MAXIMS or A. MERE MAN -1-:-u lh boarinl Ind Ibo trslninl . slits is woman-. wisdom. Pi 0..-up oamoemown. :',. 1. r.'ss.os. ouau Provinces hlllnonldo used per Elsuvhan ""3 0- 8- A- 012.00 per annuu. p Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1952 OOMMUNIST TROOPS IN -KOREA EXCEED MILLION MARK Federal Aul:i1oriiies?eaj Grain-I-Ianciiers striit-e States Will No l Restrict Imports Of OotLHaddock . OTTAWA. Sept. 5 -(CP)- The united States Tariff Commluion has rejected proposals that it re- strict imports of groundfish fillets. the Fisheries Council of Canada reported today. it said the rejection is "welcome news" to Canadah fishing indus- iry. which last year shipped about 510000.000 worth of cod. haddock and other groundfish fillets to the American market and expects to ship even more this year. Gordon O'Brien. council manag- er. said the restrictions were pro- posed by the New England Fishing industry. The New England application its: made last September. Hear- lngs on the case were held in Washington last November and Mr. O'Brien as well as C. J. Mor- row of Lunenburg represented the Plslieries Council and presented :anada's case. A survey by the U. S. Tariff commission followed and as a re- sult. reported that it found no in- jury to American producers re- Iulting from imports. The current Coming Events "Reserve October 8th for Pownal Ladies Aid Chicken supper. "St. Columba's Chicken Supper and Dance. Septhember 9th. "Reserve September 24th for Turkey Supper in Long River Hall. "Buying timothy seed daily. Mecuigan and Boyle. "Annual Thanksgiving supper. Victoria United Church. "Try our Purina Finance Plan for fending your hogs and poul- try. Dillon and Splllett. "Sandy's Drive-In shows Tuesdays. Wednesdays l-Yldayl at D P. M. Theatre. and "Dancing Stanley Bridge Rink llall every Tuesday night. Music by Munroe's Orchestra. 9 to I. "Dance, Launching School. Mon- iay. September 8th. Turners Orch- rrtra. "Ringo. Elliot Hall. Monday. ioptrmber Bth. sponsored by Fair- fiew We-eders. Door prize. "Dance in Vernon River Hall, tlonday. September Bth. Rollie Mac- x'cnzie's Orchestra. "Buying and Cleaning Timothy Rred daily. Paying top price. Elmer MacDonald, Crnpaud. "Chicken supper and dance Iona Hall. Wednesday, Sept. 10th. Supper served from 6 to 10. "Your swift Egg Grading Sta- Hon on Fitzroy Street have excel- lcni facilities for handling your! fresh eggs. It will pay you to try them with your next shipment. Correct Grndlng.IQuick Service and Payment in cash. "Farmers, ask about the shut Gain Feed Finance Plan. For part zculsrs contact your local feed mill "Regular weekly dance in at MIi”Y's Hall. Souris. every Wed- lfhdnv. Chaissons Orchestra Canteen service. "Dance every Saturday night. islanders Country Club, Travellers Rest. Music by Lennie Bolger's four niece orchestra. "Bsm Dance in Cliff Peters Rim. Ftoilo Bay, Monday. Septem- ber iiih. Round and square Danc- ml- 9.30 to 1. "Buying live and dressed poul- fry Monday to Thursday noon at 0"? plant on Fitzroy Street. next to "in telephone office. Phone 1027 for prices. swift Canadian Co. Limited. "Danes. Emerald Rail. Thurs- iiiiy. Boptsmber llth. Music by Russell warren and Blue Haven Ramblers. canteen service. "DI-nu. st. Peters Lsks sohooi. MPMIY. September nth. Lunches. a 3- pm” - St.uPPs:erIo3l.:.'1lK..'I.a W by "Show. . nonshsw Saturday. Mclro-Goldwyn Meyers new movie of Lassie in "The Painiod Hills". :::'x9i'Y of a brave boy and s fesrlen h "swift Canadian 00. Limited. ave inst received s csrlosd of has minentrats. dairy concentrate. Willi? concentrate also hog grow- ari swift: Laying Mash and Dam "gf:'I"i.Piok up !0Ill',IY0quireI:c:I.ic4 Vllilmus on troy . charlotistowo 5. U. B. tariff rate was left. unchang- ed. Groundflsh fillets make up a- bout one-eighth of Canada's :85.- 000,000,worth of fish exported to the U. S. each year. Mr. O'Brien said. Of total U. S. imports of 33,. 000,000 pounds of groundfish in 1051. 