-s. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN -1-:1- lilockheallh Blame-all and praise-all III twig ;, can-tog: m P. E. L SEVEN NOVA SCOTIANS KILLED AT LEVEL CROSSING Charlottetown, eltunmdrstdo 815.00 per annnns. Elsewhere 09.00. other Provinces and U.l.A. 012.00 Int. uuuun.) - Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew l CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 27. 1953 Canadians Building Winter Camps In Korea Seeking Exp ansion Of Markets For Potatoes PERTH, big 13., (CF)-Railway of- ,..t.tls, shippers and growers. and vsm-esentatives of the Federal and Pr(ll'll'lCllll Agriculture Departments conferred here Wednesday on ways and menus of improving and ex- panding the New Brunswick potato m.-trket. W. B. Mccullough, assistant dir- ec'or of the Trade and Commerce Department's agriculture and fish- mns branch, and until recently ngrtculttiral secretary of the Cana- wan embassy in Argentina, said -tu-rency restrictions form the iftiCl barrier to a wider market Mr potatoes in that aouth Ameri- can muntry. However. he said, Argentina has made a special al- ,.c.ttion of fttnds this year for , hase of potatoes in North At. rlcti. Uruizuay was another good .-mrket, he said, but stressed the ttuporinncc of maintaining and improving the product to keep nllrafl of competitors. An appeal for aid in preventing immigrants from Europe planting potatoes brought with them from their homelands was made by W. N. Keenan. chief of the plant pro- tectlon division. federal Agricul- NFD Department. He said there is srent danger a. new potato disease could be introduced in this man- oer. E. G. Paige. of the marketing and merchandising branch of the Federal Agriculture Department, said a survey made in.Toronto showed that 75 per cent of house- wives there preferred to pay it premium price for washed and sized potatoes. It was estimated this extra processing cost six cents for a lo-pottnd bag. ' Other speakers in a panel dis- cussion emphasized the importance of proper handing of potatoes the need for up to the minute packag- ing in order to maintain the lead in an increasingly competitive market. Appearsufworce To Be Kept . . Up To Siurengthi By BILL BOSS Canadian Press staff Writer IN KOREA (Cl?)-For more than a month Canadians have been building the camps which will house the 25th brigade during the coming winter. The work will be completed some time in Sep- tember. Canadian-style camp: with tents marshnlled in even, straight lines on parade-ground flats, just aren't possible here. As Lt. Col. Ken. Campbell of Ot- tawa says: "When you're working! with the side of ll hill you just- have to fit people in." Draw Lots ior Areas Commanding officers of the 3rd battalion, Royal Canadian Regi- ment, with six companies. and battalion headquarters to find lo- cations for, he said his com, any i. 0. D. E. Announces Overseas Host Graduate Coming Events "Dance in Miilview hall every lfridny. "Faulty Sale. Noyes Store. -Zattirday night, Greenvale Institute. "Dance, Corran Ban Hall. Thurs- day, augustp27ih. Burke's orchestra. "Pantry sale at Cottonh Store, irw London, Friday. August 28th. --Dance. Cardigan Head school. 1-lrlday, August 28th. -"utttoadlng our Bulk Wheat to- oat and tomorrow. 53.30 cwt. Bring was R. L. Dlckieson, New Glas- .;iiu. ' "Will be buying Timothy Seed 'lil.'l season as usual. cleaned or -tnrlrtmed. Mcculgan and Boyle. "Pantry Sale. 5. A. MoDonaldls. st-urdav. August 29th, 230 P. M.. ltazahfleld W. I. "Show. Moreli I-fall. Friday and xaturday. "Cow Country". Also ex- --illcnt Shorts. "Reserve Tuesday, September 22nd, Chicken supper. Cornwall linll. "Unloading car Bran. Thursday Friday, good price off car. lllts Bros. Dial 3223. ' 'Spocial Meeting Abegweit. R. B. P. Kingston, Friday. August Path, 2nd and arcl Degrees. "Movies at the Orphanage. xzount iierbert, Friday. 