r; Maxim ‘Yo, _V or a MERE MAN the Church loin . g‘c',‘,':.',§°i.‘5p the nation fszm MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN The Church ls the moral police. the watch dogs of the community‘: “Hunt ' welfare. ‘ Covers Pfmoe Edward 218181111 Like the Dew r “filial-film F°WI°° '9"- I“ 1o PAGES mu, mo. other Provlneeo s: visa, use owmtetoyn Guardian. Two Cents. cnaacoqrarowu, cannon. TUESDAYQSEPTEMBER 1s, 194s Subscription Delivered, $5.00. WHAIRIGE 4iVilLLl0N DIED AT NAZI CAMP " y? LOCAL MIA TDEALERS 1101015 DISAPPRUVAL oFRA nonwvc ozwsze llasked Men Bob I-ilcur Plant Safe roaouro. Sept. 1r _- (or-p [m-gg armed and masked men m: and bound William Cunlrffe. 51-year-old watchman. in the lake of the Vlloods Milling Com- - reml-cs on downtown Du- ES- .,.,,_ . . . $1.000 pier using dynamite and sledge- lummcrs to open a safe and fruit. Predicts Atomic Energy In l0 Years BIJIMINGEIAM, England. Sept 11- 1GP» —- Prof. M.E. Ollphant, cue ol thc Pioneers in development d the atomic bomb, today predicted rloulic ¢ncrgy would be aged 1n. lustrlally within 10 years and chm; the nuclear energy eventually would replace all other forms. ‘Coming Events "Show - Morell Tuesday. 9-17-21. "BAW - 5h Peters Wednesday. 9-17-21. Wfishow - s1. Peter's Wednesday, 7 9-17-21. ' "Chicken Supper, Kelly's Cross, Thursday. September 2on1. 9-17-41. “Dance - M ta " - Webster's Orchestf: sue will‘ "Show - Murray River Thurs- ill- 918-31 k "Show — Murray River Thurs- "y- 9-1 v 821.! “Dflllce. Town Hall, George-i W". Wednesday. Sebtenlbei" 19m. Iellsters Orchestra. 9-17-21. "Bwllilai Dane: tn Mcbeans _ lton of meat rationing with all its vlnclnl organization to be known as the Prince Edward Island Whole. sale and Retail Meat. Vendors’ As- sociation ms formed in Charlotte- towrnlast night. Mr. Wellington McNclll was elected president and Mr. J.M Rcop, secretary-treas- urcr. Basil Sherry, Summersfde, is VACE-Drcsidcnt for Prince County and M.E Ferguson, Murray River, for King's. At the conclusion of the meeting, the following rewlution was for- warded to Hon .1 G. Gardiner. Minister of Agriculture, Ottawa; Mr. Donald Gordon, chairman Wartime Prices and Trade Board, Ottawa; Messrs J.L. Douglas, MP-i W. Chester S. MacLure, M P.: Dr TV. Grant MP; J. Watson MncNnught, M P “Tile Wholesale and Retail Méat Dealers of Prince Edward Island 1n session this evening have by un- animous vote expressed their cx- treme dissatisfaction at the inltia. inconveniences to thc producers and retailers when such rationing is unnecessary This Province has a surplus of cattle which it is un- able i0 dispose of owing to Gov- crnment restrictions. Meat ration- ing in its present form dscourages the farmer in his efforts to pro- dncc Our Provincc is prcpnrcd to follow the lead of the other prov- inces by supporting them in their request for the withdrawal of the present meat rationing system." Large Attendance The mcctlngr. which was presided over b; M1‘. B Earle MacDonald. was larzely attended. there being meat dcnlers present irom w‘dely scattered sections of the Province. Mr .1 J. Trnlnor. Hedford. said 11c lmd inst rrtyrnsd from Ottawa whcrc h:- nnd M1" W 1?. Show. rlrlputy Minister" of Agriculture had been i11‘c1'ricv\'1'ng Ihp Dominion Minister of Agriculture. Mr Gard- iner. with reference to raising the (Conllnucd on Page 9 Col. 4i Two Murders ln Ontario TIMMINS, Ont. Sept. 17 - (CPD _ Two violent deaths during Warehouse. Souris. Wednesda M“ 8-12-Tue-t Dance in Farmlngto Sh l‘ may llitlht, September Zllxstc 0O 9-l8-1i.l "Annual Chicken Supper in St "llilrets Hall on Thursd - Interim 10m. 9-14-17. 1a. 1o. all} "Dince in Morell E t S h ‘l,' Wzdnssday. September lliftltmgcmo; in Glen Wednesday, Sept. 9-18-11. w Dance in Long Crcwk Hull. “Wnwiav. September 19m. Sale lll-lwhcs. 