MAXIMS pra MERE'MAN' -:2: "3 up more lllber round III. dead but solo helm- Tiioee whom we loved so long Ind 2 mm; Dali: founded H81. l-ll. Guardian, Tbroo Olub Read by erh lllf Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Likethe Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1950 GENERAL RAILWAY STRIKE CALLED OFF LAST NIGHT Eeds Probe For Weak goofs On I20-Mile Front Powerful Hurricane Hits Gulf Coast NEW ORLEANS. Aug. 30 -(AP) 74 A powerful Gulf hurricane. the first to strike the United States ennstiine this year. slammed Santa Rosa island, Fla, It 6:30 P.M. !:.D T. today. the New Orleans weather Bureau reported. The huge storm threw 'l5-mile- uri-hour winds It the island. five miles offshore from Pensacola. and piicked I 113-mile-an-hour punch Ll! its northeast quadrant. It will smash at the Mississ- ippi-Aiebamn coastline "within the next few hours". W. R. ate vans. chief forecaster of the New Orleans Weather Bureau, said in reporting the hcu'ricane's strike. About the time the hurricane struck Santa Rosa Island. a ter- nado - probably In offshoot cf the hurricane - hit Apalachicola Pa. The Florida highway patrol said 10 or 12 houses were destroyed but there were no reports of deaths or injuries. All communications iiere knocked dcwn and details were lacking. 'I'iio storm skirted the southern lip of Louisiana this afternoon and ice:-cd toward the Mississippi-Aim immn-extreme northwest Florida masts. The Weather Bureau in Mobile. Coming Events "Mali vour Films to Garnhum Photo studio. Charlottetown. "Cnriiival at Borden postponed 'llliil further notice. "Dance. Morell Rear Hal! l'iuirsday. August ant. .. ' Dance . French River Moiiday, September 4th. l-lali, "Reserve September 21st for ciizrkcii supper at Kinkora hall. "Dance. Covchead Race Track 'Ia1l. Thursday night. Augus: 31st Eariern Rhythm Boys. "Chicken Supper. games etc... Yracadie Hall. Monday. September llh. Dance Ificr. ”Lawn party South Melville Thursday. Aug. 31st. Good music. Women's Institute. "Bingo. Town Hall. Kensington- lnriian River parish. Sept. 1. Sale ice-cream. "show. ivlorcli. every Tu.-sday. Friday. Saturday. show starts a.3n ociock. . 'fi)aiice at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. Deming from 9 till 1 Music by Western Ramblers. "Dance. Donagh School. Friday. September 0th. sponsored by Jun- or l-ianrners. special music. "Show at New Glasgow tonight. It 8.45. "Danny Boy". A heart "Fmins dog story. 'jDance in Fort Augustus ,scho-rl Ylgidinv lllshf. septemoei us. Good lid C. "Regular Dance, East Royalty Rink Hail. Friday. Bus leaving Bus Ttrmlml 9.30 and 10.00. "Regular Dance in Holy Nam.- Hnll. St. Peter's Bay. Friday Bepr. ISL chllssoris orchestra. Door Prim f'Hcar W.R. Shaw speak on hi WP 10 Denmark, in Wheelie! River Hall Friday evening. Sept. isi. Sale of lunches. .'Ca.ke Sale It Moore as McLeod Saturday Iftcmoon. September 3th. at 2.30. sponsored by West Covehead Y. P. U. "Reserve Thursday. August Slat 7'" Ice Cream Festival. Winsloe Station Hall In Ild of liighfield Presbyterian oiiurcii. "Federation of Agriculture meet- lllil. Belfast Hell. Thursday. Aul. list at B p.m. The Provincial Sec- Mary will be present. s"51NdY'I Theatre Under the WW! - lhovve every Ifondev ednesdey and Friday nights. car service. llndwlehel and um drinks . M';Mnuf.lne cove Oaif club :53;-;:;"Ji's:J .'5l'1;i'a.'g.Ii.ii.?..”"'o.'!-37: ; - 0&0! Wyli- ii &"33'ao"aiil"'c'iI are requested to Borden Train First To Operate The Borden train will roll out of Charlottetown this m0l'nllI8 It seven o'clock on the first regular train run since before the rail strike com- menced. A patrol train will begin a run over the tracks at four o'clock. The Post Office stated. this morning that all regular mail will be placed "P011 the Borden train. mm MI-. slid the centre of the storm was expected to strike the Mobile area about 2 A.M. it predicted Gulf tides would equal the 1915 Ill-time roccrd of 11.8 feet above normal when a hurricane. struck July 5 causing property damage es. "milled Bl: 81.500000 and nine per- sons lost their lives. At Mobile. 