' Grad-e .g; AUGUST 29. 1946 No Dhange In i Looal Egg Market ‘There 1a oMtloI-ltv no r m the egg market since last week. Receipts am light but holding steady at present levels. Puilet Iggs are appearing on the market in mall quantities. Quality is tioldina with the demand for A eggs continuing Iii-om. Prtee; remain tuwba . _ E, 1, stations are quoting for unRfiidEd cuss delivered: l AQafge, az-ati; A-medium. 40-, A-pullet. 23-30; B. 2540: O. mains d e d shipments delivered Charlottetown: Allilie. GIL-dB; A-l mtdilllll. I6——48§ B. 35—35‘/:l A‘ puller, ‘.39; C. 2'7. l specialised producers are receiv-f my for cartcined pack: A-ia-rge. 434,9; A-medltlnt. 45-46; A-pul- let. 3:>—-3'l. Retailing to consumers: A-large 55; A-medium. 53; . . Poultry receipts continue at the “mt. ygluma with perhaps an in- cfljtlsl? in chicken marketings. Th"? “might-s io_be a good gen- eral demand for developed pul- tets fcr laying purposes. Anyone desiring to make sales should ad- rerti=e some. poultry prices remain unchang- td, However, there is a tendency [or prices t0 I0 WWI- 6i A-M-F. 34-362 B-M- 30—-%; C. 2'7. A. 25—28I B. 28-25; C. Australian Proposal ls Voted Down (By Robert Hewett) PARIS, Ant:- atl-lal’), Alu- gmltds proposal to limit rcpsr- ations levied on former enemy countries to their "reasonable ca- pwty to pay" and v delay action until a special commission made studies was voted clown tonight in a peace-conference commission after three days of arguments. Biz-lain, the United States and France lincd up with Russia against the measurw-beaten by a vote of l5 to 2. with three absten- tiohs-which provoked long. angry debates climaxed by the charge of Forcigii Minister Molotov of Russia that Australia was acting “against the interests of the Soviet peo- lcs." pMt-anwhiie. delegation SPUKQI- men disclosed that the big four council of foreign ministers-sum- moned into session by Foreign Socrclary Bevin oi Britain in an- sitcnipt to dig the conference out of dispute-would mcet tomorrow afternoon. Mr Molotov and Foreign Minis- ter Georges Bidault of France ac- cepted Mr. Beviofa suggestion‘ without condition, but State Sec- rciary Byincs of the United States said hc would attend only if pro- ccdt-ral matters were not discuss- ed because he would not consent t1 the council's limiting the free- dom of action and sovereignty of the conference. A Forlinvi Office spokesman in Landon silld the four-power coon-t ill "nncht dcal with matters out-l side iiS primary purpose of facillt-l tilting the work of the peace con- fercrit-e." Diplomatic sources in the British capital said the Dardanel~ lei qucstron was "almost certainly" on the agenda, Tlic Australian defeat came when I \"t~tr~ was token in the Italian economic commission on l move to insert her proposal for a repar-l ations commission in the Italian trciity. only Australia and New Zealand V4=ti m favor of the proposal. Can- ada. South Africa and the Nether- lands abstained. Th)’ vote came after Andrei I. vl-‘llilliky. deputy Soviet Foreign ltfihisicr, declared that repara- Wllls were "a cornerstone oi the eart- treaties." and warned that iiiihor dclay in investigating w". dlllllriuc claims would mean "post- llilllur: the peace conference." {The United States paved the way or thc break that "llfwllfly dispute. when it ari- "Wflml serller in the day that it lllluoricd Russia's opposition to Tellticning tho reparations agree. giciils previously reached by the llI Four, a<x-~ RATES Births and Marriages "m" "Bcllmhnny order. 25c. Crash BIRTHS REID-Atria P a: 1n il Aux. 2o, 104e,»; Lt éeif Big-Putz Mls- Reid. a daughter, i-thontlit Elizabeth, WDOiVELL-at the P. s. rim»- Pllil- Austin s4. mo, I0 u: Hid I m‘ Alex McDowell. Brndelbane. PIDGION-At French River on ills. 0th. 194-8. to Mr. and Mrs. f“ Pldtleon. a daughter. Ruth nnc McKENzlE-At Prince County mlgrlital on August U, 104d. tc Mr. Bu‘ Mrs. Herbert McKenzie (nee m‘ Ilvllls) of Borden. a daugh- _ 4 nan-ms COLBS-At Remington. Aug 28 ym Mrs. Carrie Coin, a ed ‘l9 @..."..u.":.*:-l..t:r."