MAXIMS 01L MERE MAN u-i-zi K luindeofmcn. Rlietorlalstlinlrtofmlngllie p‘ “Lin; Guardian. lauded llfl. Uliarlottatowls Guardian. lie 00ml - COMMONS ADOPTSBUDGET TAXATION c g Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, SATURDAY, AUGUST s, 194s i2 PAGES l s . ' Maths - menace" We" i MAXIMS or A l MERE MAN liing Makes To Minimize Proposal DIVISIOIIS At Peace COIIlCTCITQ leeps Co 0n Civilian Market my The Canadian Pres!) OTTAWA, Aug. it-Tlhe wartime jeep that seemed to be able to bounce itself anywhere except through a civilian postwar mar- ket has finally achieved even that obiective. War Assets Corporation an- nounced today fillil. some 600 war surplus. used jeeps are going on the market. Declared surplus by the armed forces. they are being distributed to dealers across Can- ada for sale in the civilian mar- kei None will be sold direct to the public by the corporation. Ceiling prices on the leap; sold to the public vary accor g to location. date oi manufacture. and whether the vehicle carries a spare tire. ' qpiling price ranges w be: Quebec. $348.75 to $506.75; Mari- tlmes. $353.26 to $510.25. The ad- dition oi a spare tire adds to the ceiling price from $11.75 to $16.25, according to model. Coming Events ("Movies at Tryop to-night. "Reserve August 7th for Morel] ‘lei Party. "Picnic at Gxdiltiver on Wed- nesday, August 7th. "Dance. Lorne Valley, Tuesday. August 6th. Webster's Orchestra. "Open Air Dance at Charles‘ Aylwartfs, Covehead Road. on Wed- nesday, August 7th. "Dance. Mount Stewart Hail, Monti-ii’. August 5th. Rollie Mac- Kruzles orchestra. “Ccme to Si, John's Church Pic- at Crapaud, Wednesday, August "Dance. St. Teresa's Hell, Mon- ggr.‘ August 5th. weusutl- Orch- "Annual Chicken Sulpper. Comm Ban. Wednesday. August 7th. Meals served from 5 o'clock. Dance. ice cram. etc. "Ham. salad. home-made bread.‘ cake. and pie at the York tea, Wednesday. Aug. 'l. beginning at live o'clock. ____ v "Come to outdoor dance Rustico- vill~~ Bridge. Monday, August 5th. Refreshments. Good music. “Collecting Hogs for Davis an!" haser Ltd., every Tuesday, Write 0i phone collect. R N. Dawson. "OrganizatiotTM-cciing — Oyster flshormen, Traoadie Hall. Monday. Aiillllst 5th, 8.30 P. M. Standard. EJ113114 glrggm ind d5ltfrlic0.s Emerald by the c.w.ii'_ "8' ' ponsored "Loading Hogs at Moniiigue fséfillOnelCh Thursday for Davis l! “user Ltd. S. C McLean. Phone I-Q-S-ths-sat ti Poultry. live P. A. MacDonald, “B p, dresssldll liigaily, St. Peter's Bay Biiilon each ‘Tliiiirstitay for firs"; Heller Ltd Norman McKenzie, m i-ti-thus-sai tf. "Loading Hogs-for Davi e Pniser Ltd, Tuesday until Rfértmr n ll _ Miiorgiirl‘ Dingwell and sifi,‘ "Load Hogs t Pasha Ste.- tgn each ursdnya for Davis ll Her Ltd. Merlin Devine. l-Mths-sac ti. "Loadinl hogs st St. Peters for Rivildllraser Ltd. each Tuesday. t truck pickup service from farm i9 m. phone noodle amt. - fl-lD-ld-ll-mt-LJJ ‘"54 of-tl-i-z-Prince. Edward ‘illiid We: red Nurses‘ Associa- cai to bo MQHITELZXGIEC: Gl/‘blaegg. lesion ‘mimetic P. m’ ' so u '_'_" Y" a Ho" tbf“t.f'ét‘i 1P4 service through Earnscliff 01m Valle . VOID n, o n Nimovn. p one gvsitoi-"Qttrene. "'12- . s-si-oo-ti. Aii “Buy Monday at noti- fioon. a em Brookflold; "£1114. Ya k- 2 edford; 3 Mt. Stew- 30- P Watervsle: 5 Vernon River; ' am, River; New winn- s pair for I£ 5 l- sods. Will 5nd ‘JBa of Fundy island where the ldlts B ROSS MUNRO Can Press Staff Writer . Aug. 2- tcr e)—_ (Advance) — Addresslm the full peace conference in the Senate chamber of Luxembourg Palace. Prime Minister Mackenzie King today formally proposed on behalf of Canada that the big four for- eign ministers meet separately during the conference to discuss proposals arising from the oop- ference, in an effort to minimize divisions among the powers. Since early this week when the conference opened the Canadian delegation has been advocaing these parallel big iour meetings but today marked the flrst- time the suggestion has been publicly proposed to the conference. Un- der the Moscow declaration which is the charter of this conference the foreign ministers would meet only after the conference ended to draft final texts to five peace treaties and