'- naxms MAXIMS or a- - ' I or A MERE‘ MAN MERE MAN > _ ‘rs Q l ._‘ , ‘ - knowvllflltlboftlb ' ' Nolllhglovellireinllefolnillll i.:l..'+ .:.."-..-..i::-..::--.-..-...-:-..‘-.'» The Pen Read byiverybody finds"?- pedlnflm I ‘ ‘ . ' ‘ , . - Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew. " uornlns DI“! """"‘ “"’- 12' PAGES Moll esoo: other rrovinsoe. e u. s. 90 t CHARLOTTETOWN. C-ANADA, MONDAY,‘ _MARCH 13, use LLED IN WORST ACCIDENT IN AVIATIO Selgiansi Vote For ‘Return OF King Leopold‘ If s. Congress May Try Out Brannan. canada lleliionslijatos New Jet Fighter‘ OTTAWA, March In — (OP) — Before a distinguished audience. Canada gave the first formsl dem- ontration Saturday of the long- ni ge jet fighter she designed as the answer to her geography Ind climate in the cold war ere.‘ _ Combined with I display of can- IdI's first jet transport, it left lit- tle ll0'lbl- that this country, with two minor post-war strides, has definitely and speclaculerly come of age III the world of aviation. Billed as the most powerful fighter in the world. the 52-foot- CF-loil rolled. turned and handled with all ability that wartime pilots were talking about hours later. Bill Wnterton, the test pilot put it up to 575 miles an hour wlthollt ever going outside the circumfer- ence of the air force field. Its ult- imate speed is a secret. Everything waterton did in in minutes in the air was plainly vis- ible to nn nudlence that included Pllllcc Bernliard of the Nether. lands. the Governor-General, Vis- count Alexander, Defence Minister Claxtan and other Cabinet Minis- icrs. l'eprrscntaIl\'es of some 20 for- rign gn\'el"l1m(‘lltS, members of Pnriinliiclit and others. Winnipeg Woman Found Murdered O Vl’I.\'.\‘lPE1Cv. March is -—(OP) — siabbcri ls limes, bile body of I 30- yenr—old mother ed’ six was found Willi’ ill ll. dingy hotel room, lying in a puddle of blood. . Police said the women. Mrs. Na:-iiigi PL'l'l'czlllll., apparently was In: ll‘if‘(l with H 15-Lnch~ict~piok found ill the room. l"0'.lwi‘ discovered the body in mnkilig -1 rmiliiie check of the room of 38-your-old Walt.er~ Stoney, found hing beside railway tracks in an0‘.licI' part of town. seriously injured. Thar Slllfl their evidence‘ indicat- ed that llli'- pair had known each nilllr illl'ni- mont . The women's husliniui wzis fcun hanged in his hr-'ne Inst. year. No charge was llld against sl'°“f‘.\'- Constalbles said they be- llfid been hit by I train. I ll8\'Cd no Coming Events ,"Matl s-our Films lo Garnhum PW" Studio. Charlottetown. "”"i'l\'<‘.\‘ nintch, Long River, to- uht. Brndrllbane vs. Long River. "Dance, st. 'I'o1'eGI'a Hail. lieeiar Monday. auspices C. W. L. M1‘jBu_viiig good _OIts, Barley, red Grain daily. Dillon at Stpilicii. ill . "Garden Seeds. Send for He‘: ;'fll;:1°l;\I¢. Arthur Vessey, York, Meeting Meadow- Institute will be he) Sthool House Mlmh 11th. 5 "Reserve March 29th’ for Dean “ll>P°r and Auction sale in Oherry “tin Sponsored by w. 1. ':\Viiishlro girls vs. Hunter Iler izlrls It Wlluhire Rink to- :'!f:'rt- Canteen service. Sketing "Annual hank l~“.ir:ncrs in the ;'M°mhly Meeting of bit. slow- : hfI;mt;hLcs‘:rdian Legion. will Mm,‘ mm‘ er in room sts M. k“”°Ckey finals for MerciiInt '¥"e,Troi>hy besin tonight in "hams Road Rink. lunch ltiver , - G"‘h8m's sins. Genie unis Iso. k"FrdsrItion -of ‘ -Ajeiculmre “eating It lierilpsh , lohool Wed. m' 53' evening,/|[ue|.‘1,mb_ [goo speakers. g ‘ "Swill Rustleo .RlfIlOf‘| obel- — '9 3090 River lied Wings to I I in New Glesgew rink lion- enlflllt It l:m..Ihie Ifoei‘ .,”"",l‘:“ono'IctpiI orunteilhv fl‘ P- roe Aliili ' ‘"‘1‘-ea‘-'3"‘-.“..ll.‘?°:“# gtgmrnnummtleiou. 3 ugh-—in . "Norm -.,. 1 .*£”'.°"-‘%“3.“'.l“r-ffizt-"*”°'»?il-'0-”“~:-°’ Farm Plan (B: Ovid Mu-tin) .WASi-IINGTON. March 12—(AP) —C°lI8I‘eII ml)‘ Rive the Brennan 513,?“ Plan a chInce—to defeat it- There now is a. possibility the program will be given a may run despite ions refusal of both House of Representatives and Sen. Me t0 have anything to do with the administration‘; pet mealug-Q 1°!