Thelullaoiflse ofrnenbiltvoldof fiCnll-‘III hill llorains 0 loaded llfl. Ilfllll, Charlottetown Guardian. he Coats. NevvsBlacltoul Imposed On War Cr Cape Breton Men For P. E . l. Potato Must Establish Domestic Peace SaysMnBracken (By The Canadian Press) 2- (Advence)- UITAWA, Oct. to tlto owers in dean's and Aver-a e _le1 We“ Canada must establish domestic Klnggs Coigttes. Q about {'72 vbusdhell: etc tlrde med: peace and regress before she can ‘I'm-re is a much greater de- compared with its in 19cc. me hope ecome an portsnt mend for potato pickers in Prince higher yield coupled with an in- factor in the solution of world County than in either Queen's or crease of 1.600 acres of sown lend pr ems. John ken. Progres- ‘s. Officials of the National is the reason for the larger crop. s.ive Conservative leader, acid to- llnponnent Oiiice at Summer- Mr. Bracken criticised the Gov- ernment for its handling or leper and farm disputes. "This country is just ems from e lone period of industris strife. The fact is war on our . We seem to have lost the political technique eizne; to m1“; these wasteful disputes to anearly end or to prevent their recur- rence. It ls a primary function of government to make the econ- cmv of the country work. In this case the government demonstrated a total incapacity to do so." To tell striking farmers that they Were not entitled to parity prices was to tell them that they must be prepared to remain in a comment position oi economic inferiority, he said. "They are asking neither more nor less than prices that will bear n fair relationship to the prices oi things that they have to buy," Mr. Bracken said. "And that is exactly what reasonable labor seeks-s just relationship between wages and t . cost oi living. If there is anyt ing unfair about either demand I would like to know what the element of unfair- ness is." ‘me housing situation was in a state o! chaos and was “another evidence oi the state oi aflairs we are heading into as the result oi government bungling and in- competence." wehavshsdmentOfl Fields Between 500 and 000 young men from Sydney. N. a. and neighbor- ing towns will be working in the Potato fields of this Province e. of willing workers has already arrived. Dur- ing the last three days fifty men from Sydney have been placed on various farms in Prince County. Yesterday twenty-seven arrived in side soy Prince County will ab- sorb approximately 500 men from Cape Breton whereas only 100 men from outside the Province will be required to supply the estimated that the peak period for potato picking will be the first and second weeks of October. By that time the labour requirements of every potato grower in the Province are ex- pected to met. Terms of Employment The men will re eive $8.00 per day and their boar . Their trans- portation to and from the Pro vince is paid by a joint agreement between the Dentin-ion and Pro- vincial Departments of Agricult- ure. Every week the men work. they are allowed. in addition to their wages. $5.00 on the cost of oheir transportation. If they re- main three weeks. the two Dc- partments oi Agriculture pay their transportation expenses both ways. Reports coming into the Chor- lottetown and Summers!’ lim- The National Employment Of- fices in Sydney have notified the Charlottetown and Surnmerside oiiices that Sydney alone can sulp- nly between. and 500 men. The remainder will come from North Sydney, Glace Bay, New Waterford. and adjacent areas. A large proportion of the Cap! Breton workers are veterans be- Coming Events "Play - Bridgetown, Saturday. "Talkies — Eldon, liionday. "Dance at Millvicw Hall. Friday, October 4th. Dancing" 9—12. _ "Dance in Rowe's Hall Pri- day. Oct. t. Sale of lunches. "Show. Cameo Thtfltrt. "Ken- sington. Wednesday. 