MAXIMS OPA. MERE MAN .1--: his truth boiusilioll universe mm. 11011111119" """- rahsu-so that In I is boundless 5! iuP.l.l. SOCIAL CREDIT RETURNED TO POWER IN ALBERTA um chart tuiowss. lssinisui-s:.:. 015.00 per annum. Iiisewhoro "Inna. ootiisr Provinces and U. S. A. 012.00 per aiussana. Read by Covers Prince Edward Island Like" the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 6, 1952 3 Everybody water-colour shows MAXI Ms OFA MERE MANV A little painting is the innocent rid quiet mind. 14 PAGES Canadian Pi oi: DownsiBecliJet In Basil: Publisher Of Two Toronto Papers Dies Unexpectedly Severe Storm in Saint John Area SAINT JOHN. N. 3-. WP)--A vicious summer storm pounded the Saint John, area to- night, setting fires, douslng street and home lights and plugginil yewers. Lightning ignited is small bosthouse on the Kennebecasis riverfront of the city and on the Belleisle River in nearby Kings County a barn was hit and de- slroyed. The rain was general through- out the province and expected to kill several forest fires and re- duce the extreme hazard rating an all N. B. woodland. It also broke a drought which had begun in damage crops in some areas. BOOSTS FORESTS STOCKHOLM-(CF)-Campaigns or good forestry management and low reforestation laws are credit- -d with increasing the total wood 1" Swede-n's forests to about 65 hilllon cubic feet, compared with 30 billion cubic feet in 1929. Coming Events "Hope River picnic cance'llpd. -vrnmi at Sei1l'lemu'n Hall to- night. "Dance Flat River Hail Friday, August 3th. "Dance. Morelrnall, tonight. Burns Orchestra. "Reserve Tuesday, July 26th. for Lot 8 Mission Picnic at West Point. "Reserve August 13th for annual "tcnic at St. Anthony's, Bloomfield. "Reserve Sept. 1st for bingo. aazaar and dance at Emerald Hall. "Green Rodd Parish Picnic. rhursday, August 7th. "Try our Purina Finance Plan for hogs and poultry. Dillon dz Spiiiett. "Sandy's Drive-in Theatre, shows Tuesdays, wednesdays and Fridays at D P. M. "Ice Cream and Dance, West- moreland school. Friday, August illh. "Show in MbrEIHall on Tues- day, Friday and Saturday only In 8.30 P. M. "Reserve Thursday, August 21, '.or” chicken supper in Kinkora Tia . "Unloading "3; bilik wheat, Phursdsy. 03,25 cwt. Dillon st Spiilett. Bring bags. "Dance, Refreshments, Kelly's flrloss School, Wednesday, August t 1. "St. Teresa's Parish Hall. August 7t-h. Buppor, 6 P. M. till 8 P. M. Games and Dance. "Chicken Supper A St. Charles Nail. Thursday, August 7th. Slipper 5-10. Games. Dance, 10-1. Come ""4 enloy good food. , "Murray Harbour United Church mt PRTW. Wednesday, August 8th. Sen Highfleld Highland Dancers. other attractions. "WGGKIY dance in Rustlco Cross School. Oyster Bed Bridge, Thursday night. V "Weekly Thursday night Dance Mt. Stewart Canadian Legion Hall MICKBIIZIG ' ” A I" .3. Aug. 5-- ” TORONTO, Aug. George Mccullagli. 6 - (GP) - 47, publisher of the Toron- ""2to Globe and Mail and the Toronto Tele- gram. died at his Thornhill iome tonight V a. heart elzure. Death .he of publisher :ame unex- pectedly when he appeared on the road to recovery after lengthy and recurrent ill- - -1.. ness. lvlr. lvici,uuagn's story - book newspaper career began as an 11. year-old newsboy in his native London, Ont., hustling copies of the old Toronto Globe he was to purchase Oct. 14, 1936. Five weeks after purchasing the Globe he bought the larger Toronto Mail and Empire and merged the two into Canada's largest morning pa- per. the Globe and Mail. On Nov. 25. 1948, Mr. McCul- lash b0llEhi- the Toronto Evening Telegram for 33,610,000 to becom publisher of two of Toronto's-three daily papers. Born March 16, 1905, he was son of George H. and Anne Catharine Mccullagb, both of London. 