MAXIMS OIL Mull MAN 1111- 0,, ‘lwuid rotunda min “m Ind pill S patter it wholesale. with I >;/'//’ The People's aper. Covers Prince Edwardilsland Like the Dew Gummy, Founded 1881. ‘ otteiown oust-aim. .y T0lVllC 00MB SAVED 1,250,000 Two Cont; Be epoch]! woman who lives near you, MAXIMC OIL MRI MAN y careful to Inlrry a CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. FRIDAT, AUoUsT 191.9... Mail. 11.00; other Provinces i U.8.A., 85.‘ Subscription Delivered. I500. LIVES rrencier ConierencgvAi Manila |5osl:pone¢i‘Chu1-¢hi11 Giv¢5 views akyo Askjlgelay l 0 Transmit __,_______i,r_-?_—_.¢,__-. _ . fillildTlfllldl. n A nuns: n; The Canadian Prq guimENnElt - Japanese uh y h. Manila conference. any- gmsy takoup to l2 day: to gcease-fire orders to all , MacArthur agrees f0 wait. PACIFIC FRONTS — Japan. reported counter-attacking in buria but Red Army rv-inl . e; Kwangtung Army asks to cease hostilities and give; till Monday noon lspsnese to lay down arms; i4 tell MacArthur 12 Allied ports bombed vicar Japan hours before llirohito cease- order; British mane fired on . liioulrneln, Burma: Japanese chins reported ready to sur- . t.) (‘lrlanf Krj-Shek. IllTlSil-Atomic bomb saved m American, 250,000 British Churchill tells Commons; . says Britain will take lead- pert in maintaining world or. ‘y: Banish Bacon littering England " TON. Aug. l6 _ (or) " bnfon now is entering the .~- market, said Rd. Dinning Unitary 1n an interview here . Mr. Dinning said hog pro_ in Canada has fallen off l" M55 39 Der cent compared ' lint Star's figures and the --n which Danish bacon will - din “innins a foothold n»- -' 0n the Canadian hog pro. iv Japanese llinet Formed ttnrnAsjclsoo, Aug. 16—-(AP) - Prince o. lllc Jsplllese .mperinl “ Y iodfli obeyed an unpreccd ll summons by Emperor Hh-I flhtloJicrln .1 new Cnbingfh 1hr; » .0. . llsfory to filnction m of an alien occup. flu ie 3'0 radio said i t-ifldilion when" lire 231,35 ‘-'_I‘0.\' fzllnlv and chose W Pflilfli‘ Nnruhlkir l-lignsltl- ‘ Etienne tlhlhzlpress Nagako, to v mi a pnlcc cabinet to succeed ‘_ “glam: Government of Pre- Kiillbvthc first eight ministers ’ p _- til." prcmicndeslgnate "We Fumlmnro Konoye. l| --l Jillian launched war‘ ‘ l a in 10".’! 5 °i iii." SHZIM “ 911d ill m. ‘ Kimnic was l’l iinnt Dflrthlifi i m ' unofficial" rc_ by the kiln“ H s Commission lble cund. . ' M JED. lrsc lillifshcd itbdfrs, he w t threatened tri - téon for Allicd airmen forced W! of their planes over ming Events _"5h°-‘i' — Canoe Cove. lirzlidsy. W “ Mutiny River ., ___ EMMIE. S/ttewart Satur i... '9" Number Boo I“. throughout £ 110W 0 . DOW. B-lil-t Ber "ntnllue. Saturd 'l-20-F‘ri-t "no u“; b te ‘ “Wins. e s rs tenouc lie u. k3 "nnfiiiltttti. C. ModPhe ‘I “i? . oeuragoid Storage ill, "mmllf bftilinnln i "iiilnnt 16th whil ..‘°. “mat is off. R. c" 8m‘ xliigihzton. nmcd mlrilsteri said the broad-- Federal War criminals t'>_ As one of Japan's as qcportcd to 1'1 1i Mon- 8 17-21. ‘hiazggil’. Marie, Wedrélflsgg? iI-l ks he Province. Get. gman‘ “Y. i Corner August 20th. Good 8-17-20-21. I; flies solicited. mode:- ‘ a-rr-zo-zi-ai. will be closed Thurs- elec- . Champion 8-l -‘-‘i Orders By RUSSELL BBINES MANILA. Aug. l7—(F‘riday)-‘ (AH-Gen. MacArthur today post-. polled the Manila surrender con-. ference at Japanese request and‘ guaranteed safe conduct for mem- bers of the