57,000,000 came from Canada. other large suppliers are Iceland and Norway. ' critically ill Although Cordell I-lull. s1, is re- ported slightly improved from a celebral thrombosis attack, the veteran statesman and legislator is still on the critical list at I Washington hospital. Mr. I-lull was secretary of state during three of President Roosevelt's terms. Oaiario And at. Papers Gil Awards ST. ANDREWS. N. B., Sept. 5- tCPi-British Columbia and On- tario papers gained the lion's share of Canadian Weekly News- papers Association awards an- nounced tonight. The C.W. N. A. annual meeting is being held here. The Powell River, B.C.. News led the winners by taking all three first places in the competi- tions for papers with a. circulation between 2.000 and 8.000. The winners: Circulation over 3.000-best all around paper, Barrie, Ont., Exam- iner; bcst front page, Chilllwack. B.C.. Progress: best editorial page. Newmarket, Ont., Era and Ex- ress. Circulation between 2.000 and 3.- 000-Powell River News. in all three classifications. Circulation between 1.000 and 2,000-best all around paper. Gan- anoque, Ont., Reporter; best front page. Dryden. Ont., Observer: best editorial page, Gananoqua Report- or. Circulation between 500 and 1.- 000-besl. all around paper, Lad- ner. B.C.. Optimist: best from. page, Ladncr Optimist: best edit.- orial page. Brighton, Ont., Ensign. Circulation under 500--best all around paper, Stavely, Alta.. Ad- vertiser; best front page. Wlnkler. Man., ProgrcM.: best editorial page. Hartney. Man., Star. Would Snarl Movement Of Record trap OTTAWA. Sept. 5-(GP)-Fed. eral grain and transport experts today expressed concern over the possibility of 9. grain-handlers strike at the Lakehead snarling movement of Canada's record grain crop this year. W. J. Fisher, deputy transport controller. said the walkout of some 1,400 workers, if it material- ized, would have "serious implica- tlons." The strike has been set for Sept. 15. Movement of virtually all grain at Lakehead terminals would be halted. he said. If the strike last- ed any length of tlme.grain would begin backing up, straining the facilities of country storage elevat- ors and finally piling up on farms. Orderly movement of railway boxcars on the prairies would be disrupted and some part of the Great Lakes shipping fleet would become idle. The Federal Government, real- izing what heavy damage a strike might do to Canada's wheat-sell- ing program. sent Arthur Mac- Namara, Deputy Minister of Labor. to Winnipeg, scene of negotiations. The grain-handlers. members of the Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clerks (A.F.L.-T.L.C.) seek a 40-hour week. a union shop and a. wage increase. A conciliation board recommend- ed a 44-hour week to replace the current 48, part of the wage in- crease demanded by the union, plus a maintenance-of-membership clause and the check-off. The board turned down the request for a union shop. This was accepted by the operators but rejected by the union. At Winnipeg. Mr. MacNamara said the Federal Government is trying to reopen negotiations and achieve a settlement. He met with terminal elevator officials and will talk to union officials at tire" Lakehead Monday. Charles I-Iardick. district chair- man of the union. said "we are hopeful that a settlement can be reached before the date of the strike." R. W. Milner. federal transport controller, also left Ottawax for Winnipes. but what role he will play in the negotiations was not certain. He has power to requisi- tion and control all transport and storage in Canada. Mr. Fishat. his deputy. said transport men established 9. recortl in grain movement last year and hope to do even better this year- lf there is no strike. Mitchell Sharp. assistant deputy minister of trade. said any inter- ruption in movement will reduce the ability of farmers to get grain to market. The current western crop-im eluding wheat. oats. barley. rye parison with those of last year: 91 Percent Of . Potato Acreage Passes Tests According to information received from H. L. McLareri, District In- spector of the Seed Potato Certification Office, 21,041 acres or 917.; of the total of 23,109 acres entered for inspection in this Province have passed final field inspection this year. The following shows the acreages which passed by variety in com- tsiand Seed 1952 1951 Irish Cobbler .... .. 4,422-3; gV550 Green Mountain 2,299; 3.644 . Kntahdin 2.0231; 2,i3.a'i -"A"-P"!-I0 10.099 azsou Canso L322 Kestvick 18-is; Pontiac 544 Warba. . 