Hear Premier MAXIMS OF A MERE MAN 5-122- abotsi: tomorrow. It is alwln Ito to be dogmatic the Guardian. Five Cassia. ssorniog Daily rounded uli. REDS LAUNCH LONG-EXPECTED oruns CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew MONDAY. APRIL 23, 1951 16 Split: Dgwelops In Britain's Labor Governmentliead Labor Minister Bevan Resigns; Early General Election Is Predicted Coming Events "Mail your Bums to Garnhuin Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Cleaning Timothy 27 -28. Brookfield Cleaning Plant. "Dance in Millvlcw Hull, Mon- zluy. April 3. Mlllvicw Orchestru. Book your Clover Mccluigan 5.: Boyle. "Garden Seeds! Send for free Catalogue. Arthur Vesey. York. "Farmers Seeds now. "Cornwall concert tonight. You will enjoy it. "Cornwall will enjoy it. concert tonight. You "Buying pigs daily. Paying Q0 pair for thirty pounders. Cali Willard Prowse. Brackley. "Dance in at.APet.er's Lake School. Tuesday, April 24th. Lunches. Good music. "Card Party, new School, liar- mald. Tuesday. April 24th. Good prises. Lunches. "Variety concert Mount Albion hall Tuesday. April 24th. We- men's Institute. -- "Alton Hall. Friday. April 27, concert and dance. Lunches, N. M. C. Institute. in st. Peters Legion Cliff "Dance Hall every Monday night. Peters new Orchestra. "See a variety concert with two one act plays. Sea View Hall. Monday the 23rd. "Mixed seed. '!0','tv Timothy. 3096 Clover. 26 cents. MoGuigan st Boyle. "Brookfleld Conservative poll meeting at Dnrllngton School. ipril 24. ' "Listen to Mrs. Leslie Ramsay. C. O. F. Candidate Third Prince. today 6.35 OFCY. "Now in stock. Timothy Seed. Clover seed, Turnip and Mangle Seed. Dillon do Splilett. "See two one-Act Plays with -Specialties in searletown Hall. on Tuesday. April 24th, at 8.30 P. M. "Car asphalt shingles and roof- ing unloading Monday and Tues- fitiy. Court & Son. Bedford Stu- lion. "Cleaning Grain and Timothy iiil the end of the season. John Leard. Crapaud. "In stock. bran. shorts. dairy concentrate, asphalt shingles. barb wire. Booking orders for clover seeds. W. I. Bowman. "Be sure and attend the Suf- folk Variety Concert and box so- cial in Marshfield hall on Wed- Mldly. April 25 at 8 p.m. Spon- sored by Central United Church. "Come one. come all to the three one act plays in frtahtown Community Milall. on Tuesday. April Mth. and Wednesday. April 25th. Wjllpaelaltles. "Fiddler's Contest. csrdisan 3'11 Tuesday night. May in. Good prim. send entries to sauna M-cPhee. Secretary c. w. 1... Cardisan. "Hear Miss Carrie Holman to- day at 5.56 0 . Summer- side. spcakinl on behalf of Mrs. Ramsay. .. noyllwfl HI". no the show RN01 5' ror Three" in Kinkora '"v Friday. A ril ma. Admis- 'i;n 10 cents an 40 cents. Dance a ter show. Shows 3.15 and 8.00. "Mint -performance of plays ::'Id6ravalogue in song and dance A inaloa Station Hail. Friday. 9'" 37. list your tlkctketls. ot ml or so sn'a Store. Wlnalos. Don't miss it this By TOM OCHILTRIE LONDON, April 23 - (Monday) - (AP) - Labor Minister Aneurin (Nye) Bevan. fiery left-winger, split with Prime Minister Attlee on the new budget and resigned today from the cabinet. I-lis action probably means a new lzeneral election soon and a. contest with the more moderate Attlee for leadership of the harassed Labor Party. Teeth and Spectacles Bevan. an eloquent former Welsh coalmlner with ambitions to he prime minister. objected to budget provisions charging patients halt the cost. of false teeth and spect- acles which they formerly received free under Britain's National Health Service. But he pitched his resig- nation on a broader issue .. in- cluding proposed huge military ex- penditures. Bevan wrote Attlee. addressing him as "My Dear Clem:" "The budget. in my views, is wrongly conceived in that it fails to apportion fairly the burdens of expenditure as between different social classes. "It is wrong because it is based upon a scale of military expenditure in the coming year which is phys- ically unattainable without grave extravagance in its spending." "1 note that you have extended the area of disagreement with your colleagues a long way behind the specific matter to which, as I un- derstood. you had taken objection. I had certainly gathered that if the proposals for imposing charges on dentures and spectacles were dropped you would have been set- failed" The death of Ernest Bevin, for- mer foreign secretary. a week ago (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) Norlhumberland Strait Reported Full Of Ice 95500000 Fir EDMONTON, April 22-(CP)-- A steady north east wind has - filled most of the Northumber- f": ti" dfw,'('”:'"ffdm”"i”" "3" land strait from Egmont Bay y ” W W ' 9 ' "t ”"” my fireman and caused damage esti- mated at more than 3500.000. The blaze gutted the two-storey brick and steel Crescent furniture building. It burned furiously for two hours before being brought under control. Dead Is W. L. (Pete) Bowen. 