A - ggnllUARY ,1. chain's, hdlloeuonslsemmae CEliTIiAl. suasolsii Piedge Support-To" t ‘ r- --,;;~_'- m X-liay Campaign, - rlr-rucoolsr .' a > - Conducted by . ROBERT LEE Morlum‘ , . . v AT QUEEN HOTEL _ . “IANUARY ~21 to annually 1o,‘ INCLUSIVE .- i s H. DAILY i... 1, o... eras rowan or relevant." Feb; s, m. "roan, cocoa, ‘narrow-s Musicale. ‘ DAILY PRAYER snnvlols-adieswo PM. All Welcome. Without Fee or Collection. rm. Bteiie si-lsco weeps as sbs holds her daushier. Mn- Virginia Mcmhiney, 0|, who collapsed when a coroner's jury in Los Angelou, Calif. recommended that she be tried for murder in the poisoning oi her husband. She allegedly admitted putting ant paste in Everett Mc- nlhureyb coffee. According to a tatement reed before the Jury, Mire. Mcllihiney said. "I loved him. but I wanted to make him sick and nurse him." M.” “gggbly lino t lo d Ri n use. Mich. pleat was smalls? units effected when 12,000 wm-kermereolaid off because of the ‘hos-tags p: steel parts caused by nation-wide cieel strike. A" “MI-beefed shorten in wheat wells a hungry winter for thou- sands of people in Iiurope and Asia. Although the U. B. has bed two bmPi-‘i’ "fill. 010011 d. have draw-a wheat out of the mills filter than the ferries can replace it. Nations “on relief" are asking 05 hnbiroflmorewieetiihalililifilldplanaodfot. Countries b ear whaat have increased tlleh- import requests similarly. Ohsrt “We glows how wheat delciney will affect nations abroad. deli :5 "“‘""'.':.."* a five are? haivanee IDI qiwlunn! IIPAIII I00 Deli by llr m: quanta on cua nag: _ i Folio brief b t Wm‘ ‘AJ. Jan!‘ 1-21-11. secrets?! ‘if the T3 m: locus aannwsan 0a.. at? giunubagllclgfodanliin r a 1, for so»: taking. i-aisi Oil‘! POLICE 000B!‘ — At the City Police Court were two cases of drunk was fined 85 and tsmoroll‘; d?” COS and the other remanded one‘ week‘. TRAIN THREE HOURS LATE- The Borden train arrived at 10:10 l"! Ililht. lbout threé hours and a half late. Practically all the de- lay was caused by the late arriv- a the mainland trains as the car ferry was only a fe\v minutes behind her average crossing time. FUNERAL SATURDAY —- The funeral of the late Rev, D, J, Mm». rison -of Brsdaibane will be held Saturday. A private service will be held at his residence at l2 noon. allowed 1;? zservice-r 5t time gait?‘ “Nth s pm. u in Bradalbane Cemetery. THE PBESBYTEBIAN Church in Canada Brookfleld Charge. ser-v vices next Lord's dav as follows: G Bfwbfieid ll am., iiartsville 3 p. m. Hunter River 7.30 p.m. There will also be a service of worship in the Gimp: Road Church,‘ Mon- Feb 4th at 8 pm, at the close of which the annual business meeting will be held. Don- ald Nicholson, student minister WILL MAKE PRESENTATION- Lieutenant-Governor J. A. Bernard and Mrs. Bernard left Charlotte- town yesterday to spend the week end in Ti . Tomorrow evening the Lieutenant-Governor will pre- sent the newly-formed Tignish branch of the Canadian Iiegion with two pictures, one oi His Majesty the King and the ot oi Her Majesty the Queen. is were present at Armed ‘UH; members of the Y's limb ' lllii night unanimously sist in than: t mess x-rs Chanlotteto o 0 and entertaining talk pioneer days in the Province. A vote oi thanks moved by Mer- ritt Forsytlse, by Moreside, was presented to speaker by tbs chairman. n. w. Willard Jordon and Bill Tan- ton were present as K1199"- Churchili Among filonorary Pallbearers ‘At Hopkins Funeral NEW YORK, Jan. 3l--(AP)—'l‘he arry L. Ho has inston among the honorary poll bearers for tho funeral tomorrow of the special - V1512!