OIL nrxxms ' small MAN -/ “rifiapeetemshacln Agenda For Sept. Meeting Announced Spenilih calla-tea m Discueeion By United Nations Assembly. yaw YORK. Au. 1 -(APl— (Advance) — The nited Nations tonight anaoflced the agenda for the September meeting o! the gn- ersi asembly, lilting such explos- lve lsues as the nish case and tho Veto power o the Big Five. The Sl-power body will convene _ 5pm. 23 at the refurbished World's Fair site at Flushing for its first session on United States soil. A third controversial question _that of Jewish immigration into Palesiisie- was not mentioned. but Egypt and Iraq, acting with the Arab League. have announc- ad they will bring it before the assembly- Dr. K. V. Evatt of Australia. spearheading osition of small power! to the etc power, ofticl- ally asked to have the voting item on the agenda. ,_ Three vetoes in one session by Andrei A. Gromyko, Russian dele- gale, blocked a motion to refer the question of outlawing the Flllansist regime of Spain dir- ectly to the general assembly. but the hlg body will receive the whole case anyway in the council's re- 0T1. This report also will cover the Iranian lcese which the courlcil still holds on its agenda pending official notice from Tehran that all Russian troops are out of Iran. The assembly will elect three new members to the security council to replcce/ Egy t, Mexico and the Netherlands. Co ombia has been mentioned as a strong can- didate for Mexico's seat and the other two replacements are ex- acted to be drawn from the Arab agile and western Euro a in keeping with geographic istrll- billion of the representatives. From the conomic and social council. the assembly will got a eisck of recommendations on much questions as refugees. relations with the International Labor Or- ganization, human rights and freedom of tho press. Secretary-gmeral 'I‘rygve..1..ie’s various reports to the assembly wlll bring out furl discussion cf the t. pay scales, the welfare of UN. em loyees and the touchy a permanent site. 0n the mlttenofia hontenthesei have been persistent reports that efforts would be made to have tho assembly ch nge its decision and select the orld'| Pair site. San Francisco or even a city in ilrope. One major organ- the trustee- shlp council- remains to hc set llll at_thi-s assembly meeting but no sctlon can be taken until the powers submit trusteeshlp agree- ments and it was generally believ- ad that any such moves would come only after conclusion of the present Paris conference. The session is expected to run. from four to six weeks. Paul Henri Silask of Belgium. assembly ure- sldcnl. will preside. DESTINATION N0’! IEAGIII! Meteorites are usually so entail that they are burned up long before they reach the ground. Coming Events "Talkies — Canoe Cove Friday. "Talkies - Crapaud, Saturday. "Movies at Borden tonlfllt. "Reserve August 7th for Mos-ell Tea Party. "ice cream and dance Kinlaora l-lllli. Friday Aug. 2nd. "Picnic at IIsTJRives- on Wed- llfsday. August 7th. - “Don't miss Dance in Rowe's all. Brackley Point. Friday, August “Livestock intend: from Elmira. next week muet “"01! hyqnoon Mondly A . 5th l on Bboadhn erce. rep.pfcr Ma etlrlg " Air D i.l..".'i°rl.. oemfifseti. 3C2; "May. August 1th. p u d for shimielnt a" e- Acealttsd May 11, Ksw Promoted BRIG. J. F. A. LISTER. C.B.E. Quebec and Victoria, former chief of sisfl cf the Canadian Army in the Netherlands, acquit. ted May ll of four charges relat- lnl to misuse of Netherlands PYOX-lflly requlaltlflned by the army. and new appointed a Dsp. ~uty Adjutant-General. He succeeds Brig. J. P. E. Bern- atchez. C.B.l!Z..D.S.O.. 36. of Mont- magny. Que. recently appointed chief of Military District No. 5. Quebec City. Brig. Lister. who had pleaded innocence to the ges. was re- lieved of his post last January after investigation of Canadian Army affairs in the Netherlands by LL-Gcn. Price Montague, re- tired chief of staff of army head-f quarters in London. He was re- instated immediately after his acquittal. A solder with a long overseas record. a son of Brig. l". A. Lister. D.S.O.. and born in the citadel city of Quebec, the new "DAG" is s. permanent force man with a nsilitery record dating back to his oomnliesilosting in the serviceoorps in 1000. C.K.ll. Regional Alanager’: Daughter Killed In Accident GAGETOWN. N.B.. Aug. r-tcr), _Ml5g Mae Johnson. 