftted to fly into Chang- Chun. the Manchurian Capital: into Mukden. largest city and vii» sl industrial centre of the territory. and into Harbin. the key to North- ern Manchuria. Still unclarified was the status of the Southern Manchurian port of Dalren. slated for Joint Russo- Chinese operation as a free 00ft» but as yet occupied only by Rus- sian troops. Chinese Communists meanwhile reported that their troops were closing in on two towns on the Tlentsin-Pukow railroad north of Tainan, provincial cupitel of Shan- tung. The towns were identified as Yuchenc and Pingyuan. ..___._--.--- Lana NAVIGATION ccosss PORT ssrnun. Dec. l1 - <01’) ._An accident friee and record king. 1 ton season come a)": QIQQQnaIfitQhC 101M110!‘ D036 of Port Arthur and Willi-Sm with the m0 (m; 1a;- Oa/pt. CI). Secord. It ' ‘ for the east with a c0110 of 355.000 bushels of wheat. Storm Disrupts Power Service An abrupt change in the wea- ther left. the countryside blanketed with two inches of snow yesterday when the first storm of the season swept the Province. Traffic in the Ciiv and towns was slowed down and many motorists drove with lights on at Lb.- height of the storm which was about noon when the wind reached a velocity of 43 miles per hour. Bus service with Borden was disrupted when buses failed to make the hill at Fredericton yes- terday forenoon. Planes were grounded until 4:15 in the after- noon. The car ferry was docked at Borden from 10:16 am until 12:13 um owing to the storm Last night telcgrarirl communica- tigrn with Borden had been broken 0 The Maritime Electric Company had considerable trouble during the day and a few customers were still without service last night. Most of the trouble was outside Charlottetown and was due to two causes .wet snow causing short- circuits and to wires being broken by the wind cc pulled down by uprooted trees. Service to the airport. to Mount Stewart. Hunter River and North Wlltshire was out most of the dav but was restored early last night. The service to Monta- gue was disrupted only about ten minutes. In Charlottetown the service was disrupted only to scattered dwellings except for a section in the northwest section of the City where street lights were out. The telephone company has its troubles too. principally in rural districts. but damage was not exH-nsive. The power tie-up to the airport left the tenants at the emergency housing development there not only without lights but chilly as well. The buildings are heated by a central system with the coal handled by automatic stokers and the fires were low uatli power was restored about 7 p.m. Expect G.M.Strike Will Be “Lcngthy" (By The Associated Press) DETROIT. Dec, ll-(AP)—The United Automobile Workers (CI. 0.), marking the 21st day of their wage strike against General Mot- ors Corporation, launched a um- paign within the union's member- ship today to build up u fund for strikers’ relief. Without stating to what extent such funds might be needed, the international union asked the $1 a week each to support cases of need arising from a strike of “lengthy duration." ilear Income Tax Proposals Proposals that income tax be rc- duced in the lower brackets and exempt usinlcss enterprises such as conperatives and Public-owned utilities be made taxable were heard today at the Senate Income Tax Committee. With the end of the session ap- proaching and the committee's work still not completed. SOme members advanced tne sussesti ~11 that it be converted into a royal commis- sion to work during the parlia- mentary recess. Speaking for the Income Tax Thor- valdson Of Winnipeg urged g com, Income Tax Act. He said its defects went so deep amendments would not correct them He asked that the redrafting be directed to reducing the amount of discretion left to officials and restoration of taxing Indonesian By VEI-N HAUGLAND BATAVIA. Java. Dec. 11- (AH-Defiant Indonesian Nat.- ionalist lesders called lmon 70.- 000,000 Japanese today to resist with arms and even tempt to reinstate eighty. ‘They ‘ ionsl recognition of their re- public as a pie-requisite of peace negotiations. Prime Minister Slit-an- Bialhrir of the unrecognised rcmlbiic de- clared Indonesians would fight further landings of British troops. and a Nationalist leader broad- bim from a radio station near n, lntemat- Soerabaja threatened ma- pcbon- ing for Dutch . . sjahrir aferring to British . r offers of discussion of the dispute after elimkiation of "extremist elements." ‘ ‘ " membership to contribute at least‘ oumsws. Dec. 11 - (om - v Decide 0n BY H.111. PIIQB LONDON. Dec. 11 — (Reuters) -.Newfound1and —Britain's oldest North erlcan colony which guards the approaches to Canada's 5t. Lawrence River basin to- dav was set back on the path lead- ing to selLgovernment after a lapse of 12 years during which she has been administered by an ap- pointed Commission of Govern- merit. The British Government in joint dial-emails to both Houses of Par- liament. announced that the pe0~ Die of Newfoundland next year will elect a national convention by full adult suffrage This conven- tion will be charged with gxgmhL inz the country's position and makinlt recommendations as to the possible forms of future government which will be submitted to the DEODh- 0f Newfoundland at a sub- sequent referendum. Prime Minister Attlee made the nr ouncemern, to an intent, crowded House of Commons, and Viscount Addison. Dominions Sec- retary followed with a similar but ails]; statement to the House of r . Conservatives Agree Anthony Eden. Secretary. and Viscount Cran- bwmle. former Dominions Score. l-BIW quickly associated the Con- servative Opposition with the