' hr Canada rum MAfiilMS ', 01A MERE MAN anti-i I lie is rich enough who does lack bis daily Alleli- not if dh-si-lomtown ‘he Oasis. Guardian. Founded llfl. Morn!!! Fire Deals S] llard Blow lo Fishermen A Si-IELBURWI. 11.5.. Aug. 24 _ ICP) —- A fi"v- which started in a berry bog a reek also dealt a cruel blow to the ordinary flshQr-ifofls who rve alone the shores of Jor- iilfl Bay when it ieapt up during" the week-em destroying the vil- latte church and fur homes and puttinl? 40-cd-i faml es to flight. All across the lower end of the Jordan Bay Peninsula nelr this louth more tJWn farmers and fish- rfmen f‘ed, driving their livestock before them. Along n roadside one Inmfly‘ lfilflpv/i to milk Meir cows while lizimcs ctaclrod 1n the woods be- hind ‘him. At another place s fa 11y wluch ehoso tr remain was the ped by 01d women and young children carry- ing butkets oi water to drench barns Blili iisv. sheris. Mrs. Evcrcm Butler pressed her son aid eight other men into scr- vicc protecting her no-me and those of her neigthonrs while shmcarried nets and UShWIg gear to the safe- ty of tlie shore. Clinton TOWYZFBHG and his wife lied from thrlr bur-ting home. able to save nothing but the clothes on their backs. TI-eY waited ‘tniy long Inc-ugh to carry Mrs. Townsend's invalid brother Martin Thorburne to safe-i but ftrgo‘ to retrieve $35 iii cast. left in a pantry drawer. Howard Derxer. aged fisherman. burned ‘lu- skm off his bards vain- ly trying to saverthe home of his dllltllltrl. ill‘?- Prcscott Locke, whose husband still was at sea ilshinP. unaware of his loss. Lrcke: n1 ‘e and four young children were loft homeless and even a $77 faiully allowance cheque Ind S» in "ssh "was forgotten in '.ii(il' flight. One cf the hear-test losers was Burns Lorine Ami-use new STJKiiThoene and n1. its ccntenls were destroy- ed. But his smrll grocery store less than 10') feet away was ic-ft intact while his car. parked near the ruined lnme hadn't even its paint Icorchco‘. The tire which destroyed the home o.’ Bin-tr. Locke also destroy- t Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ‘CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, Moivnmrjlflzsvcusr 2s, 1941 ) PAGES l 1 He b doquent enough for whom truth spanks. Maxims 01A MERE MAN Serious V i S5D.000'Fire In Sydney Mines SYDNEY MINES. N. S». Aug. fl-tCPl-Inss was estimated st. 050.000 in a iire which swept through the one-storey brick Giliis Block on Main Street tonight and for n time threat- ened the principal business street in this North Cape Bre- ton County mining town oi 8.000. Origin oi the fire. which was discovered in the basement of Thomson MacDonald's drug store about 0.30 p.m. ADT, was unknown. Three other business estab- lishments. the order office of Robert Simpson Eastern Lim- ited, Dave Nichols‘ restaurant and D. A. Gilils’ tlilor shop, were, gutted while four others suffered damage by smoke and water. v Firemen, who had just re- turned from fighting three brush fires in the area, exting- uished the flames liter a three- bour fight. The building is owned by D. A. Gillis and J. II. MscLennan. Killed Returning‘ From Fire Fighting McADAl/l. 11.5.. A118. 24 -—- (GP) —Chest=r Waance. 60, was kited instants: ear-y today when crush- ,d against s, aelephcne polo [Elf Moor-es Mills after the brakes o! a truck "failed to function. Mom-n: oi a Janadlan Pacific Rallwsv fire fighting crerw here he was returning ‘from n fire at Waweg. The truck was unable to go all the wry up a hill and 'he driver, “orced to back down when the brakes failed t-"i nor-i. told the passengers to jump. All leaped clear except Wallace. As i:e junip- ed the wedrrng presents received by a (laughter, Mrs Mmray l-iam? llton of Dartrmiuth 10.5.. who was married in Jwrdan Bay last fnlli but left her prrsenta at ‘rune until the found n hcmc of her own. , One u! the stranerest things that‘ evacuees saw as ‘ohey left thelri tirmcs to iPKi! shelter with rein-f’ tires and fnetzds res-a were hun-I iireds of brrrvn snakes wriggfiing. out of ‘he path of the iire. Coming Events "Show Malpeque Tuesday. "Show Cezioc Cove Wednesday. "T051115 —- Malpeque, Tucsda . Night Editor. y "Wednesday. A1111’. 