Imperial household fl,v_ ing to the battlefronts to enforce torders to "cease firing." | The Japanese asked for a delay ,fn the meeting at Manila, at which ‘they will receive the terms of chp-' lltulation, and the Supreme Com- ] mander of the Allied forces replied that their messages had been re- iceived "and are satisfactory." i Gen. MaeArthufs reply was surprisingly lenient for a. con. ‘ queror. but behind hirn was a vast array of Allied power and it was obvious he would not allow Japan to lake advantage of life tolerance. In his reply he sent no new dead- line for the Manila conference, evidently in recognition of Emper- or Hirohltos problems in getting his flrebrand warlords to accept defeat. The commander seemed bent on letting the Japanese solve their own problems f0 insure a minimum of hostilities before his occupying armies land on enemy shores. The Japanese message said it might take as long as l2 days to make the ceasefire order effective on all the far-flung fronts. The Jnpmlesc gave no further reason for tho inability to send envoys to Nianlln as Gen. MacArthur had directed. but said the flight would be arranged “as soon as possible." Nevis Briefs .. . . , WASHINGTON. Aug l6 -—fAP)| —Gen. Bmhrn Somerville, chief of. army servlco forces. told a news. conference tzday he didn't expect: trouble but that American troops- will move int.» Japan "fully are- pared for combat." OTTAWA. Aug. 1o -_- (CP) - A statement throwing 11°" light on Canada's mnniifiwfl‘ situation may be forthcomini! tomorrow. it was learned today. . i i OTTAWA. Auc. 1e - For conveni ce. rather than neces- sity,‘ the us of national registra- tion cards trill be continued for a willie, Arthlv: MacNamsra, deputy Labor Minister. said today. As long as rationing POIIIIHUEG. said Mr. MacNhmara. inc curds would pro- vide a useful moans oi identific- ation and also were almost a neces- sity for the cashing of family ul- lcwance chcqucs. (By The Canadian Press) VANCOUVER. Aug. iii-Work on i5 transport ferries no" under construction in Vancou- ver shipyards has been iralicrl by stop order-u from_thc Fede- ral Government, shipyard oi‘. flciais said today. More than 1,000 men will he aflccted by the order. RICHMOND. B. 0.. Alli. 18- \(CPi—Canadiarl Broadcasting C97", porntlon officials today “'9”? "t" tempting to IIYOVEI“ i‘ pa“ “d can“ i“°..."".“‘...‘3°*‘.li“0%...%ili§’ itloglfziilgn hers. ARE. Ellis. GBC regional engineer, said the fires. arc becoming serious and flow 8TB within {l0 feet of tho town’. FRANCISFO. Aug. 16- .._'1‘h¢ Khabnrovsk radio shai Alexandcl‘ M- rnmmandrr of tho Eastern Red Ban- day. as moron": S iAPl quoted MM’ Vasllcvskv. Slavic: Iilar to ncr I'm" unit a Janene" °"'“"“|“‘d§h,,_ ihc Kwantunl: Arm)’ a’ "jun clluria order his troops t ML operations at noon nex day. l i I l -—'*" I Newsman D i l __.._ l h; JAMES n. wnm: \ ymwcpnta Prose sum writer) a why m’ mm m Tokyothus far The suites-lied “m”? fall into two nnttiigixg 1' i§"’§“.,’“..°‘i§iuu¢ trouble. or regis toroiihlr, with the military. 1 Ta-kinil no first, iifnd““jf§§§,§. ‘mmnm perlmli riot the JQPBM" ness. ti: :ilngyw anymmg promptly grid imglcmrllt thnl "Breement romptly-particillarlv lWh-mnt“ m’ no some-en M?" s... lThehi-Ilziigilqiénflxlile new Drew" Hairline decision to send members a? the impel-inf family‘ ilmiwfiiiqg round Ash. tfilgitllil tiilnrnigfrienger a] Mccoy is the kev t-tl-ouhle with X1 "I f. i C o A commanders order is the r1.