MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN than. ‘W0 like the sure-we em, but like the ma: chart fllll‘ lensing Guardian, Founded I807. Charlottetown Guardian Two Oento. in} A L Upin ions Differ Gn B0m_I_J_’s Effect Navy Secretary Ferrestal Describes Damage As Relatively ilnimportant Collision Sends 20 To Hospital TORONTO. July 3 —(CP) -A collision today between a street car and bulldozer being carried on a truck sent about 20 Tomnto and suburban residents to hospital for treatment. for cuts and bruises. Circumstances of the accident were described as practically the same as those of a mishap which killed three persons and inlured 82 last nizbt l7 miles west of lviontrenl. In ihc Montreal accid- ent. a bulldozer on a platform truck swung around and ribbed the side off a bus. Coming Events "Talkies-biggie. Wednesday'- "Movies at Dorien to-niaht- "Talkies ~ Ergefald, Thursday. "Talkies-Caniee-Cove Friday. (By Don Whitehead) ABOARD U. S. S. APPALA- CHIAN. July 2—-(AP)—~Preliinin- ary survey of damage to target vessels in Monday's atomic bomb burst over Bikini lagoon today brought various estimates of the success of the experiment. Navy Secretary Forrestal ex- pressed surprise at the "rc':-l- tively unimportant" damage he saw durlnl! an inspecticcl of the heavier ships. Brig-Gen. Roger M, Ramey. air force commander. said at Kwajalein that the operation was "a complete and unqualified suc- cess." tDr. J. Robert Oppenheimer. UDlVBFSIIY of California physicist. was of the opinion at Bcrkcicy that early reports could not be expected to provide a true evalu- ation of the bonlb. that detailed scientific study must be awaited. Dr. Oppenheimer said the pre- the test was a failure.) Official announcements this as the atom bonib's the anchored target ships: Sunk-Destroyer Anderson; <19. stroyer Lamsccl; attack ITFIHS> ports Gilliam and Carlislc; and the Japanese cruiser Sakawzl. a modern welded craft. gave toll of "Talkies-Crapaud Saturday. "Dance - Pleasant Grove. July d. "Dance Iona Hall Friday. Jlfi/ lb. "Dance-Cardigan, Friday. July 5th. Webster's Orchestra. ..____ “Dance i Johnston's‘ River Ichool, Thurs ay. 4th. Women's ‘In- Itltute. "Don't Miss Glasgow Road Con- cert. Wheatley River Hail. July C. "R0110 Bav Tea Party. Wed- nesday. July i7. Don't miss it. "Dance in Pownall Hall Friday. July 5. Mi-llview Orchestra. D. S me. o "Box Social and Dance, Kelly's Cross Ilall. Friday. July 5th. Danc- gq 9-12.30- "Tha Dance st Johnston's River gchooj is postponed until Monday. July 8th. "Ice Cream Social at Fred Moss- maris on Friday evening, July 5th. Proceeds; for Village Green School. "Big dance in Tracadie Hall. Iriday. July 5th. Rollie McKerizieys Orchestra. "Reserve Thursday. July 11th for Lou-in Tea Party at Abel's Cape. Bay Fortune. "Collecting hogs for Davis dz Fraser every Thursday. Write me or phone N. A Cutcliffe. Freder- icton. D. l... McDowell. “A sipecial library meeting Will be held in Hunter River Hall on Wednmclai’. July 3rd. at 8:30 PM. Standard Time. "Wir-iloe North United Church Tea, Thursday, Jilly 41h. If not fine, Friday, Supper served at. 6 o'clock Daylight Saving. v "Collecting hogs every Thursda . Albar and surrounding distric _ and [emerald every Friday. Phone collect or write early n week. A. C Green or G. C. Green. 6-3-M-W-tf "Annual Picnic in l-ld 0! - Bridget/s Church. Lot ll. will be held Wednesday. July 3rd at Rob- “; skqgryh cedar cabin. Foxley River. 5-3-41 "Ice Cream Social. A splcee St. John's W. A. Oraoaud all. uly dill. 8-21-36-2-3 "Hospital Dance. McLean's Warehouse Souris Wednesday. Mod- ern and old time dancing, Two Orchestras. Refreshments served. " here will be a meeting of Si. Fe o Bramh Canadian Legion at q o’ lock, Thursday. July 4th. Moc- Donnldb Hall. Si. Peters Bly. "Variet Concert Griown‘: beet ant A ton Hall. y. Y 4th at a o'clock atsildsm . 9 o'clock doyiisht sevlng time. pm“ with Orchestra after. also hie of cakes gncqfll-rsynamizllichr‘ 132w c?°un" median will be held Thursday. July members are requested to new Illl b0 lal bust tn o . MacLure. . Ci. an? 5 <31 v r mills.