umn mystery. Spellbound". no 1.1mm- through United Artists rel Picture. MASTER PLAN Cciitliiucltl-‘Pgm P28!‘- 1 , forces cf these countries to t-ie role of local defence. Th..- in; limitations are imposed: panama-Army of 120-000 wm- m-d with ,1. pro-war force of yaooiioo: air foice of 150 planes rind 8.000 men, compared with es- p loll tlllillt€d 1935i ncrscnncl oi .000; myy of i5.000 tolls and 5.000 men; crawl-aircraft Mtlllery of %.000 IllBll Finland-anon trovPl. compared with a pro-war force of 301,800; navy of 10,000 tolls and personnel slrciigih of 4.500: air 101119 0i 60 plilics and 3,000 men. Bulgaria -- Land army of 56,000. compared with peak wartime force- df 670,000. Anti-aircraft artillery of L300 men; navy o! 7,260 tors manned by 3,500: air force of 90 combat type planes with oersonncl of 5.200. l-iungarw-Army including fron- til-r troops, anti-aircraft and river flotilli. of 65.000 men, compared with 700,000 during war; air forcc of 9n planes manned by 5,000 The reparations figure of $1.000,- moron was s. minimlun, an! may be increased. Not Yd Determined The total amount Italy must 1i’. In addition i0 $100,000.00) t0 iiisia, has not vet been determ- insll Likewise, the amount which Billgaria must my has not been (iccidvd Hungary Finland and Romania each has been assessed .\i00.()00.000. The United States le- snrvcri the right. however, to op- sr tlic assessment in the cage of attrition-ridden Hungary. Th:- treaty provides also that Italy give up title to he." African territorial possession. future con- trol of which will be decided by toe four powers represented on "l" PmYlt-ln Ministers’ council with- in a year after tho proposed treaty comes into force . France would art five thin slices ‘ll "llllffiy now on the Italian slain oi the two countries‘ border, but Ital-V 18 Ruana.r.te<¢d access to hydro- electric Pvwer sources in the lost Aliiilic areas, flusoslatvia. would et ‘all ter- lliuliv cast of a line nown as the Flflwii line" in Italy-the lim France PTODOBBd after an Allied commission surveyed the area-"ds well as the commune of Zara" and a lrrnu of islands in the ‘Trieste IIIPII o the Adriatic sea. Grows would acquire the Dodec- ailcsc Islands, which British troops arc m vacate within. 90 days after fiitlflctillOfl of the treat‘; Italy valves all claims against Albania and Ethiopia, as well as her com- mercial interests in China. Northern mm... W Italy- disputed northeast- gln boundary. the ‘ID-article treaty mit says:- "The coumil of foreign mlmg. ‘tr-s “Breed that all ten-ltd 633C qt (he line kziovm as the grench llill‘ shall be ceded by Italy t‘; Yugoslavia and the free territory glrlTrieste shall be constituted nblllfl the rhench line. bounded a I ‘e T-lli-h M’ a line drawn from lino to the French line." M315 dwmfllst. the territory France h, kueflllllfe 1-“ dqfineo to the P-ktn ometrc-Little St. Bernard Till-sage Mont Iienls Plateau. Mont m S. Chaberton ard an grog andlle var Upper ‘rinse Vesubie ThROJa Valleys “shuns tfisftlprovldes that Italy to 5w" ‘e al measures necessary 1m lure“? <lIl persons tinder Ital- lleu as td szllthllalltlinutialstslncr religion, the ymenf. of hlilnlon vtvuwirsmmmmruwsvinrv- RATE S Mal-mm m. Clllh ilny order. ‘v a thaw- a S Births and must accolilp BIRTHS m-qfl’ Peak and hi]! Ierpal apparently have discovered ll . ‘n, clug in this dramatic scene from Alfred Hitchcock's breath- CEIITIIAI. CIIIIIDIAI" xi ' This column he Inn 0|’ IOCII llllli U“ fiittflfifl-Tdtfi lbla In advance. p—-——--i CIAIWIILL f0! Photographs. ‘NFEDIIATION urn 'nv~ summon COOK'S for Photographs. DB. BARB-HITS 0111M Will b1 closed tin-til Aug. 12th. SPECIAL August reductions st Mrs. Johnston's Ladies’ Wear. “WOOD-Forward your wool at once to the She: house at Chariot town. ‘flu Wool warehouse will close on Saturday. Allifust 3rd. PICNIC at York Point fod-ay. Cars and bus will meet at Cen- tral Christian Church at 1:30 pm. DUE FROM BABBADOIS _ The Canadian National Steamship 55- "l-Orne Puke". captain Vic- tor Clarke. ls due here Monday August 5. from the Barbados: with a cargo of ‘I00 puncheons of mollasses. Alter unloading cargo has: the vessel will sail for Mont- w playing at the Plince Edward case. It is a. Sclznlck International i wights, including freedom of _e:<- prcsslon. of the press and publica- tion, of