I MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN .--:1 people are courting. The weather is usually HnG'WlIOll 5, carrier: chariottetowll. llunmorside 815.00 per snnuns. Elsewhere Other Provinces and U. B. A. 512.00 per annum. in P. I I. 39.00. Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew" CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1952 When things are pret y all round criticism is out of seas n. . MAXIMS OIA. i MERE MAN 14 PAGES Morning Daily Founded 1ll'l. The Guardian. Five Cents. U. N. AIR ATTACKS ON NORTH KOREA MOUNTING IN FURY Greeks - Bulgarians Clash Over Tiny Islan War On Poverty Urged At C. C. F. Convention; I Pacifist View Modified TVDRONTO. Aug. '7 -(OP) -The national convention of the C. C. F. today urged a "war on poverty" as the best means of achieving last- ing peace. At the same time. it turned back a move which would have taken out of the resolution any approval of military preparedness. The resolution said: ”Military preparedness, neces- sary though it is in the present in- ternatlonal situation. cannot take the place of positive,action to end poverty and exploitation." Mrs. Sophia Dickson and Peter Makaroit. Saskatchewan delegates, asked for the deletion, as "ir- relevant," of the words, "necessary though it is in the present inter- national situation." Heated Debate This touched off the most heat- od debate of the convention so far. Two or three delegates indicated that they were "paciflsts." Mrs. .i. M. Tclford, another Saskatche- wan delegate, asked what had been accomplished by war, and said "we are just dallying around in con- zicning war." Premier Douglas of Saskatchewan replied: "If we had allowed Hitler to bring the world into thralldom, you and I today would be under a tyranny. Some things are worse than war. "We must face the fact that in the kind of world we live in we must have force. But it should be constructive force. and we must remove the poverty mid. insecurity iriiich inevitably lead to war." Alistair Stewart. MP. for Win- llipcg North, said: "We had ipcace' when China. Ahyssinis, Czechoslovakia and Austria were overrun. when Jews were being put to death, and trade unions destroyed. so-called peace' is not the all-important thing- tho. main thing is law and order." Mrs. Gretchen Steeves of Van- couver declared: i "We can not throw away our (Continued on Page 13 001. 2) Coming Events "Dance, Iona East School, every Friday night. "Dance llowe'Tlfeil. Brackley Beach every Friday. "Dance, Millview August llth. llsil, Friday. "Abcgwslt R. 3.11 Kingston. Friday, August 8th. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. Music by R bichnutt "Dance. Auburn School. Mon- slay. August llth. Good music. I Theatre. and "Sandy's Drive-In shows Tuesdays. wednesdays Fridays at B P. M. "Ice Cream and Dance, West.- morolsnd school. Friday, August 8th. "Ice cream Festival and Dance, Cherry Hill school. Monday, Aug- ust 18th. "Show, Borden. Friday, "Mrs. 0'Malley and Mr. Malone." A great comedy. Meeting. Cavendish llth, B.30 "Annual Hall. Monday. August "Dance at sandyts Friday. Aug. . p.m. Burke's Orchestra. Admission 50 cents. A "Dance every Friday night. South Rustlco hsll. Music .by the Charlcttetonlens. "For Harvest Combining. con- tact John Maclssac 6; son, Cherry Valley. "Fresh Cement on hand and an- other car to arrive next week. Please book your orders. J. 1". WOITII. Kinkoral "Dancing, Islanders Country Club. Travellers Rest. every satur- dny night. Music by Russell War- ren and his Blue Haven Ramblers. "Emerald school - cards and Refreshments. Friday. August 8th. gfiflog. M. sponsored by Home and "Earn Dance 'in Cliff Peters nu-n. imlio Bay. Monday. August ll,th. In aid of Rollo Bay last school. "Dance. St. Peter's Bay Holy "Mm Hall. Friday, ugust 0th. alatzdvm and old time sncing from dsmw l,lf. sf. Chanson”: Orch- I Furs Must Go Under True Name in Uniiediiaies WASHINGTON, Aug. 7 - (GP) - Skunk's skunk, from now on. President Truman's fur-labeling act. signed a. year ago. goes into ef- fect tomorrow. Gone then will be Arctic seal, Mendoza beaver and Galland squir- rel. Coats of such refined-sounding