3mm‘; Guardian. Ibnndod 1881. chsrlottslown Guardian. Two Cont. 0 D Covers Prince Edward Island cnAnLodTmowN, CANADA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER s, 1945 Like the Dew 0M C BOMB AT Veterans ’Affai rs iDepartment Gets Under Way Here Ship B. Seed Tuhors To Uruguay SAINT JOHN N, B.. Dec. 7 - (CPJ- About 53.000 dralteg of New Brunswick seed foes have been nipped from Saint, John for Uru- my, The largest gnm of ootlrtoes to leave this port. since pmwsfndalys, i; took up all cargo A. mm s motor vessel Teklo. (No Prince Edward llslanld potatoes were included in the Jhipment. it was learned.) Coming Events "H pshir School Corwert in lilurlpgilrire $51001. Deoembewlzlgt-iil: -- 1on1 Milton to- dllyzuiirlsrg and Coles. 12-8-11. "Grinding wheat only t at theVIves Grist Mill. North Tryon. 12-4. d. C. l. l3. lli~6i "Newmggrldrflmn (Jhrismw; DCoglc- = c - a . Tucsdo . lemrli. 1218-18-21. "North Granville Christmas Con- cert, December 19th. If not flue, 1151, 12-8-11. "Cur Chick Fattener sure out .on the finish Livestock med Agency - 50-01 "Wanted Turkeys. Geese. Ducks. Fowl and Chtckenshlllstern Pack- lrl C .. So is. l D "r 11-20-18) "its the extra girth from Pan Sign Feed that rings results. tack Feed Agency. 10-4-04»! "Buying dolly, live and dressed, l on. Fowl, Ducks and Geese. J. R.‘ Flynn. St. Peters. 11-24-Stt-tf. Hogs for Davis d: has! Ltd. .l. .ul~lller notlye Five muses J J berkm "Buying duily all kinds of live and dressed pou ltr . Paying to liulrket prices. glgned Dav g Fraser Ltd. tf. Dsvu and 11-28- "Loadzny Hogs (or rraser Ltd. every Tuesday Jill. ll and 3:05‘- 2- ~: " nding i iwther nollcn Dlnuw; size." Murcll. "Our hog and dairy feed laytna mash and chick fsttener is espec lflllv but up and Dfoven. Livestosk Feed Agency. lo-i-d-D-tl "bosom: hogs every ‘Puesdn fol Davis d: aser Ltd Phone collect for truc service R. N Dawson. CTRDB_ . i-H-Sat. -Mon -Ii "We require a lot of dressed poultry from Dzs. 10 to 20. Will 01v hllhest bllzcs for good poul- tn‘. R. L. Dlckisson. 12-8-61 "Our store will be closed nll day Saturday. December 8th. ‘up soundly. December am lihcrs & Gallant. Lfd., North Hts- "w- _ 12-7-2i. "w _ ~- . ill/e iii-Tiled dressleflmeéuuiwity Mg dressed seese and due . To bald. Pius MacDonald. gt M Bay. “illlinl pigs Mondsv at Pred- lflcton. will not he buvins at lather points until further notice mld Jorgcnsen. \ 12-8-1! _ .__..- 353.2.‘ sate" "chaos. it: mifi“i‘l.il.‘.l...°i"..i.‘ 40.0.00‘ tom. h. McWilliams. ' '1:l.1'-2lI M d1 , D00. 010d! M? Punk 12-8-10-21. 0| Farmers York Oovehean and vicinity-Cal- mixed feed now on "W soon to arrive. Booklns or- or few day K000110100. 1m t llflii and vicinity Crane for Thflwnfiii? l? , 1w t. ointment: 6X1 y IRD of ment. hero was announced s weeks ago with the 100011101091"- of Limb-Colonel I". B. Conrad. MM.. I-s A in isation work and the o! quarters in the renovated Y. M. C. A. building on Richmond Street. Rot underway immediately. With the appointment of the staff. it. is expected the various offices will bekfunctlonirlg in full “iigtel-‘fiii filgenrthls Puovince will now be able to have their affairs and o. " disc and dealt. with here without reference to the D. V. A. offices at Halifax. which was previously the brac- tlce. A Tr ury Branch. headed btv . A.M. Brooks. ‘n-essury Of ficer. will be included in the set- up. Mr. Brook-l. a native of Mur- ray Harbor. has had considerable experience in this branch of the ' i . cwfilslslillrliyceliehsbilltaiion Officer is Mr. A. W. m. Occupational‘ Counsellor. Mr. Don ld B k . Ina chsrageerof Reistablishment Credits is Mr. W. Lawson Jenkins. Th Veterans Welfare Office will beehended bv Mr. J. T. Robison. Investigators are Messrs. Frank Jos. Sharlahan (Grade