If It's Good For The lslancl The Guardian Is For it Who @tuu:t*oIio1u west winds 20. High- “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVI. NO. 318 ELKTON. Md. tAPl-—A fed- mi investigator said Monday liefore it crashed. killing all 81 ersons aboar . ' . He did not rule out lightning or a bom ' e explosion n V b in 3 Boeing 707 which fell to earth fiery fragments during a thunderstorm S u it it a Y "I am convinced that th civil Aeronautics Board. -wit.-it type it was furl rolls. Disintegration of this hakt-r Corporation automobiles at South Bend. Ind. Production will be continued gt studebaker's Canadian plant in Hamilton, 0nt.. President B_\'cl‘s Burlingame said will be manufactured in Hamil- ton and shipped from there to dealer points at competitive ices. He added that the American car-buying public can be as- sured that service. parts and ac- cessories for the 1.000.000 Stude- bakers on the road would con- tinue to be available through U.S. and Canadian sources. LOSING FOR YEARS Burlingame said the com- pany's main plant at Sou Bend had been unprofitable for some years became of declin- bg volume. ‘Closing of the 50 - year - old ilant would throw about 6.000 employees. in cl u d i ii g 5,000 oouriyzpald workers. out of jobs. South Bend was the site ‘of per cent of the company's pro- duction operations. Announcement the com- pany's decision brought a flood nf buying of Studeloakcr com- mon stock on the New York Ex- ‘- ......_. e. -,1 8 By JOHN iuosiiaii SAINT JOHN. N.B. (CP) - Varied aspects of transportation and trade, especially in relation to parts. were discussed here Monday on Atlantic Ports Day. Representatives of gove rn- men-t. shipping and business took in the annual port- promotlon event. alternating be- tween Halifax and saint John for the last eight years. National recognition of the ports. importance was urged by a Halifax mem- t paid . Lawrence River and Seaway hi-pping. Mr. Regan said it would not practical to legislate against inter navigation on the St awrence. in the same panel discussion. ohn Potts of Toronto. president mier Louis J. Robichaud said 3 O 53'. -'<' 3' E = 8' 3' 3 '< 3 s 9. Come Prince Edward Island as “one of the great counties oi New Brunswick" when ; cause- and s comment came in a llzht-hearted exchange with Ag- riculture Minister Andrew . . Mackae said the island ll looking forward to the day the gsusaw *0 MS“ LAST WORDS HEARD 1 Lightning, Bomb Suspect In Explosion On Airliner he was convinced it four-engine }fants——were aboard flight et airliner explflded in the aI1'1Pan American World Airways. .a.-(«survivors out of it. because it “.35 an explosion before it hittwas just a ball of fire." said the ._.mu,,d_" said Robert A11.-n,‘;Mrs. Dean Wilmonth. who lives d£‘Dlll_\‘ director of safety for the « in tMea I don't‘ "lt knii\\'. it could be decompres-‘sound you of the hull qr rupture of-fore. unbelievable." - mi|'.!lllllI(l(‘ is hard to imagine." Elkton firehouse. Allen Slutlebaker Switches 0 Plant At Hamilton \'r:w YORK «AP — Slude-tchange Monday. Up a point at mrking, the announcedibesl. the -stock ended the day Plane‘-‘ "“P3°- Monday it will quit assembling. at 7%. up -‘it on a l Burlingame said that U.S. and 1 meat shake-utp two weeks world - wide requirements for said Studebaker will continue no w Studebaker automobiles‘ assemblies on a dra_stically-re- l i . l . Altlerhed II Second Class Hill by Q0 III! (lilac Dtnutinent. ottuu. and for payment of outage in nah. i Eight crew members and 73!asked if i there was a _ '1 fl .passengers —- two of th la in "V Hm 0 "I would say not at this pai- ticular time. but we have not ruled out any possibility." he said. em in- 2l4 of len route from Puerto Rico to jPhiladelphia. Only a few min- futes before the tragedy. about [65 passengers . ‘:5-'*fel.i_' fr°m_the plane during a ; contained in an unofficial and .Sf0D "1 B8lllm0I‘€- |-partial transcript played for re- lporters in Elkton. s . sage received by Paul Alexy of- the Federal Aviation Agency in the control tower of the Phila- delphia Airport. Then there was i only silence. lcnaw's LAST WORDS ! The crew also said At a press conference in the ; comm] are we r I ' ‘. ' . ' “"5-‘in that final conversation be- 'fore the plane plunged to e in a mudd cornfield near Maryland-Delaiware er. Investigators found w-hat they believed to the flight re- l l f the tie dow Vie . was a funny noise. a had never heard he- a r b y village of I w l l “Out of ar the and it was rushed to ton for study. 