fur will be given their true name: Rabbit. The law says all fur coats and other fur garments must be ad- vertised and sold under "the true English name of the animal from which the fur was taken." To back it up, the Federal Trade Commission has prepared a list of some 100 "true English names" which will let the customer know just what he or she is buying. Scratched are such names as "black marten" for skunk. or "Bal- tic lien" for rabbit. or "blue Japan- ese wolf" for goat. The law also requires sellers to state whether the fur is use . bleached or dyed, and where it came from. 11! it is imported. In Canada it is the practice to bracket the correct name of the fur after the trade name. Saving Books is Tough lob OTTAWA, Aug. '1 -(GP) -They were looking for dehumidifiers to- day to save parliament library books from mildew and mold. The job of saving them was des- cribed by a United States expert. in his first day on the scene of Monday's fire, as one of the tough- est he has seen. Alvin Kremcr. Keeper Collection of the United States Library of Congress. called the damage a catastrophe but said the task of saving the books is by no means hopeless. He told Production Minister Howe that about 75.000 of the 500.- 000-odd books in the library were hit by water. Mold has already ap- peared on some of them. Mr. Kremer said the first aim is to get rid of the "excessive humid- ity" in the library. For this, they need dehumidifiers. machines which will take the moisture out of the air and out of the books. A couple of small ones were put to work today in small vaults in the basement; and a larger one is expected to be set up in the main body of the library. , Set bean. Tell in Bus Crush Ar 28 WACO. Tex.. Aug. 7 -0113) An indentilicatlon expert today set. the total dead in Monday's Grey- hound bus crash at 28. R. L. Trask. civilian identificat- ion expert with the Unitcd States Air Force. made this report after completing classification of re- mains taken from the charred wreckage of the two buses. It had been feared the final toll would be greater than '18. Eight bodies remained to be identified. of the Siiualion-is Explosive. U. N. Observers ilepori ATHENS. Aug. 7 - fAP)- The Greek general staff said Commun- ist Bulgarian troops withdrew to- night-underi Greek mortar and machine-gun fire-from the tiny, disputed islet of Gamma in the Evros River. which forms the Greek-Turkish-Bulgarian frontier. After a day-long pounding of the island. the general staff said the Bulgarian troops - probably no more than patrol strength were seen evacuating the island. The announcement said no Greek troops were sent to the island, since the only objective of the gunfire was to get the Bul- garians out. The Greeks had giv- en the Bulgarians an ultimatum to get off the island-which both countries claim-and then opened up when the demand was ignored. Aside from the announced with- drawal, the general staff blacked out all information as to the size of its forces, the gravity of the situation or whether either side had suffered casualties. Unofficial reports from the scene said the Greeks, moving up troops to the Bulgarian border, were backed by artillery. (United Nations Balkans Com- mission observers on the scene re- ported to the U. N. in New,York that big forces of both countries are ready for action. Before the shooting started they called the situation "very dangerous" and urged Greece to ask U. N. inter- vention which might "possibly save the situation." (The Greek delegate at the U. N. already had said Greece was not contemplating such a request. De- spite some expressed fears of a dangerous Balkan flat-eup, a Greek diplomatic source at Istanbul, Tur- key. described the incident as a local one-a continuation of a ser- ies of flareups in the area over the , last five ycars. Istanbul dispatches quoted officials at Adrianople. Turkish town 10 miles from Gain- ma, as saying the firing lasted 90 minutes.) , Britain To Supply Arms To Belgium LONDON. Aug. 7.--tnouiersl.