MAXIM! OIL MERE MAN iii Accept the advice of one knows by "X who '21‘ Charlottetown Guardian. Two Can Morning Guardian. Founded Ill‘!- r . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, APRIL 21, 1941 . Read by Everybody 4i 16 PAGES lie suffers exile who denies him- self service to hie country. MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN Subscription Delivered $6.00. Mail $5.00, other Provincel l: U. I. A. 81.00 THRJEE LOSELIVES IN DROWNINGUTRAGEDIES dunlmersidc Journal Building Badly Damaged By rifQiFreetoviri Ami Unsatisfactory Conditions Blaze Broke Out At 9.45 Sunday Morning T1112 Journal building on i210 cm,“ o! Water and Queen g < which is the home of the ~ Nfidc Journal and the P. p) . Agrlculturlst, was almost mmpletrly gutted by l! Si“ which 1m dlsgovered at 0-45 NORMA? morning when people in the lobby ,,g w,» Clifton Hotel across the ,0...» =.'\\\' smoke burst from the ...,.- J the building followed by ,, 4.11111.’ o! papers. The build- im is n brick structure consist- of three ltoreys and basement re the presses are housed. The nrrparently started in the 1' and worked its way up’ first and second floors. 111m fought the blaze fol‘ vllrS before bringing iii-un- .irol, meanwhile pouring 1' u-ater into the structure - lines or hose. part .i.nnS of the second floor, collapsed. most of the _ remained intact but it “ably be necessary to tear ‘ the partitions to recen- ‘ "l" building. The presses lmscuient were partly swb- :r- l in wafer and ruhile darn- 11111 probably be repaired. oivpc machines suffered erably from fire and heat pr complete stock of news- mid lob stock was destroyed ingfirc or from being sat- wlih nutter. m» newspaper mats and of the oflicc records were ‘ Some of the office fur- wws taken out and such YCSOIIiS as were kept in the‘ vault thank!" =bei~eafem~on~=~w rs-drior ‘.1: .1. .1. Enman, editor of the . and Aurloulturisb. and '2 1 janitor, Mr. Stephen L-aughlln r -~ ioih in the building around rid» o'clock. about three-quarters _‘ our before the alarm was nothing in r n. 3-- and noticed lir AR. Brennan. the pubildi- t? ‘aid last night the damage ri.1rl1v amount to $100,000. about l'"'.‘ .1.’ it covered by insurance. l» 1111c n! the plant being de- i and the forms of today's lCv. J-llltd on Page 5 Col. 2) Cleaning Events "D“'lC9 K. of C. Hall. Sourie, Tllk April 22. l‘ Home. .More1l. Tuesday. April l- .\iacKcnzle's Orchestra. "i1?‘°@lV1l18 Hogs at Crapsud for Can.'1.:1 Packers Ltd. every Tuesday until l‘. A M. R N. Dawson. ‘ll: Gold" 3-aot comrxly with sptclaities, Victoria '1‘. “lo arrive. car choice Seed 0 llollble re-cleaned. Booking . N’. Aubrey Cuicilffe. _' Loading iiogs for Canada Pack- "ltf '11 Vernon Bridge each Tuesday NP-(iioon. while truck road closed. - liiilC. "lo-Willa Hon for condo Puk- fi a1 Si. Peters each Tuesday until 11-1111 illllf‘. whilo roads closed w ‘l signed David Prim. "llilflrllus Hogs for Canada Pack- "il oi .\li. Stoyart each Tuesday ll"! i iraln tim , while roads closed l0 imcks. signed Earl Jay. '_ "blinding Hogs for Canada Pack- l-i lid. each Tuesday at Vernon Rml- G- Lea. d"l'nloading car of Barley. Mon- nli‘ andlTuesday, April 21st and ~ "ll- Bring bag. Dillon a Spiliett. dwlnloadlng Monday and ‘Tues- Hll oi this week. car of Argro °F “miller. at special cash gr“- $2.56 per hundred at car. "M" J- New. Hunter River. no i‘ ovcilllfllah Northern Grown you °l $912111. Supply limited. Book ml‘ "ldtrs at once. Roland Benton, no: Benton d: Mackae’: Mill, Win- - Phone 221cc. "Colicctinl Hogs for Canada mile" Ltd. every Friday. Sourlo, PM“ my. Fortune Bridge. Bay Brmlxlilaw gnnsndaio, Dundee. Dlnmm n. trathcona. George II i - wsfrfel Bflill. mixed clover-reed. '" ‘News. 15% Alan. 15 ma. men?" bound. Buy your require- mm! While our nook lute. It. L. "W. New