Two). Wal- dorl Earle Prowse and Samuel Mschin (Grade One). Head clerk ls Mr. Keith M. Johnston. other appointments include: Principal Clerks: W fred . Murphy. Duffy. '00s. Alexander Earl Kl‘ ‘ ' Kennedy. William P Bruce Clerks (Grade Four): Bruce Stewart Wonnacott. Neil Mac- Leod. John Gordon Macbeen George Lawrence Monkley. Frank Stewart Cllrbonnell and Edward Praughi. Clerks (Grade Three): Elmer Robert Jones. Lee Dan Dsmch. Earle Lawrence Hume. Elmer Leirh Bulman. John Shsdaiow Chandler and Reginald Mahar. In addition to the above. ap- pointments of clerks. Grades Ono and ‘Two. it is expected. will “I announced early next. week Stenc- grsphers. messengers and tele- ‘ohone operators will also be made .:nown. Social Creditors Oppose Bretton Woods Agreement OTTAWA. Dec. 7 — (C?) Social Credit members continued tonight in the Commons to "fir ' against. the Button Woods monetary agreemento. con- tending thmt. acceptance of proposals would mean a return to the gold standard and would bind Canada to “int... stlonsl slavery." Eight Social Creditors already have spoken and five other mem- bers of the Iii-man lfrouu will have on opportunity in like the floor if they wish. "Farmers Morell and vicinity please note Moi-ell Co-operativo il now londlnu hols each ‘meld!!! until afternoon train srrivol in- stead o’! Mmlyil Iv!‘ hoazolféiro- Esmern er r sry a rv Av. Livestock Marketing-Board. li-‘Ml soul-h}! itnLV hours 3bd4P.M.°a!.rlid7to8P. .113 W hha '0 to l. your car barley mdsl uimsmsotrrlvsd. Unloading to- day and Mondlv. delivery of ygtur order. s0 3111b Mattie , eoembnr a’ $10 f0 i!!! lflfi ' gfi brides m» _Bri n-in sdblnd lt was disclosed tonight {ONO illbs l0 oer- dither odiist-rntin chic! s firm ordarsc booked. R. Dioklo- arm“ liioadqusrton in n. 194211- lbndofhfhll tskendlger " °' u" emf‘; pliant»: the wit" 33%,“. r-rbfim Southern King's Paving Program llrgod By Board Mr. Keir (lurk Elected President "Of King's County Board Of Trade. A resolution urgins the Provin- oisl Government to pavethe high- way bet-ween Montwlw and Wood Islands next year waspossed yes- oy so the annual meeting of the King's County Board of ‘rrade. '1‘.he some resolution urged the Government. to continue the pave- ment from Pooh's Corner h) l" etown and Cardigan. and pointed out. that as yet there are no paved roads either the Georgetown or the Murray Har- bour districts. In tho annual election of offic- ers Keir Clark. M was elected president w fill the vacancy caused by the recent transfer of Samuel Roswell from the Bank of Nova Bcotis branch in Mont- ague to the mainland. A G. Parka was elected vice-president: C.A. Show sect-treasurer: Councillors elected were Senator J A. Mc- Donald. Cardigan; Crilly Les Murray Harbour: 0.11. Horton. Murray River: Murdoch McGowan M L.A. Kllrnuir: EX Clements. I. H. Poole and EJ-I. Stewart sll of Montallle. Information For Bachelors COLUMBIA, Mo, Dec. '1 - (AP) ._.Bachelors: Here's a tip on who the well-educated Min thinks o. bout running ahome. _ Asurvey among 07! collage glrlo owed that you can be the duti- lte’ ruler of the family budget if you hook up with one of the 508 girls who voted that finances wore n man's affair. They sold they'd leave it to hubby to manage the family's money matters Only 183 of the girls thought that ability to sew was essential to homemaklng, The majority of the girls all stu. dents lit-Stephens College, believed that success in marriage had to be “worked for." Only 9'1 thought marital happiness came naturally to those ln love. In the matter of the patter of little feet; only 28 per cent of the girls felt they hnd not sumo-mt knowledge of children to rear _a family of their own. Only 10 udl- caled that they wanted no chlldron, three wanted one child, and