2° 0,! 1115 Main Street, Mcncton. “'85 ill-liq“; 1y killed in a. car acident laces as‘ night and Paul E. Gagnonevhs I John, was seriously inll-lfed! "in: car in which they WW»? ilflv n8 Wk tlhree other persons failed, to ma o. the curve at Du Vernets Come‘: near Gagetowrl and Pill-Well °vfiissl guardrail aPPEWIlUv crushing Johnson to dgmh as the car rolledl °"'i§irs’.°§9$.1l°n§§bn, mother of the young woman who was killed. l6 0 patient in the Moncton l-lObllllal _where she has been for the 095- 9W days. Mr. Johnson. who ls ylc re- sident and general manager of an» Milan National Railwayfi- Allllmm Region roceivcd word 0i hi0 diimll‘ ters death at Campbello lsland_ where he is today nttendlnc hill lIIl-l veilin of the calm erected in mem- ory o the late President ROOPYVBW Mr. Johnson is one of the Mari- time's most prominent citizen-1- ll.S. Fishermen Charge interference Dy Foreign Trawler: nature-Ax. nus. 1 — ‘c?’ _ Officials of the Canadian Fisheléo men's Union ex acted W018i" hsvt ready for omardinll ‘i0 tawe by the week-end at 0B5 statunmts from NOW Soot scisoonennen 0h done their ltsnvie aw by "'1" en. atatcnent" will be N" d fllgnwftiflllll callllllflllll ‘V my“ Deuce. nae t Blower-t ‘nut. floods. A uatmsur mate Mae- cncle's clglsfltrl. static. rsllatsz; "Bu," m f-“lv “ma, trwwlese on the rich W“ Blink- “Wlly n t. Aunt. Luaohol 14° miles seat of he - m u; of eerved. Mllfvhlew Oroh .' ‘hlarlier this dgpgmen, ____ n. cable“? Merry Ialandell Contra 11m ,5“ ‘dflla“il‘ee'iftoifr’liiile “i” “climb React, , A - ‘mm u’ V“. ‘mm m" of "Ill lilin lylarldom’ ego; "h" "m" ‘m’ "mm by am ' m‘ no depertnlont. tthslt time n0 rnsnt m‘ nu“ “m” statements had been rNQ-VN- l" ' l aeid s. ‘ u“ “d; mgt affidavits Ill Mel reed: to lie. fisher- azle w, Pownal. Vernon m, ‘lfiwlfimfhflhfi; grands the “IT who Mfflnn... w‘ ' ‘ “was fishermen {Pwmnunwlm Q13 “M”. irfilfiltiiiiier on heals-mod g1»; a l spar. fish ‘ofilgrimdml’. l 3:’ "i" s ‘I ‘aided u m“ °' thlemefllt gr tn Boutla fishermen to combat ll- |far to Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew rybody These anarchy. MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN ii"- lanogreates evfltban lFircflghtcrs llalt Flaince In Moncton Arcs —.A crew of hi??? b.7401? - ln e New Brunswick great era’ school have succeeded in ho ng a lilne along the forest fire front bllrnlns nearest Moncton, u. L. Miller. cniet provincial foreotcr, said tonight. Working with the aid of a bull- dozer and hand pumps. the crew rolled back the fire lino in the Acre Lake district north ofl-lar- rlsville. about five miles from here. Thus they reduced for the Prescott, at least. a potential threat to this railway centre. Chief Forester Miller reported no change in the general fire sit- "Pili"! dllrllll’ the day. Fires had made little progress. he said and most cases the flames were tra- velling back over areas already burned since the fires started in Westmorland County two weeks ago today. _ . Changing winds have eliminated the menace to the town of Shedlac, Northumberlsnd Strait summer rc- sort. and the flames burning in that area made little regress dur- lllz the day. Mr. Mil er said. Most stubborn blaze was in the Scotch settlement area, 12 mild; north of Monoton. There the fire made some headway in heavily wooded country and extra crews of fire-fighters were being sent to the area tonight._ New outbreaks ln the Rlchihucto area were reported during the day but the wind was carrying the flames away from the Kent County VlUBBe and the tire was making slow progress against the efforts M- more tllan 200 workers. A total force of about 50o men was fighting the fires in Westmor. land and Kent Counties. There has been no report o! gra- Pelly damage since Monday when the flames destroyed four farm houses and seve barns in the Chapman-Scoudou area. and 23 summer cottages and a general store and dwelling at Caissle Cape part of a peninsula jutting out lhto Northumberland Strait. Churchill Speaks In Palestine. Debate ..-. ._.,__....._.'