2'1. Picnic at Mt. Carmel. a "Talkies - Canoe Cove, Wednes- dli’. Nrght Editor, “Cllllwilniz Hess toi- Canadl Packers each Tuesday. Earl Jay. Wed- fce cream and "Dance Dcnagh School, "Mdav. Aug. 2'1. inch. ' oi "Dance. Donsgh School, Wednes- ' GI)‘. Mill-int 27th. Lundm. ice cream and "Qlmllqfilcesdand ice Cream. Belfast ‘ e . . mm w_ Lev august 26th Point ggkflegilloctlnegh Hinge dior Canada ea , , Dmd Pr.“ , ues by Signed P"C°11'¢"hl Hogs for Canada wickets each Tuesday, afternoon. - Crane. “"54"”. St. ‘Deng’: Hui, "m. ':il';l-‘\l-liilst 25th. Webster's Orch- ' "Regular Iioapital ‘Dance. lion- "l" Wrllns Rink. every latur- ‘ll! nllht. Webster's Orchestra. “mimics logs ma weenes- tgnmmifll for Csnldl Packers. - Demon, Crnpsud. “Don't miss the dsncl at Orap- mtmogou. Aaulult as. Eastern m lommrlmglonsored by Crap- "coiieotinl if? each ‘lemony I "III. Iniiotilil. listsuner itniph Loo, Vernon ed the truck ewervcd ai-d pinned him iililfiSi a teenhone pole. One o1 the. po1e's spikes pierced his head. The surviors included his son, Sheldon also of M-fiAdam. Family Parity” 0n Peace Settlement CANBERRA. A113 24 -- (AP) -- Australizfs views m a Japanese peace settlement W711 he compared with tiir-sc oi i~il1er counlsies of the British Cimmorwriftih at the "Inm- ilv conference" on Japan sched- , uled ‘o open here 'I'iiBSday. Plans for t..e conference call for a frank exchange ui lie-s among Drought Situation In Europe XDNDON. Aill- 24 -(AiP)— A large part of Europe today was in the illrroes of the worst drought in a decade, threatening severe dam- age to crops. Unless it... fnils soon. European officials say, near-famine condit- ions will exist over wide areas again next whiter. In London Saturday rain ended a 17-day drought. _ This was the situation reported by Associated Press correspondents today: Germany-the woo-st drought in 50 years than damaged n11 crops. The loss in the potato crop is ex- pected to exceed 25 per cernt gen- erally and range to nearly 50 per cent 1n some sections, agricultural officials say. The sugar beet crop has suffered comparably and pas- tures and fodder crops are badly affected. France—most of the wheat crop was harvested before the drought, but last. winter's freeze had cut the harvest by 3.‘! per cent. France needs 5,000,000 tons of wheat a year and will have to import two-thirds of iihat amount during the next 12 months, The August drought will seriously affect the second fodder outtl-nE- Possibly wipe out, and cause a drastic shortage of food for livestock. Italy-scattered rains over most oi’ ftaly last week ended a 42-year record heat wave and accompany- ing drought. There have been no reports of extensive damage to crrops. Britain-there has been no gen- eral rain since Aug. 6, although rain fell Saturday in ILondon. Sugar eels. late potatoes and vegatables have been damaged by the drrougiht but the 1947 grain harvest pros- pects are good. 'I'he biggest worry is milk production. which has fallen off sharply. Austria-officials rear widespread damage to vegetable crops. Drink- tng water supplies l-n several sect- ions aire endangered. _ Scandinavian countries-Abe sum- imer-lorig drought in Sweden 1s ex- pected to cut wheat and rye crops by 40 per cent and Sweden will have to impart about 350,000 tons of girain to mal-ntalrn the present ration. "Drastic" slaugihterings of Danish cuitle have been ordered because of curtailed fodder crops. Norway-drought in southern Norway ‘has cut grain crops sharp- ly and too much ruin in the north- ern part has damaged the harvest there, Low water supplies are hampering industrial plants. Ireland-officials forecast the bcst harvest in 40 ycars with strong prospect that bread ration- ing