JHAXI l 9F 4. aunt nan -—n-ui [up Z will!" “no lees life, bil nail sustains it.‘ . e 3+3.‘- fr"? ~"'VW\ --__._. \ A Read by Everybody . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ‘ omen». Founded leer m pAggs mu u.»- other Irovheeo 018A. eul- wot"! Gandhi. no coin, ‘CIHARIUPFETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1945 sooth-loco}. ooumoa. elm. . =5- REDDING fifth l a ' ‘UQV .. = LYBIA, TRIRCLITANIA. f - may fall under Italian *2 rule aetenneri I Bubble. bubble, Big Five plews for negotiators of the elormy Balkan and Mediterranean areas. ClRENAlCA-may be awa Egypt under British pressure. Egypt pressing for end at 20- year treaty with ieint rllle of Suez canal tolls and still trouble; _ Black gllfllfllillllh rence in o . YUGOSUVIA-elelnen s“ andmgalanlriarlll: xiii‘... R J for sovereignty om little, Wants rdanellea o neiudi d rieite and tree pert te move navy time, r - K ‘~ . thens-a ‘(in e - - l o’ o‘ ~ ' a I" . , 1 v "Culobruk _»~. sunset. " l i » ' ...,....__ u... rded to England on RIlQSIA-ob ecte to U. S.- ‘ through llack Sea map shows number of "touch-and-go“ final peace in the= perplexing the Council of Foreign Ministers in Lon- Aboveldor. "re CYPRUS questions Halifax Complains To Railway Of Smoke MONTREAL. Sept. 1s — (can. Mayor A. M. Butler oi Halifax arrived here today~to present a ition to officials of Canadian ational Railways complaining about noise and smoke of railwa treble in the western part oi Hal-' x_ . The petition. signed by 600 resi. dents of Halifax! West End. sug- fisted that diesel or electric eng- es be used within the city limits. MONTREAL. Sept. io -tcr>)_ A 0100.000 fire damaged B, section oi the Pal-and and Delorme divi_ tlon of United Steel Corporation on it. Martin Street in downtown Montreal today. Company officials mi they thousht it lble the resulted from a wring defect. Coming Events I ___ "Dance M t Webster's OIUHCSLIP: a!“ "Sim" - Murray River Thurs- "W- areal Friday. 0-1031 Saturday. 9.20.3. Cross "Chick - postponed?“ srppexx gem’! "Chicken ‘Supper; 5L Yhwsday. September 2m "Show - ‘Eldon Friday. "Dance, Iona Hall tonight “livelier. September tom. C-ZUJL! "Deuce. o ll September Zlstiwacodnralffisicwday - 9-10-2i. _ ___ ‘(Hahn s , lines in nuliltilg“ l-ifuifncvioarfi? day. September 26th. 9-20-31. “Dance in Crapaud Hail. THEE: gyvlnlsht. September 20th. Sole unches. Crapaud W. I. 9-18-21. Show at grid? 331th. ‘ii/‘garioifgli “member 26t. Sports, Refresh. ments. A good time for all. 9-19-51. "Aruiual Mceting “W Meeting of the -- The An- Bclfest Hall ll Eldon. Saturda . September 22 e P. M. a. l... i-larl- ngton. Score‘ ,1 0404i. “Baha'i Public Meeting-Thurs 41y. Se ' gm“ mpg: 9g. at 8.115 P. M. at oom. 89 Roohford sllbllfit. "Spiritual llh/olu- 0104i. Dance. MaoLean §§§§h°"se. soul-is. Friday night. n "1 and Old Tine dancing. h“ Meeseif and his Islanders. dance of the season. 9-20-2i. "museum Hose bv truck for d? Fraser. Albanv and vici- ‘ms Ho lhnemld, Friday. Sep- Greefll‘ 1mg"?! Elliott Hall has men“ Y. 01‘ G. C. Green. "Hospital QABmfY Moll: Just a few car- ntm “'i§‘.i‘$°'“v"’ Tliwti" - e er, v ‘"1 0th end ourv us no a "fluent in mixed u: “wk ""1 Bround grains ba ed Atlas Grain Company. bglgn-I "w: @0- e-la-all tinucd all d uring __ - ' ing at Show-Murray Harbour South.| Andrew's‘ h. 9-19-21." Il-IQ-HLI clirloa s of Fly Recorpc-lfl F roiii" ‘Jdpdn Rain Forces Postponement Cl Races _Torrcntiiil rain which started around 9 a. m. yes- terday morning and con- the day yesterday forced postpone- ment of the opening day's Goodwill Week racing pro- gram hut providing weather conditions prove favorable ' the entire program will be run off this afternoon start- 1230 sharp, with Thursdays card set over ' until Friday. Keen disappointment was- expressed by racing fans at yesterday’s unavoidable can- cellation but with interest at fever pitch packed stands= l are expected to take in to- day's duels of speed. Stalin