‘.it-. t"; * - , I‘ y I Fm- Standard Time. Interment clfillllutl Cemetery gamiltgEl-At Charlottetown. Aug. - 46. Harold Porter of Murray Remains mm" lll his 21st year m, gulps at the Outcllffs 1m..- h hehviime. A private funeral will llonsoiv - at Pasadena. “'- '"“' i“"i..2'..'...'.“‘u.'§.."' 19".?! S,“ dltufhter of the late bavia m‘ h and Mn. Imam of M ‘traverse. _N. D. Mac-Lean UNDERTAKER EMF! ALMER Charlottetown "and llltb Illtelllb lThought Master ended the do GENTMQIIARDIAN This 0| rqq-y of llttalunlxltesgat. outuaomrtm fl aaflaulll-tllrkaas ‘b: Inserted lblo In iadnnoe. l m! u,’ IIEAI. J. Watson MacNaught 1n "port from Parliamerfi over CFOY tonight at o pm, oimsa now from s. a. Tar-' Bush, 33'! Richmond gt" gun,“ gill: nflglnsltuefiss.’ Hose, Tailored RETURNS FROM TORONTO_ Mr. Arthur R. Macdon-ald, o; st, PM"! BM’. P. E. 1., has recently returned from a trip to Ontario. Ms‘. Macdonald left the Charlottel tIown Exhibition with a carlggd o; ersel! cattle fai- venture Croft Ffernliotatveshesterville, dOntsrio, In *- e a cow ~ Mr. Alfred Baguz d: ggiisatfidgdég: iey. Ontario. Mr. Bpgg ha; a champion bull that he pupqhgsed from Dr. J. P. Lantz. From the Doctor he purchased the darn of this bull. While at Toronto. Mr. Macdonald was the guest of James Bremher. secretary of the Canad_ ian Jersey Cattle Club, who spent some time with Mr. lVI-acdonald. showing him the herds tn the vicinity of Toronto. Mr. Mac- domid reports that the carlpad of cattle that he took from P. E. I. to Ontario is the highest priced oarload of Jersey cattle to ever leave the Maritimes. The load was made up mostly of daughters and granddaughters of the Char- lottetown Jersey Club's famous herd sire. Brampton Jesters Stan'- dard 2nd. Johnny Burrnws cf Iondow. Eng- land is visiting SJ‘. Tarbusli and family who appreciates his visit. s4,ooo°,ooo Pulp Mill Planned For Newcastle EDMUNDBTUN. N.B., Aug 2B — (OP) - A new pulp mill at New- °35l19~ llllmlvlnfl H1 exllelldliure ‘JV in Matrimonial Causes about 34.000000, is Firaser Companies Limited. Aubrey Orabtme, Edmundsten president and aezieral manager of‘ 1m; a redugflgt] to 51x weeks o; F115" Oollllpihlhe‘ Llmilld. ill milk-t the present period of six months ing the announcement tonight. said; whtm must elapse before n de. that the decision to undertake the Cree 1.151 of divorce or nullity 0g culmlr-uicn of marriage can be made absolute. project was thc studies over a having in mind of industry oi". River. , It is the intention of Fraser Companies Limited. Mr. crisbtrce stated; to cotsitruct the pain mill, period o.‘ years the develzpmcni the Miramichi. on what is known as the sinclaii", n General Order site on the north west MllfimlChl. within the town limits but outside the main residential section pro- viding the necessary rights and oriviiegcs can be ob- tained. The new mill s being designed] to mar-zifacture approximaiely 120 ions daily of unbleached sulphiie, pulp, or kraft. "It is hoped." Mr. Crabtree said. "that this iant will be in opera- tion aomet me in i048. date is contingent upon the cont», pany obtaining the necesstrv pron- erty rights and priifileges and the rlel very of biitldimz materials. nin- chincry and equipment." And Engineer Drowned ST. PIERRE. hi. Pierre-Minue- lon. Aug. 28 -— tCP Cable) — '1“.t'o bodies, believed to be those of the master and -the chief engineer of the Montreal Shipping Company freighter Port Boise were picked up and placed in the morgue here a ter the Git-man crew of the 7.000- ton ship abandoned her early to- y. (In Halifax. ‘Capt. ES. Kirch- planticd by, l i l l roperty‘; i925. lweeks. The Order comes into op- 5oralion rm August 6 but this, the files 0f ‘into operation on August I give eflect Icedure rcccmmendcd." ener, representative of the own- ers. identified the master as HVL, Macloan. an Englishman, and the chief engineer as. A. Hall, believed‘ to be from Montreal. But Kirch- enor said he had no report on thc loss of the two men.) . i The Fort Boise. bmand from Bot-I wood. Nfld., to France with a cargo of zinc concentrates, struck Great Shoal, near Dog Island "i till-i tiny Drench colony south of New- foundland Friday. The salvage