MAXIMS or A MERE MAN imam-n: It h a very looted dutyio re- mgnbu‘ to whom you owe yourself. ggnlottetown Guardian. “mm; Guardian. Founded. TIN. l” iv» our. 0N FRI The Pe's oper Covers Prince Edward IslantiLike the Dew , caanporrmown, canons, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1941 TACYT0NL PACKINGiiOUSE Read by Everybody 12 PAGES Tho insurrection oi the army h the opportunity of the enemy. MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN -1_-_-o Barbie‘ british Disclose Blueprint For Economic Drive Conference Discusses 61 - Item Agenda ls Adopted By Assembly By CLYDE BLACKBURN YORK. Sept. 23 — (CF) - Mnl; fought to the end and lost “my as m. United Nations Gen- eral Assembly adopter‘.- a. ul-item agenda packed Mth explosive top- ics and concluded for the time be- lug the plenary sessions at Plush- lng Meadow. Ton-iorrow the slx standing com- mltteea. sitting at lake “‘ viii like up the agenda items in- cluding the Greek-Balkan crisis. independence of Korea and revis- ion of fine Italian peace treaty. all of which the Soviet vainly fougilit to put aside. There was no debate Coming Events "Talkies - St. Peter's Thursday. Zane Grey's Nevada." "Dance in Launching School, Willey. September 26uh. . "Dance. Afton 8th. Music by MacNelll. "Chicken Supper. South Rustico September 23rd~24th. Re- freshments. Bingo and other games. Hall, "Dance, Fortune ‘Hall. Plriday, September 26th.» Clifford's Orch- estr a. "Chicken Slipper, Bingo other games and dance in Kelly's Cross Hall, Monday. September 29th. .___- "Special Show — Morell. Thurs- day. “Bandit of Sherwood Forest" in Technicolor. "Regular Dance at Burlington Wednesday. September 24th Bernard's Orchestra. "Dance. Georgetown Hall. Wed- nesday, September 24th. Webster's Orchestra. , __. "Special Show — Eldon, Friday. “Bandit of Sherwood Forest" in Technicolor. "Dance. Cardigan Head School Friday, September 26th. Web- with n abstentmm Em! h d ‘ml’ omheflra‘ Belgium Joining with the gov ti’; to provide the opposition votes, ~s§§§.?i@§‘f’°*vv‘.’?‘i§.wl.“§.. P051253 {$3,153} 33am" ember w. Rivet g _ es supported Arg- "Regular 'Dance tonight. Sea Breeze Pavallon. Dancing from 9 fill l. "Wanting Satmday. "will be buying dressed hogs. any quantity. A. P. Gallant. Rus- co. .-_.-_. “Farmers book. McGuigan 6r. Boyle. "Dance. Modern and Old Time. Traveller's Rest. Country Club, Thursday. "Annual Meeting‘ Mount Herbert house. Thursday, September 25th, 8 P. M. Telephone Co. in School "lust Arrived - A shipment of Fall Bulbs Halifax Seed Co. T2 Street, Chorlottebown. __._ "The Annual. Balsa Bay will be held September sot and October 1st. Best yet. , Don't miss it. ' "Mum Wednesday. September 21th for Cape Traverse Church of Boot-land Chicken Supper in Capo ‘llraveru Hall. "Croklnole andgwhist Party in Belle River Legion Hall. September 26th. at a PM. Belle River Women's Institute, "Pun for everyone at the big lesion dance. Morell i-rall, ‘fiiday flight. Sept. 26th. Music by the Intern Rhythm Boys. --__ v v l ~ at?» 'lln will?“ haeptomb: “n, ‘im, ( mm...‘ u. m. M Prwwdl In lid of 0M0" mu unamgtamia; m mom Memorial Church. supper from 53o on. “Bear Bea Cadet Drake tell of Also s ort lfllrlln and slides by Natl nal Him Board. Comwalljlall. Wed- ' "May evening. sopt. M. Ausplces Musowbmg w. r. Admission m his trip to mgland. lhd 10c. "Own to the big Janene at Vernon Bridle. trod- "! and old time dancing with later l“! Corner. hillbilly MUM, llllt. Nth. ""1150 by mo Imam nhytb Bay, Hall, Friday. -' "Slnbad Sailor” Yeo ‘illicatre, Montague, Friday. wishing to market dressed hogs next week, kindly at Rollo on the items o1 American propul- als for an interim assembly com- mittee and Uniting the veto power. A seventh committee. the epo- cial committee on the Palestinian question. was approved- by the General Assembly with the big powers, fog once, in agreement. That recommendation from the steering committee was approved byavoteofflfltol-lwvitlallxab- stun/clone and lOlTle absences, pnd the Mg five — the United States. the United . Russia, France and Chime. all voter’: In the affirmative. The Aralb delegates