‘ hlndllns food surpluses. Now some of the critics are relaxing opposition to letting Agriculture Secretory Charles Brennan try out his scheme on one or two surplus woducts. The reason: They think it will flap as well as take the political heat off the present price-support program which Brannon has been sledge-hammering as 3 failure, Mounting surpluses of food pro- duced in the United States may bring about the change in tactics. The big heedech is I large sur- plus of potatoes, dried eggs. dried milk, butter and cheese-Ill per- ishable commodities which cannot be kept too long. Less pressing It the moment are the problems of grains, cotton, flaxseed and to- bacco. The Agriculture Department has taken upwards of $275,000,000 worth of perishable products off the market fil an attempt to keep producer prices from dropping be- low support levels. Secretary Brennan is telling the country that buying up. surplus perishable: is all wrong. He says it keeps supplies away from con- sumers, keeps their foods bills un- necessarily high and taxes them to pay for surpluses which they are unable to use. Under the Brannon plan. the Government no' longer would buy up surplus periehables to hold up producer pi-ieee..InItsId it would allow the whole supply to move to market It whatever price it would bring. If average market prices were below the stfpport level, the Government would pny this former the difference from the treasury. Brannon says his plari—unveiled nearly a year ngo—-would assure formers prosperity prices and give consumers cheaper food. Paris, Subway And Bus Slrille, Ends rams. March 12 — (AP) —'i'ixe Psi-is subway Ind "bus strike ended Saturday, flattening I part of the French strike wave which Com- munists hope to bring to I crest when the first United States arms Ild arrives. The Communist-led Confedera- tion Generals du Travail ‘ordered its members back to work on the Paris lines after seeing that non- Oommunlst unions would not join thorn. t The strike never wholly halted Paris transport in five days of its’- ing. The lines, owned by the city. gave their,32.000 employees I basic five-per-cent wage increase that amounted to at least 1,100 francs (about $3.30) I month for each The 0.0.1‘. had asked for I min- imum increase of 3.000 franc!- Hoxvevor, thousands of workers, Communint and non-communist, still remain. away from their Jobs. Nearly 300.000 of France‘: 1.500.000 metal workers are idle. The no- tionalised gas and electric indust- ries remain crippled by I walkout oi many of their 100.000 employ’ us, one pressure is still low in many parts of Pu-is. soml slfblse is unoolleeted. Various dock work-. ors Ind miners lave joined in I clamor for concessions, mostly for more pay. ParllamenT Still Has To‘ |)ecide,A_cl_ion BRUSSELS. March 13—(Mondsy) --(AI-‘)—Exiled King Leopold III early Qdey won I plebiscite on the question of his return to Bel- glum’s throne. Complete official re- turns from all 30 districts Rove him approximately 57 per cent of the total vote: The count was: “Yes (for Leopold's return) 2.933.- 2 No (against his return) 2,151,881 Invalid ballots 151,477. I-‘ercentege for return 57.683; percentage Igoinst 42.317. The result in favor of Leopold is approximately two per cent larger than the percentage he had said he would hsve to get to consider ruling again over the Belgians. The plebiscite, conducted yester- day, is only advisory. The results will serve merely to inform parlia- mentuof the people’: will. Parlia- ment itself will make the final decision on the King’; status. Leopold ran ahead throughout the tabulation of ballots. The 43-year-old King got the returns at his suburban Swiss chalet near Geneva, He had re- turned to the country of his exile after spending several weeks on the French Riviera. '- Ths status of Leopold hes been a controversial subject ever since he overruled the advice of his ministers and surrendered un- conditionally to Hltler’s invading German troops May 28, 1940. Speak, the Socialist former pre- mler, urged the King at