.._._._._..___-_._.____ HE WESTERN GUARDIAN k ‘GENT-Mr!- Jahn Pond. M r 1 . an ml! be bought ‘wfilidgiiiswn. w-m at. Toronto Bum. Water IL The Guardian carrier Boy IUMMEISIDI III fiabeflltlfll- ‘iv-Hillel shale be left with ms. o.“ “u! It ally of the following lion; u; will be delivered l|| at 2o per day or lilo per week. {hone up l," your order to the boy resporuihlg f“ “mum on N," ma“ Wltlr Street Int-Phone up PRINCE COUNT! Gaul!” lo Brant . w t Gilli". a? Granivolileigl. lome in lununernlde l; for this oervlae q .,_- Jlbis column to reserved for new! a1 local interest but advertioin| o1; uewsy nature may be inlert- ‘d ,1 z cents n word strictly pay- m, 111 advance. /Bl§.\l.-\-RE.‘-'. helps acid stom- rh a, 1',1v_01' urug C0., Kenslngton. L-232-9-l6-2i. ,.p,5.'1iEl\lBlJR-Comc. to ..the p11.“ ~ 1 s . n. l‘ m L-197-9-l6-4l. _.g1'\' 11 new hcuvv duty auto 11011-4- ...11.<-r_r at braces and avoid .011 11vii;ii1'r and 511011. day troubles. " L-2a2-8-1l-2i. _1.1.\i11"1:n QUANTITY iwvd M3311 1141 ,:1ts for siile, l0 busnes .-m.$11;p l1 braces. L-28l-9-18-2i. -811 ‘m1; Sept. 25th for the hm @11;.»1to11 dinner in Central pedcquo 111111, served by Women's mflnupy L-303-9-l8-2l. DTLL WHILE 0N VISIT --Many friciitis r1 Mr. John MoDougall .111 11c 1i,v.'_srd to know he is iin- roviiu: .1!:1r his recent illness. Mr. cixyuguil motored from Bridge- " . to spend a few day's . "vs on the Island. He was takcii il. 1111120 visiting an old friend Mr. \\‘1ii. Iiat-Kcitdrick. MLss Jean 511m 1. it N. of Springfield West 15 :11 aturrdauce and will accom- pan)‘ Mr. Mciiougall on his home ma AETHIR RETURNS FROM 55A - Azim- almost four months a letter 11.15 been returned to the Canadian National Silver Fox Breeders‘ Association, Summerside, marked “saved from the sea." The letter aas mailed from Summer- side on .\fi1y 25th, last and was re- turned in the sender on September 11111.1! 1\1i.\ addressed to a firm in Pari. but business had become disniptcd beroro the letter got ov- er scas. The envelope bore the 1 cords, "officially secured“ and bore srldences of being "Saved from the m.‘ —NI" \ Candi ', ACCIDENT-Mrs. J. S. lJ|).\lil'(‘f1 roceivod a severe sliakinp 111) and minor injuries when she was struck by a car rliile resrtiing her grandson from being r1111 uyer. Mrs. Gaudet was Walking 111111 her little grandson along the liigiuvay botwocu Ebbs- fleet llllii :41. Louis when sudden- ly the hole boy ran across the road in front. of an approaching tar. Mrs. Gatidet dashed out in front of the car to rescue the boy. iir. l . Gallant, who was driv- 111 the ditcii but could . striking Mrs. Goudot. 11o 1131s 1111'. seriously hurt. She 111s taken 1o her home whore she is I'&‘(‘1l\'t'l'i1l! from the fright and was able rtrr thankful that she to snrc the child-S. —A_'.'1>io.\;1i'.;111'1y' 2000 firearms were registered in Prince County in the ii-si few nooks by the R.C.M.P. “any 11'. 1e models in flreamis d. Mr. Harrison Mac- . que registered an old iijki-t and bayonet which 1' in the American revo- t i. It was brought to the 1.1.1111 by Mr. Maclliarlanes ma- lornai crandfather, Alexander An- derson the elder, at the time of the llriitot! Empire Loyalist Immlgra- tiori. Tho vvcapno is 165 years old, lfuct 11.1011: ‘rho late Mr. Anderson its 110111 lii Eluin, Scotland. and ill-nod tze British Army when a ivitiir 111.111 Mr. MacFarlime also Itgtsforei a very dangerous looking W‘ revolver taken from a dead gQAWYftIlO bv his uncle, the late ‘gtf-ilifi-ct .\faoFarlane who was cqfhl. o. ‘one rf the counties of uorado in tho wild and woolly gg"l‘;1flttgv‘lrt‘l‘fltblo shot himself . I - hm and his mp1“. y Mr. MocFar Staitfeiiicnt On Waterway Is Expected Soon —__._ flmtwa. scat, lT-(CPM-Prime "es t‘ Alurkoiizie King toidabrief kfl;d(‘t\liit‘i(‘ll('0 tonight that lie ex- ‘mt, iairr in the wcck. to make n8 ‘Pulls-at on reports from Wasti- m bi t! i111 negotiations were under d Stilts-on Canada and the Unit- Mm. (s on the power-develop- MRLPWS" 0f the St. Lawrence- m PM"! Joint waterways pro- Pfaftrtciii. Roosevelt made it known m! dttk that the pomibiiity of get- °w""§\}) to ioint development of my,“ lf-Sflltroes along the interna- “""‘1\\'tlv was being explored guts"! Rovcrnment of the two coun- W m w President Roosevelt mini" lmlustrv expansion had Mr r up the question of new 1 ‘m. tgsnurccs and that discussions m“ n t- Iawrcnce project, purely 110d ‘f’ WW9!