-. Thc government today announced an Anglo-Belgian agreement un- tier which Britain will supply nearly i9.000.0fX) worth of defence equipment in Belgium in the next two years. The agreement will help Britain clear up its debt to the European Payments Union- ihe clearing house through which much of its trade with Western Europe is handled. Belgium. as a principal creditor in the Payments Union, agreed to lend Britain about i ,000,000 to be paid off in supplies of defence equipment. by tho and of June 1 54 1,000 Refugees (in Koie Island Riot PUSAN. A118. 7 -(AP)-Korean newspapers reported tonight that 1.000 civilian refugees rioted on Koie Island Wednesday because their rice ration had been reduced. one Korean policeman was in- lured by the rloters. the reports said. About 60.000 war-displaced refu- gecs live in camps on Koje operat- ed by the South Korean Govern- ment. They are separate from Communist. prisoners of war held on the once-turbulent island. Local newspapers said the rice ration for the refugees was out several weeks ago due to a short- 638. Canadian Grain Exports Reach All - Time Peak OTTAWA, Aug. 7- (CP)-Cam ada's grain exports climbed to a peak of 509.000,000 bushels in tho crop year ended July 31. the Trade Department announced to- day. The jump of grain shipments from the previous high of 411.000.- 000 bushelstin 1929 was achieved in spite of turbulent crop-hand- ling conditions and a late harvest which threatened Canada with one of its worst shipping bottle- necks in history. - Exports in the 1951-52 crop year included 351000.000 bushels of wheat, 72,000,000 bushels of cats and 70,000,000 bushels of barley. With the old crop year ended, trade officials are turnlni! to the prnblem of closing grain-pool books. with prospects that mil- lions of dollars in pool iressuries soon will be turned over to West- ern farmers in the form of final payments on grain deliveries. During the 12-month period. Western product-rs delivered some 718.000.000 bushels of grslp to marketing points. the highest in Western history and some 164.000.- 000 bushels higher than the 554.- 000,000 in the previous year. The Canadian Wheat Board. taking delivery of grain, has paid farmers 51.60 a bushel. basis No. 1 northern at Fort William and Port Arthur. But it has been sell- ing the wheat at about 51.79. it has paid farmers roughly 31.16 a bushel for barley and 65 cents a bushel for cats. In both cases the selling price has been running much higher. This means ihere is a surplus remaining in the credit of pool members which will be distribut- ed in the form of final payments alter the board has completed its bookkeeping. Ships, railway cars and eleva- tors worked at capacity to get the grain exports moving in the last crop year. And the prospects are. said the department. that Canada is in for another heavy transportation year with hopes of-another bumper wheat crop shaping up in the west. OTTAWA, Aug. '1 - (special) - Extension of the runways of Char- lottetown Airport will be among Transport prior to reaching a de- cision and placing a vote in 1953 Parliamentary estimates. The Guardian lcarned today. The Department of Transport building of airfieids. Not only does it build and maintain civil air- ports across the country but it the many proposed projects to , be studied by the Air Services Division of the Department of Runway Among Projects For Air Service Division Study Air Training Plan. Whether the Charlottetown Alr- port wlll get the nod for extension from Transport Minister Chevrier anti the Tlcasury Board depends on several factors. First of these is proof that extension of exist- mg runways is necessary and de- sirable and that increased traffic warrants such an outlay. The Civil Aviation Division also interests it- self in probable costs of land and buildings to be acquired in air- is Canada's major agency for theiport extensions. In any case, no firm decision on the matter will be made by the ,Mlnlster until a complete depart- built airfieids during World Wnrimeutal survey is made and all data If for the British Commonwealthl compiled. Seek To Stamp Out Hog Disease Outbreak in ii. 8. WASHINGTON. Aug. 1 - (AP)-A program for payiiig farmers for slaughtering hogs to 5 amp out an