ter to a apeclal committee later their spokesman. ported the partition plan contained in the report of the U.N. Special Commission on Palestine. General debate ended in the Aa- sembly in this morning's session after which Secretary General Try- gve Lie. taking advantage of his privilege lo intervene. delivered an impassioned plea to disputing mem- bers to reconcile their differences and provide the unity essential if the organfzatioo is to survive. life's plea. loudly applauded. was directed particularly to the United’ States and Russo but Soviet lead- 9l'_ Andrei Vlshlnsky, a few min- utes later. plunged again into a bit- ter denunciation of the United States when the Korean question was proposed for the agenda. Vlshinslby was prevented from lT/usalan policy statement by pres- agenda itsn under dimmion. ‘The Korean item. spans the Soviet bloc. dppfisltlon. I ion pea; enllna. in all three counts. rd ll l all 0afcllomafigAsttrMtfll. residence than any other unlver slty in Canada. and commercial college under her direction. Miss Falcone versity of Toronto. Registration began today. students number 128. h M8. Nelson. one o! the fought against sending the Palestine mob, and Fails el Khourl of Syria warned that all members of the Arab League m’ght break with any country which sup- glvlng a lengtlily repetition of the ident Oswuldo Aranha who nrled- that he must talk only of the a by the United States. was include: by a vote of £1 to 8 with seven absten- tlons. The antls were Russla. and The Greek-Balkan item carried 38 to six with 9 abstentfciis. Rus- sia and five satellites providing the Argentina's proposal to study a proposal for revision q! the n51. ¢ "Gilly carried 22 to_8 Canada voted with the majority BAOKVILLE. N. 8.. Sept. 28- Wlth every Province represented in the largest registration of its history. Mount. Allison University expects to have more women in The Deon of Women. Miss Mary Falconer. will have 2'18 university women students and 6b academy students is a niece of the late Sir Robert Falconer, preesldent.‘ oi the Uni- NW LONDON‘. Sept. 23 -(OP)-- H. Royal Addressed Local Branch 0f Mcfilll Graduates Society. 4 no. o. 1. Tmmnsn -, President o! the Graduate!‘ S0- ciety 0f McGill University, Mon- treal, formerly o! 'cilB!‘iOtlQfOWnl, who delivered an interesting od- dress at a. general meeting of the Provincial branch of the society in the City Council chamber last evening. Mr. D. borne Gales. secretary o! the Society. also spoke. After gen- eral discussion, it was decided to hold a dinner meeting for me members and their wives at a date to be fixed by a special committee about the last wed: in October. Hon. Dr. W. J. P. Macmillan, president of the Provincial branch of the Society. prodded at lost night's meeting. "- Probe Opens Into Manitoba Train Wreck By EDWINWILLIAMS WINNIPEG. Bent. 28-40?)- Orders received by the Canadian National Railways west-bound campers’ special the Labor Day night it. crashed into an ‘east- bound transcontinental train at Dugald. Man, should luvs caused the special to take to tho siding there. n. witness said today as an inquiry into’ the disaster opened here. The inquiry, which opened be- fore the Board o! Transport Com- missioners. is expected to explain the cause o! the head-on collin- ion. in which Si. persons were killed. Arthur smith, 22 years a CNR despatcher and on duty at Winni- peg the night of the wreck, said he was responsible for all but. one order issued to the two trains ‘ in lesfthan a week was 3o miles Sugar Rationing May Go Within Month (Byflbo Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Sept. u-Poui- bllitioo of on early removal o! mgar ratloning'—,. hops with- in the next. month-were urmgthened today by awash- lngton announcement of the lifting of all international controls on the white sweet- ening. . , There was no official oom- ment here but it was conceded that the removal of the inter- national allocation. prompted by improved world supplies, ind virtually swept away any necessity for retention of tho Canadian ration, [which works out to 44 pounds annually for each consumer. Only two weeks ago it had been predicted that the ration . would disappear before the year-end and now. based on the Wuhlngto notion. ‘the pectatlon was that it. might go within a month. Tropical Storm lllts Florida TIIAMJ. Flamfiept. M -(APl - Tlie second tropical disturbance to out. AMOSI-J-hlwmbbiiil qaoninaulo west of Jacksonville at 12:15 p.m. Al?!