religious worship, cf polit- iciil opinion ilno of pubnc meet- "g3. Trieste Of ‘Trieste. the draft continues-T- “The ir-Tcgrity and independence of this free territory shall be as- sured by the security council of the United Nations. A special com- mission representing the foil: powers of the foreign ministers council shall he immediately alp- Dolnted to consult with represent- atives of Yugoslavia ard llaly and to examine the tvliole subject and} present prelimlnzi-‘y suggestions to he vpeace conference. A pen-nanent statute shall be submitted for the approval the security council which will report to the general assembly of the United Natlom. Recommendations for s. provis- ional government and for the for- mation of a permanent statute shall be made by the peace cun- ference of 21 nations in accord- ance with the procedure adopted at the Moscow conference." Besides restrictions on the size and equipment of its Bfmcd forces, Italy would be forbidden to main- tain fortifications at the French and Yugoslav frontiers, as well zls on the islands 7f Pantellarla — an Allied invasion s ping stone — Er-i Pianosa. and t e Pcliigian fa- lands of Lampedusa, Lampionc slid Linosa. The .'OI‘I'.\i'lC8tl0II of Sicily and Sardinia would be severely re- strlcted. In addition to the two batle- ships, the Italian navy ivonld he limited to four cnlisers. four d..- Sift-liters. l6 torpedo boats. 20 cor- vettes and no more auxiliary ves- isels than 0011111 be manned and Imaintalrled by 2.500 officers and I men, sllfPlu-B ships and war material would be destroyed or turned over to the Allies us provided m; an “n, published annex of the treaty dnlifrt. e army would have no more than 200 tanks dnd the clr force would have no bombers. German 0r Ja anese technicians would n: be al owed to he employed 1h the Italian aircraft industry and Italy would be forbid-ten possession U: ;Dlanes of German or Japanese d.» ‘sign Revolutionary Step In Diplomatic History BY R-ELMAN MURIN PARIS, July 30 -- (APi - The PWDOBRI to make the Padis pence (inference an open hearing, S0008 newspaper correspondents "H! B00958 to committee meetings as well as the General Assembly l5 0116 (if lhe most revoliltiorrry steps in the history of formal dip. lomacy, It means drawing aside the veil so that the policies and astions of 8W3 country will be Iullv visible to e rest of the world. lt means "lit. in the future, people will know. not only what was decided halgexlllow ar-l ‘vhy the decision was It means an and to fragmentary information and the opportunity for interested parties, reporting 5800M hard. to slant the news ii: one direction cr another. The diplomits cf the Congress o! Vlfillllfl. and even of Versailles, would have been shaken in their chairs if they hdd attenled that session (if the conference rules committee where-the promsal was. framed and approved today with- out a dissenting vote. l Freedom of infolmation has been , a point in the policies nf Stute‘, Secretary Byrned of the United States from the beginning. Ho rained the fiuestlon a to- | dill’ baton the ri es comm Ace. o proposed that the conference open) ts doors to repcrters. n: spoke s eoiflcally of thr five rrmmun- i in. but t can in: taken for grant.- ed that he inoant the general as- senuloly as well’ A vote was taken and not a sinlle "nay." "non" ol- even a Rus- sian "r.‘.st’ was voiced. 0n the contrary, Foreign Minis- rv F "i MaclmLLAN_ L £49. 194s. to My ¥dtiEwgllldégw Mzfilgillllan a daughter. . 8mm, “ALL-M Clo Hospital, Mrs‘ AW. Jul 21, 1 u. m, ‘m; dunzmggm woven ammo. a DIATIIS ‘riloilugq W" ;,t l ds3"“i'...'.i."-l~l'...‘.':'l: mv Mrs Maris A. Thorns of K°°"°- N- it. formerly d1 3g. llilslgn. p.11. widow u flil mo “ymvéillllmond ‘Phonic and daugh- etewm enlste Sella-sad Mars. Inn H‘ Mm was Rum o N. D. MacLaan nuns-cranes. Jamaal-urn Chieftain! u; icons wimiun than m for Molotov was the first to sec- ond the motion. The Russians are suppcsedwi be the apostles of sw- i . yfiit Mr. Molotov indinsied» Islmngly that Soviet Russia craves‘ ‘uu d of its policies. I The Russians are pleasant and owdill. but they never sllv llIY-I lthing. Hence, tne Soviet t of view often has been lf-IJCUTBCQU and by con-sequence. lu- ' urateiy interpreted. I that the n-ycu-dis “NORTH COASTEB" COMING “I! was lelwftfid yesterday that the SS-North Coaster‘ would ar- live here Friday in plncg 9f m; Breeders’ ware- I THE CHARLOTTETOWN GIJABUIAIK’ Referendum Will Be Ileld In Bulgaria PTOPOsed Qty Leaves Unsettled The Quest- ion Of The Bulgarian- Greek Frontier, (By The Associated Press) PARIS. July {IO-The proposed Bulesrlan peace treaty drafted by the four-power foreign ministers leaves unanswered the quwtions 0f Bulvirian-Glreek frontier and the amount of reparations which Bulgaria must pay to Yugo- slavia and Greece. The ministers recommended that Bulgarian frontiers follow those which existed Jail. 1. 