the time of the German break-through to accompany the' Belgian cabinet to London and ‘carry on the flsht in exile there. Leopold refused. The gap left by the surrender hastened the occupation of Bel- gium and the overwhelming oflhe Allied armies on the Western Front. Maritime Electric Superintendent Taiies New Job Mr. Albert Ley. Distribution sup- erintendent of the Maritime Elec- tric Company since 1944 has ac- cepted In appointment as Assist» ant superintendent of the Avon River Power Company Limited, Nova sootis, Ind will leave here on April 1. He will take up residence at Windsor. During his six years here,- Mr. Ley has done In outstsnding job, particularly in l‘ill_’Il development. rloted for his sympsthetlc Ind hu- man understanding of the other fellow's problem, Mr. Loy will be sorely missed by his associates. Mr. My is I graduste in Electric- al Englneering from Nova Scotla Technical college. He entered the electrical utility business -with the Nova Beotis Electric ught Ind Power Ltd. and leter moved ‘to Montreal where,he was Issistsnt to Mr. Denis stairs for some time. He also spent some time in Brit- ish Guiane. on power plant con- struction and operational work. one of the occasions on which Mr. my distinguished himself 'here was during the "blackout dIys" It the end hi the war. Although here only a little more than one year. his untiring work and cheery hum- or made him I tower f strength the mployees uring that difficult period. _ . EIARNI: BAY. Kent. England- (OP) — A 68-veer-old widow has written to her mayor for hel she wants him to find her I hue d. Consideri Gas Turbines For Locomotives, Autos O’l.'.l'AWA. March‘ 1: -2 (CP). - CInIdlIn engineering scientists ere delving into the ponlbuitiee of I new pr lsion age, the ego of she gs which could ‘bring feet- er, more economic‘! lotomotivos Ind Iutoinobil_II.- . Research into Iflflllltlllag de- velopment is going on It NI-. tionel Research Council labore- I_oriII_It 0tiIwI Ind It lletiill Unlvoiisl in Nontrad- A is. . c. spoke-nen. eeid Sei- urdsy tbei research new is beyond a. pops: siege but I long period as inyolved expel-insects still lies eed. cenedlltil could’ not ex- ,“ Q, ,,. 'u._fifihIflO1“0flIbClVN or huoino suites for I ions.-tim- ,.g_ . sod tho differ- ” R. tlrbieee Ind jet -. 1‘ ' ___._______..__ gins propulsion comes from the "push" provided by hot gesee forc- ing their escape through I Jet ex- issuer. At ilcaill University. I No- borsepower expo-rlmentei gee tur- bine possibly sulieble for trucks. bulldosen or other hesvy machin- Iry us being designed. At Ot- tIwI. N. R. C. engineers were in- vestigating the possibilities of ges- turbine propulsion for locomotlvbs. he mechenicel engineering divi-_ Ion ofiheN.R.C.bIs beoowork-i lag in co-opereiioa witb,cIaIdiIn' lteilwe for more than I you in- v I f”i‘i:leuwbolIA£i|ld of loci; mot ve p on. I wceiu-it oil field dove! Int. menrlooocootivee bees been con- of the country's ' UITAWA, March 12 -— (Special) — Announcement was made here by the Public Works Department yesterday that tenders for the con- struction of I boat harbor at Skinner's Pond, Prince County. will be received until the after- noon of March 29. In the meld parliamentary esti- mates tabled two weeks ago, amount of money amlgnzed to the Skinner’: Pond.project is 3110.000 of which $50,000 is I revote from the estimates of 1040-80. Pending receipt of the tenders. the Works Department declined to "divulge. their estimates for the job in its en- tireiy. While tenders for the haifbor project are receivable It the Pub- lic Works Department offices at Charlottetown and at the Post Of- fice at Tignish, chief engineer Ro- _beri Blais told The Guardian that Visiting speaker A Recognized Authority (in Farm-Methods Dairy farmlnz. Brass production and conservation methods will be outlined here by one of Scotland‘: biggest gresslend fsrmose. Mr. Msliland Macltle Jr-.. who as pre- viously noted, will visit Charlotte- town late this month. Mr. Mec- Kle's visit is one phase of a speak- ing tour