" B_ig§J_A1_tY 11. 1941 ' r nertius Gift nY.M.C.A. From liolnlans Ltd. A known firm. R. T. Hel- m, Ltd, has subscribed $200, to fie YMCA. financial campaign, .., w“, announced over the week- 1 5,. "Y" officials. The contri- ionl which was much apprecia- ivas made throughMthe Cllal- r. - Ill-he \\ ell- i but ifiilkhn... manaBCT. ll. jggwiifiicial of the "Y" said that me gCIlPrDUS donation on the eve ,1 the start of the general can- " s; would no doubt be of great ‘imcoui-ngcmfitt to the campagrl, Writers. It would send them out Tuesday ivitii determination to, mike tiie drive an unqualified suc=_ less. . The Holman firm is never lack- ing when the need arises to make contributions to improve the wrll- Robert “mg of the citizens of the City 1 sntl Prtiviilce. TRANSPORT DDARD (Continued from Pase 1) viral‘. ' “$3,... his immedi-sterullng be- g"... he realized its importance to tiie various factions involved. For scvcn Provinces —Onturio 1m; Quebec excluded-W. P. Fill- tmgfg i.~f Winnipes. J. L. Ralston of .M0nii‘f‘lll and C. H. Locke of Van- .wu.-e.- had argued that a horizon- hi iili‘It‘.i§8 was “somcthlut; fut‘- ‘..gn" to the i-nteiit of the act. that y; laiiicnt would have said so had, it iritcilded such powers to be vested in the 30nd- ' Mr. Fillmore and his colleagues maintained that the act required the ffi|l\\'ll_\'S to issue new tariffs in individual cases, to make thcm known publicly and to establish their il€t‘(l before the board if any affected parties objected. As Mr. Raistan put it. this would be "a premature hearing by the Board of something it may never have to deal with." Further, i; was not logical that once the Beard had granted the genera! increase that individual shippers ‘should be asked to appear before the same board. . For the railways, C. F. H. Car- son of Toronto and Hugh O'Don- ,rieli of Montreal quoted from a previous court decision holding -tiiat the Board had "most sweep- ing powers" in determining and enforcing rptss. i iiuatls Born To iiewYorkWoman XKIDb. i a IIW Y l6 -(A!)— Qusdruplots were born Saturday to libs. Judith Man-sci. 22, but three died a few hours later. Two boys and one girl died at the Park West hospital about six hours After their birth, the hospital rs- ‘pfirtsd. Another boy remained s VQ. The babies died st 1:30 p.m.. about g, half hour after their nio- ther said in an interview, "I dreamed of the moment when E’ CENTRAL GUARDIAN i This column ls reserved for hcwsi of local Interest, but advertising of; s nowsy nature may h; lnuytql‘ ll flvs cents s word strictly psy- i i able In advance. DR. CAMPBELL will be away from the Polyciinic from pet; 17 to 28. ADDED ARTICLES in the sale tomorrow at the Sporting Club: one Eicctrolux. one radio. i BEBE FWOM TORONTO —Mrs. Alex Corbett, Toronto, and her two children arrived in the City Satur- day nlsht on a visit to Mrs. Cor- bett's mother, Mrs. Laura. Mac- Kenzle. Unfortunately, Mrs. Mac- Kenzle is at present a patient ln the P. F. Island Hospital. nmanas. 1n- BONSIIAW 4m.‘ uneral of the late Mrs. Charles Moore was held from Bonshaw Church Saturday afternoon. serv- ices were oonducted by Rev. C.A., Hicks and Rev. A.E. ‘Todd. Inter- merit was in St. Catherine's Ceme- tery. Rev. Mr. Hicks and Rev. Mr. Todd officiating at the grave. The pallbearers were, Everett Crosby, Gowns Cousins. Stephen MacLeod, Malcolm Lamont, Seymour Mac- Lean, Colin MacLeod. HOUSE T0 OPEN MARCH 18- The Provincial‘ Legislature will open Tuesday. March 18. Premier J. Walter Jones announced last night. ‘Ihe reply to the Address from the Throne will be made by Mr. Forrest Phillips, Second Dis- trict. Prince, and the seconder of the Address will be Mr. Eugene Cullen, Third District, Queen's. The lateness of the date for op- ening the House is due to several reasons, the Premier said, th chief ozie being the time necessitated for the considering, and concluding of the Domlnlon-, Provincial financial agreement. . i AMATEUR ARTIST-Mrs. Fred Tupliin, Indian River, is receiving congratulations that one of her‘ portrait studies. that of a little glri entitled "Janice," was hung. in the Art Exhibition at the I-lar- rls Memorial Gallery, Charlotte- town. over the week-end. Mrs. Tuplln, the former Dolly MacDon- ald, R.N., was n consistent prize winner in the art section of the Provincial Exhibition until the Exhibition closed its annual shows s few years ago. Her friends throughout Prince Ediwsrd Island n" happy for the present redo!