the rest hoped for from two in four. OTTAWA. Dec. 7 - (OP) --De- fence Minister Abbott said in an interview today there was little likelihood of any chanife in ‘the policy of bringing Canadian serv- icemen homo before Canadian war brides and repatriation of the probably would not. begin before next March. It is est then are 80.000 war brides of Canadian servicemen waiting in t to come to Canada. high~wlng croft above, monufactur nondo, Calif. Powering unit is a lne which operates a pusher-type the designer, says the three gallons To P. E. I. 1,000 Morphine Tablets Stolen C.M P. officials today said 1.00 lets stolen from the Wellesley Hos nltal dispensary here rriy ‘Thur! duy were-worth $3.000 on the 1100i addicts at S3 each, i=0! l(vtltra.!I,8 .l;'!!l;er .. Building Trades The veterans committee ing trodes and heard the characterized as another hard Jobs in Canada." Between April 1. 1944. 00d 0°‘ chief of the Labor Department veterans enrolle only 1,700 were in the there been an increase ln lnteg-cs t ln those trades. - MONTREAL. Dec. 7 -- (C?) — British prisoners-cf-wor. number- ing about 1B0. now stationed at the Debert. NA. mill-ii»!!! 08ml) awaiting repstrlatlor home. will return to the United Kingdom aboard the giant liner Queen Elizabeth, which today docked at New York with more than 10.000 returning Canadian "lvlcemen. it was learned here today. The shin is due ho leave New York next Tuesday or Wednesday. New both occupation and home duty. A Defence Headquarters state- ment. gave details of tho forma- tion of the force o! be ,_ I1.- 000 ma asaooo men who ‘will ‘fill m; ggp m; tho permlmn l0 Y is estsblished out. Much. The interim force likely will form the Jllllflflll of the permsnm ;1lal.-Gon. n. o. (mans) Works‘ Interim Force Terms t Of Service Revealed Mai-Gen. E. G. Weeks Ha Charge Of Planning Army. t active army. omit-film m ti" llimlm force until sent 80- 19"- when it. disbahds or accept h . “i.” Admseoldme dishonor "'1 dil- chaned from the lnteriln force will not lose benefits earned for "'4 P's?" rr".::.:.l:..ir"" Q . nrltrcua on ‘rtmm’ mung". service o. . M ' High; on llmitsmby W0 Wwllfi fix‘ mwgfylil-“fiol-ps. n. all officer "inflow proforma will be liv- on to younger applicants whomver Dfllliblo Refreshing ' Beverage sir-using ens...- A glider which gets aloft under its own power is the claim for the for lm hour and a. half of full-throttle cruising New Fisheries Head Plans Early Visit TORONTO. Dec. '7 — (OP) -—R. one-quarter grain morphine fab- leg drug market. Police sold tho tablets are sold by peddlers to OTTAWA, Dec. r - (cm - of the Commons was informed today of a marked reluctance among vete- rans to take training for the bulld. trend indica- tion that “by and large we have paid too little for the difficult ond 31, 1M5, R11‘. Thompson, training told the committee, nearly 18.000 d for training and building trades .‘Only recently, he said, has ed by Nelson Aircraft Corp, San Fer- d-cylinder, i-cycle. Iii-horsepower eng- propeller. William Hawley Bowlus, of fuel the glider will carry are ample at 75 mph. Centres OTTAWA. Dec. '1 - (Special) — Fisheries Minister H F‘ G Bridges told the Guardian's correspondent. today that he plans to visit Prince Edward Island on the earliest pns- sible occasion to talk over fishing problems, prices and conditions. “Representations on a number of phases of the fishing industry have been made to me here in Ot- lawn," he sold, “by members of the Commons and Senate from Prince Edward Island. They have asked me to vlslt the Isisnd and see things at first hand, andfwsgree Atfgndp mo. Durmg,..the . present ses- son lthas beenvimposslble to get away for the required length of time. “In addition to the represent- tations made, I have