‘ finale. had been re- m go- t‘. King replied: "I may “s wptiltcvtiiing to sav on that later M?» K1111! said a re . - rt he had re- g"! from Col, . Biggainchair- “k c on progress of the Boards Eéflglin the war there were rc- qan H: possible joint action to de- m” MC‘ Si. Lawrence project be- io; “,0 111v great. drain war indus- urm u d place upon power ro- ' --PAINT Endurance Bruce's. now with Glfddens pure Dfllnt. distributed by L-252-9-17-2i. —LIME MORTAR that will last for years must be aged at least two Weeks after it is siacked then DFODBHY uiixed with good sand. 911161‘ lilmb lime at Braces. L-252-9-l7-2i. —'l‘lil KENSINGTON and Indian Rlyer Poultry and Calf Clubs will ho.d their annual competition on the farm of James Pendergasi, Kon- sington. on Wednesday,‘ Scptcnioir 18th, beginning at 12.30 P. M. At- tend this field day and support the boys and girs in their junior work. Freetown And w Vicinity Mr. and Mrs. Avard Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Gay and Mr. G. l-Iarris of OIIERIY were recent vis- itors to Kensiugtoii. Lleut. Arnold Taylor of the C. A. S‘. Force stationed in Nova Sco- tia. spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Tay- o . Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Champion, son Allan and Mr. and hfrs. Char- les D Howatt. motoierl to Char- lottetown, Sunday. Mrs Peter Pate and Miss Flor- ence Duncan of OLcary spent the week-end in Konsincton. the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Atlanta. Mr. Iaigh Toombs 0f Charlotte- Jovm was in Kensington on Mon- day on business. Mr. and Mrs. Goorrzo Ellis. Mrs. Wyman Phillips and Mrs. P"'c_v Sweet of OLoaijv spent S11ud;1\ in Kensington the guests of Mrs. John S. Bears. amntimouostloned on the brief-- His many fr'enr‘s vvlll roar-rt tn hear that Mr. Glen Cotton is a pa- tient in the Prin-c Erlv. _ s1 21:1 Hospital. Charlottetown. wire"- ilf‘ operation . Mr. Keith Waite airs a business visitor to Bummorsido Monday. Her many frl"~:l~ 11*" “1'~r'i in hear that Miss Annlo Cole is con- fined to her bed suffeiliig v.";tli a severe cold. Dr W. P. McBride 211"‘ 31's with friends in Tign h. Coriurattilatlons to Mr, and Mr. Roy Styles Lani: River on the ro- cent arrival of a bonnie woe lassie. Her many friends will rosrrot tn hear that. Mrs Jrimos I.11tt"cli ‘s now a railont in ihc Prlw- f"~,'-'~- ty Hospital whore she has iaron rc- cently operated on. l1 Charges Powder Plant Blast‘ Was Sabotage DALLAS Texas, Sept. l7.—-fAP)— Represetitative Martin Dies charged today that the Kenvil. N.J., DU\\.'(40l' plant explosion last week was caus- ed by sabotage. and that his l-loiise of Representatives committee on uu- American activities had known tor a year how foreign agents pioticu its destruction. But the government merely "laughed at us" when the commute.- warned it. the chairman of the House group said in an interview. The Hercules Powder Company blast. Thursday, which took 48 iivos, and caused an estimated 514100.000 damale. will be fotovvcd by more sabciailc. he said. unless the gov- ernment intervenes. The ariaiion industry in in particular danger. he “fr: Wuhiuaton, gepresentativc E. Thomas. another member of tlir Dies committee, said invostlitiitois had determined that one tiiinse of the ex ioston was more tiau un- usual. Their flndin s, he satdnvbilld g earlriiz in New- ark tentatively set I01‘ Swi- 33- Thornas forecast evidence showing deep inroads bv fifth 601111111115“ l" the New Jersey-Pennsylvania area. ll. S. riled Cross Spends 5 Million ForBritish Relief WASHINGTON. Sept. l7 —fAP) —The American Rod Cross has spent almost 85.000000 mi relief for Britain, most of it since the begin- ning of September, Chairman Nor- man H. Davis informed the organi- zations‘ central committee today. They said $20,000 had just. been cabled to assist in establishing i0 refugee cottages for poor children under five years of aue whose homes have been wrecked by bombs. An innovation in medical rolief is the sending of blood tilasma to the British Red Cross for use in treating wounded soldiers and civil- ians. In cooperation with Barvard University a hospital is boiii}: os- tabiisiied in Salisbury‘. England. to study and front communicable dis- eases under war-time conditions. Siiieo July tho Red Cross h s sent 102 relief shipments on B isli brats and two by clfivtcr 1". ... 11111.1, .~ '%—'-—r—~ "t-o€“il...l“il£i.