will be abolished. This country has virtually escaped the drought. Pravda issues Mild Warning To lran, MOSCOW. Aug. 24 — (AP) -- Pravdn said today ilin". Prcnder Ahmed Qavan of Iran was try-mg to break the ‘Hviet-Iratziiu. dll ag- reement and “warned him against following "thr" dangerous road" D:m1n1oris to approach lwternuilbll- cl talks with '\ clear undrrstanciing of cbisctives. The \ustral1i.n delegation. l~icad-, ed by rz-‘me Minister Cl-lfley and Dr. Halbert Evntt." is expected to propoviid the view thr-t Japan's war poenilal must. bu removed (The pact. rezchad in 194i! while Russian trosp. were in Iinfl. would make Russia the rnajoitv stock- holder icr 25 years in .i Russian- Iranian nil‘ (‘flmiiary- Th? "W! Iranian prrflenient must ratify the tvreemnt to nrakc it effevlve, ‘Ilhere have bat-n reports of cPDPa- forever ltlon ivnung the legislatures.) British Food t " Ration May Be Dut This Week my sona-Eupninee) LONDON, Aug. 24 —(CP)—Last -weck belonged to Hugh Dalton, Chancellor of the Exchequer, with his announcement oi the suspen- sion of lterling convertibility and the freezing of the last £100.000.000 ($400,000,000) of the United States loan. This week will belong mostly to Food Minister Strachey and the British People will find out what the economic crisis means in terms of smaller rations. ' Everybody knows that something drastic happened to Britain's trad- ing ability last week_ but few profess to understand exactly what it was; but when Stracheyui de- cisions are made public the real meaning of world-wide dollar shortages will be unmistakeable. Since Prime Minister Aiitlee a fortnight ago announced his plan to reduce food imports 212,000,000 monthly to save dollars, Flood Ministry experts have been pre- paring a detailed memorandum on what the plan means. Even fur- thér curtailment of food purchases may be necessary now. A Cabinet meeting Monday-at which Sir Wilfrid Eady, head of the recent British Government's dollar mission to Washington, will give a detailed personal report on Anglo-American financial talks there-will probably hear Stra- chey's plans. If they are approved a public announcement will be made almost immediately. . Progress has been‘ made with Government planning to trim Britain's overseas buying and to hoost exports to meet the dollar situation. and cheering news was announced during the week-end by Arthur l-forner, general secre- tary of the National Union of Mineworkers. He said: "We have offered to work fl_i.-3_h0lll',&. eve _ Saturday from “September” lipid May of next year" as a means of helping the Government in the crisis. Miners have been on a five- day week for the last four months. Plans for higher agriculture out- put to reduce the need for food imports during the next few years have been announced by Tom Williams, Minister of Agriculture, but these bring no immediate re- (Contl-iued on Page 5 Col. 3) Former Director 0f Citizen Passes OFFAWA. Aug. 714 ——tCl’t-— Wil- son Miis Soutltsm, '18. d‘re:tor oi the Svuthnm Publishing Ccmpony and for m"n_\- years managing cctor ti," the Ottawa citizen, died held pr-vatel.‘ in Ottawa tomorrow. Mr. scuffiam retired its publish- er of t-he Citizei in 1920 to take over the znrauagenicnt o‘. South- am Limited, at tho. time the hold- ing company r‘, Soithnm interests. Five years later he re‘lred from active business but ui-tLl a few months ago maintained close touch with the Citizen and other papers in the Ssutham group. He remain- ed a director c! the Soutliam Cem- pony. His death closed an illustrious career in the printing and pub- fishing business which extended Captured Naval Documents Shed Light IONDON. Aug. 2-1 - (Reuters) —A German U-boat commander "over-excited by tr-e sudden dec- Laration of war" was res-plausible for the sinking of the Anchor- Donaldson Liner Athenia 200 miles west oi the Hebrides 0n the tlrst. night. of the war. bcpt. I. 1939, nc- oordinq to captured naval docu- ments