-_—_:—.:r.,.., __ _._ . ._, v By so clmaois LONDON. Aug l (AP) Winston Churchill exprased the hope tonight that President 'l‘rl1- man would not ‘eject the rlroposed division of Palestine as a solution of the Holy Land's troubles and joined leaders of the Labor gov- ernrrlent in pleas for American a-id in making the plan work. Declaring Angio-Amerwm co- operation in hammering out an a ;-_ ceptable Palestine plan “seems so have failed." the opposition leader spoke in a House of Corr.- mons debate which was overshad- owed by reports that the plan ari- opted by a. group of British lmi American government delegates had been received with ill favor in Washington. The negotiators originally came to London vrith power to discuss implementation cf that part of the Anglo-American inquiry commit- tee's report recommending admis- sion as soon as possible of 100.000 Jews to Palestine. a phase u l" which President Trwnsn has sisted. Preceding Mr. Churchill, Si: Stafford Cripps. President of the Board of Trade, told the House that the plan "depends upon tho oo-operstion of the USA." and "we certair-tv hope most earnestly that. such co-opcra-tion will oe forthcoming.” Prime Minister Attlee flew hack from the Paris peace conference to attend today's cabinet meeting and also conferred with the ailing for- o eign secrets , Ernest Bevin, at the letters . An Evening Star rt, how- W90 ever. that Mr. Attlee and President Truman had nod an important. thaw-Atlantic telephone conver- sation on the sub t today was glentigd by the Pm ent in Wasn- Ii n. Mr. Churchill also took occasion to renew his rritlcianl of the gov. ernment's plan lo withdraw Brit- fsh tr from Egypt, saying Brit- Iln mle t now be accused "of hav- ing a national strategic motive gin?“ w ggwgttirhhold lojnflPales- er m e east a . a orlner Hinze Min. later declared, should surrender he: mandate over Palestine 1g s}... ma"! lllllble to solve the prob- ‘llelect Proposal For Joint Commission .-l — (AP) —-'l'.l‘\e etlltmilitn study econ- I restoration ' . om on‘ ln IARI QHDYIIC ITIIII III? . Ana. 1 - —"" %' other“: went strflte n m‘. armalenof ‘SECS; ' r ltnercfr-‘rftflpl-Avlvs-r ‘ s tics W. D. Roach of the Ontario Compromise Fly JACK WILLIAMS Canadian Prese Staff Writer OTTAWA. Alla. l-Commonlise DIODOSBIS of the United Steel- workers of America (C.I.0.> for settlement of the steel strike, made today before the Commons industrial relations committee. re- ceived a mixed reception. Mam point in theproposal was a IBM-cent increase, payable in instalments. compared to an orig- inal demand of 191.5 cents. Reconstruction Minister Howe made it clear he considered the figure too high and Labor ler Mitchell said it was doubtfu whether price controls could be maintained with even a iii-cent increase. On the other hand leaders of two other unions-electrical and automobile-afliliated with steel union through the Canadian Congress of Labor. were critical of ’liic sctlement figure as being too low. The general view of the com- mittee. expected to make s rec- ommendation to parliament short- lv. was not made clear. Clarence Ctiills (COP-Cape Breton South) was the only member to take a definite stand. He described bile offer as "reasonable and very con- servailve." Meantime the strike hsd reach- ed its 18th day. There was no indication of an early settlement of other work stoppages involving CHARLUPTETOWN. FRIDAY, AUGIlS-T 2, 1946 Proposals Df Steelworkers llnion .- flct Mixed Reception electrical and chemical plant-s. RGDTCSCXIIBUVGS of those unions to attend the sessions of the par- llamentary committee. body of the parliamentary com- mittee and asked for a. night ses- sion of the Parliamentary group but the request was relected. Durlrlg me day the committee had received the union's proposals and questioned Cl-f. Millard, Can- adisn director of the union. 