280 families totalling some 1.500 persons were evacuatei from Blakeley Island. From New Orleans to Panama. City, Fla., red and black hurricane warning flags flew in the first strong winds pra- ceding the big blow. Rush Preparations Full-scale preparations were rush- ed to minimize damage from the winds and dangerous high tides. Vacaticners fled Mississippi coast hotels. The L. and N. Railroad sent a "last chance" special train out to bring in workers and residents. Extra crews were brough in to keep clear the ruadbed that car- ried the maln commuter talus frougjascagoula. Miss. to New Orleans. But commuter trains stopped running between New Or- leans and Nscagouia, Miss., by mid-afternoon. A sheriff's motorcade combed St. Bernard parish (county) adjacent to New oivleans. evacuating the area's 1,760 residents. some of the parish roads were a foot under water. In loiilsiena and Mississippi schoolho were opened as evac- uaficn centres. manned by doctors and nurses. and stocked with food. Store windows along the Miss- issippi coast were boarded. House- wives everywhere in the area rush- ed to buy candles and prepared canned foods and filled bathtubs with -water. U. N. To Decide Aim Of Campaign WASHINGTON. Aug. 30 - (AP) -- State secretary Dean Acheson said tcday it is up to the United Nations to decide whether its forces should drive beyond the sub par- allel which divided North and South Korea. Acheson told I press conference that the United states has tried to make this attitude clear. LONDON, Aug. Zi0-(Rcuiersi- Britain has softened her attitude on the Schuman plan to merge European coal and steel industries, and now is prepared to discuss preliminary 'delails. usually well- informed quarters said today. Britain Extends Army Draft To Two Years By HAL COOPER. LONDON. Aug. 30-(AP)-Prime Minister Attire announced tonight I pay boost up to 15 per cent and extension of service for conscripts from in months to two years to strengthen BriiIin'I armed forces for defence. In I broadcast speech. Aiileo fold the country his Labor Gov- eminent decided to act for two compelling reasons: 1. Preeenrpey. has attracted too few recruits for the regu- in army. navy and air force. 2. Coruicrlpts Ierving only iii months In barely trained when they Ire releeud. The pay increases, in which the loweIt ranks benefit most. will add 100000.000 (0ll0.l00.000 CIN- diui) to the country's annual de- fence bill. The longer draft turn will low '11. unifoun -n,ooo tniaodmeawbo iherwise would have been re- Ea-nse to civilian uuiii the next 1 months. The necessary legieletiea will be introduced at a metal union of Parliament Itartiul 8101- it The ll). niece. however. Wm 9' -I ' AM I. '.l'.. 5':''"' "'0 'g:..".':.r. I . . A u , aerator J . I edit: at Main Enemy Pressure On Norihem Sector By MILTON MARMOR TOKYO. Auz. 3l-(Thursday)- (AP)-Close-quarter action flared all aionl the Korean war front Wednesday with Allied troops jab- bing at increasingly large North Korean forces trying to cleave the United Nations beachhead. Counter-attacking US. and South Korean forces pushed to a point one mile north of Pohang on the eastern end of the front, even as rifle fire from flanking Commun- ist forces showered on the port city. Dispatches from the Pohang front called the situation incon- clusive and Still worrisome. The Reds searched all along the 120-mile-long battle front for a weak spot. An estimated il0.000 to 120.000 men-l2 Communist dviv- isions-were on the line. Another 30,000 men from three new diyls- ions were expected to join the force soon. . Heavy Red Pressure The main Red pressure was brought to bear on ihe northern front. where the lines run roughly 55 miles inland from Pohang on the east coast to Waegwan, 12 miles northwest of Tacgu. Gen. MacArthur's summary ear- ly today said Allied troops cleared out a Red unit which had cut the Pohang-Taegu supply road behind South Korean forces in the Kigye area. nine miles northwest of Po- horig. But the key artery to Taegu was reported still under Red. rifi fire from the hills. g ' Farther we.