- nltion of her work. wonsrbisustsii (Continued from P186 l) scene. Fifty M the victims were gQXS, three of them American men. The mutiny said PM! Km‘ neth Newton Poe and oo-Pilot 34W oii . they'd nut my baby in my arms. Now I don't have enough arms to held them all." - The quadruplets were born pre- maturely and were immediately plated in an incubator. _ DIRTNS. MARRIAGES. ' DEATHS 50c Per insertion MIARRIAGES iiucil-irserzaciirznlv _ A. zhm Qtilttii Manse, Jailtlary 25, 1947, by ,1?“- b. Carlyle Webster. Clara Jean Jlflllachcm of llopefield to Vernon IGWYKe Duck of York. W w "iinaarnis .',',_|,§I'_~\l —_At his home in Hops F‘? "'1 Buiiduy. Fob. w, Leopold lIlTAll (lghd yenrs- mnera] -T“°5‘1t"'m<uh1ha at 9.30 to st. Anne's Cllilrch, ‘QALLA \' T . writ. _\t'::: _ Iii this cliy.§undiiy, 1'1 Arthur Gallant, age l-l c, l, u. uf Mr. and Mrs, Etniie 54"“ Oysici" Bed Bridge. H15 “mm” "Yr twins at thc a. A. H'“"““('.\I-'1tncrnl Home. Funeral iii ‘iliS will be announced :.l'v‘l.\'t slums-At the RE. Isl- "d H “Rilzil, Saturday, Feb. l5, ‘guild-Milli A. Livingstone in ills m‘ Win". Funrrai from Clyde ~“'J.Vtcrlzin Church this zifternoon. service start- "ti - l0. Interment Clyde River ttmeicrjy. lPENCE-Jfhl funnel cf the HI f“ it Sh»... will be held 1...... o tiaznr of Earle W.,V. Sawler, Fall" "Fravei-se, Monday after- -"°°"- Feb. 1'! at 2 p.m. Inter- ‘ttttnt iii Seorletc-wn Cemetery. lCllANnLEll-At the home of her flutter. Philip Chandler. North zulllOli, on Feb. 15. 1N7, Miss {MAW Chandler in her 79th year. remains are resting at the §9tttclifle Funeral Home until ‘Mon today, then to Wlnsloe North ‘United Church for services st 2.30. interment in urch Cem- geieri’. Please omit flowers. litmus-At in Gerald Btreei,_ Jii- l6. ics-i. James Dennis 1.. hi‘ €8ih year. The remains are ""1": st his late residence where short service will be hell ‘rues- il’ afternoon st s o'clock, than _the salvation Army Citadel for lrvlcs at 2.80. Interment In file's Cemetery. t ' ‘N. D. IVIacLean unnanraxan EMBALMER Charlottetown ul- llatb Iiltsbln lives II Kaye also were Americans and thO 0th,,- mo o4 the crew were Colom-i biarls. i Killed in the crash was Harold coward of Calgary, Alta", an ot- flclal of the Tropical 011 WWPWY- The American P85561190“ We" ldmtifled ss Carl I-Iubman In .r.r<. Huffendick, listed as officials of ‘Texas Petroleum, and 3-3 . Burton; an official of the TNPICBI oii compalny. Their addresses were not given. Allen Campbell 01 10"‘ dun, 9,1» an official of the Troll" ical Oil company. was will", victim. i Prominent Colombians also were, aboard. lncludingiMuse MOI-Ws- l, member of the Colombian COIP, grass, and Jaime Rodriguez Lallndc. president of a chain of drut! 5101?," operating throughout the we“? ¢~ The four-engined _ D04 Pa" w“ flying the 500 miles from ranquilla to Bogota and was c! f, hours overdue when first word 0 the disaster around 2 P-m- seeped through from persons iivlns ih m‘. slmosts inaccessible YOEIOYI- , Irlforinants said it was practic- ally impossible for hhYi-hiflfl have lived thrcush the flash- Peasflyns Said the plane hit lieu | the lop of the mountain. the WP, 1,000 feet of which is vii-vitally Vet'- tlcai. to, 1 Other Great Di: asters The greatest previous lusts qf life aboard a non-military Plane M" tuned when the Maxim Goiky. “one. largest land ohms at t,“ time, crashed with another Hi4‘- "an at Moscow in i935. The B, pgfgflng aboard the MBXlm GOIIKY, were killed and one died in the other craft. In a crash of an Am-, erlcan overseas airliner in New- dland issi October. 30 aims, were. killed. A Chinese National 0d near Taingiao em Ja-tr. 5 withi 42 killed. i 1i, was the second mflim‘ 5°l°"1'i A DC-Si fell in the Cal-are 111118195 recently ltilllnl 1"- IT Killed In Crash 0f Italian Plans , ..._-- I ROME. Feb. 16 —(AP)-Tho Ital- ian Air Ministry disclosed today that 11 persons were killed In 1h! Ministry plans which orsabcd southeast of hcrc Saturday on routs to Calm. Unofficial sources Saturday had put the number at 10. The ministry released s list of 11 passengers and six crew members snd ssld sli were dead This list lnciutlld A-niml All!!! Barcntl. idsntlfi as s rslisttvs of Ki!