nu~ MAXIMS 01L MERE MAN i111 attained. nor the perfect life. ngnlglseatporfeotloncaunoth _.__ median. Three Cells. 3.3.12, Dally Founded an. 1? lnkerman Farmer“ "Critically Injured In Highway Accident m, dtewsrt of linker-men.- ritically injured in a traffic u:- iident near his home fill-lay, was mmvod yesterday to the Prince canard lslsmd Hospital by ambul- ‘m from the Cutcliffe Funeral “w”, nu n, whose age ls about 35. is believed suffering from gollbllfllOfl and a crushed lung. 1n rddltion to other injuries. The accident occurred when a “up, dyiven by Mr. Stewart, wiho || a farmer. collided with a loaded motor truck. The vohicles were not unveiling fast, it was stated. This road was r0080 I04 "i4 will" skidded out of deep tracks and min; in front of the truck. The (m, o! the collision locked the two vehicles together so firmly “W? my were separated ooh with e 20 s-iiles from Charlottetown, and ls rot far from Crspaud. M], Stewart was taken to his home after the accident bil yester- day his condition became so criti- ul that he was removed to hospit~ s! for filr-ther (treatment. He is married. Coming Events "Dance Sesview l-lail. Monday, Doc. i5. Drawink for turkey. "Christmas concert South Mol- viilc school, Friday, Dec. 19th. "Christmas concert in Victoria Hall Dec. 22nd. i "Alexandra school ‘coiioertfico- day, Dec. 28rd, 8 p.m., . "Argyle Shots érflmday plain/DIE?“ _ i r-rr" a v < "Boiithport: $811001 00110911’!- ilonday, December 22a » "Eiirnscliffs Chris as Concert. Thursday, December 8th. 8 P. M- .1 and dance Dec. 19th. "Christmas conc in Grcen Buy Sch _,... "Christmas Co ert in Hartsvllle lscliooi, December; 19th.‘ _L-_. "lx-uguo meeting at Milton Rink Tuesday,‘ 10th. Teams int- cmted please be present. "ilugersonfls Beauty Shoppe will be closed for “winter months after December ‘lifiih. "(Juno to Shorbrooks School iloiicvrt in Shcrbrooke l-lall, Mon- day, Dccc, bcr 22nd. “Wlfistl Wlion? Where‘! its Mt. Mellicli C istmos Concert. Decem- bl-r 22nd, ownal Garage llsll. blhlliilb‘ Concert, Carleton School. Wednesday night, December iiuyra P. M. I my --—— hflriading i-logs Sourls every 8W8)’. For trucking service phone a contact Clifford Peters. Nonman rucp. , "bonding Hogs at Murray Har- \°°l1r;_on Monday. December 15th. Tor (rushing service contact D. Ray lrcoks. -' ’ ' ' "ihlioadiw today car Monarch boa grower and finisher. N. Aub- W! Ouicliffe. “New Wiltshirc Scarlet Qlfier ll meet Wednesday. Dec. 11th, 9.15 p.m-. Brookfleid Hill. “Listen in- to non-o Choir Christmas iyuols ‘over ‘JFOY thlscvdningat a ooioor ‘Tcome to Whestioy Christmas Concert Deccan-be ‘l "m: the ma. ' "Cillleéthiss hogs every/Thurs- fci: Canada Packers. Phone N Rsllliloliffe or write me. n.1, mo. River 10in. ' ' merlyllrurseso, ed i4’ I-“iiiifi-il ‘""““'=-'- svoasmoc..." elf‘! nmidondsnbeoem emu‘. m‘ m: m" - “ma” n’: i i ' w a! Bill" l n ‘l’, m’ "A Matias at his m. a" it °P‘W°' ‘"4 h Omsdial upon n no 1°". P" "'1' inn in uio w. fgk-m. w‘ ' M! Alldllembét Illllldlttthtpnli? "i? it“ PW‘ . “mi! a 5., ___‘_ a fir‘ and sham“, lmiiniitedi ti ma‘: blunted too‘, “Bus. _ due _ ‘abort ’ of wag,“ ' " " m ‘mil. minions-u . --wh- Widow.» i“ Fiva Acid-throwing incidents In Sydney BYDNEY. N. 8._ Dec. i4—(OP)- Police investigation into five acid- throwing incidents in Sydney lea to the arrest Saturday of Danie. WWI-n, 35-year-old truck driver, on a charge of assault occasion» bodily harm. s was arrested after tho scrum: of l you!!! woman in a Charlotte Street department stars brought police. They found the girl's stockings corroded (o shred» and red waits on her flesh. It was the second such incident in the store in two. days. Friday Miss Germaine MacNeill was placed under a doctor's care as a result of chemical bums she suf- fered about the legs. Earlier three other women had reported acid burns on their cloth- ing but were unable to account for them. Dr. Arthur