I I ‘Wells's Paper - A I I Covers PrincelEdward Island Like the Dew cuiianorrcrowu, cannon, TUESDAY, pacammn 4. 194s 10 PAGES A good mother II the moat prec- iou: typo of common Individual community can In moans OIL MERE MAN I 1Q Lobster Factory At Sturgeon ls Destroyed A lobster factory at Sturgeon, owned by Mr. Albbtt Griffin, Mon- (sguc, was destfiyed b? 1|"? 05°“ six o'clock yesterday evening. For the last fcw weeks the factory had been in operation canning mussels and it is thought the fire started near one of the boilers. All the equipment is a total loss. There was some lnsurgnce on the plant. lllr, carlnlh stated last night he will rebuild the factory at once. IIo Change At Ford Tieup “kt Windsor WINDSOR. Ont. Dec. S — (OP) _ sympathy strikers who walked out in support of the Ford om- lllovces striking on a union sec- uriiy issue. were returning to their tubs todav and union lead- ers said that by the week's end all lhc 8.500 men who were out would be back at work. However. the situation at the Ferd Motor Company plant. where 10.000 employees went on strike Sept. l2 for union sholp cleric-off. was unchanged. N. B. INSURANCE MEN MIET SAINT JOHN. N. 3-. Dec. 3 — (GP; — J. M. Carson. Saint John. was clcctcd president todav at 7 Insurance Managers‘ oi Ncv; Brunswick. E star. Saint John. was rotary-treasurer. Coming Events, Agodation electcgfaté I "Dance. Mt. Hope, Wednesday. If not flnc. 'I‘hursda.y. 12-4-11. "Stnnchcl Christmas C nccrt. Tuesday. 18th. 12-211-21 "lllt. Herbert School Concert. December 20th. 12-4-11. "Reserve December 20th for Eamscliffe School Concert. 12-4-11. "Glllldlnz wheat daily at the Ives Grist Mill. North Tryon. 12-4. 6. 8. ll. l3. 15-61 "Daft miss Christmas Concert in ll. lion H511 , December!‘ 9th. ' "Buying daily all kinds of live Ind dresled pouit . Paying to market prices. ‘Signed Davis Fraser Ltd. 11-23-11, r.'.§l”£.’.‘5°%l§‘l“£""”' Bum‘ Gill. - ing Co.. Sourig. em Pa“ 11-20-181 "Its the extra gain from Pan Honor Feed that brings results. Livestock Feed Agency. 1044-“, "Our Chiclr Fettcner sure put on the finish. Livestock med Azency. 10-4-S-0-tf "Buyln daily live and dressed. Chicken. IPowl. bucks and Geese. l R- Flynn. st. Peters. 11-24-stt-or. "Sale oi‘ fancy work. novelties ‘lessen... Vassar; at“ .. - - c pee Ethel McDougall. 11-4-1; "Our hog and dairy feed laying zmhplllpdufihick fgxtotener figttraoecek an. Peed Agency. Pd lo-t-d-fi-tf n-u-zfi Hols each "Col {glanpélvllicss aserLtd, P11313343 ntwWl/islliéirlfh" 1o 11% CI I 5,,.r"=~=i::.r~n v also: l also org! , , l, 1W1‘. I o8.‘ 81'“!!- l: aw; 1th. Albany. or "We I Q1» ‘o _-.. nln “PM!!! ' mung-s spacial ma‘ or 1%.; sbancboidltl of M‘ "r ephpusfio. %bo a in Jolaustons River ooi "Km-roam “our ‘t "I- Hurl; mater.” Labor Shortage S_l°w3 British Reconverszon ;he annual meeting of the life , : uire a limited quantity urpouo. h , 1-4111. . BIRMINGHAM. 111112.. Dec. I - (OP) --,An acute shortage of men willing to work as laborer: is plakuing the building trade and many other industries in the early reconversion period - yet hundreds of former laborers are drawing unemployment benefits. The situation is an aftermath of wartime training cf new enl- lneenng specialists. The Mid- lands. a malor industrial centre in peacetime. attracted a big share of munitions contracts. The construction industry’: manoo was halved the number of workers in many other activities was heavily curtailed. , Many of the displaced employ ees went into the armored forces but others became engineer’ workers -- running lathes. help- ing assembls tanks and building aircraft. "Now they have lost those loba with the cancellation of govern- ment orders and won't go back to their old blsck- d rnarlaizcr of the Blrmin ham La- bor Exchange. Corlstruction. with u relatively large proportion of laborers. is hardest hit but the situation ex- tends to some of the dirty jobs in industrial plants. Polishers are needed by the hundred in fac- tories reverting