28th, 8 2--lock. sale of home made candy. "ilist your name at my office for in--W-m combining with nn up-to-, tm'(- machine. Phone 3-2. E. J. l"uf)ougall, Vernon. "Bay Fortune United Church "lriiw-' Thursday, Aug. 21th. Sup- Mr served from 5 p.m. ' ”F':tntty Salc. snturday after- 'itilll. August 29th, at Fennell and t7hnudler'a, for the Mount Albion l'.'nmen's Institute. ”i-iospltal Dance. Beaver l-tall, -iimifatzue. Friday, August asth. llnivn-fownetis Orchestra. Dancing 930 to 12.30. Admission 60 cents. -"Annual Sunday school Picnic M Clyde River Presbyterian church will be held Saturday afiemoon, Augttst 29th. at i-iirsckley Beach "Farmers ask about the Shut Gain l-teed Finance ,Plan. For pal- llculttrs contact. your local feed mill. .Farmet-I who break records We Shur Gain. "in Stock -- Dtthahe Sprays and 'J”5'- Stop blight now with Dtthane. -lvattable at the Kensington Feed Service Ltd. Kensington, 30-2 for your requirements. F"!-final Notice.-All taxes due -myvale school. not paid before fen-ember 1st. 1053, will be handed n for collection. By order of the Lrustmi, Mrs. Matthias Murray. -.Pcrcili',V'. . m"Fnr an evening of real 'en,loy- meat old time dancing, be sure and Wm? Beptembcr loth. when Don i W" and his Islanders will up- llcrtr g , com" ll Conway Community Scholarship" of the Empire (l.O.D.E.) have an- nounced that: two types of post graduate scholarships for studios overseas have been made avail- able as memorials to the memory of the men and women who gave their lives in World Wars I and H n-4 The scholarship memorial to World War II is a new scholar- ship which is being made avail- able for the first time. Three post-graduate scholarships are to be offered annually in this World War II memorial, and each is worth 52,000. Mrs. T. A. Campbell, Summer- slde, the retiring provincial edu- cational sccretary for the I.O.D.E., in making the announrcihcnt last evening said that in view of the fact that for many years, em- phasis for advanced study has been placed on science rather than the humanities. these three schol- arships are being offered annually to enable students to carry on post-graduate work in history, philosophy. English or French lit- eraturv. These scholarships are tenable at any university in the British Empire and the scholarship may be awarded for the second year to the same candidate. The memorial to World War I consists of nine post graduate scholarships which an offered an- MIBUY to students to carry on studies in history, or economics. or constitutional government, or any subject vital to the interests of the British Empire. These annual scholarships which are also worth SZMO each, may be awarded for A second year to the same candidate. Regulations governing the a- wards are similar in each type of scholarship. ' The l.O.D.E. expects that all who hold these scholarships will :53ontinued onSpag-enswooli-3)!" .i The Imperial Order Daughtersl MONTREAL. (GP)-More than! 8,000 Canadian seamen. members oil the seafarers International Union (AINL-TLC), called Wednesday night for acountry-wide strike, vote following rejection of whati they termed an "entirely unsatis- Iactory" arbitration award. Hal C. Banks, international vice- president of the union, in a state-I ment from SIU headquarters in Montreal. said: i Lake Seamen May Take Strike Vote Next Week cent of shipping on Canada's in- land waterways and a strike would cause a serious tie-up. In two majority reports Eric G. Taylor, chairman of the concilia- tion board. and the companies' rep- resentative, Joseph Sedgwlck. recommended a gradual reduction in the 40-hour week during the next year, contending that Satur- day's and Sunday's should be in- cluded in the regular schedule. ”The finding of the board-ai The majority report also recom- shipoivners' board-is entirely un-imendcd wage boosts ranging from satisfactory and our members at-elabout s25 a month to 340 a month. united in taking immediate actioniwages now run from 3190 a month as provided by the law to protestlfor deckhands to a top of 3280 for this unfair decision. Lflrst cooks. "The members are calling for an- Lucien Tremblay, the ttnion rep- immediate strike vote." lresentative