194i, but attached a footnote recommend- ing that the Greek-Bulgarian frontier be considered tentative "until the governments of Greece and Bulgaria have had an oppor- tunity to present to the peace con- ference or to the Council of For- eign Minlsters their respective views on this subject." Billgaria, which also fought against the Allies in the first Great War. lost her ‘rhracian ter- ritory to Greece in the treaty Island Connector for the nex: run “mm ended that Wllma- SW19 to Newfoundland. The "Nay", of this territory was “assigned" Coaster" is a sister shi to tho back to Bulgaria by the Germans Island Connector and s built along the same lines. She -i| ex- Pected to leave here on Fri-day evening after loading. The many friends 0f Mrs. JJ-IT Robison regret to learn that slid re-ent ed th . . funhegltmltnelelz-III. Hospital for Fifteen Nazis . Executed LONDON, J NL. l _ Fifteen Nazis gently ldfifiififii... £35.. ‘é‘.’.‘é€f.'?£3‘“°” “T; .22?“ y. urtcen of sin-guards and officials of the Neuenbl-ellne colic centration camp near Sui-muck. cn~were executed at Baden Bad- en. in the French zone of Ger- many. Swiss radio reported. At Bratislava, Anton Vssek was executed for responsibility for de- port-ina thousands of Slovak Jews to Nazi death camps from whim; only a few returned. s. Reute cable from Prague reported. Six MIDIIIOIS Di Logging Grew Perish Q (By The Associated Press) VIOhSBURG. Miss“ July IAP)—SIX members of a. logging crew perished this morning when their small boat capsized and sank in the Ysaoo River. 150 feet from the bank where eight other members of the crew stood D019- less to aid the victims. I... H. Deckeard. logging con- tractor. and five negro laborers were victims of the B14008. WINCH happened as the crew prc t0 enter the woods for ther dfl’! work. One occuPaflt of the DOM ivas saved when he held to the capsized craft until it was towed to shore. Deckeard managed to hold out until help leached him. He died after reaching shore. CHICAGO, July 90 —(A.P)——“I don‘t remember." With these words William l-Ieirens brought to a sudden and dramatic end today a widely‘ publicized plan of his lawyers for him to "make a confession’ tcthe state's attorney of the details of the Suzanne Degnan kidnap-kill- ing and two other brutal slayings. State's attorney William Tuohy immediately announced he would proceed with arrangements to p. te the accused youth on murder charges. The btrappitng youth, surround- ed by lawyers‘, olice and public officials. secretar es and stenc- graphers in the state's attorneys office. began giving what his law- yers had pounced would be a formal confession of the three slayings. Suddenly he began parrylng l!" questions with "I don't remem- ber." He gave this response to all pertinent questions about the Degnan case, the "lipstick" slay- ing of Frances Brown and the fatal stabbing of Mrs. Josephine Ross, 43-year-old widow. The development caught both defence and prosecution by sur- ri-sr. pMr. Tuohy had lent out word to nowspapermen at 2 l-m. ' univorsii llil ICICQ‘ student had ‘started merit." John Coghlan, spokesman hr the ’ ‘ counsel, issued this hastily spared statement when the con erence collapsed: "This meeting (with state pro- secutors) was held in conformity when they entered that country March 3. 194i. The foreign ministers recom- mended tkiat Bulgaria be forced to pay only part of the losses which her military operations caused to Yugoslavia and Greece. The Ministers were unable to agree. however. on the urlount to be paid. and said the final decis- ion should be deferred pending discussion of the matter with Greece and Yugoslavia. The little country of 6.700.000 population loft the side of the tottering Nazis Sept. 5. i044. and asked for an armistice. Two days later. she declared war on Ger- m y. l? was in recognition of this switch to Allied ranks that the ministers recommended that he!