' 19th. Sale of lunches by W. I. Morning Gmrdlan, Founded I081. 1 Charlottetown Guardian ‘Iwo Cent WN. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, occasions 1s, 194s ‘COVCIB Prince Edward Island Like the i). w B__ 26 PAGES labaeripfloalleliveredflul. IalIMImtherProvhloealI-l-A-II OTE ON CONTROL OF ATOMIC EN ERGY DELAYED Gov? May Remove Tax On Bison: Reducing Potato Acreage By 10 per cent In ’47 HAREOW. Ont. Dee. 1'l — (CIU- Faced with a Domin- ion-wide carry-over of pota- loeg estimated at 10,000,000 bushels, the liar-row Potato Grows; Association last night discussed the possibility of ro- ducing potato acreage by I0 per cent in 1947. - The Association's annual meeting waa told the ‘Marl’!- over” would out into sales of osrly potatoes next summer. No decision vna taken on the suggested reduction but the association will confer with other growers‘ organization, in thb Blenheim and Ilcamlngton distrlcil. King Pleased With Outlook OTTAWA, Dec. I'1-(CP)-Prime Minister Mackenzie King. observ- ing his 72nd birthday. interrupter‘ his work long enough today to give a brief interview durlnirwhlch he said that h, is “very pleased about the possibilities cf the future.’ Sci-ted behind his desk in the top floor library of Iaurler House. Mr. King said he was pleased at the way matters had been hand- led at the recent meetings of the United Nat-ions in New York. ‘He did not know how much longer he would continue in pub- lic office. No one, he said. had a right to look too much to the fut- ure. To do one's duty es one vrent along was most important. Around Mr. King while he spoke were hundreds of letter-i, telegrams and messages of con- lrratulations from all parts of Can- ada and various parts of the wnrld PLAN NEW AIIMORIES CAMPBELLTON. N. B" Dec. 17- ‘(CP)—- A special town council committeeilas been appointed to negotiate purchase of land for new armcrles here. No date for the start of construction wort has bean on- bounced. g Events "Movies it Borden to-nlpht. "Wllmot Valley School Concert. Tuesday. December 17th. "Sea. View School Concert, Wrd- nesday. December ’8t.h. "Ebmeaer Concert. December ‘Christmas Concert. Pleasant Grove. Friday nil coomber 20th. "New Haven Concert, Thursday. Dooemberfltlh- .-L_-. "Long Creek Christmas Concert. Hidayrhecember 20th. "Qlrlstmas (Jcnoert, UL Igd lohoci. Cine tonight. ‘zlibng River school concert. Thilrflll’. December l0. If not fins. Priday. "Dance. Livt 65 Hall. Wednesday. mum served. ' ' fiwo are closed this Saturday all day for stock-taking. n. Arn- lalt. llarrington. "F618"! -- Bums daily live and flllfll try. Paying mar-hat Moe via A ma: “num- iuvsr iii-nan. ioauio; lliled hogs every hiursday and "Bu. Book. McGuiIau soc driving harness sl asdmsw sutured team will‘. buggy wheels ‘and beltII. Morrison. Fredericton. _ "Annual hockey league most- Electricity OTTAWA. Dec. 11 — (OP) —- Iht- change of correspondents» between Prime Minister Mackenzie King and Premier Macdcnald of Nova Scotla aroused speculation in polit- ical circles today that the govern- ment may announce in t-he next budget its decision to rmsove elect- ricity from the ikt of articles subiect to the eight-percent federal soles tax. In the exchange. released last night. Mr. King said electricity was one of a wide range of com- modities subject to the sales tax. Then he added:- "The list of exemptions" from this pm: may be broadened or nan wed from time to time as the Dom ion Government may consider advisable in the light of its revenue needs and general economic coalitions." Federal authorities have ‘aid re- oently that the financial outlook for the current fiscal year is better than anticipated. A statement from the Treasury Department Saturday disclosed that. during the first eight months of the year rcvcmlfl topped expenditures by 5202,4761.- 643 The tax has been-i one which tome provinces have been “NW8 91° Dominion Government to r9111‘!