backed up the The main point in current contract demands that the-report. work-week be reduced to 40 fromt The Federal Department of Lab- 58 hours. The union says the sched- for received the reports last Monday. tile must start Monday Friday and work done and Sunday would be time-and-a-half rates. The union mans paid for at been placed in the labor minister. ndnrs drew lots for their areas. "Some sites were good. others required a lot of work and still would not be good--so we had them draw for them." i That's because in Korea i flat ground usually also is wet. l Best sites are high up on hill- fsides. That means cutting ledges vinto them for tent floorlngs and moorings. Tons of rock and soil must be moved and the ground levelled. Bulldozer: in Demand with bulldozers available only briefly because of the great de- Inland for them in this phase. most of the work is done by hand. Once the canvas is raised the sites must be ditched lest. rains wash the camps away. and fen:--.d against theft. They are wired for electric lights. Because even a company is a fair-sized community, with its liv- ing quarters a" platoon to a tent. orderly room, kitchen. mess hall and canteen. all the battnlions' camps are broken down to com- Missihgdlusng Pilot located (OP)-The RCAF reported Wednesday night that bush pilot. Herman Petersen of Alert Bay. B. ., has been found and is in good condition. Petersen hnd been missing since last Thurs- day when he took off in his plane for Stewart, B.C. ' I-JD M ONTON. Hurricane Damage At Medicine Hat MEDICINE HAT, Alt.a.. (GP)-i Damage from Monday night's hur- rlcane, when wind gusts of more than 100 miles an hour blasted this city of 17,000 population, was un- officially estimated Wednesday at under 3100.000. The southern Al- berta industrial city was buffeted .by average winds of 82 miles per Ihour. Black, pretty young blond who has been in a hypnotic fog since attending it travelling hypnotistl show here Saturday night, was reported in generally improved condition Wednesday by Banff springs hospital. . Hospital officials said the 10- "Memorlsl service will be held at Cenotaph, Cornwall, 2:80 p.m. Sunday. Aug. 30th. Guest speakers. "Buying pigs at Fredericton. paying :24 a pair for good pigs over 30 lbs. each: will also buy smaller ones: plus 02.00 a pair extra for pigs delivered by 10.00 am. Friday. Knud Jorgensen. "sealed tendera will be received by the undersigned until Septem- ber 2nd for the privilege of catar- ing to Queen's County Plowing Match main refreshment booth, not including soft drinks and ice cream. Cash basis only. H. smith. secretary. Pownal. "Comlntl to the Gospel Taber- nacle. M -ttazue, Thursday. Aug. 3'1. at ll. p.m., Mr. Zane: R. Mack. representing the mimlon to tapers. an international organiza- tion, ho will show colored films and wit lecture on the work of x Shows Signs Of Coming Out Of Hypnotic Fog BANFF. Alia.. tori H nettyl P. to the show. year-old girl from Nelson. B.C.. who works as a. waitress here during the summer. was much brighter and eating normally. Miss Black was one of about 20 volunteers from an audience of 450 attending a show by "the great Dr. Zorn" who offered their ser- vices in a demonstration of hyp- notlsm by the lecturer. she and the others were relieved of the hypnotic opsll ate the end of their stigo appearance. It was not until Mlu Black kept falling asleep at work Sunday morning that concern was felt for her condition. She was taken to hospital where doctors said she had a "consum- ing desire to sleep." For a time she wouldn't. eat. Interviewed by a reporter Tues- day, the Nelson girl said aha re- membered nothing of Dr. zomb'I show. or of subsequent events. she said her last recollection was going The improvement. in her condi- tion fnllowod a report from M- monton that the RCMP has locat- ed Dr. Zorn-b at. Wainwright in the Edmonton area. after instituting a country-wide search for hlm..'1'he RCMP said Dr. zomb had relayed instructions to Bani! doctors on how to bring Miss Black