tug Foundation Franklyn responded to the calls from the chip ar-tl reached her side Sufi/lay when extra pumps, were put aboard. t ‘Ilia ship ivmained hard aground despite attempts to free he! llllll lost. night when an caster-ll 111° sprang. Wit elr "hip "P ‘g, dea- thcm, the crew in two life-boats and a raft one boat, containing l6 men. was pick- qs up by the tug ant tho other reached St. Pierre. d The relt, with the master an . b0 d ' Will 21:3‘ ‘glthgwgvfzboofs git thforeiy", was buffeted by the waves RIM- washed ashore MP1)’ "ll-s "lmlui The master and chief W9“ “lb-ft ing when the raft was found oi-l the beach. Business At Standstlll Labor Day (3, n. Bis-n... Pm!) TORONTO. Aua. All — Afalflcelff, tai-oustiout the North m, ‘t . continent wlllbt ill!‘ l- s’, 2 stand-align onuMonday. P - QZEJE, "Iixrfatitutions kers in obs y holiday. ems Ind sowed}- ln Canada and I ‘m do" down with exception the livestock markets 8t- t . . ‘i: Canada along with the will join ervlna ted States lineal hence and the Wkaniamlsralltiioafgau m“ m“ so , ‘nu operate as an m4 financial and Service‘ l l-hl. Kindersiey. marks" cal inspector foi- board of mas- (Ill)! Bueh marks-is will be lav has idem“ e-ez‘ no": THE CHARLOTTETOWN ~GUARDlAN Monty Greeted At D harlottotown Airport Decrees Absolute In Six Weeks From August 6 in England, de- crees nlsi of divorce of nullity of marriage will be made absolute after six weeks instead of six months, as before the change. An official announcement stated:- "The Committee on Procedure presided over by M-r. Justice Dennintz has presented a first interim report to the Lond Chancellor recommend- “The Lord Chancellor. in con- sultation with the Lord Chief Justice and the President of thc Probate. Divorce. and Admiralty Division. has decided to accept thc recommendation of the Den- rilm: Cotmnittec. and accordingly cf the High Court has been made under sec- tion 183 of the Supreme Cotirt of Judicature (Consolidation) Act. reducing the period to six "The Denning Committee fur- the!‘ recomnirnds o simplification of the procedure for applying for to the modified pro- MDNTGOMERY (Continued from Page l) Canada's “hcurtfcit welcome EPA‘. undying thanks for your great leadership and inspiration." Faith in Canadians Monty replied by sayirt; that when he had vouch assault jubs to do he had placed Canadians in the van because he knew the lob would be done successfully. He said he mad a healthy re- spect for the veterans uriztivrzatioi". -s.r-'i the manrirlr in which it was locking after the needs of Camd- ian cit-servicemen. The ortanlza- tioh cf thisgroup had impressed him and it was one of the tesaoiis he had learcr-d ar-rl Woliiti t-ike back to Britain. He also paid a .ribute tu Canad- ian service vronienéa tribute he repented at a, civic reception where he received the keys of thc city - and described them as "terrific - absolutely terrific. As he turnccl no leave the. plat- form the bells lll the Peace Towcr carillon suddenly pealcd out trio stirring notes n!’ "Llli Marlene" — the song which the famous 8th Army borrowed from Riommeks Af- rica. Karps and used it on their victorious mazwrh to ’I‘ripoli with Monty at the ‘iead. A Civil Service recess was partly‘ responsible for the large crowd who turned out in Ottawa, but thc Fisk‘. Marshal had already won over an- other large coward in Montreal who gathered under the elms u! old McGill to see him get an honorary law degree-his s-zoond of trio tour Tomorrow the schedule 0111s for the first ess conference of his trip, a. yist to Dcfcnoe Headquarters. a stop at the National Wmr Miomoiial to place a wreath. .". lunch with hill- itary chiefs, a visit 0o a Veterans Affairs establishment and or. im- portant off-remrzi talk with 280 officers of the thrce services. Frida he goes to Kin slain to visit yal Military O0 ego- in which he has already expressed a keen interest and said that its training pal-onion can teach Brit- ain's mill ry leaders a few wrink- lcs. Promotion Seen For Sask. Man OTTAWA A . ah-The Civil Oommiss on announced to- at Hush Rose Cawley of Book. ls first on the eliliblo