111 1929 he married Phyllis Laidiaw, daughter 01' the late John D. Laid- law. He is survived by his widow, two sons and one daughter. other relatives include four sis- ters, Mrs. Gordon Morris and Mrs. Ralph Blackmore of Toronto. Mrs. Harold Godber of Montreal and Mrs. Thelma Thompson. A magazine once dubbed Mr. Mccuilagh "Canada's wonder boy" because of his meteoric rise from humble beginnings to a position of wealth and influence. in his youth he joined the staff of the Globe at London. selling subscriptions in Western Ontario. He caught the eye of the news- paper's management and was brought to Toronto where he was assigned to circulation and given the extra task of locating promis- ing young men to act as Globe cor- respondents throughout the prov- lnce. Before long Mr. Mcculiagh left Quiet Election 1 in South Korea PUSAN. Korea, Aug. 6 -!Wcd-V, ncsday)-(AP)-The Republic 01 Korea chose a president. Tuesday in a quiet, orderly election marred only by one Communist; guerrilla. raid on a polling place. Aged President syngman Rhee seemed assured of re-election. al- though returns from this first dir- cot election of a president will not be known for two or three days. Previously the president was chos- on by the National Assembly. Government officials estimated 00 per cent of the 8,300,000 eligible voters went to the polls. Long lines of Koreans. including women with babies strapped to their backs, formed outside Pusan voting booths. Police were on the alert for Com- munist guerrillas, expected to try to disrupt the voting. But the Reds struck only at s small village near Hadong, 70 miles west of Pusan. About 40 guerrillas stumbled into police guarding the village polling place. Police killed six, wounded 10 and drove off the rest. Rhee was opposed by three other candidates. But since he is the only one well known. his election seem- ed certain. Voters also chose I vice-president from among nine candidates. Migs Vemre Almost To 38th Parallel SEOUL, Aug. 6-(Wcdnesday)- (CP) - Communist Migs swept southward almost to the 33th par- allel in Korea Tuesday and ll. S. Sabre jets, one of them piloted by a Canadian, blasted four out of the skies in five clngfizhls. The Fifth Air Forcc reported six other swopt-wing Red jets were damaged-one by a com- paratively slow U. S. F-84 Thun- derjet. The Air Force described the Communist jets as "very aggres- sive." Perhaps they were trying to head off fighter-bomber as- saults which the Allies warned would be unleashed on '78 North Korean towns housing military installations. Civilians were warn- ed by radio and pamphlets to get out. Flt. Li. J. C. A. Lafrance of Loreitevilie, Quc., R.C.A.F. ex- change pilot with the Fifth Air Force, was listod'among jet pilots credited with kills in today's battle. Lafrance arrived in Korea in June, under a Canadian agree- ment. with the U.S.A.F. in send to Korea R fighter pilot a month up to a minimum of five. to help the R.('.A.F. build up a pool of pilots skilled in jet warfare. Egyptian Gov't Seizes Property Of King Farouk CAIRO. Aug. 5 --(CPV - The government in a. cabinet decree to-. nlght seized- control of abdicated King Faroulcs properties in Egypt. They are estimated at more than El00,000.000. The actual value was a secret of Farouk's reign, which ended July 28 when he was forced to leave the country. Government officials acknow- ledged they have no master listing of Farouk's Egyptian properties but hoped the papers seized at his abdication in Alexandria will give them the needed information. A prince, a doctor and n colonel were sworn in today to act as the Egyptian crown until infant King Ahmed Fuad 11 comes of age. The regents-Prince A b d e l Moneim, Dr. Bahleddin Barakat. and Col. Rashad Mohnnna-hold the royal powers and prerogatives, though since Gen. Mohammad Niiguib's army coup these powers will likely not be as extensive as when Farouk held them. V Six-month-old Fund is with his father and mother, Narrlman, on the Italian island of Capri. . Meanwhile, moves by the new government indicated a more en- cournging attitude toward foreign residents, capital and ideas. The government coupled its anti-cor- rtlpiion drive with measures be- lieved designed to restore confid- ence among foreigners. Premier Aiy Maher today can- celled previous milltary orders which had banned about 40 foreign newspapers and magazines from the country. The bans in many cases had followed publication of articles about Farouk