MAXIMS OFA Mom: MAN. Ah, happy ha who rvwns that ten- (m-"c joy, The heart lovc of a child. i Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew gain. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Them in a time when it in om- li "l! better to make a ion than n _-. Moming Guardian, Founded i881. Charlottetown Guardian. Two Cont. CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1947i 12 PAGES New Stel Floats For Rocky Point Ferry Servioo siinuld the Rocky Point ferry. “Fuirvicvs”. trot. resume her har- bour crossings until April 1st. she n11; llitVf‘ two new stool floats at lire Rocky Point pier to facili- tate her docking. If lcc conditions enable her to begin her regular- sailings before that date. Puiblic s officials say the old wood- oats can be repaired suffici- to enable tlrc "Fairvicw" -:ii‘.v to ilock until the stccl floats are placed. The floats are now being built at Amherst. N.S.. and tbs contract calls for their comple- iluil by April lst. Those on the (‘iiiilriitetoivn side are wooden 'r'\ll(l are expected to last another ycai or two. officials said last right. Wages For Farm lB.C..Lowesttlere O’I'I‘A\VA. lVIBrCh B —- (W) — Hired lrr-lp on Canadian farm! arc rccriving tiiglicr wages than n roar nzo arid more than twice as miicii ns in i940. the Bitreau M Statistics reported today. Wit-Er bozird providcd by their miplovcrs. they received an avcrngc dolly wage of $3.23 at the timc of the survey, last Jan. 15. compared with $2.96 at the Qftfllll limb iii i906. Without lnarri. tho irvcrirge wage was $4.15 against $.84 a year ago. Wag/- rates for day help were holiest in Bfltl-Sli Columbia and lowest lngfirlnce Edward Is- lniiri. iticksurvey showed. wiagc monthly wage with hozwl for all Canada vrus $3.29 at \ n. 1S compared with $57.94 tin» . cvious year. When farm hands provided thclr own board tlxii :.\'r:'nl:c monthly rzrtc was $8025 ngiiinst. $82.23 in January, i940 Corning Events "Jilniics at. Victoria to-nigilit. "Riuiznrrase Sale at St. Jomcfl Church flail. Saturday, 3 P. M. ‘landing Hogs at Montague Station cncli Thursday for Canada Packers Ltd. S. C. McLean. Phone "Loading Hogs at. Poakes Sta- tion cnch Thursday for Canada Packers Ltd. Merlin Devine. "l'ill'(l Party. Sale Lunches. 501111;: Valley llall. March 7th. 8 O'clock. "Fleeting in Afton Hail. ltinrtti 6th. to discuss farm prob- lfli". :-i>.iil.~., ctr‘. Agriculture rcp- "Piil-"rtivn will be tn attendance. Pzciui-cs will '30 shown. "Dnnrc. Parkdnlc i-lall. I-‘rlday. tiiniilr 7th. Mackellzlc-‘s Orch- (‘FITJL ‘ "Vnricty tfnnccrt apd Box Soc- ml. Rzitliist chin-rill llnil. Thurs- dnr. 8 l’ M. Admission box lunch i" 353 DPr couple. "flooding Hogs It GIQII Ill- minn each Thursday for Canada Packers Ltd. Norman McKenzie. Cardigan "Notice-Kitchen range. also roonr heaters. both‘ wick and pot burners in stock. Order now. Satis- faction guaranteed. o. c. crcen. Emerald. "Loading hogs at St. Peters for Cnnlda Packers Ltd.. each Tuesday tor truck pickup servlco from farm to ca: Phone Raddls Pratt. ‘flattening hogs swh Tuesday for Canada Packers Ltd. for truck- ht urvloo through Bacnacliflo "hm-v vnnuv. Vernon. oi-weu and "cwwwn. plum Wcltcr Crane u-is "Collecting Hon cacti Prldu for Canada Packers Ltd. for trucktnl lervice through so ervtllo. A1- "PP! Pistol. Vern arm. Avon- $1.9m Hermitage. Phone Gordon "Loading five hog; for Cumin Pm" 1t Albany. Thursday from MIMI: tllr a. mania rrtdu AM. ""11 11 ootock. Tnroktng service zhcn roads permit. Notify A. 0. "Mn. or 0. C. Green. "Collecting Boa for Canada Plchn Ltd-v n” hide). Scum. P110 B». rum: snap. Bay wrtrlrc. ‘Iinnandalo, Dt-IMII» "Momma. ltrnthooab. "more . Help Highest In _ MAYOR ASKS SALARY CUT His salary should be cut from $3.500 to $500 a year. Mayor wli. llam Ovens. seen here. of Peter- boro. announced to a startled city council. Mayor Ovens. who operates a dairy business. said he shouldn't rcceivc any more than members of council unlcss he worked full time. The mayoralty job takes only about 65 pcr cent of his time. he stated. ‘ Ask Potato Costs Survey Bo Corrtinuod OTTAWA. March 5 - (CIP) - Establishment of a chemical con- trol iaboratory to co-ordinatc fruit and vegetable research in Canada by the Federal Depart- ment of Agriculture was recom- mended at a meeting today of the Canadian Horticultural Coun- ct l. Attended by delegates from ail horticultural communities in the Dominion. the conference called on the Department of Agricul- tnr-o to continue in 194'! its cost of production siuvcy into tire out- put of Canadian potatoes. Council also urged the Depart- ment to find a aim/pie means of disinfecting used potato bags and to discover means through which bacteria ring rot in potatoes can be eliminated. It was suggested that research into the food value of potatoes and turnips be oar- rled out. (Mr. J. W. Boulter, Charlotte- town. rcprcsentr-d P. E. I. at the meeting). Carrrran Pit Props For Scottish Mines BONESS. Wcsit lnthlurr. March 5 - (Rafters) ~ The first Geo-man trading rcseel to enter a Scottish port siiuce bafore t-he war. S S Werner, m5 tons. docked today with a caiigo of pit props from Hamburg It sailed under orders of tire Allied Control Commission. BLAME STORM FOR DEATH BATHUR-‘BT. N. 13.. March 5- (OP) — The only NEW Brunswick casualty so for reported after Monday's stomr was Peter Boud- reau. of East Bathurst. who died of a heart attack after battling his way home from work in a paper mill. v By KAY rusx OTTAWA. March 5 (Cl?) — A comprehensive. country-wide survey of cancer diagnosis, treat- ment. and research soon will be launched by the newly-formed National Cancer Institute of Can- adrr as the first stop in its drive to combat this disease. the cause of one of eight deaths in the Dominion. ' ‘Ihe inst cancer survey in Can- ada was tiaken in 1968 by Dr. Frederick Banting. co-dlscoverer of insulin. and was confined only to research facilities. said Dr. A. W. Blair of Regina, acting exe- cutive director of the institute. at a press conference today fol- lowing a two-day meeting of’ the Institutes interim directors. The meeting was held to for- mulate plans for an all-out carn- paign against cancer and to dis- cuss the disbursement of the $450,000 authorized two weeks ago by trustees of the King George V silver Jubilee cancer fund for use by the institute over a three- year period. From the survey it is expected the needs of the various medical schools will be ascertained and what sums from the cancer fund should be allotted in them for use in cancer research. said Dr. Blair. One of the first thiings the Institute will do is sitinrulatc rrscarcih in all Canadian univers- ity centres. “We shall notify all universit- trs within 30 days of the petiti- ing survey and that iilnds will shortly be available for Accredit- ed research in cancer." he con- tinued. “We anticipate some small disbursements will be made this spring." Any largo disbursements would have to wait until Sciotetrnbcr when the Ir-rtitute will formally receive its charter. o.rr.n. infra Diesel Electric Engines Dntlrrter MONTREAL. March 5—Brtnglng the total number of diesel electric locomotives ordered by the Canad- ian National Railways so far this year to 4B. D. McK Ford. vice presi- dent of purchase and stores for the system. announced today titre award oif two contracts for the construction 0f 28 additional unltrr. Eighteen will be built by the Elcctro Afotlv-s Division of Gener- al Motors Corporation at Ln Grange. Ill.. and the others by the American Locrmotive Company at Schenectady. N.Y. The previous orders. announced by . Mr. F‘0rd last week. were for the construct- ion of 18 diesel locomotives by tlic Canadian Loccnrotlvr Company. l.td.. at Kingston. Ont. and two by the General Electric C0. 