outbreak of vesicular oxaniiiema in 15 states was launched today by the Agriculture Department. States which join in the pro- gram must put up 50 per cent of ihc cost. Vesicular cxunthctna is a disease . somewhat. similar . to fool-and-mouth disease. All states where the disease has been found, with the ex- -ception of California. were invited to enter into cn-oper- ative agreements. Officials said California was not in- rludod at this limo hccnusn officials there had some pre- liminary cit-an-up work to (in. News in Brief PARIS, Aug. '1 - (AP)-French and German negotiations on tin: future of the Saar Valley coal and steel resources appeared bog- ged down today, less than a week after they began, LOS ANGELES, Aug. 7 - (AP) California's 14 lop-ranking Communists were sentenced today to five years in prison and fines of 310,000 "each. A jury found them guilty of conspiracy to teach and advocate violent overthrow of the United States Government. WASHINGTON. Aug. 7 - (AP) - A jet airplane exploded below decks on the carrier Boxer off Korea Tuesday night, killing nine seamen, injuring 75 and destroying 12 other aircraft. No enemy action was involved. the navy said. VICTORIA, Aug. '1 (CF) - British Columbia Forest Service reported today the number of forest fires in B. C. has doubled in two days and closure of the woods in the Vancouver forcst district will continue. A Forest Service spokesman reported 314 men to- iday were fighting 125 fires. I WINNIPEG. Aug. 7 - (CF) - A strike of about 2.500 civic cm- pioyees was called off today about eight hours before the mid- night deadline when aldcrmen granted employees wage-hour de- mands. The settiement granted a 40-hour work week to begin Dec. 31 and a 7 1-2 per cent wage in- crease. SYDNEY. N. 8.. Aug. 7-(cP)- Nova scctia's 5,000 stoelworkers tonight demanded that the Domin- ion steel and Coal Corporation grant them wage parity with work- ers employed by Algoma Stoel and the steel Company of Cati- ada. rkers, no?-1 receiving A basic ho rly rate 0 11.81. want a 12 1-2 cent increase. - ROME. Aug. 7 - (AP) - Army engineers and police kept a trickle of international trains running to- day in a 24-hour railroad strike which crippled transport in Italy at the peak of the tourist season. The trike was called by Com- mun t union leaders. DETROIT. Aug. '7 - (AP)-Ford Motor Company said today that "still lingering stcelk shnrtages' will force a closing next week of ill of its 19 assembly plants in the United states. The firm said. however. that it hopes to "resume and 'malntsln uninterrupted pro- duction around the 18th of Au- gust." The shutdown will be the third since July 1:. r-.thMsiA!lzus con.ferencs,.- drew Ex-pect Disappointment In Pacific Pact Action HONOLULU. Aug. 7 - (AP! - The United States. Australia and New Zealand have set up a nul- itary organization for inutuai se- corny, but there is bound to be disappointment among Pacific powers that were excluded. The decision not to make a for- mal link now with other Pacific State Secretary Dean Acheson at the end of three days of confer- ences by U. S. State Secretary Dean Acheson and External Af- fairs Ministcrs Richard Casey cf Australia and Clifton Webb of New Zcaiand. While the Philippines Govern- ment takes the official View that it will be fitted into a Pacific dc- fence structure later. the oppos- ition Nacionaiista Party has been critical. -A The Nacionalistns that -the color line against Asians by ex- cluding the" Philippines. The Chi- nese Nationalists on Formosa took a. similar line. It also is expected that Britain will be irritated because Australia and New Zcaland are dealing in formal commitments in the Pa- cific without her. Britain, of course. has a stake in Hong Kong and in rich Malaya, whore Communist guerrillas wagc active war. France. hard-pressed by the Communists in Indo-China, also undoubtedly would like to have a place. The first military meeting will be held soon at Pearl Harbor. Meetings will be rotated at Pearl Harbor, Melbourne and Welling- ton. Admiral Arthur Radford. Pa- ciilc Fleet commander. was nam- ed the U. 8. military represent- charge