-—~ Morning Guardian. Ioaaasa III. Charlottetown Guardian. ‘hrs Coats. ci-iARwTTerdwN. CANADA. MONDAY. ‘JUNE 24, 194s ilAl Covers Prince Edward Island like the Dew 10 PAGES wiii Millie study 0i Potato Industry In Prince Edward Island Mr. Walter R. Shaw. Deputy Minister of Agriculture. iinnounccs that the assistance of the Economic Division. Dominion Department.» of Agriculture, has been secured for - the pu of conducting a care- ful stu y of the production and marketing of Island potatoes. Rep- resentatives of the Economics Div- ision will cccifer with the Provin- cial Department of A riculture. llbcperimental Station off clals and several fanne a and dealers before actually interviewing the growers. "These men have not gone to the Island for the purpose of telling growers what they should do. Thcy are expected to collect information which will be of assistance in im- proving potato farm management and marketing," said Mr. Shaw. The first phase of this work which involves calla on farmers in the main potato districts will be started at once. Marketing rob- Corning Events "Movies at Borden TD-nliht. "Slww. Morell. Tuesday. 6-34-31 "Show. Malpeque, Wednesday. 6-31-21 "Dance at St. Teresa's. June M postponed. 6-24 li "Cornwall Players. Hampton, Monday. June 2f. 6-24-11 "Cornwall Players. Hampton. Monday. June 24. 6-24-11 "Dance. Mount Stewart Hall. Monday 24th. Rollie Msckenzles " " l will b i tol tcr. arm- omhmru - 8'21"“ eeftltwlll b’: afslcrggl llo sluapplyllitifioi- "Dance ..in Si. Teresa's HalL i." ‘m " °“ d: “Juana Qua: gilgdw‘ J - an“ wwsm ‘emf nlllllfinlgbftllrgllldpldglelfi failm recseipta ' ‘ ' and expenditures and investment in farm business. Mr. Shaw said that surveys of this kind have been made previously in the Annapolis Valley in Nova Scotla and ir. the tato rowing district: of New ......_ "Reserve July 10th for Marsh- field-Dunstaffnage United Church Tea. G-Qe-li "Dance. French River Hall. "m", ck .' Wei] u in msny Thursday 27th. Rollie MiicKenzieks , orchutm‘. 6_21_n_u_m other parts of Canada -—— For First Time "New Glasgow. Tuesday, Na- tional Film Board Movies. ii p.m. (5.13) 6-22-31. "See Wlltshlre Y. 9.11. play “Dora Dean" in‘ Bonahaw Hall. June 26. 9-00 oclock "Collecting Hogs for Davis ant‘ Fraser Ltd" every Tuesday. Write or. phone collect. , E. . Dawson. Crapaud. 8-23 3b. .1. 6. I tf. this study is date facts about arketlng “The purpose of really to get nip-to- potato production arid m so that they will be available for the first time to farmers." said Mr. Shaw. He emphasized that lhc men who will visit farmers .iiav he trusted not to gossi about any of the information anufidividuai may give to them nor Will the informe- tion provided by individual farm- ocaba ‘passed on to any other gov- ernment departments. It is confi- “North Wiitshira. Manda m- dtiglfllflil- l" ,§“,“-d 1 d , ,5 k. 3on3] mg"; foam Mmms‘ agnd practlscalvgdrm sbllfilfsltglgelfllfigmflillfln pm‘ t ' ' 7-- ‘ _' availablecdto farmelrs so that itbcan "See Fredericton Players es‘ t be 59%: "l? s“! r fvnd “elf ‘A Poor Hutu“ Mm m gr 8y lltifjm-era tlliemselves =ISBeVE (laccomp- Bridge. Tiiaday. June 25th. "Ice Cream Social. Auapices 5t. John's W. A. Crapaud Hall. July 4th. 0-21-26-2-3 Ham l0‘; nd the methods of farm mana ment which the more suc- cessful ones have adopted. "TlilS information will be analyzed in such a way that it may be of value to those who have not succeeded that he hoped the farmers on the Island would welcome the men who are engaged in this work and would cooperate with them. They are P. J. Gilhooly. W. C. Way, and A. Gosselin who ls in charge. During the first tcn days in which the survey is under- way, these men will be assisted by Colin Chisholm and G. A. O'Brien