To Resign? PARIS, Sept. l9-(AY)—Yvel Delbflrs said in n copyright Ir- tlcle today ln the newspaper Pal-lajresse without spec fy rig any source that Premier Stalin was llliely io retire from -'Ill active and direct participation" in the Soviet (invcrnlnent this winter owing to ill health. Storm Kills 21 0n Isolated lsla. KINGSTON. Jamaica. Sept. 10- (CP Cable) - Twenty-one persons were killed at south Caicoa Island the disastrous hurricane that swept the Jamaica dependency oi ‘hulls Island Sept. 14. it was re- vealed today in a report by Com- missioner E P. Arrowsmith to the Governor of Jamaica. Property damage was heavy, the belated reports from the isolated island said. and many were left homeless. The distressed storm refugees are being accommodated in the school and other buildings left standing. while the District Commissioner is takinB all ible steps to alleviate the sufie ng. Efforts are being made here to raise funds la send supplies to the stricken area aboard a ship leav- ing Kingston Sept. 2'2. Jamaican! err- subscribing liberally to the ap- Nvfl-Stvp . To Chicago ' CHICAGO. Sept. l9 - (AP) — Three air force generals. defeated by headwinds in their attempt to fly non-stop from Japan to Wash- ington. stopped briefly ill Chicago for fuel tonight and then continued their historic flight to the Capital. Lin-Gen. Barney M. Giles. com- mander of all army air forces in WASHINGTON, Sept. 19- (Afl-The first of three 520's to complete a flight from Japan landed at Washington National Airport at 9:52 p.m. (10:52 p.m. A.D.T.) to- wlth its companions ready to follow it down. the Pacific Ocean area and leader of the flight, took off for Washing- ton at 7:35 p.m. E.D.T. (1:35 pm. A.D.T.) By 7:35 pm. the other two giant bombers. stripped of armor and ar- moment for the flight. were in the air and swinging eastward. The other ships were command- ed by Mai-Gen. Curtis Le May and Brig-Gen. Emmett O'Donnell. When they put in at the Chi- ‘cago Municipal Airport earlier for non-stop oi 5,995 miles from Mazutaili Airfield at Sapporo. capital oi Hok-_ the main. |Laval’s Trial To I Begin On Org. 4 fuel. they completed a hop kliido. northernmost of Japanese islands. Elapsed times ior the three Sup- erfortrasses were: O'Donnell. 25 hours, 43 minutes and 25 seconds. To Replace Government Will Give ,Poultry Council Meetings Cpen Poultry Council since its formation in Moncton, N.B.. last March. took place yesterday evening in the Charlottetown Hotel. Twenty-seven delegates-Aer! from Prince Edward 151mg, ten from New Brunswick. and seven from Nova. Booths-were present. Mr. Walter R. Pearce oi Shei- field Mills, N.S.. chairman of the Council. presided and introduced the chief speaker. WR. Brown. Ottawa. Ml‘. Brown. who is Chief of Poul- try Services in the Dominion De- partment of Agriculture. told the Council it was the aim of his De- partment to cover all the provinces with such meetings as thre one which he was addressing. Peace. Mr. Brown said, brought problems to the poultry industry wholly dif- ferent from those it had confronted during the war years. The destiny of the industry must be guided by the industry itself. Groups within the industry, and not groups out‘ side its boundarfee. must tackle the problems which now face Canadian poultry producers. Poultry products played a largo part in keeping up the morale of the Allied powers and. this being no. the logical thing for the poultgv industry to do is to play the same important part ln winning the peace. as it did in win- ning the war. Mr. Brown said. Planning Ernphesizcd planning that the industry could hope to hold its present enviable ican‘ markets and he urged evefl‘ deli-elite present to put his shoulder to the wiles-l with that laudable aim in view The delegates from Prince Ed- ward Island were Donald Mac- Donald. GlPnflFlYlflilI Leonard Mc- Donald. Charlottetown; George Tvrs. Charlattchwn: W Wheatlev. Royalty: Cordon Carver. Hazel- hrool- and F‘ Wlscoll. ‘F Cudmore. A. Charley. J D. Jenkins. Basil Mcfiluald and F‘ G lvard. all oi Claorlotlv-lmvn From Ne""l3rimawiclr were George Johnson, F‘ Leslie ‘Vooru and igq-n-lgu fipfnolmv-lq oi] of ‘Big-odor. “ctnn: Karl W Pm!