“ l lflu . Ail ti... VII-P iii Heavily damagcd-Jsight car- rier Independence; battleship Arkansas; heavy cruiser Pen- sacola; submarine Skate; a tank landing ship; and battleship Nagato, About '25 other ships suffered damasze in varying do rees. Mr. Forrestal. while viewing the damage to the heavienjshigs as. relqtivalyqg u ' ‘i; '. served that such ships are “diffi- cult to slnk unless they sustain underwater damage." He warned against hasty conclusions bu: ex- pressed the opinion "there still will be navies in the future.” Another atomic bomb is to be set off under water in the lagoon probably within three cr four weeks. to test the destructive power of tho blast transmitted oy water to the hulls of ships. One big question still remained lmanswered: could crcw members have lived through the hlflgf? Scientists hoped to got an an- swer to that question by observ- tng the effects of rays upon sur- viving test animals. Animals sur- vived aboard all ships so fa." vis- ited by the rcss boat. but il rom- plete anima census has not been made. Goats on the battleshi- Nevada still were alive. althougi one of the half dozen aboard was rcporz- ed sick. The Nevada was the prin- clpal target. but the bomb was believed to have exploded astern and a little to port of the ship. Admiral W, H. P. Blandy. ‘om- mander of the operations. said ‘nc believed casualties would hovel been heavy aboard the baltlcsh: i New York had it been mannnii Th New York was one of ihcl Sh! s the Admiral and Mr. For-l restal inspected after it had born. declared free of harmful radic- Bclwlly- Admiral Blandy pointed out. however. that while arn-v, material cxposod on docks if the ship was damaged "the heavy parts oi’ the ship itself were :.r.- damaged." the Japanese Negroes Vote In Primary Election JACKSON. Miss, July I-(AP) —Baoked by a promise of Feder-i s] Protection. Negroes joined white persona today in voting in Missis- iaolppis Democratic Primary elect- n. They were not molested. Tile issue of whether negroes could vote bad been highmointed during the campaign bv an anneal by Senator Theo G. Bilbo. lit-lo seeks re-nominatlon. _ to "every red-blooded Anglo-Saxon in Miss- issippi to use whatever means are nocesarv" to keep negroes from the polls. ' Twenty-five negroes were among‘ the first. 45 persons to vote in the slot precinct \t Jackson. In the 32nd mecinct. one negro was among 80 early voters. TRANSPORT ' STRIKE mama. of July a ~ fOPl - gtreet, our oeratora wen! str lug era. A l art liminary reports did not indicate‘ Prices Rise In United States NEW YORK. July §—(AP)-R»e- cord-high cattle prices and above- ceiling premiunzs for hogs brought farmers to the United States‘ live- stock markets in droves today as buyers and sellers groped ilnlor- tinly in the confusion left by the Office of Price Administration's end. This was the situation in brief: Stocks steadied. Cotton fixtures fell off. Wool was up. Textiles tiidn't budge irom O.P.A. ceilings and none was offered for sale. Poultry jumped 7 to 10 tents a pound. Flour reappeared at O.P.A.- plus prices bu: below black mar- ket quotations. Cattle hit $22.50. Hons closed at $l'i.50—short of Monday's $18.50 top but above O.P.A. levcl. Loss of subsidies was for increases in milk. butter. cheese. flour and meat prices in some parts of the United States. while others chose to wait and see if Congress would make pav- ments retroactive in the hoped- for resurrection o-f price controls. Retail outlet for food. clothin: and other staples generally stuck to their pledge to hold prices at the O.P.A. level until Congress - has a chance to do something. - Increasing pressure came from the tenant population for emer- gency relief from rising rent prices through state and civil re- strictions in the absence of fed- eral acticcl. In Chicago's grain market. me busiest day since last April's crop movcment. saw dealers bookinr 1.000.000 bushels of corn on a "lo- arrive" basis at $2.15 a bushel-IO cents above the old O.P.A. top. _ Tagging along behind the boom in hogs and cattle. poultry pflCCS Jumped between 7 and l0 cents a pound in Chicago and New'York. Cattle prices at Chicago zoo-m- ed 25 per cont above the $18 O. P. A. ceiling in two days of un- blamed restrained trading, Cattle _:,;lo_sed at ~a saint) top-Jill scams‘ above Mondays record high-but the gllitted hog market ended at $17 and $17.50 compared to Mccitlayh $18-50 limit. best since 1919. The first special legislative ses- sion to hca doff rent increases was reported in Rhcde Island where Gov. John O. Pastors sum- moned legislators to the state house Friday to meet the emcr- IZOTICV. New York. Massachusetts. Ala- bama. New Jersey. Iowa and Wflshlnizton. 