918-11. “Dance in Orapaud Hall. 'I‘h»urs- “Y “IBM. September 20th. Sale iii lunches. Crapaud W._I. 0-18-21. on‘ ___ we? 33ft B06151 ts "Widths hugs at Cardigan "try ‘Thursday for Davis s: ml"!- Contact Norman McKen- J" iflltkinl; service. - 9-1-4-21 Dance. Elliott Hall, Wednes- UY- September 10m Refresh- wnia‘ Good music. Fair-view Omens Institute. 9-18-11. "Collecting l-loga by m1‘ for ‘fifth 6s Fraser. Albany nmicxvlcl- ‘ l‘, also Emepald, Friday, Sep- ml’ lgillgén Phone collect. A. c. ‘Ingram y. or G. C. Green. live chicken no Thursday: Stanley 9:30: nnors store 10:30; New °W "D to 12 noon. The best (We for r -1 can . mmmm 4i“ week. “Iris-g; "A m tin . ry-i-i-l" °' catamarans; n, m.“ ‘grfidldv requested to meet} h. n M’ y gvening, Bo tem- = lb. sao . . a mum“ 5110118 Sscxtary. “mm 0-17-21. "Receiving h.‘ and , __ fiififey Meal: Just s. few car- mmun?’ PmllflB-llv immediate - m“ m- Hove very attractive “m!” Oral-s and our uguaj as- Iraq, ‘m, '1 mixed carloads of '11,, M,“ gmund grains bahgcd ‘m,’ Que‘ rain CompanyhMcn. erihnuym“ lllss Monday at Fre-l a,§‘,“,','a'1;1e=dav 1 a. M. York. a, m" -v. Mt. Stewart. 4, Water- tgM Nemfln River. Wednesday. River i, ““' Glasgow. 1o. Wheatlev “am-i . Brookfleld. i P. M. New 115.00 "aaafielfiyir Cross. Partner “ch W01‘ Rood Pigs over ..0 | ding that of a 22-year-old - force lbs. . m 1 °"°* mu i..S.ii’..3i"’ ‘ll-‘filii I thc weekend brought in their woke today two murder charges as policc mndc three arrests-Ancill- g r . Roland Dubrcuil, 23, a luborcnl was charged with the murder of 1. 65-year-old furniture dealer, Har- ry Kidcckel, who was found in his store Siturdny bleeding profusely. I-Ic died shortly after reaching hos- pital without regaining conscious- ness. Dubreuil, who was allegedly sccn with his wife, Ceclllc. 22. talking with thc cldcrly man that same af- ternoon, was said by police to have, murdered Kldcckel while attemp- ting to rob him. No money was found on the buslnessmans per“ son. Nur could police locate his cash rcgistcr. Cccille was held as a material‘ witness. Pcrc Lnbrnsh, 34, a truck diver. was c urged with thc murder of Fred Gnuvrcnu. 4.2, n tractor driver, who was found clcad in his room- ing housc Sunday morning, It was thought the dcoth was the result of a brawl. Police snid Gnuvrcau was struck during the bruwl and fell. knocking his head against a door. A re- sident, in thc rooming house said there had been a. drinking party In pro-lest against the present’ lll('1li-l'ili‘1011ll’!g regulations, n pro-- 6 Billion Loan? ‘slam Seeking l l l 1 . i MARSHAL STALIN MOSCOW, Sept. 1'1 — (AP)- Marshal Stalin met a group of United States Congressmen for an hour today and was under- stood to have expressed a dc- slre for a 56.000.000.000 loan from the United States. Atomic Bomb For Jap Battleship NEW YORK. Sen; 1'7 -- (CP) - The_New York Times said today in a dlspatch from Tokyo that the United States Navy plans to tow the surrendered Japanese battle. $11111 Nllgaio 500 miles to sea. nnd drop an atomic bomb upon it. The IPWSPMJQI‘ said the experiment. jlluv determine the form of navlcs 1n the future tvorld order " The 35,000-ton Nnguto was sur- rendered at thc Yokosuizn naval 535° Thouilh badly damaged. thc vessel _had survived attacks by 500 United States naval planes ‘The Times said nervspapernren W111 b? invited to udtrzc s thc atomic bombing experiment through which it said the Navy wants to 1mm these facts: whelher thc atomic bomb can cause ihc destruction of n single shin: what it will do tn a naval force; what effect it will hnvc on ‘he water I Lauzon, Koresky gsontenced To {Year In Jail MONTREAL. Sept. 17 bec tonight with $4,000 in their possession — in $100 and $50 bill-S. With