8t Erie- Penn. “The pun-hose of these diesel loco- motives will so n loin: wiry b eas- ing thr- prcsent shortage of motive power 0n the Canadian National Railways system." Mr Ford said. “Tire-y will release existing strum units for other trhan switching service and will perform the local work more economically." Pioneer in the development 01' diesel locomotives in Canldl. "l! Canadian National placed its first in service in 1925, Since that time the national systems diesel fleet ins been increased to 79 units. 50 ___.__.__,..____ (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) CHICAGO. March l-(Aflwluc- cusful use of a new powerful Icrm killing agent that checks many infections renlstant to peni- clilln and the sulfonamldcs nr.d frequently remove: the need for lurgcry was reported today. The physicians who developed the antibiotic uld it had prover‘. l0 aucccuful in treatment of such localised infection: n boils. car- brrncln. otter and ulcers that i: had "almost completely rcplaccd punlculn" In their hands. Th0 substance works with such Qcod. liruy 04.1fm tho rc- Irrlto surprise both pstiltlt‘ and physician. Developed after nearly tlll‘ l of research. It has prova cl a ecttvo against at tun: l0 vrgtonu ruimnt to penicillin. o now t was named booi- ttocin in orror of Margaret ‘Ihcy. who underwent treatment in a New York hospital for a corn- New, Powerful Germ Killer Is Revealed pound fracture of tho leg. A germ found in tho infected wound of her leg was subjected to ordinary culture mediums and found to produce a wkic spectrum of anti-bacterial activity. It also was found that the ‘aibloquent crude filtrate proved effective wlrsn lnfsctld into tho ccntro of boll; and carbunclos. The test: were conduct“! at the Presbyterian Hospital. New York, by Dr. name L. llalonq and Mlu Brlblna Johnson of tho Colum- bia University's College of Pity- slotam Ind lurgoom. Eventually "My triad the drug on men and C6 women whose cam “n!” the "ordinary run o! infections which arc neon in any aurloorra ofllco or tn tho lurltnnl clinic pf any normal." 0i tho 10o pattern, Q were uvcd the liar-non’: knife and post-surgical treating w‘: spec-dad in moat of the other c l. Soviet Union Delegate ls Outspoken (By Francis W. Ca nter LAKE succms. Mlrrch 5-(A.P)-- Andrei A. Gromylro Charged today that the UlltiQd States‘ world atomic plan was dir. cctcd against the lndcpendenug n1 other countries end said the bit- terly-contested veto issue could be no obstacle to effective control of atomic energy. The Soviet delegate to the Un- ited Nations Security Council con- tended. in the strongest attack he has yet made on the American proposals. that the Unlttcd States wants to maintain a monopoly on atomic energy. He. spoke in Eng. lish for an hour and i8 minutes and made it clear that Russia hau 11°! bulllld an inch in its opposi- tion to the Untied States plan. The Council hcurd Gromyko dc- clcre that: l. The Soviet Union could nut turn its national economy over m a proposed international control BEEHCY. 