-it along I the north rim of the U. N. bsachhcad, South Korean troops clashed with ti force of I00 Reds which had in- filirated defence lines three miles north of Sinnyong. 10 miles north. east of Tacgu. Battle For Hill Still farther west. about 16 miles northwest of Taegu. U. S. forces stormed up a strategic hil'. four miles northeast of Waegwan in the face of withering machine- gun. mortar and small-arms fire. But at nightfall Wednesday. the Americans had failed to reach the summit and withdrew to try again at the next down. The 1.700-foot hill dominates the siii-rounding terrain and is deem! ed one of the best offensive posit- ions in the sector. it was lost by the Sourth Koreans two weeks ago. Between the hill action..and the Pohang-Kigye battlefront, some 40,000 Communist troops backed by powerful artillery support ham- mered away on the Uihung sector seeking a break-through hole. Any collapse there would open the floodgates to T-Iegu Ind perhaps Pusan. Although the main threat to United Nations holdings appeared to be in the cast and northeast. furious fighting raged on Battle Mountain on the southeast front. American and South Korean troops shoved the Bed: of! this bloody summit Is the bill. which dominates the area near Human. 10 miles west of the southern part of Mason. changed hands for the eighth time in two weeks. fective Friday. The longer draft term will apply to Ill nIilonIl service men in uniform Oct. 1. Recruiting to the regular armed forces has been dropping since 1047. 'l'hIt year. enilstments total. led 90,500. In 1948 the total de. eiined to 07.200 and in 1049 in 52.- 300. The downward trend contin- ued in the first six months of this year. "Our defence needs cannot be met wholly by national service (conscripted) men." Attica said. "it is essential. if we are to have properly balanced forces, to have I solid core of regular sIilorI,Ioi. diets and Ila-men. "We need them ll experienced non-cornmiasioncd officers and skilled ti-Idclaen and we need them to train recruits. We must have ihem.to carry out our re- Iponaibilttlu Ill ovr the 'worid. "They. have not been coming forward in Iultbieut numbers." in I4imlCi the increases --In I sue co; taeuherne mvia-. eye 5 Employees Of Ont. Govit Die In Crash NOEITH BAY,' 0nt., Aug. 30- (OP)- Five Ontario Government employees died today in the flam- ing wreckage of an Ontario Provin- cial Air service Norseman aircraft whic crashed into In empty tourist resort cabin near Tlmageml. 50 mil- es north of here. Killed were: Pilot Sydney Hut- nlck. 36, Windsor. Ont.; W. E. God- des. 25. engineer, 0. W. Tyrrei. 33. engineer, both of sault Ste Marie, Ont.; C. D. Perkins, 31. Forester, llpnthlll. 0nt.; R. J. Phillips, 26. Forester, Toronto and Hamilton. Eyewitnesses raid the aircraft flew low over Mailie Lake with its engine coughing. It appeared that the pilot was going to try to land on the lake. , As it made its approach, the en- glne cut and the plane dived steep- ly toward the earth. It skidded ac- ross the ground. one wing burying itself in'a wooden cabin on the Timagami Country Club grounds. George Huichings, owner of the club. raid the aircraft burst into flames immediately. He ran out with I email hose to try to exting- uish the flames but was driven back by the heat. The plane was from the Ontario rrovincial Air service base at Bis- ootuirig, '15 miles northwest of sud- bwry. Pilot l-iutnick was born in Wind- sor and served with the R. C. A, F. in the Second World War. He join- ed the Departmentof Lands and Forests as an air engineer in 1840 and became I pilot for the Depart- ment last year. Geddes served with the R. C. A. F. and Joined the Department as an air engineer in 1049. His wife now is at Blscotaslng, although their permanent home was at sault Ste. Marie. Tyi.