a large volume of correspondence from Prince Ed- ward Island on fisheries matters. and I am dealing with these at once." The Minister has not yet had the opportunity to visit the Pacific Coast fishing industry and plans to go to British Columbia by air in the near future. But ln his schedu. for the new year. he has defini- - tely included a series of visits to the chief fishing centres of Prince Edward Island. Improved Air Service 0 Announcement by the Air Trans- port Board that a passenger and goods carrying license has been granted to Pulslfer Brothers Lini- ited of Halifax indicated improved air service for off-route centres of the Maritime Provinces, officials of the board said today, The license issued by the Board under the authority of Reconstruc- tion Minister C. D. Howe, éhables the firm to pick up passengers and goods and transport them provided the flight ls not between two ache. duled stops of existing airline. This means that lanes of the new firm wlll be svalsble for charter not only between points which are not scheduled stops on T.C.A. and other lines in Canada, but. that they may fly between non-scheduled olnts between Canada and thr- nited States. Pulslfer Brothers may Dick up air pusen on and goods at either srlottebown or Gunmen-side, provided their fll hi! do not conflict with In! o lthg scheduled service. War Assets Corporation said today that the Royal Canadian Naval Hos- pital at Shelburne, N.S., was in process of being turned over to them for disposal by R..C.N. su- thorltles. The hospital which ls one of a number of Navy FY0981‘- ties being declared sur lus at Shel- burne, ls a modern 1 blllhrnent, and will be handed over together with its equipment, com- plete except for certain items which are in short supply in the navy at the present time. In turn, War Aunts il turning over the establishment to the Nova lcotls Department of Health on tho request of Premier Angus Macdonsld. It will be put to clv- ililn use to relieve hospltol con- gestion in the Province. bed esta- o’ . Iilfhfli IIICYI QOPIORIIQI Mother. Two Children llie As llome Burns o room bungalow and brought death to Mrs An- gus Deiory and her two children Frances. 3, and Martha. 2. Flames aged through the building In a nutter of minutes Ind despite desperate efforts of 3:181:30»! tgfect a rescue e o wa ed l; building. s pp In h’ MP- Delores’ was absent from the house when the fire broke out. hnving gone Into tho woods- in the lfternoon to work. It was believed that Mrs. Dc. W"? Ind the two children had Bone 0o sleep and had been overcome by smoke before e fire was discovered by neighbors. Cause of the tragedy was not determined tonight and further details were lacking. 12,000 Canadians Arrive In N. Y. BY JOHN D. HAMILTON NEW YORK. Dec. 7 - (GP) - Cansdian fiflhting men and wom- en - 12000 strong -- poured off the slant. liner Queen Elizabeth tonight and boarded waiting trains. bound for Canada and die- charge after years cf fighting in Europe and months of patient waiting for transportation home '1'he cheerinfl from Bcuthamp today after a five-day Atlantic crossing. They were held aboard ‘the 85.000- ton Cunard liner through s long day until their trains were ready. passing the time by crowding the weather decks for a glimpse of the New York many of them had only seen in movies The great grey bulk of the Queen Elizabeth - her yellow and black funnels ablaze with lilzhr _ nosed slowly into docks at '1 A.M. (8 A M A S T.) but it was not un- til 5:15 PM. when the first troops dlsombarked and were ferried across ,t.he Hudson to Hoboken. wmpe they boarded their a All nlsht ions the movement of 22 Anny and three R C.A.F. spe- cial trains continued from Hob- oken Wcehawken and Jersey City. and from Grand