0 and 8.80; Thursday 8.30. "Trail of Mexico." "St. Peter's gay Bazaar. Tuesday and Wednesday, October 8th and ti. "Poultry buying daily live and dressed pouitr , paying top mar- ket price. Davs d: Fraser, Ltd. "Regular Hospital dance. Mon- taglue Curling Rink, Saturday nig it. "Reserve Thursday afternoo November 20th for Zion Ladies Ai Afternoon Tea and Sale. "Buying daily live and dressed oultry. aying to market prices. oudreaut d: Mc usid. Souria. "Dance. Cozy Corner, Vernon Bridge. Frldag} October 4th. Rollie MacKenzich ‘chcetra. "Loadir Hogs at Peakea Sta» tion each Thursday for Davis A Fraser Ltd. Merlin Devine. ‘ " tbs-cat t.t. "Movies-Murray River, Friday. in the govemrnenirs intensified M Harbo . Sat ds . C tel . _ - rdldfiystarringr necurraazmmergy.“ $,°,;'2f.2§,.‘.‘? °”““°“' m “*2 "Loadinl Ho t. M t mod P'z~:"."."'°' £135“; Y I c one. .. ugos avla "Dance to 0.1!. Pushy and his music at the Islanders Coun- try Club, Travellers Rest, Friday "Willis. Oct. l. 9 to i. ernment sources said tonight that the situation in Macedonia, where government troops and "terrorist" bands are battling. "has suddenly taken a serious turn for the worse. government commandos." They were said to have made a bond bid to gain pos- session of the town of Nwussa and acre repelled only after they had inflicted casualties and had caused serious damage. have blown up o. bridge mar the town and to houses, with possible loss oi lifc. Flour gendarmes were reported kill. ed and one officer wounded. nounced earlier that 220 fortified ween the ages of 18 and 35. Marw of them had been employed at the steel works and in the coal mines, but the labour troubles in Cape Breton have resulted in their tin-ling themselves without work. In Sydney alone. about 3.000 men are unemployed at the pres- ent time. liovt. Troops Battle l Terrorist Bands AHKENS. Oct. 2 — (GP) -—Gov. The bands were described by circles as “anarchist Armed bends were reported to have burned The Greek press ministry an- ltions held by the "terrorists" ad been recaptured or destroyed (U! Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew cnanwrrprowu. cameos. THURSDAY, OCTOBER a, 194s Forecasts Big Increase In _ Potato Crop The &nsdhn hi HALIFAX. Oct. Q-An increased Simply of native‘ potatoes to be available for Nova seen.“ g year was seen today in prelimin. "Y "lllnllfl by the Department 0f Agriculture io of about 4.120. Charlottetown and were assigned 1.000 l 800.000 barrels, — (OP) -Lord to make his t i Wbfd: asndrm be n new pla caéié" t st ed lisher :cd the grounds home provirlze. vigorated by the ls Planning 0n A Iieal Vacation ' ST. ANDREWS. NIB" Oct. 2 Beavenbroci: plans vacation in St. An. some of the yond that he has no _ T" EXi-‘ept "to do as little as I the famed British pup. ay while strolling emu; of Fort Tipperary, his residence during his stay in his He appeared in- ,_ on m.” t - h cool winds sweep. §l§.¥'.""&’.‘..1<».ay‘°§? n. 125.. LE “igguégmaggasfmgggnddyhlgevbod- 5W1“ 5mm ‘““51a°"°“' health, the Carggdian-gorn g r reoeating ield 000 bushels. cksnost .000 more than last year. but still about two per cent below the égévar" 1306-44 average of 1.080,- his who gllxrcughiili at? ur ' came on architect or 011M victory. tame of his deli in bein “m again w ere he spent his boyhood. His Lordship declined comment _ on world affairs, implying that it would imposed rule of not doing anything while on vacation. Ht said he came here because "there were too many things w do on the other side. Ar-l to ex- press an opinion on lnterrtational affairs, that would be doing some. 111108." he added with a smile. However. when asked ~if Britain was making great strides in her efforts to recapture the vast ex. port markets lost through her total war effort. he remarked that the United Kingdom was displaying great recuperative powers, pee . as Minister of Aircraft Pro» . aide o! . Winston back in New Brunswick be a violation of his self. British newspaper production, who has arrived in his home Province oi New Brunswick for a month's rest at Fort Tipperary overlooking Passauuquoddy Bay. LORD naavnrumook magnate and head of British wartime aircraft New Outbreak 0f Violence 0n Alberta Farm‘ Strike Front Believes Atomic Bomb Holds World Future LONDON, Oct. 2 - (OP) —'l‘he Evening Standard said today Her- mann Goering believes "possession of the atom bomb decides the fut. ure oi the world’? and "if the Un- ited Sta-tes does not hold its lead in