‘ l-‘srotik of ypt. Ind PhlliP Prescott Marion. Istcntiflid l! I United ltstos merchant. A sourcc close to tho British Innbassy hi" said ycststdsy tlic Embassy had word flan the Air Ministry that a cotuin of the EIWIII" m"! W" "I tlie plane. The croft. s three-engine Bsvctl- ‘ wear almost anything, I Aviation CorPf-‘miiml Plane °r“5h“|a d THE CHARLOTTETOWN GQARDIAN 6 alts-swag bhclf nstui ‘ ‘ m” ac on rs urno IIIIDYCI . Asmsln o f d“. m, Inlay-back sgrocymslglnngalcts 15:. o" Says British Mining Conditions licry Bad ,tBy Tho Canadian Press) LONDON, Feb. l6 — Because milling conditions 1n Britain arei "still very bad", John Rdscher, 6l,| Durham coal miner, ls flying to‘ Canada with his wife 8nd three: sons. i Tflklhi! off from Crul/don air-i port Saturday night, Rlsdler said 5 "I hope to get a mining job at ' Lantzvilie pit near Vancouver at: £10 ($40) weekly while my sons are looking around for any job that will keep them out of the pits." Rischer said he had been s oosl miner since he was ll when he worked as a pltboy for two abdi- llngs a week. Eight days ago he resigned his job hs charge man and deputy overseer at the Fen- wick steam coalpit. ‘ With him went his wife Nora and sons William. 31. Norman, M, and Jack. 24. Durdng the last three years the family saved £800 ($3.300). Air passage cost them £500 (82,000). i Paris Designers Ilse Wide Choice In Spring Fashions By Jacqueline Souvre PARIS, Feb. 16 -(AP)—Fashi0n is such this spring that you can including. grandmother's feathered hat or your mother's 1925 box-coat. and still be called s "chic woman." Every designer has. followed his own track, and if you rave about a ‘full-pleated skirt, you can have it. But don't snub any slim woman dsintlly stepping past you because of her narrow skirt, for she is as mmrt as you. All big houses, however, have dc- signed feminine collections putting the bust and hipllne into full value. Some, like Lucien LeLong, Jacques Fath, Christian Dior, have added some extra inches to the skirt. which look like ballet-frocks. pleat- ed and held tight around the waist by large belts. One of the great novelties is the A introduction of hand-embroidery on dresses and the use of cotton for dressy suits and evening dresses. a fashion already introduced in the United States but which appears for the first time tn Paris. All sleeves are elaborate and de- signers have taken pride in invis- ible seamsThus fai- they succeeded l.n making set-in sleeves look like raglan-sleeves and vice vcrsa. But the shoulder-line remains rather drooping. except for some tailored suits. such as Lanvinls, which have the square-padded sleeves. For printed dresses and stilts. sleeves reach over the elbow. Often. little capes are wrapped round the shoulders. hemmed with lace or tulic. _ The only tiling new about skrts is the introduction nf "i" """‘ "~ feet. tinderneath is a straight pen- cil-skirt on top of which com». -'~ kind of pinafore of pl ted cr Q9?“ material. Often, the underneath skirt is slightly hobbled and slit on the side or in front. Britain Plans- To Boost Dwn Speed Records (By lttmald Bodfnrtl) LONDON. Fob. lti-(Reutcrsi— Plans are being \V0l‘l(t’(‘.l out in i ‘three London offices u. make "unwbont. it shelters run oii asssilable" the world's all‘. 18nd‘ and water speed records. now held by Britain. During the coming months Bri- tain's three record holdcrs~Gioup Capt. E. M. Donaldson, fastest; flycr; Sir Malcolm Campbell, Lash, est on water; and fur broker Juith, Cobb, fastest on land-plan ss-i sauits on their own records. Prey Slit records are: 616 miles an hour! in the air, 141 miles an hour on. water, and 388 miles an hour on‘ I1 . Apart from the American chisl-, lcnge to the Gicster Meteor jctq plans, which set up the world's his... ah- crash in less than a month. inlrspeed r960"! sfiPl- 3- 1m- "iw" high cost of converting one to is a British challenger in the Dc Havllland Swallow. a plane sim- ilar to the one in which test pilot Geoffr y De Havilisind was filled v last y r when flying at a speed “"1" ,slmple Cobb plans to put the land rr- said. believed faster than sound. cord of 400 miles an hour when. he goes to Utah next August. An- other Briton dissatisfied with his existing record on land is Lt.