list for district mechani- day t ocrt commissioners at Mcncton. A locomotive foreman. MLOaw- been employed by the Canadian National Railways for 30 years. Be was commissioner aeronautical engineering the R.O.A.I'. in i9 oversees for two years, "i tlon" strike until Friday. statement R..C.M.P. instructe relation at. pony of Canada plant "unless Dominion Government. troiler or some one properly auth- orized. actually engaged in such movement." Since police started lo arrive in Ilamiltcn from outside pOlnls at Ollil lOiillTilVfl life." cial keep in nation. Field Marshal Montgomery be- the official party ff his plane at Gen- eft to right Si!!!“ ing received by when he stepped o the Airport Monday. L in the photo are Lieut. C r Siaokening Di Tension 0n Picket Lines TIM DICKSON By Canadian Press Stall Writer HAMILTON. Aug. 28 -— Tension slackened on- picket lines of the United Steel Workers of America following (C.I.O.) late today Attorney-General Blackwell's I‘. OLlIl CEIDBITI in The the joint the materials to move freely from the plant. Men on the picket lines bluntly predicted that trouble would break as soon as police arrived at the strike scene. Holding a strong line at the gate has been an im- portant part. of linion strategy lll that said also t the strike for a 40-hour week and minimum weekly wage of 60 Approximately 2.700 man tlicn. msinlsd in the plant after July i5 in defiance of Since the strike Provincials have made no move to re-open the lines and to union activities to peaceful pick- eiing. rest The General Officers British Army assembled. prior to Lord Montgomery's departure. at the staff college. Camberley. and the new Chief of General Staff. expounded the main Field M-"Sllllls _Ofl€I‘lSlV& warfare and of inspection. strategic problems on the HIM. The New Army F. M. Montgomery Plans of the commanders from bases over- sea to work out their application to special conditions in dfierent parts of the world. The 0.1.0.8. himself proposes. by a series of to studry A "Good Life" Both at home and abroad every effort is to be made th officer and the Field show." A War Office committee is con- sidering ways in which conditions could and should be improved. in the near future and for l0 years give soldier a Marshal Montsomerv has insisted more than once that the army is "part of the social fabric 0f the nation." that. its so- and living step with those With more than 150.000 younu men commit-ted annually t0 its charge for national standards of he understood the RCMP. would not be avail- able “to participate in police ac- wsges-hours steel and Ontario Provincial Police force had been d to take no action in to movement of supplies the strike-bound Steel Com- its con- to and . call. t-hcse workers have maintained production on a re- duced scale. ' The union has succeeded to a hitzh degree in keeping the non- strikers prisoners in the works, in barrino additional men from ent- erintz by the plant gates and in blcckintz passage of finished steel from the plant by truck or rail. the Imperial must servic w Urges Adoption 0f Trolley Bus System lion between ‘H6 Light and P-JWFI‘ tr. Halifax. illi- idcal fcrm to obtain such a system. Nips Pay For War Atrocities At Hope's End tBy John‘ Ward) hat the llflSflflUfl of war. 0 culprit and his Fielding, Lieut. Robert Mncli/fillati. A.D.C.'s", Brigadier Stewart, litlajur Foster, Field Marshal Moni- ry. and Iiieut. Governor LA. o], 11,5, Bernard. HALIFAX, Aug 28 — (LP) ~- Norman D. Wilson, Toronto utility expert. today advised city council lo accept a partnership nioposi- Novri Scoita Company and the City for operation of a nwdern trolley bus transportation system Mr. Wilson expressed the cpl"- ion s, trolley nus system was the sf ttaiisportatirn for Halifax and urged the City Coun- cil to take advaniige of the chance za-uAPw-Dzng- Willi the conviction of the 60th sentence to the gallows, the Manila hrnnch of the Executive Meeting Local Red Gross Interesting reports of the d1!