of Ontario. Quebec, Nova Scotla and Prince Edward Island. He will arrive here on Friday evening. March 24 and will ad- dress : meeting to be held I-t Prince of Wales College that night. The following day he plans on meeting Mr. W. R. Show. Deputy Minister of Agriculture and later pay visits .to the Experimentel Station. some forms and poulbly meet with groups of farm people. On Saturday he will leave for Moncton and Truro. Now recognized as an authority on modern farm methods. Mr. MacKie received his grounding It (Continued on Page 5 Col. 1) Potatoes Top Bail Freight for February height exports of potatoes show the greatest increase in either ex- port or import shipments as com- pared with, February 49, accord- ing to figures .eiealIed y the div- lsional superintendent of the C. N. R. It Charlottetown over the week- end. The report shows that 014 carloads were shipped during eb- rusry 1950 which is almost I fifty percent increase over the 725 shown last year. In the import ‘trade, shipments showing the greatest increase were railway coal with 74 is against 26 last year. and railway material with 32 against 8. ' Other rsll exports which showed an increase were livestock: 63 as against 51, meets, 24 ucinet 18. turnips. 110 agsinet 90 and hey Ind straw, 21 egelnet 5. Imports which showed the lug- est increase were Iutos: 30 Igslnet 19, cool: 234 against 176, flour and feed: 124 IgIlnIt_1oD, fertilizer: 68 Igsinst 33, gas and oils: ,12'I Igeinst B5, lime: 23 against 12. sugar: 17 against 9, and csnned goods: 23 Igairies, 1. Other shipments by cIrloIdI with the corresponding figures for 10d9 in brackets, included: From Tormentine to Borden: Inga empty 5 (3). fruits O. (10). H. . loads 2 (-). herdwere 2 (-). lumber 29 (19), livestock 4 (7). less oerioede an (210). meets 8 (4). machine , 10 Illt ‘l Iereted weters 10 10), miscellan- eous 93 (as). bay 0 (2),, cement o vs), trucks 2 (0) end send end gravel 0 (3). Total lmportcerlosde were 1181. showing In incroue of 318. From Borden to Terrnentlne: butter and cheese 0 (1), ‘eggs 4 (7), fish 7 (4), hides 8 (2), less celieneoue 11 (9), machinery 1 (I). I-Iilwsy meteriei I (C) rough 1 (4). mm 4 (2), blueberries 1 .(0) bottle; 3(1()8). vosctoblee 1 (0). In I Toni exportleerloeds 'w'Ie 18!. showing on increase If SI- Tenders Called For Boat Harbor .At Skinners Pond ._.j_._______:__: the project was not restricted to Prince Edwerd Island contractors. At. the some time it will be direct- ed by departmental engineers in Prince Edward Island and local labor will be employed except for a small number of key posts. Work on the harbor construction job will begin late this spring or early in summer. J. Watson Mac- Naught, MP. for Prince told The Guardian that the Skinner's Pond project has been discussed by fish- ermen, engineers and public offici- Ils for nearly three-quarters of I century. in the past there have been con- flicting opinlons as to the feasibil- ity of the harbor owing to sand conditions. but of recent years. en- gineers affirmed that the matter of drifting sands and of keeping I channel clear could be success- fully overcome. S. D. U.’ Debaters Make , Fine Showing Ottawa OTTAWA, March 12 —- (CP) .. Two law students from the Univ- ersity of British Columbia carried the 1950 Canadian University De- boting Association Charnpionshtp to the west coast Saturday night. The students, Rodney Young and Alistair Fraser, -won the judges‘ de- cision over Wilfred Driscoli and Mark Mccrulgan from St. Dun-I stan's University, Charlottetown. The B.C. students debated the affirmative side of the resolution: "Resolved thatcolnmunistic activ- ity be made I criminal offence in Osnade." - Mr. Young is the_former C.C.F'. member for Vancouver centre in the House of Commons, while his partner, Mr. Fraser, campaigned for Defence Minister Brooke Glax- t.on at Montreal in the general election last June. Two of the three judges voted in favor of the EC. team, while the third gave his decision to the Charlottetown entry. The 3.0. pair eliminated