‘ restitution to Greece and Yugo- slavia be "not in full. but only in u. "Elbe proposed treaty authorized Bulgaria to maintain a land army, lncludl frontier troops, of 55.000 men; anti-aircraft artillery forces of 1,800 men; a navy of 3,500 men a q m“ with a tonnage totalling 7&0; and an airforce of Doplarles. o; which not, more than 70 may be combat types. and 5.200 men- m military tr 0 uni! I“ not included in the above totals. um would prohibit the manufac- ture of war materials in excess of (hose required for the limited ed forces. ugltitlln and the United Stile?» have contended thflf- the PIES?!" communist-dominated Bulgarian goverrunent does not represent adequately all democratic elemenet: o1 me country, and have reius 1h recognize the governmenkhefld- ed by Klmon Georgiev. 1d state Secretary Byrnes has 58 m, United States would not con- ch,“ a, peace treaty with the Bul- garlfltfld government. as now con- t e . s vleldlliz to pressure o! cow-full, groups. the Bulgarian- Kilvemme", ha. announced lhfll B. CORSIICUS?’ assembly will be elected 010:» B- A referendum will be held (WV-nu to ‘mud. whether the count?! b» continue as b?! nwnsrvhv ° °°¥§Js§~233 dcraft provides tag: all forces of the Allies shatlilab wnhdmwn from Bulgaria n01 “In di- than 90 days after the 6g S of the treaty- _____--- mANsvLvANui Continued Prom Page l _______._ estimated 1.800.- 83o nmlltfig) fgvluding reserves): an airforce d! 150 PIP-MB “"5 5-009 personnell (comvflfed *0 l“ wfm‘ Med loan strength of 15W)» ‘I navy d! 15.000 Inns And 5.009 P97‘ son-lei (compare-l to 3,250 ‘DQ504423: nel estimated bvdanes in 15005 anti-sirclraft artillery with - pe ll was forced by the Axis in i040 to rive run m‘ m? “$2 half of Tramylva a. Uri er pro treaty the Airis-hesotlaied “Vienna. award" is nullified and the section, rich in minerals. farm lands and forests. Will be ‘elulled to Romania. l Another article of the Pmlwwi tresmy bonflrms the 1940 Soviet- mhllihlan never-ment- bv whldl ‘he U.S.S.R. was ceded B-ssarabls and northern Busovlna. The economic claustes in the! pa: m-anlm trea Y We" l’ ISCQL’ terms. lesvins l! w "l? peace conference to dlwul! lilo-l disputed points as. the United States’ demand fol- freedom '1- ghipphlg on "-2 Uarribe and Rus- sia’; dQQIIQ ': economic conces- lions in the call-ans. Allied and associated powers will be given the privilege of retaili- m; any Hmiantm property seized “in the national interest’ bdore Bomnnia signed the armistice with the Allies Sept. l2. i044 and turned against Germany. Soviet Russia is the sole belle- ficiarv from reparation-n. Under the proposed treaty, the USSR with the written directions o! the would 89¢ 0300-9991309 DIVIWQ W" accused and his parents. However, QIIM W"! 1mm 59D!- 13. W“ l“ his condition ll such that it Is in- codlnodities loch u . mil-- adflulblsuto proceed further lt mhficnaoins 1M f1"? "m? th s t rne. n - I-Ieirrens, complaining of a "ssv- Within I0 we lite!‘ the tIQM-Y ere headache" was arraigned to- became effective. the proposed day In criminal court, ‘n- uroement luvs. Allied owuvetlvn fore‘ being taken Into be wwhdrawn "sub Tuohy’: office and In granted a continuance to‘ Aug. I4 on lralrllor charges in the Degnm and Brown illayings. No plea was entered for m Hell-ens hu hdicted ‘or murder in the n and ll can: and m. said the abate would continue with n- I loo Late To Classify r5: sus-rlsnluc non AND t ml. rilcm loos-bdrm b10- m PM. wnnso n! sun. l. 0AM!!! for S or S Ills Ilka. “w per month. Inl flavors. 300 ‘Ill HIGHWAY Charlottetown and - 0N ‘and, tarpaulhl and horse KM 11:: Find lease leave at $015M" SHE... Brsdalblno B01 weeks. 