‘ to the late President Roose- e . homorar bearers were Marshall and ‘James V. . fax. British Ambassador to the Un- ited states; Bernard Baruch, Pre- sidential Adviser; Su reme Court Justice Felix Rankin-tar and Jidaywright Robert Sherwood. iiild. Iinportant A Market For i’. E. i. Newfoundland is one of Canada's best markets, Mr. W. E. Agnew to Newfoundland, told i the Kinemelfe Club t nldht. East year n to Newfound- im but Prince Edward Island liposslbly i the greatest exporter of amriou-itural produce to Newlounrhsnd in‘ gig’ voted- to ll- for t of Photos above show scenes at Tokyo's sugams prison, when sso Japanese, accused cf war crimes, face trial. Among them is I-Iideki Tojo, wartime premier, whose name became a symbol of Jap militarism. Photos show: (l) The noose that awaits those convicted. Lt. wane.- w, Whitehead, oi Necogdoches, 'l‘ex., tests lever which drops trap door. (I) lultrarlce to the modernistic Sugar-no prlscm budding. (3) Prison- .___________. Federal Govt.- (Conrtlruued from Page l) parison with those for the same or comparable occu ations ill the same locality or i they feel a variation in rate “is reasonable in the circumstances and consistent with the maintenance of existing prices oi the goods and services which the employer sells." The Wartime Salaries Order, ad- ministered by the RevenueDepal-t- London Buys Antiques at High Price LONIDON. JAN. 8 —(A.P)—— Postwar Brita-in is " oing mad over" critique furniture, paintings and ornaments. and a similar icted for the United ere await fate in unruly-furnished, unheated cells like this. (4) our Robert M. Hardy, of Yakima, Wash, prison commander. looks through peep-hole of Tojoks cell. (5) Elji Amau enters prison under guard of M? Pic. Rocco Faibrizi, of Lyons, N Y. Arnau was head of bureau of information under Toio. Photos by Thomas Shafer, NBA sci-vi“. MM Nvwbllicturee correspondent. " investment c! 0000.000. The number of fishermen at who Wes 2.361 and thew used skiffs, canoes. and gasoline boa/ts as fish- m craft. In some yous the skif Saskatchewan Fish From So. Lakes Pa‘ most pe le usually think Bask-stchews? as a great si-retch of wheat Land but it has its fair share of water. too. and it doesn't do so badly irl rod-is.- more W0. an increase of the by LieuL-Ool. r. .l rtion to its population of i I-ieuti-Ovl- Donald gi-ovlncs in Canada. m. Agnew d Lieut- stated, and added that all indica- I tious Point to a great increase this ‘in the amount of cultural groduce em from t Province Newfo and. w. Agnew sd-l voosted a further extension of m1 were?» 015C352 fucdufl” dbetteivm it r , an C 6 118%! 0 m». M d's retirement. stating- mdmmgg blllggger and better at that. in their opinion. much of the for the ewfourldland trade. success of The Cherlvi-WDWH B8 B| (Prince Edward Island is under- 11 *1 c1195 hm“ W“ due i0 NW stood to ilave shipped approximately ob my and w v c! w- and four million dollars worth of live- ME- “mild- stock and agricultural produce to Newfoundland last year.) Personals __ Canada's Capacity Auggirvilori: tAhebgifnwgldir-lefiaiy; ' I cal-cute to his home in Cardigan M“ lxwgluir fiif°°'i"dii. ‘gitl-I ‘ grave_‘..sv fine -——-—- 3: guest o'f his brotifer, Mr. Jacizicmbn will-l“)?! m mlggzdx-iizn ° ‘mm!’ ____ whea-etryfiour in Canada were listed Muriel Walker arrived in M" in i945. O.i that number (I? in. the City Tuesday evening from Ar- 0558440) did n09 We m9 mm‘ iinltoofi Mass, on a visit to Mr. mill Bl‘! 011911151 and rs. Roy Oudmore, Pownal as feed Dim“ 001V. Willi! 4H1 5gp”; in the western provinces were ___ clolsfidlor idlfi. A summa gfaflour . as rovnce o nada sosss."i‘;“‘.‘.‘ilsn‘iflff“tln°i. Til’; '51 n °1 in wag; ggwgd . c, r. t‘.'£°%i?’.§§~l.‘.”.€"i..f.%‘it°"°” ‘“ w» w Mo» y w» mul- 1-» ____ New Brunswick wi 140 barrels: Pie. Chsley Woods. a returned m four in wi 0.330 service men of Hunter River, in- “mi-limgghv‘ m onurb Wm‘ tends going to I-laiifac: this week gbalwith 10.00:’ stimuli“ 13% Mm‘. rre : roses: “.tsi'.:°'i§".f..§'°“‘ l» m- o no» ~- well-earned holiday at his home with his family and friends. 