the en- try of the Ontario Agriculture col- lege, Guelph, in one semi-final round earlier Saturday, while St Dunstan's disposed of the Univer- cIrloIdI 55 (O4). Itlroh 1 (.1), mls-. slty of Ottawa in the other semi- REVEALED RED TORTURE — Michael Shlpkov. Bulgarian citizen Ind translator for the 17.5. Lega- lion In Sofia. told U. S. officials of torture he underwent while being quest’ ‘ by Communist officials. His affidavit, Just made public, was written last August at the time of his first arrest. He may already have been executed. or is awaiting a secret treason? trial for which he is certain to receive the death penalty. Blroihers-|n~|.aw Survive _Crash CARDIFF, Wales, March 12- (API — An air crash which killed 80 of 83 passengers aboard a chartered plane here today spared — by a whim of fate- the husbands of two sisters. The two brothers-in-law, who emerged from the twisted wreckage of the big aircraft with only superficial injuries, were Gwyn Anthony. a. 27-year- old schoolmaster, and Handel Rogers. 35. grocer and ship chandler. Srnallwood To Make Announcement ST. JOHN'S. Nild.. March 12 - (CP) —— Premier smnllwood said tonight he will make announce- ments in the Newfoundland Legis- lature tomorrow regarding freight rates and the sale of fish. Mr. Smallwood. who returned Saturday from I week-end trip to Ottawa, conferred with federal authorities on both questions. LONDON — (GP) — Passenger ‘aircraft with sleeper accommoda- tion Ire going into British over- final .PrldIy. seas Airways’ transatlantic run. Stalin Silent ”-Parliament Is Elected; Peace Theme Prominent (By Eddy Gilmore) MOSCOW, March 12-—(AP)—The Russians today elected a new Par- liament of 1.30? members as the climax to I campaign based on Politburo pledges that the Soviet Union is following I policy of peace. I.» The no. 1 candidate was Prime Minister Stalin. He headed the ticket of Communists nnd their non-party associates. There was only one ticket, and that approved by the Communist Party. V The complete vote for the Sup- reme Sovlet (Parliament) is expect- ed to be announced within fl week. (Moscow dispatches Saturday II|d the 70-year-old Stalin was ex- pected to wind up the preelection pain with an important speech. There was no indication in inter Moscow dispatches or broad- casts that he did so. There was no explanation of his apparent failure to carry out the Stalin tradition of In election-eve speech). Moscow, ‘during the was In I holiday mood. Across Soviet territory, voters elected 871 members of the Coun- oil of the UrIion—the Upper House —Ind 631 members of the Council of Nationalities or Lower House. The members Ire elected for I term of four years. The govern- ment regards the election so I vote of confidence In itself Ind its pol- icies. The last. election was in week-end (6). 1945 The last important speech of the campaign was by Politburo member V. M. Molotov, who do- clared Friday night that Russia considers It pos.sll3_le“fof the Cor; Ind . . dwell side by side In imceful com- petition.- Every other Politburo member who spoke in the campaign IlIl.Il‘- ed the people that the big issue wood wss the Soviet Union’: pol v 01 peace. In the light of more state- ments, n'lIny foreign diplomats pre- dicted Russia would melts some overiureciowerd I new effort to settle the barbed problems divid- ' In: the world. As New The polls were open from 6 I.m. -to midnight. local time. By noon Sunday, the radio said. every eligible voter. had cast his ballot in the Moscow district where Stniln was standing as the candi- Big Airliner CARDIN‘, weles. March 12 -- (GP) -- An Avro Tudor Iii-lip: filled with gay Welsh football fans crashed today. 150 yards short of its home run-.vay, killing so persons in the worst recorded disaster in aviation history. Tne worst previous disaster u-us the crash of the dlrlgible Macon in 1933 over the Atlantic, when 13 Uli- ited States Navy men were killed. Three persons of the 78 passen- gers and crew of five stepped out of the shattered wreckage of to- <Iay‘s crash alive. The three survivors _—‘one dang- erously hurt, the other two witn only superficial injuries — were not permitted to see anyone except. immediate relatives. Relatives and friends who had gathered to -welcome the fans watched horror-stricken as the plane Iicsedived into the field, scattering mangled bodies and luggage. 