Cilaqow, Among representatives of the 4,2 for activities of women's clu/bs at Canadian women's Mother Anti Young Child Fllllpglillillllllld SAULT STE. MARIE. Oni-I April 20' --(CP)—Tha' nude body of Mn. Frederick Rupert, 24, and the body of her two- year-oid son. slain by bullets, were found in their blood spat»- ttrerd cabin hoimc near Pan- cake Bay. ‘i0 art-lies northwest of here, lat-c Saturday night. Provincial Police probing the slayings held Edgar Simona, 19, a northwoods guide from St. Joseph‘; Island, for questioning. The discovery was made b)’ the slain woman's husband WM had been in Sault Ste. Marie on a, shopping trip. Frederick Rup- ert i; operator‘ of a tourist wimp at the remote spot in Aigoma territory on the north shore of Lavke Superior. Sees Chance For Furniture industry FREDERICTON. April 20-401?) —Any New Brunswick manufactur- cr of school furniture could be as- Women’s Representatives In Conclave organizations the C. N.E. this August wereiNhs. who attended s. meeting at the A. Raginsky of Montreal and Mrs. Canadian National Exhibition Allison MacMlllan (right) of Fair- grounds in 'I‘oronto lo make plans view. P. E. I. MoreI-‘ederal Aid For Oyster Farmlngi. Revealed In Much improvement in the sland- nrds of milk Milk Survey I Edward mam lasuggireid‘ $133 111g to a Joint Federal-Provincial milk survey of the Province com‘ ducted dining the months of Aug- ust-October, 1046. The findings of this survey. embodied. in a rcport submitted to the Provincial Govern» "merit from Ottawu. were tabled without comment in the Legislature lest week by Premier J. Walter Jones. The findings are summarized as follows: 1 Through lack of effective milk retlulations and rigid milk control measures. an inferior quality of both pasteurized and raw milk is being offered for sale in the Prov- ince of Prince Edward Island. The, pasteurlzing plants in general arel attempting to ttmn a poor grade raw. product into a good goade finished product. » i 2. The present sub-grade quality, of raw milk, and the low oqulpq merit-standard requirement is a de- terring factor in the pxoduction of a high grade quality of “pasteurimi milk. 1 OTTAWA, April 20 — (Special) —Yieldlng to Opposition pressure as applied during the past two sessions. both within and outside of Parliament, the Government this week will submit departmental estimates to the House of Oom- mons. lnstcuci oLfilNli-"ing tewruan them through lrrthe dying days oi’ Parliament. Evtcrnai Affairs Mittistler St. Laurent announced as House lead- er that departments whose estim- ates will be placed before the House this week will be those of Finance, Fisheries and Justice. Fisheries estimates for the yea: to come show an increase of $76,000 over the mount required by the department Ln 1946-47. The increase is accounted for chlefl by salary and wage increasesin t e realm of fish culture and fisheries research More Money for Oysterif .It is anticipated that this year. ntcro Federal funds will be expend- eti and more work done for exten- sion cf oyster farming in Prince Elzinvard Island than during the war yc-rrs. Among the matters dis- cussed with Department officials last. week by Dr. A.W.H. Needler, head of the Fisheries Research Station at Si. Andrews, N 8-, was promotion of the growth of the oyster forming industry in Prince Edward Island. With the return from overseas of theme-ads of young men skilled in fishing and agriculture, Dr Needier said, there had been a cured of $50,000 worth of business annually from this; Province alone, Education Minister C. H. Blakcny. said in the Legislature Saturday vi "We have. to go outside the. Province to furnish our rural‘ schools," he commented. adding that it "must be discouraging Lo the Minister of Industry and Row construction when people