out of about 99 per ;Britain May Have New ;Foreign Secretary Soon and endillnder government laws. the unionihe” Ml Saturdaysgis entitled to strike seven days at-1333" Tm” ""5 ”” 5Y9'W””9559-5 ter a conciliation board report has?” me ”C1d9m- hands of that 3 Robert. vhor. Accidenihear Truro In Rain Last Night TRURO, tcfllayvcn Nova Sco- tland. including six of a (anally of 11, were killed Wednesday night when a. train sliced into a car on a rain-shrouded level crossing at nearby Clifton. The Dominion Atlantic Railways passenger train rammed into the late model car at 8:30 pm. ADT while en route here from Kent- ville. It butted the vehicle 300 yards along the track and then toppled it down the embankment. The Victims Mr. and Mrs. Murray Burgess of nearby Beaverbrook and three of their young children, Geraldine. Heather and Esther, were dead when extricated from the wreck- age. Their son Roger and a niece. um0l..5gMat'gat'et Taylor, 10. of Truro died the unionliicase almost entirely in his nmiorit '19” mu” '” h93p"'aL The Burgess have five surviving sons. Clifton is about five miles from the shores of Coliequid Dangerous Crossing Edenn. Burgess neigh- said the crossing was un- marked. in the district. There have been faiaiities there before in the last few years." he said. Mr. and Mrs. Burgess were re- turning home after spending a day with Mrs. Burgess sister in MAXIMS , OIA MERE MAN Every tlorhu his day in thh wntdd. The Guardian. Flu cont: Morning Dally founded 1081. 16 PAGES llncome Tax Collections Show lBig increase For P.lsland tiled Altitude Towards Peace Parley Toughens t OTTAWA, Aug. 26 (special) -- .l'-'erieral income tax collected in 'Princt-. Edward Island for the its- lcal year 1952-53 amounts to 81.- ;658,994, according to taxation sta- ;ilstlcs of Canada, made public to- day by Revenue Minister .l.J. Mc- lCt-inn. 1 This amount. exceeds by 5336.000 the taxes collected from businesses --.- id ' l i th t ' lgfgvmfgl 1:5.md.;1::pa,,:,5 if UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. (CF: tum yea, numbma 5,830. " .--Russla's ,Andrei Vlshlnsky Wed- ; Both In number 0: taxpayers nesday accused the Western al- and amounts collected in federal h” of ”””g like 5 Umlisi" '3"- "It'a the worst crossing? tax, Queenie County pays the ll0I1iS ishare of taxes for the Island with ;3.850 taxpayers. Queen's contribu- ltlon to the federal exchequer was t,s933.000 in 1951, compared to 1.680 ;taxpayers in Prince paying S332,- 000, and 300 taxpayers in Kings ,who paid a total of 558.000. i In 1951. latest year for which idetalled figures are available, icharlottetown, with 3,390 federal itaxpayers paid a total of 8852.000 in federal income tax. or 65 per- Icent of the contribution made by ithe entire Province. Summersidc, lwith 930 taxpayers, records tax payments of 5252.000, or 19 percent "inf the gl'f!.l1d total. Amounts paid by smaller centres suclt as Souris. Georgetown or Kensinzton are not broken down in the present ngurcs. i As is the case in other eastern Provinces, it is clearly indicated that Prince Edward Island farm- and trying to ram through an ul- l.n::ttum to the Communists on the make-up of the Kore-N peace 3 conference. l He also manoeuvred to force the .UN assembly to make A decision on whether Russia would attent ,tlie peace conference as an inter- ested neighbor-which he insisted fshc is-or as a member of the lcommunist side tagged as a part .of the Red agresssor team. 1 Vlshlnsky delivered an angr; ;spocch in the 60-country politic; lcommittec of the assembly. some ldelegates saw it as a warning that the Korean peace conference, if 11 is ever held, is doomed to fail lbefore it. starts unless the condi- jtlons laid down by Red China's lpremlcr and foreign minister, iChou En-Lai, in Peiping and by jtht-h Soviet delegation here are accepted. some observers the regarded By FRASER VVIGHTON LONDON. tReutersl -.