this field, it. will mean the ex- tinction oi the world." The No. 2 Nazi and head qf the former Luftwaffe who was one of i2 German leaders sentenced to death for war crimts. also believes b0 Stalin was the most outstanding of Allied war leaders, including Win. ston Churchill and the late Pres- ident Roosevelt, it said. Goeringu views, the reported. were expressed in s ques- available. tion and answer interview given Earlier outbreaks of violence "in the condemned cell where he resulted in more than 40 convic- sits waiting for death." The Stan. dard did not specify when the in- terview was obtained. Attacks U. S. Trieste Policy Standard (By The Canadian Press) EDMONTON. Oct. 2—A new outbreak of violence occurred on the Alberta farm strike front to- day ss leaders representing an estimated 50.000 Alberta and Sas- katchewan farmers prepared to place their demands for parity between farm costs and returns before the Agricultural Prices Support Board. -A scuffle between non-union farmers and Alberta. Farmers‘ Union pickets. whose 20.000 mem- bers precipitated the 30-day de- livery strike S-Bpt. 6. was reported at Leslievilie. about ‘l0 miles southwest of Edmonton today. Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Edmonton said several pickets were arrested after a farmer was prevented from putting his cream cans aboard a train. Names of the pickets were not immediately tions in Alberta police courts. An additional 20 to 80 pickets are also scheduled to appear in court. An appeal against 14-day jail terms in connection with violence at St. Paul, last month will be made in supreme court by four men convicted on 13 charges scot- 20. Statements on the appeal have been filed on behalf of Vic- tor Tesaier. ichard Pritze. R. Bartholomew and Adam Skakpon. The appeal is being made by Steel Corporation Steel Workers Endorse Proposal HAMILTON. Oct. 2--(CP)-—By a majority ci 20 to one striking steel workers in the Steel Company of Canada plant here have endor- sed the return-to-work settlemtnt proposal placed before them by their national negotiating commit- tee. it was reported tonight ‘on good authority. The men, who went on weeks ago in a demand - rnt-Iin-hour wage incpelse and union security. were said to have cast ballots numbering more than 3,000 on acceptance or rejection cf the settlement oposal which will result in a 1 wenta-an-hour pay increase. The members of the United Steel Workers Union (CLO) em- striiice 13 played in Hamilton voted Monday. Those employed at the Algom-a. plant at Sault Ont., voted Tuesday Ste. or snd ballotting was in progress io- dly at the Sydney, of the Dominion Steel end Coal Corporation. N. 8.. works as s way of certiorarl. the four men '.‘.i;'..':..°'""t'r...um..'s . ..... :':":ir"i:..:"" M W .. new’ "M *" . orman ' . 1e u; . ' _ _ we»- mm. slurs m... sh m..*."::::i ...."'.::::.*i= s. racers“ n. Killed Instantly "gov-aw m- fegmv-ltilngqd lfoflirhw“ eifis"ual'“““el’n all! .'.'"....i“t.‘. E533.“- "iiifpmr... g"‘,,’,-,,§E,,"P§,° ,l,',“,.{'.,,§‘?.,’,‘.°““.' ‘ .__ ‘s every or. _1II-- '--° American military one on the state but a~ ntilitsrybase and ' 1 u. p ited raml- anmmmn, N. s. o t. a- 35§117=l’5»'~"”'o5§=‘55""$l'“3‘$=°tlwmfi‘...ti°".iifs?li.iiihi. “yo-M's” we“? ‘t’? ~~°*~".°=--.a swan: °""";""-°.“~.1' - ' ' ro e, a t - st"m°°n" “"5" mum odd hope. “This is not our lest word." be l‘; “dim efimouf: emf. p w 1.1.551»: Inigo “i532”...- lnstoantly "um,- "h a "h" f“ . Moshe Pijade. Yugoslav warned. if ‘Priests is not to be. who delegation will meet ‘with kiiied last night when caught by mm 4kg“, _ "an “Mm ‘to. ti: laeéceiéogfagge. ‘democratic. we can never accent ememe of the Agriculturalmlgricg a] full trip of coal on the hoisting n” m “l” m“ m“ fsrsnce to about set: ‘Maurice oouve de llurville oi a“ n Bu“ 13cm“; miner. n e' re kl t . s u’ “'- “hfl” Mfgluflwffna" tiing the sect-wast dispute our France. submitted a Punch com. " h? s]: “I: Gardiner W312»? Lllawfi. “Johnatha- the projected international sons. promise to insure the early de- m‘ 11-“, whine;- uacxinnon. curred. Just how it happened has "co ‘_--Hmw*°h hi“. that the probl militnrllltion of the free lone, ______.