dominant World Zionist Organi- MAXIMS 07A MERE MAN 1111i 1y isfliemuisueolinpea- iafi“ i? Read by Everybody A Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew mpgtlnidlanloulodilfl. l] gflaamwnomsiurwccsa * CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. MONDAY, JULY 29, 1946 10 PAGES The caverns or sorrow an mines of dinmondl. ' MAXIMS OIL r MERE MAN l» Snbaorl ' Delivered 85.00. Mall. I100: other Prnvlaeu I [Ll-A- ".00. D E GAU ‘ills CALLS FOR BRITISH-FRENCH A Attacks Proposal F llslev Hulls For Federated Palestine coupon. July I8 -<0P>—A possible new struggle for suprem- acy ‘m the Holy Land between divergent Zionist groups loomed Wihv \vhen a spokesman for the “New Zionist Organization" culled for dissolution of the Jewish ggency for Palestine. He termed the agency a "front" to obstruct realization of Jewish national all‘? the same time Dr. Chaim ‘Vfn/JTIBHTI, President of the ration and head of the Jewish Agency. attacked the Anglo-Amer- iriin cabinet committee’! propos- al for a federated Palestine as having all the disadvantages and 110W‘ ni’ the advantages of previ- ous partition plans. In Palestine. meanwhile. it was evident that any division of the lloly Land would meet with \'lo- ion: opposition from the majority of Ai-nhs and at least a minority of Jews. A. Ahrahamson. member o! the Vlfilifl executive the ‘New Zion‘st Organization" which broke from the parent group in 1935 m disaizrcement over demands for a Jewish national state. asserted in an interview that Britain set up the Jewish Agency as a "front" to nhstriirt Jewish national aims and that by attacking the agency the British have destroyed the only illusion on which they could de- pend for support." A British white paper Wednes- day cited evidence which it said linked members of the agency's F1\ff‘ilir\‘0 with recent violence in Faliisime. " Aiirahamson called for a format- ion of a Jewish provisional gov- __f_C_ontln'med on Page a Col. 4i Coming Events "Movies at $51 tonight. "Talkies —- lgn-enld. Thursday. "Talkies can}; Monday. "Talkies rvioifialitTuesday. "Talkies — Malpeque, Wednes- lav. ' lieilys Cross Picnic Wednes- day. July 31st. "Dance st. Teresa's Hail. Mon- day July 29th. Webster Orchestra. "Dance. Lorne Valley. Tuesday. July lllst. Webster's Orchestra, "Fords-Bulk Feed Wheat in llorir. Also Western Feed Oats. Court and Son. "Dance seven Mile Bay Hail huerrioy night, July 30th Clood UFlI‘. "Ire Cream Social and Dance. gxzcétniount School. Tuesday. July "Ice Cream arid Dance. Emer- ald ilrill. Monday. July 29th. Mrs. G. c. Green and Mrs! J. J. White. "ice Cream and Dance. St. Ann's School. Lot 22, July 30th. in aid of Softball Team. ' V"Chlcken. Ham. Salad. served at hen-man oLdge, New Haven. Wed- 1150-13". July 31st. "Ice Cream Festival. bingo and dancr. St. Charles Hall Tuesday. $111K. 6th. Supper served in even- a. "Bonk orders at once for the last 1111" "Feed Oats" this summer. llcrmas Myers. Secretary. "Attend the lfllfifl remisea of P. L. 111v 29th st 5 p.111. ST. "Gi-nitox S 50 D. D. T. S ray for Potatoes. Also Perenox now n stock. Dillon a Spillett. - ' "Collecting l-logs for Davie an: Fraser Ltdn T d Writ °' 11110110 colieeztfy RuaaNfyb . {Ice Cream Festival and Bazaar {use Baée‘ of home cooking. Bclle Jmyrautturch grounds. Wednesday. hay sale on IWIOB, G“B1z Carnival. Trundle. Mania. James and Attractions. Wednesday. lily 31st. Rollie McKenzie’: Orch- "Jfl- Meals served from 3 D. S. T. O0 m g°“l‘~'-1'yneallll.lt'hmrs_ ‘filolidfi -.“;l"i..:*":i° v s... “n” m“ mum". I a. ei-n lo day. Movies-bligh- New Glasgow. w. Pltopl "notch "Collecting ho f De i Q $112.1"? riiatziiirii-I. "ten o. L ‘moms. ' ~¢-_- "Collecting b mry ‘may and viilfismd 7511:1371’ ""1 mould every “fr. Phone °°11s¢t or vn-lte niy ‘a . A c. Green s: o. c. anon. 0-s- _-w-u. “or Cafhfi slit?“ 7W truck b ca; l- am; oh Mgnfiay ‘street. one of the main Jerusalem- Can. Delegation NEW YORK. July Z8 — (CP) — Finance Minister llsley of Count and L3. Pearson, Canadian am- baasad to the United Stalks. sail- ed for Europa today aboard the liner Queen Mary to Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration at Geneva. Mr. llsley heads the Canadian del ation while Mr. Pearson. who h en associated with UN.R.R..1.. since it was set up in 1943 and is a chairman of one of its standing committees. has attended all coun- cil meetings. _ Before returning to WBShlHJZlOXLl Mr. Pearson may visit, some of the main operating centres of U.N.R.