44. He apparently became trapped on the second storey. His body was found five hours to the east end of Pictou Island with ice. reported Captain Angus Brown following -his ice patrol Saturday. This marks the first time this season that there has been any appreciable amount of ice east, of Charlottetown in the straits. It is thought that the fee will clear out in three or four days. Captain Brown observed that it is fortunate that the ice was light this year or it would have been very late in clearing as the wind was practically north east all spring. Seals are nlcntiful in the straits. -specially off Caribou and Captain Brown saw a sealing schooner working off Egmont Bay. This was the first sealer Captain Brown t::...::" in Census To Cover The ice is clearing out well ahead of other years. he reported He expects that the shares will be completely free for the opening of lihe lobster fishing season on May Fishing Industry In Broad Survey OTTAWA. April 20--(CPI--For the first time in Canada's cen- sus-taking history. a detailed study will be launched next June of the Canadian commercial fish- erman. And that involves compli- cations. The first is how to define a "commercial” fisherman. F o r there are those who sometimes combine sport with work- and earn a little cash by selling their catch. After looking at the problem from various angles, the Fisheries Department decided that for the purposes of the census, in "com- mercial" flshcrman is one who on- gaged in catching or carrying fish in the period from June, 1950. to May. 1951. He must have fished Fewer Household Appliances In U.S. CLEVELAND, April 22 -(AP) - United States manufacturers will produce 30 per cent less major household appliances this year than in 1050, the magazine Steel reports today. However. that still will exceed the volume produced in 1949, the magazine says. steel adds that a survey "refuted rumors that de- mand for appliances has fallen off sharply." With steel production as of last week at 103 per cent of rated cap- acity. the pressure for more steel for defence purposes continues. for at least 15 days or earned at By E. S. Johnson TORQUAY. England, April 22- (OP)-Heads of delegations rep- resenting 39 countries Saturday brought to a close seven months of secret bargaining and negotiat- ions to reduce world tariff bar- rlers. L. Dana Wilgress. Canada's high commissioner in London. and chairman of the conference. said in an address that "the results are not as great as many had hoped." At the concluding session the principal delegates appended their signatures to the Tot-quay protocol in general agreement on tariff and trade which embodies 147 bilateral pacts successfully completed. Austria and Germany concluded .mm.. Iy DAVE MolnTOSK SEA'I'I'l..E. Wash.. April 22 - (CF) - Canada's United Nations' brigade. a force of 0.000 fighting men, tonight was bound for Korea and the battlefields. Three ships, one a 30.000-ton lux- ury trsnsport of the 11.5. army command. carried the men. They sailed from the Seattle port of embarkaton. coming from their training centre ht nearby Fort. Lewis in a fleet of buses. The smiling commander. Brig. John Rockingham, who chatted with his men as they boarded the trans- ports, will fly to Korea this week to be on hand when the troops arrive. The first contingent sailed front here a few days ago. Two more fol- lowed with the remainder of the force. All three sailed under military secrecy which prohibited mention 39 Nations Signs New Tariff Agreements least 5100 from fishing. By this definition. those who earned 0100 or more in less than 15 days. or who worked for 15 days or more for less than 5100. will he in- cluded. Here further complications may arise. A fisherman may knmv how many days he spent fishing. but he may not know his actual earnings. To meet this the bureau decid- ed that the census-taker will lim- it the "number of days fishing” question to four groups: lcssp than 30 days: 510 to 55) days days: 60 to 80 days: and 90 days or: 21 agreements each. Canada also was well up in the list with 16 pacts, the United states 15. in- eluding one from Canada. and the United Kingdom, nine. Failure. however. was reported in talks among the U. S.. Britain. Australia and New zealand. It was attributed to fears that tariff ”V''- . . , And when ll. comes to questions mmessloni Poum impmze on about the fishern-mn's czirninga. Empire preferences. The reduction in tariffs and customs duties agreed upon will come into operation before the year's end. But detailed commit.