13;-s; Neited Gem 43 Sequoia ,2 Bliss Triumph 14 Kenncbec 13 gg Chippewa . Early Epicure ism, 3?: Mclntyre 5 NW Total acres ”Pas.sed" 21.0-ii H.M.C.S. Porto St. Louis. one of the newest additions to the Canad- ian Navy put into port here im night on her way from Quebec to Halifax. The "Gate Vessel" is ex- pected to sail this morning. One oi the newly-designed ships for har- bor guarding duty, she was recent- ly launched at the Lauzon, Quebec, shipyards. She is under command of Lieut Cmdr. H. Bruce Carnall, D.S.C.. and the First Officer on board is Lgleut. Omdr.. Robert 0. Me an. S . H . and Bar. son at . and Mrs L. B. McMillan of this city. Lieut. Omdr. McMillan returned to active duty with the Canadian Navy in May of last year after a distinguished career during the war years. A former Aide to the former Lieutenant Governor J. A. Bernard, he won his first decoration while serving aboard a minesweeper in the Mediterranean. A surprise sweeup by enemy planes caused havoc in the Piirt in which the mlnesweeper was lying and killed all other of- ficers on board. The then Lieut. McMillan took command and was personally responsible for shooting down five of the attacking planes. He later won a. Bar to the Dis- tinguished Service Cross. He returned to this country Local. Man Offi On Visiting Naval Craft cer Lt. Cmdr. R. C. McMillan briefly in l943 for I. cross-country was-You Naval duty before going baciio active sea duty. When the war ended he came to his native city and served aboard H.M. C. S. Queen Charlotte as Training Of- ficer. Lsst r he went. back to active duty with the Royal Canad- ian Navy. and fiaxseed-is estimated at about 1,300,000,000 bushels. The Bureau of Statistics has estimated the wheat crop at a record 656,- 000,000 bushels. More Polio In British Columbia VANCOUVER. Sept. 5 ---(OP) - Nine new cases of poliomyeiitis were reported today in British Columbia. bringing the total to 248. The death in Vancouver of a four- year-old girl brought the prov- ince's polio fatalities to 21. Name Negro CHICAGO. Sept. 5- (AP) - Dwight D. Eisenhower indicated today he would be willing to name a negro to the cabinet if he could find one with "merit" and "the qualifications needed to serve the United tatcs well." The epublican for president also made his strongest bid yet for s working alliance with Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio. Eisenhower said of his defeated rival for the nomination: "I'll try to draw him on to my tssrn, not only as a consultant but as a man to lead s very important section of the fight." The General spoke up in answer n-'7BEing pin. fowl and cattle. :s.s . Monday at Fredericton. Knud Jorgensen. "Buying live fowl Tuesday. eight to twelve. R. L. Dirkieson, New Glasgow. "Three act play "l-zya-s of Love". South Rustic-o hall. Mon- day, September 8th. Definitely last. performance. New specialties. "Unloading carlosd Pioneer feeds. Delivered free on . , t hill stock Brsntford asphalt shingles, siding on hand. Get our Eisenhower Willing T 0 To Cabin.et to questions fired at him by Re- publicsn leaders and party candl- dates from Illinois. Indiana and Michigan. Edgar G. Brown. a Republican candidate for Congress from Illin- olsl. tn: question of the an s , o a standing negro" to the cabinet in the event Eisenhower becomes President. Brown himself is a negro. This was the answer: "Wlth respect to the appoint- ment of a negro to any place. I would say this: I will search for merit wherever it is. I will search for the qualifications needed to serve the United States well and if,' in a particular field. you can find someone whose appointment would give resuurancs to the great body of negro men. I should very much like to do such a thing. Make no mistake; I said negro men. pl meant it in the generic sense, the negro race." on other points and campaign issues. Eisenhower said that: 1. He believes "we can come close to balancing the budget." and the first stop is "complete honesty, complete efficllency. and - 0 son expenditures. 2. He believes "one of the great- est defects in our foreign policy price before .nssC'II.In'. R. L. Dlckieson. New Glasgow. is that thereis none” . Zion The Salvation Army Team of Evangclists who opened their Mid- Century "Crusade for Christ" in Presbyterian Church last evening, were accorded aasplendid Provincial and Civic welcome at noon yesterday by Premier J. Wal- ter Jones and Mayor J. D. Stewart. On :1 stage erected at the ap- proximate location of the first Salvation Army open air meeting held in Charlottetown sixty-three years ago. Premier Jones spoke of the happy relations that existed between the Army and the peo- ple. of the Province down through the years. He hoped that the in- fluencc for good which has per- meated their activities here as