2. One country (obviously the (Continued on Page 5 Ool. 4) Parliament At A Glance (Canadian Press) Sipeaker Gaspard Fauteux rulcd that dist-fission of the flppllmjlllgll for_ a Iffl-per-cent increase in freight rates, now before tlrc Fergnaport Commissioners. was bar- Triansport Minister Chev-riot said the freight-rule application was made by the Railway AS501:- tation of Canada. not. by the c“. adian National Railways. Veterans Minister Mackenzie sold it would cos-t possl-bly 5200,. 000 to $7.000.00D to ClllTGCiv_d€iE\.'l§ in 2.600 veterans ironies. In tire Upper Chanthcr. sQflqHJf J. F. Johnston (L-Snskntrltevrunl said if current credits to Brit-tin were not sufficient they should be extended. Thursday The Commons will continue the Throne Speech debate. The Sen- ate will sit. Chinese Cov’t Chins Vlotory Dvor Communists NANKING, March 5 -— (AP) — The Gcvecrsiment announced t0- nfght that the Chinese commun- lsts had been crushed in a spring offensive south c! Harbin. The Cihfmesc press quickly speculated that naticrlial forces sc-czr would lntinch their own offensive in Non-hem Ma-ri-churia. Chinese newspaper men who visited Tehhwel. scene of the Com- munists‘ biggest defeat in North Matichtula, reported the city was a mass of wrecked buildings after a week of shelling. They raid G00 Communist bodies still wcirc on the streets. ' More Motor Vshloiis Registered In It. B. FREDER-ICTON. ltArcli 5 - (OP) - Record high revenue from motor vehicle licences in New Brunswickdast year vms rc- vealrd today by Hon. W. S. An- derson. Minister of Public Workl. The total was $l.t5\88.9G'7. an in- crease of $251,828 over the pre- vious y-ean. He reported increases in the number of every type of vehicle registered. . Gasoline’ tax and licence fees amounted to "$8.081. an in- crease of 0740.651. ' What P. E. I. OTTAWA. March 5-—(Spccial)- A vote or Moooooo for nie con- struction and improvement o.’ the Prince Edward Island cor ferry terminals is contained in the nar- llnmentnry estimates tabled yes- terday afternoon in the Commons. With this is an additional item of $565,000 for completion of the new ferry Abegweit. now tinder con- struction in the yards of M rine Industries Ltd. zrt Sorel, Qua Acco-rdi-ng to Finance Miltisici‘ Douglas Abbott's estimates. Prince Edward Island will receive a 31f.)- sldy of $3Bl.93l.88 in the 1947-48 fiscal year. an amount similar to the regular subsidy o-f last rear. There is a blank space loft how- ever under rho heading of “rum. pensatlon to Provinces in lieu of income and corporation taxes under the Dominion Provincial taxation agreement of 1942." Tire old com- pensation subsidy of $401,367.78 will "be rrp-I-zccd by the large:- amourrt agreed on lJGiWDCII tho Dominion Cabhret and P. E. I. Premier Waiter Jones. All increase of $1.300 to a 110A’ total of $37,580 is listcd for O_\'al.f‘l' culture this year and nn inrresu- of $76,000 in the vc-te for fish tul- ture to a total of $308,000. Little for Public Buildings IS-l-llid farts buildi" Prince Edward poorly in public works _—(C_oritlnired c. Page 5 Co]: '4) ti. S. May Be 1 Near Agreement Gets From Ottawa; Ai A Disappointing Outlook i beat it With Dominion HALIFAX. March 5 — (CP) -l Ari lrrciicalici-i that the Nova Si-criia. Cover-alum.