__._.- not been determined. 1m investiga- h . mt m, ma‘ should be sent immediately to the leaving it under the jurisdiction tion under the Coal Mines ltegu. "film mm.“ humus‘: eougamoinaiomnian marital: gautiiziel United Nations Security Act will be held at a later . ca. Orwell ' - yum,‘ . Wm‘, can‘? couldmpot reach an Isresment Pswtntsiassrvers felt it would be 1&1’? mflglllll u ‘m °~"-'* w. all ‘. ..tii.."l'.'§‘..'..2.'! "as ' '° "" “" as... all... .." a.'...;”°.';‘.'..‘£ Will halve mm 4“. tldn ith vi io t the l of man's rri -1 ad ‘ "—"' nr.'eum . ‘an American glclonomle clauses oi thrgtamgs will! lilllod the Nuzlenbgg “film-TEN 0'0- l — G’) — in Iooolel to decisions of ian treaty gq y" lens. De. John “hard oilthe Ibderei nflmnlstmm. council '5'i-'a.i'€.""E .'.r'“°m¢a'°' .'.'.‘.l°..r"" '..§.."‘...§",“l.! Rommel-risers. "ue'ncliali‘srglfi 'l‘r§.¥°'§r'»s§9 "P" “Hamlin ifliiguofflftlemd " ad” the tme ‘l - Danube. "unfit-i red- ti " 6M0!’ Jolebh B. K . “l tiflo 013011“ 00m 0f 500109. ill be ‘trains ci creating a Mia treatment in Jail. "II MM“! Natalia‘: 1g; N: "l! Mm 1991i" It the 1210mm status-annotation at the Adri- and free to our uoa lien a mu could take place be- ooavooltiop It llolllltvr WIM- e pm. p. pulp giggles“; _ fl] fan a tribunal mated by the Ii Oct. i. s fiery ‘nuosisv mum Allied as . powers. and that a . laced, a native of Halifax. b stuck thigh rapid to the art a written reasoned an sieowilibotlte rsoipiantoianbon- than. lsssrlsvueoltetbciloneesea _. silent. Iylrlflhfloouuarasuue. Fear Mounts For Life 0f Cordell llull WABHINCYIDN, State. mounted today on his 75th birthday as he failed to rally from a cerebral hemorrhage, A late afternoon bulletin from Bethesda Naval Hospital said: “Mr, Hull's condition still re- mains serious. ‘Iliere has been no marked change during the day. At p.m. the navy reported his condition was the same. Mr. Hull suffered the hemorrhage- Mmldly hliht. Hospital attaches said he was conscious and not paralyzed. _ Baruch llurls Charge At Wallace B FRANCIS W. CARPEN Nbrw Yonx. Oct. a - <.3§'§“_ Bgrnard M. Baruch tonight charg- f, ijenrv A. Wallace with creat- 0. confusion and division among (m? NOD16 by failing to correct what he said were “errors" about the United States atomic en 000ml plan in Mr. Wallace's .1 y letter on foreign policy, Mr- Banach. ihe United States delegate to the United Nations At. °m1<= Enemy Commission, also told l bras conference that Mr. Wal- lace— “y dismissed as com. mews Sooretorv-personaily admit- ted he was in error at a meeting with Mr. Baruch in Marhattan. But. Mr. Baruch added. Mr. Wal- lace later did not sign a stategnent admitting the errors which was PPQPI-Nd by a representative oi Mr. Wallace and Mr. Baruchs after their talk herelast F'ri.. Mr. Baruch said that "in view 0i the misinformation that has been spread ard continuously spread -..I was forced to put out the stsbemen . With that Mr. Baruch released the statement on the matter which Mr. Wallace proposed to Mr. Bar- Ilvh. and a memorandum for Pres. ident 'I'l"llmfli'i from Mr. Bar- uch on the points raised in. Mr. Wallace's July 23 letter. l-lechargcd Wallace with "com. plow misunderstanding of the Un- ted States position on the method of detcrminirg the transition stages" of atomic control and said the United States has not. asked other countries to refrain from research on the military use of atomic en- ergy "and would not ask this un- less we were prepared to cease such research ourselves " The memorandum said the Uh. ited States delegation "cannot con- sider modifications in those fund- amemai. principles of its plan which, in our judgment, must be maintained to meet the mandate given the commission by the United Nations General Assembly last January. PORT ARTHUR. Oct. 2-46?)