‘1iéti’f°°“‘ “'- uudevvvont a successful appendiciiisi McBride enjoy Sunday pleasantly HALIFAX. Sept. l'l—(CP)—1An- napolls Valley fruit-growers mark- ed up a loss of about $1,000,000 to- night while widespread sections elsewhere in the Maritime Prov_ inces surveyed damage running in- to the hundreds of thousands of dollars in the trail of last night's near-hurricane. Hardest hit by the furious blow, the orchardists of Nova Scotia’s fruit belt had seen an estimated 600.000 barrels of ripe apples tum. bled to the ground. just, about 5O per can‘. of their expected 1,260.- OOO-harrcl crop. The apple mgr- keiinrz hoard here estimated to- night this would cost them $1,- 000000. . Elsewhere, new reports of dam. age continued to trickle in as line- men patched up communication linos snapped by the gale that whisilcd ‘up from the tropics. Doz- ons of districts reported minor de- struction and discomfort caused by broken power and communi- cation facilities. Fishermen Suffer - From shore areas came word that fishermen had suffered heav- ily by the gale, which swept in with the highest tides seen in some areas in years. Along the Nortliuinboriand Strait shore, lob- stormon had lost thousands of dol- liirs worth of gear. Small shipping was battered sovorclv. Besides two slzeable pleasure yachts driven aground in Halifax. small vessels in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick were sunk n1" soiit adrift. At Brooklyn, N. S.. a dredge with two men aboard was swopt inshore tossed above the high-water mark. The men wore safe. Around Port Grevilie in the Bay of Fundy, the pvater was littered with timber from four scows. Two of the scows were driven aground. Prince Edward Island escaped with only slight loss, the peak of tho storm apparently missing the liitlc province as it swept north- eartvvarci. About a dozen trees were felled in Charlottetown, and power 1illld t-oiiiinunication lines were ldowncri. but services were back to inovinul tonight. Tlic wind, averaged tarounti 45 miics an hour but 1rcnchctl ‘i0 in spots. littered sec- 'tlm1s of tho other two provinces with fallcn ivecs and other do- ,bris. Ton 1icisons were injured in winch N1 w l’.l‘iilis\\'l('k. none seriously. ,'l‘iu':-t' were no casualties else- whore. 'I‘olophone and telegraph ser- vices \\‘(l'(‘ approaching normal _.agiiii'. tonight. Rural telephone lines were still shaky. though. Digby, on tho Bay of Fundy. £11115 1111111110 to make contact with the outlyini: urea by phone. This hold for sonic regions along the Nova Scotia south shore. At Woifvillc, N. S., the town was without light and power for"'lO hours after two falling trees snap- ped the transmission wires. An- napolis Royal had no lights from yrosterdziv afternoon until this morning. An operation was underway at the Windsor. N. S., hospital when the lights faiicd at the height of the storm Tho hospital's power generator took cure cf the emer- gency and the operation contin- ucd. s Million Dollar Loss Estimated In li/allei/Area andJCPi-Further reports of destruc. e SUMMERSIDE AND PRINCE COUNTY Belated reports from Yarmouth, on the western Nova scotia shore, told of heavy damage to small boats in that area. Many were swamped and some were torn from moorings to be cast up on the rocks and battered. Of the fleet of 15 small racing yachts on Lake Milo, near Yar- mouth, only five escaped exten. slve damage. Three miles from the town, a huse tree fell across the road and held "P traffic until branches were cut from its lower part. to allow cars to pass under 1t. 'I‘ho same dgice was resorted to near Brook- Damage was reported all up and down the length of the Annapolis V5119! Some of the western sec- tions lost as high as 80 per cent of the crop. The loss scaled down to as low as 25 per cent in shelt- ered areas. - A5 8- Ieslllt. the fertile valley will produce only 30 per can; of last years crop. Because of dwindling markets brought on by the war, the oichardists already had cut their production down to 60 per cent of the 1939 figure, and last night's blow cuts that in half, Based 0n f1 1.250,000-barrel crop, the growers would have received about $2,300,000 this year under the Federal Government's guar- BIOGEST DANCE of THE SEASON in KENSINGTON RINK on THURSDAY NIGHT SEPT. 19th BALTIC ORCHESTRA Sponsored by KENSINGTON BUSY BEE CLUB 30 feet by ‘l0 feet of excellent floor space Old time dance caller to put you through your pug Proceeds go to Red Cross Refreshments served Admission 25o Come and Help Down Hitler N EWSMEN THINK _ __(Continued_fro1:o_ pagLr) Great Britain with bombs for come 'time and might have greater re- serves _o_f planes and gasoline than the British thought. Mr. Browne suggested his coi- ieaizue was over-estimating the bower of_ the German air force, and underestimating the Royal AirForce anteed price scheme. Officials of the apple marketing board said tonight the fruit left on the trees would bring only about $1,300,001) under the plan, Destruction in N. B. SAINT JOHN, N.B.. Sept. 17. - tlon caused in New Brunswick by the stoini of _ves'.i.