1 instrument package which re- cords key conditions aboard the plane was found in r main point of the 1 Q . It "pretty well ged over of 296.000 shares. It was by l “P-" 9 -‘aldv and it "°t far the most active,stock on the l P°55ll’l° 1° 535’ h at the ex,_.hange_ chances ‘were that the recorder Bm.1ingame_ installed as com, might yield_ information useful president in 3 manage. in determining the cause of the ago The Mic’: written maintenance log also was found ;near. y. Allen said it. would take 10 to '14 days to .plot the spots where the wreckage fell and take aer- ial photographs of the W35 huge tum- ; 53“ w a li 9 duced scale at Hamilton. RESTYLING FAILURE Heavy financial losses. aggra- vated by a poor reception for C.A.B. investigators then will Studebaker's com letely re- collect the plane parts and try styled 1964 line introduced in to prepare a three—dimensional September. led to the decision. moclcup——a task Allen said is Burlingame said the high pro- going to be very difficult be- ductivity and efficiency of the cause some parts may have Hamilton plant should permit burned in an intense gmund U! s... .-.. fl 8 8 C The last words of crew mem-I l°'“°l"“"" ls °’‘P9°f°d '0 Wm‘ had Sleltpedlbers aboard the plane were men-ce in about three weeks- lthe approximate time for the erecion of the new irioinerattor the co tion felt that, in acco previous discussion. the tender should be let to the low bidder once a performance bond was‘ i"°” l accepting the tender of Ben.-nottl Jenkins, Wi-nsloe. and J. Davidl Clarke, Charlottetown. l corder of the ill-fated airlinerlY9‘3'l‘tWl€'€'W99kl.Y00110011011-The ' Washlng- manner of collection is A C.A.B. spokesman said theldividual groups now providing i be where the homeownens n -however . it garbage. INCINERATOR BUILDING three weeks. If lfiarbage Contra is let By GEORGE CONDON Garbage collection in Chat‘- l 1 night . mu, ,5 miles southwest 4,11 ‘BALL ‘OF FIRE’ ' “Cl. 2” . . d l ,—it as learned last night ati witm._m._.mn_ We knew there would be no i flamelpper .. w':5g:;::g1as‘zwr:e: ::l::n('.'1_‘l°"“‘l5' m°el"'"'g °‘ cm’! . . Conn. J.P. Nicholison. heading‘ he tender committee. ntract for garbage collec- W85 Wad)’ for signs‘-ntg. l-Ie rdance with l t . A resolution was then patssedl The contract calls for an all will be imiieir to methods used by in- his service. it wit that ‘back door" type of coliectioni eeci not I ake. their garbage to the road- ; Court. Nicholson explained, i that those pie-rsonis ving in upper floors of apart- me-nit buildings could not expect collection to take place at their. doors. He said all latndlctrds were to provide facilities on this roimd floor for their tenants‘ i l CLAUDE JODOIN tlefti_ pvresidtent of the n" lain Labor Congress. diiscusscs un- employment insurance with Cl-lARLOT’i‘ETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, o"r:E"i:’iTi’;’ij’ii to, 1963. Many Work Unde -¢ Labor Minister MacEta»chen. The CLC. in a brief to the ininister in Ottawa M'oii:l.ay. "°T,,,“f.‘,’.“E SEVEN CENTS Noted I OTTAWA .d ed of thousands of workers lwould be barred from regular lunem-ploy-ment insurance cover- lage if the seasonal benefit plan proposed by the Gill inquiry‘ committee is implemented. the - Canadian Labor Congress told ithe government Monday. .. i This view was contained in a . ' ‘.15-page brief submitted b the lCLC to abor Minister Eachen on the Gill report on. .over-hauling the unemployment linsurance program. he four - man committee. headed by Toronto insurance xecutive Ernest C. Gill. was testaiblished in July, 1961. and delivered its report to the for- mer Progressive Conservative government in November. 