have so‘ little interest in building up an industry." g Magnate B! LAURENCE F. SUNTZ BUENOS AIREB. April 20-01?) -Simon I. Pacino. Spanish-Indian peasant who turned a tin mine grubstake into one of the worlds greatest fortunes and became the leading tin magnate of his time. dried here today in his hotel suite. Patlno had been ill for some time. The Bolivian Embassy. where his body was placed in state, said death was caused b? ‘general exhaustion" attributed to age. The Elnbeasy said he was 00 years old. although biograph- ical records indicated he was 01. With him when he died were his wife. Albina. and a son. An- tenor. who in recent Ywfl m4 been in full charge of his father's far-flung industrial MM"- The "world tin kin!" fvrlovl his native Bolivia in 1060, "T1611 doctors warned that he must ahun the rarefied air of the two-mile- lilgh Bolivian plateau. For almost a score of years. he lived luxuriously in Btu-ope. Illu- ing the reputation or a fabulous spender as he built palaces and marked increase in interest in oy- ster farming in Prince E-ciw-zrd Is- land. More enquiries had been re- celved by the Maritime Research Station than ever before, seeking definite inlozmaiicn about oyster: culture together with estimates of C081, ' While this years estimate for oyster culture is $37,580, only $1,200 (Continued on Page 5 Col. 1) Worlrfs Greatest Tin Dies At 862 viilaa along the Riviera and in Sicily. He made himself the Bolivian minister at Madrid and Paris. A daughter married a Spanish marquis and his son An- tener married Princess Christina of Bourbon. He returned to the western hemisphere at the outbreak o! the Second World War and lived for a time in New York and Mont- real before moving to Bueuol Alres in 1N5. Wealth and power came to Pe- tino ln middle age, after it had seemed certain that he would lead a life of mediocrity. He was born in Oachabernba. finished the equivalent of Junior high school. and in 1006 was a clerk in a g l store. support- ing a wife and family on d5 a month. A miner came into the store for a grubetake and Patlno guaranteed the miners bill in rc- turn for a mortgage on the mine. That holding became the rloh Negro mine. and Patina quickly staked out other claims. The (Continued on H“ I 001. i) 3. The present quality or! both raw and pasteurized milk does not meet the standard of the U. S. Public Health Service milk ordin- ance code or other recognized milk sblmdards that are in effect in certadn Canadian Provinces or ur- ban municipalities. - 4. The percentage compliance i dairy farms with the United States I‘ Puiblic Health Service milk ordin- lnl health menace. 5.111s presmtstandard qt milk pasteurization plants within the equipment, and temperature con- trol measures, is far too low. Plant Inspections Despite the high reduction 0'. bacterial tiumbers during the has-ting process. only three of the eight pasteurization plants lumpect- ed were found to produce a product containing lea than 30,000 bacteria. per mL-thestandard adopted by the U. S. P. H. S. for grade A past- eurized milk. ‘The containers also contribute to the poor quality oi the fmlshed product," says the report. "Only (Continued on 132;. '1. 0S1. 21 Big increase in Butter Blocks OTTAWA. April 20 —(OP)——In- creasing support for reports that butter rationing may soon ‘end in Canada-possibly in June-came tonight with disclosure that the domlnioifs butter supplies were 16,000,000 pounds above the stocks on hand at this time last year. lihe Dominion Bureau of Stattsr ics said that March. supplies of but- ter, including tolal stocks at. the be: ginning of the month, imports an. the month's production. totullcd 43.000000 pound; compared with 27,000,000 pounds 1.11 March lust 1cm‘. iThe Bureau said. too. that pro- duction of orcamcry