~rdav and last n t were received tonight while debris was being cleared away. FY0111 Cape Bald to Rlchibucto, and izenerally along Northumber- land Strait hundreds of small boats were reported cast adrift or sunk. Thousands of lobster traps were torn avvnv and wharves were damag- ed smousli". Dykes 005111111! 111011- sands of dollars 1n the Bale Verte area were battered severely. Fishermenfls rowbcats and motor. boats were left high and clrv 0n fields and roads between Capo Bald and RlClllbllCilL‘ Sonic motorists had to stop their cars and push boats off the highivav, At Cape Bald 50 o1 the 52 boats in a lobster fishiiiz ilcct were sunk. One lobster dealer at Dixon Point! reported he hzid lot-i more than $10001 worth of lobsters in anchored flo. isnl Another rcucrtod a $500 s. Fish- whcn (iCSCflblllz their lop . After the ground fIoor of a resi- donce near Buctoucho became food- ed, Royal Canadian Afounteci Police inarowboat rescued the family of five. Grain stiil unharvestod was a. complete loss in some districts. . At Yfltlehal Beach. near Bnlhurst. I a 111211 tide undermined summer cottages. Soldiers sleepinrz in the Sussex military camp were rudely awaken- cd bv the cale when 1t stiddenly, snatched their tents tIWFLV. The men 1 gathered up their equipment and,‘ ran for the nearest shelter. In some parts of the province tele- phone and electric services remained disrupted tonight. The storm reached hurricane proportions out-i side of Moncton. where a velocity1 of O0 to B5 miics was recorded the peak. Unrootod trccs of all sizes were s, common sight through- out the cities and countryside. :1 €P Storm Damage I Considerable In Prince County Considerable damage is reported in Prince County during the heavy rain storm and wind which raged all dav Monday and part of Tues- dav. From Mont Carmel comes news that the flsiicrpiciiis union there has lost hulf their fleet of flshltrriie‘ boats. At. Tignish the barn of Prank Martin was blown down and a con- siderable quantity of hay and feed damaged. A valuribv horse was saved quite miraculously when a part of the roof formed an arch over the animal as it rrashed to the ground. A barn about 80 feet in length belonging to Alan Higgins on the Maipoque Road was also dam- od. ‘The animals were saved. Trees are reported down in Bed- oque and other sections of East Pri-nco and also in West Prince Telephone polcs are down in sever- al sections and toll lines and lo- cal linos are out of order. In Summerside the electric light system was disrupted for several hours, esporlnliv in the east end 'T‘roos were blown down in several parts of the town and some damage 1m: done tn buildlncs aloud the the shore at the east end. —S. Northern France Faces Food Shortage LILLE, France, (delayed) —fvio. B-crlini “Sept. 17 —-tAPi - Pre- liminary" surveys of Northern France by French auihoritgs disclose a largo reduction in agricultural re- serves because of war damage and requirements of the German occu- piition. French sources predicted this area would suffor considerably this win- tcr frcm lack of food. and all cities and villages have created commit- ioos lo supervise rationing and dis- trlbuiiou of stippllos. Eiforls have been made to allot vsqciab": Pardons to as many fam- and. Davis said. not one of the ship- ments had been lost. iiics as nnsslblc. Raising of chickens and rabbits has been encouraged. Will Take No Action Against Toronto Teacher ‘TORONTO. Sept. l7—-((7Pi- The board of governors of the Uni- versity of Toronto have decided no action should be taken in respect to a recent speech of Prof. Frank Underhill in which he was quoted as saying Canada has two loyal- ties--"one to Britain, the other to North America," Dr. Bruce Mac- donald chairman announced today. he said: “There is no stonographlc report or other satisfactory evidence to support the published account as to what was Prof. Unrierhills statement at the couchlching con- ference. Therefore no action should be taken in respect thereof. We hope the incident is closed now . . . the board has investigated the affair thoroughly." Yesterday Dr. Macdonald said Prof. Underhlll had submitted "in- controvertible evidence" to the board that "he is pro-British and wants Britain to win the war." The Canadian Press noted Prof. Undorhill as saving at he Aug. 24 conference of the Canadian In- stitute on Economics and Politics: "We now have two loyalties-one t4; Britain, the other to North Am- erica. I venture to say it is the second. North America is going to be supreme now. The relative im- parlance of Britain is going to sink no matter what happens." War-ZS Years Ago Today 111v The C-anadlmi Press) Sept. 18. 