‘ tc the second P01" liesigning Today? Delay In Sending fdrfllidir Are Labor Gov’t ‘Plans To Make iliasle Slowly By noss MUNRO LONDON, Aug. l6 — lCP Cable) --Britain‘s LubOl‘ Government evid- ently intends to "make haste slowly" in its nationalization pro- gram affecting the keystones oi til-c country's economy. The suhsfilnce and tone of the Speech from the Throne Wednes- dcty, sketching Labor's program for tllc forzliculnim session of Por- lillnlcrlt, was interpreted here as indicating tiu; Government is not going to rush headlong into not- ionalization projects. There won't be an indusuini revolution over- night in Brit ‘n. As prezlictcu. nationalization of coal mines and the placing under public ovrnerslllp of the Bank of England were specifically predicted in the Tilronc Speech. But nothing was said in rile Speech about the |nationulizclllctl the iron and steel indusi cs and oi’ transport lsys-tcznrr-F 1's vast rail, air and networks-which silrlrcd cqu" future of . coal mines and the Bzlnkrol England in Labor's elec- liion platform. , How-ever, lire Throne Speech emerely outlined o. program for the GEN. McNAUGHTON orraws, Aug. l6 - IQ?) —Resignation of Defence Mm- ister McNaughton, and a re- shufflemenl. of the F8118"! Cabinet may be announced to- morrow. it was learned tonight. It was believed that the rc- signalion of Gen. McNaughton, mentioned frequently during recent weeks as a lkely ap- pointee for a diplomatic post, now is in the hands oi’ Prime Minister Mackenzie King. An announcement of iilc cab- inet rcshitfiile “as expected to come following a lengthy cab- inet meeting today. but Mr. King lcIt his East Block office tonight without issuing any statements. nai lhutlcn projects foreshadowed the election platform prosumaflv will be proposed in subsequent ses- rlons. _ Tllc Daily Herald. Labor newts-j pope commenting on tile Speech] szild: Couple-J with the firm de-| claratioll of plans there also goes n warning. Not everything can be achieved at lmce and the fruits of this bcncf c3111 program cannot be gathered in a few monlhs." The Liberal Aizlncilcsler Guardian said it would be surprising. when the parlicml-ntary fight comes. if the proposals involving the coal mines and the Bank of England -“can bc made out to be desperately rrvoliltlonniy acts." Winston (Linn-chill. opposition lender, said .:l ltlc House of Colm- molls today l~c~ would anuroach the coal mines . posals "in a sym- pathetic sjli. t" if convinced they would imprrrse production and lows or the pric of coal. Reply To Message Sent liing George OTTAWA. Aug. l6 — iCPi — Prime Minister Mackenzie King today rcceivccl the following mos- sage from the King in reply to his V-J Da-y message Tuesday:- "The Queen and I greatly ap- preciate your telegram on this mcm- orable degw. We pray that now that pence has ccmc back to the world its blessings may be long ETTJOXCCi by all in Canada whose contribu- tion to the common cause did so much to as: ' - ." J udge nigraisfgEotriiisib-ziti —i Of Heavy Horses HerLi The exhibit of horses in the heavy breeds was one of the finctstt‘ I l‘.f..t‘°“...°.".