to civilian pro- duction after turning out such products as shells and parts for military vehicles which did not require a high finish. Truman Seeks To Stem Tide Cf Labor Strife today asked _ess for legislation to stem the do off-in‘ In YMPUhTt ' periods in whl gtgwvppages would be barred for 30 _S. Warning that present strikes may cripple our feconverslon pro. Bram." Mr. Truman appealed for action before Congress‘ Christmas recess-which lg to. start only 17 days hence, Dec. 20. President William Green of the American Federation of Labor said he believed the plan would be “un- acceptable to labor." some Senators indicated belief it did not go far enough. . But without waiting for Capitol H"! Friction. My. Truman announ- ced creation of fact-finding boards for the Dlhstate General Motors strike and for a vast approaching threat, the steel wage dispute. No Stomach. But Life Said Not Too Tough SALT LAKE CITY Dec. s -- (AP) —- It's not too tough to live without a stomach. says one of the few men who can speak author- ltavelv on the subject. A patient here — his surgeon and he both asked their names be withheld — underwent : total gnstrectomy af- ter Krowt-h of a stomach tumor made the operation mandatory and- now is Riven “a. fair chance" for complete recovery The esophagus has been connected with the small intutine. and the man may eat six ounces of food at each of his ITOGUQIIL IIIOIJL . I! SPENCER DAVII PEIPING, Dec. 8 - (AP) - Liv- ing quietly in Pelplng In these day: of civil strife i: Helllrnuth you Ruckteschell. a man of distinction In Gem-ran naval "clrcl . A: captain of two German aux- iliary raider: in the Second Grout War, this middiogcd sea- oiug Junker wears the ight':- roe: and. our _us presented for his work In altroyi I A t fAllled hlpping n m” m. o his It victims won the ‘$.’l§f1.3°"‘l.'l€l§“$ *8. n mu of I: six-inch uni. hi: m‘; Eng-pods boat and hhItwo scout p n. ' iholiol moot .8 "If septum lo II? War To 'End Legally Jsn. I If Bill Passes OTTAWA, Dec. 3 — (C?) — For legal purposes the war against Germany BM Jill-l! W‘ floialiy will coma to an and bu. Llildfklfuredraftofthsflov- ernmeut‘: National Emergency Power: l!" Comma now before no Is adopted. The original blll which came t" "trim s‘ this "an m . u w vigour Pranks bee: and Pro provided thud the governor-fl- council mould fix a day by ro- olumotlon for the official of the war and that ou that day the War Measures Act would l0 out of operation and the Emerg- ency Powers Act ‘would sin-rt. A: now upended tbs bill will provide that it oomcu info force on Jan. 1 and "ou and after many and Ja poles of the i?“ be deemed no longer If the blll becomes mean that the Government must start repaying refundable income taxes or the refundable portions of the excess profits taxes before April ,- i940. The income tax and excess pro- fit: tax lllbvs provide that the re- fundable portions collected in l0. fl mult be paldback within two years after the end of the fiscal year following the official declara- tion of the end of the . This will be two years after March 31, 1948. The taxes collected in 1063 would be repayable before A- pril 1, 1940, and so on. However, it la expected the Gov. ernment will not wait that Ions but will start the repayments us soon as the finances of the country make It feasible. The Government owes approx- imately $280,000,000 on refunds on arsenal income taxe: collected rom i042 to 1 and $l84,000.0f'0 ‘SP. Hofiectfifl of rehdugie portions of personal Income taxes was discontinued midway Ln 194-1. Search For Missing ll. S. IIavy Aircraft VANCOUVER. Dec. 3 - (OP)- United States aircraft searched in heavy winds today for a United States Navy plane missing on an Alaska-Seattle flight with i5 per- sona aboard. The missing aircraft left Kodi- ak. Alaska. on the 1.000 mile trlgr; Baturday and since then violent gales have swept the British Col- umbla coast. The 011881116! persons were be lteved to be United States Navy personnel. ONION ODOR TROUBLEBOMI TORONTO. Dec. Si — (CF) Residents of suburban Scarboro will be able to breathe easier in the future. Board of Health auth- orities today ordered a vegetable dehydrotlnd firm to stop a nuisance of itself with and garlic smells. The odors could be smelled a mile away. residents said and many were forced to keen their windows closed at night in order to got some sleep. - onion German Raider Living Quietly In Peiping _____.