- fcrent activities carried on dur- inz the summer months were Dre- sonted at a iecent meeting of the Provincial Red Oross Executive presided over by Dr. W.J.P. Mac- Milian. OBE. A resume oi the doings of the First Aid. swimming and watersafety committee was given by‘ its chairman. Mrs. E. M. Brian-ail and was enthusiastically received. Miss Estelle Homes. the recently appointed Provincial Nutritionist told cf her endeavors in this field showed that she has been making excellent contacts and progress with this phase of Red Cross peacetime programme. Miss Iphi- genie Arsenault. Divisional Com- missioner. reported that. the re- turns to date in the i946 campaign amounted to 92.000. uriich does not include Prince County results. and is not complete as there are still a number of districts ln Queens and Kings Counties from which no reports have been re- ceived. The meeting also heard about the Red Cross Summer School for Health which was held early in July and was attended by nineteen rural teachers. Miss Verna G. Darrach. R.N.. b5] i d ih bCtllt- MANILA, Alli. llifldeiflreteh: pgesleigit uiI-‘cquirtgmgnt of the weebeni me “mo” has ii-ng at ropes clnd in a Luzon pris- who “'35 llle DlFBCIOY 01 Junior Inerscnal search by solicitors in mammhled 5W9“? Puke‘ “n95 M on, dozens of Japanese have Red Gross for five years previous the Divorce Registry. fiielw Felt!» Mmfemalllv "m" paid for almost incredible at-‘W her enlistment in the Anny This rccflmimcflfihtiofl has also llgg", Exligiafda "gel" rociiies committed m the Phililts-l tegglrsliré 1944. was Nappolnted to h . i d. . t. R l f’ . 0 c‘ ‘ w V " ~ ' pine —‘l‘lIllOS ‘rwvclvirlk the (lent l5 fl l ‘ 0cm qlcicfp Cb “'1 rrlimvtiou escnile “u” ‘he “umber of umomsls at of niorh than 91000 civilians and m? Court ave cen ma c t‘ m: M,” “d _b, d _ _ . _, _ 6i to ~ ~- ~ a» 9m 9 "l9" Flll c0900 American and Phiiipino graduation will re an essential re-‘ zillicd hc-adquarlcrs lcgal section qllll‘(\mgnf_ “F3111 details a; to m, anncunccd it had sticcocded i thc Qgndjtions tgov: "ing application‘ tlevelnpmciit oi zi ncw priiiciplc and flptpointmw i Wm be announm in intc-rnaticcial ia\v--thc twinriplc- Cd by the civil service Commysfiionl of Command responsibility. in the next few days" the hi... - Illveillfllltllrs- ‘l/Olklllg >‘\’l‘l'<’l1>' ister said “but uithoutfzoind into re- long before Japan's surrender, these matters M (setan I m“ flddl gathercd evidence first against that appttcants who are taken on top-run Japanese ita, Mashar cc-nvictcd and sentenced to vlie. categories-those committed prisoner of war camps. atrocities agaknst civilians, It also has stopped shipment of of cases. scrap iron and limestone into the Among the worst cases plant by train. W959i Un to now the Mounties and The massacre of 150 American rict splashed with and thcri machine-tsunami. The slaying oi‘ Punitive expcdi-i ions ordcrcil the Police Fire Kills Three, lnjurs i5 lines of his plans for the train-_ _ _, ing. disposition, and gqulp-lnenl o; - ignnecessargé shat 93 mil; alrgtllweeesf regular and territorial formations. ' ""' “g “be (‘tfm mg,’ menu, of‘ The conference was mainly de- BOMBAY‘ Aull- WQTNMETQ- r a u, "e t ti“; rtod voted to studying the problems of Tlllee persons were killed and l5 ‘heir PmbmQmf-v ‘Bum, 9° “m; to Mmtytnt; iniured today when police opened which Wm Wl/"nfimlli “Pfnmar to m, new Am“, the 19550115 ilrc to disperse striking textile “V9 mfiihsfh“ “ma, a; 7;,“ be leamt during the world-widecam- workers at Amalner 1n Bwnbay “W” ~ ‘he ‘ “ r . my!“ o; the war, 1t wt“ be m; province. Several policemen were BmIllOYBd lll l-i’ lleagnlilgfrpgggkg been on strike since Aug. higher wages. tcrsl-Three seamen B th a f h , " - "Rood ..t§...°.‘.'i.‘{'p°s...§.°TZ§.°?iZ'Fii.-B§lii$1 Elfiijlffli °§.,§§§*.‘..‘.I’°.§.°.§Z§‘,§ “ifili? ered a "sail-or-strike" ultimatum as ‘won 2'5 Tmstruwon tn t.