%..t§.ii Tmma“ M‘ “mm Tl-“Of Japanese Threats rey, P.Q._ said last night- conformotion and fidelity to tvn". he said. was distinctive and inc classes were ilnlform tliffiiikhfllli- _._ Among thn Clydesdalesthc Grind Champion went to Alex. lVlcChulL; pha. Bay Fortune, with rcfllhfl nrizc going to Peter Martin Hilli- tcr River. Mr. McClumphjl_ 1:0 won the Senior Championship nu stallions three years anrl_0\ ‘A Pctcr Martin again winning .s l place. The Junior Champion? n; lion prize went to Frank Co in b‘ Rollo Bay. with A. F. McSsnin. Furthermore, production contin- St. Peter's Bay. Winning Sfldlllldi ircs on the atomic bomb which “mm lhclpcd clinch Japanese defeat, Mr. The Junior Champifm m?" ‘m’ Truman told n news conference. der three years was nwalrifltyl without making any threat. Harrison Green Clvde Riv“. ‘l i Washington has been giving - close attention to Tokyo broad- casts to the effect that Japan has 10st. but it's temporary and that she will have to reinforce the points where she was weak-in materials and scientific knowledge and equipment. lily The‘ Associated Press; It‘ WASHINGTON. Aug. 16—l-iints from Radio Tolcvo that Japan thinks of l/PllgCilliCO in her hour of ‘tlcfcnl drew :1 declaration from Pl't"-.iti':lli. Truman today that he didn't think the Japanese would have a chance. scusses Ja Envo MORE GAS FOR BRITISH LONDON. Aug. 16 -- (CP) — Basic gasoline rations for British motorists were raised 25 per cent today for tho September. Novem- ber period. Ration: had permitted motorists to drive an aversfit 0i l20~niil_es___a_m_onth. re. The army kmigs his record SilOWS. t0 Niillkin§ i" 1937 ‘I rmyls om‘ O- d to call the. of thing befo him well. as had to ill’ '1‘ stop the Japanese a v-apine. Om ‘nbu m litigious Klrmy n" in 1939 whim‘ it was too Drvild W $"°P ‘whims the Russians (and losinf!‘ i" N0‘ monhan , , There have been other lnslunrlncés where only by brandishing ltdrc m” thorlty of tLe throne COll ‘mm! periai headquarters control v field commanders. ‘ To these two po-sslbe exploring tiorla for Tokyo's tardiness i wou k add a third which daily beflnme more s. parent-TOKYO 15 making hay whle the sun shines. twin"? the Rising Bu l sets in the twilight of on occupied country Between the silrrendcr nmimln- ement and the actual occuluiinn it is doing everything 0055i“? i“ stltengthen the influence of tile illt . the m “Eon. has done thk sort ‘Yiwashi- Lfiofifnifiiifie??? edit)‘ road. “ current session and other nation-- i l — i Attendance Records Broken ‘ All records for attendance ’ r iany one day at Oid ilumc We Charlottetown. were smashed y terday when 7.983 persons stood in front of the ticket windows and bought tickets to see the big card _of horse racing yesterday aftcr- noon. Since 22000 season tickets had previously been sold. lhcre were 9,983 paid admissions to the lraci: yesterday. They filled the grandstand and !the bleachers; they ovezflotved in- to the centre field oy the hundreds. and some sat on the fences and the roofs of nearby buildings. was no point of vantage but what had people on it ir- numbers. The ideal day no doubt had much to do with such a large crowd taming out. The skv was almost cloudless. the temperature was n- 85- ing. and the sun. never obscu; 1 for a moment. shone down with .1 warmth that was exhilarating but never uncomfortable. Between the races. the great crowds turned their attention to the vaudeville which helped them to forget the rather ‘on dclars which occurred at timrs bciween heats. The midway did an even greater business than on the opening clay, and hundrects of rounc girls and boys-and eve.