who will then leave the Island to llshed "Cornwall Players, Hell, tonight. (Monday. Junesflzal‘. _,.. "Sea Kinkora Players play in Emerald Hall. June 26. fl-Ii-li-N-M. "Movies-North Wlltahire. Tues- day. New Glasgow, Wednesday. Hunter River, Thursday. h "See Marie Players present Johnny Gel. Your iri" in Win lloe Hall. Wednesday 28th. 0-15-24-28-31. "Reserve Thursday. June 27th for Glasgow Road (Players at Kings- wnx Hall. In iii of Ham re ti-M-ZB-(f-fti ' "See Wlltshli-e Y. P. U, ‘Dora Dean", Fredericton June 24th sit 9 P, M. (D. S. survey of dairy farms lri Nova Scotia. Throne Wohhles Dver Copyright lag. s . "*- qg) TORONTO. June 23 — (OP) - 5_22_-_>;_ A throne as yet ungreced, wobbled slightly today at ihe ominous sound f the word “copyrighlfl and ilirestened to tumble ere it sees the coronation of ils rightful Queen. _ It all started Friday whaii Charles 0. Milne, Toronto planing. re. her, said he would take legal scion if a ‘Miss Canada" were crowned at the celebration. "Dance in Tracadie Hall Wed- nesday. June 26th. Rollie Mac- l\cnlle'a Orchestra. Refreshments served. 6-22-31. "Reserve Wednesday evening. June 26th, Garden Party and Dance. Hampton Hall _.rourda. Good music. “nmmm well stocked sa oon. 64144-21. can?“ h. holds me cowwflght a“ t l. "Box Social-slid Dance. Cove- h Wmmlal‘ ‘"16. 0h the other head Coirimunity Hall, Monddy. m’ °°m.'"m"‘l mmmm?“ m am o! itfinhocu says Mr Milnee cop ght ream _ . M,‘ for “Miss Canada baa ty contest." " while their event has been an- nounced as: "The centennial beauty contest to choose Miss Ciinash." the difference? Miss s isinisstligqiaatnoosrnsoy Clumillbeh i the Dept. iliiura Tuasdai. fins 2st w: n ools p. s. easel. cl "Lo h t. t. Davis t‘i-i‘....°'£..i. 5.i."i~.."‘;'..ii';'. l"0l' truck nlclriio service from farm l0 . h Rodd! ti. c" D on. fi-lba-itilT-mi-l-U can conduct a somewhat similar type n! as a ii said. Employment Service Ass’n To Meet ilere Annual Danie-silos 0f Mflhrlsllllibd Grhapsar so a u o s Saturday. o m tional Association of Publl: Ploy wh ch is cimcerncd Fri the improvement o and Canada The Mari tional Employment Service and New Brunswick along the three provinces. James H. Bond. ternationel Pa idence, B. .; and L J. pioyment ton. Maritime re dent of the National Employmcn ing meeting. John general convention chairman. MacDonald at the annual oirique which will be held The association. Vlfle discussions on lndlngs of employ- fesslonaillzation of the employmen service workers in both countries organization of community em plciymcnt centres; services to vet a training institute for members. The convention will close Monday with the annual busincs meeting of the Maritime chapto and the election of officers. To Goiitinua Search‘ ate wi-th the ground effort to guide them to the wreck 80 mile the L-aurentian mountain northeast of here in Agatha-Bis. Adele region. Man Drowned In Halifax Harbor HALIFAX‘. June 38——(OP)-- Th today when George Beazley. 32, "lm-llvimmcr. lost his life afte the canoe in which he and n corn lrigonish. N. 5.. was rescued. "I don't wave struck ua or whaLha .. .. .but the next think 1 ew was the water couldn't swim. I grabbed the and kept hollering to him to Mr no one to TIM-the ti e without his now~or for b0 years is death. ' "All those informed ln Portage fiieuietery. Braokley Beach. will meet at the cemetery at 1.80 o'clock Wednesday lei-noon. June 2e Brine york ls. 5-22- "Coileoting iii-nee a ifli: afWr the same. He couldn't reach she recalled grimly. , Ele¢fien 3¢mn= h ' Complete collect oi- my a . d t - i grfzooto. .T':;-n"’“ m‘ a Jofirxffibiilii. June a - fiaiml. Po 1°’: ma ,. _ M???» lib-thi- ' a ~ ~v~seiiwist .. More than 200 delegates avlll gather in Charlottetown Saturday for the annual convention of the Maritime chapter of the Interga- m. ment Services. The association. marily with public em- ioyment services. has more than 0.000 members in the United States time Oha ter is made up of members of sta fs of the J?