‘ may be irony ngrcc- mcoit wit-h the Dcrrririiioir on zaxn- ‘tlQrii and flira-nciai matters nus seen by scimc quarters here when the City Hall reporter of the Hali- fax Mail today reported "high city hall sources" as saying the Nova 5001i! Gm/enlnlfillt \\".t$ considering passing on to municipalities pos- sibly 50 per rent of thc immense in revenues it. would derive from sucir an agreement. Such an arrangement might mcarl 1 0500.000 annually loriHalifax. inc‘ rcpcriei- addcd. “The aid." the story continued. "would be given to the municipal- ities not totally in the form of grzirvts but alsg bv taking over cer- tain of their civic coirrmitrnenis to the province. "The provincial highways tux which costs the city 560.000 a rear rnay be completely cluniciatcd. cer- tain civic costs of hcaitih and wel- fare t-akcn ovcr by the Province coda grant paldniirrrrelly in licu of taxati i on income-producing, gcvcrnrritnt biviness. A lsiggrr sillarc of the Costs of education may ulsu be accepted by the Province. “The Pmviizticial Government, it was reported. would call represent- atives oif the municipalities toge- ther soon after signing the new ag- recmen-t -- if one is signcd. At the earns time. belief is expressed that finalization of n Dominion-Provin- cial agreement would be held up No Trace 0f Steamer Missing Three Days MONTREAL. March 5 —- (C?) - veteran iC-ipi. Allari J Valils and his rug- EBd Oflzludian crew 01f’ Z3, hope ap- pcamd to res-t tonight for safety of freighter Novadoc. the gale- IUPOXl the scaunansiilp of i the Canadian three days off ‘cw-apt Maine coast. Telephone: reports from the Un- tire Paterson Steamship Company. owners of the Novadoc, said six planes and three vessels had tnrried out a sear-ch of lied Sta-res C-oast Guard Montreal offices of the i0 some 6.000 miles. The belt covered l-arid to Boston and 60 miles to sea. No trace of the vessel was found. “So icing as nothing is found. un- til there Ls scone evidence of the strip breaking up - "avreckage. a Lifeboat or sirrvivors — we will coorrslder the Novadoc afloat. sonic- where. " 1.0. McEwen, the Corri- panys operating manager in Moor- troal. said tonight. ‘ An Old Fisherman "Captain Vallls Ls an old Nev."- foundlnnd fisherman, and the geri- cral tactic of those follows is to to deep water in a Silt‘. perhaps even ‘:00 milcs to s:a. “I have asked that the .<'.'\r<'h be shifted to the Cape Ccd arm br- cause if Capt. Viallis put to uzn to get out c-i itic gale he probably could be at Cape Cod. cr even New York, tomorrow. "All vessels at sea watch. The C..'.\Sil_'.-',tl.'.i‘€l arc on tlrc will solid out another plnre temorrcvi- in ad-i clition to those makinl T681118!‘ tours." Tire Novadocs radio is believed tn have been smashed out of com- ‘\‘ iii the storm. norct from lhc Nuvnrlcc. en New zouic‘ from Dfgbr. N S. to York with a ca-rgo of gypsuim, tome at 2:17 A.M. Monday. At that time c ivris shipping W310i‘. a was Capt. (Continued cr. Page 5 Cfil- 4i the Nova. trait-h was stove in arr-cl she nuuiiiig before the iv New Wave 0f Violence A Sweeping Palestine JERUSALEM. March 5 -— (Al?) _ One person wias killed and three were injured as a new wave of violence svvopt Palestine to- night with gunfire rattling in the ancient streets of Jerusalem. Earlier today. the Orion cine- ma in the Jewish scctlon of Jorusalrrn was held up by sevcrr men. who brandlshctl revolvers. scooped up $000 and escaped ‘n a taxi. Police said the robbers were “young Jews“. and that they ind not been captured. GRANIJPA EMBARRASSED DANVIUJE. 111.. March 5 —, (KP) -- "Grandpa" Edward Mai- den. 79. is ill~rrnd embarrassed. He has illv chicken pox. He caught the disease, which trsrr.'illy' attnoks tllildrcn only. from his seven-year-old grandson. Donald. Newsm en, Diplomats Enroute To Moscow extend-ed 100.1 miles along the s-hore from Port- urz-tll tihc coming session of tlrc lot tcr proposals." the legislature to dctenrilnc tiic fc-cllng of the entirc Government towards (By Ross Munro) ABOARD BRITISH DIPLO- MATIC TRAIN EN ROUTE 'l‘O MOSCOW. March 5 — (CPI-AFC rolled across shivering. shattered Europe tonight-bound for Moscow and u conference which may have