consider recommen- dations from the conference. The Canadian proposal is that the Big Four consider such re- cornmendations while the confer- ence progresses. "I would like to see the iour great powers willing to consider and consider promptly any chang- es in the foreign ministers‘ pro- posals which are seriously sull- gested by strong arguments,"said Mr. King. He said it was “of highest im- portance" that everything Wssible should be doneto minimize div- lsions. In that regard. he said. "I believe I can sneak for everyone .i.iere, indeed for the peoples of an anxious world." Would Leave Position U ‘ rl I-f the Big Four met as he sug- gested it would not require any change in_ the formal position of. the powers. "The final stage provided for llnhcl‘ me Moscow declaration vwould still take place alid the for me Durliose of EDPTOVUTZ 111° final draft treaties. "But if there is merit in this proposal they would I believe find at that lime that. many problems of the final stage had been re- solved. Indeed it might not be too much to hope that final agree- ment would rapidly ensue. Fur- thermore this course would have the advantage of emphasizing our common partnership in the mak- ing of the peace." This was the most important feature of Mr. King's speech. which also treated in general terms the problems before the conference and the over-all ques- tion of the peace. Special Tics With France Opening his address. awaited with wide interest by all diiegit: (Continued on Page 5 Col. 2) Roosevelt Cairn Unveiled At Campohellc I M By JOHN LANGLOIS Canadian Press Staff Writer WELC L, Campobcllo Is- land. NB , Aug. ‘l - (CPI “Can. ‘d8 Pflld a tribute to Franklin D. Roosevelt yesterday with the “n. veiling c,f a memorial cairn on this Un ted Sta-tea president spent many a summer holiday More than 2.000 attended the un- veiling ceremony to hear Hon Rey Altherton, United States ambas- sador to Canada. describe Mr. Roosevelt as ‘ozie of the greatest of all Americar-i. " Many of those who attended were neighbors of the President cn this tiny Canadian island and had known him from the time he was a. youth. It was here he came to fish and swim Here too he oon- tracted in 1921 the infantile para- lysis which h» l-ismed to convert from a handicap to a spur to great- ernactiomm h l o! was t e peope Campo- beiio that Mr. Atherton spoke when he told them they had a clear pic- ture of "the man oscvelt." “Aloan knew the ifvovermr. Washi n knew the President. the far places of the earl-h line" the world statesman." the ambas- sador said, “but nere on this Is- land you knew the man. Roose- . ou krlzw ‘lim the way he wantedtobeknowmyouthinkoi him tilts ray he wanted to be “m. ‘ o v.. ‘The cairn, of New Brunswick red the His- lflnisur Mackenzie Kl!!!- who istattr-aling the Paris pence eanfennce. in a message read by iulources Minister Glen. spoils d the‘ efforts in restore ‘we in line with m. Roosevelt's _ . qr foreign ministers would convenen Three Die In Hammer Slaying Two chiidToIi And Mother Are Slain In Savage Attack. ‘TORONTO, Aug. 2 — (OP) — A stocky Stl-year-old laborer who whistled as he was escorted from police headquarters after four hours of questioning, Angus Young oi Toronto awaited in a jail cell tor-‘ght trial An a charge oi mur- der laid a few hours after 35-year- old Georgina. ‘Washington was slain in a savage hammer and axe at- tack, on her and her three tiny children. Two of the children, Joan. two. and Donald, seven. died in hos- pital. Doctors performed a delic- ate brain operation in their fight to save the life of Florence. three. but the child's condition remained critical Young made a brief appearance before Magistrate I" C. Gullen and was remanded tc Aug. l0 without bcirg asked to plead. Police said Young was a roorncr in the two-storey brick house on Central MoCaul street. on the fringe of a slu-m district. in which Miss Washington end her children .had lived for two Yell-TS. ' Inspector of McCathie, directlrg the investiga- tion, said the woman was unmar- ried Neighbors said t-hat a man whom they had known as nel hus- band lived for a time at the Mc- Caul street house but left Bbfiill i year ago. Stories told brv persona who were with Miss Washington shortly be- (Continued on Poke 5 C01. 