which had been interpreted as uncompliment- ary. Simpsons To Build Store in Vancouver VANCOUVER, Aug. 5411?) Robert Simpson Ltd., will start. construction of a 86,000,000 mull order centre and department store in suburban Burnaby in October, company general manager C. W. Jaggs said today. The mail order business of Simpson's and Sears- Roebuck were recently merged. vice. Admission 50 cents. H”Hnmouun w. r. Chicken and ndm Supper in Hibbsrt Trernere's Vufgdmyso bazaar. Thursday. Aug- ,IM'5h0;W. Afton Hall. Wednesday. Sun. Otniloy and Mr. Malone". W! "in! Mariette Main and James trnore. A great comedy. m'IPWill be loading hogs at the :l Wins points each Thursday. ;.:'::t.'::.'::' ."".t:' .13” M -"1 1'1 . . . Ewen and Cassley. pm M-V”. "Y”'- "OVA.-1'.-r'o Dlsnning to falehd Winsioa Congregational MPBWGIV. Chicken supper served " G D-1'11. Full band on grounds P-'''- M50 sports. Come early. B"”i"l"Il7 meeting h:lIdlIch- Canadian Legion will be lmugv the lasion Home. Char- "v Tlmfldlv. August 7, at 33.1mm. Allmem-b rslplosso at- Kingston Begin Repairing Damage OTTAWA. Aug. 5- (CF)-Em glnesrs today started repairing the damage of ti 12-hour fire which hit the Parliamentary Lib- rary Monday. Meanwhile, librarians began dry- ing and sorting thousands of books soaked by a sprinkler syr- iem and tons of water poured through the conical roof during the blue. . There is still no estimate of the damage. Reports were current, however, that about half of the library: 1,000,000 volumes were damaged, and that the building's giass-and- metal roof will have to be re- placed. Despite the danger of a weak- snod roof. library officials today To Parliamentary Library books from the sodden, circular library through the corridor which separates it from the main part of this Par- liament BuIldinga' centre block. The volumes were strewn for drying purposes in the corridors. Meanwhile, a temporary refer- ence room was set up in the Com- mons' railway committee room. The Fire Department had no r port on the cause of the blaze. w'ltich broke out high In the dome. Faulty wiring is suspected. The immediate problem. said 1:. A. Gardner, chief architect of the Public Works Department, is to fix the holes firemen made in the metal roof. In addition to the water which wfis played through these holes. a rainstorm added to the water troubla. carted piles of said. Uranium production in the had 13 calves and has outlived sev- LOS ANGELES, Aug. 5--(AP)- General Eisenhower tonight out- lined a 10-point program for the United States-a program aimed at lasting peace, honesty in gov- ernment, equality for all citizens and loyalty in federal service. The Republican presidential nomlncc also crillcd for protection of the earnings and the. savings. of the people "from Ii double toll of high prices and high taxes." And be appealed to veterans to help him put the program into effect. In notes prepared for a speech lit the annual encampment of the vctcriihs of foreign wars-his first mrijor nridrcss slncc the Republi- cans chose him as their standarrl Vbenrcr July ii--the General set forth ilicsc "positive objectives": "1. To increase America's strength: spiritual, creative and material. "2. To win a just and lasting Eisenhower Reveals lo-Point Program peace secured by the strength of the free world. ”3. To build a. based on war. "4. To make America's promise of equality of living fact for every prosperity nut American. "5, To strengthen and to extend measures for the security and welfare of the people. "6. To protect, the earnings and savings of the people from double toll of high prices and' high taxes. "7. To serve the worthy inter- ests of every group of our peo- ple, yet make the test of each policy: Is it good for America? "8. To restore honesty in gov- ernnicnt. '19. To ensure, by means which, gill-irds our basic rights, that those who serve in government are Am- ericans of loyalty and dedication. "10. To rcvivc in every Ameri- can the faith .ihat he can achieve a better future for himself and his family." roacacouliirtsf France, Aug. S-(CP)-Sir Jock