butter you 1N0 per ccnt in Murch- Boavar Trapping is rrontaiile |_n___ii. B. FRBDERICPON, April 20-—(OP) —Bcaver trapping enriched the New Brunswick treasury to a1- most 840.000 and'trappers by more than 0131.000 last year. Hon. R.J. Gill, minister, of Lands and Mince, disclosed in the Legislat- urc saturday. The total received from the Canadian fur auction for 0,990 pelts, after deduction of commis- sion, was 0100M, Mr. Gill an- nounced. The Government bought and marketed the pelts. Mr. Gill 21 Today OAPETOWN, April 20 -. (Rflltfil!) —Princosg Elizabeth, in high birthday spirits, arrived back in Capetown today with the King and Queen and Prin- cess Margaret at the end of their 7.000-<milc. 50-day African tour. All are spending a quiet day before tomorrow's birthday cciebmtions. Capetown pia-ns the gayest day of the whole visit for Prin- cess Elizabeth's 21st birthday tomorrow, which has been pro- claimed a. public holiday. D115‘- long celebrations including par- ades and bails will end in a. monster fireworks display at night. 4.000 Homes in Jap City Burned TOKYO. April 21—(Monda_\')— (AP)--A wind-driven fire whiehi raged through the inland city ‘oil do, 100 miles west of Tokyo, was; extinguished by rain early this‘, morning after it destroyed almost‘ homes and left more than ago United stat/es Eight Arm 01-0 cegapanese reports said that more once code is dangerously lcw and 4000 such conditions constitute a potent- 15.000 persons with..." she Province Wm‘ 7951mm‘ t0 dairy 155" than two-thirds of the city 0f 33.- Wl» 01°45 01' lllilerauml- WW ‘*1 000 population was destroyed. Bodies 0f 11 leading Nazis Were Cremated MUNICH. April 2O — (Reuters) - The bodies of Hermann Goering and the 10 other top Nazis who were hanged at Nuernberg last October irere cremated. the ashes thrown together into s11 army dust- bl-rr and then dumped into the River Isar near here by four Al- lied zones-sis, reliable sources said tonight. The generals. representing Brit- ain, the Uzriicd States, Rance and Riuslo, pcnnltted no aides or as- sistants to accompany them and kept secret the spot where, before daybreak on a cold crisp morning. the la-st scene of the drama was playtd. After the- execution, two army truck were loaded within the the Nuernberg prison yard on the morning of Oct. 16 with l2 un- painted boxes. ll of ivhich contain- ed the bodies. The 12th was merely weighted. This apparently was to mislead suspicious Germans. Accompanying ti1c secret convoy were jeeps cam/lag American s01- riiers amled with tummy-guns and two army motor-cars containing four gener-"ls as official observers. Military police met the convoy at. Munich at 8:30 AM and cs- ccritd it to the crematorium in Ostfriedhof civilian cemetery in East Munich. Tho boxes were piled Z€sRiT5i_ FREIGHT CAR SHOBTAGE RELIEVED FREDERICTON. April 20 -—-(CIP) -The freight car shortage which affected movement of puipwood in New Brunswick in recent months was reported relieved with recent arrival of railway cars owned in the United States. Export of pulpwood iuaquickened as a result, and thousands of cords piled along rall- way sldlngs are being loaded for informed members. United states paper mills i FOR’ till/H’ [Ni/(ING [0380 1"’ JXNADA FLOUR King Christian Dead Boring Bout Leads "r1 Trouble At so lBYThe Canadian Press) HAKVITIIION, Bermuda. April so —T»hc British freighter Empire Honduras, escorted by the Royal NEW)’ sloop Patistow Bay, put, in laerc Saturday with two men ln irons and two more in sick bay after a gang-fight aboard ship 600 miles of! Bermuda. Th:- flght, which officers said- startcd last Tuesday as a result of discussion over Tuesday night's fight in London between Jog Baksi and British Empire heavy- weight champion Bruce Wood- Cvck. broke out between the eng- inc room