233's...» eiitl to prosecute cucc. Bo mm that the lllvlnl of which Holman has not been u- , still is l matter for police iivostigltlod. mo: mum: mun em mmmdo ao- uiri-riu of illldeilmalgzd m- 1mm: Iowa mm ' “m” firemen before m control In About M0 lump in th Hotel Hubert clad erll Om the , whi All (I fhqvhig will . s rilht of the Soviet Union to on Romanian territoiy such foiees as it may need for the Imlntencnce of lilies of coin- munication of tne Red A: with :10 Soviet limo of occupat in The treaty draft eats no rtutric- on the mambo: such roups. Bub of diplomatic missions cf lR-illlll. till Unifcd States and Brit- ain who new mot as the Allied 0on- Ccimsii during the occupation colltimle to unction for a not to exceed IS months u enfonul o! the treaty. The lengthlevt parts of tne draft economic clauses m1 de- tho peace conference is ex- tc focus on the conflicting vielbeints of Russia and tho west- soctions on mu: were agreed were made public n the i one: d. molt of t. in iiilht 3on0 ll. ml A ,” loud p; oinn I fcethnghllfluc‘ Iidsdif! I . iUdJ-Ielsldy v.1... u ,. EWOPOM treaty. but discussions at wc pnvfoua met-tings of the Big m: foreign ministers council dis- mnou. anatomic clause pro- - Bentley-induced W ending 4 ..___. Historic old Kirk of St. James was the scene of one of the pret- llast-weanmgs of the season. on ‘rueaclay afternoon. July S0. when Frances Phyllis. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred C. MacLeod of this city, became the bride cf William Elderkln. son of Mt. and Mrsncharles Bentley, of this city. The ceremony was performed by the ltev. '1'. i1 B. Sinners. MA. 5.12M. ‘me bride, given in marriage by be: father, wore a street-length dress of turquoise blue and car- ried a bouquet of American Beauty roses. She was attended. by her cousin. Miss Isabell (Billie) zfourke. “no wore a dress of rose _ Y‘ Corrections In Entrance Lists ‘Hie following are official cor- rections in the Prince of Wales College entrance exhumation lists: Catherine Livingstone of Clyde River was equal with ma: m- Gulsan of Queen squire sczsoi in British History. each having ~16 marks out of a. Possible 50. Edna Tvwaslscnd of Pgfncg Street School was equal with Janet Ives; Vgestin Kent School in Hygiene w: av 41 ma ‘ posnbk 5o 8 its out of a figured sheer with feather hn-t of matching shade. and carried a 60111186 of pink cal-nations. bridegroom wls supported by Mr. Ralph Dumont. The ush- ers were Mr. Ronhld Smith, of Saint John. and lidir. Donald Mac- Leod. brother of the bride. During the signing of the reg- ister. “Oh Perfect Love" was beautifully rendered by Mrs. Neil MacLean. accompanied by Miss Lillian MacKenzle. organist of St. James Church. who also played the Wedding March. The bride's mother was attired in navy blue with white accessor- ies and wore a corsage of white carnations. The groom's mother was attired in rose crepe with white accessories and wore a cor- sage of white roses, Following the ceremony, a re- gGptlOIT was held at "The Char- lottetown" after which the happy couple left bv car for points in Nova Scotis. and New Brunswick. Decision Iiade Five Days Before invasion Struck WASHINGTON. July 30 - (A?) Field Marshal Hscoum. Wilson. Britain's representative on the wartime combined chiefs of stafi. disclosed tonight that the fir-ll decision for the i944 invasion of southern France came lust five daiys before it struck. With troop and SUIp ships al- ready loading for the ong-planned assault, the nculbined chiefs "t staff over-ruled the idea .1 shir- irq; the whole tiling to Brittany in western France. Lord Wilson. then Gen. Sir Henry Maitlarid Wilson, supreme Allied conmlander in tlid Mediterranean. recounted in a report to the com- bined chiefs that their go-dhead came Aug. l0 and that the Allied assault on the Rlxiem was launch- ed Aug. 15. In two weeks the Ger- mans were almost completely swept from southern France. Lord Wilson had suggested in June a drive through northern Italy would be more effective. the report related. But Gen Eisen- hower's view ultimately prevailed that Marseilles must be taken to provide additional port capacity in support the decisive battle France. Lord Wilson's report, a 20.000- -' ‘ leased tonight word re through the United States Wllr Department. sheds new light oil the high-level strategic planning. Among his disclosures were: 1. Gen. de UQIUIE and Gen. Gir- aud ulged that a French general command the expedition, out were overruled since the three assauit divisions were American, and lan- g-uage and command difficulties might cause ccmplicatiors The seven supportlrr; French divisions were fcrlrled. however, into French Army "B" under Gen. de Lattre cle Tassigny. 