15 1'Irdl from House The four-engined plane plum- meted to earth 15 yards from the nearest house in the tiny hamlet of sigglnstone. It came down so sharply there were no skid marks on the ground. It did not explode or burn. The aircraft was just 30 seconds away from its destination at unn- dow airstrip, just outside Cardiff. lord Pakenhnrn, Minister of Civil Aviation. immediately hurried to Wales to make I. personal ou- the-spot investigation. The pilot of the ill-feted cult. was Capt. Dennis J. Persons. 26, who was decorated by the King last year for his part in the Berlin air lift. His body and those of some pes- sensors were caught in the wreck- age. Huge jacks were u.Ied.to lift the plane and remove them. A coroner's inquest was ordered for tomorrow to speed identifica- tion. . An -airline official told reporters at the scene that the wrecked plane had flown 1400 hours with- out the slightest accident. ' "As for as we can see every- thing aboard was in proper order. The total of 83 persons Ibosrd was I load well within the certlflcsts of airworthiness requirements." Harry Bramhall, In Ilfvort work- er who witnessed the crash, said he was convinced Parsons deliberately turned his plane to save the vil- lage of slgginstone. ' Bramhall said the pilot appar- ently switched off Ill engines just before the crash to avoid fire. The plane was s four-engined Avro Tudor transport chartered by a group of Welsh football has to take them and bring than home from Belfast where they saw Wales beat Ireland. 0-3, Saturday in s Rugby Unlonal international game. They celebrated Saturday night in Dublin. « Originally 72 seats were booked but, an airline official said. Just before take-off an extra. six seats were put in to accommodate hall I dozen determined fans who were anxious to see the game. Banners d ribbons proclaiming support of t e Welsh football team were found scattered among the date. He received every vote in_ his district in the inst election. In the 1946 elections there were; 101.450.936 votes cast. or 99.7 per, cent of the registered voters. ,‘ To vote in favor of the hide oil party and non-p.-lrt_v candidates. ihcl elector drops into the box the bal- lot on which nppenr the names of the bloc candidate in his district. To vote In opposition he draws I line through the name of the candidate. READING. England -— (CF) Reading town council is considering spending £8,000 (£18,600) on unl- forms for the local police force. wreckage and the battered bodies. . The plane did not burn. Three stagger from Wreck Lydia Thomas. on whose father‘: form the crash occurred. said the survivors staggered from the tail of the plane, which was the least damaged part of the craft. One, she said, was in uniform and was believed to be I steward on the plane's crew. "I rushed to the plane and help- ed to get two out,"' said Thomas Newman. another eye-witness. "They were in a bad way and could not stand up. We laid them Pope Pius Urges Prayers To End Armaments Race By FRANK BRUTTO VATICAN CITY. March 12 (AP) — Pope Pius Saturday urged wor d-wide prayers on Passion 8 sy, March 1. for "opportune remedies for the present evils" of In unsettled peace and the Irma- nients race. In In oncyclical to Roman Cath- olic bishops, the Pontiif attecked P ‘ by implication, declar- ing it undenrlincs good morals and peace by its onslaught on religion. "A solid and stable peace that could happily resolve the many and Ilweys lncresslng motives of dis- cords has not arrived." he contin- ued. "Many nations place obstacles in each others way and, Is trust fades. there is I rece of resrrrl." Sunday - the day the church he- gins the commemoration of Ohrlst'li suffering that ended with his cru- cifixion -- to unite his prayer with that of Romen Catholics through- out the world. Orthodox Catholic, church of England and Protostsnt leaders of other ‘ nominations recently hsve urged thst fresh efforts-be lnedo for peace. The World council of Churches. representing I65 Protest- -snt and Greek orthodox churches lfl 44 Ian, Ipflllfid E05. 