0.. already had taken steps o ccntroi rents, and some municipal authorities con- templated similar action, Big Four Agree 0n Trieste By PARA S, Josl-zmrnrivan Jilly z —tAr‘)— The Bill hour foreign mullslers have flawed in Dilfltlble on the inter llJllCllZlAlZiltACll oi lileste. Senamr riiillul‘ vanosnberp 0i me Unued DHJLGS delcganon said tonight. 1m! Mlcnuan Republican sen- ulci- reported tnr. agreement loll- owing a fouz-nour meeting of the ~lllllllSlEiS, l-ie said. however, that J19 IDFBWJI lIlilllSi-Efb had not yet aizlced cn a statue for the dis- UJlBCI Adriatic port, one of the roost serious problems which has laced lne conference here. (Reuters News Agency reported that at today's meeting State Secretary Byrnes of the United States and Foreign Secretary Bev- ir-. cf Britain "made it quite clear" lhat lbev would orl-lv agree to the proposed international bone for Trieste oncl the neighboring area of Venezia Guilia if control and rcsoonsbllity for the region rested on the United Nation-s and not. on the Bil: Four as proposed by the Soviet delegation.) The Forelim Ministers also agreed Sen-atm- Vanderliberi added on the area to be included in the International Zone. foreshad- owing eventual acceptance of the French compromise proposal on the Italo-Yugoslav frontier. Both Mr. Byrnzs and Mr. Bevin h-ad been expected to accept in- ternationalization of Trieste. a plan put forward by Georges Bidault. French Forei n Minister. Foreign Minister V. . Molotov of Russia accepted the proposal Monday. Senator Vand-enbenr aid the foreign ministers did not (locus: the question of fixirur a date for the general European ace eon- ference at today's se on. The French olan would place the Yugoslav-Italian border along a Hench-proposed lino. with ‘n-ieste and the surrounding com intecmtionaliled. Once the troublesome ‘Priests issue is settled. the council in ox- oeoted to set. a date for the general European once conference ‘of I1 0091811. IMALLB‘! MACHINE ‘IDOL . 1%: -t g0?) — A 0M d Udly m‘: to the ' nan. Honored At Lady Baden-Powell. World Chief Guido. concluded her sross- Canada lecture tour last night by delivering an address at the Char- lottetown Hotel on the Girl Guide movement throughout the world which held the rapt attention of her audience for an hour or more. Seated at the main table with Lady Baden-Powell was His Hon- our Lieut-Govemor J. A. Ber- nard and Mrs. Bernard. Chief Justice Thane A. Campbell, Prem- ier Walter Jones and Mrs. Jones. Mayor B. Earle MacDonald and Mrs. MacDonald. Rev. S. J. Davies. Boy Scout Field Commis- sioner; Mrs. D. MacGlligon. divisional commissioner and Mrs. John Reay. Provincial Girl Guide Commissioner. The clergy of the city were represented by the Rev. T. H. B. Scmcrs. pastor of St. James Presbyterian Church; Hcv. Father Baldwin. pastor of the Church of the Most Holy Redeem- er; Rev. T. E. MacLennan. pastor of Trinity United; the Rev. L. A. Dougan of St. Duclsfan's Basilica; and Major and Mrs. Victor Mac- Lean. Salvation Army. Premier Jones acted as chair- Lady Baden-Powell in opening her address reminded her hearers that she was no stranger to Can- ada. that she had visited Canada in 1919 when the Girl Guide movement was in the experiment- al stage. In the last war. the Boy. Scout and Girl Guide movement came “into its own". Lady Baden- Poweli said. Cu this last tour. she had left England in January and ‘O.P.A. End Sees lady Baden-Powell Banquet 0n Arrival In City had Vl5li9dv parts of Latin-Am. 91198» "Wllldlllg Cuba and liie-xlco. and had also toured the Bahamas. Trinidad. and many of the otheri islands of the West Indies. l dy _ Baden-Powell also spent some time in the United States which has the greatest