2. Several time; preparations for the invasion were cancelled chiefly because of the demands of the It- alian campaign and the shortage of shipping to transport an exped- ition of some 950,000 men. Shaw Attacks Socialized Mcllicine (By The Canadian Plus) LONDON. July (IO-George Ber- nard Shaw IOdBY continued his lifetime crusade against the auth- ority of doctors. asserting that Britain's socialized medicine bill would give them power to “poison us or mutilate us Profesionally with virtually complete immunity and considerable Pecuniary Rain." Mr. Shaw. who celebrated his 90th birthday last week. vented his criticism in a letter to the Times of London which he ad- mitted that “I am too 01d to keep hammering ln the case which I stated in my preface to ‘The Doc- tors Dilcmmafi" Ilrge Free Port Iii Saint Jchlr SAINT JOHN. N. B. July 30 — (CPL-Establishment. of a "i?! ort in Saint John was urged to- day in resolutions passed by the m council and Sa John common trade- the Saint John board of Both resolutions “fled H93"! legislation providing for estab- lishment of free ports throughout Canada." W olutbn PBS ' The counc séeseme of Ta 5312b‘; "dds of the of! commit! e of the Saint ohu Board o Trade, who later attend- ed the meeting of his own organi- zation, ' The board passed the nioton "requesting the city to appear ill Ottawa on behalf of the 8006"‘ plrlnclple of the establishment of‘ feel; Pr?“ trtrgluolrlhaliit n: I t c a tree wfilelfflpcEltlbillhtd In Saint. John." 1t also pledged lil 1"" support to the ci-iy in ‘Nil! ltman whatever action it might take in the matter. (A free port is one in which merchants of all nations may load and unload goodl. unaffected by the country's customs regulations n long as tho goods remain in the free port area). rides that “Romar-‘a shall restore all the legal l-i livs and interests in Romania of ‘ e United Nations and their nationals as Chfl‘ existed on June 22. i941. ard shall return all property. in Romania, Includiils ships cf- t e United Natims an their nationals as it now exisw" A foot-mtg mi.» that inclusion a lhippifll Ill Silpulbtld U! Iflfllfl. ~mi~ ~= Order Causes Concern In Govemuicnt Circles (B! The Canadian Press LONDON. July au_,\n glieggd order DY U16 British Palestine POmmIMP-r prohibiting fraternis- "m" 01 Brill-sh personnel with Jews caused grave concern in government circles tonight on the eve of a House of Commons de- bate on POllCY lu lhe Holy Land. In Cairo. meanwhile. Jamal Hussslnl. acting president of the Arab higher executive of Pales- tine. charged the United, state; WlLlI selling Palestine in ordgr t0 let Jews’ votes" and declared that Arabs "will fight to the last man and woman and will seek the bell) of any country" to bled; the Ankle-American cabinet commit- tee proposal for a division of Pal- estine on federation lines. Jewish rejection of the cabinet committee proposal was forecast fr. Paris by David Ben chairman of the Jewish iivlo said the plan was worth discussing". agency. meeting in Paris week. would turn dow-n the pro- posa. High British Government sour- ces said the aliesed letter to Brit- CANADIAN VOTER-S WOULD Gallup Poll of Canada I wucomz NEWFOUNDLAND ' ASTENTB PBOVDICI Nearly SIxInTonWolldUhtcSoollvIhllcnIIlnl. (By CANADIAN INEHTUE OI’ PUBLIC OPINIGI) election in wnvuntion foundhndi will decide province is t“ liilP .; Ptliii j opportunity In a.1l provinces, the - in favor of such a union. The largest opposition is to be found 1n the Mmmmfi "he" 34 Per cent of those interviewed were definitely WM wmrmd to opposition rmclne 1mm ‘I to 1'! n: cent in other "Vfl Ill Quebec. the D01! recorded the greatest "no opflflon" vote, 31 P" 05111? 0f 1009c interviewed in that. province falling into this category. 01110118 those Canadians who favor the union. motives show geogn. Phi-cal differences. In Ontario and Western Canada, think first of the resources to develop. book. idea that it would be an “ ish officers in Palestine banning fraternization was being discuned "at cabinet level," Labor Government took a ous view" order, attributed to Maj.