__________.______-. In all, more than soo prisoners of war from l4 countrlel met him at un point and spent varying pac- Iods as captivu guests aboard hi: veuel until they were transferred to J: nose hands. An when It was aunuted that Allied courts of inqulrvmlght Ilka to look Into his records, thl: bluo eyed contorn of 01min ML rnlral: Dcontz and Radar pliol with a lhfllli u want of mo. I did my job an my heart is abso- lutely clear." HI: first raider was the convoc- -= or lwr: o oua. "mun" a half-damn six-inch banish f cllllllflbalfll‘ - l . . In the first Canadian land, Generall H. D. G. Cre to Lt.-Col. John David Stewart in during his two-day visit to the province recently. lit-Col. Stewart won the 9.8.0. when as Brigade Commander of the 10 Cdn. Inf. Bde. his complete disregard for personal safety and the offensive spirit which (Canadian Army Photo). To Trouble News Briefs .. airless" Dec. 3 — (Rleutcr -Prime Min- ister Smuts said t y that South Africa should open her doors to immigration and should encour- lme people to come and share in the great! industrial development of the country which hr», predicted would take place within the next five to 10 years. LONDON. Dec. 8_ - (Reuters) -Moscow radio today described Generallsshno Francisco Franco of Spain as “the '2lst defendant present invislblv in the courtroom at Nuernbem. " SYDNEY. Australia. Dec. 8 - (CP) - Last-minute efforts to find a settlement for a protected strike of Australian coal miners which might ultimately feel, 500.000 workers Wéfo- under way tonight as Prime Minister Chlflev agreed to meet union leaders Wednesday in Canberra. MONTREAL, Dec. 3 -—(CP)—- Canadian railways will send 21 spec's] trains to New You-k to carry ‘$2.2? ‘it? ‘Sh? m"‘°"1i>°&>‘3“5 ‘° .. a. e e . an- adian service personnel who will arrive Thursday aboaaég the giant liner Queen Ellzabe , It- learned here today. TOKYO. Dec. 3 --(AP)— The Japlsnese diet. operating under the shadows of growing domestic un- rest and new American g in- to war responsibilities. told to- day that heavy tux Id be required to meet a promcd hudgxébnf 13.000.000.000 yen (about $907) .000 mt the official exchange re. a . m Trio Sentenced For‘ Mistrestlng Fllors WUPPERTAL, Germany, Dec. 8- (AP)—Coi. Erich Kllllngor. blyear- old German prisoner camp com- mandant, today was sentenced by a British military court to vc year: imprisonment and two of his aide: received prison term: for mis- treatment of R A1’. filers in - a oflweat-box" camp. Killings-r and two staff officers . Heinza Junge, chief inter. m‘?! n officer, and Llout. Kain- rl Ibo officer-were convicted on charms of torturing lined co n an endeavor to malt them disclose Allied air secrets. Jun‘ wag sentenced to five y investlttire made in Prinz-c Edward Is- prlesented the Distinguished Service Order he instilled in all ranks resulted in the ‘ _ task of effecting a crossing over the canal at Moerbnlgge. Bcignzm. -. Crirvnc Wave Continues rhurdt, an interrogation m airmen In hot asbeltol- v . won acquitted. i1>¢ko~ _ l‘ tend ll lb h rdt tuleod ‘o Ill 0i‘. IT“ Wlghlfll ‘m dau or Otto Soehrl and Liam Government. House. Charlottetown, ‘ (‘e success of the Brigadeks Ontario \ TORONTO. Dec. 3 -- (CP) -- Gang robberies occurred in widely. separated Ontario points Sunday night and early today with minor Jmbhcclcg-iuszthf-“l” tween‘ areas. At Tlmagaml four men were ar- rested and taken to North Bay where they faced armed robbery charges after a store was held up at River Valley near North Bay