“ older persons-hall the time of their lives on the For- ris wheel and other clcvcxly dc- slgned appliances which did cv $111118 the voungsters n- zmportancl. with thclslde out before finally depnsitlngl jthem safely to a position of Siil-' I i l i | ble equillbrliun. Eiopes With line -Girl As Another Waits At ‘Church (By The Associated Press) GORHAM. M1. Ailg- i6-—~N()i‘lil3f1 A. Martin, 21-year-old dairy farmci" revealed tonight he had elilp girl waited at the church. Martin and Beverly, also , were married yesterday While West. brook Congregational Church \\'ilS b91118 Pfelififcd for the farmers wedding to Elizabeth R. Furblsh. daughter of Westbrookfis mayor. A few hour's after the Iiiartinw Rowe wedding. 450 guests assemble-if in the Westbrook churcn to nit-end the schedule-i marriage of that young farmer and Miss Fili-hish.‘ Fifteen minutes after the appoint-i ed time the minister announced? there would be no ceremony. ‘, Martin said that he lct the Fur-‘ bLsh's “know” before the ivcddingl but Mayor Ftwblsh said he did noel tm°w siimeiil‘!!! was amiss until‘ his sister-in-lmv, Mrs sewall Wob- ster. answering a. teleph. e call about 2 pm from sozrnnc who dld hot identify himself was lu- formed that “Norman Marlin won't be at the house." It was ‘mes-day night on the eve of the Martin-Furnish wed- jdfng, that Martin and Bcvcrlv _'Rowe decided to clone. hinrtirl said. "It tvas Just that we wcrc in love l l Girl Killed In Tower Collapse ST. CATHERJNFS, 0nt., Aug l6 -— (CP) -—- Police today pushed forward a thorough inquiry nlto the collapse last night in Monfo_ bello Par]; of a flag tower which old girl and injury to six others, two seriously. Grace Ann McCormadr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.J. McCorm_ ack, died instantly tvhen struck by the 40-year.old angle iron tower as; it crashed t0 the ground, bringing- wltih it several youths who had; climbed up the structure to obtain; a view of the fireworks display Arnold Bowler. hit by the p019.‘ suffered a broken left wrst and injuries t0 his leg. Mrs Margaret.‘ Booth suffered a. fractu-nrl left col. lar bone and di§l_0_c_fl_te§l_l1ip._ There i round ‘T0 with a gentle breeze blow- l with Beverly Rowe whllc another 2. ‘ time by a strong Labor party maj- _al'c Ill-ought under control, it and wanted to get married," lic_ said. caused the death of an is-YCBLI lIn H I‘ LONDON, Aug. 16 —— (CP) - The atomic bomb saved.‘ ,1,000,it.'.'ii American and 250,000 British lives by making in-E lvasion of Japan unnecessary, Winston Churchill declared‘ ‘today. and Prime Minister Attlee asserted the new-found; ‘power would force the world “to make a revaluation, 05-‘ lpECiiiii)’ in the sphere of international relations.” l‘ Mr. Churchill, speaking in the House of Commons in a new role as leader of the Conscrvzitive Opposition. rlis~ [closed that he and President 'l‘rirmnn “at POii-ldttm ap-' ‘proved the military plans to unchzlin the dread pent-up forces" of the atomic bomb. He declared this weapon “more than any other factor”i 1 brought the “sirdden and speedy ending of the Will‘ against‘ Japan." zlgainst whom great invasion blows were planned. lat the Potsdam conference. . ‘ i “i um in entire agreement," Mr. Churchill said, “with Ville President of the United States that the secret of the latom bomb shall so far as possible not be turned over at the present time to any other country in the world." 