-Cel.' Goldie Gardner, holder of the world's hsby car record at 25D miles an hour. Gardner believes he can improve it. 8h- Msieoim Campbell, one-time, fastest man on land and now fast-i est on water, will attack the ist- ter record in late spring with the world's first Jstbost. Another British speed record ts the blue ribsnd of the Atlsntk. held since i988 by the Queen Mary. In August of thst yssr the Mary did the east to west cross-. in; st. an, average speed of S .00. knots and the rsvcrss crossing st an average of 30.90 knots. If the Mary loses tho record it is likely to go to hsr slstership Queen Elisabeth. reported to be capable of s spssd exceeding at. knots. 80s of! ‘Nrrsclns, 1c milss south- east of Rome and not hr from tbs Ansjo bestihhssd. ‘The Mr Ministry sold icing on ths wings probobly i llssenstti. Ill-i into tbs ‘lyrrhnisncsiusd the crash. ,Rushton, of Btirch Ridge, n. s. Fur Company Reorganized A meeting of shareholders of ‘The Mount Albion Fur Company Limited" was held Saturday ever,- lng, February 15th. in the office of the Royal Packing Company, Charlottetown. Dr. J. T. Lantz, Charlottetown. was elected Presi- dent and J. S. Jenkins, Charlotte- town, was elected Secretary ‘Treasurer. Dr. J. T. Lantz and Messrs. J. D. Jenkins and R. R. Bell. Charlottetown, were appoint- ed Directors. The cvmilflhy Was Incorporated on December l8 1913, with the late Robert Jenkins. Mount Al- bion. President and the lute ,George E. Henderson, Charlotte- town. Secretary Treasurer with aulhtlrity lu engage in the busi- IIESS of fur farming with beaver as a. specialty. In 1917 it was estimated that several hundred beavers were io- cated on the Company's property at Mount Albion. The cost. of fen- Qm! the animals located in such a large territory as that acquired i.y the Company was prohibitive and "to helver. once available food iwas consumed. emigrated to ilew territory outside the defines of the COMDImy and the venture was not a success. It was decided at the "ICEIIIIB held on Saturday even- !" w M" Th9 N01181:! surveyed and boundaries established and to Qlultaliu on present upper-um. ities offered by the heavily wood- ed well watered property that t..- closes a large area. It was brought out at the meeting that two col. onies of beaver are at present lrrlhabltatin: dams built on the COmPI-riys property. at... Immigration Plans Delayed While Housing Short OTTAWA, Feb. 1e —(CP)—-The Government plans u. dfilgy any m- nouncement or: s general immi- gration policy until an end of the hull-Slut; shortage in causal. is in $18M, it was learned authoritative- ly today. A source in close touch with Government affairs told the Canad- ian Press that the cabinet liss def- initely decided that there will be no ideclsred Mr. McKay, "lies in the 0pm G00!‘ policy on until the qustion solved. The Cabinet's decision, he said, was communicated to is caucus of Liberal Party members when a provision repealing the Chinese Exclusion Act came under heavy fire. The provision was included inia bill which. among other th‘ii:=. crin- tinued wartime {"1" which dependents o! members of the armed forces u... . come into the country without be- lrig subjected to the Immigration ct. immigration of housing ls When the bill came up for second reading in the Commons Opposit- ion members and Liberal members from British Columbia. objected to the way in which the Government was planning to repeal the exclus- ion of Chinese. The source mid that Resources Minister Glen was under particular- ly heavy fire at the Liberal caucus and that finally External Affairs Minister St. Laurent stepped into """ ‘" explain the exact extent of the bill. . ,-_ Alrie .