force and deckhands uhlle the Empire Honduras was 11 dllys out of Liverpool bound for Hampton Roads. Capt. O. S. Brown, master o! the freighter, sent oil a wireless for medical aid and altered course for Bermuda to land the two injured seamen. George Ap- pleton and Leonard Jones, both Of I-ivvrllovl. Appleton suffered a fractured skull and Jones several ‘Jroken ribs. quaos norm, runes naan ECCLES, Lanes. England, April 20—(AP)-The third of quadruplets, born here Saturday, died this morning. Tho surviving child, Arthur, was reported in satisfactory condition. The babies were born lo Mrs. Marian Lowe, 38. COPENHAGEN, Denmark, April ‘JO-King Christian X of Den- mark (above) died tonight. Christian. ruler of Denmark for the last 36 years. died at 11:04 pm. (5:04 pm. AST) in Amalicn- borg Castle after an illness of 15 days. Ho suffered a heart attack Ap- ril 6. Crown Prince Frederik auto- matically; succeeded his 76-year- olci father and became King "Fred- erik IX. The King lapsed into a coma eight hours before his death and the Danish royal family gathered at his bedside as his strength cbbcd. A great. throng of sorrowful Danes, expecting their beloved King's death at any moment. col- lectcd in the square in front o! the castle in the centre of Cop- enhagen to await further news. At his bedside were Queen Al- exandrlne. who recently became ill herself from the strain of long hours administering to her husband: Crown Prince Frederik, Crown Princess Ingrlckand Prince Knud. (Prince Erik of Denmark. cous- in of King Christian. arrived in New York from Los Angeles by plane and immediately boarded another plane for Copenhagen.) Copnnllagclfs two principal newspapers, both strikcbound. broadcast the latest bulletins over loud speakers. The King suffered a heart at- tack Easter Sunday. DIETAL OF ANCIENTS Certain coiitilrirg 115ml iron n; far back as V1500 B.C‘. PITTSBURGH, April 20 -—(A.P) ~C.I.O President P11111111 Murray today announced 11 two-year agree- ment between the United Steel workers (C.I.O.) and uhe United Staffs Steel Corporation providing wage increases of "slightly in ex- cess of 15 cents n.n hour." The agrccmcnt provides a Sl-a- day increase <12 1 2 cents an hour) for all employees. The pact, announced after a meeting of the union's executive board. is subject to approval of the 1701mm wage policy mnmlttze which meets tomorrow. fillatlflcai- ion is expected. The remainder of the raise- slightly more than 2 l-2 cents- elimination of inequities by in- creasing standard hourly wage rates, improvements in vacations. reduction of the southern different- ioi and establishment of a. sever- ance pay program. With the raises the lowest hourly rate for other workers in 11.5, 5ie:i‘s five operating subsidiary plants, to, which the agreement applies, wll be about $1.00 an hour, The agree- ment covers an estimated 140,000 employees at these subsidiaries. The lowest southern rate is rais- od from 79 cents to about 04 1'2 cents an hour. New Union Agreement With U. S. Steel Corp. April 1. The agreement coniiiiiirs iilf‘. “maintenance '- of ~ mambcrsiiip" clause and duewheckoffs 111 cum- pany plants. Ln its bargaining proposals union had asked a union vrhich makes mombciudiip 1111;111:1111- ory on 111w empiifvces Wli-‘Jill a specified time llrniL Under “mirni- chance of membership" a mrmiw of the Union must remain 1.11 Union for the duration of the rou- i110 tract. The new agrcomozu provides , in ‘change ls cxiaccicd for Monday. a. two-week “escape which Unionists may period" similar "escape" provision. This is the first agreement reached by the 11111011 for 104T m‘ ‘lllie in temperature in biond-yv at Charlottetown 42. the basic slccl industry. Union claims 850,000 members 5.121011 r 15111111101 11 p111" i.