3. for I "gigantic new effort for peace" to l\'€l‘t what it celled the danger oi -wor suicide from the projected hyd ogen bomb. Patriarch Alexei of Russia Pri- dsy night Iddrelsed I messlgs to heads of the orthodox catholic The Pope said he would go to St. Peter's Basilica on Pesslon church urging them "in take I ‘stand in defence of poses.‘ O Subscriptions Delivered 80.00. N l_ll_STOR.Y 31.00 Wrecked On Edge Of Welsh Village; Only Three Men Survive out on the grass until an ambull once came." _ The Llandow airstrip near Cor diff is a wart.ime airfield whic has been reduced to reserve statul and now is headquarters of an aiix4 iliary air squadron. l Air Force Takes Charge I Air Force troops, who too charge of the area. began plckin up wreckage and listing person property. They found a pearl necklace in . I case. canned fruit, and othei lglfts the passengers were bringing from Ireland. convoys of ambulances began moving the battered bodies of the § air victims into a temporary morgue It St. Anthan R. A. F. station three miles away. ‘There the difficult task of ident- ification began. Many of the dead. including thnec women passengers, were practically stripped of their clothing by the crash. There were scenes of frantic grief Ind moons of anguish as puentn. brothers, sisters and wives picked out members of their families from the long rows of dead. The grim return was B for-cry from the happy take-off Friday. when the Tudor left Dublin it! 2:10 p. m. it carried fuel for- Ibouo four hours flying. The pilot had estimated his arrival time It 32(1) p.m. -— two minutes before its flight actually ended in disaster. "The Avro Tudo came down in I small field not far from the village of Siggingstone, about three miles 150 yards short of its destination ' It nursed I farmhouse by only 10 yards in its total plunge. It Ip- peared that the pilots attempted. to land in the small field when the airport. Four women were passengers and her husband and son. Brothers See Crash Two brothers «playing football I! the edge of the field were wit- nesses. ____.________________. (Continued on Page 11 Col. 5) A ‘Jll.l. he: becomes A ‘(own ‘N\Ti-\ if-s HRST ‘lRAFF\C \_.ic.\iT.' TORONTO, March 12 ——(CP) -- Mlnlmutm and maximum temper- atures: Victoria 34 44: Edmonton 3b 1'1: Regina 13‘: 9: \Vlnnlpeg 4h 15; Toronto 26 34; Ottawa 17 25: Montreal 19 31; Quebec 15 27; Saint John — 34; Mon-cion 10 24; I-lnliinx Si. 37; Charlottetown 14 15; Sydney 9 25; Yurmouth 26 37; St. John's 12 22. l-i.Al.Jlll‘AX. lvtarctn 12 -—((7!') —- Oificlsl forecasts issued by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax: Syn is: Snogrpsfcll over the hlariiimcs Sunday morning. It. changed to rain over the Nova Scntla. main- land where the temperatures rose to the 30s. in Prince Edvwrird Is- land and Nwost of New Brunsrwicic temperatures remained in the ‘dos. Northerly winds are again bringing cold air into the district and on Monday the weather will generally be sunny. but there will be I few snowflurries. Regiona1.forecasts. ' valid until midnight Monday: ‘ Prince lildward Islmd: Cloudy with widely scattered smwifhn-rice clearing Monday evening. Golder. Northwest winds 20 becoming limit by evening. Low and high Monday It Charlottetown 15 and 25. High tide today it too A. M. Ind 5.30 P. M. sun rises st 631 A. M. and sets It 8.15 P. M. ‘ summorside tide eighlncn min- utes later than Charlottetown. Bolllilm — ronmtrrrnts gamer BBBVICI: , WEEK‘ DAYS Lv. Borden Lv. capo Tornientlns 0.10 AM. 2.40 PM. SUNDAY snvicn In. one Tormenelse use In. M. loelea 0.10 AM. , were reported killed, one dying with ‘ from Jilsndow airfield, and only_ they saw they were going to miss ‘ »I J