19l5—3rd Brigade. Can- adian Field Artillery, detached to the 8th British Division to rein-i force Imperial army gunners tn the' action at Bots Granior. Russia m. strongly dofendod position at Viina captured by Germans. Uee Minnrd’: for sprains. 5 ‘ would and in bad shape for fighting, onor who has ciinod to give any details of breakaway from the detention. When which was getting stronger. He could not. see the British navv and air force permitting the Germans 1o settle down to “a nice. long quiet blockade." of Britain. Unless the Royal Air Force could stop the Germans short of British shores. however, Mr. Browne fore- saw a terrific problem confronting the British. If the Germans were once able to establish a. bridgehead and move men. supplies and tanks across for two or three days, he feared the situation would be des- aerate. Both men thought the fight- ing qualities of the British sol- diers might be more suited to the kind of war which would be fought in such circumstances than the qualities of the Ger- man soldier. The latter func- tioned best when he worked ac- cording iu 11 plan. The former wen better at improvisation un- dcr difficult and perplexing eon- ditions. Moreover they thought British equipment. was sure to be new and un-to-date because the British were so slow in ut-tiinp their supplies. With stoi iv weather coming Browne 11111112111 German soltii tiircss cue of Hit ers secret weap- "a iicw cure for seasick- noss. 011 the other hand. Mr. Danioll suflfzostod bad weather pvas likely to act both wave. While it would maki- tmnsportation of a German force across tho sea more difficult, _it would iurikc it harder for the Brit- h to know what the Germans were up to and perhaps provideaehance for a stirnrise attack. Educational Fox Week Is Cancefled A special meeting of the Summer- side Board of Trade was held yes- tcrclay. Mr. A. R. Brennan, the pres- ldent. presided. The meeting was called to deal with the holding of fox educational week. It was decid- ed not to hold this event this year. as it was felt that the Provincial Government was taking care of the matter of fox education through their fox service Department and in educational demonstrations in connection with fox ranching which are being held all over the Province- A resolution was passed, however. urging that the board request that the pelt. show sponsored by the P. n. r. Exhibitlors Assn. be held in Summerside this war. In the ev- out of the pelt show being held in. summerslde the board would give it their utmost support. The resolu- tion was moved by W. J. Lidst/one and seconded by S. G. Merriam, - No ilegistration Card, German Prisoner Taken BURLINGTON. Ont» Sept. l7.- (CPi — A roughly-dressed young German civilian prisoner. speaking English with an Oxford accent. and lacklniz a national registration card. was recaptured todav after five hours of freedom from a detention camp in the Toronto district. He was the second German pris- been arrested after failing to produce a national regis- tration card during police question- mg. Today's escapcr was 27-year-old AIORBIIGEI’ Slcgel. Siogel said he was a graduate of the University of London. He dei- s he was pressed for a definite state- mont on the manner in which ho escaped the German said: "I would like to got the advice of mv camp leader before I talk. I have nothing to hide." - FOOD SUPPLIES IN FRANCE VICl-TY, France. Sept. l7.—fAPl- The question of food supplies for unoccupied France was studied by the Council of Ministers today while dispatches from Paris said that ra- tioning of all principal foodstuffs would be initiated in the Nazi-hold zone Sept 23. Soap. sugar. razor blades and toothpaste are fast giv- ing out. DIAN Threat Heard To Destroy Arms Plant BRDGEPORT. Conn. Sept. 1'1.