memhur- ship o-f Boy Scouts and Guides of any country in ‘ world. She had then begun tier; Canadian tour at Vancouver rid had continued across the country Speaking at various centres ini every Province. Reviews Guide Activities irl Guiltei ‘ its own".i said. during i H16 The Boy Scout and G movement came "into Lady Baden-Powell the last war. Despite the serlousi losses suffered by the orcaniza-l tlon through so many of its mogti capable loaders going into war. service. botlr the Boy Scout and? the Girl Guide movements con- tinued to thrive in England. There. their work was invaluable. when the Germans were raining bombs upon the citlcs. towns and villages. pf Great Britain. Both the Scouts and the Guides assisted at blood transfusions. at fires. at civil defense. at zaring for the bombed-out people. and at feeding the hungry and ‘he in- Jllred. Nol rrlly did they work wonders in England but on the Continent as vvell._ Lady Baden- Powell said. Lady Baden-Powell told of her tOontiinued On Page 5 Col '11 .3 Candidates In illlehlttl......,..,. By-Eleetion COOKSI-IIRE. Que. July 2 -—tC P)— Voters from the Rural East- ern ‘rowniohios constituency of Compton will go to the polls to- morrow to choose their next mem- ber in the Provincial Legislature 11cm Hmong three cflicial candid- ates. l-frst by-electlon since last Nov- GXIIOZI‘. me Compton vote is to nalmc a successor to vV.J. uufiy. Liberal who clan. The 125157 electors have a choice between two old-line pariies- the Union Nationals of Premier Maurice Duplessis and the Liberal opposition of Adelard Goribout- and the Bloc Populaire a war-born nationalist group bead- ed ov An-clre Laurendeau. The candidates. officially nom- inated a week ago. are C. D. French for tLie Government. W.S. Laberee. Liberal. and Aurellcn Quintin. Bloc Populairc. A fourdii candidate. Gerard Houle. retired before nom- lnatlons to support the Bloc Poo- ulalre. Premier Duplessis and other government spokesmen. in ad- dresses supporting Mr. French. asked electors to endorse the auto- nomlst policy of the Union Nat- ionalc bv electing the government candidate. The government would consider election of Mr. French as endorsement of its stand at the Dominion-Provincial confbrcnce. speakers said. Mr. G-cdbout and Liberal party. supporters charged the Govern- ment with having shown isolation- ism during the Dominion-Provinc- lal conference and urged elcctimi of Mr. Lrlberee to show Dublicly that Quebec did not completely approve the Union Nation-ale stand. The Bloc Populaire. only party with a Frcncvli-Sllfilklflll candidate- asked for a vote in suDDOTi 0! M? Quintin an the grounds it was only fair that n constituency Wit-h l majority of French-sbeakirm v09"! should have a representative of their owntlanwulsc in m! 119315‘ laiture. There are 62 oollina booths in this widespread constituency and N- sulta will be gathered at Cook- shire. Presfnt sLandlmt in the ill-seat u : ‘ellurnliatmrllationale 49. Liblflll 36- Bloc edpulllre s. independent 1- Vscant one (Compton). PLENTY OI’ MILEAGE lndia Riots ‘ rioting crowds witmnsphc-ro 33 Dead ln y_ into and AHIMEDABAD. In clia. July (OFF-Troops fired rifles of Hindus in Ahmedabad today’ to suppress "arson and iootinfi" and the toll in continued communal clashes rose to 33 dead and 250 iniured. v - Crowds fought with stones and Moslems Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETJRN. CANADA. WEDNESDAY, JULY s, 1946 G...” regional ii - 4 FAILURE 0F CONFERENCE IS REASON Federal Cov’t. To_ Discontinue Agencies iAlnlost Immediately HALIFAX. July 3 - (Wednes. dill’) _ (CP) The Halifax Chronicle said in a newlsipage storv today it had learned that reconstruction councils Jhroughoui Canada. set up last year by Ottawa to facilitate post- war reconversion and reconstruc- tion. are to be abolished almost immediately because of failure of the Dominion-Provincial con»- ference. While the full reasons for Fed- eral Government abolition of one of its malor agencies in peace- time re-employmemt was not know-n. the Chronicle said. it was learned that Ottawa was taking the attitude that the negative outcome cf the conference dict- ated a complete shift of