- mt-nts will not be disclosed by the governments concerned until May 9. The schedule; of tariff concess- the census-taker will (Continued on Page-'5-PCoi.VIilPP simply ask llevgln Biief 6,000 - Man Canadian t Force Sails For Korea of time of departure and the ves- E. Darby Toni gh ar HK'W:-P” LONDON: April 22 - (Cm -. The Conservative Party retained its seat in s by-election Satur- day in the sulbulban district of Harrow West (Middlesexl. The seat was made vacant by the resignation of Norman Bower. Conservative member of Parlia- ment for the district since 1041. tons, embracing thousands of items. will be published May 12. in Doyvnt0wnmEdmontgL Soviet Union Has Plans For East German Army 1 r e Yesterday later on the ground floor under several feet of debris. It is be- lieved the floor collapsed while he was trying to pick his way out of the blazing building. Part of a wall also fell on him. The blaze, believed to have started in the rear of the furni- ture store. was discovered by the caretaker of an adjoining build- ing. Cause of the fire is not yet known. Today's fire was the second in the same building within the last three weeks. By Braels Curry i BERLIN, April 22 -(A P) -. Russia has completed detailed plans for creating a Communist East German army of 25 divisions. an authoritative East German source said Saturday. He described this based upon alert units (bereft- schaftell) of the miiitariaod. 50.- 000-man People's Police-as Mos- cow's ace in the hole if big four talks fail to settle East-West dif- ferences. r Andrei Gromyko, Soviet deputy foreign minister. denounced West- crn defence plans and hinted for the first time at the possibility of failure of the talks in meetings of army-to be the four-power deputies in Paris last week. Alllr-d officials in Berlin con- firmed several key points in the report of the East German sources. By this informant's ac- count: The widely-reported visit of Georgi M. Malenkov of the Soviet Politburo to East Germany in February "concerned military as well as political affairs. Malenkov discussed the army plan with high Soviet officers in Germany. Malt.-nkov told the officers the Politburo had decided to rush the formation of an East German army if the Russians failed to block West German renrmamcnt. or to neutralize Germany through four-power discussions. 35 Cars Potatoes Daily Moving To . Export Markets 35 carlonds a day. it is stated in the Potato Markctlng Bulletin re- leased last night by Mr. E. D. Reid. manager of the Potato Board. The present movement is about all the market can handle. it is noted, al- though there appears to be a tendency to increase the ship- 'ments which is not in the best interests of the business. The starch factories at Hunter River and Baltic have been work- ing to capacity since they were opened. using a total of about 3.- 500 bushels a day each. It is estim- ated that ihcre is only about 1.300 LAUREL. Miss.. April 22 -(AP) l - Winds of iornadie force slrucki near Laurel Saturday nlghl,' killing two persons i j......m:............. The one big transport. built to carry war brides of American sold- iers in the Second World War, was the last word in sea-travel style. There is a post; exchange. an ele- and injuring two others. Earlier a windstorm hit the business district of Me- vator in the main rotunda; a big, comb. Mm" ,0 mile, sou.h,,..cm bright cafeteria for the troops and ".11...." six women. 1 promenade and sun deals for all ,g.g ; ranks. There are spacious cabins - BAGHDAD, 1...” Apr” 32 - Wilh 79'" bFd' - 107 Omw” "id Opposition party Icadcrs here lic- 5Cm0i' N-G-0-3 "id G0n"0i'i-9-bi” lieve that public opinion eventual- ”'00P'd90k3 10" the m9n- ly will force Iraq's parliament to. Eris. Rockinsham was extremely follow neigh-bring Iran's parlia-. pleased with the accommodation for men; down the mad .0 0.1 M... his brigade. tionalizatlon. E "After seeing this ship. aybe I n.E ? should so by us." he told the men crucaao. April 22 .- tam - . after an inspection of the his The Upper Mississippi River hov- i U'll'llP0l'l- ered at record flood levels along A top American officer had hiah the lows-lllinola border tuda.-;, lmiu for the Oamdinnn. As the lashed by winds of 35 to to milc.. marched aboard the transport: 1 an hour. At Dtrbuquc, la.. flu- fli" ill. he remarked: river created at 22.7 feet - well "They are the but iooluns troops above the also record of 11.5 feet. to I0 ihmlilh Ghll 9011-" Most railroad yards were flooded It was I hish compliment. 