~ii.d that Mr. St. Laur- ent made it clear t-hnt he supported removal of dis/orianirlatlon from Canadian laws but that things had to come in order. For instance, the, question of housing in Canada had‘ to be solved before _ there could‘ be any mass immigration. There were predictions that M st. Laurent would repent in the Commons t-he assurances he had given the Liberal caucus and that his explanations would set maul’ minds at rest. w li-Btiat Power No Good For Halifax (By The Canadian Press) HALIFAX, Feb. l6—'I"his old port and n captured German U- electric power all right-but it seems the current ls different. Oh Saturday. city ofliclals dis- cussed ways of combatting power shortage in the event of a pro- longed coal strike and one source came up with the bright idsa that the idle power-charged U- boat might be put to good use. ‘he It up to some convenient downtown dock. it was proposed, and pipe the power ashore. However, naval and electrical engineers tonight pointed out the difference in currents and the the other. "The city used alter- nating current and the U-boat direct current and never the dull meet-it's just as as that." an engineer FIND DEATH ACCIDENTAL OXFORD. N. 5-. Feb. IU-A coroner's jury yesterday decided that the death of Edger William who was killed when he wsl thrown from. a truck Ihidsy night. had been accidental. Rush- fnn was thrown from the truck‘, when the driver, John I. llmbrll. lost control of the vshlols after it struck s bump- ro naval. nv runs "coupon, ‘Feb. 1s —(CP)-Food Off To Returns From Lecture Tour Across Canada -ww~wwnssu-»- Mr. Willard McKay The speaker at the Baha'i nub- lic lecture at the Charlottetown Hotel on Saturday evening was Mr. Willard McKay of this city. The subject was, “The Power Behind the Plan". Mr. McKay said in part: "The Baha'i social program s the great reformer and reform was long considered radi- cal and utoplan; but the progress of history si-nce the turn of the century has been in the direction he foretold." The speaker slim- mflrized this plan as an education- a_l drive to replace tive motive with one of collabora- tion; to expand local and national 'know that the individuals great- -est advantage lies in the welfare jority rule into all zidministratioii; necessary and practical. ‘The power behind this plan,‘ ‘lofty character of Baha‘u'llah ind iin his sublime and inspired pro-, de- _ t8- actio/nary and hostile governments had been In the face oi , nouncements. ,termined persecution by the of Iran and Turkey Iilstigatod FY1411! the Mohammedan priesthood, the Founder of the Baha'i Fall. liar- lessly advocated justice foi- common man. urged the need worldwide disarmament, i Chairman ‘ ‘Judge the eompeth, loyalties to s. universal scope; to.‘ of all humanity; to inculcate thc'c"-‘-‘i principle of consultation and mzi-‘of high-minded iieflple 9VeFYWh°Ye~ i To keep the body physically, arld,however, were careful not to carry to rwllw spiritual ideals as true. the miriii morally clean were tasks their protests too thr- the cf calleiliby ‘he r a universal auxiliary language, solve t , Scout, Guide Week Good‘ Start i Boiy scout and Girl Guide Weak got off to an auspicious start yes- icrday afternoon with the holding of a vesper service in the Prince of Wales College auditorium. The service which began at 4 o'clock was largely attended. coni- crcte evidence of the interest tsken in these movements by the citizens of Charlottetown. Troop Leader Paul Ctldmore pre- sided. Soated on the platform with the were Mayor B. Earle MacDonald and Mrs. MacDonald, l-LL. Palmer, Rev. SJ. Davies, Mn. J.Y. Reay, Provincial Commissioner of Girl Guides, Mr. Stanley Mclrmis. Queens District Commissioner and Gail Buchanan, William Kennedy, Lorraine Mac- (xrmac, and Graham Jenkins of the Brownies, Cubs, Guides, and Scouts respectively. His Worship B. Earle MacDon- ald in officially opening the serv- ice stressed the great influence the Boy Scout and Girl Guide organ- izations had on the formation of character or the young people who were members. The-re was no 0th!!!‘ organization which had done so much for the young people of this city, province and Canada as had the organization founded by Lord Baden-Powell, Mayor MacDonald said. "Provincial Commissioner Th4; address 9f the Provincial people present and was lstened t0 Iwlth careful attention. . Quoting the words cf the Found- Ier, Lord Baden-Powell, who said the cardinal aim cf the Boy Scout movement was to "replace self with service", Mr. Davies said the 081T?