- qllilil. This would indicate that 1! the douiiulon meets the demands the provinces might take advent-WEB of the may: to boost their own tr cit axes. “h. Rita's reierenceic electricity we, tn reply to Mr. Maodonalds re- quest that the dominion move out of the electricity to: field ' ________ Bium’: Cabinet Given Ailllfovai, PARIS. Dec. l'l-—(AP)-.Pseni- dent-Premier Leon Blurn’: all- Socialist interim government re- ceived an overwhelming vote of approval tonight from the French National Assembly. With only a minimum of Hit“. tion between the Communists and the Mouvement Repubilcain Pop- ulsi-re. the Assembly voted 580 w 18 to seat Blum's cabinet, which will remain in office until the, loi- ter part o! January when a res- ulsr government is constituted The new cabinet. first under tl-e constitution of France's ‘Fourth Republic. planned to go to work tomorrow on a new budget for the first three months of 1041. Artist Bios At B3 NEW YORK. Dec. 1'l-tAP)-- Albert Sterner, 83, lnteruatn-ually known painter. etcher and litho- griipher and a member of the Na- "Wlll Academy. died yesterday. A native of London. Sterner "me l0 the United States It the 88o of l7 and helped organise the 9mm» Art mliituin. ‘I'll Bvbiiiitiglliaiiiillfiggo LONDON. Dec. 1'! mam-n. Pm: Association saldnn miiiieiiti- llod threatened today to 00M: Buckingham Palace. The threat was the latest in a series made by anonymous tele. Phone call I-sainat railroad pulsllo bilildings the es, Eltmbeth and MUTE! . were in iesldenee at the Palace tonight, A Cfllltlnt guard is msintolnad at mwlrlnshuo and all other Rey- al establishments. but presumably "l would be after the "c919! o! a bomb t. Ceiling Prices 0n Cars, True Construction of the long awaited Y.M.C.A. building in Charlotte- town, which has been plat-nod since early in 1844, will be under- taken early next spring, as soon as weather conditions will permit ex,- osvstion, This was the decision of the Board of Directors of the Young Men's Christi-an Association at a special meeting held last evening. with the President of the Board. B. Frank Tlnnsy, presiding. The building will be construct- ed on the sitsof the tempers y quarters at the earner of Prince and Euston Streetl. b! M’. F. Bchurman Co. Ltd. in accordance with plans and specifications of architects Jas. E. Harris and it‘. S. Blanchard. with the building bur- eau of the International Commit- tee of the Y-M.C.A. as consultants. Many obstacles have arisen since the “Y" directors undertook a fin- ancial campaign three years ago for a new building. In the first place. estimates for a suitable building were very considerably in excess of the amount sctuaPy reis- ed; priorities for building ‘mater- ials. particularly steel were impos- si-bie to obtain for such a bulld- ing, and in the meantime bulld- ins costs have risen rapidly. The swimming pool originally planned will he added when ma- terial and finances permit. The building will be so constructed 1s to make it possible to add the Continued 0n Page 21 Col. s ilo Break In St. John Milk Strike SAINT JOHN. N. B., Dee 17-. (OP)—The week-old strike by about half the milk producers who nor- mally supply the saint John area continued tonight while a state- ment was awaited from Agricul- ture Minister A. O. ‘Iieylor on tie result of his conferences yester- day with representatives of the strikers and the New Brunswick Dairy Products Commission. Meanwhile. dairies here today consider-d the possibility of c:- talnlns temporarily the milk us- Ilfl! supplied d|ily to the Mount Allison edueatl l institutions at Backville and similar institutions elsewhere in the province. This would be for the period of their 61mins. starting this week. roi- the Christmas and New Year's holiday season. Says Canada Unable To MoveWheat a 8 “it? its _ l sir. F ast Enough expressed more than the iooooncoo year that any bushels cositraoted for this Be Started In New Y. M. C. A. Building To E arlyflSpring Stations Citizfonship Week Committee Appointed Representatives of the City's service clubl. the Ministerial As- sociation, and the City's public schools met last niiht in the City Council chambers to appoint a committee which win act with the Provincial Government com- mitteio in arranging Ohm-latte- towns celebration of canadim, wfllsnshir Week. Jan. 4. to Jan. Il A committee comprising Lieut- Col. W. W. Reid. 118.0,; flout.