-rel, another R. C. A. F. vet- eran, joined the Department as an air engineer in 1945. He was born in London, England. His wife is living at Tlmagaml but they made their home in sauit Ste. Marie during the winter. Phillips. a graduate of the Univ- ersity of Toronto School of Forestry joined the Forest Protection Divis- ion of the Department on graduat- ion last May. Perkins was I graduate of the Forestry School of the University of New Brunswick. Legion Convention At Montague Next Monday Montague will be en fete Mon- day when the Montague branch of the Canadian Legion plays host to the delegates from 31 sister branches throughout the Province It the annual convention to be held Labor Day. Plans were all but fin- alized ...yesterday- and Provincial ibecretary .1.e. Walker was looking forward to what.is expected to be one of the most successful conven- tions held in recent years. some 00 delegates will gather for the important business sessions which will open It 9.30 A. M. and .conclude late in the afternoon with the election of officers. The ses- sions will be held in Yeo's Thesi- tre. A social evening will follow with the annual banquet, catered to by the Ladies Auxiliary cf the Montague branch. being held in the Beaver Club Hall, The sessions will be opened by the Provincial President. Peter A. MaeLellIn. souris. chairman is Harry Bishop, M.M., Summerside. Welcoming the delegates will be the "president of the Montague branch Roderick Martin, and the Mayor of Montague. His Worship W.li. Lane. At noon. Provincial delegates, members cf the Montague branch. and all other veterans attending will form parade and. led by the band of the P.E.I. Regiment f1'ir.h Rcoce). under the kind permission of the oficer commanding. Lt. Col. A.W. Rogers, E.D., will proceed to the Memorial School where a wreath will be placed. The parade will continue to King's County '-ICC-dntinued on Page 6 Col. 1) Gov'l To Borrdw 3300.000.000 from Banks I OTTAWA, Aug. 30-(CP)- The Government has decided lo borrow f300.000.000. from Canadian chartered banks for I half-year period. Finance Minister Abbott announced to- day. 1 Mr. Abbott gave no indicat- ion to what use the money would be put. but his an- nouncement oIme It I time when the -Government is known to be considering an expansion of the current de-' fence budget by It 1613! 3150.- 000.000 and other expcn ilures to cover shipment of Ca Idlan arms to North Atlantic parl- ners. one department official said he believed the money would be primarily put to the use of assisting the Government in the provision of loans and ad- when to such establishment: as the Government-owned Can- adian National Railways. the Foreign Exchange Control Board. and the Central Mort- gage and Housing Corporation. Mr. Abbott in I statement said the borrowing will be done "through the issue of abort-terrn Government of Can- ' Ida . Wu bertilleates total- ling .000.000. These certif- icated, bearing the annual in- tenet rate of veri-elgh-tbs of one per cent. ve been sold Eifi. Head Claims Coldwell Charge lie .Gordoii.iinirue: . MONTREAL, Aug. 30 --The fol- lowing statement was issued by W. A. Mather. president of the Can- Idlan Pacific Railway. tonight: "The statement attributed to M J. Coldwell by press dos-patches to the eflfect that Mr. Gordon had abruptly brought the. strike negoti- ations fo an end is untrue, and can only be attributable to a on-.-sided account of the negotiations giver to Mr. Coldwell by the represent- atives of the unions. "Nothing was said by Mr. Gordon on that occasion or any other that was not the result of careful con- sideration by the Railway lepre- senfatives jointly on what was their common problem. "The fact is that at the conclus- ion of the meeting on Saturday afternoon, the situation had be- come so critical that. at the re- quest of the Railways. an adjourn- ment was taken until 7.30 Saturday night in order that both parties should have an opportunity of re- considering their stand on a quest- ion of such great public import.