- Elevators oi the Saskatchewan Pool Terminals Limited at Port Arthur had handled 31 per cent of all grain moved through the Lakehead during the crop year ended last Julv 3d, directors were y Oct. 2-(AP)— leer for the life of Cordell Hull. former United States Secretary of the things ‘invented. MAXI MS OIL MERE MAN The art of invention growl with 10 PAGES Subscription Delivered 85.00. ' Inli. 84.00: other Pmvinces A 0.5L. 85.00. i Lawyers Press Final Pleas To Save Henlchmen By G. K. HODENFIELD NUERNBERG, Oct. 2—(AP)—The United States Army imposed a news blackout tonight over the heavily- guarded Nuernberg courthouse and jail, after a tense day Idluring which defence lawyers pressed final pleas to save ‘Hitler's doomed henchmen from the ignominy of the gal- ‘lows. A four-power commission, meeting in the courthouse, Council. The news clampdown obscured happenings within the prison. where unusual precautions were reported taken to prevent suicide by any of. the Nazis. Lawyers for all of the defendants sentenced to death filed appeals with the Allied Control Council to commute the sentences. It was believed. however, that the ap- peals would be denied. The lawyers said that if the Council rejected the commutation pleas, they would ask that all the doomed prisoners be granted the last request of dying before a firing squad. rather than on the gallows. The American army doubled its security guard and gave orders to shoot to kill at any provocation. A protective barrier also was thrown around n courthouse cor- ridor, where three acquitted dc- fendants-Hjalmar Schacnt. Franz Von Papen and Hans Fritsche- waited their formal release. German civil authorities were reported to have filed petitions asking for the custody of Schacht. Von Papen and Fritsche, so that the trio could be brought before German denazification boards and sentenced to prison. Acquittalof the three touched of! protests in many quarters. The news blackout obscured in- formation about the future of Schacht. Von Papen and Fritsche. It was learned, however, that all had requested permission to go to the British occupation zone, and that the United States 3rd Army thus for had refused them trans- pcrtation. No one in the American military government organization in Ber- lin was prepared to say definitely to which of the four zones Von Papen, Schacht and Fritsche be- longed, Lawyers for the three said they would appeal to the Control Coun- cil for immunity for their clients against German arrest. Frelghtlhground (By The Canadian Pres!) KINGSTON. 0n.t.. Oct. 2—Two Kingston based tugs. the Salvage Prince and the salvage Queen. are enroute today to the foot of Wolfe Island where the Canada Steamship Lines freighter Acad- ian went aground during yester- day afternoon's heavy snowstorm. The Acadlan was travelling light. told at a meeting today. Espionage Hearing Swings Into Stride (By Douglas How Canadian Press ti-al jurymen "for cause" by A. W. Staff ri UPIAWA, Oct. 2—(CP) — The legal decks were cleared today for the tri-ai of Harold Samuel Gerson of Montreal and Ottawa. a 41-year- old geologist who is alleged bynthe Crown to be the agent Gray m a Russian espionage ri-ng in Con- ada. The dark, sturdy, Montreal-born son of Russian parents pleaded not guilty in Ontario Supreme Court today to a charge of con- s irin with a large number of ans ans and Russian lhnbassy officials to other and communi- cute con idential information for Soviet Russia. He was selected by the Crown as the first to o in trial after Mr. Justice 0. l". cFariand ruled that the “interests of justice would not be served" by rmitting Gcrson and four other crmer government officials to be tried on a joint in- dictment. The ruling spiked the first effort by the Crown to lump to- gether for a. single hearing a con- siderable number of the i8 per- aum so far detsirlbd in a probe that first became subllcly-known last Feb. lb when rson and 12 others. two of them women, were detained by R.C.M.P, and carried away for weckrof isolated ques- tion ng before police and a special Royal Commission. _ Evidence in Ger-son's trial is ex- pected to begin tomorrow after three days of legal argument and selection of a jury in an unortho- dox manner never before encount- ered by Mr. Justice McFarland in is years on the bench. Isrslstsat challenges cl poten- Beament of Ottawa, defence coun- sel. led first to selection c-f two members of the potit jury panel oi 144 who, after hearing each man questioned by lawyers, decided whether he would be a satisfac- tory and unbiased person to try the accused. Of the 50 men called. l2 became members ct the jury, 12 were pcr- emptoriiy challenged and auto-. maticaliy rejected by Mr. Beamcnt after passing the two-man board. l5 were stood aside by the Grown and ll were rejected by the board. The original two men relinquished their quasi judici-Jl duties once the first two jurymen were selected and each new juryman replaced one of the two until the 12 were selected. 