‘;__|a in Southeast Asia. "l9 used to carry foodstuffs loss coal. 0. tho Armv must see to it that they of a man's privacy and reedo . _ . min-h to civil in, trained ln'such as "lights out." tattoo roll‘: ol allowance 1y dfoefillflh vgffif character. body. and skill. proud calls. short passes. and minor "lid M‘ “ddium” ‘dv m3 to have belonged to a "first-clam parades. ance may 513° be V“ ~ be free to tzc brass-Lichten- ant Gcncrals Tonit-yuku Yamash- Homma, Tnttcshl Kono and Sliz-yoku Kuc, Each was Atrocities were divided into thrct- J95 BYE risoners of war on Palaivaii Is- and. Thcy wcrc hunchtwl togcther. gasoline. burned 26.0110 Filipino Geri. Kono on Fanny Island. \\‘|‘t'l‘(‘ an estimated 15,000 civilians -...~:"a killed. injured by stones throvm by strik- ers utio defied a police ban on public meetings and demonstrat- ion. Three thousand workersqhaive or Seaman Deliver illtlmatum SINGAPORE, Aug. 28- (Rou- representing to a representative of Lord Kill- earn, British special commissioner The men said the ship could ho rather than wait for the disposal of "use- eld Marshal Montgomery's op- in on is that the trained soldier. when not required for duty. should where he plcases and return to his quarters when trnz.v.'ng and cctnpleie their yvork sticccssfuliy will qualify for Qp- pointmcnt either as Inspectors. Grade 2 or as Inspectors. Grade 1, depending on their rating as train-l In New Brunswick there are] Dersgng‘, ’14 Grade 2 posts to be tilled and. zind battlcficld atrocities-thc last catc- goigv providing the least number l9 Grade i positions. In Novst Scotia thc ‘ianres are 17 and 1O fot- thc resp xiv? grades, and for, Prince Edward Island 4 and l The initial salary for Grade 2, officers is $1.800 a year. and for men in Grade i positions $1.500. Anrrial increases bringing the sal- aries up to niaxtmums of $2.100 and $1.800. respc-r-tively may U5, given. Such clue-rs also receive‘ the cost-oi-living bonus." survivors of Bataan at Cn p O'Donnell in central Luzon, ‘Pile elected by camnnulm sick and wcary veterans w c killed in baymne, prflcncs, Pa‘, Mr. Bridges explained furl-her, bcaflngx hehoading and shflofinm that 93 candidates .0 undergo, training will be selected l'rom the! Maritime Province applicants by the Civil Service Commission with similar procedure followed in Bil- tish Columbia. The commission will make the selection by ‘screen- iiig‘ all the Maritime applications and thus determining, by an eval- nation of the information the ap- plicants give regarding themselves in their DB-pfli‘? qt llpjllCilt-lnh. and by interviews and oral test-s. i‘. fishery guardians. ing under the supervision of some u; our present inspectors Those hf them Whose work as ausrdians has indicated that. they have apti- tude for fisheries service will then during the past flve months which ‘ By JACK WILLIAMS Canadian Press Staff Writer 28—R.enewed Canadals steel "like edged forward today. but meagre cflficial information on disc sions between union and gove ent no hint of a quick settlement to the 45-day strike. While new proposals had been advanced by both sides there was a strong opinion there had been little change in the gap between the pOSTUOXI of the govcmmcn". and that of the union. Most promising aspect. was the likeli- hood that the discussions would be continued tomorrow. Late this afternoon C. H. Mil- lard. Canadian director of the United Steelworkers of America (C.I.O.); A. R. Mosher. president of the Canadian Congress of La- committe chairman. went into conference Mitchell and his deputy. Arthur MacNamara. It was 50 minutes later they came out and Mi". acted as okesman. "We reviewed the lrliolc- situat- ion." he said. “There was a mut- ual exchange oi’ proposals, but the mcetiriiz was very inconclus- ive. We migiit meet again to- marrow" Mr. Mitchell had no comment. The meetinz was the second in two days. Mr. Millard arrived un- expectedly in Ottawa yesterday ttticn Conroy ‘Inauguration Df New Flight September 1st M Aug. 2B — Daily flights across the Atlantic between Montreal and London will begin Sept. l. when the trans-Atlantic tservice operated by trans-Canada ‘Air Isines will add another flight to its present schedule. it was an- nounced today by FEM. McGregor. operations manager. ‘Trans-Atlantic flights were in- augurated by the Government in July i943. to give fast transport for wartime cargo and mail to troops overseas. Later the service was enlarged to provide