- irig out by the Scouts and Guides iof that call would more than lust- ,ity all the time and effort spent in bringing the movement. to its pres- worih all the time and effort in- volved, Mr. Davies said, and that. different situation. Every Labor the Scouts and Guides had suc- member agrees that, cesdcd- in those twin accompllsh-iwith the crisis which has left the merits was a tribute not only to,Unitcd Kingdom cold, troubled and imemseives bu; w (he leader; whoifristrated, the administration has entrusted with their given the impression that socialist physical and moral welfare. snd described the establishment of Davies said. They were traits 811d \_ world governnnnt which can create that reign of pggpe and order for which we ytcarn." This talk milrks the end oi a ‘lecture tour undertaken hv 1v ,McKa_y in the interests of Bahai Faith. The itinerary cred sixteen Canadian cities 5,1,1, nine the UUV- and ‘the me EEYY provinces. One of 8h spots" of the trip was ‘ht from Vancouver to Cal ‘across the Canadian Rookie, i While in Vernon, B.C.. Mk5 fr}... Kay met and had breakfast with Mr. and Mrs. Edward lwlcMuyrlg, until recently of Kcrlsingtoil p E. I. Another Island cncodnter iéltglMiss Jean Boswell of Vrczrirla, t» -._. now assistant to the p.35- or of the United Church in Lctll. biifiile. Alberta, Mr, ‘liar-Kay was aso entertained ll'l Victoria, B,(J,, by Mn- D5115)’ Lyle of Charlotte- mw: ‘rigging!’ 12:3’), dadughter-irl-liiv, . l.‘ 8!‘ O “i. of Charlottetown. s n forme”, 5 Rumors Con. Franco ilas Castle In Spain SHANNON AIRPORT, Eire. Feb. l6 -- (CP) —— The Press A.- sociotion today quoted Jose Gil-oi Perelra, until recently premier of the Spanish govcr-nmeut-in-exiie, ss reporting rumors in Spain than Gen. Francsco Franco had bought a castle in Eire as a possible ref- ugc. "It is oommoliiy held iii Spain that if Franco is driven from power be will take refuge in Ireland." Girai was quoted as saying in an interview when he stopped litre oii hi5 way from Paris to New York by Ais‘ France. Mlntstsr Btrschey now plans to fly to Canada and tho United States, nest week instead of travelling b)’, ship, it was turned today. , Strachsy was schsdulsd to ssii fol‘. Cplilflp ear this wlek- but post- pomd his b because of the Blit- ish rust crisis. In North Amorlss he will confer with top-ranking Csnsd- ian and Asnsrlosn food sports. qualities which would make them based on teachings given eighty Boy Scout Field Commissioner, the, years ago by an Iranian noblemainimtn SJ. Davies, was an inspirih8. uhilfiu- th l nus ber of young‘ throplst, Baha'u’llah. His plan lemme "° e “s” r n high position in the estimation iby critics of The lessons of moral and Pills‘ V5055!‘ 8150m- l! Wt» iical cleanliness and the spirit Ofi ‘sportsmanship which were iearnedW-rlovement HD9681‘ i0 think Scouts and Guides would the hem well in saint life, m. have W" improved even it Pious PAGE Fl v r. Iltivcrniiitint Warns All Civil Servants Pbllowing is the text order-in-councii by the Provincial Government‘ and forwarded to all provincial civil servants: "Council having under consid. eraflon the relationship of public servants and their responsibility to the Government did and doth hereby order that no public ser- vant. as defined in the Public Service Act. being 1 Geo. VI, Cap. 28. or any person contributing under the provisions of the Pub- lic Service Superannuation Act, being 9 Geo. VI. Cap. 31. shall accept any appointment, in an advisory capacity or otherwise, in or to any organization wihere such organization may st any time be receiving or seeking financial ss- sistance from the Government. "Council further ordered that no such persons as referred to in the foregoing shall make available to any person information acquir- ed, or which may be in their pos- session, by virtue of the position they hold; nor shall they lend. themselves in any way to any‘ organisation or movement which might enable such bodies to press demands on the Government." Fuel Crisis Strips Labor Gov’t 