released Saturday by the Admiralty. The Iulikihfl took Ill lives in- eluding 12 Canadians. ‘llhe making, the documents state. ‘was reported to Rtler who. on the advice of nis naval staff. denied German respons-bdlty and accused Winrton Churchill - then First Lord oi the Admiralty — 0! nttemptinl to engineer atrocity stories against Germany The mystery was finally solved when. on his return to harbor. lt was ascertained that Lieutenant Lemp. commander oi the submar- ine U-JD, sank the Atherin. He pleaded that he was over-ex- cited by the sudden declaration of war and had opened his sealed 5...... 01.1] a few hours teiore the torpedrinl Britain's mllhty battleship, the amino-mi “Dill oak. ‘Ins stink by a German U-boat in home orat- en the accord month of the war V ohgmliflvrégsc. Avondnie and On Sinkings enough" to switch on n11 coastal lights from 10 to 10:30 p.m.. the captured German naval documents related. ‘me documents disclosed that on the 1:1) Prime ivillnlstcr Neville Chamberlain rejected Hitler's ‘peace r-ropfrsms" the German sub- marine, U40. commanded by Lleut. Gnenther Prion. lay submerged ofi the Oriutcya waiting for a chance to sneak int» the nitherto impen- etrable Scapa Il"1ow huze British naval base off the Scottflrh coast. Priest's log said the lzslf hour n! coastal iititts enabled him to obtain "the rrost exact firs." The following day, shortly before mid- over 60 years wi'h sliori breaks when ne was an office in a Hamilton drygoods firm and a year on a rav-ch near Calgary. 1-1e was the eldest son of the late Wil- liam southam oi Hamilton found- er of Southern Entirprlres. For years he urged monetary reform and social credit and as late as this year wrote the Com- mons committee on election en- deavouring, nsuccessfully, to pur- suade it to bring in recommends- tions for changes in Canada's vot- ing system. He wanted proportion- si representation and transferable votes which he thought would give s fairer interpretation of the voice of the people. He also be- lieved in single tax. Mr. Southam was born in Inn- don. Ont.. Oct. 2. 1688 and moved flit‘. Dalls For Facts In Dollar Crisis OTTAWA, Aug. 24 —(CP)- Gauging the Federal Govern- ment with “mystificntlonfl J. M. MacDonneII, president of the Progressive Conservative Party and financial critic for the Opposition tonight called on the Government to “put its cards on the table" with re- spect to the dollar crisis, and to cease treating the Canadian people "as children." Mr. MacDonneli, in a 600- wmrd statement, said the ser- iousness oi the dollar situation was not so apparent in Cannds as In Britain, “but let no one doubt that we in Canada are gravely involved." “Canada is this year buying from the United States about 51.000.000.000 more oi goods than we are selling to them. Our stock oi United States’ dollars has been rapidly diminishing, and we ha c been hoping to help the situation by receiving payment for half oi our sup- plies to Britain in the form of American dollars supplied us by Britain out oi the U. S. loan. The present crisis makes it clear that, unless some new arrangement is made between Britain and the U. 5.. Britain cannot carry out this hoped- for a... ngement. "The British Government, has taken the British people into its confidence and made a clean breast of the whole alt- untion. In addition it has called on the people for fur- ther cffort 1nd sacrifice. rem. iniscent of i940 and the days of Dunkirk." iiov’t To Slinllmrt ll. S. Apple. Prices OTTAWA. Aug. _24 — (CP) _ Agriculture Niinister Gardiner an. "llllmefi lonlrht tnc Agricultural Prices 511111101‘. Board has been iillthDlqzPd 1,, gqnymde qn a.m,e_ nient with the No.3 swgig Apole Marketirg Board io support the Price u! H1191“? from the 1947 crop, exocrine iri total 1,253,000 barrels. H8 51nd tilt‘ main failings of the agreement would be these: , l. It will provide for the c:nt‘.n- "time 0f the Nova Scotia Apple Mflrliefing Board as the