regular transportation for passengersmail and express. Through popular demand the service grew lo its present schedule of six flights a week. keen Interest ln By-eieotion in Bridgeton By STUART UNDERHILL Canadian Press staff’ Writer GLASGOW. Aug. 28—-tCP Cable) —Keen interest has been aroused l-ll U19 Bddseton by-electlon to- morrow when five candidates will seek the parliamentary seat l-eit vacant by the death of popular James Maxlon, lender Q1 the 1h. dependent Labor Party, Most observers think it will re- sult in a fight between Conserva- tive V. D. Warren and James Carmichael. close friend of Mr. Maxton who will seek to retain the seat for Independent Labor. The chief threat to Mr. Oar- michaelis bid 1s seen in- the cani- Dfllktl of John Wheatley. Labor, Some working-class support may be diverted from Mr. Carmichael by the Labor candidate. Other candidates are Guy Ald~ red. Independent Socialist. known ‘as “the lead-er of forlorn hopes". - and Mis Wendv Wood. Independ- ent Scottish Nationalist. ' Miss Wood. a novelist who once pulled down the Union Jack on Stirling Castle and replaced it with a Scottish flag. has been campaigning in a tartan skirt and balmoral. If Mr Carmichael loses there will be only one Independent La- bor mcmber left in the house and some observers think thc dcfcat would mark the final breakup cf the partv. Whatever thc result. it willgivc the house of commons full rcmcc- sent-alien for the first time since the general election. To Sponsorltflo Campaign VANCOUVER All: 2'7 4 lCPl v Officials of ‘he Kinsmen Club i' here last night that they win s sor a Dominlon-"tvidc campaign to fight itiantile paralysis when their convention opens in Banff. Scpt 8. A delegation of 20 Vancouver members will attcnd l ion to the new inspcctnrships n number of permanent seasonal vacancies which offer employmct". for from seven to eleven mont i= of the year. Shcnid qualified eligi- ble candidates rimait-t after thc full-time lnspccvorshim have bccc. filled they may bc offered season- attend a fishery course. hrobabty at Windsor. N5 which will "Q cut-ted on jnioiv by Fisheries. Veterans Affairs and Laoours voc- ational training section and wll include study of such sitblects as duties of llShfifitl". inspectors. Dur- intz the course the men will re- ceive the basic‘ grarrs provided under the vocauonal and Educ!" tonal training plan for veterans. together with un- monthlv allow- moe for dependent children. In notiropriate instances an addition- Rnted on Work DOM "At the end of the course the candidates will we rated on tmlr work and those who have r9891"! al positions. "The established prcfcrenco hi" lmers who have done active scrvicc Pvcrslcas wll: aplpiy’ in thc fasc OI appontmen s. .e ercnce n nji- pointment will he given. first, ‘.0 qualified residents of thc fisheries subdistrlci in which the vacancy representatives gave l bor. and Pat Conroy. C.C.L. iratzc. with Labor Minister, morning and later spent almost. so react: FIVE Renewed Efforts To Settle Steel Strike Prove “lnconclusive" two hours wuh Mr. Conroy at. a conference with Mr. MacNsmai-a‘. Presumably" today's exchame of "proposals came from that meeting and the possibility of a further meeting tomorrow appeared to be bgsed or a study of the prop“. iii. a The position the Government has adopted to the present is ,th.-it it favors a general increase ‘of l0 cciits-ari-hour in the three lnianis affected by the strike. lTlicy arc Dominion" Steel (lnrii Cfliii. Sydney. NS; Algomta ‘Stccl Corp, Sault Ste. Marie. Ont; and Sit-cl Company of Can- zidn. l-Inmiltcn. The lllliCfl. on the other hand. in its latest proposal asked a 10- cent increase retroactive to April i. a Fib-cciit increase effective some time zihis year and further iccrrasrs rclatcd to any advances which trike place in the cost cf .iivin'z index after July l. Coupled with this is the removal 0f the idifferential which results in the Sydney workers getting five cents an hour loss than workers in the Ontario plants. Sicko 112d oilered a 10-cent increase. Alzoma had made an night-cent offer and Dosco had adopted illi? position it could not afford to raise iis oozes. DZJFCO HOW TWQlVEES MDT/Emma!