- once. "when the conference was N- su.:ned on Saturday evening the representatives of the men again said that their position was un- changed and it was because of this ban that negotiations were discon- tlnued." Maritime Service To Resume Early This Mollillig MONGPON. N. 3.. Aug. 31-(CF) -(Thursday)--Canadian National Railways officials announced early today that normal morning pass- enger traln service will be re-est- ablished throughout the Atlantic Region today. First train to operate was ex- pected to be the passenge train from Moncten to saint John, N. B.. scheduled to depart at 5 A. M. A. D. Trains resuming service include the Ocean Limited and Scotian, west-bound from Halifax; Halifax- Sydney, Halli x-Yarmouth. Monct- on-saint Joh , Moncton-Campbell- ton. Newcastle-Fredericton. Gaspe- Bay peninsula and mainland-Prince Edward Island services. other services, including those in Newfoundland. would resume norm- al operations on existing aeredules, the announcement said. Church-Siaie Feud ls Ended In Hungary BUDAPEST. A118. 30 - (AP) - The Foreign Ministry announced tonight that the (Communist-dorm lnated) Government and the Rp- .man catholic Church ended their 1011! feud today by signing an ag- reement after eight weeks of neg- otiations. The Ministry said Hungary's Bench of Bishops "acknowledge and support. in accordance with their duties as (Hungarian) sun- jects, the constitution and order of state of the Hungarian People's Republic.” The text of the agreement asre. leased by the Foreign Ministry in- of Bishops, The B.lshops' Bench has been the highest Catholic Church authority in Hungary since the life imprisonment of Joseph Card- inal Mindszenty in 1949. Negotia- tions with the Government began ncuncement said the Bishops re- quested the talks. The agreement text said the Bishops will take steps in accord- ance with Church law against members of the clergy whose act- ivities are directed against "the legal order of the republic and against the constructive work of the republic." Pilot Returns To The U. S. in Handcuffs NEW YORK, Aug. 30 -- (AP) - The pilot who hitched an unauth- orized ocean ride on the Polish liner Batory by landing a. rented seaplane beside the Europe-bound vessel came back today in hand- cuffs. Wililam Jesse Newton. arrested when the Batory docked in Brit- ain. was flown back to the United states in custody. Arraigned on federal charges of transporting a stolen plane in for- eign commerce, Newton was held in 350.000 bail. By DOUGLAS HOW OTTAWA. Aug. 30 - (CP) The commons today fought I sid-. -battle over the big. controversial figure, of Donald Gordon right in the midst of its ncn-stop debate on the rail-strike bill. M. J. Coldwell. 0.0.1". leader. vir- tunlly called for Mr. Gordon's res- ignation as president of the Canad- ian National Railways because of his handling of the rail-dispute negotiations with the unions. Members of three parties. in- cluding one Liberal, attacked Mr. Gordon. one Progressive Conserv- ative came to his Ild. Mr. Coldwell said Mr. Gordon's "period of usefulness as president of the O.N.i7. has come to an end." Angus Meclnnls (Oc!'--vIn- eouver that) said it would take :1 generation of good labor relations to undo the harm the wartime prices controller has done in his few months as rail head. David Oroii (L - Toronto spr- dina). is former Ontario Labor Minister. said Mr. Gcrdon handled negotiations with "something less than skill and dexterity he carried the ball and. unfortunately for us. he fumbled it." Two Social credit member-. luv. l.'.a. Hansel) (so-Mactmnn and 0. would probably be It. Gordon as I future discussic C. N. R. President Under Heavy Fire In Commons ed in Mr. Gordon if reports of his conduct were tnie. but he "suspect- ed that l.lle'Whole story might not be known. 7'cBFnTiFzi.6iTrriQ?Is7::6i.'