0n them. Mr. Millard said the set- tlement plan ‘came from the nat- ional advisory committee of the union and would have to be final- ly approved by the complete mem- bership. The advisory group was epared to urge its acceptance if t had assurance that it would be implemented without revisions. the union was prepared to make separate agreements with eaorl plant it was insistent a uni- form settlement should be applied to all three companies and their subsidiaries. On wages the union had a five- point plan:- Removal of the differential un- dcr which most Sydney workers get give cents less than workers in Ontario steel nulls; a general 10- oent increase retroactive to April 1, the date at which steel prices were advanced; a 2%-cent increase some 35.000 workers in rubber. - (Continued On Page 5 Col. 4i Troops Discover Large Arms Cache In Tel Aviv By OSGOOD CARUTHEBS TEL AVIV. Palestine, Aug. 1 - (AW-British troops today discov- ered in a boys technical school taken over as a. battalion headquar- ters the largest. arsenal of crime yet found in their lnoh-by-irlcb Some troops had been‘ in the building since Monday, unaware of the powder keg hidden in a. secret A communique declared 664 P91‘- sons had been arrested up to noon today in the careful screening of the city's 200,000 population. A Bri- tish general said that among them were 35 men and one woman known to be terrorists. .~ Suppers -of an airborne division still were hacking away this after- noon at false walls and other hol- low-sounding places in the boy's o labyrinth of rooms beneath them. soil oi Thousands of rounds of ammuni- tion, mortar bombs and hand Bren- ades and hundreds of rifles and pistols were found in scaled rooms below the main floor of the school in this all-Jewish community. Officials said they believed the arsenal belonged to the powerful Jewish underground, Hogans. bonds, was found yesterday beneath the great synagogue of Tel Aviv. Al; dawn fihls morning an in- specting officer found a newly- bricked up hole in a wail behind a huge, crate of tools. and a full in- vestigation was begun. A large store of arms, along with equipment for forging government Decline Request For Special Meeting With Representatives Of Ontario Labor Unions (By The Canadian Press) OTr-AWA. Aug. l-rhe sleerlna cbmlnlltee of tile Conn-films’ in- dusi-rlili relations committee cic- cilllcd caily tonight u rcquehl 101' B, special meeilng wlin more than :00 Ontario representatives oi. tour strike-affected. labor unions who descended on the national capllfll to give "rank and file" emphasis to their leaders’ de- msnds for higher wages and bel- iel- working conditions. George Burt. of America (C.I.O.) Lold reporters Maurice Lalonde (L-Labeliel. committee chairman. ilsd communicated the! d¢0l5l0l1 to hiln in response to B. T00R98! for a. meeling tonight which ca.p- ped the delegations activities for their first day in Ottawa. I There was no immediate incli- cation or the motorcade-delegat- ions next move. but’ there were hints that members saw little use of extending their stay here. The representatives descended an the capital during the night after organizing in Toronto a motorcade which ultimately in- cluded men and women workers from Toronto, Hamilton. Windsor. Chathsm, Pcterboroillh. Kitchen- er. Welland and Bowmanville. They launched their campaign wllh e meeting in Major Hill Park. within sight of the Perils; qrrug mom. buildings. The delegation i cluded representatives of four major unions. the United Electrical Workers, United Rubber Workers United Automobile Workers. and International Union of Mine. Mil‘. and Smelteaqworkers. all affili- ated with the Canadian CQHINI of . Their move on Ottawa stemmed from the statement before the Commons’ committee by Mr. Jus- -h.sd it not. been for their leaders. Supreme Cournlndustrial disputes commissioner in the steel strike. that union leadership was a "dic- tatorship" and that rank and file members would sOmclimes have accepted compromise Wage offers Mr. Burt said cf this: "The rank and file certainly was con- suited by labor management and since it is utterly impossible to take Ottawa to the rank and file we have succeeded in bripglnlzlllfi rank and file to Ottawa. From the park. the filo-includ- ing 25 women-marched the short distance to Parliament Hill behind Piper Jack Sandiscn of TOYOHW and hia skirling bagpipes. Ab- sence of police from the Scene reflected their orderlincss. Their general spirit was one of_serious good humor. Search For P.E.l. Native (By The Canadian Press) HALIFAX. Aug l-Search for Dirt. 38-year-old native of Peake’s Station. P. E. 1., tonight had spread over Nova Scotia and sent delegations lo Ottawa today and a committee was appointed Another group conferred with the steering l0 ‘Borden Firc Dept. fiuclls Carleton Blaze Two acres of woodland vrere destroyed