‘ tonight after hitting the mainland with OO-mlle-an-hour winds in the Tampa Area on the west coast. The sfnrm_ which had wallowed about in the Gulf of Mexico off Tampa most of the day. suddenly entered the mainland tonight and was sweeping across the state - through the wealthy citrus belt- at a forward speed of 20 miles an hour. it was moving on a north north- east course and slowly curving bo the northeast. Its present path and forward speed would bring it out into the Atlantic in the Savannah- Charleston area early Wednesday morning. For the first time since Sunday, storm warnings were ordered down ln the South Florida area- still groggy from the mighty hurri- cane which struck six days ago- énd small craft warnings replaced the ominous red-and-blmk storm flags horn Tampa to Vero Beach south to the Florida Keys. The Weather Bureau predicted that winds would gradually in- crease over Southern Georgia and the Carollnas and slowly decrease over South and Central Florida. involved. This one was a sched- uled order issued by a previous operator. One of the orders, amerdlrig an earlier one. gave the wen-bound special the right-of-way over the out-bound tr nsconti ‘ l as for (Continued on Page b Ooi. B) l’ Consider Fate 0i Big Battlewagons had . odients. The Italian armistice was signed. on her decks. she silenced l7 Ger- served Navy's greatest ‘bottle-wagons? in en route to v. docuprd at. Roaytli on the Firth of Ibrth on what. may, be her last voy- age. There she will loin he! ulster ship HMS. Rodney, damaged by a mine during the Allied lami- lngs in nus under repair. Tho fate of thou two 22-year-old battleships which coat mo: than 056000.000) to World War-ls unknown. Admiralty apokennen laid their future is "un- der consideration bot no decision has been readied.” The Issac-ton "Nolllofiu sin la affectionately known by the men who sailed in lzor never was ro- ganiod as a ‘ooauiy. with a long forecast-lo and ntperatracturo mo; y more way alt. are "will: 100E”? a tanker but e a o a re equate. A magnetic auno damaged in the Mediterranean when Ill slnwuflsgdilpofforoo"if"ond ndyinlflltoodnow almond moraine man guns in a nine-ton-o. minute bombardment off Normandy and Japanese envoy; boarded her The Nelson's design vvu tho dir- aot ovutoovne or the Washington Trootyof 1922 which controlled armament of ‘Ifllhipo. Consequently lie was dadmod wbloli necessitated groupng both the moln lrmlfllfllt postwar, Ind on i also had her nine mounted in triple turrets. lure Nelson vvu senior flog- shlp of ihe Home l-‘leet for molly your been tho war and in 18M King George V soiled in her and may thousands of the public trod. liar dooh. Until recently she was noablp of the Battleship ‘training roa. Home Hoot. and many "peacetime" ratings have beta trained aboard ha. A|tboilgh_ alto muted 13.000 and ht in mm mum of war ch Poodle he! one of than woo was mined again in 10M but alto 1 throughout the war. negotiate the surrender of Pcnong. within the llmlto of the treaty, and control in 1V5 lO-inoh gun I O crow averaged 1.600 man 111 billed aboard Ll ht S F I Patna 0H0; ‘Eilglhad NEW YORK, Sept 2; ._.(Ap)_. M 599 Pm. A171‘ today, the sun crossed the equator, going south, and autumn returns to the north- Iffl “ ' “ =- The moment-oi the sun's crooning u “i134 m; f-‘Qlllnox. South of the equator it mI-rkl tho billnning of swing. The official entry of autumn was w- colmponled. opp. , ' “wan, b: cold. wool-her. high winds and rain in Eastern Canada and oome snow in the Northeastern Untied Stltll. EOSTO . SON. 23 --(AP)-—'l'he foil ao woo in when l?! i§.i‘..‘“..2‘.i°‘i.‘.."‘€i.'.’°“"“' °‘ a ur n t. The United States Weather Sign sold lllllt snow fell liq bit. Wash- ington and in Caribou. Mo. Tom- Pfilfl-INI dfllfibed below 40 in moat of New England and belov- froelllll In othar sectional. Utiel. 