51in reis; 38 mil-is in Alberta with 12- 300 Cid Country Letter barrels; two mills m arm-ii Columbia with 100 barrels-all per Div-hour day. Capacity figures shown against each mill represent the major- ihy of cases the rated capacity in barrels of 10C unds each, per 2e hours of opera ion. Thus. tho 220 '—-- mills could in a. single day, work- ing three shifts of eight each. produce a total of 96.50 barrels of flour But this rate of daily output could not be main- taned throughout the year in view of Sundays. holidays. break- downs. and sto es necessary and repair of By JOIN DAUPIIINEE Canadian Press Staff Writer North Wales has started a cam- paign to save 100 miles oi coast- ilne from Davy Jones, The job will cost millions oi pounds. , Representatives of 20 municip- 3°!‘ x51‘? W" alitie met at Bangor to start the ball goliing. An engineer is being‘ Mn-Wuai "l0 ap ninted to urvey the coast and W °° mun drgw up Ian: to end the menace. 1321i?‘ N-l-"WIQY I01‘ 30° morn!!!" Then a elsh delegation will see M319" 9-5" W W‘ the Government to demand that dm lg-gYui-Nny Wggg Whitehall accept full financial re- “or e would _ sunpear to be in the sponsibility for the work mmumood o‘ % day! p" mm inc Poingnoi Ayr in Flingifiirggnfiig 2:: 7°“ “d mum "Pusan l" mli" has been eat g its way inland. m“ or “J74” bum“ o‘ "m" Sea walls and promenades have d“ mm I“ u" “M14717 °1 can" been smashed during the last few a it‘ W152i?“ 9°“? 97°‘ ears. Hundreds oi houses have dwtflr," 15's,’?! algal ‘P4113300 mobs m- the een swamped with loss oi furnit- , ure and penoneheifects. gwww" ma“ am‘ 1 There's a cam lgn of another sort in Lancaah re: The County War Agricultural Committee has opened its winter drive against the fox. The first shoot was geld in rough country around 5ilver ale. - ins’ to legend the last wolf In Ing- llnd Ill killed there- one of the boaters commented t at he cer- tainly chose his stronghold well. Ninety guns were mustered for the! three wives through hill. Toronto Aide Irene IONDON —(Reu ) — A do- nation 01in £100 {u m,‘ w illbeth omerrs tral Pfolreasiva Oomervative Anoeia/tlon of ltd-onto. has tamed over w the Walton's Royal Naval Service benevolent (will The do f r nation was ll |benefit oi women raging in ti: were ass w e - h t i i “:47 ith ii’ 1 . rgsnults. Qtihllrhlzfptilflfl had lost slmoet ail the poultry and it has not been uncommon to fin as any as l0 ducks with their heads bitten afl- . ‘ ' The electrification of Northern Bootleg: ia at the dconafirufion . as now res w n: F3»: ab’: light to all» of the '" rnent, has been amended to enable the administration to "take into consideration, with a view to ad- justment, those salaried officials whose rate oi salary is unduly low having regard to the rates paid for substantially similar services in the same or other businesses." Revenue Minister Explains Revenue Minister McCsnn, who announced the amendment said:- "Tile amendment is not to be taken as a lifting of the salaries control, but rather as indicative oi the fact that special cases of hard- ship and unfairness may be dealt with either individually or as a group. Otherwise, the control con- tinues." Finance Minister Ilsley announ- ced the suspension of price celi- lngs and expressed belief there was "no need or occasion" for any general rise in price of the goods aflected, most of which are luxury or near luxury goods. None them are staples such as bread. butter, sugar and, in the field of services, rentals. Mr. Ilsley was joined b Donald Gordon, Prices Board cha rman, in the hope that the suspension. which covers imported as well as domestic lines, would be the be- ginning oi thc ‘orderly unravelling of the price ceiling system which began ln 194i. The announcement was accomp- anied by s letter sent by Mr. Gor- don to manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers which called upon them to co-operate to ensure that the step would "not he allowed to become the signal for numerous price advances." _ The suspended ceilings vary a- cross the Dominion. dellcndinil upon the price the individual rp- taiier was