1962. . The Liberal government has promised legislation based on the Gill blueprint but it is not expected to be placed before Parliament until next year. :0PPOSES PROPOSAL l In its submission. ‘registered outright opposition to lthe Gill proposal to scrap the (OP!-—Some hun-' i 4 Mc- iook issue with some of the ircolmmernidations of the spec ta‘. Gill committee. present seasonal benefit. plan (CP Wirep]]o[,o) :and substitute new regulations . ‘that «would disqualify from reg- l It was hoped that collection. would begin as soon as possible ; s City Engineer Norman S~te»w- ‘ rt said the new iucineratoi' was 3 xpected to he completed in ‘ Erection of the tecpee" structure began Mon- day. Mr. Stewart sand. lcontinuance of Studebaker‘s au- itomotive activities on a profit- able. although more restricted. asis. He said the Canadian opera- tion always had ‘been ii money maker for . the cooperation. addition to supplying the Cana- dian market, the Hamilton plant has for many years been an im- portant base for Studebaker‘: export business. he said. all Studebaloer automotive ope 'ations in Canada. had en placed in over-all charge of Stude«baker's automotive activi- ties. Burlingame announced. Economic Field Ponder-ed During Atlantic Ports Day l of the Canadian Board of Mar-j in'e Underwriters. said this na- vigation has been costly to un- derwriters for vessels no equipped to operate in ice con- ditions. For vessels so equipped. because of favorable exper- lence. the rates will be reduced considerab y. Premier Stanfield of Nova Scotia said Canadians cannot take a narrow parochial view of the country's development. “We must be prepared to rec- ognize that technological changes may sometimes work to our advantage and some- times to our disadvantage." New B«runswrick's Premier Ro- bichaud gave a similar opinion. saying: “We have no alterna- tive but to avoid parochlallsm and. to approach _our common problems in a united fashion. Canadian channels of trade were returning more to the sea. location of the Atlantic ports would again be in their favor. l l I l N.B.-P.E.|. Trade Jobs Ai~Atlaniic Ports Day SAINT JOHN. N43. (op)-Pi-9 premier referred to the Conser- 83%,.‘ “d pone, ,mdMh, dis, vatlve agriculture minister's mark . “Mr. MacRae suggested it is essential for us to reconstruct a rather poor road leading to Prince Edward Island.“ said. Premier Robichaud. "That will; be done within the next few months." As for the causeway. once it is constructed "we will be pleased to welcome Prince Edward Is- land as one of the greatest coun- ties of New Brunswick." Earlier, Mr. Mnckae had ta- eo another lab of Premier Ro- bichaud. Referring to recent federal’ - provincial fiscal talks. Mr. Mat.- Rae said Ottawa apparently thinks "our people are not w nearly so much as the people of New Brunswick. Nova scotin or even Newfoundland." The additional revenue given ly to 83.- IC . --ma if power-svound up In: Gordon Grundy. president of w lire. St-rewn over an area of one square mile was wreckage ranging in size from tiny chips to use the mcineiraitc-r were (ll;-I cussed as was the D0s.=ihil‘i‘ty of i OTTAWA lCP) — The (Continued on Page 3 Col. 3) lcommission on taxation Monday ifarmers do not receive any con- sidered. it was doubtful, for in- Questions of wine would be able of metal to large segin nts of be e what appeared wingtips. one IBM and -.10. _ Pine trees in the in ‘flel were festooned with delbr s. Victims were to be identified through rings. clothing. pocket- books. fingerprints or' dental ork “It's going to be a very. v ry difficult Job of identlfica said Dr Russel . is er. Maryland's chief medical ex- aminer who was on the scene. N.S. Man, Son Sought In Woods An RCAF helicopter joined the search Monday for a rrivaiijwas designed to 5 nd ' woods at f for commission what the farmer nca-r day morning. e . . a tion." Views Of Farm Federation Are Outlinecl On Taxation By STEWART MIICLEOI) ii Canada.’ bu-t somewhat wor-. ried about the heavy emphasis on property taxes. -headed by .l. M. Bentley, presi- royal ldent was quick to point ntit that government also have to be com} regular l“5"”‘“°' benefit’- theard the voice of the farmer 'cessions so far as personal in- -‘stance, whether rural ——generally_ satisfied with the come taxes are concerned. ;providei-l as much for students be P31 present. revenue-raising system ”"Rather." said the brief, "the cirgiunstances and nature of the farming‘ enterprise have on the whole been recognized and pro-, LIVERPOOL. N.S. tCPi —-, The presentation by tne Cana- liter adiustinent made to these-"l his son lost in by Port Mon-tori since Suii- gt Ground search parties led by ii 42. Live-npootl. i sh Rain and high winds struck the l Come taxes- orea today. i Apart from objections to meet- luidian Federation of Agriculture the Car- hinks about taxation generally. in: the heavy cost of education ouid be collected through in- l The main problem, said M. J. McCormick. a mlnent Mont- real businessman.’ is creation of a gigantic industrial boom in he Atlantic area. As necessary ingredients for this. be included capital. inexpensive power. pro- per products, ready access to hug e markets. and transporta- tion facilities. He suggested holding ports days in other Ca- na i n c’ es. ECONOMIC CHALLENGE D. D. Patterson of Saint John. a Legislature member and for- mer provincial secretary-trear tlrel‘. said there's need to rec- ognize the economic challenge . facing the area. New runs- wick's per capita income of about $1,000 left a gap of $300.- 000.000 for the province to fill and bring her to the compara- tive level of richer provinces. fiibar Regains Independence ZANZIBAR (Reuters)-—Wlth a volley of rifle fire by soldiers. tant boom of guns over the bar- bor this ate regained its independence today after 73 years as a Brit- ish protectorate. Crowds estimated unofficially at more than 70.000 broke on in claps and cheers of "uhuru" e om). The new national flag. ii yel- low clove on a green circle against A red background. was hoisted ong with the sultan‘: flag. INSIDE TODAY Announcements. notices .. 12 Births. deaths . . . . . . .. . is n In . .. $.13 Finance, Markets 10 suites . . . . . . . . 11 Editorials .. 4 . . . . . . . . . . . ..I. It Kings Queen. City 5 I Wuhan’: 0 his persuasive with anti! 0-’ POLITICIAN SPRY AT 85 Grand old man of Western politics. H H , has his amiual walk around Stanley Park in down- town vnncouver. The cabinet ‘sinister in the And the federation delegation. l [along to someone else. RCMP wetre organizeii Sunday.thl‘0u‘-Zh Pl‘0P91‘l.V taxes. he 3180 ‘T00 BIG’ AN EXPENSE night to look for Harry l.iake.l thinks that any additional rev- and his son. Robcnt. 14 oflenue required by government ‘Elevators, ersonal income tax is the‘ one source of revenue based out the ability-to-pay concept. saidl the brief. It is also one of the; -few taxes that cannot be passed The federation felt that edu- ' ' tioo hi a ‘cation. is n expense to tbe met through property taxes (“it is just growing beyond property tax," said W. J. Par- ker. president of Manitoba Poo Ltd) and the rev- enue should bc raised through income ‘taxes which the federal government would pass on to I l ular benefits all workers with a record of repetitive seasonal un- . employment. . i Under the Gil-1 plan. thosej seasonal workers would be cov-1 ered under a new fund, to be. financed by the government at an estimated annual co of t$lFi0.000,000. This extended ben- lefits fund would also cover made available to farmers by':_“"°"l‘°"5 wh" have exhausted 4 l i l However. the Gill report said the extended benefits should not ' to seasonal workers who had 40 weeks or work schools «as their urban counterparts. ‘ l The federation said that the recently-imposed sales tax on building products an uc- tion machinery should be re- ipealed. Farmers used a lot of both, and it was a direct charge on production. or °': ditions’ limiting the claim seasonal workers were also pr ; pose . I lCLC ARGUMENT l T The cu: argued that the in-.' levitable result of the proposed‘ (AP) -‘ The whereabouts of the 19- robbers year-old night club singer re- ' a mystery. But an FBI. STATl')LlN-E. Nev. Two suspected bank were captured Monday night in n topics in a com the CLC . fore being! laid off. Other con-l WEATHER 'A' few sunny intervals; turning colder: low 40 and 37. 