- n Prince Edward Island. Nova 5C0“; ii. . personnel officers of lax-nor firms n International president of Dallas. Texas. will ad- dress the delegates as will B. G. Sullivan. International vice presi- dent. Toronto; Thomas Bride. In- at president of Prov- Trottior. chief Commissioner of the Unem- Insurance Commission. Ottawa. R. P. Hartley, K. 0.. Mone- lonal superinten- Servlce and Maritime chapter pre- sident will be chairman of tlie open- B. Murley. man- ager of the Charlottetown office is The delegates will be welcomed to Charlottetown by Lieutenant- Governor James Bernard. Premier- Walter Jones and Mayor B. Earle ln the Char- lottetown Hotel Saturday evening. which alriis to give employers and employees the very best available professional cd- in finding a solution to their problems of am ioyment. will have ment experts. Also on the acendn Will be such subjects as the pro- erans and their families; selective placement for the handicapped and OI’! For Plane Wreckage" OTTAWA. June 23—(OP)—Search party in an age believed on tc-p of is mono-foot Ste. second drowning on the Northwest Arm here within a month occurred banlon were paddling. capsized. The companion. Miss Mary Donovan of In an interview following hos- pital treatment for shock. the ylrl know whether fie ne . was under the boat. He (Boaglsv) nearby. He ioat , o it." lllfflwilllbi Speculation 0n Budget Continues Oorigawa. En - (OP) - Ami-fulfil fiitwwfil. 31%? |5|am| Man 0n I Directorate Df Seed Growers taxation burdens will be go;- m; current l2 months. with the dis- closure ooifnin in Finance Minister Ilsleyb bud speech in the Coni- O m I15. sDeculation increased as the date o! the speech approached and 1110!! of it was to the effect Aunt per- soinal income tax cuts tn be an- nounced will be particularly bene- ficial to those in the low income brackets. There has been tall: that the in- come tax exeni lions will be in- creased from S w $850. for sin le persons and from $1.200 ‘to $1. Oil or hurried persons. As is custom- ary the few officials wiho know the bl-lihet secrets are not talking Another of the ie orts in unof- ficial quarters hag an that the Government will f low the lead of the British Government in remov- ing all excess profits taxes effect. ive at the end of the cal er year. These taxw were reduced in the last bud t amid conjecture that they wc-ud be eliminated this year. There was similar spec the possibility of reduction in cor- pora ion taxes. Personal income taxes were cut l6 per cent lest rvcar and there was WINNIPEG. June 28 —(OP)‘ .- Alex M Stewart of Alisa Craig. 011i». was TE-QlBCiQG resident of the Canadian Seed were As- sociation as the Association neared the close the third and final day of its here Saturday. Other officers include:- EL. Eaton. Upper Canard. Na, honorarv vice-president; James MsoGregi-ir. Cmtral Lot i6. P.E.l.. ‘Iruno, N.S.; M P. Harrison. Fredericton, and TJ Pratt. Hartland, N.B., directors, Find Radium Needle nd annual convention President Again bis/Manama. At its first session. Czechoslovak- ia's new parliament unanimously re-elected Eduard Benes. above. as the country's president. He be- came Czechoslcvakias second president in 1935. went into exile after the German conquest and for a time served as professor of polit- In Dh'town Dump some ibilloy ch, out might be as hig this year Mr. llsley has heard requent requests that fine There's the old expression “like looking for a needle in a haiystack" but they've topped