4 i He predicted it would take “per-i The Prime Minister hzips three or four years" before‘ House to proceed cautiously with AIIIPTICAII llfflgffifi i" the Bmmhi demobilization warning “we must bomb can be ‘overtaken’ and said' keep our forcés smmg h. Qrder h, “ill zllcsc thice years we must re-i prpvent djggydpfg" i iililiitlifllil‘ rl-lrltiolls with other men, AS for Brit, h recohstrug-ginn l wit" they dwell. in such n1 program, he cicclnicd that “we will, \\'iiy that lhosc men do not wish have to Shh-t paying our “m. for, ill’ iiliie t" i011 119°" @5031 05116! the essential food and raw mater‘ for the sakc of vulgar and outdated. 131 we have to import, from abrgad” t Iimbiiiflfl <1? t0!‘ P055101“!!! differ- slnce "lend-lease and mutual aid"l‘ 011C“ 111 iflfiviflglfli" cannot go on indefinitely. | Speaking of Potsdam, Mr. Chur-‘ - chili said the news of the success.’ fui New Mexico experiment with, the atomic bomb was received at] the Potsdam meeting, and that the Allies "owed it to consclence"| to give Japan a chance to surren- der before the bomb was uscd. fffcéhiiiiuiti loriiPageljfliColLtl) \ ,Britain To-Take lMore Frozen Fillets The Cimxscrvative loader also ex-. pressed concern about the Balk-. ans_ declaring that "almost every-I \\‘il0i‘f‘ Communist forces have ob, Joined or are in the process of jobtnirling dictatorial powers." urge the l l‘ l l i i 1 Says Stalin Kept Promise . He i\i:O said Marshal Stalin had made-hurl kcpt—n “promise" to throw Soviet power against Japan three months after Germany was whipped. Mr. Churchill further declar- cll thr- prnposcrl western boun- rlary for Poland. at Germany's cxpcnsc, was "not a. good aug- ury for the future." and stated that “it would be wrong to in. tcrvcnc in Spain in a forcible manner." i I l | orrAwA, Afinlo _ tCPJ _’ Under nrrnnscment; between the. Fisheries Department and the Brlt- ' .1511 Mill-NU’ of Food the quantltyi lllTr-‘llilrivpcittitriles 01f. P181515? Chum‘? ‘i1 “W” “*0. “mils 1° be Snaalindi ‘I 1-, i‘ ice _ M2115 I0 P- ilfillfl thc United ixiilgdOiil from the cur- p.l llllllbil, (onlirln e or the firs. mm; 59350115 producmm has been ‘increased from 15,000,000 to 3Q, .000,000 pounds. it was announced f today | The contract covcrs frozen fillet; of cod and Pollock from the Mar- ltlme Provinces and Quebec. vrlth‘ cod making lip (he bulk of the I 2,511. tPollock “fillets will amount . no more ran seven per cent Mr. (Ihurchill 'szlid the first ato-I "F the m“ ‘luiiniiiy- Mo“ ni the my bmnb u.“ no doubt owe were. fish called for under the original in lhc presence of a new factoriairflilgemeflto fllitiidl’ till-VB been in lulmzin affairs. We possessed; mftige lflVfliilabietjtlflChDllé the Pfesfliti powrrs which were irresistible. The m 0 PTO U0 1011. Pflrtmt-‘flt 0f- bolnb brought peace, but man a- fivillls said. the full 20,000,000 ‘as."t:l.“l§.2.:.““l.r::*l'. .. n:“;l:.l"ll.:.:"r ‘cancers n 0 oreg n epem er. policy, hfcssrs. Attlee and Chur- Under other arrangements, Can- fjlillilrlrcllilipitlzgcqiéficdaqggrrillsagfiacykllis ‘zlgiralrlisvvitiipbclvnei in? ilyllintcd King- - " s - a o o s 011 trial as it never was before" of frozen British COTIXIIiJiZ hzliigxut. and "in our foreign policy lei, us _i.