Gov- ernment's declaration of policy They spoke immediately after their respective Houses had rung with applause for the closing statement by the Government leaders that Parliament. will wish Newfound- landers well in the exercise of their choice Members of ralliament of all opinion wel- former Foreign shadm of political comed the declaration offering the (Continued on Page, 7 Col. 5) Manitoba Increases Hard Liquor Ration WINNLPEG. Dec. 11 - (GP)- WR. Clubb. chairman of the Ms- nitobe Liquor Control Commis- sion. played Santa Claus today. He announced. effective imme- diately. that the quota of spirits in Manitoba is raised from two to three 26-ounce bottles per month. Only one of the three bottles purchased under the new quota may be scotch and one must be other than scotch or rye. Seek To Trace Homing Pigeon NORTH BAY. Ont, Dec. 11- (OP>_ - Spurred by belief of a Northern Ontario pigeon fancier that the message it carried was genuine. efforts continued tonight to trace an exhausted homing pigeon that landed yestmiday in s. loft at Mindemoya on Manitoulin Island bearing a tattered and partly fndecipherable scrap of paved" including the words “we are ery hungry " Harry Mulligan of North Bay said he believed "some persons in desperate circumstances must have sent the message." On s bond on the pigeons leg was the code number 0044-16410, which was traced to Nod-man Michel of Oshawa, who said to- night he could not definitely re- call how he had disposed of the bird but believed it had been ship. 09d to the R.C AF at Dart mouth N S RC A F Headquarters in Ot- tawa said today the bird was not one used bv the Air Force How- ever. Eastern Air Command head- quarters of the RC AF at Hal ifax reported one of their birds had been left in Northern Ontar. io and had not. returned to the Blast Coast. according to their rec- ords. ‘They expressed the belief that it have been captured poison any st- sover- Christiscn "Theracan Jbingaaawarll! ‘basuohabutcil manna may asidulger released by hnmtm in power to parliament. l Qng Leaders In New Resistance Move alone. We never have understood who were termed e ." Lt.-Gen. Sir Miles C. . commander-in-chief of land forces of the Southeast Asia Command. arrived from Singapore for a con- ference vuith Lh-Gen Sir Philip . commander of Allied forces in the Netherlands East In- dies. on measures for the restor- ation of peace in Java. Gen. Christison apparently had W! been em at an Allied con- ference in Sinsamre last week to take all steps necessary to md fighting in Java and ifinrequisit- ion all reinforcements South- east Asia Gourmand could pro- vide. n,“ In moat Allied quarten rwortcd e situation was out except for scattered mining in t area of Buitenamg and con- thusd looting. laid to former of was. h Ban- Colonyk Electors To Form Board Urges Ferry Terminal Improvements A resolution strongly urging in- creased facilities for the North. timberland Ferry iornlinol at Wood Islands was passed at the regular monthly meeting of the Board of Tkade last flight. The resolution, moved by Lt. Col. K. S. Rogers and seconded by Mr. Keith MacKinnon. is to be sent to the Dominion Department of Public Works and to the Island Federal members and Senators at Ottawa. President D. M. Gass presided at the meeting. Those approving the increasing of the facilities at Wood Islands included Premier J. Walter Jones. Messrs. Keith MacKlnnon. R. E. Mutch. and Col. GE. Full. Asked by Mr. DM. Gass what disposition the Provincial Gov- ernment proposed making cf the Kensington Rifle Range. Premier Jones said the range, consisting of approximately 122 acres, had been bought by the Provincial Government for $7,600 from the Department of National Defense and that. the Government had plans for the range which he was not prepared to divulge at the present time. Mr. P.G. Clark. head of the Re- gional Re-Construction Committee, who was to be the guest speaker at last night's dinner. was unable to reach the City in time owing to the bad condition of the roads. Gen. Patton ls Improving I-IEIDELBERG. Germany, Dec. 1i-—Ge.n. George S. Patton, Jr., paralyzed by a broken neck, was improved tonight after a half- hour talk with his wife and his condition was described officially as “very satisfactory." The colorful United States Army general was fully conscious, rut- ional and taking nourishment. A further neurological examin- ation of the injured commander showed "normally active" tendon reflexes. . AYS l; ——i—--——-ih lis liens “foo in: Yon i1 1mm ' (o lute A11 APPolNTMENT g 6,6 - ‘a ‘c TORONTO, Dec, 11 - Minimum and maximum iunlpcraiurc-s: Vancouver‘ 30, 4i; Edmonton -, 24; Regina 11b. 4; Winnipeg 21!), lh; Toronto 9, 1'1; Ottawa '1, l0; Montreal 11, 12; Quebec 10. 13; Saint John 30, 30- Mcncton B, 31: Halifax -_. 33; ariettetovrn 31.. 33; Sydney 28, 52. FORECASTS Lower St. Lawrence and Lake St. John: Strong northwest winds; generally fair and decidedly cold; scattered snowflurrlcs. Thursday. fair and continuing cold, Gulf. North Shore and Bay, Chaleur: Strong northwest gales; partly cloudy and colder with scattered sncwflurries. Maritime West: Strong north- west winds 11nd moderate galea, increasing k1 force; generally fair and colder with scattered snow- flurrles. Thursday: fair and cold. Maritime East: West to norli- wcst gains. decreasing in force towards night; partly cloudy nod colder; light snow in Cape Breton. Thursday, generally fair and cold. lll h tide st 4.28 Fiat q moon December 9.17 P. M. Summer-sled tide teen mim- iles later than Char tetown. CIAILOTTIT%O _ . NEW GLAS W S A! I have Charlottetown 12.15 BM In. halve Gaalettatawa an I-lO l _.-. zzweaksirdnnsi-i.