03.. had the United out; low of I! above. .5’ Tourist Possibilities Canada's income last. year ol 214 million dollars from American tourists was less than half the amount. American visitors spent in Atlantic City in nve months last. year. Mr. Garth Cate, director of the travel and trade ‘department of the Scripps-Howard newspap- ers. told the delegates yesterday afternoon at the convention oi the Canadian Association of Tour- ist and Travel Bureaus. Mr. Cate said such figures should impress Canadians with the possibilities Canada has for a greatly increased tourist business. Mr. D. Leo Dolen. director of the Canadian Travel Burau. Otta- wa. said the United States, tourist bureaus were making more rapid strides in their efforts to have the tourist. season lengthened be- yond Sept. 1 than were the Cen- adlans. Mr. Dolan said he had ap- proached Canada's two biggest labour organizations with the ob- ject. of obtaining their consent. to have Labour Day set at a later Hate in the year. He had had no success. He suggested that the Association do its utmost toward having the season extended. Under Handicaps Mr. Dclan said Canada was labouring under handicaps in its efforts to secure more tourists and those handicaps were_ inexcusable since each of them could be cor- rented. The quality of the foocl in many Canadian hotels and res- (Continued on Page 5 Col. 5) News Briefs LIVING cosrs Lrvr: rssun HAMILTON. Sept. 23—(CP)- The up-bound. cost of living was expected tonight to headline dis- euasiona at the 62nd annual con- vention of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada opening here tomorrow. "WANT CANADIANS m unused OTTAWA. Sept. za-(cri-Ah eflort is being made to get more Canadians into the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Culb- ural Organization and there also is a good chance that a national commission of U.N. E. 5.0.0. will be formed in Canada. according to Dr. Walter Loves, deputy director-general of the organizat- ion. l ' u PITKOV EXECUTED 8011A. Beat. 28-<APl—Nlkola Sept. as 4c?) - Believed the youngest air passenger ‘in Canada's history, Meraline Russell left here Petkov. the peasant leader who accused the Communists of kill- ing and beating their political foes in their march to power in Bul- garia, died today on the gallows in Boflab Contra‘ Prison, an of- ficial snn- ncement said. STB-lKEpI-ITTRIESTE TRJEBTE. Free Territory. Sept. Zw-(APM-Radlo ‘rrlesto announ. ced that Blndicatl Uriatl had call- ed a generalstrike in Trieste late today and tho British-American Military Government promptly do- olarod the action was "the first Communist attempt. to hamper the essential life of ‘Trieste and bring dlscrdlt" to the week-old Free ‘ibrritory IIAOTION T0 IXICUTION NIW YORK, BUN. flb-lbucu. tlbn of Nikola Petkov, Bulgarian "l!!!" Fifty loader. brought a slurp reaction from Britain and the United Skies and confronted British foreign policy with a I?!" Problem. Ill lnndon auth- “mi-lu" with?! said Britain. which mode ll. unsuccessful ot- {mm fomuve Potter's life. would 9“! 5 "P MOT-est with the Blllllriaoflilovornment. 4-“ a, close 000,000) export-import gap by: trade balance Give Production Targets For llext Fifteen Months Dy Fruor Wightou Reuters Political Coueqrondenl LONDON. Sept. B0 —(Reuters)- Final blueprint for Britain's drive to beat the economic crisis de- mands produ-ction of 21.700.000.000 66.800.000.000) worth from British workers during the next l5 months and promises no respite from austerity until the target is achieved, it was authori- tatively disclosed tonight. The five-point plan for the op- oration of which workers will be directed and supply of materials controlled by the aims by the end of next year to ($2.400.- of the £800.000.000 l. Cutting imports. 2. Cutting overseas expendi- ture. 3. Increasing exports. 4. Concentrating resources on essential industries. 