Walter Koresky of Windsor. Ont., with whom they were ar- rested last week at Charlotte- town, the Lauzons were escorted hcre by Provincial Police. At Quebec, Lauzon and Kore- sky pleaded guilty to the theft of a car and were sentenced to one year 1n Jail. Mrs. Lauzcn pleaded not guilty and was remanded for trial The trio, wanted in Ontario for questioning in connection with a series of bank holdups, will be questioned here for a possible link- up with a $17,000 armed robbery at a department store. Provincial Police said Eileen Lnuzon is expecting a baby 1n December. She has been married to Lnuzon for six months and had known him since 194i. (GP), _ Ulyssc Lauzon and his ZO-year-y old wifc~Eilcen zrrrlvcd from Que-_ Yugoslavia Of Italian .l_l. Y. Prepares For lleavy Gale NEW YORK, Sept. 1'1 —(AP>-~ steadily rising winds laden with heavy rain whipped the North At- lantic coast of the United States late today and hundreds of alr- planes were flown hurriedly to 1n- land cities to escape the tropical storm headed toward New York and New England. Commercial airlines cancelled nearly all inbound and outgoing flights late in the afternoon If the centre of the storm moved northward at its present rate wind velocities in New York should reach their peak sometime tomorrow af- ternoon. the weather office at La Guardia Field estimated at 5 P M . EDT. (6 P.M. A.D T) today Plans Being COITIG bo’Beph'1b Request Be Hosphahzafion (Special to The Guardian) OTZFAWA, Ont., Sept. 1'7 -— AS the Parliament of Canada began its second full week's work today. observrrs in the galleries and both House and departmental 0f- 300 Canadians To l Leave Manila Today l By WILLIAM STEWART MANILA, Sept. 17 - (CP Cable) — Some 300 able-bodied Canadian soldiers, prisoners of war since thc grim Hung Kong campaign of December. 1941, lcokcd forward tonight to their- departure to. morrow en route to the homes they have not seen for nearly four years. Their morale was boosted when they received their first Cana- dian army pay since they fell into Japanese hands. The officers each received $200 in United States currency, the other ranks each received $100, Cold Rain, Snow In Western Canada WINNLPEG, Scpt. l7 - (GP) - Cold rains swept harvest fields in Western Canada during the work- cnd. bringing another halt to cut- ting and threshing. In many Prair- ie districts tempcrntums droppccl below the frost line and in the Calgary arca there was light snow in progress rior to thc brawl but could turn sh 1'10 further par- ticulurs. overnight. Most I‘ U. S. Japan To Be Sent Home MacArthur Considers 200,000 Regulars Could Keep Prostrate Country In Line. By RUSS-III: sumac 17 KYO. sent. — tAPl -— G31? MacArthur declared will)’ that 200,000 regulars probably r t Japan in line. ffélitlitlilcrfg pgbslarxilipitlete demobiliza- tlgn" of his victorious citizen army “simgfigiln was the occupation m,“ h, yunked plans for military mm -- which might have token .1 t " to en- "ili°"r*r<iiiilizt its: o wmmamm “Th” Japanese showed their co- operaeuon by shelving militarist- . - u m“ “i:'“ll’.'....’?“"‘.?.'.. Sllltlflllliislll ‘nnclvughilaa veteran zivllglllmfillgltllllTe jailed for oPDos. lng thc Wilf- Silnullaneously Gen- MacArthur Soldiers In put intoeffect s drastic re-educa- tlcn program designed by dint of press, radio and the public schools to lead Japan's millions from militarism to the ways of democ- racy. Fbur more suspected Japanese, war criminals were locked in Yokohama prison, where once some Allied prisoners languishedfi Twenty-nine of the on Gen! MacArthura wanted list now are, in custody. Two others were sui-; 1s . c a Yoshlo snlnouuxlt: Lt-Gen. classmate of war dictator Hidekli Tojo in Japan's military academy, and former member of the Su-_ preme War Council, committed suicide by cutting his throat with:- hls samurai sword. the news- paper Asahl said. He was not on the wanted list. i n ficinls were enthusiastic over the tonc of thc new membership of thc Commons. New members on both sides of thc Green Chamber have made auspicious debuts and new blood has brought a livelier, or at least lcss moribund, air to the staid Senate. Prcgressivc-Conservatives. new- lv-electcd to Parliament. have listened to Prime Minister King's little homilies and lectures on the duties of members with equanlmity and good humour, at the" same. time holding their own in the give and take of exchanges across the centre aisle. New Liberal mem- bers, particularly those from the armed services, have won praise from all sides of the House, not-I ably the movcr and seconder of‘ thc Throne Speech. Opposition leader John Bracken. while less vocal than his im- mediate predecessors, Gordon Grnlcdon or Hon. R. B. Hanson, has won high praise for his easy and sure adaptability to the Otimva scene. I-lis queries of the Ministry arc lncisivc and to the point. He wastes no words but so far mis- sed no tricks. Problems of Prince Edward ls- land have been pointedly called to thc attention of thc House by W. Chester S. McLure, Progressive- Conservntivc member for Queen's, during the opening week of the sessions. Mr. McLure‘s query to Veterans’ Affairs Minister McKenzie asking hospital care of Prince Edward Island veterans in their own Province awaits an answer and action. > Mr. MacKenzle today announc- ed the establishment of a new military hospital in the Montreal area but had no word as to im- proved military hospital facilities for veterans of P. E. I. In the Senate, Col. Brewer Rob- inson of Summersldo upheld the dignity of the Red Chamber in moving the Speech in reply. so far at least. there has been none of the bitterness, the scri- vnony and the wrangling born of Homecoming OI; Island ‘Batteries Boys Heartwarming Wel- Ian E FOR BETTER BAKING [93 OF CA FLOUR MHlED FROM Stiifiill (Continued on page 9. Col. 3) Made To Give Home. Brig-Gen. Stewart. the new district officer commanding Ml). No. 6, paid a visit to the Island over the week-end and plans were tentatively laid for a public wel- come to the two batteries from this Province. These are the 8th Heavy A. A. Battery consisting of eight officers and 1'14 other ranks and the 2nd Medium Battery. composed of eight officers and 221 other ranks. These two famous batteries were recruited in Prince Edward Is- land and have taken part in all the heavy fighting in Sicily, Italy and Northern Europe. It. is expected that they will sail from England together and will arrive in Charlottetown before the‘ end of September, possibly earlier. Reception Plans Laid A meeting of the Citizens Re- ception Committee was held in the City Buldlng last evening presid- ed o y Councillor Percy G. Gay in addition to the Com- mittee members Col. J. R. Paton. M. C, Hon. George H. Barbour. Lt.-Col. P. S. Fielding, M.M., were present and were added to thc Committee. The personnel of these two batteries were recruited from all an curly date, Maj. Leslie Mutch. Seeks Stlice Territory By JOHN A. PABIH LONDON, Sept. l7 -- (A?) Yugoslavia, backed by Soviet Rus- cnce of foreign ministers today for a sizeable slice of Italian territory, including the important port of Trieste. The Yugoslav vice-premier. Ed- ward Kareij, presented the claim personally to the British, Ameri- can. Russian. French and Chin- esc foreign ministers at their meeting this afternoon. Besides Trieste and Venezia Giulia the so-called "Julian March" Yugoslavia asked for the Italian-held islands off the vuzoslavia coast and the Italian province of Zara on the Dalma. tlan