and a gunfight ensued between bandits and the owner's son. ‘ Police said the gunmen escaped In a stolcn automobile. Meanwhile in the Niagara Pen. insuln police searched for five masked men who tied four merri- hers of the H J. Daugherty family in bonds ripped from sheets and took almost $500 In cash and Jewel- ry valued at $250. They took a small part of the cash from a safc. At Wyoming near Sarnia thicvcs stole a safe containing $85 to $100. Six Kitchener youths were field today on charges of housemreakrng with intent and conspiracy to r_ob after they broke into the home or a local business man. r. r. I. Youth Sent To Supreme Court ANTIGONISH. N. 5.. Dec. (CF) — Louis Paulette of Bay- flcld and John Thomas of Rocky Point. P.E.I.. who escaped from jail here recently and were re- captured. appeared before Stipen- dlary Magistrate H. R. Chisholm today on charge of breaking jail. They were remanded for trial in the Supreme Court. Later in the day they appeared before Btlpendlarv Magistrate J. A. Maclleod on a charge of break- ing and entering the post office at Afton and theft of a mnll pouch key. The total number Including one of obstructing the charges wast the pair is eight. railway wi a trolly. Ilis/euss Layoffs It“: Maritime Shipyards HALIFAX Deo. 3 — . (CP) -— 1510!!! in Maritime % building and ship, re y be dis Olllld y alliax, Sydney, and Saint John union flcials at a maths - federation headquarters It‘: . and executive rmiou locals Agricultural By GEORGE KITCHEN OTTAWA. Dec. 3 -— (OP) Federal Government proposals for boosting meat and wheat produc- tion next year to help feed a hungry world today were placed before the DominioirPmvipctal liflflcultzurlal conference which also heard Prairie suggestions for greater emphasis on wheat pro- duction than on meat. _ ' Agriculture Minister Gardiner. answering the western represen- WUOHS. said that if wheat acre- age was increased it would be at the QXWIIEG 0! acreage for coarse 1181-115. which were necessary if Canada was to produce beef and bacon to meet overseas corruuit- merits. l In ‘brief. here are the Govern- ments Slllll-testllons for 1946 acm- oozes. as drawn up by the Agri- cultural Supplies Board: Wheat: 23,414,100 acres. of which 22,566,000 would be grown c514 the Prairies. unchanged from 5. 0M5! 14.310200 acres. down Slightly from the 1945 ‘total of 14.393200. The proposal calls for increases in oats acreage 1n Que- bec and Ontario and decreases in 24311100118. Saskatchewan and Al- aria. Hurley. 8.000.000 acra against 7.300.000 in 1945. with all the in- crease ill the Prairie Provinces. Mixed lzrains: Unchanged. at 1.- 453.400 acres. mostly in Quabgq and Ontario. Tile conference, attmded by Dominion and Provincial agricul- ture officials and farmer organ- ization leaders. also heard: 1. An announcement by Mr. Gardiner that he and Trade Britain soon to determine the food treads cf tho United Kingdom and Europe and to survev the possi- bilitles of enlarging Canadab overseas agricultural markets. 2. A warning from Arthur Mac- Namara. Deputy Labor Minister, that the farm labor situation pos- siblv will be worse next spring than it. was in the spring of 1945 and his suggestion that farmers give more attention to wages and efficiency if they hoped to hold their own in a competitive lmbor market. 3. A statement by L. B. Pearsall. secretary-manager of the Can- adian Meat Board. that Canada. would be 40.000000 pounds short on her commitment to supply Britain with 450,000,000 pounds on bacon this year. Bacon will be in short supply in i946 and possibly into 1947. 