- Britain may soon have a new foreign sec- rotary. The charge would release An- thony Eden from the foreign of- fice and enable him in stand by Sir Winston Churchill in his other post as deputy prime minister. ceniraie his energy on helping policy and government. Leading Candidates Leading candidates for the for- eign office appointment are: sir Walter Monckton, 62-year-old labor minister whose skill at concilla-' tion and management has shot him up to the top ranks of the party: and Harold MacNeill, 5.0- the able minister of housing and local gov- ernment under whose direction the party is approaching its promised goal of 300,000 new homes. . The present acting foreign sec.- retary, the Marquess of Salisbury. is not considered likely to get. the post because his peerage prevents himgfrom sitting in the House of Commons. Richard Butler, Chan- cellor of the exchequer, who filled Em,” men would be able to Comlsearch and Rescue aircraft boosted i Churchill work out top matters off” 3 mi5-ii"? L3"c5-5”” lmmb” Still No Trace Of Missing lilane CHURCHILL. Man., tCPi-RCAF the total area covered in a search to-40.000 square miles Wednesday. The 14 planes-eight four-engine Lancasters, four twin-engined Da- kotas and an Otter and Norseman on floats-fought poor and fog in the hunt. Three more Lancasters were at Truro. They left after supper and;,.,.s am not sunermg ma gremyvishinsky speech as a hardening Martzaret decided to come aionzin-om the income tax levies. Char- 30! the Russian 3imUd8- TM” W” ,.'700,000 for We-alherlthe July. 1952 figure of for a visit. dav Domestic Exports OTTAWA (CF)---Canada's do- mestic exports in July hits an es- timated total of 393,100,000, a. Bureau of Statistics official re- ported Wednesday. This was lower than the sill,- June, bttt well above 370.000.- ooo. For the seven-month period ended July 31, it brought total Winnipeg. flown in from Green- wood, N.S.. base of the lost plane,l at the request of search master" Jack Hudson of Winnipeg. l The missing plane took off sat-i urday with eight men aboard on? a routine, eight-hour navigationi flight from Rockcliffe. ont., to; Churchill. i RushVl:t;ni-IJI-Ijgsifoi l Winnipeg By Air in as prime minister during Churchill's enforced real this sum-- mer. is almost ruled ottt. by the, fact that Britainls whole economic; recovery program is dependent on his direction at. the treasury. Political opinion is , that Churchill intends to make a top-level reshuffle in his calilnell before fall, when Parliament will-l be reconvenintz and the party will be holding its annual conferenctai Eden Convalesclng l Eden 55, has been absent froirf the foreign office through illness for more than four months. and now is convalescing after a series of operations. He is expected to make a complete recovery, but no date for his return has yet. been announced, The prime minister, now nearly; 70, has himself only recently ro-4 sttmed his duties after a seven-. week rest from overwork. He is reported to have captured much of his old vigor, but' he is evidently anxious'that. Eden, his official dep- uty and indicated successor, should be close at hand this autumn. Politicians said today a change- in the foreign secretaryshlp would indicate Churchill's intention to continue as prime minister as long as his health permits. saooioiolitirleti Robbery In France 'ln MONTREAL. tCPi - Air traits- port command headquarters at La- chine announced Wednesday thatl an RCAF C-119 "flying boxcar" transport has left Boston with eight iron lungs for Winnipeg. The hospitals for twatment of polio' victims in the West. domestic exports to s2.3a6,'700,0o() as against 52,-167,100,000 in the cor- responding pcriod of last. year. Boy Scouts To Meet In Canada In 1555 VIENNA (AP)--The Boy Scout world conference ended it meeting in Vaduz, Liechtenstein. Wednes- day after picking Canada as host for the next conference and Scout ljamboree in 1955. 