0f Gilt By JIAMES McCOOK LONDON, Feb. l6 - (C?) -The fuel crisis has stripped poiltitls of gilt and gingerbread for the Labor ‘Government and its supporters. Thus far, support o,f Prime Min- ister Attlee’; administration has been faithful eve-n when the sur- face of party harmony was ruffled Foreign Secretary ‘Bevirrs foreign policy. The critics of an But the fuel crisis presents a Ln- dealing iplulnlng is hardly something to La bor t h a t could some sections of the Government's timing failed. For instance it is argued that there might have been some better citizens and thereby enable specific wamlng of the danger be- them to have a powerful and dir- fore Fuel Minister Shinweli sud- ect influence toward making a bet- ter tip-rid society. ; The service opened with singing of the the ierowd sang the hymn; t Help in Af§°s Past." _ On behalf cf the Brownies, Cubs. ‘promise was made by Gail Buch- anan, William Kennedy- 107131"? ‘MacCormac, Graham Jenkins. The presentation of gold curds ‘Guides Jane Johnstone and Hea- thcl‘ Lantz. Alter a few closing remarks by the chairman, Troop leader P801 \Ii'llQ had participated in making ‘the service such a success. the ser- Canada." RETIRES FROM TRANSPORT DEPARTMENT ‘ orttawa. Feb. i6 f tCPi - \\'iiiiei- C. Surttes, assistant chief cf aids to navigation 0f U"! T111115‘ port Department, retired Saturday from the Government after 46 years of service. At a reception in his honor, Hope IV. Ailderscli. director of Marthe igervjccs, said that Mr. Surtees‘ iarchiiccitlmi abilities Ill the de- signing of lighthouses were lit? first objects seen by visitors to Canada as they flhiiwadled H511‘ fax lttrd Vancouver. Similar monu- ment.» were Iolilltl thruushfllli 1"‘ timid wateruvays. Actress Loraine Day (Mrs. Leo Durooiler) goes tn court to charge Lcs Angsles Judge George Docicweller wltih "prejudice". had asked her "to show cause" wh The Judge y lier divorce from airport executive lily Hendricks shouldn't be sci aside following hcr marriage to Dur- ocher. ‘Illutil at loft. Midway in the service, the large |for hotlseholders "0 god Our tchief English industrial area. was made by Mrs. J-Y- Fill’ mi Cudimore, who thanked all those? vice closed with the singling of "Oi Hendricks seated behind ths actress. Her attorney ls ting dorriy announced in the House of iCommons speech 10 days ago that there would be electricity cut-offs Ngijgna] Anthem, ifor industry and severe reductions throughout the i Friends of the government say ,that if Herbert Morrison, Labor iGuideg, and smalls, the renewal Qt.‘ ileader in the House. had been on hand instead qt sick in hospital, timing would have been better all t around and the Government's face , would have been saved In the end the responsibility comes to Attlee‘s door and he is not avoiding it. Still supreme in party esteem, and unlikely to lose hi5 place to others who might want it. Attlees assets in more normal timesPquiet ways, precision and friendliness-are not too well suited to the crisis. Parliamentary veteran-s say that Winston Churchill or Lloyd George would have made fuel saving a glowing crusade by speeches but Attlee in his quiet radio appeal Simply told the unpalatable facts and asked the people to bucklc to against this new emergency. After 20 years of economic tin- certainty and war, Britons have become expert judges of calamity speeches and many thought that Attlees did not measure up to the hour. Russia Protsts Acheson Attitude LONDON. Feb. 16 —tAP)—The Moscow radio reported satin-day night that Foreign Minister Molo- tov had protested to the United States enubassy in Moscow against the "hostile" attitude shown by Dean Acheson, Under-Secretary of ltste. before a recent Senate helm, i I The report said the protest in- volved Acheson! remark Feb. 10 during s Sonata hearing on the ap- pointment of David Lilienthai as chairman o.