W. Ormiston, City Medical Health Officer, said none of the acid bums were of 'a ser~ ious nature but would require careful attention. Would Admit so Million Immigrants (By The Canadian Press) MONTREAL. Dec. 14-30mm» m» a 1i minimi- Oaniida of'40.000,0oo to 50,000,000 of the finest people of Europe” in an addfbss Saturday before the Dominion Commercial Travellers Association. Ha said that Canada. could no longer rely on Great Britain for defence against aggression and should not rely on the United States. Potato Steamer‘ At Georgetown Tho "North Coaster", a SCQ-ton freighter from Montreal. arrived in Georgetown at 9 o'clock yester- day morning after an uneventful trip down the St. Lawrence. She was piloted into the harbour by the veteran pilot, Temple Gotell, and his assistant, Victor Rafuse. The vessel will begin the loading this morning of between fifty and bushels of seed potatoes for Cubs. Shippers. RETIRED JUDGE DIES VANCOUVER. Dec, H-(OPM Mr. Justice Andrew Harper, 72 who retired from the British Cc- lumbiu. supreme Court in Septem- bsr, died Friday night at his homo here. A native of Msdoc, Ont... h: was called to the Bar bore in 100d and appointed to the Count! Court Bench in 19S! and to the Supreme Court in 10M. II had been ill a year. She is being loaded by Associated ~ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, DECEMBER _15, 1947 OTTAWA, Dec. 14-(&pccial)— With all four members from the Island Province absent. Amus Mechanic. Prince Edward Island- bcm 0.01‘. mcanber for Vancouver last cut a slur on the Province which went undefended in the House of Commons on Friday night. , Answering J.A. Ross, Progressive l" mtivs member for Bcurls. try to opsrah a farm?" Mr. Mac» Innis rstorfod, “Yes. I did, por- hsps before my honorable friend was born. If my good friend has picked as many stones oi! a farm as 1 did in Prince Edward island, he would know what farming is like." (Mir. Macmnis was born at Glen William. P.E.I. in 1884 and st- tended school there. For many years prior to entering Parliament he was a. motor-man in Vancouver.) ‘Mr. llatflelifs Questions H. H. Hatfield. Prclrelisivc 0011- servative member for Victoria- Carleton is followlns up the de- mand, made by Walter Shaw. Prince Edward Island deputy min- ister of agriculture for a Fedora. investigation of the 91'1"“ °1 chemical fertilizer. In a series o! questions scheduled for tomorrow. Mr. Hatfield asks why the former Government-owned ammonium ni- trate plant at Welland, Ont, was gold and how much was paid for it. He also calls on the Govern- merit. to give the reason Why $1115 (Oontlnued 0h P889 5 901- 4) "is illpciieiiln Maine ‘PORTLAND, Me., Dec. ll-(AP) _.-A 47-mi1e, $20,000,000 high-steed toll highway stretching through snow-covered 1BrXfl'll‘lfI_ forest land between Kitter and Portland was opened official y Saturday to traf- fic. Begun in May. 1948, the double- lane. concrete ind bituminous hlglvwav was financed by public no“. of furribikc allthqlfly b01105 for which the state has no re- 5 c...‘ ..f.i . ‘Passenger cars are churned 50 cents and tucks slightly higher. There are discounts for short trips along the highway. ‘in which thc speed limit is 611 miles an hour. Salvation Army Leader Passes NEW YORK, Dec. l4-—(A.P)- Gen. Edward J. l-llggins, 88, third international leader of the Salva- tion Army, died today at his New Jersey horns the Salvation Army announced hers. Elected to sue ‘ the deposed Gen. Bramwcli Booth in 1929. Gen Higgins relinquished the post In 1034 over the protest of Army~ leadcrsathroughout the world, be- cause of ill health. He was succeed ed by Gen. Evangeline Booth. Gen. Higgins was tho first mar outside of the Booth to bead tho Salvation Ann!- I ‘ediths force at l8. Man, who shouted “Did you over L. » “our info Marshall Replies To Molotov - LONDON. Doc. l4 -(AP)—8tate loaetary Marshall told Russia. to- nldit that neither the United States noir Britain has pocketed “one penny" from the sale of Ger- man exports, and appealed anew for big power co-operation in re- viving Germany's economy and foreign trade.