- (AP)—'1‘tie vast plant of the Rem- ington Arms Company. Inca a major manufacturer of mlllllilflll‘ for the United States defence arc ‘fllll and for Great Britain, was uairolicd by a special police guard l0lllllill as tho result of an anonviiiotis warning that it would be blown up during the day. Scareelv had the tipstor telephon- ed his warning to an attache of a Brooklyn. N.Y.. notice s1a11~i1 riurin: the earlv morninz hours. when the police cordon was plnci-ri about the factory and 11 llillC-hOtil of the buildings and lZfOilil Superintendent of Police. Charles A. Wheeler, said the search revcaioci nothiniz of 11. Silspi-"ious nature. 1.5; 111111111 -P.A.F. Bombers Over Germany Base Post Office Handles Much Mail OTTAWA. Sept. 17.-(CP) —No- body, Postmaster General Mulock assured today. is smoking the sol- diers’ tobacco except the soldiers. The Postmaster General, in con- dur-tint: a dozen Ottawa correspond- Pills about the new base post office, whore all mail is handled for Cana- dians serving overseas. gave his as- surance la the matter of soldiers’ tobacco in answer to several com- plainis that parcels had not been delivered. Mr. Mulock said some 4.000 par- cels were Inst. as a result of enemy action aealnst a vessel some time aco which mizzht account. for non- deiivnrv in some cases. Investiuatirin showed some par- cels had been received overseas af- ter thr- romplaints had been made in Canada In other eases if was found that parcels reported not rc- v-civod had not been sent for YPHSOM known only tn the sender. ’ The haso post office handles a'l mail for men serving overseasabout. 450 but". a nay. Reporters saw how i’ is handled and hoard from lvlif. Mulock that l0 per cent. of all mail for men on active service overseas is mlsndtlrrsscd. ‘It should be done in this manner: T121174. Sapper John Doe. 3rd Field Company. BERLIN, Sept. 18.-(Wodnosdav1_ -(CP)—Dcspito a fierce storm rut;- lmz in the English Channel 11nd across the North Sea, a small 111-01111 of Royal Air Force lone-distance. bombers crossed Gcriniinyfls western frontier last night. German officials t admitted today. g The German officials claimed that " pursuit planes rose to fiaht off the raiders and that one British bon1b-. er was shot down. ‘The others. thei officials claimed were turned back, No air raid alarm had been sound- ed in Berlin up to 1._4i_l am. 18,48 p.m. ADTi and no British bombers have been ovor the German capital since the early hours of Afonday. Set Wheat Futures Down In Winnipeg change today ainiouuwrd 111111. oflcc- 3 tive tomorrow. 1111' inrniiiiiiiii 1ll'i('1‘ of October vviiuiit 111 111i- l 11.1w.» Pit will be 70 cents :1 bushel, 1-oi1i1i:1i'1*u with the previous iii:ni1111111i o1 w cents; December \\iio'.1i's 111“- (‘It price will be droppt 1i from '74 - Cis- to '7l"‘~ and May v on tho board with a .1 _ The chaniui in 1311' 111. ~ l taken at. the l'0t1ilt*.\t of ilu- (‘.1 at an Wheat Board. ihc council tiouiicemeiit said. It “'11s stressed , that the new futures DYICPS zireonly‘. minlmiim values 11nd 1111' market m“. trade above ilicin if oontirizons warrant, _ Pegged prices Mav iii. vvhon a p1‘ carried wheat. Iiliiifv. 1 1 w eek. The council also announced the following rcaulnliuli t ‘ (‘Olllffinillll cash wheat prices. 11cm itaicd by the chance in the minimums of fu- t ture quotations: _ _ "If and when the closiniz pTWC (l! is the minimum price 111'l‘$"lb°d to that future. the minimum fut. 11111:!’ of all izrados of cash whcat in s.01_e Fort, Willliam or Port - 1W1‘ 5'1"" be established and announce-d (f. . by the cash closing price committee t lo of the next trad- iar? zilexgiibrihsfhgllssiot be lower dthan the dosing price for each 51TH e s0 established and announced. a "All flat purchases of such Em 1'5 west of Fort William and tori P0?‘ A1111“; shall be bascil on tho mini- mum prices 5o established." No Reduction In Crainilates 1 In Maritimes IIALIFAX. Solit- Agrlcultura Minister John A. Mc- Donald of Nova ‘SC0ll8. has been advised by Aiistziii" Fraser, Mont- real, vice-prcsidciu. in chartlt’ 0f traffic for the Canadian National Railways, that the i\l'.1i'iiii111'v.s' plea for a reduction in lrciiiht page; on {god grains from Western t Canada cannot be granted. | Mr. Fraser's telogzrnm was re- ceived on Saturday". It was in roiili‘ to representations made by 1111' Nova scotia, New ilrimswicl: and Prince Edward Island Ciuvorii- meats. _ , ' The message read: "Possibility effecting reductions those rates again carefully considered follow- ing conference 15th ultimo and re- gret advise that far reasons fully discussed with _vou. 11111111ssihio confine such 111-rai1u1111c11i. 111 .