ativc. Australia and New Zealand will name their military advisers later. A communique issued at the end of the conference said it. would be "premature" at this early stage of development to invite other pow- ers into the mutual security ar- rangement. It emphasized. however. that the three powers "would continue to keep in close touch through ex- isting channels with other states concerned to preserve peace in the Pacific area." In this connection. Pcreign Min- istcr Joaquin Elizalde said in Manila that the Philippines and Japan soon may join Anzus pow- ers in a five-power conference to co-ordinate Pacific defences. There was no confirmation. Juspe:I;c;I:I.;3e Will Be Rebuilt MONTREAL, Allif. '7 --I'CP)-- Donald Gordon, president of Can- adian National Railways. said to- day that the central building of Jasper Park Lodge in Alberta. de- stroyed by fire last. month. will be rebuilt for the 1953 season, open- ing in June. The rustic character of the form- er building will be retained sl- though the final design is not yet known. Work on the new building is expected to begin before Sept. 16. New Superintendent For C.N.EL Appointed MONTREAL. Aug. 7 -(CP)- Appolntment of Robert Aitlyen as general superintendent for the Eastern District of Canadian Na- tional Exprem. with headquarters in Montreal. was announced today by general manager T. H. Martin. He succeeds F. M. Smith. who died. iMr. Smith tiled uexpoctediy last month while holidaying in P. E. I.) MANILA. Aug. '1 - IAP) - A weak eruption today blew off part of the crater ruin of I-libok I-libok volcano and sent it toppling down the side. the government geo- graphical department reported. The Southern Philippines volcano erupted last December and killed nearly 1,000 persons. Inierfere Blasied From ThLSky SEOUL. (AP) - United Nations sir attacks rose in fury Thursday with hund- reds of fighter-bombers raking North Korea and Sabres destroying four Mig Jets that tried to inter- fere. The U8. Fifth Air Force said five Migs also were damaged, bring- ing Red losses to 15 destroyed and 19 damaged in four days. Allied losses, if any. are announced week- It seemed obvious the intensified air blows were designed to put pres- sure on the Communists to quit stalling at the armistice table at Panmuniom. The fighter-bombers also struck along the front. where the tough South Korean Capital Division re- captured "Capital Hill" on the cen- tral front in' furious fighting. The shell-scarred knob had changed hands six times in two -5- davs. Chinese Communist troops inl a desperate charge Thursday morn- lug lost nearly 200 dead and wound- ed but drove the Koreans from the summit. The veteran Koreans re-formed. attacked and in three hours of close-quarter combat chased the Chinese from the heights. Warning to Civilians WASHINGTON. Aug. 7 - (API - Thomas Flnletter. secretary of the United States Air Force urged Communist leaders today to co- operate in minimizing danger to civilians in 78 Kort-an cities sched- uled fnr bombing of military targets by U, N. forces. "If the Communists will work with us, we can hold down. if not entirely avoid civilian casualties," Finletter said in a statement. The secretary emphasized. how- ever. that "we have to desf.roy”i.hese militsrv objects and on boys." Reports from the Far Eairztwlilave S , indicated that the Red leaders thus Pwilamem far have failed to co-operate with the United Nations command getting civilians awav from cities on the ;omblng schedule. TAIPEH. Formosa. Aug. 7 (APL. Sources close to Madame Chlang Kai-Shek said today she may go Be the United States for medical treatment. She suffers from neurodermatltls. a nervous allergy which causes severe itching. amen: be-i cause they will be used gslnst our t in, d Migs Seeking To British Cabinet Seeks New Angle In Settling ; LONDON Aug. 1 -fR.eutersl- A special cabinet meeting spent three nouns tonight discusing an tAnglo-American approach to the :Government of Iran for a solution I f the oil dispute, informed sources "said here. I But their decision. if one lreached, was not made public. Prime Minister Winston Churc- lhlll called the