sole ma)‘. Retina evencv so. the um crop produced in Nova bolls Valley. , 2- 1")"- Prlm Support Board will Qllliftllitne a minimmn “val-age ,e_ film '01 B11 Parleites and grades handled by the Marketing Board (‘f $2.25 a bar;e1 to the grower be- Icre puking costs. , l 3. Tit-c Prices Support Board will Sophia’; Amm- horg pr-ly today after three mouths Dfifvilfli: up i.) 2011000 barrels of, a; m Jealtl‘. The fungi-a; will be varieties. and grades which are not; readily salezinle on this continent rand dispose o.’ them outside c-f the markets available to tire Apple iMarl-vilrig Bornd. I Details of the agrremcnt, expect- ed to be completed within a few ‘days. will be nilTlOliTlCEd later. [Texas (Millard liit By Storm GALVEBION, Tex, Aug. 24 - (AP) - Texas City, hit only last April by a terrific ship explosion disaster which claimed more than 500 lives was struck late today by a BB-mile-an-huur tropical storm that a few hours earlier raked Galveston with high winds and torrential rain. At least one life was lost in the storm in Galveston. Three other persons were fear- ed lost on a fishing boat that left Galveston Pricey and sailed out. into the Gulf of Mexico. Thousands of refugees huddled in public buildings here as the storm mounted in fury. The storm. almost of hurricane force, uprooted trees, blew down signs and smashed windows in houses along the Galveston sea- wail. night, Oct. 14, i-he ‘ 1..- moved in shently, dodging the cables oi the blockshlpi- Biviftiy- the men under water fixed torpedoes on three rhips and fired. . "After three tense minutes comes the detonation Q1 tile nearest snip. There is a loud explosion. roar and rumbling. Then come columns of water followed by columns of fire and rpllnters fly through the air,” Prien wrote. »"A battleship has been sunk. a smond damaged. and the other three trrpsdtns have gorse to hllll. A11 the tubes are empts. I doc.“ t0 Hamilton in 1811.‘ because "the English were hind to withdraw." \ Two Planes Slightly Damaged By Fire . Two Maritime Central Airways planes ii 26-passeriger Douglas and B lo-Daeienszr‘ bocltheen were damaged by iii-e Saturday evening caused by cleaning fluid overturn- ing and igniting while one of me employees was checking the en_ pines, t The blaze which burned an atl- eron off the Douglas DC-a and ‘he leads around the Sparkpiugg of the Lockheed was brought un- d" wmffll bi’ the presence of mind of Keith Taylor, M. c, A, engineer who despite a severe burn on his left forearm, suffered when the fluid ignited brought the airline's fire extinguishing Equip- "lei" "130 1111i’ and had the fire extinguished when City Firemen arrived un the scene. Yesterday afternoon City iire- men we:e called out again to ex- llllsuish a grass fire in the or- chard of the Experimental Farm Station on Mt. Edward Road. Pair Killed lit Maine Air Show I HOULTON, iire., Aug, zit-tap) —A pilot and his 17-year-old com- panion died Saturday in the flam- ina wreckage of a former Army training plane beore 1,000 persons awaiting the start of the Northern Maine air show at the municipal airport. The dead were George Bul1ey,24, and Lewis mnemore; 17. Firlemoreb father was believed to have been among ‘the crowd llse Drchartl Sprayers {To Fight Forest Fires l xrzirrvimm. 1c. s. Aug. itcPi-Fanners turned out with orchard sprayers today to help |town firemen quell a blaze in pine woods at neanhy Greenwich. Fli- _teen acres of timber was burned |over before the flames were con- ‘ oiled. 24.... Ford Boosts Prices In The ilnited States DETROIT. Aug. 24 —(AP) - President Henry Ford II an- nounced today that prices on "most models‘ of Ford Motor Company passenger cars and all truck models “are being raised ately." 