MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN all! water. Bavaaoareolaalientdogand Morning Guardian. founded llfl. Charlottetown Guardian. Two Outta. l? Sweeps B Wood Islands - Caribou Keitol Asks Service Improvements Discussed Local Man llais hmah Mar. Winter Fair At Luncheon Mutual cooperation in the maintenance and further develop- ment. of the transportation facilltr ies between Nova Scotia and Prince Edward land was aha keynote oi addresses delivered at a. dinner given in Pictou yesterday in honour of representative citizens of Plctou County by the officials of Northuxn- berland Ferries Ltd. B-esen tilt E. Island‘ vlgerle/lserllatorlfilrzclaig. smmnsr. N. a. Oct. 0—(C‘.P)—- 5mm! - - K011i B- Hr - The first, entry ‘for the horse 5 Mflcmmilid- M“ L- Di-‘uflms- show one of the highlights of the M-P-i ML w- Chest" 5- MCI-Am?- iorthcoming Maritime Winter M-P-i M‘? R- E- Mumh- Li” Fail‘ has come from G R. Wet- C°L C~ L- MWKQY- M‘? w- M~ more of Saint 'John. N. 3.. who M°D°m~id. Sydney, Mr. B. Graham has entered a combination saddle and carriage horse in several classes. ‘ Secretary manager Raeburn Mc- Cunn said today that entries, which close Oct. 15, have begun to move. Prescott Blanchard of Truro. VGIENJ! exhibitor of other years, has entered his prize Ayreshlre herd in the dairy division while Earl Baker of Charlottetown has entered a string of light horses that includes several carriage and saddle animals. ‘ii DQNOASTIIR, Enslarld — (GP)- A wire mpe 1,640 feet. lone’. l0 l-ll inches in churmfcrence and weigh lug 22 tons has been made for oer. lac conveyor use on the continent. Cominc Events "Show — Emerald Thursday. Rogers, Messrs E E. Clawson and Robert Nicholson of the Dominion Department of Transport, Messrs. J. O, l-lyrldman, A. W. Hyndman, E, T. Hlggs, A. A. Leaman, C. N. S. A. McLeod, Keith MacKin- A. W. L. MacMillain, Deputy Minister of Public Works, and Dugaid McKlnnon, M.L.A.t Among the Pictcu Couzzty guests were Messrs. H. B. McCullough, M. P. for Plctou County, C. E. De W0 e, member oi the Nova a Legislature for Pictou County, George Murray. editor of the Plctoll A v manager at Cariboo. N.S. fol Northumberlsnd Ferries. and Cor- McKc-nna all of Plctou. Mr. RE. Mutch, resident Norbhlmberlsnd es presided. Commands Service Mr. McCullough said the oi Pictcu County were beg nn 0f "may __ Bridgetown. Saturn,“ ‘~10 realize that the ferry service be-i "Talkies - Canoe Cove Priday. "Movies at Victoria tonight. dwralkles — Malpeque, Wednes- ay. "Dance, Iona Hall, Thursday, October 10th. "Show — Cameo. Thursday, 8.30. ‘Black Market Babies." Also Serial. "Dance, Orw-ell‘ mu. Friday. October 11th. Millview Orchestra. ORDER Shirts or Blankets from S. F. Tax-bitch for Christmas Gifts. October ‘ ' Reserve 16th for Chicken Supper in Loin Creek Hall, Su/pper served from o'clock. "Poultry buying daily live and dressed poult , ying top mar- ket price, Dave Fraser, Ltd. "Don't forget Legion. Dance. Molm-t Stewart Hall, Monday, Oct. 14th. MacKen-zieb Orchestra. "Dance, Kozy Corner. Vernon Bridge, h-ldey. October 11th, Mac- Kenzie’; Orchestra. “Regular Hospital dance. Mon- tarlue Ctrfling Rink, Saturday nlg it. - waa of ineatimable benefit to the le o1 Nova Sootia and Prl-nc ward Island. As the pass. idle traffic between Car bou and Wood Islands would increase to an extent perhaps beyond the dreams of most c! thos, present. In the meantime. Mr. Mctfullcfisiig. said. he did not think the sh located near the Wood Islands pier were an attractive slglht to tourists wishing to visit Primce Edward ls- land. First. impressions are difficult, to eradicate front tlhe memory, nndi the slight c! twenty or twenty-five tar-paper shacks marring ih great natural beau-iv oi’ the err-i trance to Wood Islands could not but be repugnant to the aesthetic sense of American and mainland visitors. Aiother disagreeabla feature to summ t tourists was the stench from rotting fish oifals contamin- ating the atmosphere at the pier. There were. too. the innumerable hosts oi film. Those conditions will have to be dealt with. Mr. McCul- louarh said. ii’ the Goverrr-msnt wishes to attract the better type of American tourists to either Caribou or Wood Islands. 