that om locally for ust last week several memibers exemptions be rased to $1.200 for single persons and $2.000 for mar- ried persona. In pro-war days the exemptions were $1.000 to $3. t respectively. of e Prince Edward Island Requests also have been inside Hospital stairf went to the city that farmers be given special con- diirm and recovered a radimn neede wioh in some way had be 081110 misplaced and ihad found its way to the waste baskets. alued at about $350 the precious slderation in the way of exemptions as recognition of the work done on the farm by the farmer's wife and children. ‘Ilhc speech may contain some gubgrtgyuge measured an mm m t announcement with respect to the i 1m d L - - tamtioixi of the now lax-exempt '00- $d%h_ m W0 mlnlmelem m operatives A hovel Commission Tihe needle was traced. to the recommended ias- year that co-op- “he; in the hospital can” but erallves be taxed but no immed- iate action was takesi on the sug- gestiom. Likely s fair portion of the Donal when the authorities went to inves. tigate they found the ashes already removed to the Dump. Ottawa was wired arri a radium 1 - - imbylléi£°“'-“-“ m‘ vni§ii.°°““{§5 econ» e»- broke up 1n mm em 1W aid the search. Armed ivith the mm“ nslev m‘ disclose Melicate instrument, Dr, Wendell lwhether the Gcvernmen is pIE- “°D°“”ld' imam“! "dmmillii- i pared to Sign laxauon agreements grgiegriieralls volunteer asslfiants _ with all Provinces except Ontario ed Lhefnujflgi ulsuolllugg’ B5325“??? filial‘; and Quebec. In the minor fields of taxation. some reduction might be effects-ii in Jewelry. amusements. soil- drln-ks, cigarets and other luxuries which were made a source of rev- enue durin the war Some r uction may be brought about in pqgtage. Postmaster gen- eral Bertrand at lhe last session forecast a reduction in post-ago rates. Sask. Gov’t “dill-m “mill-d Klve off. The search W06 narrowed down to g, mere handful, after several tests, and the radium was recovered, 5 I‘ Windsor Tornado Fund for wrecka e. which a v he mysterious: disappealgnlccaol ieealriy The following subscriptions JIVQ gin-Ge ears no o; a Libemm. with been received in response vto the . .A.F. personnel aboard. will ‘ppul . l“ Fmmy‘ Gwlldm“ be resumed-tomorrow after a halt “"_ (o?) A Th” Ch “w” Gmrdl“ “mo” “d”, u, ovme a breather 1M, an REGINA. Jinn 38 —~ “us-b B. D. Lawton .. . . .5.0D exhaunefgmund Wm surplus of 8490.833 was rca i; ma. Foster . . . . 5.00 If weather conditions are favor- “gm {ilnkagablzgvfyfgr egazfmtllh “m” w‘ ‘l’ P‘ Mucmun‘ " " “m” able. a spotter plane will co-oper- 20' 1 Provincial Tram”: J“ Fines announced Saturday Revenue roi- the year amount-Hi lo $39.2'fb.64'i, while total expend- itures were 1373184814. Reoei ts on education tax were ea with .W5.000 $5.592. for th evious year." and gasoline tax oolegllons amounted to 04.404.- 000 compared with $3.307.000 for . 191,5 111959 Wktd lhl Chili ill- creases in receipts. Expenditures increased bv some 01.000000 over the recedinl W" bVllill public health s owin! lln in crease of aisoeooo natural "re- “Pliantom llohlier“ Al. Syilnoy Gets 9-Year Sent-once S SYDNEY. N S . June 23 -_ icPi *7‘? "is" 0f the “Phantom Rob- beridewho for months kept Sydney r95 his on the alert. and for days l l‘ I time Kept Oil and Royal Can- adian Moimterl olice on double duty. ended Saitiuxiay whcii Ar- lhur R Baloom. 3'7. of Weylmnuth NS? was sentenced to nine years in nltentlary siizesman. o o th- wh aspen-t most“! his lif in United aisles and, as lllfllfltated o“. lice records. spent l1 years in g .S.' prism.- was flOllVirlgd by Supreme Court iiries on gwu charges of attempted break and {gait and of break. entry and iii win-t isiiioom iiiid lnlod turo of a broken nah? which Riven him a bad star! in life. The weil-drelerl bookseller claim- eii he had atwnlipted t0 -- o IlIlUht" after ocmng to Osnaefa. KILLED IN QUAIRM» $1. 