elsewhere, would continue and expand. Mayor J. D. Stewart expressed the great pleasure it gave him. on behalf of the City Council and the citizens generally. to welcome the Army Evangelism and wish them success in their Crusade. his Worship spoke of the ease with llepulaiion Due To Evaluation DIXVILLE NOTOH. N. H.. Sept. 5-(OP)-Quebec's reputation as a "poor" province is the result of too-low municipal evaluation. Charles def... Mignault, chairman of the Quebec Municipal Commut- slon. said today. Addressing the three-day most- Largely Attended Opening? Of Salvatiottzirmy Crusade which the better can be overlooked in the world of today. and the influence for good which the Army extends in all countries. He remembered with gratitude the part played by the salvation Army overseas during the war, and like others who were in that con- thlngs of life (Continued on Page 8 C317-UVE Quebec Will Nbl Sign Agreement QUEBEC, Sept. 5 (OP) Premier Duplessls of Quebec indic- ated today his government will not fall in step with Ontario which re- recently signed temporary tax ag- reements with the Federal govern- mcnt. Apparently referring to this tax agreement. Mr. Duplcssis said "the government will never sign the death warrant of the Province of Quebec." In a statement which contained no direct reference to tax agree- ments. Mr. Duplemis said "we are IYRDGPIDIY opposed to assimilation. centralisation and absorption." He did not say. however. that his governs-nant will never sign an ag- roemsnt. He has previously critic- ised Federal-Provincial tax agree- snants. Under the Ontario agreement an- riouncgi last week. that province will rent personal . and cor- tsx fields for five years Quebec gives "an appearance of poverty to our province." "it is a recognized fact that this excessively low valuation has been harmful to our province from an economic viewpoint.” He said property assessment is a serious business. "The consequences of hasty and bsdly-made valuations have often resulted in the impossibility of municipalities undertaking needed public improvements." 4 ing of the Quebec Union of . P iitlns -Mr. Ian ” um under-evaluation of properties in tn the Federal government in re- turn for annual payments. The ag- reement differed from agreements V1!!! eight other provinces which include inheritance taxes. nnisron Enlsnd --(CP)- Postmaster-General Earl do is Wlrr said NOD00 Britons are able to have the use of a telephone ire- osuse subscribers agreed to share s party line. He appealed to more pre-1946 subscribers to share their tslephones. islves and fire bombs Bul Vanl”leel i Does Not Fear Auiumn Allack SEOUL. Sept. ti -(ssturdsy)- .(AP)- Gen. James A. Van Fleet said Friday the Communists now have built their Korean armies to more than 1.000.000 men but he doubted if they would dare an autumn offensive. The United States Eighth Army commander spoke against a back- drop of new air blows at Red tar- gets. renewed air battles that saw three Communist Mig jets downed and another strong Chinese at- tempt to recapture Bunker Hill that cost them an estimated 400 in dead find wounded. Van Fleet told a press confer- ence that while the Communist military machine built up its man- power, the Allies had bolstered their lines "providing us a strong coast-to-coast installation." The general did not say how much more than 1.000.000 he thought the Communist had gone. He lost estimated their strength at 900,000 men in March. Van Fleet said the Reds had lost 30.000 men in casualties in beating against the bristling Allied de- fences during the last three months. Allied planes Friday mass- bomed a camouflaged mine and ore processing centre at Sinhung. north of the Red port of Hungnam in Northeast Korea. Two waves of Filth Air Force. 