st Carleton yesterday afternoon in a flre which origin- lted in the woods s short dist- ance from the home of Mr. Elmer Francis. A hurried call for assistance to combat the fire was sent to Mayor W P. MacNeill of Borden who fire equipment under coounaold of Chief Preston Darrach. A plentiful supply of water was available after a nearby brook had been dammed and with five lengths of hose in service. the flre was finally extinguished four hours later. Cpl. MacLellan and Cst. Night- ingale of the Borden detachment, R.C.M.P.. rendered assistance to the fire-fighters. No buildings were damaged by the fire Manitoba Makes Tax Agreement With Dttawa (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA. Aug. 1—Premier Stuart Gsrson of Manitoba said in a statement last- night that Manitoba and Dominion Govern- ment officials will meet in early autumn io consummate a new formal tax agreement betlween the two governments. Mr. Garcon said that after three days of discussion here a draft agreement. has been drown up and will be submitted shortly to the Manitoba and Federal Calo- ineis. ‘Iihe agreement was drawn up on the basis of the Federal offer to the provinces as outlined in the budget speech. Manitoba would agree not to collect personal income or inheritance taxes f0!‘ 8 period of five years and would limit corporation income tax to five per cent. destroyed or responded by sending the town's books PAGES Control 0f Atomic Encrgy Given To Civilian Connniesion development in the nited Truman's signature on a law lng control to a civilian commission. . Mr. conference that l1: plans to make public the personnel of the five- man commission as soon as he ob talns acceptances from those he has asked to serve. The commissioners must be civil- ians but there is no bar against r1- tired members of the armed forces. The military Bets into the con- trol picture by having a repre- sentative as director of the division of military application. He will be appointed by thc commission. how- ever. Atomic weapons, along with civil- ian uses of the new power, come within the commission's jurisdiction. By permission of the President. however, the commission could-per- mit the armed forces to work in the atomic weapons field. Other principal features control 1aw:-- 1. A virtual government monogly on atomic inventions and psten . 2. Strict security rules with the death penalty provided for major violations committed with intent to harm the United States. 3. Exclusive commission authority over fisslonable material used in the production of atomic bombs. and over facilities used in production with power to permit others to produce fissionable materials under Tlilld controls. 4. Licences required for the use of devices utilizing atomic energy, such licences not to be issued un- til Congress has nod 90 days to Study the projects involved. 5. A joint committee of nine Sen. ators and nine representatives to keep continuously in touch with hhe commission's activities and with atomic problems in general. of the Gambling Houses To De Kept llcw Issue Df Postage Stamps m as .1—(CP)—A new fir: ofugpictorial postalze stamps. with emphasis on the basl‘! industries and raw materials of lire Domirdon, will ‘be released 56P- 16 to replace those issued in i942 and 1943 to depict the war effort of the people, Postmaster General ' Bertrand announced today in the Ccmlmons. The new series will be made up of stamps of the eight. l0. l4. Z". 5O and $1 denominations and a. seven-cent airmail. IO-cent special delivery and ll-cmt air m!" 5P9‘ cial delivery. No change will be made in the resent one. two three, four. and lye-cent small-sized stamps which carry portraits of the King in uni- forms of the Canadian armed ser- oes. The green lo-c-znt special deliv- ery stamlp will still carry the coat of arms of Canada but_ now wi.l have the medallion flanked 0y laurel and olive branches as sym- bols of victory and peace. Illustrations of the stamps no sooner were mace public than it was reported that an error has; been made in one-the eight-cent fame scene which shows an Ont- orio farmer plowing a field near his farm buildings. Tile slow was shown as throwing earth to the right instead of to the left in the customary plowing method. Following are (‘ne