Drummond, 61, Britain's Second World War food planner, ills wife and their 12- year-old daughter were brutally slain early today in the foothills of the French Alps where were vacationing. Police said robbery appeared to he the motive. Money and suit- cases were missing. Shots were about about 1 :i.m. by a farmer living nearby. Up and doing his chores four hours later, he found the body, of the child, Elizabeth, lying at the side of the highway near which the Drum- mnnds had been camping. Her skull was shattered. Up the rolid, near their mobile, lay the body of Lady Drummond, the former Anne Wllbrabsm who collaborated in Sir Jack's writings. She was shot through the heart. Across the road, next in ii high- way market, was the body of Sil' Jack, rircssed only in blue pajama trousers. He had been slain by three bullets. His body was cov- ered by a camp col. A policeman, diving into the nearby Durance River, found what authorities believe was the itoath weapon--lin American army car- binc. Part of the stock was found near Eli7.nhr-th's body. Appat-cntl,v us she iricd to csczipc she ltliii been struck by rcpcntcii hlmvs of such force as to splinter the guns ivoorlcn butt. A police dog lcd police in a railroad where the scent was lost. Ncnr Dignc, some 20 miles away, the uniform of n dcscrtcr from the French Foreign Legion was they Hilto- found later. In It was a letter ndrtressr-rl to an lialinn. Police wcro unable immedlatcly to con- nect. the uniform with the stay. ings. The Drummonds left their home, Spencer House, Nuihall, Nottinghziin, Iilnillfliifl, lust month and wcrc driving in Marseille- and the French Riviera. Sir .lack, a tall, spore, modest man, was scientific adviser to the lillnislry of Food during the war. lie gave Britons a balanced diet - short on taste, but long on nu- trition. Knightcd in 1944, he never us:-ii his second name, Cecil, and re- fused to be called Sir John. He was the only knight called Sir Jack. Lady Drummoud hclprfl him write the book ”The Englishman's Food." Sir Jack once predicted that if the world refused to co- operate in husbandlng its food resources, there would be an in- ternational famine within 50 years. 9 So. Africa To Produce First Uranium Shortly JOHANNESBURG. South Africa, Aizz. 6 -iR.ci;ter.s1- S0ll'.'.l Africa 'lilII produce its first uranium by the end of September. the Johan- nesturg Star said today. Product- ion is expected to inertia from gold orzs hi the West Rand Consolidat- ed Mines at Krugersdorp, about 20 miles from here. the newspaper Union has been financed by the U. S. and Britain, whom south Africa has contracted to sell the uranium. WHITFIER. CiIii.f., Aug. 5 (AP) - Putaco Hazel, s Holstein cow, today Mi. 1: record for milk production. After today's milking her total was 267,308 pounds of milk. This is four pounds more than the previous record held for 15 years by a cow now dead, own- ed by the Michigan Board of Con- trol. "lviarel" is 17 years old, has British Party Brutally Slain In French Alps Fruit Crop Report Given " when a car he. was driving careen- at. Fredericton Junction but is not has tentatively been set for Thurs-I parently pavement and spun off the high- way. smashing out poles and leav- ing scores of telephone lilies hang-1 ing like icicles. Driver George Ta)-I escaped unhurt. the area. Th8 men WCTC liElli0VEd 511.111. 0'I'rAWA, Aug. 5 -(C111-There won't be quite so many apples,l pears, plums and grapes around this year as there was in 1951. The Bureau of statistics, in its first estimate of Canada): 1052 fruit. crops, said yields of these fruits will be moderately smaller than last year. But output of all other fruits will "up to some ex- tent" and the apricot crop is ex- pected to show a big increase. The Canadian apple crop is at present estimated at 12,8-14,000 bushels compared with 13,613,000 bushels last year. Lower yields in Ontario, Quebec and New Bruns- wick will outwelgli larger crops in Nova. Scotla and British Columbia. The pear crop is put at 073,000 bushels compared with 1,201,000, plums and prunes at 623,000 com- pared with a74,000 and grapes at 88,275,000 pounds compared with 88,303,000 pounds. The yield of peaches is expected to increase to 2,019,000 bushels compared with 1,708,000 last year. 