“ Fort Will- iam; Heywood R Clark. Burtt’s Cnrnci" Fdlvln O Black. Norton: Ralph Colpitts. Petltcodiac: William Kerr. Monctmi. and A.C Craft owl Harold Dibble: of Fit John Nova Sciatic. sent Walter R Penrrte. Sheffi-wldk Mills; G H. Ran-lie. _G Molcllan. and William Jenkins. all of Truro: Manning K. Fills. Port Willem: Russell Eagles. Gasnereaux: and C.M McMillan. l-Ioliiax The Council will continue its meetings at Tlie Charlottetown to- day. P RIS. Sept. l0 — (Reuters) -- A Giles. 26 hours. 24 minutes and‘ The treason m.“ Q; pier“, Lav“ 55 seconds. Le May. 2'7 hours and 30 seconds. The officers or the crews did not see reporters at the airport butmounced tonight" 'Joseph Damand. once chief of the Capt. A.J. Madden. who came from Washington to be present at the landing. quoted Giles as saying it. was a "very nice flight." The ships followed a great Arc- tic cimle route. over Canada part of the way. and their pilots hoped to make Washington non-stop. but. Madden quoted Giles. “we ran into headwinds about 3.000 miles fromnchicago, making it impos- llble- life for someone living." Miss Tobey _0n the flight. Madden revealed. died last night and it WI! was Capt. Kermit Beahan of today her eyes had been removed Houston. Tex., who observed his former Vichy Premier, will start Oct. 4 before the High Court oi Just-ice the Ministry of Justice an- The trial oi Vichy militia, will open Oct. 3 DONATEB EYES TO SCIENCE STAMFORD. Conn. Se t. l9 - (cP)—Aiter watching r ne- phew suffer for veara from a eerloua eye isease Eve Tobey drew up a eyes to science "to provide a happie and 27th birthday Aug. 9 by dropping Medical Centre. New York City. an atomic bomb on Nagasaki. one‘ oi the knockout blows oi the warn. Hiroshima. He had been on the atomic bombing iii ht as an ob- server, Madden eei . Recommend Trieste ‘International Port LONDON, Sept. l9 - (OP) - Tho Big Five council of foreign ' announced tonight,‘ it had recommended that the Italian- Yuioslav border be reviled and that Trieete be made en interna- tional port. e OTTAWA. Sept. 1S —(CP) There are “high hopes" that the Dominion of Canada Rifle Associa- tion's annual meet. suspended dur- ing the war. will be resumed next year. Col “W. said will}. Rn’. Birtwietle. secre- '91 n0 I .0 The first meeting of the Marltimei He emphasized it was only bv’ position in the overseas and Amer-.- w'ill recently donating her donated to the Presbyterian Rationing Proposal “Serious Con- sideration." Delegates Are Informed. OFITAWA, $6M. The Retail Merchants Association and leaving the remainder to distributed through the regular channels a! trade. . The proposal. presented to {Government officials at a. one_day conference on meat rationing. was contained in a resolution which said the new plan would be ‘sub- ject only to the provision that the Dominion Government through .the Wartime Prices and Trade F Board use the Board's existing fac- ilities to ensure equitable dlstribu. tlon T resolution suggested that the alternative plan be tested cu; ior the remainder of this year. sub. lect t0 r islon “in the light of the than pi- ailing conditions.