-Gen._ Evelyn Barker. British commander iii Palestine. Prime Minister Attiee may re- turn from the Paris conference for tomorrow's debate. Limitation DI Finland To Defense (By The Associated Prom) PAicIS. July 30--(Advance)— Lh-lutation of rinlanas armed forces to small, inoffensive units designed for local defence is re- commended in the council of for- eign ministers’ draft of a Peace. i I 0i treaty between allied countries and Finland. Germany's partner in the war against Icussia and ureat Britain. The treaty draft to be submit- ted to the Paris peace COILI6I€I1C8' would limit the Finnish land army to g total strength of 34.400 per- sonnel. The draft irroposed a Flh- nish navy limited to a personnel‘ strength of 4,500 and a. £0181 W11- naize of 10.000. and an air force. including the naval air arm. of 60 aircraft. including reserves. and personnel of 3.000- A further restriction imposed by the treaty would forbid Finland from acquiring aircraft designed Dfllmflfllyb as boxnébers ‘Kit; inter-i na bom. -carry BC - Designed to strip Finland cf| any ability to wage effective war- fare. the treaty would accord Rus-l sis a 50-year lease on Pcrkkalc-l Udd to establish a naval base and t would cede outright to Russia t-ht northernmost Finnish province of , Petssmo. with its ice-free Arctic ocean pol-t, of }he same name, giv- mg the Soviet Union an OPP‘!!- tunity to exploit Arctic Ocean shipping throughout the year. Pcfsamo surrendered Surrender of Petsalfio. on Russian-Finnish border. l5 in a0- wl-dhmd with the Russian-Finnish armistice signed Sem- 19- 19“- The draft recommends that N- payptlqm, to be paid to Russia. shall IIOI. be ih mu. but shall be limited to $300,000,000 payable 0v“ m eight-year period beslnning Sept. 19, 1955. Payment shall bi in commcdities-isicluding tun-W products. sea-mini End "V" craft and sundry machinery- Many of the terms previously had been agreed to by Rusill Blld Finland in the Soviet-Finnish Br- mistice. Political cliauses of the PNPO treaty inclu e one COP Russian renunciation of fifth“ f‘: iggsg the pefiiflfliilfl of H8050 suAltiltliilildl-Fldlltiaillse. stipulates that‘ the Aaland Islands at the mou g! the Gulf of Bothnia, between lweden and Finland, shall rennin demilltarized. , m’ With n wary eve toward, m Gemmyt o; the future, the rc fgdlfisg 2049a,“, fully with the United Nations In order to emu" win-r my all‘ ‘lggglirlgodowaerds or mull-Bi‘ lmi her l-earmament." low Development In Ileirens Sass sed the omoAclo. July so - (A?) - An elaborate plan for Willis-u! when; u; confess formauy tile Susanne an kldn ' WW1! ""1 two other s vim! J15}? W" when State's Attorney iliinm J- moiiy sllnotlllced the youth would s; only, "I (IPIIC u‘ proeecu had recev z 11-year-old university student a the behest of the youths 10770" who l-Pnmmcfl BIWIUW ham "willing to sign s confession. The prosccuto: said til-t ll I result of the youths mitten. n? mo“ "pl-cum with murder charges” against him. Super-forts LONDON - (OP) —- bnsod at Marhlm Norfolk and B. A. F. Lancaster: from Mlldenhall have been testing the effects of the massive tioncretn plum It Iilgl, near Bum of the remarks in the r d a clause pledslllit F“- I erri I slderation". . July 3i. INS-Whatever Newfoundlantfs national con- lvention may decide as to that country's future. Canadian would like to m Britain's first colony invited to Join Confederation. Last June. Newfoundlanrlen, in duh my 14 yours. elected a 5-inch mitosis! nihcu fob it will be to Nip. future. Whether this convention lo seek entry as Canada's tenth pmblematlcal. but plain Canadian citizens would welcome such a move. Canadians. who will probably not be and |tc vote officially on the nbniasicn of New- .’ Joundlasid. to Confederation. were given In to record their views in a national sample survey conducted by the Canadian Institute on the question: "DO YOU 1mm: CANADA SHOULD INVITE NHWEOUNIIAND '10 BECOME ‘I111: TENTH PROVINCE OR. NUT?" The vote: Should be invited .... .. mym Should not be invited 15 Qualified 3 No Opinion M v of t use with-an ophfon w- voters were apt to “swsrmphical iogicallicss" f the id , h Quebec and hasten-l Canada, first thought hail! to do evlvlithwtlifisoit which Newfoundland would be to the Dominion by way d: new mm,“ Mllltflrv ldvilltflses ranked high (but IIOt highest) in everyone-s OPPNUOP to inviting Newfoundland wu centered chiefly on the c _ d" hmdlcap” t» olfildl. ansdas oflicia-l Policy with regard to the matter h” been that; 1g is strictly Newfoundlands business. but that (in the words of Justice Min-Ill" 5L Laurent.) “if the DeOple of Newfoundland came to the ‘ckonclusion that