denominations. colors and subjects of the new stam :— Elght-cenls. blown. eastern Can- adian f-xrm scene Ontario ill-certs. olive-glean. Great Bear lake. showing scene of first pitch- blende discoveries H-cents. dark brown. hydro-elec- tric power station on St. Maurice River. Quebec. Ziiccnls. carbon blue, cimbinq] gllclclgslsr and harvester, prairie prov- oo-cerzs. green, lumbering oper- ations in British Columbia's. $1. purple. new train-ferry, with YlSTllYIB-BOM. Prince Edward Island. Seven-cents, air mall. blue, can. B118; Erase in flight near Sudbury, lilcerlis. i ai dfillvfly. Violietr tllilssi aglltl: mail plane over Quebec City IO-cents. Special delivery, Prince Edward Island. Bil-t was the amls of Canada ‘L Tache to a ear hut Acting Pol ce reported missing by ills brother and olive branches ‘ayvlvlllzgllc “:11 573N010! Aljged 391811861‘ will h‘! Alex who said he was last seen in victory and ma“ will almost certainly be dismissed a, Halifax restaurant last Friday - if he falls to report when called. night. Yesterday the board refused to Dragging operations for thebody accept Ca t. Tache's resignation of a man believed to have fallen chufch suntan.” and decide he should be summon; from a Halifax pier late Friday] ed to face "very serious charges . nlflrt were discontinued m4 yelp; Lleut. Arthur Mellie. Capt. lives expressed the belief alrt had - mffl| Tull" deputy. was suspended at not fallen {mm tha pier, g I yesterday's hoard meeting‘ after . admitting he had been qulliy of ' ygrahve flL§|BDEdl0f£liCE".f— reported‘- AN-I-DGONISHI NS. Au‘. 1 _ y y ta ng or era rom asp‘. to?) ___ Parishioners o! 5t Am Tache instead of from Police Dir 'drew's Roman » ago, cc obrated their church's cen- celebrated by Most Rev. J R Mac- _ preaching the centennial Catholic Chtrch. built Scottish exiles a oentiuy tlenary here today with high mass Donald, ooadlllwr Bishop of Ani- igonish, and a former Archbishop James astor. orriaon oi sermon. recalled that tilt. first grammar school in eastan Nova Scotia was at St. Andrews. ' Church d nitarles attending the ceremonies included Blah... P.A fifth, Jose Sandoval Veissoo. Bray. of Saint John. N. . andJz, escaped without. a scratch he- Bishop cause he was sleeping in a bellow 0b. Landry of- Hearst.‘ on these three points:- who has admitted firing the shots which killed Davis was to appear Aug. a for statement on a murder. charge. He 718$ flllllhled self-defence. demanded that Davis collecte from the underworld for pavment to municipal authorities. new morality squad leader gave details of a plan to hound gamb. ling houses out of operation while nent. Along with announcement of the. signature that put the act on moi Truman told his press‘ Subscription Delivered 06.00. Hail. 84.00: other Provinces l 0.0.5. l0.0\ Trieste Plan Unacceptable To Yugoslavia WASHINGTON, Aug. 1 - (AP)-—- BlB F 0'11‘ QYIBPTQmlSB Army domination of atomic energy U States ended legally today with Presideirlt l? V- Soiution Is Rejected By Vice-Premier l Kardelj. By LYNN HETNZER rams. Aug. l — (AFRO; h, lslavin bluntly announced . iBYFfhr ‘mum “(it "mm thelriifi-dnd Iccmnrcmlse so-utior. of - ~ me Ncfhs-r] named pancake-m‘- fercllce ifit; flint ilk-l? new“ -."'°‘°" “7 “grills ~n powers ..r their w a Ofllllgrsfl bitter wttack 0n the Trieste ‘ d KordeIl. ‘I020- glezailslglgcrlizrttiarlliaizl" and chief deleg- ate. said his country would felt-IT’ the solution because "it abandons large section? otf lllllf 1190919 m ~h° c ‘ . ill . ‘mKféggecieu exgloslon on ‘IYKSKB game after Foreign Minister Moo- tov of Russia. l-ruended a Greed motion in the rules committee t0 0pm the conference to 01y Deflfl? questions " The ixunmittee adoptel Mr, Mommy's amencment that all? delegation, could raise any ques- tion "pertaining to the draft "661-- ‘es .