1 There was no indication where in Canada the two taneous meetings will be held. The conference announced that of hardcnlngliron lungs are needed by Winnipeg there are 5,582,000 Boy Scouts of tnatclv 54.000 from I branch all ranks in 55 cotintries. more ithan 3.000.000 of the 1 in the U. S. nda. ' N.S. Remembers Scot W110 Gave Pr By Kingsley Brown Jr. , (Canadian Press Staff Writer) t HALIFAX, (CP) -- When King; James I began selling l(nliZllih0'lfls' to finance a Scottish colony ml the Now lVorlrl hr never If-?(lk0ll-I the French in help llR.l' ill-V wife's doury. But Nova Scotin. ”"' colony, fll(ltl'l do b:Itlll' transaction. She RM ll” "am"-t' her fin: and cont-of-nrms. 'llodR.Vj there are more than 100 Nnvnl Srotia harnncls In Scotland wllhl titles but no lnnds. The province. after 324 .W-ars. unveiled a monument Wednesdn.V at the site of a fort. occupied for three years by the colonists on the shores of Annapolis basin near Champlainls razed Port Roynl Stgottisitl in the, it. rommrntnrnles the settlers and Sir William Alexander who master-minded this historic but ST. TROPEZ. France (AP)- urly Wednesday and got. away with 3300.000 in jewels and cash belonging to patrons in this riv- isra resort, police said. It was the first hig haul report- ed this summer on France's glam- or coast where ,1ewel'robberiea are a traditional hazard for wealthy vacationers. Among the victims in recent years were the Aga. Khan and his bcgum. The chinf victim Wednesday was Mrs. l-fayat. Voltrrra who owned all but 316,000 of the stolen valu- ables. Police said that because of her falling night the manager of the Mini hotel, identified as it Mrs. Clot. could not give thrm it dra- thts mission. Au invited. her trance. motion of the Iunmen. Gunmen invaded the bedroom ofiol Kill! Mm"- a near-sighted woman hotolkeepenl abortive attempt at early 500'! tish colonization from the court, . Unveils Plaque Premier Mint-donald. a Scot. him- self whose clan settled about a century later in rugged Cape. Breton and established a Scottish stronghold, unveiled the stone with the bronze plaque under heavy, rain-filled skies. . Sir William, later Earl of Stir- ling, was something of n dreamer land It pool. This hrlpcd in gain- 'lng the influence of King James. also a romantic So he suggt-stedi to the kind that he establish at Scottish colony, in emulation of England, llollnntl and Franco. ovince Name lSFcoit.lshS-nobleman th?'t?rii?F-1 JUNE 4- between New England and New- fotindland. Fluitncn Soli--Inn To finance the venture, Sir Wil- tnrl his son would give the colonyllinm advised James to sell ltnnorsi of knight-barnnet to worthy Scots with 3,000 marks on their hand! or who were willing in outfit 11 number of colonists. The first evpt-rlilions. in ltl'l'1-1L'l. were failures. The first started into and left. the settler at New- foundland. l'l'hcn thn ships arriv- ed the next year they found hnlf the settlers (load and the others content with fishing for end. Ton, however, gave tip their F-Continued on Prize 8 'c(Tl”4l VS-try in Eastern Canada. flail n;;.;;..g. In was Is Heaviest In Years CALGARY. ICPl-Hail to Prairie grain crops has been the heaviest running well ahead of destruction from the rapidly approaching a damn" this in skies An inquest will be held Thurs-L stmul- , year years. the 1952 and record in .s.. m:.-.;-....m mg" men, and pemoml tux 1m.la. peace conference ever is held . pm me 1951 mum,” yeanffor the conference Whc” the cur- a. profit altogether of s3,01B,000l O Undergoes Operation ,Province had 36 taxable co-oper-I ill federal income taxes. lpert for the Progresive Conserva- .tax returns in 1951, according tot his condition is satisfactorv. i.vct'c farmers who reported a totalfnaiurc of the operation. corded as received from other in- -iottr-town and Summerside. in- :3 19811118 that the Red! Md T"Ch' cl inn-its, account for as percent of!Tl1i5 was in contrast to the appar- Prince Edward Island reports isslreni session opened- land paying overall income tax of iative companies which divulged Al TORONTO, I-Cif:i:r;m-don Gmy. l Only 100 primary producers in itlve party, underwent. an operation said would not disclose t' n income of 263.000 and paid 37,0001 idivldual primary producers such as. uding both corporations with of- 9-d "19 D0lni't0f "W ”'”m:3 Wham" '31, grand max (0151, lent eagerness of the Communists active taxable companies, revealing. ' Gordon Gruydon -s7s7,ooo. In the same year, the. IWOM Of 5113.000 and Paid b11.000.idon, 50-year-old foreign affairs ex- Prlnce Edward Island filed incomelwednesday. Hospital authorities tlhe taxation statistics. All of titescipoctot-5 in taxes. No tax money was re-l I fishermen and forestry operators. 