____i__ BALLOON SIGIITED strike the notes continuously for THE PAS,‘ Man. Aug. i6—(CPl "frrcdom and fair play." ._ ‘tlce expressed hope for “emerg- ence of democratic governments, -A large white balloon, believed ‘bfl-"ii (‘ii TYPE PiBCUOIIS." 1K1 E11." to have been of Japanese origin, 0P0» was sighted Tuesday near Wabow- ‘ d911, M011». 136 miles north-cast of t ‘ here, by Game Guardian Jack Lun- r die and his son. | Mi‘- Aiiiff- i0!‘ his Diift. announ-i They reported seeing "something Wi in‘ Wnnlii nnk parliament to‘ hanging down" from thc hlgh.fly- Inppmvn thr- Uniicri Nations chem‘, ing bag, lfvr. and l-tllfi Britain ivnuld‘ trike a Lundlc also fold nf finding n‘ ']i"‘.!illl'. .l ill cflnrls to establish‘ fallen balloon in a large swamp» Iiultd nlilirlinill world pence. icarly t! s l l orlty, and opened up the long road {Britliirl will attempt to travel to illfiilCt.‘ and prosperity. . } “We have to rcalizc wc are living , in a new world." Mr. Attlee declar- cd, and "unless the forces of de. strilctiilzi now sct loose in the urorld usclcss lo plan for the future." Mr. Aitlcc Urges Caution . Howe Says Plenty Jobs During Reconversion lUnited ‘Kingdom and Canadian‘ contracts also have been cut but! not so heavily. . By DARFY WDONNELL OTTAWA. Aurz. l6—lCP)—Muni-= lions hiinistor Howe stated flatly? today lhat. thcrc will be no un- Mnnyliinu‘. shins were rnturuinsl omplnynlcnt in Canada during the‘ Pfiilntfintnfi "nt a KTPMPY rate than rcconvcrsioll period if the peoplei hiid be?" iiiiiicililitfid." said Mr.. ncccpt the jobs that will be avail. HOWE- nble. i More than 230,000 workers have‘ Speaking: n; u pfcgg cpnfefengg_ been released from war industries‘ in the Parliamentary Press Gal-‘Sifice V-E dill’. Mill’ B. and Yet‘ lcry, Mr, llowe said that despite‘. there is an overall labor shortage; war prnrillrtinll cutbacks there still. of bctwecrl 130.000 and 140.000. is n great labor shortage particu- workers. On top of this lhcrt‘ is .1[ larly in ilasic industries which great 000K108 0i $300.000.000 worth people lrft to take high-priced war-I of lower priority industrial activity jobs. lic was supported on thfs| belni! held back until there is an and ilthcl" statements by two of OVBPIIOW 0f nlflfilimvl‘? nllii mF-tffi- his assistants, Harry Carmichael Hi5 i701" hiilh Dfiiltiil‘ Wflfk such and Dr. Llurl Gnldcubcrg. as housing. '.i'ill‘l’\" will bf‘. jobs available for Pcak cmnlovmcilt in war indust. ever-tunic wilo wants in work and. ries was rcachcrl in 1943 ivllcllromc in mo»: cos-rs iliscllnrigcd war work_l 900,000 mcu and wnmcn were on crs will flllfi they are llceded in the payrolls. About 25 pcr cont of jobs similar lo lhcsc they held in the figure wcrc women. This lig- DYE-Will‘ day's. Temporary unem- urc droppcd l0 6.50.000 on V-E flay ploy-mom would occur in the cases and now was down another 2'30,- of tho-c trim did not wish to take 000. fimrcvcr. the rclcascd workers lnbir whilc a war lndus- have bccrl rlbsnrbcd rmfl it was as. ‘ire, rcloolcd for peace. sumed the lncn had gone into. peacetime production whcrl the! plants xvcrc rcccnvcrtcd. _ ll.-.