26 PAGES ers Seen Hit r Gil Jbess Benefit CLC Opposition n Brief seasonal regulations would dis- qualify many thousands of workers in a wide range of in- dustries who enjoy coverage un- der the present plan and have always done so. The CDC brief also ranged over the 46 other major recom- mendations contained in Gill report. It was presented by P r e s ide nt Claude Jodoin. backed by the senior officers of the 1.080.000-member central ls- hnr organization. The presenta- tion of the C-LC's views on un- employment insurance. origi- nally scheduled for last month. had been postponed by agree- ment. The congress follows up with a major submission to the fed- eral cabinet on Wednesday. when it will deal with many other legislative and economic prehensive brid. pplecl §Jet Airliner Lands Safely GA.\'l')ER.. \'fld. lCPl A big jetliner with 46 passengers and 10 ore-wmembers made it safe landing on three engines here Monday nigiht. The plane_ Pan American World Airways fli-ght [00 from N. York to London. timmed around over the Atlantic affine!‘ .oil pressure in one of its four l (3'Il£’,ill|ClS fell below it . l The captain of the Boating 707 « decided in mm imnind'beImnse ‘ of deteriorating woatdter between his position and Britain. an air- line spokesman said. The plane landed witliout in- cident. The engine was being checked here and tlhe flight was expected to be resumed late Monday n-tight or eanly today. r Calif. Posses Push Search For Kidnapped Sinatra Jr. Sheriff i-Zrnesl Carlson Placcrviile said the 0 men were all from of er four outhern the Pm.‘”“°°5 0" 3 f"""‘"la .during a manhunt in the Lakeiagent said the two arrested gun- California area of the bank basis with no strings attached; Property taxes hit farmers‘ particularly hard because their entire e x i s to n c e was built around property. Between 1949 -and IW. said the federation. the realized net income of self-employed farm- ers increased only 10.4 per cent. l while wages in manufacturing rose 40.1 per cent. Commission chairman Kenneth Carter said this was a "rather st:-irtling" ‘ Tahoe resort for two men sus- men, as well as period of kidnapping 1'-‘rank Si- ‘ seized with them. were held spe- natra .lr.. son of the famed an-‘cifically in the bank holdup lgrtainer, :case. There was no re-portedi **'“" "j—‘—“§link with Sinatra's disappear-l Cargo Ploine Down At Sea lment would work on his miss- NEW roux fAPl—An Amer-ging so“ me Meanwhile. Attorney General. R rt Kennedy telephoned‘ from Washington and assured- Frank Sinatra Sr. that all re-‘ sources of the justice depart- figure, but he didn't think the‘ it-an civilian cargo Plane carry-‘ real difference was this great.| me three persons was reported -Farmers had some ad\‘antagcs‘dmvn in Atlantic Ocean The six men. arrested Monday were found the Strawberry Lodge area. 20 miles west of that “can‘t be rung up on a cash - M0|1(l3.V. Bbmll 150 miles |10l'lll‘ the resort where young sman-3 register." and there were social ‘ 9851 0t the t\Z0|‘0S« identity)’ and srrvativc governments Al‘tlll.l' Mcighen and R. Bennett did seven miles two hours Saturday. not ha for an O5-yeerr-old min-n. ' (CP Wirepliofol l as well as economic considcra-.‘ fa‘? ill “'05? 3503” W35 "0' tions Execut]\fe . 5p(-rotary nawd; The (-46 aircraft, on route l l l cers was reported seized Sunday‘ night. FBI agents and sheril'f‘s oft'i-. identified two of the six as. Kirk said the social facilities iParliciment At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS MONDAY. Dec. fl. 1963 Canadian pilot sentenced to 30 years by it Cuban court. Opposition Leader Diefi-.n- baker suggested the govern- ment purchasc the home of Sir John A. Macdonald. now up for sale at Kingston. A bill to name a representa- tion commissioner, with in- slructions to study drastic changes in voting procedure. was given first readinc. Arnold Pf‘tl‘l‘S t.\'l)P TI miskamingi said .