5 So iar as improving conditional for the rerrv tenninals was con corned, he had done and would (Continued on Page 5 Gal, 4) tween Caribou and Wood Islands e "Hot goose su Thanks ivin , Monday. OctobglPe 14th V ctorfa Hall. s o'clock, United Church. i "Chicken Supper and Dance, Vernon River Hall. Moniay, October 14th, C. W. L, Millview Orchestra. Supper served 6 P. M. "The District Convention of the Woman's Institute will be held in Parkdale I-Iall on Tuesday, October 15th at 2 P. M. "Victoria rat-IKE: the Canad- inn lesion presents the icture .‘l.et’s Face It" in Victoria all or~ Th everJ-ng, October 10th. uradav Dance after the picture, "Collecting Hogs for Davb and hall's everv day. Sculls, Rollo my. Fortune Bridge. Bay Fortune Annandale, Dundee. B11. etown Strathoona. George Dlllflelf "Monthly mes Mt. Stewart Branch Canadian ion, Thurs- day. October 10th. l-‘uli attendance rent-ac. r. w. Lacey. ory- N A l C d- H» we Mr- Brown were amm- ......,.,. - 6W 118 0 - ana lan l:::.::.."§.j:,,bl..:st-t a1: "spggjfl ._ Umqqfln‘ a" 9f were cor a v we come e Bra ' f 111N100! M ildtlng B f t t A ed chairman and other speakers. nod} sflcmunhm, email 101th. e6 C011 rac nnOunc 11m 1cm two for u» main- 11th. Parties who booked orders land to continue a tour which bleeaa come early. Oliver Camp- bell. 00D It the i211 m Friday. 9 to 1. to O. K. Preaby’: Music Country Cluu, Travel- y. October 8th and . Dlflltflil "Medina hop at st Peters ior Dumas-run- m each ‘rueaday. Pbr truck oiakua service from farm to ear. ohona Roadie Pratt. I-ll-ll-ll-lnt-Ltl i-l h '1‘ sd . m"! 15:. for “thirst.- c‘ Vernon. Orwell sad o one Walter Crane. 5-81-0441 "Collect for Davis I 1m service Glerry Vail Nawtown. 11 -12. "Rubber bolting 00M! d1’! bloell. MW! traces. N Bil WIION. llflfi will hlfllfll. Ii ea salt... list-mu. wheels. mm gigfénmmbgmfih Succumbs To Injuries SAINT JOHN. N. 13.. Oct. 9 — (GP) Cyril Stronz. driveiwof a Saint John milk truck smashed tnls morning by a McAdam-bound C. P. R, train at Epworth Park. l2 miles from here. died 1n hospi- tal earlv tonight. His helper. Kenneth McLeod. remained unconscious and in ser- ious condition. After the collision at. the level cmeelnz. the train carried the truck the length of the station platform. The crossing. almost hidden to motorists by trees and shrubbery, has no wig-wag or other warning signal. the luncheon from P. ocate, J. W. Roberts‘ sentence. bett Harris, Lorne Fraser. and John though he might have mixed up F10 German Chief-of-Staffs letter con- nt: tinued. ii. N. Assembly For Death Sentence (By Thomas A. NUERNBERD. Oct. 9—— (AP)— With only about 144 hours to live- unless the unexpected happens- Fieid Marshal Wilhelm Keltel has appealed that the Allied Control Council. as "old soldiers". have him shot instead of hanged, it. was disclosed today. (The Council met in Berlin Wednesday without making an an- nouncement of any action con- cerning the appeals of the con- victed Nazis. A communique an- nouncing the council's deci-si 1 is expected Thursday. Informed sources said they expected the ap- peals would be rejected.) (Swiss radio said all appeals were rejected.) A Junker to the last, Kcltel said in his letter to the council dated Oct. 5 that “I will enjoy giving my life as asked by the verdict, as ex- piati-on, hoping that such sacrifice may serve to the blessing of the German people and to the credit of the German army. "I have one petition alone. which is to give me