4. A report from tlhe Agricul- tural Supplies Board that total output of meat in Canada. in 1045 at 2,400,000,000 pounds shows a decline of 15 per cent from the‘ record production of 1944 and the Board's prediction that a further "minor" decline will occur next year. Plane Struck By ~ Lightning, Crashes PARIS, Dec. 3 —(Re'uters)- Twenty-seven persons were kill today‘ when a four-engined British plane crashed near efort France. after being struck by light- ning. Rochfort is near the Bay of Blscay. , Youth Charged In Sister's Death BANGOR, Mo. Dec. 3 — (‘Al’) -- Twelve year-old Teresa Jamey was found stabbed to death today In the kitchen of her home and police said her brotherllFrancln, l4. confesses ‘that he had struck her ith a n c. wThe children's mother, Mrs. Es. the!‘ Verney, collapsed and was un- able to come with her son to court when h; pleaded innocent to p charge of murder and was ordered held for hearing Dec. l0. \ Lauzhon, Peltier ( l l‘: 3 | : f; 1'! C TT If LO BAKING $0M UR ‘J1 fl \lll l‘ H fl i" i) Appeal Sentences TORONTO, Dec. 3 — (OP) -- Notlcc: of appeal against ‘ences totalling as your! ill penitentiary d Ulysle Lauzon and §§§§§§ lgelitier of Windsor, Onti were filed today at Osgoode Hal by their counsel, LS. Allan. Lau- zon and Poitier pleaded guilty to th h 8H. Thee arrmti Mal challenge of a the jurlsdlct on of glstrute Juries Garvin who heard the case In Kingston. They claim the Meal:- traie had no jurisdiction to deal with the case as none of the of- fences charged by the Crown were committed In fiontenac County nor were Lauzon and Poitier arrested l-l l'\ l) ll. W HI Fl 1 For '1 946 Is Discussed Federal Gov’t Wants More Wheat And Meat Next year; Canada Short On Bacon Contract With Britain. tater Mwlirlnncn. will Lia-vow“ Program In Hospital ‘ After Traffic Accident ' Suffering from broken bones in his right foot. Alexander Smith 0f Arlington. Lot 14 was taken to the P.E. Island Hospital vest/er- day as the result o1 a. collision between a car driven by his father, James Smith. and a truck owned by R. Dlckieson. New Glasgow. e M0 mt occurred about eight o'clock yesterday morning at Hunter River. The SmILhg were driving .to Charlottetown where both are employed with MI‘. Schurman and Com any Ltd. and the truck was on i way to New G 0W While the heavier ve- hicle suffered little damage. the car is said to IIBVF been badly llioiullosed. Both drivers escaped n. ry. Heavy Carry-Over 0f Legislation In Parliament v Buhuerlpflou Delivered. lllll. lull. 0M0: otloc Provinces I 08A. $5M- -SHUFFLE SEEN POSSIBLE Minor Changes Likely. Belief Ileld At Ottawa By J ACK BRAYLEY UITAWA, Dec. 3 — (OP) -—Po:. sibility of l minor 4Cabinet re- shuffle und the appointment of several parliamentary assistant: early next year, was being discuss. ed tonl t in parliamentary lob- bies. Prime Minister Mackenzie Kin served notice of future Cablne reconstruction at a press conference last August when he announced Cabinet appointments and said the system of parliamentary assistant: would be continued. Mr. King had indicated that the Cabinet reconstruction, when if. came, would see the three services consolidated under one minister. First step in this direction was the naming of Hon. Douglas Abbott to head both Defence and Naval Af. fairs following the resignation of Gen. McNaughton as Defence Min- ister. This move would appear to lndl. cate Mr. Abbott, rather than Col. Colin Gibson, the present Air Ml.n- isfer, would assume direction of the three services when final consoli. datlon is completed. There has been much speculation in connection with the future of Col. Gibson as to whether he would stay in the Cabinet or accept ano- ther high post. The most oft-re- peated report on Parliament Hill I: that he might be named Lieut- enant-Governor of Ontario-As post held at one time by his father. There is some talk of appolntin a medical man to the Health an Welfare Department. This might see Hen. Dr, J .J . McCl-mu go from the Revenue post to the Health and Welfare Department. This would OTTAWA. Doc. 8 — (Special)- With the end of the present sea- sion of Parliament drawing near. members of Contmons ate are taking spook of their tw- £u“3“’”‘“‘“’°’l4s““s£ .5??..W..& carry-over of legislation. who-mobs two Houses meet again after the new year. Only a portion of time legislation touched on in the ‘Throne Speech implemented. and some of tn.