far-reaching efforts on the future of this unhappy continent and of the World. This diplomatic special is bear- ing Foreign Secretary Bevl-n and his aides to the Big Four meeting in the Russian capital which w.ll . seek to work out the Problems of a solid peace. Here and there. as we moved along. thllrc was striking evidence of the late war—bombed-out cit- ies. cold. ragged people. barren fields. The train started at Dun- kerque-scene of the heroic ova-zon- tion in ‘HMO-mid moved across France and Belgium-into Oer- many. In wrecked Berlin. where - Hitler's European empire dlcd. the train stopped for two hours. We were bound for a peace meeting but wrecked Berlin was a Brim symbol of war. . European peace difficulties were illustrated cvcn ln travel. At Brut-Litovsk. Poland. we must change from this French-model train tn n Russian one-because i City Chairman ~ i i JlAJOlf. FRANK J. STOREY i It rivas announced yesterday by lthe Provincial chairman of the t . Rcd Cross Campaign. Mr. Edwin jJoiinsteiio. that. Major Frank J, ‘Storey. wril known businessman. ‘ uill act as chairman of the Cam. paign in the City of Charloiie~ , town. 1 iilajor- Storey is prominent in i military circles being second-in- ‘ command cf 5th Divisional Signals. ‘ A wrrr vct ihll. Major Storey served . four and n trail‘ _\c.rrs overseas a1. i inched lU licndquartcrs Third Cair- iadiani Division and saw active scr- i vice iii Noriihwest Europe. . 0n return llome Afajoi‘ ientcrecl the firm of JP. ‘ which bs" me krlcivill as and Slrrrtiy l.I('i. g The Rrri (first-s Cainpaigir will he ‘conducted in the city the latter part of ilris month. ‘Gas. Electric . Rationing May Continue 3 Years . Storey Crockztt y Crockett ‘ v coupon. Wig; actor» -l.--.n linfornred Gzxcrnmeiit snokcsnisni and isniri today tirrrt an cicrtrivit i hoirscltiililcrs ~ tho rrc.\t LWu and prrbably iirr-noi mars. will be 3llllI3ilil"CCl \\'.l.l!l1l a few rials. Domestic allocation of i-oni is not reduced nt present but deliver- ies rvbll be ctit to ironies ‘iviiere llrc llSf‘ of gas and electricity c.\- ‘ ceriis the fzinrily truotzr. Shortage of electricity general- illg plants \\lll bring a "very ren- slrlcrahic upset to British social life." the source srurl. but lic t‘:- presseci the beiirf that it will ‘it 'llllllf‘('r'.->2<ll'\' to iiriposc night-shit‘. I '~ in - iviicly; Britain To Reduce ltoyal Navy till Per Cent l LONDON. \lzrl‘;'ll I» ‘lBllillill vriil reduce tilt‘ |Nfl\'_v 60 prr cent ilils ivar. The Admiralty nnnouirccd today. t r.\l‘)- i R030: .in its budget estimates (or 1947-48. ithrrt trilc totnl i1l'-'.lll.)(’l‘ of rlnvnl til-i ificczs. SPZICIWH. boys and lt0_\:il ‘lvfariircs wiiiild be rcduccd from the “M74647 lllllXllTllllll 0i 492.300 to i512.- 000 during ill!‘ twelve mouths b‘- ginning April 1. the soviet trains run on ivirlrr gungc tracks. Just. beforr the train started yesterday. Bevin signed the Anglo- Frcnch alliance which may he the forerunner of a similar ngrcemeirt involving Russia and the Unrtcrl States. Tho gossip oil tire train ts that the Moscow conference mny develop beyond a discussion of Germany and Austria into a broud alliance of tho Big Four which would extend and strengthen their present association under the Un- tied Nations. Aboard the special arc 120 nicm- lrors of a forolgn office rtelcgatroir and 20 British and Dominiom‘ correspondents. Bevin ltRs .1 rrrr to himself up front. At Brussels. where I boarded the train, he talk- ed with Belgian officials and in Berlin he left. the train for cull- versatlons with senior British of- fi-cials. c As the train passed through German towns. Germans stood and stared