3 ion Paints we (NE lliiRSr.i.vEs CRE0lT F09. Loses wt: BLAME. Luck 9 .Bank' Robbers 34.000 At Montreal MONTITEAL (CPI-Bank rob- bcrs struck Wednesday for the. second time within three monthsl at the small farm village of St. lAugustin. escaping with approxi- of tilt; Banque Pt-ovinciale rltt Cari- . Police said the lone person in the bank. a 50-year-old womani ltcuer. was too frightened by thel ,smooth-working, two-man team In give a good description of the bandits. - 9 The same branch Wi1Vl'Ollb!1t'l of close to sl,000 by two armed tncn TORONTO. (CP- Minimum and maximum temperature ltnuscn -- 58 p ' ' iX'tt'tnrm 5.2 66 .Plan To Combat tf;j;g,fpl0" -jg j; Livestock Pests lawn 4a so i , ,,. l'.'inn:p”Q 53 90 OTTAWA, tOPi M An oxpausinti iT"l'0Yli" 5 i "1 of the Federal Government's cf-'l"'-WV1 55 sf fort in control livestock pests int-W'iiliF"vll 57 W Western Canada was annouticr-dlQH"ll"" . - :50 Wednesday by the Agrtcttlturcts-'liil' Mil" 57 lDcpn:'tn1ent. txlnns ion :3 on i The livestock insect labornlorv ll-11!-'-WX ---- -- J7 "E int lmthbridce. Alta, will become. Vii-”Fl'iii”'"l'”l 52 W .'the niaior research centre on live- ,5WlilP.i' 34 istock insects for Western Canada. iY"i"l”””l 51 5” tthc department said. i r -r p 't' 5 i The department said it plans a ll.il.iFAX. tCPi The Wmthci comparable resenich rentre in Oni -Oilicri says the weather over flu tarto to serve the livestock indus- Xinrttimcs 'l'hursday will be cloudl utlh tnlermittrni. rain. - nngionnl forecasts: Eastern New Brunswick coun- lies, St. John river valley: Over cast. with intermittent. rain am" drizzle. Not much change in temp o-rature. Light winds. Low-high at Monclnn 50 and 65, l:ifEf(l;;flC:)dl' inntl Saint John 52 an . - - V N - - -1-imundston 5'! and 68. The hall ittsurance board has re-I Prince Edward Island. In! 0' or-ived 4.672 damage claims to date rltalour: Overcast: occasional rain iand the 195.1 total is expected int 'riutmtn.x-. Nnfl-'T;;ICh if:I!Il0u"i:l c uni nr surpass the record ngurt-. temperature. .2 wn s. i- loli 5.506 for 1947. high at Charlottetown 00 and M. Monetary loss is expected to be; Campbellton 55 andL0t5.M Ill I winds; Alberta. greater in Saskatchewan but no Bay of Fundy: . Chairman Glen Elder of the Al- lestitnate is available. A Regina overcast with for PMNWS 5"" "i" berta hall lnstirancc board andlsurvey said claims on companies lcrmiilfnl will and 'll'iZZl'- V'”iii"' officials of private companies re- who write tip to 00 per cent of.it,v nr-nr -zero in for and three ported Wednesday that at least the bail insurance in the Prsiri-t'iniIes in rain and drizzlf. 0il1"l'i 03,500,000 will be paid Alb:-rtalPrnvinces now total 20.086. exclus-ivii". ill ml1”- T9mfl9TliUi'9 "'07 farmers this year in cover halllive of last week's claims on the M. losses from some of the worst Alberta board. 4 W --romp" i storms in'the province's history. The Alberta losses cover about either 700 in Alberta. and,1.lDl in Man- 1,000,000 acres of grain lie also made a friend of Ferdi- nand Gorges, governor of New irlyniottth, who not 'mIll'IlmInl'!l lll'l persuading James to grant the wiped out or heavily damaged rquol to eight. per cent. of inrovlnct-is tr-tat seeded -areagr. thcilr re Md when fa:-morn report on High tide today at Charlottetown at 12.15 A. M. and 12.30 P. M. lllgh tide today at the North Share at. 7.41 A. M. and 7.62 P. M sun rises t0dl.V at 5.28 A. M. and 'srts at 7.00 P. M. The survey said there have been 12.914 claims in Saskatchewan. 6,- ..i'nbn. These figures will be sharp- 'eok-andis ll-at I-cvaro storm s.