'l'his year's strawberry crop is pilt at 26,511,000 quarts compared with 25,4-15,000 last. year, raspber- ries at 13,010,000 compared with 12,724,000 quarts and loganberries at 1,137,000 pounds compared with 887,000 pounds. Fatal Accident On N.B. Highway; Phone lines VCul By cianaalhn-13:-1;. Staff Writer EDMONTON. Aug. 0 --iCP)-- The Social Credit Party swept back sawr JOHN. N. 17., Aug. 5 - , ,Gp,g Accidents law this snap into power in Alberta tonight, noon in wmch one man was kmed winning its fifth straight election and a. truck loaded with fruit was 3”" 1965- wreckcd cut telephone communi- Relum M the Gwemmem W7” cations to some areas north of heltded by 43'Y5”"3ldt B”-I197 teaching Ernest C. Manning was reported by the Canadian Press at 7:19 p. 111. MST, ti0:19 p. 1'n.E'DT) 19 mmutrs after the polls closed. The re-election of the party whlrh gained its first foothold in Canada in 10.15 under the leader- ship of the late William Abcrliart was assured carly by returns from Saint John and all areas east, in- eluding Nova Scotla. Extra crews were working tonight to repair the lines. At Petcrsvllle, Queens County. 40 miles north on the Broad Road.l Steadman Brewer, Oromocto, died, ed off the left of the highway , about 4 DV mV Brewer was about 30 rural constituencies. Country polls years old and married. PH” MM. closed at 6 p. m, an hour call.er tin. Oromocto, owner of the car ml” the city pout” and a passenger in it, is in hospital Took Early Lad b l' ' d i it s , . 1 eiexe seriousy hull An inquest, The smm cram SVVVOW was av day. parent from the start as most sov- M Nauw,gewm,kV 25 ml,” Mswcrnment candidates blliilt up (taill- on route 2. a (Davidson Transportlnmndlml ”d5' They ll d"led I 8! Halifax tractor-trailer rlgimarpns as me mum m.mmuCd.' . loaded with peaches and pea” up, Five of the nine cabinet minis- re-eiection were - iters standing for ' 1 - it . . skldded on Ian wen” lreiurned in their rural constituen- lclcs within 1 1-2 hours of the close lof their polls. With nearly a third of the House elected, the Opposit- )o,.V Tmm. NV 5” is in hospital M-ion had no members elected. S L J V d h: All indications pointed to an- Gx: Paoalgrsois Mml:1anad5V5m;Vnt;VVothcr lops:dcdVI.e11tslature majority .for the chain. Credit Party. The and Malcolm McPherson, 'Prur0,-,LlbPmu and the C. C FVV only Op- position parties with enough can- didates to form a. government, ap- peared to be heading along the same line as in the 1948 electron. At dissolution, Liberals had three seats and C. C. F. two to Social Cl'r-ditfs 49. B (C(Tr1til'l-u0dV0ll-p1:Be- sVc61.-4T- Party Standing 11.40 p. m. MST-:Canadlan Press party standings in Alberta: The truck. en route from Boston to Halifax, wound up on its side after spewing lt.s load of fruit over through a window of the smashed tab. The accident took place about Princess Margaret's Friend To Wed Elected: Vsc , ........... .. 33 LONDON. Aug, 5 - tRctitcl's1--yfyggdjng; Jane McNelll, 21-year-old Ekigllslllsc , is 5 l l l l 1 society girl tonight, announced her 1,11,, engagement to the Earl of Dal-ipc keith. Scottish peer whose name cap has often been romantically link-l1nd.sc ed with Princess Margaret. (mg, The 28-year-old Earl will be thet1m1 -Lab, fifth of the Princess immedlateCTotal circle of young men frlcnds tot ----- marry. , l M K. 7" tSweden Hands Strong rumors of his engagement swiftly followed by gossip that het . llussia Two to the Princess last January were was already engaged to Miss Mc-I More Protests Neill, at the time visiting her fa- STOCK!