seaboard. Italys counterclaims - demand. ing retention of the territory with the llossible exception of Flume at the eastern tip - are expegtgd g0 be presented by the Italian for- eign minister, Alcide Gasperl. Atl1lon Great Britain LIVERPOOL, England. Sept. 1'7 ——(CP CABLED- The Empress of Scotland docked here today, bring- ing to Britain the Earl _of Athlone Governor-General of Canada, and Princess Alice on their first visit home in five years. Also aboard rhe big grey CPR. liner was Mai-Gen. Georges P. Vanicr. Canadian Ambassador to France. returning to Paris after three weeks in the Dominion. A group of 37 Canadian women of the St, John Ambulance brigade arrived for service in the United Kingdom. Most of the several hun- drcrl passengers were wives and children returning after SDEfidlflR thc war years in Canada. - Deadlock Continues In Windsor Strike WINDSOR, Ont., Sept. 17 (CP) -— As deadlock continued to- night between the Ford Motor Com- pany o.f Canada and local 200 of thc United Automobile Workers Union (CIO) in the strike involving an estimated 10.000 employees of Ford, the Windsor Police Com- mission rnec to define its procedure. It was rurdcrstood the Commis- sion did not feel inclined to offer the company protection for per- sons desiring to cross the picket lincs around the sprawling auto-l motive works. sia. asked the five-power confer-i Trial OI-“Eeasi: OF Belsen" Begins LUENEBERG, Germany, Sept.‘ 1'7 — (CP) -- Testimony that more. than 4,000,000 persons died at the Auschwitz concentration camp in‘; Poland was promised by the Launch Drive c s prosecution today "t the opening of the military trial of Josef Kra-, mer and Mt S. S. henchmen for A F d cons rac o com1..t mass mur-- .._.._P Y - rmy llll A converted gymnasium in tns heart of this picturesque medieval. city served as a courtroom for thc. British military court trying Kra-i Capt, NW. Lnwther pmslded mer-known as the “Beast of} at the dinner held last evening 1n Belsen"-—for the regime of hor-i the Salvation Army Citadel to o1"- rcr he instituted an that camp. Bantu.- _and launch the drive which, after his transfer from Ausch-: beginning this morning and ending‘ wits-and the 23 men and 21 wo- this evening. is expected to raisa mc11 who served under him. $9.000 for the Army's Home Franc At the start. Mal-Gen. I-I. P. appeal. M. Berney-Fdcklin, heading the The canvassers are arranged into court, brushed aside efforts of five divisions whose leaders are British officers defending the sc- Lieut -Col. FEB Conrad, M M., cused to get separate trials of ED; Lieut-Col. J.D Stewart. ytge Auschwitz and Belscn camp BkS1O' gliwARRgl-E, J, Andrew C 37895- ‘ fl’; all . e Mr. Ro Then Col. T. M. Backhouse. Cudmore is chairman ab‘? the ‘spec’: chief prosecutor, capped a cold. ial names" division. precise. two-hour-long recital of Capt. Lnwther gtatgd f,“ gammy the incredible crimes charged to the 45 with a disclosure that he had a witness who had seen rec- ords of 4,000,000 deaths at Ausch- witz. Mass starvation, beatings and torture, filth and disease and des- pair, prisoners driven to canni- balism — that was the picture Col, Backhouse painted for the men trying the Nazis. bv royal warrant, on behalf of all Allied countries whose nationals suffer- ed in the camp. Accused Are Irnpasslve Throughout. the sullen Kramer and his stone-faced co-defendants sat impassive, under guard British military police and brisk Auxiliary Territorial Service mem- bers servng as wardrcsses. Twelve of them including Kramer and the S. S. woman Irma Grese who. Backhouse said. had been called the worst of the women guards were charged with crimes at Auschwitz. where Kramer commanded the Birkenau compound, infamous as the big- gest and worst of Germany's mass