2) P. E. I. Men In Searclinfelehraiiier... HALIFAX. Aug 2 - 4GP) -Two Prince Edward Island men came to" Halifax today to join in the search, for their brother Cyrus Birt who disappeared last Friday night The pair, Alex and Howard Blrt, re- used to believe their brother was the man who possibly tumbled from Pier 20 a week ago. Dragging operations were aban- doned last Saturday when they failed to disclose the body of a man whom an airman said had gone overboard. Protest Cmmission 0f Nova Scotia From llew Issue UTTAWA. Aug. 2 — (CP) Postmaster General Bertram! said will’ "life had ieeli no intention on the part of t::i: Federal govern- ment io I°P8ct Nova Sootla in tne new issue of pictorial postage Siflmlis and that the new Prince Edward Island car-ferry on the $1 dencmination was intended to TeDWse-w’. the lvfnritime Provinces generally MP- Bflrtrand was commenting on a Halifax dispatch which quoted Mayor J E. Ahern of Halifax and J K. Bell. secretary treasurer of Maritime Marine Workers‘ Wiififfiilflli. as protesti-rn, against the omission oi Nova Scotia frcm the "W 188119. announced in the Commons ‘Tuesday The minister said representation on stamps was determined 0n n regional rather than a Jmvincia‘. basis and added that it would l)(‘- iln ssible to give a place to each i ividuai province on all stamp issues. I-le noted that Nova Scotia had representatiin ll the 1920-29 issue when. the fame racing schooner Bluenose was snown on the .50- Cfliii 818m . one of the most noted of CG"! a‘s stamp issues and again in 1937 when the Iii-cent stamp portrayed Halifax harbor. I-LALIFlAX. Auc. 2 - (GP) —A Nova scoti csLlnet msnber, 1.1- dustry Min ter Harold Connolly, entered a pretest tonight against the exclusion of ihis province from Canada's new Issue of pictorial postage stamps. "It's mt lllfprlliflfll" he coni- menoed. "In fact. it's just more evidence of the subtle cabal that has ‘ransformed Canada from nine provinces into five zones Althouah a document mlied the British North America Act is angered to givo m niro provinces. e fact now is that we have the bones o! the Marltimel. Quebec, Ontario, the Prairies and ‘ii-itlsh Columbia " The minister said he was at o loss to understand how a picture of the Prince Edward Island car- ferry, which iii on the $1 stamp. could be correlated as representative of the basic industries and mw materials of the Maritime prov- hrlior Ila J]. Ahern of T-Iaflfax and .3. Bell Secretary- ‘monouns- ulo Maritime manni- workers’ oration. omhsion of Nova Seotis Aliens sold he planned to “nnlillitla ‘étiffilifitii’. u.°“““ e cs - pm next week on other * r p detectives Archie '- 1' Many injured In Train Wreck BAYONNE, N J . Aug. 2 _(Ml) "-5 Passenger-jammed oomiirvutier train Dlmixhed into the back of another Passenger train at a local station on the main line qt’ the Central railroad '-y New Jeyggy to. night. ard police said “more than 100 persons‘ were irljured and me trains turned into twisted and srrwking wreckage. Police listed "40 or D0 persons" as seriously iiiii-lred and admitted to hospitals, chm-J half of them suffering from burns. The engine of the oncoming tram crashed into the last cal of t); standing train splitting it part1 way through its length, police said: The engine lYiiifil then exploded, showering the wreckage with live steam Fire burst out ln the wreckage within o few minutes after the collision. Two alarms called all available fire equipment m the scene, and firemen were helping to remove victims from the tom rail- road cars. Bayer-rte hospital officials said n mlmlber of lniuled had been ad- mitted. but it knew of "no fatalit- ies yet." Thev added a. number of persons being aiknltted were suffering from burns. The coliissiovi was at the height of the comm-liter rush when the trail-n normally are filled to cap- acity. Want Relief For Strikers Families HAMJTJTON. Ont.. Aug. 2 —- fCPl-The Hamilton labor coun- cil (C.C.L.) last night endorsed a proposal that the city provide re- lief for families of workers now on strike here and decided to ask the Hamlltcn Trades and Labor Council (T.L.C.) to