Central terminal in Manhattan. The four trains leaving Grand Central. bore sick and special troops - the only Canadian veberano ‘m Bet a close- up view of Manhattan as they 81cm carried across the city in uses. All told. thcre were 9030 Army men and womm and 1.261 mom- bers of the R..C.A F. In addition there were 301 civilians and armed forces personnel from countries such as Britain. the Netherlands Norway. Czechoslovakia. Austrslia. and Home. There were 44 members of the Cansdlanlwomervs Army Co ;, 58 members of the R.C.Arg", Women's Division; 37 Canadian run-sing elders and 20 WomenPs Royal Canadian Naval service personnel. WINNIPEG SHOP ROBBED ’ WINNIPEX] Dec. 7 -- (C?) Police today sought shop breakers who early this morning raided the Brody Millinery and Dress Sho in North Wlnnipes. escaping wl cosh and goods valued at $2900. LONDON. . '7 — (AP) -- babor Government leaders today wholeheartedly approved the pro- Duoe H. 000.000 United Rates loan to Britain. but two Con- servotive members in the House Commons moved that the fin- pnolal sgreement be rejected. troops‘ arrived hem- ton a dawn lpbociptlon Delivered JO.- {IIIL "M: other hovlncu J ILIJ. SIM. 1 1 J1 BIG THR WASHINGTON, Dec. '1 -(AP)_ The Foreign Ministers of Britain, the United States and Russia \vlll meet ln Moscow Dec. 15, the State Department announced tonight. ‘to tackle an array of critical internat- ional issues including control of nt- omlc energy, State Secretary Byrnes is pl - nlng to fly to the Russian caplii-‘ii, probably leaving Washington early next week. It is considered im- probable that he will be home by Christmas This will be the first meeting of Mr Byrnes, Foreign Secretary Bevin and Foreign Commissrlr Molotov since the breakdown of the London council of foreign min- isters in September. The fact they have agreed to meet again is considered by nu- thoritles here to be a hopeful sign for improvement in relations amorg the three countries. The plan for the meeting in Mos- cow was suggested by Mr. Byrnes Ne‘): 24, the State Department sa . Hera are some of the main pro- blems confronting the Govern- ments of the three great powers as the time for the Foreign Minis- ters meeting HppTOaChEB: . The whole machinery of European peace making has stell- ed as a result of the breakdown of the council at London in Septem- ber and there has been no final n- greement on a compromise sug- gestion that a general European peace conference should be held by the end of INC-the time limits now being obviously out of the question. 2. Refusal of Britain and the United States to recognize the governments of Romania and Bul- garia remains a touchy point with Russia which considers her inton- ests in those countries to be dom- lmmt. 8. ‘ "United States and Russia remain without agreement ovnr Allied control machinery for Jap- an despite weeks of negotiating and Russia still holds aloof from the Far Eastern Advisory Commis- sion here. 4, Another source of conflict n. mong the powers is Iran where Russian and British troops remain in occupation. One section of the country is torn by clvll strife and s United States suggestion a few days ago to have all Allied troops out of the country by Jan. l. has been turned down. 5. At the moment the Big Three powers are working together rea- sonably well in China. in the opin- ioh of diplomatic officials here but there is constant apprehension that in that war-ravaged country, with its central government and its northern communist forces, there may be future trouble which agreement among the powers could avoid. ll. S. Loan Short 0f Brltain’s Needs LONDON, Dec. '1 -- (OP Cable) —The proposed United Staten loan to Britain falls far short of what she wanted but without it the country would have plunged into "austerity" far beyond any e7!