‘ the United States Atomic Commission. In reply to s question, the radio said, Achason stated "Russia's for- sign policy ls aggressive and ex-i pnnsionist." t "On Feb. 14," said the Moscow, broadcast, "the Minister of Foreign‘ Affairs of the II.S.S.R.. V.M. Molo-I tov, dlsintohod a note to the Am- bassador of the U.S.A. in Moscow, Gen. Bedell Smith stating that the Soviet Government draws the at- tention of the United States Gov- ammerit to the inadmissible be- havior of Mr. Acheson. who-ce- spite his official position-hallowed himself to make at the Senate a declaration which was a artist slnnde and hostile to the Soviet Union." ‘rwomesnbersof theUriited states Smatc Atomic Committee came to ' ‘" ‘s defence ssturduy his-ht- Olicirmsn Bourke llickenlooper (Rqa-Ia.) told s reporter he thinks Acheson put into words "what is apparent to My Immfllfll observer of Russia's actions and program." Senator Edwin C. Johnson (Dem.- Coioi. s committee member. mitt he belisvcs the Russians "are out- tbe wrong inference on what no (Acheson) said." recently passed \ RANKIN'S BRONCHIAL COUGH SYRUP This well known prspero- tion gives prompt rclisf of bronchitis, tight or ciissty coughs and colds. Large Bottle 50c Sold Only At RANKIN'S DRUG STORE Annual Meeting Maritime Fair AMILERST. N.S.. Feb. 18 -—(CP) -—Mayor NS. Sanford was rc-elcct- ed chairman of the Maritime Win- ter Fair mission- at the annual meeting here during the weekend. Commissioner HA. Ripley, re- porting it had cost the town $6,559 to operate the fair and maintain buildings last year, said expenses would also be heavy this year. I-Is was authorized to confcr with members of the Maritime Stock Breeder's AssOClltIDII on possible financial assistance. Close to 200 head of beef cattle will be entered in the Maritime spring show and market sale in the fair buildings March l8 and 19, it “'25 SILIICUHCEG. WILL DRADKDDWN (Continued from Page 1) their seats. It is agreed that this record at a time when members have sot a $2.000 annual tax-free increase in indemnity looks very bad to the back constituencies. J. M MacDonnell, opposition financial critic was reported as particularly incensed over the absence oii Friday of nearly half the party strength. Mr. MacDon- ncll who is national president of , the Progressive Conservative party and left a high-salaried post to serve in the Commons is ssl-d to have personally rebuked ls num- bcr of his Ontario colleagues. Pruizi-essive Conservatives ad- mitted over the week end that had their party been at full strength, they could have success- Iully challenged the deputy speak- er's ruling. While this would not have meant a government defeat it would have meant a rebuke of the maioritir not only to Mr. Mac- Donald himself but lg Defeneg Mr-nistcr Brooke Claxton who de- clined to answer a quegflon "keg by Col. Merritt, thus precipitating the vote. Attendance of member; {mm the Maritimes and from Wes-tern Canada has been uniformly high this_session. Ontario and Qupbgq lVf.P.s who are in the habit of slipping off home for week-end; i with their families, say the Mari. timers are merely making g vii-- m‘? 0T "EPESSIHJ and that they too would belaway from the house if they didrlt have so tar to gmvgy I11 Bu)‘ case. attendance in tlio green chamber will show improve. merit in the future. The party chiefs have spoken. Ontario 5nd Qluebet: members will obey "or e s6." ii. S. Owes Russia Lend Lease Materials WASHINGTON. Feb. l6_(A.Pi- State Department officials, it was learned today, have informed Sen- ators that the Units-d States must Slllil Russia snmc $25,000,000 worth of gn-ntls ordered originallyt under lend-lease or violate “agreements made ill good faith." The State Department's view was made pub- llc h_v chairman Styles Bridges tRep. N.H.l of the Senate Appro- priations Committee. It had IIEnPd comptroller general Lindsay C. Warren testifi that the shipments to Russia. as wcli as China, Brtzii, France, Belgium. the Netherlands and Australia, were prohibited oy Congress. During learned the squabble. Senators from lend-lease admin‘!- trator Chester Lane that there is “no question in my mind the! they are binding on our govern- mciit." Ho noted that they were made before Japan surrendered and be- fore Congress reduced lend-lease, or fiwt the Dec. 31 deadline tiitrr which the Unitcd States \v:i.- iii pay no further shipping cost.» IIuIIuun-n-n- n-‘LJ oer u MSTwirH cumin/i s iaut1i-.t'.ii.i~ii. (iitimt awn (Oil) vit-‘lill ucirrrzv’ MIXTURE S