io-m it in a joint request to the city coiinczl gforwactl-on. The _lo,bor.;cq oil also u: ed-a tag day to raise undsfor str kers and asked free use of firehalis as central de ols for strike welfare work an free use of schools for meetings. Sees Food Shortage In Quebec Province QUEBEC. Aug. 2 —(CP)—Agrl- culture Minister Laurent Barres said today at a press conference he believes there will be a "real food shortage in Quebec province next winter." “At a time when it is imperative to see that there is an cvor- ahundance of crops we have face the fact that the supply of farm products will be far short of the demand." said Mr, Barre. "The general shortage of man- ual labor on Quebec farms during the present season has been a most acute problem for the farm- er. The grave consequences of Lhis cannot be ignored by the ci-‘ty dweller." Destruction 0f Timber Threatened AMHERST, N.S . Aug '1 —(CP) -—One of the finest stands of tim- ber in Ciunberland County was threatened totilgnt after tire broke out in slash between Shulie and Sand River on tile shores of Chlg- necto Bay Although are area burned over today had been cleared of most of its growth, toresters were trying to keep it out of o. tract of timber owned ivy I-Iolllrtgsworth Whitney Company of Boston. CIVIL WAR FEARED NANKING. Aux. 2 —<A_Pi- Wang Ping-Nari, Chinese Com- munlst spokesman. said today the government must tlecldé Wiilihi the next few days whether China la to have peace or war. “Unless Chiang Kal-Shek makes a decision to ask for an unconditional cease- fire and i-mplement decisions call- ing for a coalition lliJl/eflimflit. U10, present fighting soon will enf-il- all China." Wang said. I “m”. {The Frank f0‘ Will Attempt To Settle Steel Strike Commons Committee To Reopen Negotiat- ions On Monday. B! JACK WILLIAMS Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA» AUB- 2—An attemlpt will be made Monday by the Com- mons industrial relations commit- tee to re-o-pen negotiations in an effvfl lo settle the 18-day steel strike. Decision to ask representatives of the three companies affected by the strike-Dominion Steel and 0on1 Corp. SydneyJN. 3.; Steel Co. of Canada. Hamilton and Algoma Steel Corp. sault Ste. Marie. Ont-was reached today at a Mil-hour meeting of the col-n- mittee in camera. At the conclusion of the meet. in: Italph Maybank tL-Wlnnipeg Smith). acting chairman, an- nounced the representatives of the steel companies were being asked to return to Ottawa. C. l-l. Mll- lard. Canadian director of the United Steelworkers of America (C.I.O.) will also be on hand. . Purpose of the meeting would be "to discuss the issues the one with the other with as much ciuidance as anyone here cln gve.‘ Mr. Maybank said the commit- tee members at their private ses- sion had discussed "a great many things." He declined to elaborate or to comment on speculations that the Government would sug- gest settlement for less than the Union had asked. Presumably the Union offer will be fonnally placed before the emplovers uwhen thev reach Ot- tawa Monday. Tlie offer was made to the com- ntittee yesterday by Mr. Millard. He said the national advisory committee of the executive was prepared to recommend to the Union a lfilé-cent wage increase. payable ln instalments and coup- led ivlth an increase. starting in January. of one cent for each point advance in the cost of living from Jilly. 1946. The Union originally had asked for a lllVe-oent increase. It also was prepared to modify its de- mands on hours and Union secur- it ll. Monday's conferences. presuming the committee succeeds in its ob- jective. will bring tlie Union and employers together for the first time since the strike started July 15 ‘Negotiations immediately be- fore the strike were sponsored by Justice W.D. Roach. commissioner in the steel dispute. At the morning session corrimlt- tee members completed the quest- ioning of Mr. Millard and in the course of the yiiscussion Angus , Maclnnls (CCF - Vancouver East) supported the Union proposal- David Croll (L-Toronto Spadina) and L. E. Baker (L-Shelburne- Yarmouth-Clare) indicated ‘he!’ were Qppflsed to the suggestion 0f linking future increases with the cost-of-living index. Mr. Millard said the Union i“ that respect was following the precedent established by the Gov- pmmem 1n 1L5 wartime cost-of- livlng bonus which provided an increase of 25 cents a ilveekfltoig each one-point advance. jib policy had n-ot led to serious prict increases, the Union leader said. "Price; went up so fast the Government had to revise its pol- icv." said Reconstruction li/ilnisie!‘ i-Ilowe. "What is hapbcninil today is that the Prices Board is {T9- ireating to a new line and be ore it did it provided for an increase the steelworkers to PTO!" , Germany. Lilli-T _§ALPENABEn§JeGmber of the Allied prosecution staff said today the war crimes trials against 22 rank- ing Germans mi-ght ond by Aug- lS and that a verdict was ssible Sept. 1. The case against t e in- tiivlduali. including Krriiiiiii" Goerlng. Joachim Von _ Riliiifiii‘ trop, Rudolf Hess and Field Mar- shill Wilhelm Kqitel. has been completed. The international mil- itary tribunal now is hearliiz summaries Sande! Q Thus-ethyl 6J0 Pa. prosecution 53am" ‘ seven Nazi- organizations. Parlcer Show} cm . in different ATHENS. Tenn" Aug. 2 — (AP) —An uneasy ptace settled over this town today following a. bloody. six- hour battle which left 18 wounded as combat-wise veterans forced the surrender of a score or more de- tlzed officers barricaded. in the cMinn county Jail. The battle followed a bitter pol- itical campaign which left nerves taut. An all-veteran slate of can- didates had come forward in op- position to the one advanced by te Senator Paul Cantrell. head of the local Democratic organiza- tion hel-c for 10 years. The veterans faction obtained a statement from a county election commissioner conceding the elec- tion of the entire slate of former soldiers. After the fury of the con- flict subslded, James E. Harvis, Managing Editor of the Chat- tanooga Times. sald:- ' "As we stood on a crowded side- walk across the street from the polling place, which had closed to start the ballot counting. we saw the plate glass doors shattered by the impact of two bodies. th e of two election officials stat oned there by the all-GI ticket The veterans said they were breaking out of the polling place to _report what thev described as fr. welzularltirs in election procedure. Thereafter. events moved rapidly. A car filled with armed men drove Eighteen Wounded As Cun B_attle Winds llp Election Campaign ,crowd watched. a deputy the ballottlng place and the box entered removed The car then sped 1o the il The veterans, some 500 strongg moved on the Jail, followed bv seven deputies. As the veterans convergnd on the jail, the deputies hurriedly barri- caded the place. Sporadlc firing broke out. Swiftly the veterans drifted back under cover and then, from sumewherf, produced rifles and shotguns. Under cover oi darkness’. the war veterans went into action with demolition charges _ home made. but effective. After a third blast had rocked the jail. one of the dr- putles leaned from the building and shouted: ‘Stop that blasting W'e'll give u - we're dying in here." At .02 am. the officers began filing out of the battered building. Thry were searched roughly by the attackers and marched back inlo 111B building to be locked in cells under guard. Ralph Duggan. a former Navy lieutenant commander and a ar- ant spokesman for the one- ima servicemen, said the veterans, "are elected and will ‘serve as your Bfllmly officials, beginning Sept. 1." He produced a statement from George Woods, a member of tine County Election Comrnlsion. which said he “conceded the GI-candl- dates have been elected.” up to tihe iail and then. while the / Meet Demands For Fann Labor OTTAWA Ailg- Z -—(CP)—Labor Minister Mitchell said today dc- rnands for farm labor have so far been met and plans have been completed to deal with the peak demand expected in four or five weeks. Coupled with the minister's statement was a review by his deputy ministers, Arthur Mac- Namara of the current situation parts of the country. Mr. Mitchel asked that all pos- sible assistanco be given to farm- ers in harvesting vitally-needed food on the same basis as they land during the war. Mi‘. MacNamara reported haying well under way in the Maritimes. though in New Brunswick forest fires had required manpower that would otherwise he available for harvesting. The Annapolis Valley apple crop and New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island potato crop butlooks were promising and additional workers would be re- qulred, With fairly light crops in Que- bec t.he farm labor situation was wcll l-n hand, although many ord- ers remained unfilled in the Mont- real area and efforts were ‘icing made to attract men to that sect- ion from eastern Quebec. Minimum Wage Act Amended QUEBEC, Azig. 2 - (or) 4am- Minister Ar-‘onio Barrette announ- ced last night that the provincial minimum wage act has been atm- ended to oblige employers open“. lng under the act's oldinanceglto pay their workers time-aricl-a-hait for overtime instead o,f minimum rates fixed by the ordinances. as in the past. He said the new ordinance ani- endlng the act lind been approved by the Quebec minimum wage Hitler's Yacht Offered For Sale WEST HARTLEPOOL. Durham. Einsland. Aug. 2 - tote) - Adolf Hitler's lbw-fort luxury yacht Grille was offered for sale today by the Admiralty, ' Inviting offers, the Admiralty re- marked that the Grille has "o con sideraible number of cabins. also conference and dining rooms. and w-ould appear to be a suitable craft fbr conversion to a pleasure cruiser." When lHtler accepted the Grille in 1W4 he was still "a man of the people," simple. and a e. The accommodations o. the easel were arranged accordingly. . Later the Grille was murtened up. in keeping with the luxury standards established at the hleh- i‘€l"s Bei-ctitesxeden retreat. i-ilt- ler's ovm cabin was done out in a lime blue In 1 the Grilles white pain: was covered with wartime y Mine rail-s were bolted to ol-s thoilchtfully provided when she was built. The nicht got down to real ‘work mining the waters around Wi elmahaven and a few weeks later she oecame a rce raider In 1'04: the Grille entered on. tile last phase of her career under Ger- man rule as an operation base ship Charged With Slaying Playmate lBy The Canadian Press. SITKA, Alaska. Aug. 2—'I‘hir- telen-year-old Chris Didrickson was 6 . mur er for the knife slaying or his playmate, Anna Marie Ward. 11. Tuesday night. ‘The girl. daughter cf City . Supervisor William ard. was stabbed 30 times. with l0 knife wounds Mthin a radius of two- inches in the upper part of her body. police reported. Gen. lllassw, Ten Others Hanged MOSCOW, Aug. 2 - (AP) Izvestia reported today that Lt - Gen. Andrei A. Vfassov. a Cossack described as Russia's No. 1 native- borrl. war criminal, and 10 others have been hanged following trial by the military collegian of toe U.S S R. supreme court. All the accused, Izvestla said. pleaded guilty to charges of “trea- son to the motherland. aiding Ger- man intelligence ancl terrorist act- ivities against the. Soviet Union." Gtn. Vlassov commanded the Red Army on the Smolensk front 194d but. switched to the Nazi cause when he was captured by the Ger- mans. (United States army irttelligervr officers reported last June the Vlassov. captured in Prague. hm! been turned over to the Russians more than a vear before by Gleam" glovtak authorities About 1.200 of his snber-u-lolding Cossacks like were handed over to the Russians.) l llegro Butler MlNl-JOLA. N.Y.. A118. 2 -— (AP) -A 23-year-old. Negro butler and chauffeur confessed today. Police Captain Stuyvesant Pinnell said. to slaying socially-prominent Mrs. Mar ory Church Logo-ti» 52. Hid Bl- rig and woundili8 her daugh- ter, Margery. nine day's i180- Pinnel, chief of Nassau county detectives, said the man. Ward Beecher Craway, had been bdtiked on a charge of murder. The district attorney's office said arraignment would follow after tihe oral state- ment hld been put ln writing. Philip Huntington. assistant Dis- trict Attorney. said Miss ‘b08311 looked at Craway and said: ‘Ho is the men. There is no question about it." Soon after police said the state- ment had been made, Caraway was taken to Flower Hill. where the Lo- n home is located, and assisted electives in finding two of three sections a revolver. Pinnell who Caraway as saying he had t own the weapon away after ihe crimes. Carawayb arrest followed a police check of servants in the homes of neighbors of the Logans. ‘Iihe chrck led them yesterday to the eastern Long island village of Southold where Mr. and Mrs. James M. Rose, Flower Hill residents. have a s-um- mer home. Police description they had and when he failedio establish 1n alibi for July 24 thev brought hm to Mineola. District Attorney Jamea M. Gehrif said no attempt had been made to learn the motive for the Jotr U-bosts in northern waters. nooting. Subscription Delivered 85.00. Mall. 84.00: other Provinces l» U.5.A. $5.00. HANGES . ed today with first degree‘ said Caraway resembled ‘ Resolutions . Disposed 0f By D'ABCY GDONNELL Canadian Press Stiff Wrlbd OTTAWA. tAug. 2 — (CP) — The Commons. a: n comparatively quiet bu. active sitting. today atloptgcdvrc- solutions to bills limit will bring into effect the lax F-lallges as outlined ,in the budget of Ji-llie 2i. Wiklifll" lanv substantial alterations. l The resolutions. adopted in a tbloc. covered all iJIODOSEd W)‘ changes. effecting everything from iptrsonul income to cigars. Many oi‘ lthe resolutions had been passed previously but their adoption was no‘. moved. Among those to be passed during the dav were resolutions dealing with corporation taxes, taxes on members of the forcjs and auxiliary services. taxes on cigars. tax con- cessions tn oil companies, and taxes on in=urancc companies. Once the resolutions were out of the veay discussion was continued on n bill increasing the salary oi Dominion and provincial Judges. Rrsunipticn of study of’ the bud- get resolutions berznn shortly after Justice Minister St. Laurent dis- clnscd that 33 prosecutions have been instituted a; the result of ir- regularities in the handling of ra- tion coupon banking by La. Banqua Provlnciale du Canada and that ‘other prosecutions are pending. Ha tdid not sav whether they were [bank employees. Oil Co. Concessions One of the first resolutions dealt with covered concessions to oil min- ins companies Mr. Abbott said the government allowed as a tax credit: 50 per can't. of the capital cost in- curred in unsuccessful deep-test oil well drilling. If a sucgefifui well (Continued on Page 5 Col. 2) to Sour (lute fir. teem. MAN is ANY our. Wllo WILL PRCPCSE To tBy The Canadian Pres) TORONTO, Aug. 2 — Minimum and maximum temperatures: Vancouver 52 Edmonton Calgary Winnipeg Toronto Ottasva Montreal Quebec . . Saint John Moncton . Halifax. . . Charlottetown . Sydney . Yarmouth HALIFAX, Aug. 3—(Saiurday)— Official inland forecasts issued by the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice at Halifax nt 12.15 a.m., A.D. T.. Aug. 3. Forecasts vnllri ilnlll midnight Saturday: Prince Etiward bland. Upper Saint John River Valley, Bay of Chaleur: Overcast with rain be- ugmying Saturday afternoon. Little qlianflp m temperature. East winds i° commission nr'i w uld be ubll hed - - - h i h s t- them." ,1, .morrow.g'swlil o, mg S lllCrfiiisll-Y u. 2o mp. . in a ..______._-. . . Quebec » * d. - .t ca ~i it to 80.Camp- VERDICT av seer. i official Eazette. comesses slaymg $111K“ "' 7-. al."..i..“"3.,,emlnmq l! ii. 8111111111131 . mining 5i“- urday afternoon. rises tomorrow morning at 5-48. Hlgih tide this morning at. 8.55 and. this afternoon at 4. First. quarter moon AuKiili "hr 455 T‘. M. Summerside tide eighteen min, um: infer than Charlottetown. All! SCHEDULE Charlottetown-Menorah — 1M" Charlottetown 8 A- M.. 10-30 A. M-- 5.15 P. M Arrive Charlottetown 12 P. M.. 5.55 P M_, 7.35 P. M. Charlottetown-Halifax —- Lelvl Charlottetown 12.55 P. M. Arrivl Charlottetown 455 ‘P M. Charlottetown — New Glasgow — Charlottetown 12.45 P. M Arrive Charlottetown 5 P. M. Standard Time throughout- CAR FERRY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND’ Standard Time Leave Iéorgaen at 9.05 A.M.. 1 P-M and 4.30 3 P. M._ 7.30 P . Extra trips are made between. on which automobiles are carried. sown/if sanvica Prom Borden. 1 P M._ 6. 45 P. M. Prom Tormantine. 3 P M. ll P. M. W000 lSLANDS-CAIIIBOU Daylight Saving Leave Wood islands. daily ‘I M. DA.M.1A.M.,1.M..3P.M., and 5 P. M. and Caribou at same ihours. A. Leave Tormenltliine 10.30 A. M."