‘.1e withdraw. The 1946 contract also cnnialnui a Melville Scenes Cf Accidents Thrce young men — two m Frtctoivn rd one at Melville - wcre droxv cs1 ovcr the week-end. ‘In both awitlcnis ilicy were fish- ing for trout from small boats on Illlllpclldé. The victims were: Ivan 'l",1_viur, 19, and Clarence Davison, 15. both of Freetown, drowned Saturday niurnioig. , Neil .1411‘, ill, oi Mount Stewart. drowned Sunday afternoon. The bodies of the two from Free- town Were recovered Saturday but at Melville, grappling operations were imsuccossfui lust night and will be l'l‘.\illll€(i turlv today. 'l‘i1; accident at Nlulville in. SOlililiT-ll Queen's County oc- curred at what i5 known as Beat- 011's Mill. a few miles from Eldon. The young men nus fishing aicnc in a small boat when lie app-ircntl; lost his balance only aoout :1; fret from show However, the water ie probably l5 feet deep at the spot. It was be- lieved he was standing up in the lxiai, although appilrenily there iworc 11o eywviincsscs of the trag- crll’ 1-1.; was visiting a sister, Mrs. William McEwen at Melville and bad worked a short time for the Canadian National Railways. Ho 1105 a son of the late Wesley Jay of Mt. Stewart. It was not learned. tvhcilicl‘ his mother is living. 35km: brothers, Elmer Jay, Basil ' Jay, Duncan Jay and George Jay. live at or near Mount Stewart. A sister, Annie, is in Montreal. Search for Body cpl. Ad. Lund of the (Rmzht-ie- town Police Puree went with Royal Canadian Mounted Police to Mei- ville to assist in dragging openi- tions. Hie took grappling equip- ment from ihe Charlottetown Fire Department and did some 0.! the actual dragging last night. He has had considerable experience in thg work. Residents of the district will resume the search for the body at "Ycfidnfili IATEoETcZTsY OPPORTUNIiY-l. Quorum Knocks our 4o 41111111115 l1 05ui\\.\.~r Cones‘ Rina!’ biifii A TORONTO, April 2 —(CP)-— Minimum and maximum temper aiurc-s; Vancouver 41, 57; Ediraon- ton .".T, 40; ilcgrlnn 3i, 55; Winnipeg ‘.17. ~45; 'l‘ul‘(1|1'.11 3-3. 50; L7ti1l/WB. ‘.25, 4i; hloiilrcal Ill ~ ; Quebec 16, 40; mint John :5, ;.; Moncton 21, 42; ilalliax 20, 43; Charlottetown 25. 110; Sydney ‘J0. 37; Yarmouth 28. 1 ilil, ilLLlFAX. April I -- (Ci?) Wraiiir: .\_‘~'lli,i]1.yiS and official ill- Jond lorci-nsi.» issued by the Do- imilricn Public Weather Office ai llaiiiax at 11.15 p m. A.S T. Sun- (in? Sinopris :11 1i 11111.: ‘ A <i1.~.1\11'i1.i11ce 1s moving iotvom 111.1» .\i.11~1‘111~.~. from lust south oi‘ 1hr Gtrnii Lmktw. it is causing M‘. w erm- mii-"h of Nova Scoliu bin ‘~11 N\_11-ii\c:'.~.. New Brunswick and Prince tidnard island the skim ,;1:‘v .'i!ll(l$i vicar. The snow in the of iiip district will rhn-trgo u. 1\1'1- showers during tho flay and iho cloud will spread IlfiYiilHYli-Yd but otherwise not much ‘ Florin-act ruild until Monday mid- lrsighi: i l i'l‘1ll\'f‘ able cloudiness. Edward Island ~ Vari- Not much change Light winds High uearh- 1200 contracts in basic stool . and steel fabricating plants. In other years, agreements reach- ed in US. stocks Union negotiations i I High tide this morning at 10.50 and ionlchi at 11.112. Sun sols iilLs evening at 6.52 and have set the wage pattern for lhc _i‘iS1'S irmmrrow morning at 5.05. industry as a whole. 1 First quarter moon April 21th. The wage figure confonms to the . 51g p_ M_ pattern set in agreements by lite-I llllrd ‘ules latcr than (‘Tiarlotletcovn United Electrical Workers. largest Union in the C.I.O. frame- work. It roughly is the some offer the Dally except Stinday. made by General Motors to Summorsidr- tide eighteen min- CAR FERRY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND" United Automobile Workers, second int-ave Borden at 9.05 AM The raises are retroactive to only to the s-tcclworiters in size. [Leave Tormentlne at 3 PM