\11 itimcs without (‘Xivllrilliiz siuniu reductions to all other it'l‘l'iii)l'lf‘S. Might Have To Ilc I-Ixfomlod E Commenting on the tcicizram.‘ Mr. McDo11ald siixii 1111' ltldfliililt‘ Governments l'i‘(‘0i'.ill'/< r1 that rc- duciions granted iiirin illi"ili have to be extended to Ouiariu 111111 Quebec also. He boiiciod the rc- ductlons should be extruded to those provinces as well as this Maritimos. Mr. McDonald said the fichi for , lowcr rail rates on focd~ would bc carried on and that 1111' lirost word of the railways could not bu. taken as final. In tho meantime. ho said. cvcry encouragement would be uivvn 111 tho development of water fiuiiispur- , tation for food grains and .\I(ll'.‘\_‘f‘ facilities at various 1111vts in the, Marltimes. Alrcadv 0111' or two‘ firms had taken action l0 11l‘1\\'i(iI‘ such storage fiirlillifs 111 Nova Scot-la ports and in bring in grain l by the water route. 1iooav' when three '1'i:1d at his automobile near Zagreb cemetery. John. appointment as general staff of- floor "7. Saint John; Maj. A. B. GilbertJ lti-icpt-isaint John, general staff officer. ,Grade II at M. D. No. 7; Lt-Col. R. L. H. Gooddav, V. D., John, deputy assistant General with rank of Tot-Colonel. Rind Major D. C. Skinner. O,B.C., saint John. deputy asslstnno Quar- ,tar1o nctod today to safeguard .i'i\‘lil.'\ll population from such war- 1 iiouiir-(‘d at. Royal Canadian Engineers. Base Post Office, Canada. qxy v Fire Still Rages in Power Plant CALGARY, Sept. l7 -—(C'P) -— Fire still raged today in the trans- former room of the Calgary Power Company's plant at Horseshoe Falls, 55 miles west of Calgary, l6 hours after an explosion ignited 8.000 gallons of oil last night. Company officials said the fire had been confined to the transform- er room but that it would have to burn itself out before investigators could make any estimate of the damage. Four transfonners, each running in 1.700 gallons of oil, and high tension switches, also in oil, are in the room where the fire broke out. Two brick walls of the transform- WINNIPEGSPDI.17-——'CP)—'I'119 or room had fallen and the roof Council of the Wiinnpoc tlraiii Isx- I ¢o1111;11>r¢11- demoljghi-(l, Fricfid Of 1m Yugo-Slay King Wounded ZAGREB. Yugoslavia. Sept. 17. — <.-\P1~C0u1it-B0mbelec, close friend was wounded| groups of men the The count has not been active in politics recently. iKiuu Alexander was assassinated s Osi. ti. i934, as he arrived at Mar- 5011.0 on a visit to France). Several hundred persons have been arrested in the past few days for pro-Fascist demonstrations in vari- the nearby or Cuffffflt Wile". mm": 011s parts of Croatia. aAppointments Announced OTTAWA, Sept. 17—(CP)—1Ap- pointment of Lt-Col. L. F. Grant. formerly engineering at Royal Military Col- lege, Kingston, lsrair officer at iMiiitary District No. 3. Kingston. ‘xv-as annotinccd by the Department ‘of National Dofcnce tonight. osscoiate professor of Ont. as izeneral headquarters of Other senior appointments in military districts included: Ma]. K. s. Kennedy. E. D- Saint to the rank of Lt-Col. on at headquarters. M. D. No.1 Saint Adjutant- it"l'IIlRSit‘I‘-G(‘II(‘I'?\i. Ontario Acts In Home Defence TORONTO. Sept. 17.—1CP) -O\n- 1s lino dancers as air raids and sabot- tut‘ \\'ii]\ 1111' establishment of a l‘l\lil;\ii protection committee. At- iorriov-Griwra‘. Crordon Conant an- tho committee's first mcotinz hold that iho organization will ho extended to communities, thrnuizhoiii the province. ointariols action follows that of 11hr r pvmiiicos. particularly the !\1.'1rl1,1i1r's and Qucboc in the estab- ll>llllli‘lll 11-1111 federal aid of A.R.l‘. meiiiiiratioiis. Mr. Conant said that 111 the cvcnl of invasion - "which we trust will novor ooiuc"—the com- muter would loud itself t0 direction ‘ 11v miiiiarv authorities. "\V1~‘r1' 1101112 in do everything 1' our power to protect the lives and 'll'1>llf‘l'l\‘ of tho people of Ontario." 111' said. "We don't know what that wii; iuvow-o. but. we're not 110i"! t" shrink from tho task because it is t an (‘zffivult or impcndorabie at the moment " T0 sBPsi.‘ "runin own SDMFWVIIEIRFIN-ENGLAND — ‘ 1C1“ Because of muddios in ilio souii: . of official air-raid sirens. nci in a Midland town 110W irrincci "vicilnnra squads" to Ht"? their own warning. '$IOO Fine 0n Leo Durocher NEWYORK, Sept. 17_fAp1... Ford C. Prick, President of 1314 National League, today slapped 1 $100 fine and a five-day suspense: on Leo Durocher, Brooklyn 11cc.