5. increasing home and 001-» onlal empire agricultural pro- ductioii. Although the British adverse ls approximately 1600,0000“) the dollar adverse bal- ance la £800.000.000. This apparent discrepancy in ex- (Continued on Page 5 Col. I) Sells ill-cent Loaf TORONTO. Sept. 25 — (OP) - baker who served sic years with lfie Royal Army Service Corps, figures "13 cents a loaf is foo ex- Claude Goulding. a Canadian pensive for the working man" he is serving an increased clientele a. ill-cent loo-f of bread at ifs Dan- fc-rt Avenue store in east-central Toronto. "l am making two cents on each loaf selling at 10 cents," he sold in an interview. "And since I sell a complete line of foodstuffs I feel the lo-oent loaf is good advertis- Believeii Youngest ilir Passenger RJDG-E. N. tonight in a Trans-Canada Lines plane when less than hours old Mrs. Gerald G. Russell. Harbor, N. 3., last night. The ill-mile trip tor-mobile. Accompanied by a nurse. could be treated successfully. exports government, g. Mr. Gouldlnl. who served his baking apprenticeship John. N13" in Saint "a 800d many years ago" display: a. sign cm his mop: “To help lighten the burden our bread stays at 10 cents a loaf." The child. daughter of Mr. and their homeland. It. will Black's third sailing of Yugoslavs was 000ml f0!‘ the across Canada, bringing Montreal Neurological Hospital the number who following her birtn at St. Stephen meme. to Pennfleld Ridge was made by au- infarit was not. reported in serious operate condition and it was believed aho were lubricate i 4 I i l T0 UNTXE KN OT Gen, Stephen J. Chamberlln. Gen. McArthufs wartime chief of operations, who has been secretly ordered to Greece at the request of U. s. Secretary of State George Marshall, In view of the U. N. controversy regarding Greece it is also interesting to note that the U. B. army units'.war games have been based on a simulated invas- ion of Crete and Piraeus. lloath Yesterday 0f Mr. J. P. MaePherson Mr. John Peter Mac-Pherson. 66. well known Charlottetown tailor and clothing dealer. died yesterday in the Prince Edward Island Hos- pital. Although he had been un- well for several weeks his death was unexpected. . Born at Kllmulr. near Monta- ;ue_ he was a son of the» late Mr. and Mrs. Peter MacPherson. As a young man heuearned the tailor- ingtudg- 1nd,." inducted bualu here since 1938. He was in busi- ness in Summersicle from 1930 to 1937 and for eight years prior to that was located in California. In his youth he was well known as a track and. field athlete. being a frequent winner in such events as the 100 yard dash. shot putt. and high jump. In Boston he once had the privilege of competing against. the then world champion 100 yard. man. He was a valued member of Trinity United Church and his passing will be keenly felt among a wide circle of friends throughout the Province. ’ Surviving are his widow. the former Barbara Elizabeth Bruce of Valleyfleld, P. E. 1.. one son, Bruce. Charlottetown, and four brothers and three sisters. Two brothers, Alexander and Roderick, and three sisters. Margaret. May and Christie, are in Pasadena. California; and two other broth- ers Dan and Norman. at Kilmulr. The funeral will be held Thurs- day afternoon from the MacLeaii Funeral Home. l0 -v 1.000 YUGOSLAVS T0 SAIL 24 Montreal next week be llav e _____________ TALLOW LUBRICANT the tallow. Wet Weather Halts Harvesti lhllilfitofllorhovincelhll. STRIKE I tlon Delivered 86.00. a. s. not Drew Suggestion ls Approved By ‘Western Premiers (By TheCanadian Press) Hopes for a settlement of Can- adafs packinghouse workers‘ strike brightened today w- Premiers of Manitoba. Saskatchu-an and Al- berta approved a suggestion of Premier Drew of Ontario for a conference of provincial labor ministers. The Premiers said they would send. representatives to a meeting at Toronto Sept. 26 that. would "explore every possibility ofreach- ing some agreement by which work can be resumed immediately in the packing plants across Gan- ado." The conference, if approved by Premiers of tour other affected Provinces, could end an impasse caused by the United Packing- house Workers of America i010.) demanding that the wage de- mands for which 12,000 workers walked out be bargained for on a. nation-wide basis. This has not been possible here- tofore because the Dominion Gov- ernment transferred its wartime Jurisdiction in labor disputes back to the Provlnces, although it could intervene if asked.» ln Halifax Premier Angus L Macdonald of. Nova Scotla sold “any suggestion which will settle .__ (Contrlnued c-n Page 5 Col. 2) lie-elected Chairman 0f Transportation SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Sept. 20 - (OP) - DR. Tllmbull. Halifax. was re-elected chairman of 1h! Transportation Comnilaslon of tho Maritime Board of Trade at a bur iness meeting tonight prior to "he opening sessions 0f the Board's 47th annual convention tomor- row. - other officers for the 00min! year, all IB-elflilfifl. are Vice-Chair- man. Mayor James D. McKenna, Saint John: Honorary Secretary- ‘Treasurer. E.A. Saunders, secretary of the Halifax Board of Trade. and Transportation Manager, Rand H. Matheson. Moncton. ‘ 441a bur ‘lift 0e biaoaqtsr bulimic olfen HEARS lllllbfll‘ 00f MONTREAL, Sept. 23 -—lC‘E')-— N‘ The transport Rodnik will sail iffifl carrying am estimated 1.000 Yugoslavs back t0 Th6 from to 3.000 retlnined First. commercial steam enimfl d ln early industrial plant! d with melted b!!! n3 In West battling (tea miwrvro. Sept. 23--Mlnirnum and maximum temperatures: Vancouver 49, 74; Edmonton 4'1. 48: Regina 42. so; Winnipeg as, 63; Toronto 31, 58; Ottawa 28, 52; - Montreal 34, 40, Quebec 81, 4Q; Saint John 40, ; Moncton 89, 50'. Halifax '52. M: Charlottetown 47. bonsydney 61. 64. HALIFAX. Sept. a -(CP) - Wuther synopsis and official in- land forecasts issued by the Do- minion Public Weather Office oi Halifax at midnight ‘Tuesday. OTTAWA. Sept. 23 -—(CP)-—W!t weather has held harvesting oper- ations to a standstill on the Pralrll Provinces for the last two weeks. the Dorm-lion Bureau of statistics laid today in the int of a serial of telegraphic reports covering crop ooaivli-tlons throughout Canada. Before bad weather not in. har- Ieltng in Manitoba was narly completed while in Saskatchewan it was about 00 per cent finished. In Alaerta. apart from southern areas. little or no thrrerhlng has been done. under way: more is no cha proqrects for apples and In the Morltlmea. apple and potato harvesting operations are nge in N015 South's crop will be nmch below average. The potato harvest in New _ bnmswok. however. is lmaewhot higher than‘ expected; Harvesting of ‘ghroln lo well advanced. - e ll IQil advanced. yieltk are below average. swar- boetl. have benefited harvesting of cereal crops in but the While - late owl!» buoy. as potatoes and from recent rains, it is expectled that the outturn of potatoes will vary from fair to good. In some ' duction. lri Huron County are tlnue operations and has hampers the harvest of flsxseed. The flue cured tobacco harvest ls nearly completed. I ~ Good weather has prevailed gen- erally throughout British Columbia and grain harvesting la practically completed hi southern ore-as. Har- venting operations are in owing in the northern with cutting of coarse grains about 80 per cent completelfln the Peace River block. Picking of the lobe foul-t. crops ls well under way and yields and quality are generally ootlalacton ' section: o deterioration of pasture conditions ha; resulted in a drop in milk pro- peeled and silo filling is under way. The white bean harvest is in full owl-rig. although recent heavy rains making it difficult for bean growers to cori- full districts, Synopsis: It is clear and cool in the. Msrltlmos and temperatures have already dropped below 40 do. greea in many places. Frost la forecast for all regions conlgm and Wednesday wul continue cool Tn 0m l i i i pwg§mrnfis°volli§mrbrfimpre; Wm‘ “Wmmn ifmpflltll"! h! emu", u much bet.” mm “h the boa. Rain will spread into the northern areas in the afternoon as a disturbance now in Ontario moves into the Maritime district. Forecasts valid until Wednu- day midnight: Prnice Edward Island: _ Clear. becoming overcast in t!" evening. Continued cool with | before dawn. Light winds. inc ing after noon to southwest fl glgh Wednesday at Chnrlotteflofill d H tide this morning 1th at and tonight M. 7.11. ' e Sun sets this afternoon or BI; v 1