- Prime Minister Mackenzie King. who head; the Canadian delega- tion. is expected lo launch major Canadian participation w- morrow when he speaks before the plenary session. All. King and his advlsors have been working for several days Jn the text of the add- ress which likely will sum up the loamdian position in regard to several major questions. Tile ed dress will he made some time af- ter 4 pm. GM '1‘ (11 am. E.D.T. -12 noon A.D T.) when confer- ence sessions begin Kardelj at a plenary mica: de- clared the French line ea the boundary between Italy and Yugo- slavia. was a “negation of all the fundamental principles for which our p le fought " Just". fore Randall's amount»- ment, Foreign Minister Va; Boetzelaer of the Netherlands ro- vived the equality dispute between the big and -ittl.e states with the tilxeclamticgg: "Wetare opposed to ii-V 118 e "(real powers imtpoea their will on the others." l (‘Corltdnued On Page l Col. Q Under Close Watch Montserrat. Aux. 1 _<ci>> - Montreal s gambling operators used §i'.°."...§".’;’.'.°.i"..i‘i5'2.f.§i..li2“?.?'..§2 Sumac A9 vice situation, continuing to un- fold in the wake of the slaying . just a week ago of Harry Davis. . one of their big bosses. , The day brought developments 1. In court- Louis Bercovitz, 88, ordered volunts ry 2 City Council _ members a full probe of reports d protection fees 3. At police headquarters- the dismissal from the force for the old morality chief appeared immi- At a stormy city council meet- lng late today. several members threatened to group together for independent action should the ex- ecutive committee fail to call a special council meeting to discuss vice and gambling rackets. After a similarly hectic scss-‘on this morning. some council mem- bers sairi thcy cxpcciod a full in- vesilgaiinn would be launched into reports that certain civic officials had accepted protection money from Davis. Meanwhile. at police headquart- ers, Lleut. Gabriel Plche outlined a plan lo clean out gambling houses by keeping thcm under n round- thc-clock ivatch. He said his morality squad of nearly 50 officers and men would he split into atrcls, which wculll be indlvldualy responsible for stamping out vice in specific areas assigned to them. All silsiwectel gambling houses would be under observation night and day. Lleut. Piche was named io lead the police department's morality squad after the suspension Monday of Capt. Arthur Tache, who said today he rlld not intend to appear before the department's disciplin- ary hoard to face charges in con- nection with his administration of the morality squad. The board cannot force Ca t. ector Fernand Dufresne. Lleut. Maille will appear again before the board Aug. 16. Fear Mexicans Kllled Ill. MONTE. Calif. Aug. l -(APi __1nour Mexicans asleep on top of a truckload of bah-d hay were kill ed today. one by decapitation. when the vehicle went under a ilivhwcy underpass without sufficient clear- s c. A LAWS Man is NENER A HALIFAX. Aug. 2 -- (Wlday) —— (OP) — Official inland forecast-s issued by the Dominion Pirlblic Weather Office at Halifax at M215 a.m_ A D T.. Friday. Aug 2. Forecasts valid until midnight Friday: Prince Edward Island — Clair wright with patches of god forni- ing before dawn Cloudy late Fr‘.- day morning. Not much change in temperature. Light winds increas- ing to east 15 m.n.h. Friday aft/er- atgon. High rhioav Charlottetown Summary: Irwreasing cloudl TORONTO. Aug. 1 (CP Minimum and maximum temporal- urcs: Vancouver 57. 70; Edmonton 5i; 70; Regina 57. 87; Toronto 80. 68: Ottawa 57. '74; Montreal 63. 80: Quebec 49, 78: Saint John 55. 75; Monctoh 49. ; Halifax 55. 6'2; Charlottetown 50. 72; Sydney 52. 6.3: Yarllaouth 5S. . High tide this morning at 3.20 and this afternoon at 3.14, Sun sets this evening at. 8.27 and rises tomorrow morning at 5.47. First quarter moon August 4th. 4.55 P. M Summer-side tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. AIB SCHEDULE Charlottetown-Mouton - Leave Charlottetown l A. M. 10.30 A. M.. 5.15 P. M Arrive Glarlottetown 12 P. M.. 5.55 P. M._ 13s P. M. Charlottetown-Halifax - Leave Charlottetown 12.55 P. M. Arrive Charlottetown 455 P. M. .- Charlottetown - New Glanow - Leave Charlottetown 12.45 P. M Arrive Charlottetown 5 P. M. Standard Time throughout ness. l '- CAR FERRY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND“ Standard Tine Leave Borden at. 0.05 A.M., l PM and 4.30 P. M Leave Tormentlno 10.80 A. M. 3 P. Ml. 7.30 P M Extr tripe are s... bet which “automobiles are earl-ix a SUNDAY BEIIVICI From Borden, 1 P. M“ 6. 45 P. Prom Tonnentine. 3 P. M.. I P WOOD ISLANDS-CABIN!!! Daylight Saving Leave Wood unites. daily 1 A. n. 0am. i1A.M.,1P.M..8P.M, piece in idle hay. ane 0 l". M. and Caribou at sane hotlrs.