recon- struction oolcy. "The new policy was not dis- closed. Up to now. councils work- ing in each province have invest- igated industrial. public works and other projects coming under the brad of reconstruction in con- iurict-ion with provincial govern- ments and other public bodies. Recommendations for financial aid have been forwarded to Ot- tawa. and the Federal govern- ment would make grants or loans." The story said the decision had apparently been reached coincid- entally with the fashioning of the national budget and its optional financial offers to the provinces. It calls for speedy action in the demolition of the government bran-ch. Operations of the Nova Scotia scotia Council. it is under- stood. are to be wound up oom- pietely bv Aug. l5. ' ‘ "Since the notification left Ot- tawa at approximately the same time as the budget was brought down. nossibilitv was evident that. financial considerations carried some weight in the verdict. Some quarters held that national ad- ministration felt it could not fin- ance further projects recom- mended bv its councils without getting the provinces on the dot- knives in new clashes sterlifl? after the lifting of the curfew at 6 am. The 25th Rajputana Rifle; open- ed fire at noon to control some "flacrant cases of arson Vflflil looting" accompanying the lots. a Bombay provincial communique said. (One person was reports-c! ed in similar disorders in Mint ‘ in eastern India. 250 miles norlh- west. of Calcutta.) _ Nineteen poisons wore killed and 130 injured Monday in a_ between Moslems sect of dissenlcrs several pitched times Ill hrli cos and police fired groups fighting and looting shops. The wave of disorders stemmed ar- from political tension which ecl during Hindu rcllrzious lccssions in honor of ' ‘Jagannath Roth. somctimc; -' ecl Juggernaut. whom the Wadi“ revere as lord of 1hr- universe. Order Restored In Jugs-Slay City i . .A t Tamara. July zfraPi-Orfirri was restored today in ihlS §li>||{p'> paralyzed cZ-ty after thrcc 411i‘ "it rioting in \\'l1‘"ii ‘v10 il*"l'5°n5 “Twi killed and so iniurcd- in" "iii rcmainod tonse. Bri-l tish and United States front" WW“ kept on the alert to qucll an)’ new outbreaks. _ Military authorities. fearing new clashes between Communists and pro-Italian sympalhizers. denied permission to the Italo-Slav strike committee to hold a mass demonstration in connection will‘ a funeral recession for a Coin- munist wor er who Was shot to death Sunday night. Transportation still was halted and mnst stores and businesses were closed by a general strike of 200.000 workers. called yester- day in connection with the riots. Some: stores owned by Italians. which also had been closed. re- opened today. but shutters were kept half closed so that they ‘A healthy youngatisr wath and runs about l5 miles a dasY-\ I Outstrmdingly Qigd would be dropped quickly if new occurred. ores: e lznatlon at his sudden death ted line for its projected Domin- "Ton-Provincial agreements. F's- ance Minister llsleyfls formal ad- mission of the failure of the Do- minion Provincial conference. contained in the budget speech. strenztheneci this view. "Other quarters felt that Ot- tawa might be sim/ply brandish- ing a big stick in the direction of those provinces that were dissat- isfied with‘ its proposals. Thus. the national government would be qivinz the provinces a foretaste of what they miiiht expect in the wav of financial withdrawals un- lcs." they rallicd beneath the navi- rier oi’ the Dominion-Provincial screams-ht." Rose Statement Given To Press 12 PAGES th ho Commnnhnenfn, MAXI MS or A MERE MAN Mill ll .11! able creature-but ough he has made 82,000,000 b", hllll’! 10¢ inprvvod on flu Ten Subscription ‘Delivered 86.00. Mall. “M: other Provinces I 0.5.5. ILI. i RECONSTRUCTION COUNCILS T0 BE ABOLISHED ls Fourth Victim of Collision Andre De Re/pentigny. l8. died in hospital today raising to fou: he number of fatalities :cstitin,z from a collision last nigh‘. be- tween a cnpacltv-fillerl Transport Company bus and heavy truck carrying a blllldOZtZ“ at Woodlands, 1'7 miles southwest of here. The other dead were identified‘ as George E. Moreland. 