'Marine and Australian fighter- lbombers loosed 227 tons of explo- on buildings .and shops. They claimed 35 build- lings destroyed and 3: damaged. other fighter-bombers and light bombers blasted supply centres be- hind the front. Sabre pilots tangled seven times lwith Mix jets Friday. They claim- yed three destroyed--one without .firing a shot--one probably de- stroyed and three damaged. This lbrought their two-day tail to 15 Idestroyed. one probably and eight ,damaged. Allied losses are an- inounced weekly. ' The Chinese made one more fu- tile and ,costly attempt early Fri- day to seize Bunker Hill. a good tactical position only four miles east of the armistice conference site at Panmunjom. Elements of two Chinese regi- ments pounded up the hill behind a scorching arillcry and motrar lbarrage. swept into the Allied itrenches and were hurled back in a two-hour struggle of bayonets land grenades. N. B. Schools To Delay Openings FREDERICTON. Sept. 5 -tCPl- olin cases in New Brunswick soared to the 200 mark today as a provincial government minister and a health officer urged parents to keep their children out of crowds. With 16 new cases reported in six counties. six of them in Kent. Hon. James W. Brittain appealed to parents to keep children away from congested places and areas. The Minister of Education and Munlclpa1Affalrs was joined in the plan by Dr. J. A. Melanson. chief medical officer. Mr. Britain asked parents to ex- crclse necessary "discipline and control" in their homes while polio is rampant in the province. He said the government had taken steps to prevent spread of the dis- ease by delaying school opening. Parents could co-operate by mak- ing sure their children are kept away from places where they might be exposed to polio. l l I OTTAWA. Sept. 5--(CP)--Lord Robinson. United Kingdom for- estry expert, died suddenly here today. He was heading Britain's delegation to the sixth Common- wealth forestry conference. Pneumonia was given as the cause of the death of the 69-year- old first Baron 'nf Kailder Forest and Adelaide. He entered hospi- tal two days ago after a siren- uous 3.000-mile tour of Ontario and Quebec by conference dele- gates. He was chairman of the For- estry Commission of Great Bri- tain since 0932 and was credited with formulating forest policy and the creation of state forests in the United Kingdom. Delegates met briefly. stood in silence for a minute in his mem- ory and then adjourned for the day. Resources Minister Winters. president of the conference. said Lord Robinson had given vigor- ous leadership in development and utilization of the forests of "re Commonwealth. armies l rise or sink together. MAXI MS OIL MERE MAN The woman's cause Is man's: they 16 PAGES Morning Daily Founded 1881. The Guardian. Five Cents MARGATE. England. Sept. 5 -tAP)- Britain's organized labor unions today unanimously adopted a. resolution urging a big boost in British trade with Rulla and her satelhtes. The annual convention of the 3,-- 000.000-member Trades Union Congress. backbone of the Labor Party. said increased East-West trade is necessary to help stlmu late Britain's export drive. It expressed alarm at the grow- ling difficulty of maintaining Brit- tish exports in the face of trade re- striations and warned that ”ox- tended slump conditions and un- employment" may result. . The resolution called on all gov- ernments--both East and West-- to meet without further delay to Idiscuss increased trade and the removal of artificial trade bar- rlers. Labor leaders addressing the convention said increased East- West trade might help the cause of world peace lrut unphaslzecl Treatment For Bladdertancer CHICAGO. Sept. 5 - (AP) m- A new radium-needle treatment is saving many people with bladder cancer, Dr. Raymond Darget od Bordeaux. France. reported today. Radium-filled needles are put into the cancerous part of the blad- der. to kill cancer with X-rays. A balloon inside the bladder, filled with lead solution. keeps the rays from damaging.the healthy tiwue of the bladder. This damage has been a serious drawback before in using radium. The needles are left in place four to six days. then are pulled out. he told the International College of Surgeons. Half of 200 patients given this treatment are alive five years is- tcr. tvitli their bladders kept intact. Dr. Darget said. Cancer is usually considered cured if it doesn't recur within five years. Bladder cancer causes about three per cent of all cancer deaths. The usual treatment today is to remove the entire bladder. The tubes leading from the kidneys then are made to empty into the colon. Will Form Small Diocese LONDON. Ont., Sept. 5 - tCP)-- The. Church of England in Canada today decided to farm a small dio- cese as the home of the primate in office. The iilth general synod, in the Second day of meetings here. de- cided to form the See to releive the primate of diocesan duties. It voted unanimously after hearing a Wam- ing by Chancellor R.V. Harris of British labor Votes To Increase Tradgwith Reds that such an increase depends on Russia