1W0 of the 50 were rejected be- cause they couldn't read. others because they couldn't hear. lviore than a few were turned down be- cause-llke Gerson-they were em- ployees of the Dominion Govern- ment, the prosecuting power. Mr. Justice McFarland! ruling against a long trial divorced Ger- sorfs hearin from those of .1 S. Banning, hs brother-in-law and another former munitions depart- ment official, E. G. Adams. offi- cial in several financial branches of Government, and Sqdn. Ldrs. F. g. Poland end M, S. Nightingale, .C.A..l=‘. veterans. The one other court develop- ment of the day was the formal committal by Magistrate Glenn Strike of Dr, David Shugar, ox- navsl anti-submarine expert. on s charge of conspiracy. He appeared before county court Judge A. G. McDougall and his bell of 03.000 was continued. drew up its recommendations on details of the scheduled hangings Oct. 16 of Hermann Goering and 10 other top- ranking Nazis convicted yesterday. The recommendations, which also dealt with the con- finement of seven other Nazis sentenced to prison terms, will be rushed to Berlin for approval of the Allied Control Palestine Conference I Adjourned (n; The 525.... Pres!) IDNDON. Oct. 2—The Arab- British conference on Palestine was adjourned today until Dec. l6 with the two parties apparently no nearer settlement than they were when the talks began Sept. 10. The Arab delegates probably will return to their hcanes. The future of the Holy Land apparently was as much up in the e1; as ever, and the question of Jewish immigration remains un- settled. Tlhe London discussions. ignored by the United States Government and boycotted by Jews and by Palatine Arabs, were halted when an Arab plan was placed before the conference as an alternative to the Anglo-American e199?" federalizaticn proposal first en- unciated last June by Herbert Morrison. Lord President oi the council. Declaring the British Govern- ment wanted more time to con- sider the Arab proposals. an offic- ial communique armouncinizu- the adjournment recognized the 8T0“ urgency" for settling the problem. but said the timetable arranged fur other international meetings would ‘prevent the early THUMB- lion of discussions. A Jewish agency spokesman said it was the agency's view the con- ference had been called too soon. and that preliminary inform!!! conversation should have M86641- cd a major conference. if ‘(Allis A P tffY NW1’? luvs Ton ‘fo MAKE AN EXCUSE ‘film’ HAsWf- MREADY BEEN luvanfeo! (By The Canadian Press) AX, Oct. a-lThursdayh- Official inland weather forecasts issued today by the Dominion Pilblic Weather Office at Halifax. Forecasts valid until Thursday midnight. Prince Edward Island: Cloudy with intermittent rain clearing towards evening. Becoming cooler in the evening. Light winds in- creasing by afternoon to west 15 M.P.H. High today at Charlotte- town. 60. Summary: Rein clearing by evening ' TOR. NTO. Oct. 2 - Minimum and maximum temperature;- Vancouver 66 Edmonton 40 45 Regina .. b2 — Winnipeg b! 77 Toronto 3S 05 Montreal . 33 47 Ottawa 34 45 Quebec . . B0 M Saint John 45 50 Moncton 41 58 Halifax . 48 60 Charlottetown .. 47 b! Sydney . 50 0d Yarmouih . . . . . . . .. 40 5T High tide this afternoon at 4.29 and tonight at 3.17. Sun sets this afternoon at 5.’! and rises tomorrow mommt 0. First quarter moon Oct 3rd, 4.53 A. M. Summer-side tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. W00!) ISLANDS - CABIIOU Leave Wood lslnids I A.M. 11 Able 1 P M 3 l.'e“Clb01lIA.M-.11L 1:52.315.» u‘