3n i. I a-ge and blind pension of $2.648.- C00. Th bud et for iota-w. on rev- cnueeaccouufit. is aimed at $409M.- see. . Eilsn At Dttswa‘ June 3i — (C?) - and noticeably B l‘ o OTTAWA. ~10 kl i‘ oldirngnann-dile his lsat visit nere. m. Hon. Aiiisiioiiv Men. arrived here today with a party of 31'1"!" parliamentarians en route b01110 from the ire Parliamentary Association conference in Ber- muda. and id be wouldn't ex- clude any na from the W111i" able" conferences in future. The party Nllstarsd at a hotel. n l. the on s4 then were drive hrouah Gatineau o unto-y for s call Prime Min tar Mack e t his summer hams t ‘on. idPl-laidtohave startedby - .deat - vi” fill ‘OI Q y h g, n inquest will be bed ‘niesday -.......... ....__..-....-_...,».s;,. Cabinet n a l iflilifilwjilltilfili‘? _ STO- MONOTON. N.B , June E .._ quarrel hiking, . “‘-?ilK"'°."'n§ni.i..,-. .59. ‘$5. bl w ti!!!’ ht. teal science at Chicago University. To Name Sub Base After Allied Spy PARIS. June 23 _ iReutersl~ France is to riumc her biggest sub-. marine base after the "traitor of Loricnt“. a man who for fo-ur years was the most holed man in Brit- ar.i:iy—Jacques Stosskopf, one of the Allies‘ most brilliant and BJJ- acious spies. The new base is at Lioricnt where ‘Stossicopf openly collaborated with the Germans to obtain their sec- rets and pass them on to London. Fewer than 20 persons knew the "traitor" was one of the best sev- ret agents in France. When the Germans ‘invaded France. Stosskapf welcomed the Germans at his home and offered to put his technical knowledge at the disposal of the German Navy. which turned the port into a U- boat base. His countrymen shunned him iiiid Siosskopf had not a single 'i.cii_d i-n the town. but he Stuck in i s iob and became a close friend rf Grand Admiral Kari Doenitz, German navaicommander in chief, who often visited the port. _ _For four years he reported activ- ities of Hitler's U-boats and ship- Dmit. Tlien he disappeared. Not until the liberation did Lament know the trulh-vand then too late in honor a great patriot in person. Siosskopf was dead. In 1944. a few weeks before ‘D- Day. the Germans discovered Slosskopfs name on a list of ro- sistance secret agents. After a work of torture in Gestapo cells he ivas deported to Germany. There ll(‘ lioipcd some resistance comrades to escape. but, one party was caught and found to be CfltTylnl documents drawn up by Stosakclpf. The Germans rounded up Stoss- knpf and his companions. murder- ed them and burned their bodies iii the camp grounds. WOODS CAMP DESTROYED TIMMINS. Ont, Jun: 23 —(CP) -A bush camp fire of tlie Abitibl Power and Paper Company in Bolus Township was destroyed by fire Thursday when a forest fire raged out of control over a 100 acre area. The fire. which finally was extin- guished several hours later by fire Reveal Eisenhower Invasion Report MAXIM! CIA MERE MAN. Subscription Delivered IMO. Ill. “M: other Provinces I [Ll-L IM- cilZisT iiiiiafiociiiai) BY EARTHQUAK Heaviest Tremor In Years For B.C._ ciiiiii oiiiigiii lll lAuil ls Drowned SAINT JOHN, H 3., June 8 - -old urdaly Walrus caught in soft. mud from which e was unable to free her- self as the tide came in. It was be- lieved aha bad been chasing a ball which her mother had bought for her a short- time previously. Her body was found floating. Telephone Pioneers Meet Iii TITILILlLS. TRUE-O. N.S., June 33 —- (C?) -c. E. Dowden, of Halifax. was elected president of the ‘Telephone Pioneers of America. Acadia Chap- ter. at the group's eighth annual meeting held here Saturday. Others elected included: H. L. Conrad. Sydney; O. Langley, New Glasgow, and J. L. Stewart, Bum- mersido, P.E.I. The meetimz was attended by 80 members from Nova Bcotia and Prince Edward Island. (By Clyde Blackburn) WASHINGTON. June 23— (C?) -"Tlie war was won before the Rhine was crossed." Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower said in a report published today. The report credited victory to Allied teamwork and Nazi mistakes, termed Field Marshal Montgomery's hairidling of the tactical si-tuation at Caen "masterly" and gave ex- tended credit to the contribution of Canadian forces. The former supreme Allied com- mander. now United States Army Chief of Staff. submitted a 00.000- word report to the combined chiefs of staff covering D-Day to VE-Day filune 6, 1944. to May 8. 194-5. Throughout the report there are numerous references to the lst Canadian Army. its tasks and per- [c-xmances. particularly at Caen and Falsise in Normandy. Gen. Eisenhower described the fight at the “Falaise pocket" as the "second vital battle" of the Europ- ean operation. and said:- "Without the great sacrifices made here by the Anglo-Canadian armies in the series of brutal. slugging battles. first for Caen mid then foi- Falaise. the spectawlar advances made elsewhere by the never nave Allied forces could come about." Gen. Eisenhower described the difficult task assigned the British and Canadian forces at Caen, re- tention of which was "the key to the main enemy strata y." "Every foot of groun the enemy lost at Caen was like losing l0 miles anywhere else." He frequently mentioned points of strategy in which he was sup- ported by Fleld Marshal life-nt- gomery's advice. Particularly in PW decision to use five divisions ‘n the invasion instead of th ee as orig- inally planned. and t e supreme commander's determination to "pin down and destroy substantial por- tions of the enemy in our immed- iate front." In his summing up the General comments that it would be impos- sible to sin le out individuals ~n his staff an under him for praise. (Ln. a recent book. "Top Secret." Ralph Ingersoli. editor of the newspaper PM. severely criticized Field Marshal Montgomery's con- duct on this part of the campaign and described tihe fighting at Caen as "a defeat from which British arms on the continent never re- covered, (Field Marshal Montgomery liim- self recently published for private distribution a book. “Normandy to Baltic." in which he said the ism was to draw enemy forces to sen while American forces broke loose rangers and Abitlbl employees. de- stroyed all of the camp buildings. By MAX IlARlI-LSON NEW YORK. June 23 — (APl —India filed s formal cdfnplaint with the United Nations tonight charging the Union of South Africa with discrimination against ap- proximately 50,000 Indians living in South Alrica. The complaint. filed by Sir Ramaswsmi Mudallsr. head of the Indian U. N. delegation. call- ed on Secretary-General Trygve Lie to place the case before the Genera: Asset-holy which insets asst. . Meanwhile. it appeared almost certain that the General As- ssinblv also would be called u to lot on Poland's charges t Home Spain was s. throat to worlmeaoe. P0 circles in sted that Dr. Oscar huge. Po delegate to the Security Council. pl snned two India Brings Case To United Nations to the wast of St. Lo.) By GEORGE FTNLAY i VANCOUVER. June 3 — (Q). qacroas a wide-stretch of British Columbia the heaviest earthquake in years rumbled today taking heavy property toll at Courtenay B.C.. ancouver Island centre, where walls of buildings collapsed, crashing into the streets. The tremor. of 30 seconds dura- tion. extended from Olympia, Wests. w Kelowna. B.C.. in famed Oksnagan Valley fruitilanda, M0 miles east of here. In Vancouver and