charging when the cell- ing order first went into effect. Although many of the goons are in the luxury class, some are immediate concern to the average consumer. These include shaving accessories. drugs, pipes. cigaret papers. tobacco, cigars and cigar- ets, the price of cas, electricity. steam or water. of ICiEEPBDiLWITE- less or telephone service and transportation except by steam railway. , Others were hook prices, artists pallets and easeis, fireworks, cos- metics, toilet preparations and perfumes, jewelcv, halrdressini! M!" cessories, mlllincry and toys. Foods aflecled were mainly luX- ury items little used on the aver- age dinner table while household articles released from ceiiingswerc those designed for decorative rath- er than practical uses. . Mr. Isicy warned that s cculat- ion or withholding of goo _s from the market would result In till‘ Bogrd "exercising iiS DOWGYS OI rertuisition at former ceiling pric- “He predicted that "in tom! cases, due to the ability oi manu- facturers and distributors to ad- just prices of goods which were out of line, there should be re- ductions in prices.“ In his announcement on the lan- e"! pa cy, . ing described the relaxations as the first step towards “the eventual removal of price controls" and said they would provide "greater flexibility with- out weakening the essential fab- ric" of the government's anti- lnfiatlon program. O ADIAN PACIFIC 6:81‘ 1S CHANGED MONTREAL, Jan. 30 - D. C. Coleman chairman ‘and president of the ansdian Pacific Railway announce today that of the c mpany's crest changed to embody again the beaver symbol of the Domin- ihe new trademarks beaver It work will crown a shield bear- ingithe legend "Canadian Par-lilo" above a globe which carries the ' slogan "spans the World Per use in all departments of the eonlpan , in this count and e- broad {he new crest wli replace e id shield which lists railway. Y: ships, communica- .;exprees and tgtels as the cos offered by a com’ . " ocooamm means Prom tam“ locum?!’ a M , ma“. K pried states within two or three years. At London's two auction houses. Christie n sa while there had been no fantastic prices for any one item. even "the most ordinary" art treasures bring low? to five times their pre-Iwar p ce. “We've found that the market here is about two years ahead of the United States." Charles Des Graz, a partner at Sothelyyfis said. “and good healthy American buy- ing is still taking place which means they anticipate s boom. ‘I notice that the extraordinary high prices are fetched by ordin- ary things rather than by extra.- ordinary things." Des Graz added. "nos not that things bring $8.000 but that things which used fetch $80 now bring $400. At Christie's, Sir Alec Marlin, msnsg director. said that the general evel of things of quality, "provided they are on the sznall- ish side,” was much higher than before the war but that there had P5851) llitllzolreal tielst of an oluytstand; a ce. suc as s. rea glee: Gainsborough or a Rembrandt. since there have been none on thc market. . China In Demand He said people do not want "coi- lcctors items” so much as things of some serviceable value which they can't bu new. such as and fore n china, Georgian slvelr (rather an the formerly popu- lar Eiimbethan), small fum turn, pictures. car is and curtains. Chippendale‘ tables. “just big enough for a glass and an ssh- tray." now bring to own r@~.:.sw.. or" ‘iii’ TWC i a wr ng a e that formerly cost QLMO how 605$ $5.200; a diamond bracelet worth $90 before now is worth 81,- 200: Auduborfs book of birds. one of the copies of which bmughtthe world's record price of A600 in $14,000 for a A is worth $2.000 or twice its pro-war mice; a small Florentine engrav- ing will bring $8.400; china rcelain ornaments sell and from 5P9"? . . D privatclvdprinted books. the ex- pe so . “Elven ordinary people ~ have money to spend because while .their salaries have been slashed. so have their expenditures," Des Ora: said. " n a. man feels down. he Wile thinks "why not have a china P ins Whitefish as well as wheat. Not by a ood deal it doesn't. Hm tclgfwm la-km agave grim Y9 889!