death by shooting.” Keitel was the second of the convicted Nazis to ask to be shot. Grand Admiral Erich Raeder ask- ed to be shot instead of given a life Keitel said he had kept his loy- gaity to the German people even such loyalty with loyalty to Hitler. “All that I have done or omit- Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island like the Dew v CHARLOTTEIDWMCANADA. TllURSDAi-MOCTOBER 1o, 1946 illilifsltiwilii Com MAXIMS OI‘ A. ‘s, MERE MAN Even-beware i to tlaiitererl. o ‘Mun... Scene Fire This Morning ted had its last root in my mental attitude as a soldier and in the conviction that faith is at all times unch-J-ngeable." the former 450 Meetings Scheduled For mthusiastic response to the m- peal to fill Canada's new e58 contract with the United King- dom was given by Prince Edward Island poultry producers at a largely attended dinner meeting in The Charlottetown last niilhh '1ue occasion was the visit here of Messrs. J. A. Peacock. Direc- tor oi Egg supplies for the Bri- tish Ministry of Food. and W. A. Brown. chief o-f the Poultry Mar- keting and Production Services. Ottawa, and manager ol the Poultry Products Board, both of whom discussed the terms oi the new contract. _Well over 200 men and women representing all branches oi the Island's egg and poultry indus- try attended the dinner. over which Mr. Leonard MacDonald. secretary of the P. iii. I. Poultry Industry Committee, presided. ‘Jther speakers were Ills Honour gieuienant Governor Bernard. His Worship Mavor MacDonald. Ma]. F. M. Nash. senior poultry pro- ducts lnspecior, l-Ion. W. F. A. Stewart, Minister oi’ Agriculture. Mir. Walter R. Show, Deputy Min- ister, Premier J. Walter Jones. Hon. W. J. P. MacMillan. and Mr. Haber McPhail. of Cornwall. The latter assured the visiting speakers that Island producers would guarantee full contribution to Britain's era requirements. and make it gladly and willingly. Yesterday biternoon Messrs. Peacock and BIOWIII met members oi the Poultrv Industry Commit- tee ahd discussed ways and means ‘of meeting the Island quota on the contract. which is valued bv the Dominion Department of Agricul- ture at approximately $80,000,000 over the l947-4S_period and which (ails for delivery of everv surplus em Canada can produce. Mr. Peacock commented en- thusiastically to a Guardian rep- resentative on the impression gained from his first visit to Prince Edward Island. and said his reception a-t both aitemoon and evening meetings exceeded LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Oct. 9- (Reutcrsl-Thcre will be about 450 meetings during the forthcom- illg sessio-n of the United Naiinns General Assembly which opens hero Oct. 23. Andrew Cordial‘, ex- ecutive assistant to Secretory Gen- eral Trygve Lie. told a press con- ference today. Outlining plans for the assem- bly, Mr, Cordier said there will be from 30 to 35 plenary sessions. about 15 meetings for each of the main committees, and subcommit- tee sessions. The entire agenda, will occupy at least 6 1-2 weeks, A proposal will be introduced to impose a deadline 0i.‘ 10 days after the open- ing of the assembly during which new items may be introduced in the agenda. Canada's IO-minute speech-lllnlt proposal is one of several suggoe i tions before tho secretariat for hastening the asscmbly's work, but the view appears to be that dis- cussion oi this and other such questions usually leads to waste of valuable time and nothing is sav- ed in the long run. It ls envisaged that all commit- tees will meet at ihe U. N. tempor- ury headquarters here and til-ll glenary sessions will be held at lushing some 10 miles distance. The assembly's first official business is to receive reports from the Secretary General on the See uriiy Council and the Economic and Social Council deb1tes——all item which is expected to occupy four clays. A general committee will decide the order of items m" the agenda on which the commit- tees will begin work Oct, I. The Security COUIICI] \v.