they would be happy to throw in their lot with Canada. eir representation would be given most earnest and svmoathetfc ca. —W»fld Copyright Belorved— 1D ct. Increase For Wheat Price OTTAWA, Jilly 30 — (GP)- An increase of l0 cents to $1.35 a bushel in the Initial price to p. ’ of Canadian wheat. retroactive to Aug. l, 1945. and to continue in effect until July Si. I950, was announced today in the Commfins by Trade Minister Mac- Klnncn. DISCOUB-AGE SUICIDIB EASTEOURNE. England —(OP) —'l‘he Rev. R..Q Nelson. curate of St. Mary's. wants the council to put up notices in Beachy Head "to change the minds of people contmaplatixig suicide". He fears that more people may make the coo-foot death leap now that the war-time barbed wire has gone frctn the cliff-top. DUNFERMLINE, Seotland,-—(CP) Etghty-five-year-old David Wish- hart is flying to Canada to see his daughter shortly because "at my (By The Aloclatod Press; 605mm. N. Y. July (JO-Will- liam H. (Bill) Cane, owner cf the Good Time track on wihich the Hambletordan is contested, today sold Chestertown. one of theprime favorites for next week's race. to Walter E. Smith of Los Angeies for 840.000. Chesteficwlfi. bay colt by Volc- mitc. will represent Smith in the i046 race but likely will be piloted by Hurry Switriey. Carla's trainer and driver. The trotter last week easily ivon the National Stake at Old Orchard. Ma. although disquali- fied in the first neat for running undel- the wire. That heat was clocked in 2:0i%. one-fourth sec- ond off the I-lambletoriian record. DETPRJOYI‘, July 30 —(APl—Hal Newhouser, Detroit Tigers’ 20- game winner, today discovcrr-d a nerve injury in the elbow of ‘his pitching arm will keep him out: of action for about a week. Trainer Jack Home] of the Tig- ers said the ace left-hander would miss liis regular pitching turns Wednesday against New York Yankees and Sunday against Bos- ton Red Sax. age one must get a move on.” A special meeting discuss matters I is requested. President. P.E.I.P.R.A. i ‘P. E. I. P. R. A. of all members of the P. E. I. Provincial Rifle Association will be held in the Council Chambers, City Building, on Thursday nigh-t, August 1st at 8 o’clock to in connection with the re- organization of the Provincial Rifle Association and the coming visit of Colonel R. J. Birt- whistle, V.D., F.C.I.S., Secretary of the Dom. of Canada Rifle Association. A full attendance D. A. MacKINNON, LL-Col. W. A. Smith, Major, Sec.-Treas., P.E.I.P.R.A -.,_ An ARCHITECCT, $3,000 Veterans Affairs, Ottawa. of the public information Divbioli. I SERVICES, $2.539. f0!‘ Affairs, Ottawa.‘ All EDITOR, 525200.000. Ottawa. i popularizlllg of National Pull particulars on posters innit Service Offices be filed immediately with the _TIIE PUBLIC SERVICE 0F CANADA REQUIRES All ‘ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF INFORMATION. $3,600- $4,200, for Department of Labour, Ottawa. $3,600, for Department of preparation of designs and preliminary plans of hos- pitals and other departmental buildings. A CHIEF NUTRITIONIST, FEMALE, $Z,700-$3.8il0, for Department of National Health and Welfare, . Ottawa. To be responsible for the work and activity | A FACTORY MANAGER, $Z700-SS,l80, for Depart- ment of Veterans Affairs, Toronto. I search and development of artificial limbs, splints, braces, prosthetic or orthopaedic appliances and other allied mechanical problems. - An ASSISTANT TO SUPERVISOR 0F DIETETIC A SUPERVISOR 0F PLAYGROUNDS AND Ill- CREATION, $2,400, for Department of Minn and Resources, Ottawa. To assist the Superintendent of the National Parks of Canada In the development and Several INSPECTORS, Plant Products, SIAM-QUI- for Department of Agriculture, at various centres. To conduct the work of inspection in relation to the pro- visions of the Seeds Act, the Feeding Stills Act, the ' Fertilizers Act, the Inspection and Sale Act, the Hay and Straw Inspection Act and the Agricultural Poets Control Act and regulations made thereunder. and Civil Service Oominisdoul (Jfflces . throughout Canada. Application forms, obtainable thereat, should CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION OF CANADA, OTTAWA. To be responsible for the section of the Nutrition To conduct re- Departinent of Veterans for Department of Labour, Parks. in Post Offices. National hpiuy-