sexton to consider the Middle East situation. withi special reference to relations wilhi Iran and Egypt. The conference- phere next November of premiers tfrom Cqmmonwcalth countries was !ai.so on the agenda. ' Foreign secretary Anthony Eden iprovlded the basis of the Iranian idlscussion with 9. brief he had sub- pnntted. sources added. Eden's brief was said to cover pI1'an'sintcrnal situation and the ithreat of the Communist Tudeh iliarty, which might seize an eco- nomic dlstress to gain control of Iran. Anglo-American consultations on Iran's medicament have been in- ,dlcatcd since Premier Mohammed iMOSsi1degh submitted. and then iwithdrew, an offer to steer the dis- ipute to arbitration. I An attempt to ease the pressure in Il'3Il.5 predicament have been lln Tehran hy new efforts to reach an oil agreement was believed one suggestion before the ministers, even though such a move might -mean the sacrifice of Eritainis original principles. Observers here believe Mossa- degh has placed Iran in a predic- lament in which the Communists ;could gain much throuzh worsen- 'ing economic conditions. W85 Anti-British Speaker 3 TE1-IRAN. Aug. 7 -rCPv- Aya- tulah Kashani. a fanatically antl- British. Moslem-leads; of thev.F9-' l'onal front, was elected today as peaker of Iran's lower House of the Majlis. of the 82 deputies present, 4'7 voted for the bearded little Mullah ' ”kcbEuiuTd'o?'rTg?T:i"c'ol. 2) REMANDED FOR. WEEK NEW WATERFORD, N. 5. Aug. 7 - (CF) -- Ralph Gregor. 50. charged with the murder of his 56-year-old wife Olive. was today remanded for a week when he ap- lpeared for preliminary hearing before Magistrate M. J. l-linchey. Police See Themselves As First Lin QUEBEC. Aug. 7 -i(1P) ..soine police believe Allied police forces constitute "the first line of de- fence." and would like their re- spective governmcnts to recognize this. The International Relations Committee of the International As- 'soclation of Police Chiefs, which met behind closed doors yesterday and today, passed resolutions cm- bodylng this view. The resolutions will be submitted to the association's annual meeting in Los Angeles Sept. 21-25. The committee. headed by Lt.- Cni. Leon Lambert. assistant dir- ector of Quebec Provincial Police. has members from Canada. Eng- land, the United States. Honolulu and Puertn Rico. The association groups police forces from all Al. lied countries except France and Belgium. e Defence Lt.-Fol. Lambert. announced adoption of resolutions today. "The first action in a world war is infiltration by the enemy." he said. "They evcn get into army and police forces of Allied countries." He said armed services had a place under the North Atlantic Treaty Organization but the police forces. which played a first-line defence role at home. did not have recognition or support of their governments as such. Treason. sedition and loopholes in the law's application in both Canada and thellnltcd States are studied by the committee. Quebec's padlock law. adopted in 1936. was discussed by the com- mittee as one type of anti-Com- munist security measure. Under the law, Communist propaganda mav be SP,l7.Pd and premises em- ployed for propaganda padlockcri. Social Services Take Half Z. Expenditures WELLINGTON. N. Z.. Aug. '1 - tReuters)- Prime Minister Sidney 1-lolland today introduced a budget in which social services make up nearly half the expenditures. "People must realize the welfare state is a costly business," the Con- ervatlve Prime Minister told Par- liament. New Zcaland's Ipioneer social security system was started more than half a century ago and grew under the Labor Government from 1936 to 1949. Expenditures for 1952-53 is E210.