-.1 meet during the assembly as Will the economic and social council. cowl-aurora, Emgland - (c?) —Unable to find a hosusc luv, 0,1), mill-ell. R0101“ t, Barb has’ cram». has n . '“ i GIODQUI-lfl UITAWAOoLO-(Wl-A I 3a I@C ll€dlfli M “will queiim 819.20. Ml W2. the minimum beefinl .'Ib new mtlta an mostly, wi ket in the will meeed l. I all his expectations. will take them all across Canada. lireaaes Britain's Need Dealing with Britain's en re- - Will Iiot Be Party To Forclble Repatriation IDNDON, Oct. 0 —(Eeutera)~— Hector McNeil, new minister of ' , toda assured the House of Oollllnona that Britain will not be a party to Iordbie repatriation oi per-pone against whom no offences known. y fled Inna). some; quamfbluc bland). $88.20; av, $21.10. _ load to choice nufddllt — MINI. 50; hoot , Arbult rim The t contract provides m from Canada od a 101101.000 potmth one, 04.000900 l!!! 5W iF-‘P- of Y v Polish and other aatlmelities now in th cattle oosntn to unr- l mould not be feta.- ‘md the total lllllrhtheir will to their countries of origin ren had l!’ 0i f!» waa replyin to n. Stokes. Labor, who ‘diflaced perlond mi M I I t ‘hllllilfllldl. lsan g A Proucer Give Warm Reception T0 British Spokesmen qulremonts Mr. Peacock laid that during three war years. 19412. to 194-4, only 30 or 3:1 eggs per head per population could be distribut- ed per year after meeting prior- lly requirements. “In i945 we were able to raise that somewhat, due to the help you Canadians gave us," he said. "We Rut un to nearly 4'7 eggs: still under one @418 per “leek. This year we are feeling reasonably confident that the position will have again imnrov- ed. We ilGile to give the people 55 to 56 eggs each. and once again that is due to help from Cana- dian producers. "We want to improve the standard oi feeding at home, but at the moment we are faced, not with prospects of a. further in- crease iu 1547 but with a drastic reduction due to world shortage of food stulis. Our own home Dro- duction which was severely cur- tailed during the war had 1115i started to expand again. and now we are back on rations lower than anything we had during the \Vi1l'.—0ne-tu"81iih of what we had tn ore-oar years. That means a real lack in our diet. ind it is one which I am hoping the pro- ducers of Canada will ma!!! help us to overcome." Mr. Peacock siremed the ad vantage of slam-ping "Canada" on everv erg stripped to the Old Country. which "canying 380 messages of good will and re- minders of what Canada is doing in everv case." In addition to shell eggs. con- sidcrable quantities of dried eggs have been thinned from Canadfl. which also are badly needed. "We are calling now for a minimum oi two and three-quar- ter million hcxes of eggs." Mr l Peacock said. “We shall want every qg we can get. By i040 the pendulum may be swinging back to greater production at home; but don't think that we shall cease to want Canadian eggs. Tlhe whole basis oi our busi- ness with you is the system of forward contracts-a new system where the buyer and seller. zet- ting together. plan ahead to get the maximum benefit for the in- dustry and tor the consumer. "The potentialities oi the poul- try industry of Canada are en- ormous. We have contracts for 1947-48 for vour whole exroort- ahle surplus. I em here now to discuss contracts with Mr. Brown (Corltirrled on Page B Col d) Search Partlesfind lillldren LISTOWEL, Ont" Oct. 9 —(CP) -Polioe today pressed‘ a search of this Perth County district some 21 miles north oi Stratiord for a man who took two children for a horse and buygy ride and then left them in the buslh aozm six miles from this town, after saying he would be back. Sear parties fattnd the