10th llome lind School Donvention Doncluilati SACKV-ILLE. N.B., Aug. 24 - <CP)—The 10th annual convent- ion of the Canadian Federationof Home and &hoo1 concluded here Saturdaydollowing a tour of Prince Edward island Friday. olrrawa Aus. 24 -(CP) Largely a result. of a sharp de- cline in cod and lobster landings on the Asrantic seaboard, total landings of sea fish by Canadian fishermen this year have fallen far below last year's level. During the first seven months oi 1047, total landings dropped to 038,700,000 pounds from 59D.- 000,000 1n the same period last year, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today. During the same period, total value oi the catch dropped. 05,000,000 to 024,700,000 for the i947 period. The Bureau noted that the de- cline on the Atlantic coast was the outcome of both lower prices and reduced landings in the cod ‘and lobster fields. particularly cod. Returns to British Columbia fish- ermen wera at a slightly higher level than last year. This trend towards reduced prices plus a decline in export de- mands for frozen fish is reflected by fish landing figures for July. During the month, the catch of Atlantic cod dropped from 67,700.- 000 pounds in July last. year to 41,400,000 pounds. declines being sharpest in Quebec and Nova 5co- ti l. ‘Hie bureau also reported that Believe Bandits Are Hiding In Windsort, - dits from their hideaway, from $20 to s97, effective 1mmedl-- WINDSOR. Ont. All. 24-46?) -Ulvs=cs Lauzon. 23, and Donald. (Mickey) McDonald, 40. lcng-termi convicts who staged a $40,000 bank i holdup here yesterday, four r1335. after their escape from Kingston Penitentiary, were still at large to- night, apparently "holed up" in Windsor. The city's 140-man polio: force was poi-seal for instant action and. the likclhocrl of a gun battle to recapture the two criminals, among the Dominica's most dang- erous. Windsor officers, assisted by On- tarrio Provincial policemen, scoured districts Where the pair migiht be hiding. Lauzon. whose career of violent crime started in Wrndsor. might be sheltered by old friends, police said. Chief Constable Claude Renaud disclosed that an "excellent" fing- erprint clinched the identification of Lauzon and McDonald as the bandits who held 15 customers and nine employees at bay and looted a branch of the Royal Bank of Canada just before closing time yesterday afternoon. ‘Ilhe print was McDonald's. It was found on the steering vifheel of the bandits’ getaway automobile. Earl- ier, the barnk manager said one of the men, armed with a sub-mach- ine gun. looked “like newspaper pictures" oi Lauzon. Renaud appeyled to the public to assist police in flushing the ban- Immigration officials here and in Detroit were alerted by the possi- bility that McDonald and Lauzon would attempt to enter tihe United states. Police in cities and towns cm both sides of the Detrrorit River were furnished with descriptions. The United States Coast Guard was looking out for suspicious boats. Quebec Town Ringed By Fires ROUYN. Que, Aug. t4 — (CP) -- This Northern Que- bec mining wwn was ringed tonight by forest fires with the flames, fanned by a strong wind, sweeping in an easterly direction towards the communities oi Val D'0r, Ca- dillac and Malartic. Rouyn itself was believed to be in no danger since fires a few years ago had burned out all she brush and trees surrounding the town, leav- ing a "safety belt" that the flames could not leap. Hun- dreds of men were fighting the flames and rs number of rninin properties were be- lieved in the path of the red tongues of iire. The tires forced cancelli- stints nf rail traffic between Rouyn and Montreal and bus service in and out d! Rouyn also was suspended. It was reported that the flames had eaten away many of the rail- road iies on the Canadian National line into Robyn from Montreal. The hut also was Subscription Delivered 80.00. lull 88.00. other Provinces b Ii. l. A. l1.