‘ This was Marshall's answer to Foreign Minister Molotov’: angry charge Friday of Anglo-American profltecring at Germany's expense. British Sub StaysSuiimergcd “ScveralWceks" LONDON. Dec. l4 —' (AP) -— A British submarine has remained submerged for “severe! weeks." then sunfvced under her own Ipowcr with her full crew of seve- officrls and 60 meii in vood health. the Admiraitv said tcdaly. Two or three days was the pre- vioul limit of submersion. An Admiralty u uncement re- ported that the submarine Alliance, with a displacement of 1.250 tons, had returned to its bass at Ports- mouth after a cruise in the tropical waters cff Sierra Leone, Afr‘ca, “to test living conditions aboard a submarine during prolonged dives l» ‘~-~'"~‘ waters." ' An Admiralty spokesman con that the submarine -_ or of Britain's latest types - had re- mained submerged for severa‘ weeks but declined tr disclose an details. It was learned. however. tho the Alliance had‘ been fitted ‘Ifth an improved version c! tho Gar aiianzschaovlsel g .md¢‘~ i hdevice . éjchnorkel servleelon glf-bcats in 1M8- both purifies the air in sub marines and eliminates engine odors. But ovsnfwith it installed or submarines I8 to ‘i2 hours o! sub- nerslon was the previous limit Safstyfllouncil Recalls Freak. Accidents in '47 CHICAGO, Dec. i3 -(AP) -— Witliout even trying. a few unsung individuals performed fancy feats this year that might have stumped Hollywood's most hardened stunt men. '1‘he National Safety Council, in its annual roundup or freak ‘ac- cidents, listed three headliners for 1947: . Mrs. Anne McGlnnis fell from a fourth-floor fire escape, struck a clothes line at the third-floor level, was flipped through a window and landed in the second-floor bliahr rocm of a startled neighbor. ' Charles Aster, pitboy in a South Yorkshire, England, mine, fell down a 1,5t4-foot shaft and suffered only n broken leg. Halfway down. he overtook an elevator cage descend- ing almost as first as he was. l-le landed on its roof and rode the rest of the way down. In Lille. France, Yvon Dherire, a tile setter, foil six storeys from a roof toward a baby buggy below. The mother frantically snatched the infant to safety. Dherlre hit the buggy squarely and was ‘m- hurt‘. the baby. smiled its ap- Leaves (By ‘The Aaeoohtcl Prod) OHliOAOOPDIc. ld-Ono of tho bloodiest bursts of billings since the 8t. Valcntindsbdy slevlhterof bellefil Chicago GaaagbWar Four Dead drew. Mitch", deputy chief of de- tectives. ‘Daley was killed later by police ailchinsqun and" pistol slugs as he tried to csogpo from the window of tbs home of an accomplice where police had trap- t state's, rigs {wen- JM 8t. Valentine ‘springs in Okisliosna City. the mother fainted and broke an ankle. After licr automobile turned over flvo times, Mrs. Lsc Mlrksbury crawled uniniured from the wreck- age in Centrnlia, Mo., she took a look at the debris, fainted and suf- fered a out over lier eye. Leroy Thurman struggled trying in open a case of compress bed- e can flew open" the springs catwultinl him against tho ceiling. He was placed on s bodwlth springs-in a hospital l ‘ As fix-anon Horace Lelaouf was Sil-Yaar-old Conservative The Late Earl Baldwin Slight Fire Aboard Potato Steamer ilere City‘ firemen were called out about, 3;10 yesterday afternoon for a gm, 1n the aft hold of the freigh- ter "Marjory" which is docked st the RsiIway-vzhaflJue-dllis potatoes . . . v ~0- t’- 1 woman. ; ""- ‘bu. {its was caused hen work- men. who were loading potatoes in the_ hold. upset an oil stove, which net fire to the straw which 1S "w! u; pack between layers of potato bags. Before local firemen had the blaze under control it was reported that slight damage ‘was caused to the hold, and