\it-lnt_\-re Mines is in the "dark aces in employee treatment and questioned its share of the gold siihslriy. Alfred D. Halos l"(' Wel- lington Southl argued unsuc- cessfully for a proposal to al- low payment of death duties by instalments. Extension of the Small Businesses Loans Act for an other three years was -,_vivcn quick approval and sent the Senate. TUESDAY. Doc. 10 The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. EST to debate an increase in special pensions. The Senate meets at 3 p.m. Exte Affairs Minister Martin indicated Canada is - considering action in aid at front Newfoundland to the‘ Josezplh Jame; some;-' 33‘ pt 034;. MOFCS. 58'" 3" 5 0 5 3‘ '3” land, and Thomas Patrick Keat- . p.m. AST reporting "almost out ing. of Riverside. Calif. wanted M 335-" l for an $8.500 holdup last month Three minutes later the pilot; of 3 bank 31 Sherman Oaks, radioed that "aircraft is ditch-lcallfy The other four were inn." lbooked on charges of harboring No more was heard from the: scarce and Keatinz. plane. A U.S. Air Force searchl plane was dispatched from the Azores. In New York. the U.S. Coasti ’Guard placed on the alert 39 merchant ships within a 200- i mile radius of the plane‘: last‘ known position. ‘ aircraft left. Gander. .Nfid., at 2:50 a.m. and was; scheduled in Santa Marian z es. a 12:21 p.m. AST. ll was supposed to have fuel 3,, |-‘ARMER 1‘|ss|:\'(;'i'0:\i enough it! last llfllll 3235 p.m.‘ (‘,api|a| flnrg-a"_ Thr Guardian OTTAWA C()nS".l‘ll(‘li0fl cf the new federal Ch"-D3l'tnl(‘l‘lt of transport wharf at Charlotte- i.nwn should be i'f7nTpl'.‘l(‘{l ii)’ "lib proximately ay 1964. ‘Heath Mat-qiiai‘i'ic. .\IP for Man Remanded In Murder Case g Quepn:_ u-a; infni'mr‘d this nook. — M0738“ In reply to a question placed on \|ar i l H.-\l.lFAX 40?‘ Green. ‘2T~ycar-old Newfound- mp m-dey papnr h_\' .\l' ;land seaman rliarged with cap- qua,...ie 5,9...-.qa.-y of state ,l,\\' ‘Hal "“'rd” in "W 5h°°““'“ °l I’i('kc-rsigiill said that the l‘(?(|lllii'(>‘- his wife Bertha. has on men“ 0. me dopamrwm M. the manned 30 days for psychiatric buildings on me M,“ “.hm., am. I . , 5 . ‘ exggifnmflilygg arraigned on men now he'lm'e the Va('('0l’i1n10(l8t,l0l1S me =- ...°.*. .. .....:'.:.::“*-I Monda '. ‘ .‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ' " His - year - old wife was °Ma‘"°d' rm Pm": can :79 dl-‘:‘._m ‘found dead in the couple's north by 3"‘ d°pa"'nlml'_ O . :1“”w Halifax it p it rim enl Oct 20. wmk’ "M H" “"'l‘ "MN" ' ‘ .Green with a bullet wound in. MP M9<‘Q|l31‘i‘l“ “'35 3l5“V"" his side. was taken to hospital ; formed that at the present time where he remained under pi» i the government does not contem- llce guard tplate conarviv.-ting s new wharf TE‘ four others holdup. S('Ol‘(.‘f‘ and Knitting were viewed in a lineup by John Foss. who said he was in the room with Sinatra Jr. when the young singer was seized Sunday night just as he was about to go on stage at Harrah's Tahoe Casino. They also were studied by S1~ natra .lr.'s manager. Tino Bar- zie. was after this viewing that agent Curtis 0. Lynum said rcc. Keating and the other fotir were being held specifi- cally for the bank holdup. An eyewitness of the abduc- tion at a casino said the 13- ycar-old son of the famed eu- tcrtainer was seized Sunday night by two men who hiirst into a motel room and demanded: “Wheres the money?" The witness. John l-‘oss. said Young Sinatra had been called on the telephone in the room it hour earlier. It FBI So Queens MP is Given Answers To Queries for zcnoral commercial pur- ]):\\(‘.<. in reply to another question it-nm \i*‘ xiaowari-ie. Trans- port .\li'nis:er George Mcilrafith xnirl that the C.\'R has discon- li'f\lI1‘f‘l ma kini: l'f\.~‘|3~l‘V8tl(l1S lhrutich its (‘.ll'8'l'l0ltlEl0\-"11 of- ti('f‘ ft‘.-r slf‘(‘Din-it car space on the flccan Limiter? With the intro- l'lll'llOll nl an expanded teletype li('l\\’0l'l( for passenger reserva- tions. all spiice in sleeping cars in ii-old hy the reservations olf- iice at the station where such cars originate. This was done. the railway explained. in the in- forest of providing the best pos- sible service to the greatest num-her of customers. Th-c reply said it was neces- sary to rcrserve space on coach tars of the train and that siicin reservations can be made as . Charlottetown