47, Chub’ eauguay. Que. Agnes Poisson. 31. Montreal. and Ovila LeJour. 55.‘ Lachine. Que. Thirty one other, persons were injured and l6 were still in hospital today. eight m serious condition. First Sea Lord Comments Dn Atom Bomb Experiment LONDON. July 2~ (Reutersh- Admiral Sir John Cunningham. First Sea Lord of the Admiralty, speaking on how the anmrc- bomb was likely to affect future naval fighting said today: "Ii would sound a note of caution. against drawing too hasty con- clusions from the result of the Bikini experirnents- which we hope will soon be publlshed—be- fore they have been confirmed and tested." He added: "Because an atom bomb-and if an atom bomb-bail had great succ so s ainst a battleship-“afiflityfla ‘ ill " tropical lagoon for three or four months, and pinpointed to an exactitude of 10 inches for the attacking bomber. do not let us think that has solved the problem. J we were to try out a n»- rifle against an old cow tethered in the middle of a field. it does not necessarily follow that was the right kind of bullet to use against a wounded tiger In a thick jungle." Addressing a luncheon of the newly formed guild of British newspaper editors, Sir John said the need for the caipital ship le- mained. He predicted great sub- marine development during the next few years. lnvestitures Likely Neld In Fall OTTAWA. hi." _ (CPl—In- vestitures at Government House here and by provincial Lieuten- MOXVTREAL. July 2 - lCP)—-l Provdnizal. a . the i The Canada To Retain Economic Controls iFederal Cov’t. Wlll Not follow ll.S. Example In ilisandonllig War-Imposed l Regulations OTTAWA. July 2 lCP) Minister Mackenzie King lcdav told the Commons Canada intends to retain her Drice. T9!!! land rationing controls regardless ‘ti the united Slates action o! abandoning similar war-imposed iegulatlons in tint country. At the same time Mr- Kink 0b- served that developments affect- mg prices in thio United States were "not without their effect" upon Canada and stresed that Canadian policies. as in the DB-sl. uould "necessarily continue t0 have such developments in mind". In a too-word statement Mr. King noted that the American emergency control legislation ex- pired June 30 and that there now were under Federal Law no con- trol-J. except for sugar. on prices. icnts and rationins in $11M 60W" l Pflfflf.‘ try. "This situation has not unnot- uralv raised certain QHQSMOM in minds of many Canadians. Government. feels that the first opportunity should be taken to assure Parliament and the country that there is no intention of abandoning similar controls in Canada. "Developments Mfectinfl orloel in other countries. DBIEiCUJ-ITIY m‘ United States. are. of course. 110$ without their effect noon Canada. our musics have in the out and will in the future. nooeaarily continue to have such diovelw‘ merits in mind!’ But controls edaied in Canada before they ‘vere adwibd 111 m! United States m. Kim added. Ind the Canadian regulations while similar in obiflctive in $11000‘ ill the Unified States. had du- CI0dtLql1Illi8 widely 1-11 M“ and er na ure . "In Oiilllllfedwfirdl. wewi: OM10 hav fo ow ‘our will!‘ whigh we believe is well ldlflifid to Canadian conditions and to the Canadian economy. We shill coin- tinue to follow policies which I! believe to be in the wenerol in- terest. making. from time to time. such modifications as seem to b9 required in the 111M 0f 1111mm!“ and external conditions es they develop." Chairman Donald Gordon of the Prices Board. which adrninmefs Canadais Price Control Ileglela- tion. said when asked for oom- men-t on the American action:— "The situation is far from clear 1n the United States and we ll!" cot to wait until it clears off. other sources said that even if the action led to a form of infinit- ion in the United States there was no reason for a "bust i1'D' in the Canadian price system with iihfi retention of present controls and "watching" attitude. There was some speculations that if United States prices continued to go out of line the hope bf N- ani-Govcrnors likely will be held this fall for the 1.190 Canadians honored in the King's first. Do- minion Day honors list. Dr. E. H. Coleman. Under-Secretary of i State. said today. The Governor General and '.'is- countess Alexander at present are MONTREAL. July 2 (CPL-i Fred Rose. declaring “this is not the first time that I am the vic- tim of a frame-up." said today m. a statement issued on his behalf,‘ that "the Canadian ‘spy scare can easily become the match that’ st-ts off World War Ill." _ Mrs. Roso released the rnimeoq era lied statement to the Press.