as well as on the Western governments. The Western powers have gen- erally agreed with the United Sta- tes to prohibit the export of any strategic uar-potential goods to Iron Curtain countries. Recent Soviet assertions that Russia is willing to do more busi- ness with ihe West have been written off by most Western trade officials as propaganda. The T. U. C. convention also unanimously adopted a resolution demanding that the government start action now to apply equal pay for women in the civil service. The government has promised to study the gradual adoption of .equai pay for women civil service lworkcis. but no action has been taken so far. The T. U. C. ended its week- long convention by electing Tom O'Brien. a Labor member of par- liament. as new chairman of the executive general council. Large Number Pilgrims Killed .lV'F.'W DELHI. Sept. 6 -tSai- urriayI- (AP)- More than 350 Hindu pilgrims were killed and many were missing in a high Himalayan snow storm that overtook them at 10,000 feet altitude in Himachal Pra- dish state. survivors reported today. Reports in morning papers here quoted the first group of survivors returning to the plains as saying the fate of many hiding from the storm in caves was unknown. They said many died of exhaustion on the return journey. The Maui Mahcsh festival annually in the-high Himal- ayas--regarded as the seat of the Hindu gods--attracts thousands of pilgrims. The post-monsoon storm hit them at Shangaralot. 65 miles from Chambs in Himachal Pradish. Bandits Siage S25.il00 Bobbery B-(CF)-'INvvi TORONTO. Sept. bandits who called each other "Willie" and "George" made of! with 326,000 in cash in s. daylight holdup of s Dominion Bank branch today. Police said three employees who arrived early for work left the bank. door unlocked and the ban- dits "just walked in". The bank is in Toronto's west. end at Ron- cesvailes and Howard Park Aven- U55. First reports said the. thieves hid in the bank during the night. Police said the men forced t 9. bank manager to open the vaui. and escaped an hour before the normal 10 s.m. opening for public business. Halifax that "we have already kill- ed two primates" by overwork. There was no question among the 300 delegates that the primate of all Canada. was faced with a too- heavy task. But there was consid- erable discussion as to how a change should be made. Chancellor Harris said there were three ways: Creation of a small diocese: freeing the primate entire- llly or diocesan duties. such as is the rnase with the presiding bishop or ;the Episcopal Church in the United i States: or appointment of a co- ndlutor bishop to assist in his dio- l rose. British Forestry Expert Dies Suddenly In Ottawa Funeral arrangements are not yet complete. Lady Robinson, in London. was advised of her hus- band's death. Born Roy Lister Robinson in Adelaide. Australia. March 9. 1883. Lord Robinson was educat- ed at St. Peters College and the school of mines of the University of Adelaide where he was an hon- iars student and outstanding ath- ctr. He went to Oxford as in Rhodes Srhnlnr where he was a double blue starring in cricket and in- crease. During the First World War hr served in the British minis- trick of niuniiions and agriculture and was awarded the Order of the British Empire. in,1019 he became a member of th British Forestry Commission and in 1932 becomes its chairman. In 1931 he was Kind George V and was elevated to tho pr-orago In 1947. Survivors also Include ikillod in knighted by two daughters in England. A son was the Second World War. M to Mutt tofu. ' tits ttttt,Fottow.x. A lftlDDl..E Coon-tr: HALIFAX. Sept: HP-I-EEK?) Official forecasts issued by the Do- minion Public Weather Office in -1 Halifax and valid until midnight Saturday with an outlook for Sun- day. synopsis: The weather over most of this Maritimes Saturday will remain fine. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward island - clean with little change in temperature. Light winds becoming southwest 1! after noon. Low and high at Char- lottetown 50 and 75, Moncton 41 and 75. Fredericton 43 and 80, saint John 52 and 75. Outlook for Eltmriav .. Bunny. Summary for Saturday .-. Clear. High tlda today at Charlotte- town at 12.17 P. M. High tide on the North Shore at 7.08 A. M. and 7.18 P.M. Summersidc tide eighteen min: utas later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 5.40 A. M. and sets at. M2 P. M.