‘ B88798 6B 85 oi wlijfieflsh in past couple of years than 1211c waters of any other province. Just a. few big Lakes? No, four score lskm or more. most of them in the northern areas of the prov- ince. Not all of the-m big lakes. of course. a. good of them n in simmer time, some in winter a. iew both winter and summer. ‘There io a little fishing in such rivers as the Churchill and the Saskatchewan. Most oi the lakes yield pickerel, ike and suckers as well as white- 15h. Quite a number of them are sources of Lake trout and ling, and a lunsller grou . say 20, are also fished for . _Some smal catches 0.! perch are made here and there. A few sturgeon are taken from one or two of the lakes and‘ 1 W161i "Y 170m one or cwo yield small quantities of goldeyes. But the Whitefish is “tops" in importance in Saskatchewan by a bigamergin. 1n 1944, for instance, to 1 fisheries production in the province had a. marketed value oi’ s, little less than $1,500,000 and yvhitefish represented well over nslf the return or. in ro num- Bo far as Whitefish landings are concerned in liiflythey amounted something under 4.200.000 pounds. s good deal oi fish but not as much as was taken during the year by Ontario fishermen nor as much as Manitoba had to its cred- it. In the following year up went Saskatchewan eaten to 5.35.000 nds. and up went Saskatchewan first place among the Domin- ica's provinces in sine of Whitefish production. (hone i904 and the Saskatchewan fishermen weren't content with a mere 5.325.000 pounds. When the adding nulchlnee "nad finished tot- ting up the weight figures for the your the Whitefish landings for the province had jumpai to 6.715.000 pounds. 'I'hat kept Saskatchewan at the head of the production list, over 2.500.000 pounds ahead of the newt. ranking province, Ontario. Gill Nets by Thousands Gill nets hoop new, and lines are the catching gear emploved in Saskatchewan fi heries. with gill nets in far greater use than any other apparatus. In i944. for ex- ample, nearly 21.400 gill nets were used representing by t emselves, an vaee in the living room’ to cheer me up’ and just comes in buys it " Mesew W publish demand icv up to HLW UiSSl vars hoe access tiiravli‘ - Dnrdenalies and leepom. Tuv- v ssy m» infringement on Mr ' my and ilcluity. to want bole on the The newly mgsnlsed General Assembly of the the Soviet Union OVI‘ United Nations Organsatlon may start its career ‘rorkieh IIIMYVIWHU‘ USSR Davin] ear iron nia _ damond lee oil eooeessu ' northern Iran. Oecu ii b mall. Aseebaiil 50 per cent and more in the past couple of years. VETERAN EDITOR DEB WINCHESTER. Mass. Jan. 3d -(AP)—Wlllianl D. Sullivan, M, for many years ing editor of the Boston Globe, ed. yester- day after a long illness. Joining the Globe sf-ter his 1mm 0g graduation from Harvard in i088. very big. Some qr them are fished MY 5H1 . iivan was sports editor. city ed‘ or managing editor oi the paper. retired in i030. COUNCIL 0K HINT CLEEPHORPELS, England - (CPl-Major Albert Cox, Nilaycl of Cleetlrorpes. who recently re- turned from India. was work! late one night with town comm members when a parcel arrived. Inside were a pair of pills/rues and the mayoreca. The council took the hint and ad- jcumed. j- Heed: New orih f Rear Admiral Sidney W. Souars, above, of St. Louis. has been named by President Truman to I be director oi the new central iinteiiigence agency to co-ordi- [note and function as a clearing . house for all federal foreign i intelligence activities. - g ll per cent ' of vosilli‘: estimat- or lliizzaziii. Iranian provinces mo , | ‘an, which Iran " fifii?" H . problem, whidl has the ‘sliputewith 110%)“ - fistuso-rwursw» ' -* '-|'.“~’J'4l-“i'>. l »=.<.»-