‘ _ Government spokesmen said af- ter the meeting that the suggestion would be given "careful consider- atlon." Throne Speech Debate Continues UITAWA. Sept. 19 - (CP) -- From the independence of a seat on the rear flank of the Progress- ive Conservative benches. George I-Ieon. Independent Progressive Conservative member for Argen- teuil constituency in Quebec, today called in the Commons for a "gen- tleman's agreement between the boards of strategy of all pOIiHCRI parties" to ensure or at least fac- ilitate the election of party leaders at general elections. ' He. said the position of party ‘lleaders was difficult and no one (Continued on page 9. Col. 3) lslanilcrriluc - on S. S. Pasteur A number of Prince Edward Islanders are listed among over- seas Canadian Army personnel due to arrive at Quebec cm Sept. 21 on board the troopship Pasteur. Tor-y are: Capt, F. R. P. Arsenau1t_ Char- lottetown; Ca t. J. I. Hickey. Ken- slngton; Cap. Sourls East; Gnr. J.W. Charlottetown; Pte. L. A. Perry. ‘Summerside; Pte. C. Arsenaillt. Summerslde; L-Cpl. N. B. Arsen- .' ault. Mont Carmel; Cpl. J.C. Blan- lchard; Sgmn. C. C. Burgess. Char- lottetown; Pte, J. Burke, Charlotte- town Tpr. R. E. Cameron Hamp- ton; Pte. G. A. Campbell. Char- lottetown Pte. U. V. Carragher, Charlottetown; Tor. as, Chandler, (Xiarlottetown; Pte. J. Creamer. lottetown; Sgt. P. Dodds, Sum- merside. Pie. S. J. Gallant. Summersirle; Ptc. A. V. Garrett, Charlottetown: Pte. C. J. Gillie, Summerslde; Ptc F. J. Larkin, Armadale; Sgt. E E Lin . Whcatley River; Sm th. Charlotte-town. 0MB. F. J. Smith. town; Pte. P. G. Smith. Charlotte- town; Gnr. W. M. . 0. lottetown; briggs Charlottetown. H. MicKenzie. Pte. Charlottetown; . Charlottetown; Sgt. Charlottetown Cin on the QQEILEE 19 — (OP) ._ o! Commons this aftemoon iedangerous waters. In answer to a Meat Dealers Have Plan Fiyc Island lvorcc Cases “ Before Senate n Minister Mltdoeil told the House! tilBti his department had received no of Canada. proposed today to the application from the Clark Steam-i Government that the present meat 511111 Company for a wage reduc. rationing system be_ suspended in tlon which would represent favor OI a plan of requisitloning elimination of the bonus paid tn meat required for overseas shipment Canadian merchant the seamen in second question on tn . war risk bonus. also askgd slfinffaf don Isnor. Liberal member for Halifax. Mr. Mitchell said that m i2i"2.i':”..§:;:i<..*:::" e Pee» bonus. Ce o: this 90mins out of Finance Minister Ilglcys office today members of te Canadian Retail Merchant, Association. here to seek modifi- cation of the present meat ration- mg Wsmm» 101d l Guardian's wlleéllondent that they felt the ‘Government was prepargd to make I at least some concessions" to butchers and small meat proces. sors. A Montreal sausage-maker said lllis ltoiuslness had been virtually “r bed out_ because customgy; wou not yield their coupons for sausages. keeping them for the more expensive cuts. A western ideliigm said only red and blue [brand beef was being sent to ‘Blltfiill and Europe as lower grades would become spoiled and tainted en route. He felt some e1. fort should be made to prevent wastage of perishable cuts. A further meeting or in; men _represcntatives and Finance Min- -ister Ilsley is taking place to. marrow. Speaker Faulcux opened the House oi Commons procedurgg this afternoon complaining about members declaring exhibits of various kinds to illustrate points of their speeches. He deplomdl the showing of baskets oi peacheg by a British Columbia member curly this week and the unfurl- lng 0i a new design for a Cane. ("Pm 11KB by the member for Fort William. Both offenders are Lib- eral members and served in the last Parliament. Of the 214 divorce cases now D J. McCoi-malk. Mahala‘, Souris; Cpl. H. A. DeCoste, Chniw Pte. r‘. Charlotte- Smith. Char- lottetown; Pte. S. A. Walker (no address); Pte. O. W. Wedge. O'- M. Holmes. Char- L.