- RA. in Europe. Attlee. Byrnes Arrive For Conference PARIS, July 2B - (AP) — Prime Minister Attlee of Britain and State Secretary Byrnes of the United States arrived today for the ill-power European peace confer- ence and found the deputy foreign ministers deadlocked both on treaty details and the publication of roposed treaty drafts. e deputies n! Britain. the Un- ited States. the Soviet Union and France agreed to send copies of the drafts. including disputed tll- temative clauses. to each of the five former belllgerents involved. but gave up in (‘espair afaer 11th-- hour conferences concerntng pub- licatlon of the drafts ‘in their own countries. The deputies argued most. of this afternoon on the point. The Ain- erlcan and French delegations were understood to be ready to make public any or ail parts of each treaty. but the British refused to permit publication of any proposals except those which were accepted by all four powers. The Russiai-s announced they stood for public- ation of all or of nothing - The terms of the drafts had beau. distributed by British sources fir probable use rit midnight but pub- licatlon suddenly was prohibited by order of the deputy foreign minis- ters council. , Most, of the terms of thc treaties already are kmwn, as the result. of unofficial leaks. but there has been no authorization for flml publication. which now probably will rest with the full peace coli- f-erersce opening tomorrow. Full texts. meanwhile, will go to the former enemy states involved Fir-land, Italy. Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary. The Peace conference will eon- vvene tomorrow at 4 P M iii AM. E..T.D) ln tho former Senate chamber of historic Luxembourg Palace. near Paris‘ latin quarter. workmen labored aganst time to finish preparations in the immense panelled chamber. ‘This conference will dcai only with Italy and the German satellite states which WMZGG war against members of the United Nations It will not much upon such major problems as the future of Germ- any in the European family or the control of atomic energy. Jewish Storekeepers liefy Cov’t Order By CARTER L. DAVIDSON JERUSALEM. Julv 28—tAP)—- Jewish storekeepers on J sf f a arteries. remained in their 5111'" today in defiance of a gvvrrnmel" security measure aimed B1 410M16- cation of the rvrsmlm- They d" mended revocation of the order. The order was 01011111188194 Saturday as the millllry and P0" lice tightened precautions in 1M of a new wave of arrests which followed last Monday! bombing of the King David H0191- Palestine government and British military headquarters. v The district commissioners or- dai- mil-notes the niopkseeerl that the governmenu would “take over the premises as a stcu 119°‘ esnry for maintaining mm" essential to the life of the com- rkunlty." but the owners reviled n3 would be unable to move it i- stocks before the desalina- Mia afternoon-set by W! l“ ‘ as. a1 insets in Jerusalem. meugsywhllgm continued iiiiiiilnir 111 the ruins of the King David Ho; tel's east wing. from which 8 bodies have been recovered- Tim" ty-four rsons still are listed ll miss n the blast. or was no ofllcial JCWY-Yl. pronouncement here on the 11" proposal of the Aniuo-Amfllw‘ cabinet committee fora federally- governed division of Palestine n- to Arab and Jewish owvlflcil- ernoipally because most Jewish leader! either are in ilil °1 W at the country. An armed band made an an; nicseufui attack aiitui-asv nlsh coughs‘. mui¢;ry_ 1131132131115. 11:1; a m w are ' hand to be holdinii- m Jews ar- an» U f mmiitihial" a."ir.i."j..z...rnr ‘lleirens Ready i Famous Scientist To Spend Vacation In To Confess Slayings CHICAGO. July 28 —(AP)— iligs in Chicago's lurid criminal history-the kidnap-slaying arid dlsmemberment of six-year-old Suzanne Degnan. the "lipstick" slaying of a young woman and the fatal slashing of a 43-year-old widow. “The defence feels that the time has come for Heirens to make known by confession to the state's attorney the facts of the various crimes charged against him." Malacby Coghian. one of the youths five lawyers, said Satur- clay. _Mr. Coghians reference to "the time has come" obviously meant the defence strategy now was aim. ed at saving the strapping 17- ycar-old university student and wrestling enthusiast from n. pos- slhle ‘penalty of death in the clcciric chair. Mr. Goghlan said the confessI-on would deal with the Degiian slay- ing last Jan. '7. the “lipsticif” kill- ing last Dec. 10 of Frances Brnwn. 