- ger manager, who was binis on rpm yeste-rdayfls ball pan ' ' CIITCZDnflll folloiving a1. with Umpiris §;i‘.‘\‘_§4ap George Aiagcrku . Prick, u-ho uuied was guilty of - lending t0 inc ' a r; _ s3,‘ 1114 peppery Dndssr pilot p121; be e1 11.11;. to play Sund vvh .ch O"V“II'Y'V- and followed b‘; a ncrir f irig which .\IIQL‘I'i~Zl god by a Dodgrr on $a00 bail on a on sault. l 11111111115“ I rContinuod from pace 11 190mb on the Nazi 1111111111114.- "Apzirt from tiii-ir goi- l ‘mir- burityy" the boinbiiii: :1 s on London were supposed 1o iiiisc-tile the public opinion. Instead. he said, they have 11ni- wted the King and Queen and 1111-11- people "by new and sacred bonds 0f common diinpoi” iiiid s'i-1l1-11 "all hearts t0 the stern and iiii- relenting prosecution 0t the 111111- with so foul a foe." Increasing Confidence Britain can await the decision of the air battle with "sober and increasing confidence." he said. The Royal Air Force has done “serious injury" to Germany": plans for invasion by "very heavy and prolonged night bombing" of troops and ship concentrations. The Prime Minister said that "we must . . not underrate the damage inflicted upon the enemy by the very heavy and prolonged nightly bombing upon his concen- tration of shipping and upon all focal points of his assembly of troops." He spoke enthusiastically of Sunday's air fighting ln which the Royal Air Force donned a record number o1 Nazi planes for one day-IBS. "Sunday's action," he said. “was the most brilliant and fruitful of any fought upon a large scale by fighters of the Royal Air Force 11p to the present. The figures have already been made public. To the best of my belief-and I have made searching enquiries and several crosschecks-thoy are not in any way exaggerated. “Neither side has yet employed more than a portion of its forces but there are good reasons for be- lieving at the present time that very grievous inroads are being made upon the enemy's superior- ‘ 1 .‘ u _ and adviser o1‘ ilie late King Alex- "Y 9f "umbpr-Y and m“ “'9 ma? “his! lisiilisiiiutvli Humor of Yugoslavia’ await the decision of the pro- longed air battle with sober and increasing confidence." Concerning the bombings Buckingham Palace, Mr. Chuichi ai . “The deliberate and ropcafod at- tacks upon Buckingham Palzict and upon the persons of our ba- loved King and Queen are als intended, apart from their gener barbarlty, to have an unsettling effect upon public oplnion._ They have, of course, the opposite ef- fect. They unite the King and Queen to their people by now and sacred bonds of common danger and they steel all hearts to rho stern and unrelenting rosecution of the war with so fou a foo." waves or (OonAiued from page 1) ,_______________.-. . . ..___.. vasion. The R.A.F'. knocked do . sit least five German ]i1{\l'i('.s,_ ti antl- alrcraft gunners aic-ic inc sOlUiF east coast shot down two naive The attack on London 1's be- rzan last nick! a: 8106 p. 111."~t.ti6 p_ m, ADTi and after lillii‘ “ii still wont. on high in tho scuddiiig clouds we"; in" 1.. _ times the roar of G "man rose over the thunder o: tile 111111- aircraft guns. Early roporis of casualties snowy ed an undetermined 1r.imb< v of a n- doncrs kill ‘ ' '01" ‘HF’ T! p , simultancou-SIY- rn spite of the rvniflvve ra-lrist invasion given to Britain bi’ ti" heavy action of its bombers azaiizst German bases and by the poucr of wind and bi lowinu for, Prune \ isior Churthii! ‘»\.'ll’l‘.f‘li the ' during the day frr pi't‘il-I‘~\'l~<‘-1 v tho German thrust wrh tr ivps a- cross tho Channel still is c'n':n- uing hourly. Mayfair Bomborl Announcrcncizts div 1-1 c‘. that fashionable Nluyfair. 1 1 and rthor sections of the \\ End lad boon damaged bv (To: . itcmbl in last night's ra. s 1R,ogcni and Oxfo f. 1, cadilly. Park I..111". 13' I N‘ find Sloan Squares. and 5.11111 R'>',\. The Tailors‘ Sfrrr‘ In that " ‘WP-st "it area of c‘ . stwn. hicli winds whip d up storms o.’ dcbrll worker! lion of air first. hail Prune figure at 10,000 0 8.000 injurctb- anrl four-fifths had ow 1'11 11 the Lon- rlcn area. Total f‘.l!~ ~11. 1'-" slut-c Juiv 1a thus had mounted in llt".1li_\' 13. 1 0C0. 1 t TRSFFK‘ Y\I.\‘.\' Nil-TR IVES -, .\f111\"i‘ltl=7!\l.. Sept. 17- -t(‘l"~- 1'1 ,.T. Foreman. 5i izoiicral f‘ ‘ lit lT-"f 1fic llifliifltt“? of tho (‘nnadiaii Na. ticnal ftailways. died at his i101" early today. - ' " "