- Gol. L. T. Lowther, Principal of Prince street School; and Mr. Walthen Gaudet was digger; to represent the City.‘ Its duties will be to assist the provincial (mm- mltterof Attorney-General l". A. Iaarse; Mr. L. W. Shaw, director o! education; and Mr. W. R. 918W. provnlclal deputy-Minister of Agriculture. to formulate the celebration ceremonies with spec- ial reference to those to be held on Jan. 6. On that day the Charlottetown ceremonies will be broadcast over a national network. ‘they will be the first of such ceremonies to be broadcast in Canada. Mayor B. Earle MacDonald pre- sided at last night's meeting. liova Soctla Fishermen liavo liarrovi Escape LOCKEPORT, N’. 8.. Dec. 17 .__ (CP)— Two fishermen, Jack Nell of Newfoundland and Daniel Williams of West Green Harbor. N. S. are Ln hospital today following an icy brush with death yesterday in the chill waters of Loclteport Harbor. The pair was . tossed into tihc water when two small flshinfl craft collided when returning to port. Williams. unable to swim. clung to Neil in a dentin-grip and dragged his ompanion below the surface. They were rescued by Albert llenseon and his son ‘Iierrencg who were following close behind in a motorboat. Williams and Neil are suffering from shock and exposuref MONTREAL. Dec. 17-03.?)- Ganadlan Pacino Railway 00mp- sny today reported earnings in the week ended Doc. 14 at g5’. 640.000. convpared with 053M900 i" n" Cflfelbondln! period in 1M6, a decrease of $253,000 or 4,0 per cent. Plan New Weather In Arctic By TIM DICKSON TORONTO, Dec. l'l—(OP)-—E|-,. pension of a chain of weather stations around the Arct1c's rim would enable Canadian weather- men to tell with a high degree of accuracy when a big storm is about to roll down the northern half of this continent, Andrew Thomson, Canada's new Control- ler of Metecrologlcalservices said today in an interview. Currently only six stationsdhart weather in the Arctic. Within three years they will number i6. but Mr. Thomson said 26 are needed for an adequate report. So few weather stations spot the Polar expanses at present that meteorologists call the Gan- adlan-Unlted States sector of the Arctic north of o6 decrees north latitude the “blind spot.” It cov- ers 500.000 square miles. Facing the six Canadian-Amer- ican stations north of 66 degrees are more than 200 stations in the European-Asiatic segment. Half of the 200 are in Russia. To forecasters, the “blind spot" is of vital importance because that is where most of North Am- erica's most paralyzing storms are born, Mr. Thomson said. Gold Polar air piles up there, seetihes for a day or two and then heads south to chill millions of Canad- ians and Americans and possibly cause death. damBBB- and disrup- tions of communications. “We need to know what's cook- lug in the Arctic." said Mr. Thomson. "The only six stations now operating enable a forecaster in toll when iiir is piling up in the Arctic but the information he has is so skotchv that he 11in’! i011 for certain where the cold air mass is about to break through or whether it will go east or west. when ii: docs stnrt to mnve. he can hardly tell (lo-finitely how low temperatures arc going i0 droll" our! Man Loses Iii: itaescuiiylio CALGARY, Dec. IT-(UM-Gor- don Grassick. 20. lost his life h? exposure while rescuinl N! Wm and three-yesr-old daughter from flood waters which csscat~d through Bowness Park west of here yesterday, The flood caused damages estimated at more than $50,000. Mrs. Grassick was taken to lioa- . pital sufferlnl shock. l"! m’ daughter, Anne Margaret, is be- lng. cared for at the home of neigh- bors. - L with. BAGS 'r=-'{“.‘.‘.£'i"".......,."""‘*£..§i'.