-.r~ grwc u gcncral picture lir’ industrial situation. and 'I‘\vu cXnrullil-s of the labor ~lz ii llc will makc n rlctailcdi agc that is still Ilcing fcl! slntvulllz: on rcconvrrsion ncxti Montreal. with n diorlrluo nf l‘ wcclz. ‘llic Ulllicd Stair-s our coin; mcn and 100s‘! women. lulrl tracts in Canada-JO per cell; of. onto, with a iil“('i‘f‘l)8ll(‘§.' of l‘ dlrcrl (Jnnndinn war production—. men and 5,255 women, as of A _ have been curtailed by 9o per cent.‘ lo. .t_ ouse 0f Commo “i. Returning Vets Warmly Greeted _ Fully-five returned men arrived l" ‘he Cl)‘ by bus ,\‘;-ster'day' even. lug from Bordcrl, pan, of 1h‘; 799 Aluritimers who arrived in Halifax Wediiaiiifld’ 0n the "Oarneronia." ATP-Hy 0f them Were met at the Canadian LQBlOn Home by their ""'-"‘35- PENN-i. and other relatives ‘m? mo“ 0f "lo-Be who lived out. nine lilc City were taken to their ilOHlFS by car Some. however. chose to accept the hospitality of the Legion where lunche-‘w had flifefldy been prepared r them Included among [hggg enleri/Bifled at the LEEiOn were Gnr. Albert Convey. New Zealarld, P.E.I.; Cpl Charles McDonald, Newport; L. Bdr Pctcr Campbell, Newport; Pte Charles Sh€EhJ1IL Bear River; Till". B.M MacKinnon, Kilmulr; Pte. K.M Macllaren. Brudenell; Gnr J.H. Morrlssey, Newtown CFO-ii; Gnr. P.R. MacPherson, Glen Martin; Pte. M.J. Mcfien. m. Melville; Pte. crw, Stewart, Georgetown; Pte. George Reynolds, Murray River; Cfn. L.W.R. Smith. Montreal; and Gnr. J C. McFarlane, '76 Gerald Street, Char- lottetoivn. KILLED IN BLA_ST NOR-TH VANCOUVER, B C . AUG. l6 - (CP) — Leslie I". Cot. treil, 33 year old Vancouver ship. yard worker, wee killed today in an explosion and fire while work. inlz in the hold of a ship under re- pair here at Burrard Dry Dock William D. Bell, Vancouver, also working in the hold. suffered ser- ions bilrns. The explosion was believed caused by an acetylene t0rc-h. I'M 17il<ll~l6 MY NEWS m comrooqr FOLKS e (By The Canadian Press) METEOROLOGICAL SERVICE Aug. l6 - Minimum and maximum temperatures: Kamloops 6'1, 91; Edmonton 58 80; Regina 48. ; Winnipeg 52, 91; Toronto 52. '14; Ottawa 48, 76; Montreal 55. '14; Quebec 54, 89; St. John 40. —; Moncton 42. '14; Hali- fax 55. ‘TB; Charlottetown 5i, '73; Sydney 56, 7T; Yarmouth 52, 88. FORECAST Lower St. Lawrence: Moderate in fresh southwest winds; partly cloudy and moderately warm with scattered showers chiefly north of the St. lnwrencc Lake St. John: Partly cloudy with scattered shovrcrs; not much change in temperature. Gulf and Bay Chaleur: southwest to west winds: Fresh partly cloudy with scattered showers; not much change in temperature. North Shore: Fresh southwest in west winds; partly cloudy with scattered showers; not mirch change in temperature. Maritime East: Moderate sooth- wcsl winds: fair and warm. Maritime West: Moderate south. west winds; fair and worm. High tide this evening at 507 onrl tomorrow morning at 5.38. Sun sets this evening at 5.05 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.05. Full moon August 2R. 730 A. M. Silmmcrsidc tide ciahicen minu- tes later than Charlottetown. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown i" . 5.45 EM Arrive Chnrlnllcfnwn .. 8.10 P-M CIIARLOTTETOWN- NEW GLASGOW (Dnllv I-Zxeem Rnndnyl Leave Charlottetown Lin. $.00 I'.l\l Arrive Charlottetown 925. 5.20 PM N. S.-—P. l1. I. FERRY SERVICE molly. Including Sundays) SCHEDULE MAY l-SEPT. 30 Leave Wood Islands ‘l n. m.. I) e. m.. 3 o. m. Leave Caribou. I o. l, 1 o. n; 5.1.