to some of the bags in which the potatoes were con- tained, causing them to split open allowing the contents (a spill out onto the floor of the hold. The steamer is loading approx- imately»65.000 sacks of 599d P018- toes. Famous Scottish Comedian Passes ST. ANDREWS, Plfcshirs, 5col- land. Dec. l4 — (OP) — Will Fyffe, 52. Scottish comedian whose song "I Belong To Glasgow" is a favorite the world over wherever Scots gather on social occasions, died today at a hospital here 12 hours after he fell from a hotel window. An acquaintance said Fyffe lost his balance while standing ncar an open window and fell about 20 feet suffering multiple injuries of the head. He lisd been in bad health for some time. Three months ago he was operated on for an ear ail- ment and since then, friends said. he had been subject to spells of dizziness. Ho hadacted since he was seven. His roles range all the way from Little Eva in " ricie Tom‘: Cabin" to Polonius in "Hl-mlet." British Empire in 1942. At the iri- veltiture the King said he always enioysd Pyfffsiahowc. _ I The actor entertained the troops in three ‘wars — the Boer War and both World Wars. HEAT PIOBTRATION UNION N. J, Dec. lin-(APJ- Police took another look‘ at the calendar today ss they entered l. cue of “heat ' tration" on tho blotter. Hvln elson. 55, had col- lsfi in a tavern.‘ Ambulance s. aims" said. itjyas ‘the lien. had on too many clothes and dmaiaaaq- ofabltnfng buflllo. _ . mos‘ ‘Jim "or." Peso s cor. a?’ l ltfwll too hot inths establish- mtnt, k ' - Pyiffe, born in Dundee, was made. ~ a Commander o: the Order of the " Earl Baldwin Died In Sleep Saturday Was Prim Minister Wiios Edward VIII Aiidlcatod ll 1936. LONDON, Dec. 14- (APP-Earl Baldwin, 80, Conservative Prime Minister at the time o! the ab- dication o! Edward VIII in 1036, died in his sleep Saturday night. it was announced today. The end came at Lord Bald- win's home in Btourport, Wotcg. l-le had been suffering froina cold for several days and was found dead by a servant who went to call hirn. Often described as the "most English of Englishmen," Lord Baldwin served as Prime Ministev from May 25, i923, to Jan. '32, 1024: from Nov. d, 1924. to Jure 4, 1929; and from June 7. 103-1 to May 28. i037. Hs once described the office of Prime Minister as the “loneliest lob in the world." He was a Conservative in poll- tics, a successful iron fer in business and s steadfast church- msn. He also was a finn believer in Anglo-American co-opcration. He often declared that "close coila» boration" between the two noun tries would rid the world of war. although he acknowledged that "it might take 100 years" to bring this about. Well Known in Canada He was welbkncwn -to Con» dians and delighted the people o’ the Dominion with his bluff heart- iness and rugged sincerity. Once during a slop-over in Quebec in 1927 he confessed there were several things he wished he might have been rather than whirls-flee“ ca. 5r‘ ilocicwoad’: Church Sands Missionary TRURO. N5. Dec. 14 __(CP)- The first missionary to be sent in- to the field by the People's Church of Truro, founded last spring by Rev. Perry Rockwood when he broke with the Presbyterian Church after refusing to submit to church court disciplinary action .was given a farewell tonight. . he church will send Miss Doris Dy o! Truro into Nigeria for four years and another missionary al- ready is being trained to follow. min expenses 1o: Miss Dye will be borne by the church. flpecfll speaker at the farewell held in the town high school was Rev. Thomas Tltccme, himself a veteran of 60 years in Africa. Mr. Rockwood formed the People's Clutch when he refused to burn his eemnona after the Halifax- Lunenburg Presbvtery found him guilty of itteinptimg to split the Presbyterian Church. nswbn wnrrc FAMOUS sons. ‘DOUIDO. 