-27E 16 PAGES - that the first shifts of returning it June 2.2, when a Government aii- . our There are moment: which we call when Ilene. Maxms - .orA. MERE MAN -:1: own. then never lose alone I Iubeerlptfou Delivered U30 IIII IIJOI other Provinces C U. I. I'M! Strike Leaders Call More To Work After Gov't Bill Passes By JOHN IABLANC (Canadian Preu Staff Writer) OTTAWA. Aug. 30 - (OP) -The general rail strike was called off tonight. Tomorrow the trains will start rolling again as 124.000 workers move back to the jobs they left nine days ago in the most paralyz- ing work atop-page ln,CInIda's his- tory. At 10:15 P. M. E. D. T. tonight, in response to an emergency bIck-to- work la-w enacted by Parliament 19 minutes earlier, strike leaders sum- moned the men back to work for tomorrow. Frank H. Hall and A. R. Masher. co-leaders in the wdlkout that tied up 40,0000 miles of rallrcad, sent out the call to their members right after royal assent had been given to a. Government bill directing them to be back on'the Job in 48 hours. The twb labor leaders, chief spokesmen for 17 International and Canadian Unions, had said earlier workers could be back on the job in the morning and some trains could be moving a. few hours after that if they got out the call be- tween 10 and 11 P. M. Railway spokesmen at Montreal also said trains would be moving tomorrow, though possibly not at full service, if the men got the recall order tonight and reported first thing in the mcming. It would take about 24 hours after the work instructions. rail- way and union oficiels estimated. to get regular service back in op- eration. Restarting of the trains will be accommnied by a resumption of service in the COIIHIIEXCIII telegraph facilities operated by the railway companies and in htl; cairliagiien g a yr. c I. I , p- pied Eyl walkout that started Tuesday morning last week after the collapse of negotiations on union demands for wage-hour con- cessions, Negotiation! to lteeilne Under the Government bill, the railways and the unions are to get back into negotiations on these iri- sues right aways, with an arbitrator to be appointed if they fall to get agreement soon. In that emergency legislation brought before a special session of Parliament yesterday. the union chiefs told their followers in a broadcast that the unions had made "distinct gIlns." They told the raiiroaders to re- port for work "at the earliest pos- sible moment." withdrawing strllze instructions. Mr. Hall and Mr. Mosher got their authority to call off the stop- page from I meeting of Canadian heads of the unions engaged in the dispute, summoned as the back-to-work measure was in the late stage of passage through Par- llament. The strike chiefs-Canadian heads of 15 lntemationsl Unions and two Canadian bodies-went to their final meeting after I day of close watch on involved Commons procedure in dealing with the em- ergency bill the Government brought in yesterday to compel the rail workers to end the strike within 48 hours after its passage. After keeping I close eye on a series of Government and Oppo- sition mwes Ind counter-movcs- including In Idopted Government amendment softening the bill's impact on rail labor-the union chiefs said their men would obey the law Ind took immediate Iction to have the strike eeiled oi! offic- ially. This consisted of In authorizat- OTTAWA. Aug. 30 -- (GP) .. The wholesale price index during July climbed to the highest level iii history. the Bureau of statistics reported today. Moving up on its seventh suc- cessive monthly climb, the BureIu'a wholesale price index stood at i00.9 at the end of July - 1.9 points above the previous high of 103.0 in June and 10.8 points high- er than the 156.0 level in July. last year. ' The Bureau's index is calculated on the basis that me prices equal loo. Since the beginning of the your the index has climbed from ll7.1. on Aug. 4 the Bureau amoun- oed that tho June retell coIt-of- living index moved up 2.1 points to I peek of 107.0. A survey of living costs for July is expected to be made -within the next few due. The lurelu said that in the with e . , oimo u.tocr..aripe Bre- fobanluupar. ion South) said he was disappoint- viholesele -prloi range there were '- - r