- chief polnts raised in the Govemur-Gefnerars eddies three months ago have not been em- barked upon. The Government blll which has occasioned the most comment both in Canada and overseas is bill 20. providing for establishment of a separate Canadian cit i-p This Act. which while printed and distributed to members will not b:- brought to the Commons for discussion year. has evoked thousands of letters from all across Canada. the United States. Brit- ain. South Africa and other coun- trlu in and outside the British Commonwealth. Chlefly river-sue State Secretary sponsor of the Canadian Citizen- ship Bill. told The Guardian that an overwhelming number of the letters received as his office on the 11193511111 were favorable in the highest. degree. It was generally iBldEfSiiOOd. he said. that Canada had grown our. of the "mail-na- tion" class. and that her people had won the right. to citluenshl (Continued on Page ‘I Ool 5) Bracken Charges Federal Cov't Ilas IIo Peaeetime Plan TORONTO, Dec." 3 — (CPI _. Hon. John Bracken, national Pro- gressive Conservative leader, sold tonight the Federal Government was without u clear-cut reconver. alon program and charged that it “still insist: on secret. order-An- councll government." “What Is needed ls for the Gov- ernment to ahake off its lingering war mentality and get It: think. ing adjusted to conditions of peace," the Federal Opposition leader said in an address at the annual meet- ing of the Ontario Regressive As- soclation. Mr. Bracken, while defending Parliament as “a growth from can. turles of experience," said that many of its form: and procedures were not a matter for commenda- tion. "With Its load of tradition It l: allowing itself to become a slow- and outmoded conventions and is being used by It: present bone: to excuse their dictatorship plex . " Two Million Loss In Steel Mill Fire in that county. . “OOQOWBAD motion machine of archaic forms N COM- Pt. Doc. 8 -— uncut was believed to have set off the "with: ssh-mu principally of l valuable component and tools. ail ' owned by the new. ' In" ' fit in with previous speculation that Hon. Brooke Claxton. present Minister and former assistant to Mr. King might take over the buoy Prime Mifrfbter’: onerous External Affairs portfolio. This would leave the Revenue post to be filled, possibly by the‘ promotion of one of the new crop of parliamentary assistants-men hup: R..W. Mayhew, veteran mem- ber for Victoria and Mr. Haley's as- partment, \ Mr, King had indicated last sunl- mer that he wanted to look over the available material before filling all parliamentary assistant berth: and it is understood he has been keeping an eye on his supporter: during the session and after con- sultation with his colleaguee: at; An names of the new assistants, 410: cum- can. fll Havana rllltloos 102s: CAYs (s. (ti: Cruse? 9 l METEOROLOGICAL OFFIC Toronto, Dec. 3 — (CI-W-Minimu and maximum temperatures: Van- couver 44, 54; Edition/ton 25, 37; Regina 6. 28; Winnipeg 11 13g Toronto 33. 41; Ottawa 17, 26; MOm treat 19, 27; ucbcc 14. 31; Saint Johln 11, 40; MOIICtUII 18, 35, Halifax 25 40: Charlottetown 24, 22. 36; Yarmmith 27 43 FORECASTS:- Lower St. Lawrence and Lake St. John: cloudy and becoming u. lllttll colder with light stiowfalls or flun es. Gull. North Shams and Ba ~ eur: fresh winds; cloudy, 03% light snowfalls and flurrloa. Maritime East: 36: Sydney o or w. Maritime West: fresh go to weoterl winds; cloudy occasional ht ruin; port In” ow l! ck. I High tide this morning at tins Hid tonight. at 10.14. S l5 till! B“ ' ' mztaium tomorrowemim": ‘New moon December 4th. 1M . M. ummau-sid tid tom min ulcs later than Cielarliggtddh. (AP) - Fire a Inlchlne . ‘chap ‘f, g: flog. glgmloifltgal UIIAIDDTTITOWN - lfl. QY 1351K theomntlnized Stutm Navv cf ruore than 82.000000. A short t slstant in the kindred Finance De- ' early date will make known thé\‘_ moderate fresh winds; cloudy with light