33, and the fatal throat slashing of Mrs. Josephine Ross. June 3, 1M5. Asked specifically about he Rc-ss slaying, a killing with which the youth has not he said: "There is no need quibble about the number of homicfcs. There are three. They are‘ .he Degnan girl. the ex~wave Miss BYOWH. and Mrs. Josephine Psoss." All of the slayings occurred in the same North Side hood i_n which Helrens. termed by detective chief Walter Storms ‘the great criminal of his age in 531C850 police annals." once 1;v. to lle.‘[;ilbOl"' Miss Bro\vn‘t nearly nude body was found draped over a ba‘htuli. She had hccn shot twice and n 10- inch steel knife blade was buried in the base of her skull. On a wall of her apartment was written a vivid message in 11p- stick: “For Heaven's sake. catch me bcmre I km 1110'". I can't control myself.” The same message was mailed in an anonymous letter to the Deg- iiaci family after Suzanne wag kidnapped. Suzanne. blond. blue-eyed and Plump daughter of James Dergnan. then an Office of Price Administ. ration official. was stolen from her ‘bed. a block away from Chi. canes busy Sheridan Road along Lake Mlchl-gan, shortly after midnight Monday, Jan. 7_ Parts of her body——tlie severed 110811. ices and arms-were found 111111 night in sewers and catch bflgsinianear hperdlloime. Th: 1cm 's vra pe n a s ' has. the torso in her pajamggptillig 11 pager sugar sack. Peace Conference Meets Tomorrow . By noaawr c. ivibsox PARIS. July 28 —- (AP) —Di;;_ iomats and a sprinkling of milit- ary experts from 21 countries will meet in the qarawling Luxemboug Palace at 3 pm. 110 a.m. A D T.» tomorrow to open debate on peace treaties to shape the future of 83.000000 inhabitants of live for- mer enemy countries. . - Convoked by Britain. the. United States. Russia and France, time Paris peace conference offers 1'1 invited countries the chance to make recommar.:iations—out rec- ommendations only-on pacts with Italy. Romania, Finland, Hungary and Bulgaria. The treaties have been drafted by the foreign ministers of the four major powers. Among other’ details. the pact... would limit the former AXis satellites to armies totalling 405.000 men for all five and would exact total reparations of more than $8L000.0000,000. By oomipariso-i with alze 1919 Versailles pelwe parley after the First Great War. the importance of the Paris conference is limited by two major factors. 1. ‘Treaties-have been prepared. wherea! 27 years ago 32 countries participated actively in virrltlng tuc- original pacts. Final treaties will not. be concluded here. but by Brit- Bill. the Unified States Russia and France after this conference. 2. The treaty with Germany - magor European adversary of the Alias-has not been prepared and will not be discussed formally by the 1.500 delegates. It will be "writ- ten st o. subsequent international conference. , millomalc nformarits say thi- oonferenee. while in mapy respects a mere formality, "will h; h; 1m. ggrtant as the 8g Four want it. to The explained that thin hinges on w ether the four pcs-ers who drafted the trsatiea encourage. either openly or secretly, Qugggg- tions by the smaller powers. whe- ther theyamo imi- to incorpor- IM such recommendations into the treaties. and whether w summon‘ ta from the five former enemy countries and from other re such la get. Luxem- . mm, Aiban and Mex- ico. who have asked for admission. bombing. snob each between lantril add“ ME tJLen. been chm-gap hltzh school in Toronto. ~ ethe Royal Canadian Navy. 1941- Prince Edward Dr- C. H. Best. co-discoverer of attend thelwilliam Helrens is ready to con- insulin with Sir Prederck Bant- fiftih council meeting of tihe United fess three of the most savages kiil- lug. and present Director of the 311111-111: institute of Medical Re- search will vacation on Prince Edward Island during August. The Doctor has just recently re- turned froni Great Britain where he took part in the Empire Scien- tific Conference of the Royal Society. While in England he was recipient of an Honorary Doctor of