-Cpl. R. R. Square- Charlotte- r". a. Peters, . E. J. Gaudet. figment; Gnr. P. A, Rayner, Alber- n. One Prince Edward Islander is oeed also listed among R.C.A.F. person- retuminfi "Pasteur." Leo. T. S. W001i, New Wllt-- on the list to be disposed of by the Senate this session. only five ‘are from Prince Edward Island. it was stated by the clerk of the ._Dlvorce Committee. The remain. mg 211 are from the Province of Quebec. sole other Province which ‘has no special divorce tribunal o: its own. The senate Divorce Committee consists of nine mem. bers with Senator A. B. Copp oi New Brunswick as chair-mam Norboro Dies Few Hours g-mgmAflier Marriage JURED IN SMASH-UP Twenty-year-old Willard Day of Norboro, P.E.I., was fatally injured at Summerside yesterday in a traffic ac- cident involving two cars. He died in the Prince County Hospital at 8:30 last night, less than fen hours after he was married. aged. Critically injured were: had a broken neck. in his neck. . John Leckie of Bedequc, Acting Coroner T. D. Carruthers ordered an inquest into Day's death. A Jury will be sworn in this morning. Day and his bride were about to leave for the mainland on their wedding trip when the accident oc- curred. They liad been married a scant half-hour earlier by Rev. Kenneth Sullivan at the United Church Parsonage. The smash. on Water Street east near the edge of the town. come about 10.30 am. during a blinding rain storm. There was a possibility that the wedding car. a. Chevrolet coupe. skidded before it was struck on the right side by Leckies Ply- mouth coach. The possibility was seen. too, that the coupe was about to tum into a driveway. Day was the youngest son of Mrs. Frank Day and thg late Mr. Day. A farmer. he lived with his mother on the old homestead. Surviving in addition to his widow. who lived formerly at O‘Leary. are three sisters and three brothers. The sis- ters are. Mrs. Clayton Smith. Free- town; Mrs. Crawford Sinclair. Springfield East; and Mrs. Ed A- dams. Marglite. The brothers are. Harland at Summersidc: Gordon at Kensington and Howard in West- I ern Canada. ', Funeral arrangements were not completed last night.—S Britain Grateful Favors Union 0f BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Sept. l9 - (CP Cable) — Economic ad- vantages of a_federation of West Indian colonies. with British Guiana and British Honduras set inside as the "bread basket" for the Caribbean federation, was stressed today at the West Indies Labor Congress meeting. R. Hart of Jamaica said in- creased purchasing power for need- ed imports would be gained by treating ihe Caribbean area as an integrated uliole. with political and marketing control. He pointed out that oi Jamaica's imports oi £7,000,000 annually, food imports cost £2,000,000. Moat of these foods could be grown in the federated Caribbean colonies. but not lri Jamaica or any one colony where lands had to be set aside for crowing exportabie produce such as sugar cane and bananas. I-le suggested that British Guiana and Honduras could be developed by the federation, and on their acres most of the foodstuffs now imported could be grown. Manic Leaf _By WILLIAM BOSS Canadian Prose War Correspondent AMSTERDAM. Sept. 19- (Op Cable) -In a two-column front base editorial. the Amsterdam edi- tion of the Maple Leaf, Canadian Army newspaper. today mo]; issue with the Army's repatriation pg]. clsm of the procedure governing selection of personnel for repatri- ation. was based on investigation of the repatriation stream from Nijmcgen. Holland, to No. 8 Repat- riation Depot, England. The editorial asked why Nat- ional Resources Mobilization Act personnel who hadn't left the Un- ted_Klnadom for Europe by VE- Dny now were returning home with the 1st Division. Of four N.R.M.A, men investi- atcd at random by the Maple eai. the paper said three were sold still not to have volunteered for oversees service although m. l West Indies Coloniesl . pi mmcnt LONDON, Sept. l9 -- (CP Cable) - Announcement. that Canada is sending 100,000 cues of eggs to Britain was given display today in London evening newspapers and evoked an editorial “thank you" in the Star. (The shipment will be loaded at. Vancouver itnd will reach hefg via. tho Panama Canal. the Canadian Agriculture De. partment. said in Otawa.) RAILWAYS HAD ROLE IN GERMAN DEFEAT LONDON. Sept. 19 - (CPI Sir Charles fiewton, chief general manager of the London and North Eastern Railway. has revealed that to send 100 bombers on a. raid to Germany the LNE R. ran 36 special trains to carry 2.600.000 gal- lons of petrol. and 362 trucks to carry 2.900 tons of bombs. One thousand seven hundred trains were run in 10 months with rubble from bliized London for American and ILA F airflelds Nine hundred trains carried cem- en?