-lOLlVf,'Ail-g. 5 -- (Aili- ther. a Hong Kong lawyer. The rumors cropped up again to- Sweden handed Russia two more strong protests today and hinted day and Miss McNeill confirmed she might take to the United Na- theni hcrsclf, although an an- nouncement had been scheduled to ,ttons her quarrel with the Soviet lover the shooting down of two un- Great Efforts T(TBM():s-tIB Production Of Uranium By Douglas flow OTTAWA, Aug. 5 - iCPl -The "great urgency" of demand aris- ing from the United States atomic bomb is spurring Canada's ef- forts to increase hi-r ilranium pro- duction sharply and to find more of the vital mineral in the north. (The efforts are already paying o . Production at the government's first mine has been boosted sub- stantially this year by a big con- struction program. A second mine is due to start producing next April. By then Canada hopes to be producing at least twice as much uranium as now. Officials describe the program as an urgency of paramount im- portance. Canada is in no position to produce bombs herself and this only makes it all the more im- portant that she help the Amer- icans who can and do. The direct link is seldom men- tioned publicly but the records in- dicste the big majority of Canada's uranium goes into U. S. bomb pro- duction. For instance, W. J. Bennett, head of the government's uran- tum-mining Eldorado Mining and Refining (10441 Ltd., has said Canadian uranium now "in as- sociated almost exclusively with an instrument of war." Without mentioning U. 5. needs. the latest annual report of the Eldorado firm emphasises the "great. urgency" of the demand for uranium and the "paramount: importance" of getting new pro- duction facilitiea into stride as swiftly as possible. Canada uses only a minor frac- tion of this uranium for her atomic plant at Chalk River. 0nt,, engaged only in non-military re- search. It is U. 8. requirements which are behind these phases of the current hunt below the earth. in laboratories and over lonely wastes of land: 1. The first Eidnrndn mine in en of them Ei1Ed on passion. it) appear tomorrow in The Times. Mliss McNelll, a model for Lon- don fashion dcslgner Norman Hartncll. said no wedding plans have been made. i 5 armed Swedish planes last June. Swedish Foreign Minister Oesten Unden summoned the Soviet Am- bassacior. Rear-Admiral Constan- tine Rodionov, and handed him two notcs, one of which askcd Moscow to order its diplomats here to strip spying on Swedish military establishments. in the fifiii of a series of pro- Party Refl- ls Defeated expressed ”sul'pl'lse and regret" at Russia's refusal to let the international Court of Justice pass on Swedish charges that, lhc aircraft ucrc shot down over in- tcvnatlonnl waters. The note scrvcd notice that thr Swedes "rcscrvii their full right to to the matter in the form EDMONT()N, A115! 5 -- K-Tl - , Arthur Wray, Social Credit Part),-V rcbel, tonight was defeated by oi-1l1'6V”'l ficial government. candidate Lee, Leavltt in Banlf-Cochrane. Mr.!P WTl)', first elected lo the AibCl'i:'l mglslmll" 1" 1944' 1”” mm dmuhlslkcdllil might take the issue to V” Mm me Kwcmmelnl and mlsltlic ncxt session of the U. N. Gen- Shumed ''9 "M 0m"35"'l0” 5”” "Ilcral Asscmblv. At, stake. iii tho the House before the 1048 eicciion, Swdish .-,w'-V is fr;-gdnm of (hr when he WON 5-! M1 Indeibendfm-Baltic Sea where the planes were Social Creditor. tlost. last June. Immigration Increase Reported For This Year arrivals in 19502 95,211 in ms: OTFAWA. Aug. 5 -(CPS! --WW 125.414 in 1948; 114,127 in 1941; and ads admitted more immigrants in 71.179 in 1945, the first six months of this year than she did in each of the years n: mtg year was 1946, 1947. 1949 and 1950. The Immigration Department immigrants, They announced today that 08,057 new compgrpd with 14,130 in citizens entered in the six-month regpondlng six months of period compared with 79.785 in the number or British corresponding period of 1051, an gbnui, 3,000 increase of 18,272 d fotlwr country V The rate of arrivals, if continue .' The number of Fr:-nci could establish ri near-rr-cord )'0iIl'.grants lticrcascd slightly for immigration. However. im-lcomporcd with 2,272. blc V V This was intcl'pl'elcd in diplo- th e N t-wcomcr in the latter months of the year. A total of 190,391 were admitted 27,427. an increase of 40 per cent Arrivals from the 1'nlted state year since 1913, when approxlmatc- an increase of seven per cent. iy 000,000 arrived. Canadians returning from th since the and of the Second United States also World War. Canada has admitted about 311 per cent. with 722,087 immigrnnts.nbout one-third turninc in the "'- of them British. There were 70,013 compared with 1,025. 