“ siiiiiiiiiliivii HOSPITAL ll/IENACED BY FOREST FIR E Promise-Di Rain Delays Evacuation g HALll-‘AX, Aug, 25 -(Mondayr -A slackening wind and a promise of rain czirly today caused author- lilcs at Shclburne, soul-h shore town 100 miles from here, to post- pone their deal-slim to evacuate the IOO-bed Roseway Hospital as a raging forest fire lost some oi its fury Wiiih smoke sweeping over the hospital from the IQ-square-rnfle iii-e burning in second growth timber along the Jordan Bay pen- insula, hospital officials at first decided to evacuate the patients, many of whom are tuberculin. Later, however, the work of hundreds of fire-fighters began t0 have its effect and the progress of the fire, its front two miles from the hospital, was slowed. v Behind it were left the ruins of the Baptist Church and four of the 20 homes in the fishing settlement of Jordan Bay. Many of the 40-odd families i-n the community of upper sandy Point nearby wereiorced to flee from thei-r homes yesterday afternoon. At Sheet Harbor Firefighters were encouragedb) the promise of rain which earlier Sunday had fallen over the east- ern part of the Province checking fires which had consumed eight M (Continued on Page B Col. ii) Showers Slow lip Forest Fires in ll. B. MONCTON, N. B.’ Aug, 24_(cp) §h0wers today aided fire. fighters working alongthe Malak- off fire front. 15 miles east of Mlmwfl- ‘Ibnleiit Forest Service officials said the fire was being held in a mile and a half square area burned over earlier and w,“ not endangering {arm prqperty in the area. A crew of 60 men equipped with mobile water tanks and pumps was holding the fire in‘ check, cfnaiisqneaeog all»; fir: tattoo ll ‘S EVER, ton e . TORONTO Aug. 24 —(CP) - beiieved to have twisted some of the rails. Fish Landings This Year Decline Sharply in response to the strong demand for salted fish both from the tra- illtionai export markets and from the government's relief purchase program, a substantially greater proportion of the catch of~ At- lantic cod, bake, and pollock is being processed in the salted forms. r Thus, freezlngs of cod fillets in July 1047 were scarcely_ below those for July last. year. and stocks of cod fillets on Aug. 11 consequently were low. The export value of fishery pro- ducts to the end of July totalled 338,300,000 slightly down from the i947 figure of 881300.000. Reduc- tlons were snown in the export value of fresh and frozen cod fil- lets, whitefish and lobsters. while gains were recorded for fresh and frozen halibut and salmon. ' July landings in Nova Bcotie. the largest-producing province. follow: cod, 27,901,000 pounds; haddock, 2,053,000: pollocit, 3,730.- 000; bake, 2,802,000; other ground fish, 248,000; halibut, 193.000: other flatflsh, 282.000; herring, 11,800,000; sardines. 0.000; mack- erel, 1567000; swordfish. 340,000; other pelagic fish, 100.000: salmon. H7000; other estusrisl fish. 326.- 000; lobsters, 520.000: other shell Minimum uiirl maximum temper- utures: Vancouver 48 '10; Edmonton -- as; Regina 4a 64; Winnipeg" so 06; Toronto 0b 89; Ottawa '70 95; Montreal 63 68: Saint John -- 65; Moncton 5'1 07; Halifax 63 '10; Charlottetown BB 66; Sydney 50 05. HALIFAX, A118. 24—(CP)—-W08- ther synopsis and official inland forecasts issued by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax ni midnight Sunday. Synopsis: Rain is occurring over the Mari- times with occasional thunder- storms. A small disturbance over Western Quebec is expected to move southeastward across the Marltimes Monday. Very warm moist air over the Eastern Mates caused temperatures to reach the mid 90s in some sections. This warm air will pass over the South- ern Marittmes during the day, but will he followed by cooler air later In the day. Forecasts valid until Monday: Prince midnigh t Edward Isiandr-Over- cast with intermittent rain and thunderstorms clearing in the afternoon. Warmer. Light winds becoming west 15 in the after- noon. High Monday at Charlotte- town 78. High tide this moming at 4.10 and tonight nth 631. Bun sets this evening at 0.51 and rises tomorrow morning at 5.13. Pull moon Aillilst 31st. 11.34 A.M. Summerslde tide eighteen min- ilsh, 890,000. utes later than Charlottetown.