blsnkly. They probably were not even avvire that it was carrying Britons to a conic-route which will go i; long way toward deciding the fate of their country. We all have been issued nugr. fleece-lined coats and othcr Arctic gear and w; are hotter padded thou most Canadian prospectorl. ‘. judgment. Subacripflo Delivered $6.00. Mall sun. other Provinces a n. l. a. and GOVT PLANS T0 REPAIR 2,600 VETERANS HOUSE-S Strong Attack On jlnited States Atomic Plans Country-wide Cancer Survey ls Planned May Crust tlp To $700,000 iliouse Told i BY IVAN! O'Donnell i OTTAWA. March 5—(CP)--Vet- ierans Minister MacKenzie. answer- iing OppOsltlon charges of. faulty construction ln veterans homes. said tcday in the Commons that i the GUSIF-mB-nt will pay for "a 100 IP81‘ Chit repair job" on 2,600 hous- ing units built an small holdings iunder provisions of the Veterans ' Land Act. i Mr. ltiacKcrrzie. saying ma; m; repair work would cost between 5500.000 and $100,000. stated tins: many of the defect; were due to "faulty workmanship“ and the use iof “faulty materials." All the con. i dltlons were "remedlable and. with. ifew exceptions. at a very small cast." It was hoped the wort: would be completed within a few months. Rciect Commission Suggestion Speaking during continued Throne Speech debate, Mr. Mac- kenzie rejected a Progressive Con- servativc Party suggestion that a royal commission be established to investigate the building of homes for veterans. "The only feature with which a. royal commission could deal. in my would be the question of a cut in capital cost." said Mr. Mackenzie. “If we were to ask a. royal com-mission to examine the physical condition of these houses lt would simply be delaying their completion nii_d delaying the fur- nishing of the amenities to which these scttlcrs are Cntitled." Besides the minister. speakers in the debate included Arthur Ross IPC-Sourisi: bfoirrinn Locklturl (PC- -Ll.ncolni: Hnzcn Argue ICC FAl/‘ood Mountain) and Armand rlouthiei- (L. Drumnrond - Ariiin- bits-kn). i ‘ i\lr. (‘isuili-cr‘ callcd for-tho cum)- (‘ration or‘ all member's in strength- _._._~_ w ~ (continued on Page 5 Col. 3- No MAN is A boas who (Atria ‘to You About Yours. sELr 9 TORONTO. March 5 —(C'Pl—- Minimum and maximum tempora- t tllr€sI-— vlll1('0ll\'f‘l' 30 4b) Ednronton 33B 5 Regina HB 1 Winnipeg 10B 3" Toronto 27 4t‘! Ottawa 17 36 Montrcal ... 23 4O Qiierwi- 2s 4o Saint. John ~-~ 36 Mont-ton 24 34 Halifax . 26 40 Charlottetown .. 25 35 Sydney 28 33 Yarrnoutii 3O 3B HALIFAX. March 5 ~ (AP) —- Weatirer synopsis and official 1n- land forecasts issued by the D0- minion Public Weather Office at Halifax at 11.15 p.m.. Wednesday. Synopsis: A disturbance in the Gulf of Si. Lawrence is causing IfiOW and. occasional min in the North Shore region and Gaspc. but only var- iable cloudiness with snowflurrisa over the Marlttmes. As tlrll dis- turbance moves slowly\ eastward Thursday. little change in the weather is expected. Tempera- tures ln all regions an "Al" 9X‘ peered to go above freezing iur- ingwhe day. Forecasts valid until Thursday midnight: Prince Edward Island: Variable cloudiness with widely scattered snowflurrics. Not much chanBB i" temperature. Light winds increas- lug hi the afternoon to west lb. High ‘Thursd-ry at Charlottetown 38. illgh tide this morning at 10-44 and tonight at 10.25. Sun sets this iftcmoon at 5-08 and rises wonwrraw morning lt- 630. Full moon March 6. 10.15 P. M. Sllfflmérsldw tide eighteen min- ute; later than Charlottetown, CA8 I-‘IRIY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND’ Dolly except Sunday. Leave Borden It 9.05 AIM. Leave Torrncnttnc at 8 PM.