°‘"} m‘ ’ lcemanl-‘iiarriagavo iodeyaa "house were formally ks g Move Meets With Mixed Reception ' ilsod Car Ciaiil-iigs Lott 7 Ilntolchcd But May i: . O Bo Later ilovlsoii. OTTAWA. Dec. 17 --(0P)— Raising of the ceiling pried; on new cars and trucks in, Canada was announced today by u" 911% BOO-rd. and the move, climb/e on sales tomorrow, PPOIIIPtIy met with a mixed recept- lfm IPOm lB-bor and management. While the head of one automo. bile-manufacturing firm 5am the 8WD Bl B apllr to production, a labor official called it a. possible 011E881‘ to labor-management peace. The consumer price boosts "-10 N! colli- on passenger automobiles and seven pes- cent on commercial vehicles- were Rented by the board, It "N. because of higher prices in effect for imported essential parts and substantially high- 91‘ P7106! for labor and domes- tic materials. Though the board left uled oar ceilings untouched for the mom. ent. c, board official said it. prob- aibly would consider 1n the future an increase in the prices of sec- ond-hand vehicles. Cheaper Than Import-a Despite the rise in new ca: pric- ces. the Board said. Canadian; still will be able to buy Dominion- mede vehicles more cheaply than they can import, than from the United Sta-tea. A standard model from the United States will cost about $200 more than a. (lp-nadian- made model. even under the revis- ed ceiling, bcsua of the import duties. Oomipanieg whole products an going up are the lord Motor Oom- pany of Canada. l‘ ‘ Motors of oanads and- Chrysler Company '0! Canada. _ D.B. Grelg. president of Ford o! Canada, said at Windsor, Ont. Continued 0n Page fl Col. I By-Eleotion in Yiiuebec Today ST. LIBOIRE, Que, Dec. 1'1- (OP)—Eiectors of the rural con- stituency of Bagot will go to ilie polls tomorrow in a provincial by- electl-on to fill a Legislature seaf- left vacant by the death of Cyrliie Dumaine, Liberal. Three candidates are in the- runnlng- the Union Nstionsle government choice. Daniel John- son; the Liberal standard-bearer- Dr. Roland Ballly; and on Indoo- endent, Georges rleGrandprs. This will be the third by-elcrr- tlon sl-nce Premier Maurice Dv- plessis and. the Union Nationals were elected in i044. In two prev- ious contests the Government gained seats, winning Beauce from the Bloc Populaire and Compton from the Liberals. Present standing in the ill-seat Legislature is: Uni-on Nationale. 50; Liberals 35; Bloc Popuiaire three: indep- endent two; vacesit one (Bigot). MONGION. N. l. 138i 1'1 — (OPl-It may have been the I.- 000th house constructed W War- time Housing Limited lb Oanada but to war veteran C. I. Harris. his wife and two children. it seemed the only house our built. That wasthe higrressicno pol- one handed the keys tn the 8.000th house by Mat-Gem. A. Young. president of Wartime Hous- ing Limited and vioe-lmsident of Central Marts!!! and llonsint Corporation. The house. a five-morn. two- storey structure. was built Wartime Housing workers operat- ing under a. new plan originated by a hilcmton construction smut. J. l". Par-soul. president of the Parsons Oonstrumoa Oimtlmy. M the bays to the 5.00001 presented to the new tenants. Wartime Hous- _ ing officials onnomeed that they toliillldl-nlddit- wtollfllllfifi lmalro-Itullbomnin manila yhthe corals‘ yea-l’. if tho Boosted CHAIRMAN OI‘ INDIA ‘SSIMBLY Amid delegates’ shouts o! “In ullab zindabad” (long live resolu- tion) and "jal Hind" (victory to India). Dr. Rajendid Prasad, food minister in the interim Indian government, was made permanent chairman of India's constituent as- sembly. The 62-year-old member of the Hlndoo-led All-India Con- gress party was unopposed for for- mal election on the third day of the assembly’: session, thus for boycotted by the Moslcm league on orders of its president._Mohem- med All Jinnah. Rental Ceilings To Advance? GITAWA. Dee. l7,- (OH-The Ottawa Citizen said today that “according to reports in usually well-informed circles s general in- crease In. rental ceilings of from l0 to 15 par cent may come lntc effect sometime in January." . Rents were frozen in 1941 ‘under the general scheme of price con- oi. A Prices Board spokesman had no comment to make on the report, other than to say rents were sub- ject to government policy. Boy Badly Iniureii By ills Pot Bog _ mmoEartrroN, N. n. Dec. 11 _ (CP)-— Doctors are today endeav- orlns to hold in place one nose of 14. year-old Donald Titus which was badly mutilated by his pet dog last tWN-M as he was lying on a couch at his home. He is st present a patient in the Victoria Public hos- pital where he was taken directly after the accident, The dog was lying on the floor be side the couch on which the young boy was lying and wihen he reached over to pet the dog it jumped and