murder factories, until he moved to Belsen fivc months before the British armies liberated it April 15. "At Auschwitz. the prosecution will say there was the deliberate cold-blooded extermination of mil- lions," Col. Backhnuse told the court. He added: “Every member of the Belsen (Continued on r'='.;§;a‘¢.l. s) By FRANK FLAHERTY OTTAWA, Sept. 1'1 — (OP) Canada should start on a pro- gram of selective immigration at Liberal member for Winnipeg South. said today in the Com- mons. parts of the Province and it was felt that the reception should bc a Provincial affair participated inlMutch said Such a Pmgram “eed by all municipalities in the Prov-in“ Fmd Smuld r 1 ince. This is the first opportunity. P91151115! Cwpmw“ ° deilwbl 1"‘ the citizens have had to greet Is-I land units and the wish to make 1c an affair that will‘ be remembered. Since the Committee have many plans to make it was decided to meet almost daily and Miss Iphi- genie Arsenault was appointed secretary for the special commit- nee. Major Lowther. Councillor T. A Butler, Col. Fielding, Col. Paton, Councillor Gay and Leo J. Brad- ley, D C. M., werc appointed to select a suitable place for this reception and to report back. Mrs. M. Bagnall, Mrs. Ira M. Brown and Mrs. L. T. Lowther werc ask- ed to look after the distribution of cigarettes, etc. Councillor Gay was asked to phone all Mayors of towns and representative citizens of villages to come to the next meeting to be held in the City building on Thursday. Sept. 20 at 7:30 P. M. J. A. B elfoon and Major A. W. Matheson were asked to head a committee to contact all return- ed members of both batteries as it is hoped that all these will tum out in uniform to greet the re- turning ones. They will report at next meeting. (Continued on Page 7 (v%l.‘I)_— $0 NADA WAKHH) HARD WHEAT commmee | employment A veteran of the two wars, Maj. not be delayed tion and establishment of high in Canada. There was a shortage of labor in Can- ada in thc unskilled and some highly-skilled classes. Bringing in people from these classes would help provide jobs for people here. Mnj. Mulch was one of several private members who took part in the Throne Speech today. Oth- ers were R. . Knight (C.C.F.- Saskatoon). G. R. Boucher (PC- Carleton). . George Cruickshank (L-Frnscr Valleyl, and George White (PC - Hastings-Peterbor- cugh). Mr. Knight said more use- made of he wanted the Hudson Urges Immigration » l Program For Canada Bay Railway and the port of Churchill and suspected there of, division, commanded by Lieut - Col. Stewart, would bear watching by the other divisions. It was com- mended and manned, he said, by officers and men, every on; 01' wlwm Was a vetelan from overseas. None knew better than they, Capt 10w- ther said, the grep/t work of love and mercy which the Salvation Army had carried on for the Canadian buys on the battle field. The canvassers will he tendered another dinner at the Citadel this evening at 6 o'clock and cum in the results of their one-day osm- Pfl 8h. T0 nacomnssros BASE HAMILTON Bermuda, Sept. 1'7- (CP CABI-El- Capt. J.D. Prentice R.C.N. corpmyanding‘ officer. oonfir med today thatthe Royal Canadiar Navy. ‘Iralnine base I-I.M.G.S. som- ;ers T§]es would be decommissioned in about three weeks. The announcement was recelrcc. with regret by Borrnucllans who had been very hospitable to Canadiar sailors here. LONDON — (C?) Sir Ben Smith. food minister, warned mem- bers of hi5 staff wishing to return to London that many would be disappoined as homes were hard to find in this bomb-dunsged city. Even tote Lmnoar nan (‘an time (on MANY locus m 4n w *3? as ? '1 B! was “a Negro in the woodpile“. holding up developments. Mr. Boucher, representing the rural area adjoining Ottawa. said‘ he