- pxpgining in a covering letter} that it rental-led what the Labor». Progressive mcmhcr nf _ Pants- mcnt for Montreal-Cartier "|l1-‘ fended to say to the press and 1hr‘ pr-oplr- when he was released on hail pr-ndini: the hearing of his appeal." _ _ Rose. convicted of conspiring to communicate information to Rus- sia. was sentenced last month f0 six years in penltcntlary- H‘! at?" pliratln-n for release on ball penil- ing hearing of his appeal next fall was rejected. In his statement Rose aaid_r.e had been found guilty of a crime he did not commit but that he did hot blame the lurymen be- cause they had been "victims of a vast propaganda machine let loose in this country since the es- tablishment of the Royal Com- mission early in February. He said the Roichstag fire "lit the fuse that set off World War II" and that the Canadim “spy scare" could easii become the match that sets of a third world war-"an atomic war that will end all warn. for it can only end in the destruction of all human- lty.’ King Murdered, Physicians Say BANGKOK. Siam. July 2~tAP) —-A Siamese police communique said Monday that l3 of the 2C physicians who conducted a It mortem on the body of you flll King Anmda Mahtdol reported that murder was the most likely on a tour of Western Canada and on thcir rctum probably will go to the Marifimes. making it un- likely lnvestitures could be held before fall. Canadians who reside within a reastmable distance of Ottawa would be invested at Government House. while those in the Mari- times and west probably would he decorated h_v the provincial licu~ tenant-governors at ceremnnios. cnincidinz: with the Governor Generals investziurc. Effects Will De Constructive ls British Belief By SYDNEY CAMPBELL IDNDON. July 2— fReuters)— British reaction to the United States price control impasse is that what- ever happens it will have affects more constructive than catastrophic for the United States and the world. American productive power when unfettered is recognized as the kev to the situation. Cong-res obvlouslv must take some action fairlv soon. British observers believe. because rents cannot at nrelenf- be left decon- trolied. Beyond that. if prices rocket. controls will be re-imoosed: if riot. American cnpltalimn will haw, proved itself to the world’! advantaflb. Higher mic-es would reduce the real value of Britain's proposed ssmoooooo loan and of other countries‘ dollar eornlnm or bor- rcwings. But all countries would be compensated bv hither prices for their exports to dollar marketa- mtll Er. Obgok" ‘Chotlkoehion. f CI". Drag-iii? for? were r6903: ‘aha: in support e °' ° on l m theafy fgrfwiorbldsl he vtctbn of on was absolute] murder. IIIIIII cluoine subsidies on American R0048 would have to he temporarily abandoned. Thr- mont inmortanb United States products now sub- fidized on entering Canada are coal for domestic use and cottion. In a nutshell. a general advance ln American nrices would leave Canada three choices - she could gr. without the American woods»- nriv hither prices or meet the nricc advances through increased subsidies. iF if ‘s or. ‘fit at MONEY 4n status‘. if Mosfw SAYS ‘QQOD-EY‘ do ME 9 HALIFAX. July 3- (Wednes- dayl-(UPJ-Official inland fore- casts issued by the Dominion Pub- lic Weather Office hero at I32“ a. m. A.D.'l". todav. midnight Forecasts. valid until Prince Edward Island. Eastern tonight: Counties. Bllnt. John River Vul- lev, Bay of Cblleur—Olelr wtth much the same temperature this afternoon. Cooler tonllbt. HIM winds during the earl becoming welt l0 m-il- - the afternoon. High today ‘it Charlotteto ‘N. Mencton. Pr - arilcton g. int John ‘N, CIMP‘ '3'” lw-Oloer and a limo l . col-lab tide his afternoon at a3 and wlllfitai. 35‘- Billlo ' ifififfl Eiiitffii