child- lm ed lest night after they been for more than six hours. They are the children of Mr. rl. Goor McKechrde-Ar- lane, 4 1-2, and obert, 2 1-2. GHIIIR. lhgland -— (C?) — ‘Ihomu Pate, N, hes star-ted his Nth roar as an organist of Holy Sydney Steel Workers Go Back To Mills SYDNEY. N.S., Oct 9 - (OP) —'I'hc ponderous process oi coaxing Dominion steel and Coal Corpora- tions mils ‘Jack into full produc. toon began tally as Wage differ. enwa between United Steel Work- ers and company ended and the first of the 4,000 Dosoo employees Were culled to ‘vork. General malager CM. Anson estimated it utruld be a month be. f-cre the yol-am would be in full blast fitm furnaces to nail mil. The ci-sodlmk, which had stalled tlhe hack-to-zvork movement snce the official end of the steel strike last. Thursday; W15 broken this morning when Mr. Anson called Union officials lnio his office, He told them the plant was ready to resume operatbn. The cost of the luent-arl-hoqlr wage boost for which the ‘Union membership had voted to and the strike, would be tcrrle bv hhe Fled- erni Government through added subsidies, Mr. Anson said. Previously the company had balked at paying the increase, con- tending tllllt It had been losing ,moncy ewol on tlic previous basic image rates of 5% 1.2 cents hourly For that reason Doscn had than incd to set '1 date for the re- _ 11111;: of iilc nulls. still under I giovernnl-rnt control i Italian Treaty Articles Are Approved (By Louis Nevin) PARIS, Oct. 9—tAP> -— French compromise proposals ior the government of tho free state of Trieste-mast hotly disputed sec- tion of the proposed Iiuiilnn peace treaty-were approved by the peace conference today despite opposition from the Snvici. bloc. The decision on ‘Trieste came after a series oi ballots in which Russia and Slavic states xvere vot- ed down l5 to six in their last tlespemie attempt to have the peace conference write their mlaas into the pact. The delegates approved the first 86 articles of the treaty this after noon and after dinner dashed through all the military articles, approving unanimously 30 articles in less than haii an hour, This section of the treaty re- duced the Italian navy to two battleships, four cruisers, four de- stroyers. 16 torpedo boats and 20 corvettes with a personnel of 22,- 500 men; the army to 185.000 men. and the air force to 200 combat and 150 transport planes and a rson- nel oi 25.000. A Carabinier force of 55.000 men was allowed, Without ‘iscussi-on the confer- ence approved the granting of $100,000,000 in reparations to Rus- sia to be paid by Italy over a period oi seven years. The conference also voted to let Albania satisfy her claims 1mm Italian assets within Albania‘: borders and granted repamtions of 00,000,000‘ each to Groom ztrd Yugoslavia and $25,000,000 to Ethiopia. IBSTOCK, Iricesterslln-e, Bing- land - (C?) — Biolwr inland, a connorant ‘s laenlg led fish and 12 PAGES pany Subscription Deilvand IMI. i Hail. 04.00: other Province: i ILl-l. I.‘ < 1. Ten Buildings levelled In Conflajration A complete section of the Charlottetown waterfront this morning is a blazing mass of ruins the result of an early morning fire which swept the plant of Bruce Stew- are and Company, Limited, the Island Fertilizer Com- pany Limited and several buildings owend by the W. D. Giiiis Coal Company. The fire broke out about 2 o’clock. Ten buildings were levelled as the destructive blaze, aided by the inflammable contents of the buildings, roar- ed through the wooden structures. Buiidings razed by the flames were: Bruce Stewart and Company: Foundry Shop Boiler Shop Pattern Shop Coal Shed , Garage The plant of the Island Fertilizer Company W. D. Giiils and Company: One kindling shed . One coal shed <30 tons of briquets). Three empty buildings. 