'i'hou- in the city of time and In ares sands of Americans have shipped of 80 square blocks also was on. out from laattia to Korea. der water. i I . (Continued on':Page 5 Col. 2) llawaii Shelled marketable carloads of potatoes left in the Province: Regarding prospects for the coming year it was tinted that Government. s Canadians To World Scout Meat I t O0 p.m. Inserted by the P. E. 1. Liberal Party Die the s MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN genre struck the father when on swore. subscripti PAGES By Don Hub. TOKYO. April 23 -- (Mondayl IAPJ - The long-expected Chinese Communist spring of- fensive smashed into the United Nations line across a wide front in Korea Sunday and pressed on today. Chinese attacking from the northwest drove over the lmjin River on at 15-mile front. A field dispatch reported they were heavily engaged with Allied forces at daybreak Monday. One sector of the Allied front was cracked in the first onslaught Sunday night. Field dispatches reported the gap-on the central front northwest of Hwachon diam Lkig-')xT.-. David Green, Scoutmaster of the Willingdon Scout Troop in Montreal. has been named Scout- master of the Canadian Boy Scout contingent to attend the Seventh World Scout Pamborec. to be held in Austria from August 3 to 13. Every Canadian Province will be represented in the troop of 32 Scouts which will sail from Mon- treal on July IE. it is expected that 15,000 boys from many coun- tries will attend the big interna- tional scout gathering at. Bad lschl. Still No Trace Of Missing Plane" HALIFAX. April 22--(AP)-' A night and day search for a miss- ing Mustang which disappeared in New Brunswick-Maine's bog and timber country Thursday has yielded no results. Air Force of- ficlals reported tonight. The R.C.A.F. fighter. Flt. Lt. Robert E. Kent, 28, of Vancouver. disappeared after banking away from a formation in murky weather. The flight was enroute from Chatham, N.B.. to Uplands. near Ottawa. Arrest Spies In Argentina BUENOB AIRES, April 22 -- (Reuters) - Argentine police said Saturday they had arrested two spies alleged to have stolen secret documents-on atomic energy on be- half of a foreign power. President Peron announced March 24 that his country has an atomic energy "pilot plant" in operation. Reports in Argentine newspapers said the loss of secret documents piloted by was discovered by Inspector Jose Potatoes are moving out to the Regamll of the investigations export market at the rate of about branch , The documents were -connected with atomic investigations carried out at Huemul Island. the reports said. The plant Peron re- ferred to is located there. Both spies were said to have been former Argentine soldiers. -appeared to be plugged by mid- ' night. ” l New Volunteers Ll.-Gen. James A. Van Fleet. new Eighth Army commander. iconfirmed Sunday that the Reds were ready and said new Com- imunlst "volunteers" have joined Ithe Chinese and North Koreans. pl-fe did not identify them or give 1 any other particulars. The United Nations field gen- eral told correspondents: "I am confident we can meet any Red counter-blow." He said Allied forces are in "excellent shape." "If the enemy knew what I know, he would go back to China right now. Eventually he come to that decision,” he added. This is It The big counter-offensive fol- 'lowed intensive Red artillery and imorlar barrages on the western .'and central fronts Sunday. ”I think this is it." com-men-led a front-line intelligence officer. Massed infantry attacks follow- ed Lt.-Gen. James A. Van Fleet. said 'his forces were ready to meet whatever the Chinese could lnilslcr. ' AP correspondent John Rau- dolph. on the western front. re- ported the lmjin River crossing was on a line north of Munsan to it point where the river curves north and northwest into Chi- ncsc-held territory. This was the same avenue along which the Chinese stormed last 'New Year's eve when they hurled tback Allied forces. The central front assault began shortly after dusk. with two Red battalions rushmg along the ridge- lines northwest of I-lwachon dam in a column of twos. Reds Break Through AP correspondent Jim Becker on the central front reported Allied fort to stem the attack. But. the ef iREd5 broke through the line. other Provinces and USA. 33-99 IVE IN KORE i Make Iisitia-l Gains On Wide Front; Row ”Volusstees-s” Appeas- wlii - The U. N. ground commandern ans delivered 38.00; Mail 38.90 raged in the area. At another point on the central front. the Red assault opened ear- ly Monday. A lighter. but firm. Communist punch fell on the eastern front. That sector has . been quiet for weeks. Randolph said the Allied pull- back on the northern salient 01 the westem front was mostly for adjustment of the line. lie added that Allied field icommanders were not particularly lconcerned and that