supported the idea of de- veloping the national capital and the surrounding district but sug- gestcd the people of the arca should not be deprived of the franchise and thc differing laws and properly right-s. Educational systems prevailing in the adjoin- ing districts of Quebec and Ont- ario should not be disturbed. Maj. Mutch said Canada now was faced with the opportunity nf doubling her population with- in the next 25 years. lie was convinced lt was not possiblc to maintain a high standard of living under the conditions of settlement in Canada as they existed today. Immigration could nor orced from cxpanding' exportl trade and if this was done thc Government's goal of high bu div- em- Storm Of Meat Rationing Protests Are Continuing By The Canadian Press The tempest over meat rationing in Canada entered its second wed: Monday with an announcement by the Independent Butchers‘ Assoc- ialion in ‘Pol-onto that more than 12.000 signatures of Tbronto dtlnens who condemned the Government edict; had been affixed to petitions in one clay. More petitions would bc issued at a meeting of retail butchers to be held here tonight. Added impetus was given thc Canada-wide rationing protest when in was learned that. because of a surplus of meat, New York City will discontinue meatless 'I‘uesdays and Pridays. More protests found their way tn the desk of Prices Board officials during the last 24 hours. with the latest to wire objections being bui- chcrs from Timmins, Ont. and district Enrlv Monday Edmonton butchers reportedly tossed some vnriciics of cooked meats they failed to sell into garbage cans. (Continued cn Page Reports said business there last week was 60 per cent under normal. The same thing happened Ottawa and Moncton, N.B., despite a promise from Finance Minister llslcy that a change in coupon values for cooked meats would be considered. Some butchers in Brantford, Ont, are ignoring ra- tion regulations partially or wholly. Latest to come to defence of meat rationing. however. joining with the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire in Toronto and the National Council of Women, was the Soldicr-‘s Wife Club of Toronto which sent a telegram to che Prices Board supporting the re-lntroduc- tion of men‘. rationing Snult Ste Marie. Ont , meat dcalcrs dccidcd at n week-end meeting lo send all moat coupons back to the Govcrlnncllt if ration- ing svns not ciiscontinued by Sept. 24. and to sell mcat without taking coupons. METEOROLOGICAL SERVICE, Toronto, Sept. 17 — (CP) Minimum and maximum temper- atures: Voncouver 50, 00; Edmon- ton 27, 46; Regina 45, 56; Winnipeg 52, 65; Toronto 40, 61; Ottawa 57; Montreal 40, 54* Quebec 35. 57; Saint John as; Moncton s1, so; Hal- ifax 44, so; Charlottetown 4a, 5'1: Sydney 4i, 60; Yarmouth 42. 56 FORECASTS Lower St. John Lawrence: Fresh Northeasterly winds; partly cloudy and cool. Lake St. John: Fair and cool. Gulf Bay Chnleur and North Moderate to fresh north- erly winds; fair and cool. Maritime West: Fresh to strong northeast winds; partly cloudy and oool, followed by rain near the Bay of Fundy. Maritime East: Fresh north and n°rtheast winds; cloudy and cool. High tide this morning at ‘1-10 and ton ht. n. 9.36. Bun se this evening at 7.06 and rises orrow morning at 8.41. Pull moon September 2i. 4.40 P. M. Summersldp tide eighteen minu- tes later than Charlotteovcn. SUNDAY SERVICE lrave Charlottetown 12.15. 5.05 RM Mrive Chlrlottcinwn 5.20. 8.10 M CIIARLOTTETOWN- NEW GLASGOW (Daily Except Sunday! Leave Charlottetown 1.10. 0.00 RM Arrive Charlottetown 2.35. 5.20 PM N. S.—P. B. l. FERRY SERVICE (Dally. Including Sundays) SCHEDULE MAY l-BEPT. 80 heave Wood Islands '1 a. an. ll a. 1a.. 8 o. m. partly -.w‘-A-'bn~ Leave Caribo; I a. m, l p. us. l I l. s...‘-