- perlenced during the war. Britons who had looked forward to the losn so long were realizing todsy it means no immediate end ‘Moscow l _i__i—_i._ FOREIGN SECRETARIES T0 MEET Brig-Gen. Eduardo Comes. 11b- erol-backed candidate of the Na- tional Democratic Union. is ex- pected to be the victor in Brazil's presidential election. which end! l5 years of dictatorship. Final results of the voting are not: ex- pected for several weeks. Charge Woman Killed Husband PATERSON, N.J., Dec. 7 —(A£’) --Dignlfied, gray-haired Mrs. Gene va Humphrey was charged todui by prmucutons assistant Ju t G Kirchner with chasing el husband with an outomoblle,.cor-. nering him in a blind alley und crushing him to death atop a gar- bage le in front of a cellar door. She was held on a minor charge. Mr. Kirchner gave this account of the death of Hugh Edwin Hum- phrey. 4.3. chauffeur-butler to erstwhile suffragist Carrie Cha man Catt and the arrest of h! wife, mai in Mrs. Cott's New The death chase early today in nearby Slrlgac followed an argu- Rvochelle N . Y. home; ment between the couple that llad started shortly after midnight in. a tsproom over another woman with whom the 47-year-old Mrs. Humphrey said her younger hus. band had been "running around." 4 c0305»; PAY-s. Wdlhfsrikm bum’ lolmt to the shortages of everything which exist to the point of discom- fort. ut it was impressed upon them that they had every cause lo rejoice that things would become no worse. The present standard of living can be maintained indefinite with United States financial al . TOKYO, Dec. 'l - (AP) - War crimes trials of top Japanese are scheduled to start In January, with former Premier flldeko Tojo high on the cslendsr for the proceedings at which death penalties probably will be asked, the American clllef prosecutor disclosed today. Joseph B. Keenan, special pro- arrlved in Tokyo is staff, sold that Allied countries had been invited to nom. lnate members of the court, which will be appointed by Con. MacAr- thur and to participate in the pro- iecu ion, but that- none had yet Mr. Keenan ssld 'lous delay: in starting the trl were to reo- pect the rights of other countries and to show that the United sum r Trials Of Top Japanese To Start, In_ i Lb-Gen. Yamasllita Sentenced To Be Hanged /\’ Manila Trial. wu not taking alhlgh-handed atti- January tude. Early today lib-Gen. ‘lbmoynki Ynmashitl was convicted by a mil- itary commlnion It Manila of hi“. ing permitted a series of ltrocitlol MET!!!) Toronto. Dec. 7 — mum and maximum Government leaders are optlmis- i" decreasing north d who». Iut- w mun: ds"...?"m..tz occasional rain. albumen ll $.40. a ROLOGICAL OFMGI». (CF) — Mini- tic that im rovement will be felt mi/"ewwn 25' u; Sydney w‘ u; next ‘your Etsfldinduétfxiles hit their ‘($333155)’- peace me s e. clent recon. ' _ version, however, would be lmpos- Low" si- mwmxlce‘ gaudy ‘m! gm, Wuhan; l 10am comparatively mild. light rein or anowflurrim at first. Gulf and North Shore: Btrbnl east to northeast winds. ales in out portion; cloudy t1) 0°- caolonol rain or part snow.- Bay Chaleur: mosh or strong northeast. m northwest winds: cloudy with occasional light rain or snow. lhlllllb! ‘Q0 “hi” Ills light min, put: sled in III Brunswick; at lllfllli i dhl h muby Japan normed ‘m m“ “wmm ‘flgrties mshcornmand and was ‘fg Y“. wfiw" en o an . ‘ ' “an yam“;- Ilfnamashlts’: shoullioeg m“? "g A ltd as he heard the sunponcoubut ho straightened and bowed {ilk to Mo. Gen. Russell Myn ids, on. sldent of the Uhihd sum 60m- mission which trlld him. Earlier he had doom-dd " I wish to stand here today w!“ clean conscience agd gear to I Iii innocent o on flail"... want to thank the comm on for a fair trial." l