- ooo.ooo of which f:9'i,600,000 is for social services ranging from the health plan to old-age pensions. For defence the government pro- poses to spend The second biggest item after so- rcstimatcd f8.0(XI.000. ' "The government" Holland said. Via the first to recognize the harm- ful effect of is too heavy burden of itaxatlon but its capacity to reduce itaxation is dictated by the services people expect to rpcelve from the state." lioiland suggested a "more realistic" approach to some social security problems to save money without curtailing benefits in any way. The social security expenditure new amounts on the average to 2210 a year for a family of four. he seld.. V The new budget abolishes the two-penny stamp duty on receipts and reduces the present lo-per- cent surcharge on the incfxne tax , Iranian Oil Dispute Aug. 8 '- (Friday) -- Warns of Polio Danger in Sussex iilrea of N. B. FREDERJCTON. Aug. 7 -(CPI -New Brunswick's chief medlcai officer has indirectly advised par- ents not to take their children to the Sussex area because of the poiiomyclltls outbreak in King's County. Dr. J. A. Melanson said that he did not tell the many parents call- ing his office that they could nor. go to Kings County. "but." he said. "I wouldn't take my children to Sussex." ills warning came as a Sussex man said that the death Wednes- day of his seven-year-old son was attributed to polio by a Sussex physician..The boy. 111 three days, was the third victim of the dis- ease Lo die in New Brunswick this sumner. Dr. Melanson said the official count shows 27 cases reported to date-15 in Kings and 12 in saint John County, with two deaths. But an unofficial tally today reached 32-20 in Kings and 12 in Saint John. In Saint John, it was learned that 2&pollo victims have been ad- mitted to the isolation wing of the General Hospital. including five new cases Wednesdly. In 1951. only six cases had been reported in N. B. by Aug. 21. In .1950. the year's total was 14. s iteleci Red Offer To Show 0 o . - Motion Pictures- TORONTO. Allg'.q7-(CP)- .An offer by Chinese Communist dele- gates to show motion pictures. which they said were proof of their germ warfare charges. was ruled out at today's session of the 18th International Ilod Cross Crin- fer:-nre. The (Yhinr-so made ihe offer several days ago and later called newspaper men to their hotel rooms tin show the films and dis- tribute booklets, photographs and photostats of letters they claim- ed were written by the United States prisoners. Chairman. John A. MacAuley. of Winnipeg. has several times ruled discussions on germ war- fare and atrocity charges out oi order on grounds that they were political. He said any suggestion that the conference is "a tribunal or is constituted to listen to such evi- dence is entirely out of order." Germ warfare complaints were in the province of the Inter- national Committee and I TPAnIvl' lion yesterday invited all govern- ments concerned. with the charges to meet for discussions. Laier the conference approved, by a vote of 80-0, rt Polish re- solution urfzinfz all governments to ratify the Geneva Protocol con- corninlt the prohibition of "a bar- tcriologicni wc.-upon." Professor T'clcr MacCailum. tcontinued on Page 13 Col. Til Will-.tl (loco itttovts (121 (ocantra ow. Wives Wiklf U? omit: oumcur 2 HALIFAX. Aug. '1 -(GP)-Ob flcisl forecasts issued by the Dom- inion Public Weather Office in Halifax and valid until midnight Friday. synopsis: Indications are that fine weath- er will cover all regions Friday. Re- gional forecasts: . Prince Edward Island -- Friday sunny and warmer. Light winds. cial services is i:56.b94,000 to con-iio five per cent as an incentive to Low ma mgh M Charlottetown go tlnue the capital-works program of la rge-scale hydro-electric projects and land-settlement schemes al- ready under way. Other proposed expenditures in- clude l'.13.000.000 for the depart- lcrease production other tax-relief provisions in- clude a 20-per-cent rebate an estate succession duties to relieve those sheep farming estates which were highly taxed following abnormally meat of primary and secondary in- high wool prices. dustxles. subsidies to rcduce living costs. The budget also cuts taxcrby an and 215,900,000 for food Holland said revenue is expected to yield n sur- plus of 12,700,000 over expenditures and 79. High tide today at Cherlowu town at 12.33 A. M. and 12.25 P. M. High tide on the North Shore at 7.15 A. M. and 7.55 P. M. Summeraldu tide eighteen min- the current year's lites later than Cunrlottetown. sun rises today at 5.00 A.iM. and . sets at V" W V