1'. in tests over the shootings. Swedcnl and at the time they will find sult- lmntic circles as an indication that- liighilght for the flrstsix months 63-per-cent increase in the number of British totalled 23.001 Wednesday. the cor- 1951, The advance slowly rastwarri across the exceeded by Marltlmcs lA'0(lllFSfl.'ll'. followed by the total from snyiclt-aring wcallicv itnmi- lSI"i0wcrs to 2.767 ' tiiilnricrstnrms migration Minister Harris said re- from all Nnrthcrn European count.- centiy he expected the rate to drop tics totalled 311.478 compared with and 71!. in 1051-the largest number for any totalled 3,931 compared with 3.638. t increased by 2.104 re-,uinx later than Charlottetown. six monlhslsun rises today at. 5.03 A. M and Morning Daily Founded 1881. the Guardian. Five Cents. Win 5th BS-t-siaiglst Victory Since 1935 p ,0pposition Party lieaders Elected l I EDMONTON. Aug. 5 - roe) - Liberal leader J. Harper Prowss Itonight was re-elected in Edmon- tton. lie was the first Opposition lParty member returned in the Al- tberta election. Mr. Prowse ran lsecond to Preniler E. C. Manning. 'first candidate, t.o be elected in Edmot-.lon EDMONTON. A111. 5 - (CPI C. C. F. leader Elmer E. Roper to- Ynlght. won re-clcction in Edmon- ton in the Alberta general elec- tion. A member of the House since a by-election in 1942, he was ulisuccrzssful in his third lstralght attempt to lead his party to power ill a provincial election llrishnfan First lin Uraniutn Bush I l URANIUM CITY, Sask., Aug. 5- (CPJ - An Irishman was the first to stake a claim as the world's first turanium rush began in this town .980 miles northivcst of Regina. Ten minutes after the recorders office opened yesterday, Patrick ll-iughea of County Down, Ireland. lfiled his claim. He led the why idi- some 1,000 prospectors, flushed with the hope of striking it rich in an area ill the Beaver Lodge country near Lake Athabaska. in th: northwest corner of Saskat- chewan. Sunday night. no one knew how many uranium hunters lay in wait in the bush and lake cnunlrv sur- rounding this recently-opened min- 5; town. Yesterday, however, every type of lcorweyance spilled bearded .soilr- doughs, geologists. Indians, and even three womcn. Others trumpet! 21110 bush through rain and mos- , quitocs. Hughes. starlint: but on foot. transferred to a boat and later to ,a waiting aircraft which parachut- ed him down 13 miles from Uran- tlum City. The final leg of his true Vlwas made by taxi which rushed 4 V 611 him to the office. Twenty concessions were thrown open by the Department of Natural Resources yesterday for public stak- ing. More than 500 claims were ex- pected to be registered in the first two days. All the surveyed lots in the new townslte have been taken. and stir- veyors are expected to open .5. other 150 soon. I IMTERIAL OIL EARNINGS I roaoxro, Aug. 5 ...(cr-) -Im. iperlai Oil l.td., estimates its con- lsolidatcd net earnings for the first half of 1952 after income taxes, at 519,203,921. This is equivalent to 04 cents I share and compares with 518.120,- .a60. or 60 cents a share, for the Lcorresponding period of 1951. based Iupon 29,847,227 commonshares now outstanding. l Volume of product sales is ap- proximately nlne per cent greater ,tllan for the first six months or lliist year. I WHERE is A lot 13' MNEY in Ctacuisfiou but if '3EEtAS (0 BE IN otttsa Psoeir-:5 HALIFAX, Aug. ii -(CPI - Offirlal forecasts issued by the Dominion Puhilr Weather office in Halifax and valid until midnight synopsis; Tliundcistorms will island Cloudy. wzdclv scattered ivcriiicsday morn- lng. Continuing warm. lishi. winds Low and high M Clinrlottotown Us )3)dwnl'fl and Prince xi High tirir today at Charlotte- own at 1028 A. M. and 11.51 P. M. I High tide on the North Shore at c,5.33 A. M. and 8.37 P. M. Summcrslde tidc, eighteen min- 5 . J sets at. 7.33 P. M.