‘ sub ‘dics and AP-{flma is likely to [161 Sflfflt‘ EOVOYTTilEIll BSSISlBIICBlH ‘JFlUTIl for PUHVPTSICIT of its steel production fncllilies to the less profitable coke production to e-ld fuel shorihgcs this winter. t international ‘,Problem Over Foreign Trawlers OTTAWA, Aug. 28 (GP) -- RH. Winters (L -Queens-Lunen- burg) said today in the Comm/ant that ll) Nova Scctiri there was as international problem in fisheries arising out of the use of Atlantis waters by European countrits. He referred to recent icportl that vessels of rouign regis wen destroying Carndlan equ omen cn the Qucro Harm. 115 miles of Canso, NS. Tithe were repealed incidents since vie war enrled. on clear days and .n broad daylight The bank was so “ingested re- cently with foreign trawicrs that the Canadian ‘or-at: went around the bank to avoid collision Ship- pers believed they knew the ident- ity of the HIWIJTS, but we're not able to say so definitely. He urged the government to do termine identity of trawlczs aw.‘ negotiate with the governments of those countries for the protection cl Canadian fishing rights. In the inc-sir 'mc the Canadian trawlcrs inns’. l ire proteztion. If cxlsllng conditions were allow- ed to continue the barns would be depleted as the European cue He suggested that fast craft bl obtained by the department, the R.C.M.P.. the Navy and the 110-- ‘AF. to protect Canada's offshore waters. Seek To Nalt Automobile ‘Black Market WASHINGTON, Aug. 28—-(AP_)-< Tiic Officc of Price Administration is bolstering its automobile_ en- forccincnt staff with 200 addition- al agents in n drive to c:aclc down on what an official describ- ed as a "nation-wide black mar- kct" in motor-car sales. ‘ Disclosing this today, William E. Remy of the agcncy's automo- hilc enforcement branch said “thcre is no partlculai"_place where violations of prirc ceilings are not going on." With thc 200 ALlltPOHMd accrue. thc OPA. have 600 in the iicltl. Ilitvisticnitrtis to (lute. Dr. Remy icltl Ii il=]]r)l'li"l'. have turned up such things as flit-sci 1. Somc nciv cars have been sold as iizli as 100 pct" ccnt or between SL200 llllli $1.600 above establish- etl tirivc ic\cl<. In raw: ill\‘(’~‘t'i~gair~tl, "m1 out ' i.\"c (l“'lll"I‘S tiiriird out to ir- riiilntm: lX-vf‘ rcculatircis." Parliament At A Glance ROOQIi-Illdtinn Minister Howl mid hc would mnkc a statement Thursday on thc PNll slttiation. Joan Francois Poull~0i rind-l..- Tvmiscruiiiizi) siiitl Mi". Howe should hc timer-n us Canada's next Primc Iiiinistci". Resources Minister Glcn said slntcmcnts by tuppnsition member's ccniirmcd thc difficulty of the Govcrnmcnl drafting an immigra- IJ tinn policy. Mr. (llici F-Hltl there Wns noth- lrtg sittislvl‘ in a plan to bring 4.000 Polish soldiers tc Canada. Senator Wishart Robertson, Government loader. awnounced in thr- Scnntc it. was probable Par- liament would prorogiio this week- end. 'I‘hu|".<dn_v The Cn-mnmns will discuss var- oocurs ard. sexuic to qualified rc- ahead. Arviorig the improvements he pleases. and should be exempt- n hoped f» m4: better married quar- ed from a number of petty re- required standltitr will be Rive" ,1: _ m- "-.h at site abroad: atrictions which were traditional oral examination. The will’! l - further notice. This action qooms in- rather than useful. Why. fqt- ex- cord and the snowing made in the of Infantile Paralysis in u‘ bedroom; and amine stead c abolition Barrack rooms: mes eouai to good civilian stands Nit; infrinflm 0f $3.‘? mu‘ sive him a bedside llsht? amole. should the soldier not be allowed to read in bed? Why not kthe Maritime: there an. il oral ice’, will. together. determine the C8IldidHl9S'_Iil1ll ratirg. In add» sidents cf th: province coiiccrtico", , ___ __ The management wishes to . definitely be no children admitted to their theatre until lnus G'i\’t‘l'llll‘lf‘lll lcgislatinn. Thl S"Illli." will sit. MacDONALD BROS. THEATRE MT. STEWART announce that there will is taken due to the prevalence e Province. . _ .. . we", "y; ._.._,.. _ _..,_._.-e,s._,..