0.. Dec. l4-(A.P)-- Mrs. Lissa. Jane Raynor Morgan, ‘l9. who helped Tell Taylor writc the music for “Down By The Old Mill Stream", died unexpectedlv Thursday night st her home here. 14 PAGES 0NTR0LLEED ECONOMY 0F Present a To Recent ' Slur . 0n Province .,...______...-. ‘Has highest asst will not hold two, even in a Joint assupbly. MAXIMS ' ' OIL MERE MAN I Canada's Fual Situation Cood OTTAWA. Dec. li-Icy winds will bowl mm the out to wont stasis this winter but Canadians will be able to sit snugly in W911. heated homes ivithout too much fear of running short of fuel. Coal production increased iii September to 1,536,660 tons coni- pared with 1429.905 in September, 1H6. though output for the nine- month period dropped to 10,558,- 671 against 13,029,009 in 1946, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics re- ported today. Coke production rose to 285,000 tons compared with 276.000 in August and 195.000 in September, 1H6. The nine-month total Jumped to 2,600,000 against 2,402,000 for the same period a year ago. Ooal imports in September 10',- ailed 3,882,043 tons against 3,497.- 338 in September, 194.6. For the nine-month period imports total- led 21,538,232 against 17,810,460 a year ago. Expats increased in September to 91,763 tons against 75,174 in September, 1946. Exports in the nine-month period totalled 478,270 against 599,188 for the same per- iod last year. New Cancer Clue Discovered In Experimental Mice (By Alton L. Blakealee, NEW HAVEN, Conn, Dec. l4- fAPl-Mice that don't get cancel are coming from a laboratory as- sembly linc here for designing and prloducirig strange new varieties cf moe. .13D7HH1rat6kyi§' npbratslf ‘up Dr. ‘Leonel! O. strong, geneticist at Yale University school of Medl- clne. _ 1n 1039, Dr. Strong began in- jecting mics with a powsrfin cm. cer-prcducing chemical, methyl- cholanthrene. In each succeeding Stfierohion,‘ the mice developed cancers at the site of the injec tion. By selecting brothers and sisters for mating, Dr. Strong produced family strains in which this change in genetic structure could be made to reappear often or dom inantly in succeeding generations. The descendants of such in-bred lines repeatedly inherited the un» usual characteristic. By the same kind of selection, of resistant mice, Dr. Strong prp- duced family iincs of mics which did not get cancer at the site where the chemical was injected. The tumors developed at remote sites on their bodies. These resistant mice also do not get cancer spontaneously. Dr. strong ivas the first to dem~ onstrate that a cancer-producini! substance can alter genetic struc- ture and change inheritance. Th" experiments are evidence, he said that cancer may he caused by a chemical or virus that changes tho genetic structure in the body cells BIG BANG A dynamite explosion set off on the Arctic island of Nova Zembla in 1933 was heard in Berlin 2,000 miles away. By (mono! nnclmv OTIAWA.’ Dec. 14 -, w?) - The Government’! plan tolncresac the financial return to Canadian farmers for their livestock 910d- ucia depends on the aucceal of current negotiations for the ro- newal of Anglo-Canadian food con-‘ tracts, it was learned Saturday. Agriculture Minister Gardiner announced more than a week I0 that the Govern-sent planned, to boost the price paid theyagrll-‘lll- turn industry (or hoof and other meats and than had been con- siderable ‘speculation both within and outside the Commons. ac to how this will be done. . This plan, it la understood. is based on the auurnpthn that the new food agreements, when sign- ed. will provide‘ higher prices s! bacon, beef. lnutton. lamb and other meat products to be chipped to Jritsln in INC. " A! the aanio tllfll. m- Govern- monlfe expectation that it will be ablo to follow through with this tel» thdt m. - co at mlhlomate. will be successfully concluded- “'\ ‘i’ ,1 i ' ll" no! Pfddlicticn. Expect Advance In Mont Con-tract Prices Mr, Gardiner’: original ann- ouncement, made before the recent Dominion-Provincial