snapped at. his nose which was nearly severed. lt is understood that. the dog will be destroyed. {ROMOTED SUB INSPECTOR HALIFAX. Doc. 17 — (CP- —- Promotlon ofsgt. Weldon J. Fitz- slmmons of "H" Division. Royal Canadian Mounted Police, to the rank of sub inspector was announc- ed today by assistant commissioner C. K. Gray. officer commanding the division. A native of Ottawa, sub inspector Fitzsimmons is attached to the preventive service of bead- quarcls atoll hm. 2.5.000th House By Wartime Housing Ltd. ad them. It. was early h: 194d that Mono- ton first requested construction of low-rental houses for veterans. Owing to hes demands the ori- ginal estimate need o! 80 was increased to 100 and work m these houses began on July I8. In 00 woiflng day; the satire 100 houses. complete with sewer and water connections. were erect- ed leaving only the interior finish- ing to be done. The first tenants moved in on October eighth. i110! two and a half months after the initial building got underway. When applications for the 100 homes mounted to 800 the Canad- by ion Legion requested city ommcll ‘trflgyply for an additional 100 Work on these houses was start- rll moved into Bile 0f them. ¥‘li‘.‘f‘°».‘.‘.€.f',‘.“'......m°"‘°‘“iii. small homes in sections witharealltirlgsavflll ialandlfil. ed Oct 2i and today veteran Har- ‘ihs secret or Monoton’: success In speeding horns production. said was mom; ods. Ill; idea involved building 9o M onw- Soviot delegate Bequests Time To Study Plan LAKE SUOOIE$. N.Y.. DI. l’! (AP)—The United States failed today 1n an attempt to brim about an immediate vote of approval on its lflvlwsals for international control of‘ atomic energy. can resolution we; not in: complete ccrilfortnity with the disarmament decision of the United Nations senersl ssserobly and asked more time in study it. Baruch Disappointed I Bernard M. Baruch of the Unit- ed Stat-es. who told. the rm. Atom- lc filcrgy Commission ho had intended to ask a vote on the American proposals at this session, appeared disappointed at the de- lay. but fin-ally ‘agreed tQ post- Dvnelncnt of the commission‘; de- liberations until Friday, Gmmylro indicated he wuchlof- iy concerned with achieving o. un- l ' decision on the proposals. I-ls charged that there were certain aspects of the proposals-including provisions for sanctions-Mitch were in violation of the U. N. charter-and added that many questions concerning the i-caolutlo which had been asked by tho Soviet delegation still were un- answered. He was ‘not quite dear" how the United States wanted to implement these r. ll In essence, the United states plan calls for "a strong and com- ContInuedOnPage2IOoI.I' TORONTO. Dec. 1'! -M.inimm1 and maximum temperatures. Vancouver lildmionton Regina Winnipeg Toronto . Ottawa Montreal Queibee saint John Moncton Halifax . Charlottetown Sydney Yarrnouth HALIFAX. Dec. ii-(cm-wso- they synopsis and official inland forecasts issued by the Dcmiflavfl Public Weather Office at Halnax- at 11.15 p.m., TUBSIiRY. Dec. l7. Synopsis at ll pm: ~ Rain is falling in the eastern ‘Maritimes and intefinlttent snow ssaosasa=s.,ss in the nor-them part of th, dis- trict. ‘Warm afi- from the with has reached parts of Nova Bent"! and New Brunswick and temper- atures have risen to the upper for- ties tonight, Colder air from the west has reached the New Bruns— wick border and will spread across the entire Marltimes during the day. ‘This will cause clearing and colder weather. Forecasts valid until Wednesday midnight: Prince Edward Island - Rain ending by morning. Wednesday cloudy and colder with scattered sriowflurries. South winds 20 mpii shifting to west 25 mph. High Wed- nesday st Charlottetown 30. High tide this mornlnl at 6.51 and tonight at 7.09. Sun sets this afternoon at 4.20 and rises tomorrow morning at ‘fig New moon Decanter 23rd. A. M. Sununeralde tide eighteen mhu utea later than Charlottetown . -, i can ssaa! i "IIINCI EDWARD ISLAND’ Leave Borden at 0.06 All». l P.1d. and 4J0 P. IL . Inovo Tormsotino 10.30 A. ll. a P. l. ‘I80 P. ll. Intro trips are made between on which automobiles are could. will»! IIIVIOI Iron Borden. l PM. II Iron lbs-antic a Pl. {is Y