- to make runways and some country stations in East Anglia were handling 80 to 160 tmcs as icy. The editorial confined b0 orilifi nruoh traffic as they were built for. Critical 0f Repatriation Policy mlttedl with a point score more t an 50. It added that 31 pcr cent of a. draft 170m the Saskatoon Light Horse. support battalion of the lst Division, consisted of N.R.M.A. personnel. The article added: "This sort. of business isn't fun- ny. Men aiio volunteered to come overseas, who either went into act- as volunteers to soc that tn;- fight- ink men were equipped with necessaries; deserve better merit. of the volunteers who made Canadian Army an army which to be proud. All wanted is justice." nangements. said the l I t i For Canadian Eggs i His bride. the former Miss Myra MacDonald of Sum- merside was the only one of five who was not seriously in- jured. She was said to be suffering from shock. Two cars involved in the smash-up were badly dam- . Elaine Bowness of Summerside, the bridesmaid, who I Lee Donald, of Summerside. formerly of Sea View. and driver of (he wedding car, who has a fractured vertebra who was Few Canadians To Be Liberated OITAWA. Sept. l8 — (OP: - Ali bllt possibly 150 0f the 1.500- odd Canadian soldiers taken pri- soner by the Japanese at the fall i of I-long Kong on Christmas Day. l 1941. now have been liberated and l are in the process of repatriation an official source said here tonight. The informant said his informat-g ion did not indicate in what patt- of the Far East the remaining 1S0 were located. but it was expected they too would be moved this week. joining others oi the home-bound Canadian force. MARY A fellow aeswlatee A Mute ‘alien l1’ Collies 1o Pllffitir, “l5 BEST F001’ Backward»! METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE. Toronto. Sept. 1B -— (CP) — Min- imum and maximum temperatures: Vancouver t4. 50: Edmonton 40. 4.8; Regine 40, 52; Winnipg 44, b6; Toronto 50, b1; Ottawa . 54; Montreal ea, 6S; Quebec w. 5'1; Saint John t8; Moncton 4H. b9; Halifax 53. 68; Charlottetown 52; Sydney 43. 51; Yarmouth 52. 66. FORECASTS Lower Si. Lavl-rencc: Moderate winds; mostly cloudy and cool. Lake St. John: Moderate to fresh southwest to south winds; mostly cloudy followed by scattered show- ers rind slightly higher temper- ature. Gulf and Bay Chaleur: Fresh westerly winds; partly cloudy and o CO . North Shore: Mostly cloudy and i northerly winds; mostly cloudy l i of! ion as volunteers or did their begt the treat- This is an appeal on behalf the to that's Officers at ticladquarlers of the Canadian forces in the Nether- lands who are responsible for re- patriation and demobilization ar- had not seen the article and with eld comment. cool with fresh to strong winds and showers over the east portion. Maritime Went: Fresh and cool. Maritime East: Fresh to strong nurtllweeterly winds; mostly cloudy and cooler with light scattered ahowere. High tide this morning at 0.44 and tonight at 11.05. Sun sets this evening at 7.00 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.44. PFIIH moon September 21st. 4.40 . M. Summerside tide eighteen minu- bee later than Charlottetown. SUNDAY SERVICE l/uve Charlottetown 12.1.5. 5.45 EM. Active Charlottetown 5.20. 3.10 EM CBARLOTTETOWN- NEW GLASGOW (Dally Except Sandeyi Leave Charlottetown 1.10. 4.00 Arrive Charlottetown 2.85. 5.20 RM N. 5.-P. E. l. FERRY BERVICI (flatly. Including Sllndayl] SCHEDULE MAY i-BIPT. 80 l.m..8I.m. IMWCIIINQIe-molmn. ll. ii t l l driving the second car involved in the wreck and who has a broken nose in ad- ‘ dition to other face and possibly head injuries. ' have Wood Ielelale ‘I a. nu. I1