agricultural conforencc, said that the purpose of the "increased price level for. livestock ucts was to compen- "ion. the recent advances in‘ the prlcesmfgrsins used for thl‘ feeding of livestock. The expectation, presumably, is that if prices in the British coh- iract are advanced. the levels on the domestic retail market also will move higher. This has happened in the put with the result that the British contract level has coma to be called an unofficial "coiling" on meat priccs on the domestic, m8- kst. e ‘his la because ind domestic price level ll automatically drawn-up to the higher rats which tho Canad- fng supplies of meat to fill thf ‘Fulfil, Gfilltfld-lo Subscription Delivered _ Mall 86.00, other Provinces b U. i. 81M RUSSIA Ian Meat Board offers in puRhI-y _ _ ‘s1 “J0- lirastioi-teps Are Taken To Check Spiral New Currency Issue Aimed At Wiping Cut Larga Part (if Purchasing Power. B)’ EDDIE GILMORE MOSCOW. Doc. i4 - (AP) i'l‘lic soviet Union announced (0 iiiight it would start issue of new. currency Tuesday and would slin- ultaiieousiy abandon ull food rs- tloning iii a program to combsil inflation. The announcement was reported (o the country by Moscow radio in a decree of iiie Council of Minis- tors (cabinet) and (he Commui-i. ist Party. It was signed liy Prims Minister Stalin and Andrei Zhdanov of the Communist Party Central. Conmiittec. ~ l (Tho action by the Russian Gov- ernment was the first. admission that post-uni- inflation had af- fected tlie controlled Russian eco- nomy- It followed by 10 days tlil statement in “lashington b: Robert Lovett, United States Un- dcr-Secrelary of State. that 5011K!- thing "in the nature of panic buyi iiig" had hit Russia over rumors of devaluation of the ruble.) , The decree for currency reform provides that rubles brought to banks for conversion will be ox- changed at the rate of l0 for om new ruble. The exchange musi take place in the week of Dec. 1d- £2 Rationing was ordered abolished on all "food and industrial goods’ and consumer goods were broughl under unified price control. Thi price of bread under the new pro‘ gram will be l2 per cent lower thai the ration price, the announce- ment saidnBeor will be 10 g ‘ '1cw§i‘."‘"'-buf;-'lvodka and wn' changed from the mount. ratlol I > . ‘y (Continued ori Page 5 Col. 4) Mont 9 jyi orrmo . QAYS 4o h'§\l“lt'“i.‘one I (N A CAYETENA Bu-f lwonf wash MY own clones! TORONTO, Dccnli — (OP)- Minimum and maximum tempers aturcs: Vancouver 85,14" Vic? toria 36, ~18; Edmonton 21. 54; Roi gina 14, 14; Winnipeg 13, l4; Tor- onto 22. as; Ottawa, mo, lri Montreal 5, l0; Quebec 2B, i0 saint John -—. 20; Moncinn 4, 1 Halifax l6, 25; Charlottetown i0 i5; Sydney l7, 22; Yarmouth .20 24 ‘ HALIFAX. Dec. 14 --(CP)-—Ofi ficial inland forecasts issued by bin - Dominion Public Weather Office‘ sA _ Halifax valid from 11 pm. $undal- until midnight Monday. synopsis: , Early Sunday morning lumped}!- ures foil to near zero in Nov Bi-uriawick and the in Nova sooth. ts tures about 15 and in Prince Edllfl Island about 10. During the attor- 20s in Nova scotia, to 15 in Priuoi Edward island and New Brunswick Al. mid-evening Sunday skies wort mostly clear over tho district but ii. was cloudy with snowflunrics "in Eastern Nova Bcotia. Mitch . tbs some tenweratures are’ sirpocted; again tonight but Monday ‘will-filth mildbr. A disturbance 111p , I from Northern Ontario ia _ ‘fl cause snow in- tho Marftlmes )1 day. A new storm develobin ‘liens may clues wander wca and rain in a few ma, Regional forecasts: _ Prince lidwai-dfslmd: _ scattered lnlilll. . becoming overcast. no i tematceiit fidu- “we i"! Esattn anon region of Nova Scctia. 1210171103.; ‘y i’ Q noon temPQratui-es rose to the mid " . . » while the briiieh contract price in expected. to sdvaiiep under new agreement, it also is’ Niel ‘ ['- sied that the flnasltill tau 3w‘ h . to tai vi xsxgrlgecarillhg of hill Ifilfl