i '""cn :2 -no as V Wholesale, Price Index I Climbs To, Record High A per cent in the price of onions. raw rubber. potatoes, cedar lumber. pepper. coccoa butter. A African coccoa' beans and halibut. Declines of between lo and 24 per cent were registered in Ontario wheat, lemons, salt spring meek- EIGI. Ontario oats and timothy hay. Increases over June were re- corded in all eight index sub- B'l'0llDl- l-he Ihilfpelt rises being in the wood and animal products ecc- tion. The wood grcup rose from 201.0 to 205.! and the animal prod- ucts group from 173.0 to 1773. The vegetable product: group role to 100.1 from 140.0. textile iifoducl-i to 106.0 from 103.4. iron products to 1023 from. 132.4, mm. ferrous metals to l00.i'from i081. non-metallic minerals to 140.7 from 140.8, and Q-iemicai products'to me from flI.o. The index num- ber of wholesale prices for farm Plan To Scalier U. S. Gov'l Offices WASHINGTON, Aug. so --(AP) - President Truman today asked Congress for s139,eoo,ooo to let 11'.) United states Government office facilities outside of Washingtoufor. use "in event of emergency." Apparently part of long-range plans for dispersal of the Govern- ment io guard Igalnst atomic It- tacks. the proposed program would provide for buildings It four sites emergency communications facilit- ies and highway construction. A White House statement said the construction program stems from I "joint study" by Govern- ment agencies. "No widespread dislocation of Government. workers and their families is envisioned." the state- ment said. "The new federal buildings will permit workers now residing in tha Washington area to commute daily to and from their jobs." . The statement ” said that the amount sought. today "would initi- ate I long-range plan to insure th continuity of essential functions 0 Government in event of emerg- ency.". ion from the union heads to Mr. Hall to fell the workers in their name to get back on the job 10- rnorrow morning. V It meant the end of a nationally- crippling transport crisis such as! few rountries have seen, which has .diaguptcrl 'mueh- -industry” throwri many thousands out o work besides l05.000 railway ems ployees, caused heavy loss of per: isihsble goods such as fruit and vegetable crops and hit hard at the travelling public. Exilctations were that in Iboul 34 hours the trains would be TOII4 ing normally. Mr. Hall calculated that the first freight trains iri small communities should be mov- ing in the morning; some pasenq gcr trains may be going in the afternoon. and possibly the first trans-continental trains might re- sume sewice tomorrow night. The men were being called bacli under an emergency measure, ind troduced by Prime Minister 5 Izaurcint et yesterday's opening 0 the emergency session of Pariiac ment, which assures them of get4 ting at least as much as the final settlement offer of the railways on which negotiations foundered lasti Saturday night. Terms of Bill As originally introduced, the bill ordered the strikers to return toi work with an immediate four-cenil icontinued on Page 6 Col. 4) AN ext-:cu1Na is A cw who WORKS 0 wmi His coo? ON 2 l-lAl.IFAX. Aug. so-(CP)-oin- cial forecasu issued by the DW mininn Public Weather Office in Halifax. Synopsis: Skies were clear even most of the Marilimcs and East- ern Quebec tonight. Pressure wag expected to remain high over 1111 Marltimes Thursday. and flu; weather will continue over iii! forecast district. , Regional forecasts valid untl midnight Thursday.- Prlnce Edward Island: Thursiinyg clear and warmer. Light winds. Low early Thursday morning and high in the afternoon It Char- lottetown 50 and 70. mini (life today at we A. u. and .1: P. M. sun rises at s:i2 A. M. Ind -old at GM P. M. - wool) Isnaims .. cannon DAEIJIIRY IAIVIW lelolle 'fA.If.eA.Il.Il A.M.IP.M.Il'.II. lP.If. . V 4 WW advanced to 1001 from have caribou 1 A.:l.'0uI.rl.1l AM. 1 fall. I In within commuting distance of ' Washington. V, it also ntempiates setting up be near enough to Washington to- .").