Victoria bus- lnes blocks. hotels and apart- ment buildings swayed crazlly and occupants rushed into the streets, but only minor damage was re- ported and no one was injured. Dr. J. A. Pearce. director of the Dominion Astrophysical Observa- torv at Victoria, said the tremor was so sharp it threw the seis- mflllrerpli out. as the light went off An the photographic recorder. I-le estimated the epicentre in the immediate vicinity of Vio- toria. probably 25-miles distant. At Courtenay. I50 miles north of Victoria, with a. population of about 2.000. walls of buildings collapsed, showering bricks and shattered glass into the streets. causing damage estimated at thousands of dollars. The heaviest damage was at the (Continued on Page 5 Col. 5) News Briefs TORONTO. June 23 — (OP) — The United Rubber Workers (C. L0.) announced Saturday that it would cell a. strike Monday in all On-tarlo rubber plant-s except those oi the Dunlop and Viceroy com- panies. It said it eimwted that approxlmatelv 12.000 Union mem- bers would walk out. ' TORONTO. June 38 - (OPT- Special attention will be given the problem of the current shortage of nurses when more than 1.000 delegates attend the biennial con- vention of the Canadian Nurses‘ Association here July 1. it was announced today. Madura. India. June 22 - (AP) —Flve persons were killed and l3 in_lured iodav after police opened fire on armed crowds attacking pedestrians in the third day of demonstrations aaalnst last week's arrest in Kashmir of Jawahral Nehru, president-designate of the Congress Party- ‘PARiI-S. June 22 (APi Russia is reported to have block- ed the plans for a general peace conference for July 15 put forward bv the American delegate to the Big Four meeting in Paris. w. ceivr Gsf Monastic! iii ins Worm on 1A: rm PAYMENT HM. 01mm. Toronto. June 23 - iCP)—-M.ini-_ mum and maximum temperatures- vancouver 4'1. 07: Edmonton ‘ bl: Regina M. so; Winnipeg 54- 6i; Toronto 51.03; o 5S. B6. Montreal 5'1. Quebec 54. 811 Saint John —. ——: Monctxin 56. 792 Halifax 5i. M: Charlottetown 5". 76; Sydney 53, T7; Yarmouth 52. 87. HALIFAX. June Mr-(Mondayl- tCPl-Offlclal inland forecasts ls- sued by the Dominion Public moves if the Security Council It“ according to elpeotatiions tomor- row and rejects his demand for a worldwide diplomatic break with the Franco regime. 1.11s would make an effort to keep the Spanish case on the Security Council agenda. 2. Regardless of what happened in the Security Council. he would bring the case before the General Assembly. The Indian c int will be the first to so rect-ly to the General Assembly instead of the lecuritv Council. Under the charter. cases which threaten internaflosial peace are Council while band! bv . those which moral!‘ threaten to impair friendly tloas Tana be . a ~ senbly. after oo srlnl facts. has the authority to make ranomnisndatioas to the states in- volved or to- the Security Council. Weather Office here at 15:15 a.m. A.D.'I‘. today and valid until mid- night tonight: Prince Edward Island: Variable cloudiness. Warmer. Light winds becoming west i0 m.p.h. during the daytime. High toda at Charlotte- town B0. Moncton . Synopsis at l0 pJn- lllfidlY-JY" weather la fine over the Maritime! this evening, most portions having become clear. Ting persists over the open water whlc ma be ewected to move onshore dur n] the night but will clear away by mid-morn- ing. Cooler air has started _to move over the lower St. Lawrence and is expected to cover moat d the Gulf of 5t. Lawrence by tomorrow evening with showers occurrifll along the forward marsh of tho cold air. H h tide tbismas-aing attl and on ht at 7.10. rissehmtsfiorrow aiornlng at New ‘Jinrmflh. ates later than Charlottebffllfi" ihiaeveninlatlflalll-