the with- idrawals were normal "rolllnli- lwlth-the-punch" thrown by lh! i Chinese. g Top fielrl commanders. consid- ered the threat of a major Red counter-blow greater now than ptwo weeks ago. Jet Aerial Battle The largest jet aerial battle In A 0-Pt-VC!donti.mi:d-on Page 5 COL 3) A Lot-to Potts. Huerta in (ac WRONG. DRECTIONE I l iM'.Ti0RONTO. April 22 -(CPL. h mmum temperatures observer! etween 7:30 p. m. and 7:30 a. m, EST; maximum temperatures be. ptutcen 7:30 a. m. and 7:30 p in Victoria 44 56: Edmonton 2d 445; Calvary an 51: Regina 20 .17; wt... Hillel: 19 42; Toronto 42 52' 0t. tawa 40 59: Montreal at? 55: Mone- fon Fill 54; llaiifax 35 50; Char- lottetown 28 52; Sydney 2:, 5,. Yarmoulh 3:; r2; st. ,1 t. - i l 27 39. l 0 ns Nfld. l . l 25:70: . -m- l .HAl.lF .flClli forecasts issued by the Do. lmlnion Public Weather Office here and valid until midnight: Monday. Synopsis: Skies are clear over the East- orn Maritimes. Over the remain- yder of the district. however. skier. shave clouded over this evening. tThlH is the forerunner of a band of intermittent rain which has hemziforccs fought hand-to-hand in an rcachcd Eastern Quebec. Western New Brunswick. and the New glingiand Stains. B... midnight. however. the nm This weather. accompanied by iammared w have been cyosedgstx-ong southerly winds, will laecrer reported. Fighting still35P”"d 8i0W'.V msiward thmus" See Possibi OTTAWA April 22-tCP)-The with the current of parliament barely half By Earlhgualte HONOLULU. April 22 - -tAPi- The big island of Hawaii was shaken at 2:53 pm. today (7:53 pm EST) by a two-minute earth- quake described as "rather sev- crc." ' No major casualties were re- ported two hours after the 'quaks. Sonic windows were broken in downtown llllo. Hawaii's biggest city. The ti. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey at Barbers Point on Oahu --wherc Honolulu is sltuated-r-:- ported the quake "as heavy as any recorded from the big II.- M corridors is that the should the Government decide one is necessary--would deal with leg- islation which it feels it. won't. have whipped into shape for the present session. islstion mendations of the Royal Commiss- ion qulry into the country's transport- ation system. Its report was tabled a month ago and the Government already has indicated it intends to accept some of atlons. over. is understood to be consider- ing calling another sitting next fall. The word in the parlimentary fall session in time some of this likely would btl leg- to implement recom- which made a two-year in- the recommend- other legislation said' in he in the offing. but probably late in coming into statutory form. are bills dealing with the North At- lante security Alliance. Their lity Fall "Session Of Parliament inattlre is not known. Also among the may be the constitutional amend- of a contributory old-age pen- sions scheme. These still are a- waiting provineial consent which may come late enough to put them on a fall agenda. On Friday. Postmaster-General Rinfret dsclosed that he plans to introduce a revision of the Postal Act. This automatically would touch off debate on the recent re- duction in urban mail servlc. the queations of renumeration for rural mall carriers and a series of other contentious postal matters. The government may decide to introduce its new Postal Act. get a sampling of parliamentary opinion in the opening debates had then let the bill lapse on the order paper and bring it. forward in a fail ses- sion. Opposition members say they've heard the talk of a fall session. but have no official word from the Government. late-comers t ments necessary for the launchingi Jill!" rcmninrlcr of the district in- tnighi and Monday. Clearing will immmcnce in the western regions llvlonday evening with the arrlvI' Iof tlrlcr air from the west. FtllTCflSlSf Prince Edward Island: Inton- mlttont rain. A little milder. Winds south 20. Low and high pltfnndny at Charlottetown 35 and . 54. High t-ide today at 11.23-A. M Sun rise: at 5.17 A. M. and sets .llt. 7.08 P. M. :llOBDl.7N - CAP! T0;-MINTINI FERRY SIIVICE : Leave Borden Lens 0. 1'. I.l0 A.M. 2.40 l'.M. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Borden Leave (2. l'. 0.45 PM. P.M. 8.00 MCA AIR SERVICE Lv. Charlottetown for Mancini 5:50 A.M.-ll:20 A.M.-4:45 P. . Ar. Charlottetown from Monetoss 7:40 A.M.-l:25 P.M.-0:55 EM. Lv. Charlottetown for New Glasgow - llailfax 1:55 AM. New Glasgow only: 1:40 PM. New Glasgow 0 Ilalifala Ar. Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax. ll:lti A.M. from New Glasgow all 4:20 PM. from New Glallow nalffaa. Charlottetown - Sydney flllitfl every Monday. Wednesday. Friday. l t crcv - CJRW at 9:00 Inssstsdiv H:...'Ii: