TIHELY - grung to one of the lsadinl 1.3753: of New York natural white ,0, 1. registering as a prominent up type and being headlined lin ciggant little shoulder view wth - do idual tyling. Its stature was up ough the put mine and current summer months and new coma. up to take its place among the fox leaders. Today it is noted, 1:, equals the demand for Nor-wgglln blue fox which has been ,. favorite right along. Both are cited as responsible for tho I'l'0Wi-I1 or fax pgpulsrity with buyers mmughaut the country. Both are sported to be re-ordering with :uccess in double and treble-tiered gplets and in straight and shaped mics and trebled boat- G 101' is being featured in dy ioxeos. The significance of paste wind, out in growing activitlty as ink pale blue, canary yellow col- Ila; rand cuff sets. Even more not- gple in the trend toward color are the requests that keep comlnl In for foxes diad '0 m"'ch Ppecmc cloth garments. These Include many unusual shades. Orders. it 15 Dolm- out have been placed for Krem- dycd foxes. So far, there is only .. limited interest reported in pearl rm; and even less in silver fox. 1n pearl fox, bleached golden, which the 1"romm's have brought out. I5 still in the sampling stage. Another prominent New York dealer states: As far as other foxes go Norwegian blue is moving fair- iy well. There is also some de- mmd tor pearl and pearl bleached in golden tone but very little for 511ver fox and black-dyed fox. Re- newed interest in fox BGHGHIIY 15 responsible for the big remodeling job which firms are tacklinl N p,egem,, Fox jackets and scaris keep coming in from department” stores across the country to be turn- ed into stoic: and caP68- A W 9,3 page of a recent issue of Women: Wear may. N. v. is taken up Will; news of fox of different types an emphasis seems to be on white fox. Norwegian blue fox and pastel!- Muskrat and squirrel declined CORRECTED WITII Silver Fox And IOTES III TIII08 their father an Ericyao It natural- ly thought they were Erics. But as the guard hair of these two mink came in. they got to be a golden color. I showed them to a good many ranchers and suction house men. Most of these fellows got a good laugh out of them. Called them csnsriee. Bu I kept on sel- ecting for color an finally when I took them to the, International Blink Show in Milwaukee these mink placed first in the Palomino class. "The Palomino is valuable also for produci other mutations. I have produced several different shades from them. The one I think most desirable is the Pearl. These are from the Sapphire and Palo- mino cross. Palominos are very pro- lific and have always produced for me close to s. fivskit average. They are large. like their anceeto, the Pastel. They are also very healthy. of recent years. much interest has been shown in the light shades. and it looks now as if the Palomino will bathe light tan shade the fur trade is looking for. And let us hope that Palomino pelts take after their predecessor. the popular Pastel. The Edmonton Fur Auction sale rat and little or no bidding for the United states. There was strong R i t R. C. SI 1 . bidding for the small types of musk- dlif. nzcny Phow) gm 3 Training as Junior NCO's at Utopia Army Camp. N. B., these four militiamen represent each of Canada's Atlantic Provinces, all in the same platoon on the basic training course. course is sort of strict but we are learning a lot from it." me week drew - wood mend-we Eillwlii. ci'r'."3”'3.”k;i..”i?i ;?S..2..'"i'.?uliZ iioii”uliilfl..”i5IZTc'iT”'J?'f,.lZf.'3;i 'l'-llIa1l.ifaHir. .fi.'aS.?ff..f..'i?fi mm": its 1-000-000 we-war im- 9' buye" fmm E”""" C”md5 "Id of the 5th Divisional Column R.C.A.S.C. and Sigmn. P. L. Cannon from Charlottetown of the 5th Signal Approximately 200 young men are attending the seven-week course.-(Csna- liussis Proposes Y Big Four Talks 0n European Security LONDON (Reuters)-Russls has sent a note to Britain, France and the United States proposing a meet- ing of the Big Four powers in Aug- ust or September to ”' s and prepare the way for the conference on European security suggested by Russia last month, reliable sources said Wednesday. The note was handed to Selwyn Lloyd, minister of state at the Foreign Office, by Jacob Males, Soviet ambassador to Britain. Similar notes were delivered in Washington and Paris to the United States and French governments. A foreign office spokesman de- clined to comment on the note or even admit one had been received. The note it is understood. did not name any site for the proposed meeting of the Big Four-Russia, United States. Britain and France. mitiee reported. "We should be aware of the danger in trying to keep so rich a land all to ourselves." it went on. The committee, headed by A. E. McGilbray, assistant to the presi- dent of General Motors of Canada, said any study of immigration "re- veals it creates more jobs, creates more homes and raises the stand- ard of living." They say what the canm-run IN srzuzcrron They are from left to right, Pte. R. J. Canada had been careful in migrants and their skill often helpcd eliminate production bottle- necks. "As a nation with the greatest medium and small size beaver. the following top prices . . . large to 51.15: medium Dart Smlll. .55 small, 52:: to 580: damaged, aver- age sizes, 25 to 28 cents: mlfteh Wis 35 per cent sold; brown and dark colors brought 318.25 to 324: U. 5. Awards Medal Muskrat was 85 per cent sold with and extra large, 81.20 to 31.40; large and extra large light weight. 61.05 o to '75 cents: large and extra large I F W shot. son to two; medium and n 0 By J. M. ROBERTS Jr. (Annotated Press News Analyst) Iran very nearly fell into the D518 Infill! and ext” 1'"I?9- 311' hands of Soviet Russia three years to :15. There was keen bidding no and now comes back to a place for smaller olferings of ermine. in the has W0,-id became both mink and otter with pricesyreported Ema," and Russia were In-aid to slightly above current market levels. pun men. intern" mo 13,- 1"; they start a general war. When the extreme nationalists of of Iran when she showed signs of staying after the war, and the grapevine had told her that she could not have the ancient state with its oil wealth without a fight. She made some cooing sounds at Tehran, and launched negotiations on some disputes with the smaller nations, but in general her stand- ofishness was remarkable. This attitude made an important contribution to the estimate in the free world that this was not the game in which Russia was ready to risk a general waxr. The final settlement of the Iran- ian dispute is a victory for every- body, even the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company which has appeared to be so wounded. It will. continue to chamber Urges High Population Aim For Canada MONTREAL (CF) -The not less, immigration. position to immigrn tion potential development of any coun- try in the world today, Canada must be prepared to face up to this problem of immigration," it continued. The report said community lead- ers and various organizations and groups ”must provide leadership in developing a public opinion that Cana- will demand the required increases dian Chamber of Commerce yester- in population by immigration." day urged Canada to aim at a popu- lation of at least 30,000,000 by 1975 and said this country necdslmore, COMMJNISTS END MEETING NEW YORK (AP) - Communist "It is the people of Canada who party delegates from 24 states will lose out if short-sighted op- Sunday c o n cl u d e cl a three-day impairs political conference here. the country's future development." held at is secret location the chamber's immigration com- closed doors. i It was behind Tuesday. Augut 10. 1054 1-sooureau3'rap-r Court Martial Board Rules Againsl-I Verdict Handed Down By Naval” Court OTTAWA, OP)-The court martial appeal board Thursday quashed conviction of two Navy officers on charges of negligence in the grounding of a Canadian destroyer in Korea a year ago. By s 3-2 decision, the board struck down the Navy court mar- tial verdict against Cmdr. Richard Chemweth of Montreal. former captain of the destroyer Huron, and ordered a new trial. The two dissenting members contended that the conviction should be quashed and no new trial held. By -unanimous decision. the five- member board wiped out the con- viction against Lt.-Cmdr. T. J. C. Thomas of Dartmouth, N. 8., of- ficer of the watch at the time of the grounding July 18, 1953, on Yang Do island off the east coast of North Korea. The Navy has no appeal from the board's decision. Chenoweth, Thomas and Lieut. George Emerson of Bathurst, NB. navigator of the Huron. were con- victed of negligence by a Navy court martial at Halifax last Aug- ust and sentenced to be severely reprimanded. Emerson did not ap- peal his conviction. No one was hurt in the grounding, shortly af- ter midnight while the Huron was on patrol. The board found that Chenoweth had been accused of negligence but had not been informed in exactly what respects he had been negli- gent. Mr. Andette referred to the ”meagrcness and paucity of the prosecution evidence on many scores and its positively exculpa- tory nature in relation to at least one point." There was not even any evi- dence, he added, to identify Cheno- weth as Captain of the Huron at the time of the grounding. "The shortcomings of the prose- cution in such circumstances weigh heavily agalnstthe Crown upon whom the onus lies. From the mere evidence in the record it does not seem that the court below the court martial could reasonably have found the appellant Cheno- weth gullty.... "It is with great regret that I feel compelled to order a new trial for appellant, with all the disturbance. expense and worry which it will involve for him when neisnot tbosuthorefhis own misfortune in this respect." 3 Mr. Addy wrote: ' "The reeord....is so incomplete ...that I fail to see how a court.- acting reasonably on the evidence adduced before it at trial. might have convicted. unleu the mem- bers of the court used their per- sonal naval knowledge to establish the additional facts necessary to nnd the appellant guilty... "It is absolutely fundamental that an accused, in order to be convicted, must be convicted on legal evidence adduced before him in court, and that all the essential particular: and elements of the offence must be proven in evi- dence. and that the accused must be given an opportunity to meet and explain or contradict this evi-' dence. "Any regulation in any way lim- itinr these most basic principles of British Justice must, in my opin- ion, be very strictly interpreted... "There is no evidence on the record that the captain was not on duty when he should have been on the bridge. nor that he faued in some material way to instruct his subordinates, nor that he was obliged at that particular time to be on the bridge himself to ensure that the position of the ship was fixed, nor is there any evidence as to what constitutes proper fixing, or was there any evidence that the captain knew or should have known at that time that the ship was not being properly flxed.... "Except as to the evidence that the ship did. in fact, go aground on the tip of Yang Do island the evidence in so far as the accused is concerned is completely excul- patory and I am therefore led to the inevitable conclusion that the court martial must, in some mys- terious way, have supplied the missing facts through its naval knowledge of navigation and the technical matters of fixing a ship." Evidence at the court martial was that Thomas received a sug- gestion from the navigator that he alter course 20 degrees port (to the left). Thomas asked the navi- gator to check. The navigator checked and again suggested the 20-degree alteration, which was carried out. The ship hit the is- land two minutes later. filf.'”.i”..i” :i."”rii??.E;3il To RCAF Member l.”3i"..'il?.7”f.l. iiilifiailriiifhmiifa gggoggfg 6;; 3503'; 3531? 33:1; muskrst wu 90 re! M9 "W 59' owrawa. (GP) - The United up lilder :9-rahltif uni"! nlfrhr ”;';f bursemenfs for its losses without riinlns in nvemse 15 W cm "ml" states Wednesday awarded its air tours efemsvgb 5 0” Th egrlgm; putting Britain in the position of the levels of the May we in L01” medal to mt. Lt. Frederick w. rnc rs u v norce(-mmilr I the M, ,xp1.,m,, 'l””' D M” ”' mm mmkm W” Em" of the RC” for mmmmus iovelmlneni 03115 do which had offered. Muskrat has been on the service with the 1.7.8. 5th air force uh! 0- I23 32 - STILL WAN-rs "ROCK" decline for some months and the in Korea. 9 00” I'M Russian sale is just a continuation Hon. Don 0. Elisa. U.S- mini-5'-Cl" But Britain feared Russia might MADRID (AP)-The authorita- ,,g ml, daeune. one of the reasons pinned on the medal in a ceremony invoke an old treaty giving her the tlve newspaper Arriba said Wed- given for the lower prices in Cm- at the embassy here. t right to intervene against foreign ncsiliay Splairti lwilldnotayotint any; ada was the cancellation, or rather Flt. Lt. Evans, 83-year-old tie mm, 1,, Iran, The 3,-mm got out, lcoa itroncyba nmc u Xe: inrlaaillBrilt- su-m-won or W or PM ” 0i””".::d..S”s: :2 '2: .:::a:.:. I t:;...:.: :r..:.. mnmhl 10; mliukmt larglrr-Ijeng 1:; I?Ie:rl':adn Theatre ein carlyolgga REDS FLAY KEY ROLE ress rockyat the western entrance headgear or root?! v . A r ' new 1- ;:.::n.::c::"8;..:l::::: ":...:::.i ””l..i”.?”..:'2' .?.i2”"2:”i;': i2-"ioi-slfS”'S?”ii?”r"--i?-1- Si???- In T - c - ' . rmuc a. A-monk. who W to mtwom Esllny of ml... premier Mossa- rmtbilshed, 5;; e;;';g;iagoc:h";"5,,',;); well known to 1111' firm?" hm '-mnmjr neg)-I, new in jail, to defy Britain re ”"'..”G-be" ,. was Ca umd b. he dgy of the silver fox EDINBURGH (Reuters) -- The i ng 0WF9F' I 73 3 9 5 in the 1y; ch” g of the wild Dowager Duchess of Bucclcuch, 1" the hoe M R cmmblne em Brlieln AUK- 3. 1704- 1:;gu5s":g;1ce' bamch xgeseuch in me mother of the Duchess of Glou- omy' mm” W” In ” puma" to - take over at almost any time. But 1 G0 ERNOBFGENEEAL Umled sli”';"H'u1;pgL:wt2:;.?:,t gliseuvllaflead hBe;forSe.tll1lerrl'iar)1r'iai:-Iiisxgie the united expression of world am V est snnus ur cl ' t. l-ion. Vincent Massey Isl in in 1893. she was Lady Margaret ODIHIOB EXP!!!-564 thfoulh NH! Th9 I7- 1-Iiidcimi-thrir 11:13: Ppi: lhmlwcgfigfaonf Ape. B;-Idgeman, United Nations had driven her out Canada! lath governor-general. i Trappers are shifting to other lines of employmet to make livelihood- Prices for skim. except possibly raccoons in the North. are so D00? as to make trappinz lnrselv unpro- fitable. Trimming furs-wolves. red ioxea and the like-are not moving because they are out of the cur- rent fashion trend. Large rcceivinif houses report their worst buying rt-cord in years. If demand continues slack. the slump might write an end to mori- or the trapping business. Indians and Eskimos In Alaska are under- going real prlvatlon because their rxistenceis based on furs and they will need direct Government as- sistance. As usual the annual for catch was led by muskrats but even these animals continued in a down- ward trend that has been due to prices and the so-called muskrat cycle. storms which drive salt sort! up the Louisiana marshes have been killing the plant food muakrata ell in survive. Mr. Askbrook said flatly that prices paid for raw furs are not sufficient to encourage trappinl. because there is little opportunity for profit. The condition of the domestic raw fur mtrket is de- plorable. the Interior Department official declared in his summary on the fur catch. With few excep- iions. the annual takes report- ed by the chief fu ' ucin states are ltlll on the decline. 'I'i'ie,fl1l' trade is attempting to spur the re- vival or neglected furs by develop- ins and marketing popular-priced items. It is a cooperative venture that should benefit His entire in- dustry. ::1I.IAlTf ls AND TRUCKS s3o-ooo wonru USED cans AND P- mucxs MUST no sow: THIS IS A JIIIIKEIIS and MECHANICS PARADISE CARS TRUCKS 1932 CHEVROLET SEDAN I941 Ton INTERNATIONAL - . .- I936 CHEVROLET SEDAN I940 IV2 Ten CHEVROLET with good pIuf- . form and rocks. "34 DODGE 55”" 1942 1 Ton CHEVROLET 1931 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN "46 ,,4 M DODGE 1933 PONTIAC 5EDAN I946 K.55 INTERNATIONAL (2 Ton) 1935 pgyuoum sgpsn 1945 1 Ten INTERNATIONAL I939 CHEVROLET SEDAN 1941 2 Ton roan Igoolghnx:-orle a 1 r INTERNAT - 1940 sruossaxra SEDAN "48 ”" ” '"”' 1939 PONTIAC SEDAN tor. fires. platform rocks. I939 HUDSON COUPE A 1947 1 Ton none: ma MERCURY 1 Ten Nor: MAKE AND YEAR -. IF YOU HAVE A can on TRUCK SIMILAR ro THOSE on SALE THIS is Your orronrumrv TO on YOUR srg: PARTS - MOST as THE ABOVE LISTED cans AND mucus AT 3100 on LESS These can have their good points at W0" 55 Y9"? - SPECIALS - mo 2 Ten rose .7." 5350.00 1733' rlyilior-ulIl:IrlE(ililr:ii;'lit:t.f:I-:nnlng mm mo 3 Ton MERCURY s39s.oo ,. 5495,” I952 Va ten INTERNATIONAL I952 I ton INTERNATIONAL-New fruclf 1953 V: Poll INTERNATIONAL-P. u. Iedy con'difi0n- mi VIM”- - n-there III nondi- 1954 V: fen INTERNATIONAL "" FM” 5"” "9 V ' K iiFOUR IKIGH Capitol Recording Stem Singing Stars of the Red Slielton Show Tiler famous greupfliet kept the song I "O Baby I Get So Lonely" At the of the Hit Parade ell Susnnier APPEARING AT THE IIOLLAWAY OLIIB TUESDAY AIIGIIST 10th Great interest is being taken in Palomino mink and here is In article written for the National For News by Maynard Johnson: "How I Discovered the Palomino" -. . One Jul! day, back in 100. I was counting my Pastels and came across two light colored kits in a litter of seven, a male and a fun- Ile. There mother was s Pastel. - ilefrigsrstiss sum it scnvioc Repairs To All Makes . tion (I. . ' morons 0:00 to 10:00 PM. . , Admission SI.00 1950 1 M. popp.'-sg-air. bgdy, excellent "41 nnzou-".1 5EpAN...g.gisnred, re- I Children 506 ' condition. registered. 130MIl?l0"Ud- Rewinding and Repairs ' ?;'Emunm.;:. Floor Show and Dense 10:15 PM. to 2:15 AM. ' S aspire Tile Fear Knidlts will hire pen Adnlulen 31.50 W. R. J E N P I. Ehctrlc , Music Supplied Iy-THE DOWNTOWNIRS -.3. .......u For Table Resenretlens oiei ms or mo N 200 GREAT IlE0ll0E ST. ml 5533”; ' ' ”';;.;- L.-,.,.,,.,...;;.-eg.-.