3 Railway box cars. No immediate estimate of the loss could be obtained but it will likely run into hundreds of thousands of dol- iars. $60,000 worth of stock was stored in the garage build- ing alone. Five electric welders were among the equipment destroyed. The fire is believed to have broken out in the Foundry Shop of the Bruce Stewart. plant. In a matter of minutes it spread to the Boiler and Pattern Shops, engulfing all three wooden buildings in a sea of flame. Next to catch was the coal shed and with it went the W. D. Gillis buildings. ' Next came the Island Fertilizer Plant with the fire- iliscuss Meat Shortage in United States —Arnld talk oi posible "emergency action" by President Truman. top ranking adlmlrllstration dismiss the prevailing meat sh in the United States fort days, designed to get. more meat on the American dinner tlbie. will be cant by crate to the sea for reload. r men, working heroically, unable to get near the structure situated directly behind the roaring inferno. It was a devastating and at the same time a spectacu- lar sight as the entire end of the city was iii. up as bright as day. The popping of high test, fluids could be heard fre- quentiy. Seven lines of hose were laid and the firemen working desperately, creeping up to within feet of the fire at times, only to be driven back by the intense heat of the flames which reached as high as fifty feet into the night sky. The fire came just twelve days after Sierns Laundry had been completely destroyed in an early morning disas- ter, and it meant that approximately another 200 men today are out of employment. Small craft moored along both sides of the wharf were moved to places of safety. The Rocky Point Ferry on Prince Street Wharf was also removed. _ Firemen, under Chief Jewel, realizing the buildings on the Bruce Stewart Wharf were doomed kept close watch on MacDonald and Rowe wood_working plant and other buildings on adjoining wharf. _ The fire was still blazing at 4.30 a.m., with no hope 0f saving any of the burning buildings. The ‘machine shop of the Bruce Stewart plant, which is a brick structure. remained untouched. utwtuus j ‘min A Kw co A tut MARK iti QEQGRAPHY Ytiilta Willis to Know ‘unis You inc WASHINGTON, Oct 9 - (AP) ‘ CQQRSE’ adviser; i 2 1.2 hours today but btmke up without a statement One hghly placed Democrat. pre- dicted that the President would take some new nicip within a few Another said that. no definite course had been iecided upon, but that two suggest/d steps had been frmily ruled out: l. The President — as of late HALIFAX, Oct. l0 — (OP)- (Thursday)-—Ofilcial inland wea- toda - has no intention oi sum.- "1 "8 WWW“ mi" 399cm *5‘ ther forecasts issued today b8 the sion- Dominion Public Weather fflcc '4‘. The edlflivisiilm" "=51" i" at Halifax. Forecasts valid until slightest intention of selsins cattle mydntgm; from the farms and ranches. still under discuss: . among the Pmsddentls advisers, this source said, are relaxation or removal of price controls and use oi i119 V1051 idenUs extruord nary war powers Just how such powers miahi be umd to end the shortage was not explained. Leave’ Caribotl a a. 11., u s. M. will Tnlinjt “m” 1 r. M., a P. M. ,__________ - LONDON, Oct. 9 -tReute1-sl—' apples for Britain ‘llhe l0,000-ton British cargo ship! The shin will mslre the 10.000- Durango. which normally carries nule trip to Vancouver h the ll will relteuni s- Prince Edward Island—Cloudy. Light winds. Not much change in temperature, High today at Char- lottetown 55, Moncton and Fred- ericton 58, Saint John 05. Camp- bellton and Muncton b0, WOOD ISLANDS — CABIIOU 1 ma}? Wood Ialalds I AM. 11 AM- frouen meat from the Argentine to strrita of M am Britain has been diverted from to Britain h ,000 Buenos Aires to Vancouver to pick theoretically one for Wwryfiy 111 up a record shipment oi Canadian the United Kflidtil.