Science Degree from the Uni- versity of Cambridge. Dr. Best is a. Maritlmer. his father. Major William Best. being one of the founders of the City of Halifax. and a native of Kings County. Nova Soctia. Mrs. Best ls,a daughter of the late Rev. Dr. Mahon, who was well known on Prince Edward Island. one of his early pastor- ntes being Marshfield United Church in this Province. Varied Career Although a __voung man. Dr. Best has had a varied and distinguish- ed career. Ile began his educat- ion ln Pembroke. Maine. where he was born in 1899. and completed He then enrolled in Toronto University in 1016. but interrupted his college course to serve in World War I in Canada and England. After the war he returned to the University of Toronto where he obtained his BIA. Degree 1921. M.A. 192.2. and M.D. 1925. In i928 he earned the D.Sc. degree. University" of Lon- don. England. and received an sltv of Chicago in 194i. In the summer of 1921 insulin was discovered bv Banting and Best The latter was then made Director of the Insulin Division of the Connaught Laboratories and was put in charge of insulin production a yea-r later. Prom 1032-41 he wasxAssoclate Director of Connaught Laboratories and in 1941 wag appointed honorary con- sultsnt. Dr. Best, has held various posts in physiology at the University of Toronto and has been director oi’ the Department of Physiology since 1929. In i929 he was also made director of the Banting and Best Department of Medical Re- search. War Services After the outbreak of WorldWar II Dr. Best initiated the Canad- fan serum project for securing dried human scrum for military use. This became a major under- taking of the Connaught Labora- tories in collaboration with the Canadian Red Cross Society with the sponsorship and financial sup- port of the Canadian (lovem- ment. During the second World War. Dr. Best was in active service with as director of the R- 0. N- Medloal Research Division with the rank of Surgeon Captain. From 1941-43 Dr. Best was ap- ~ pointed scientific director of the" International Health Division ofl itic Rockefeller Foundation and in I943 was eluted chairman of the Board of Scientific Directors hr this Foundation for that year. S He has recently. January. 191B- bcen re-appointed as scientifi: director. Won Coveted Awards As a student. scientist. profes- sor. author and oriwflilsr. D1‘- Best has earned many "Oi/fled onwards. amonz which are thc foi- (Contimied on Page 5 0:1. 4i Will Call Cabinet into Session (By The CanadlarrPressi HALIFAX, July 28 —— P18111181‘ Angus L. Mscdonald said 101118111 would call the Nova scotia Cabinet into session Aug. 6 to dis- c1133 the taxation agreement of- fered to the nravlrices in the fed- eral budget June 2'1. Shortly after the budget propos- als were received here the provin- B’ n ciai cabinet studied them but asked Dominion authorities for clarification. Last week Mr. Mac- donald held preliminary discus- sions in Ottawa with Finance Min- ister llsley and tonight the_Pre- mirr said some of the points need- i~~~ clarification had been cleared Honorary D.Sc. from the Univer- Lyman P. Duff. chief justice, who sat as a member of the Judicial Com- mittee of the Privy Cn-iinr-il. Island 1 DR. C. H. BEST 2 Airmen Killed Near llplands (By The Canadian Press; OTTAWA. Jilly 2&-Twg ginngn a dive at 5.000 feet and crashed Cyrvill six miles east of here. . , _ Names of the men were with- hfelfill pending notification of next- o - n. ' e. Ont.. Leo St. Jean. a. son of the farm owner. who said he was lying un- der a tree when- he' heard the plane roaring overhead. and then saw it dive to earth. With several others. he ran to the scene where the machine cut a. 500-foot swath "like a road" through the bush. "Trees were torn up by the roots and others snapped off." he said. "There were bits o1 plane all over the placc....one wheel wag thrown 500 feet from “where the plane first hit. Both men were dead when we arrived-one had been hurled into the trees. the other was beneath the wreck- age of a win-z." Serviceman. Wives, Children Arrive 0n Aquitania HALIFAX. July 28 —(CP)—The liner Aqultariia arrived here Sat- urday from Southampton with 2.- 400 passengers, most of them Cun- adian soldiers and wives and children of servicemen. airmen The passenger list included Sir. retired Canadian in London Air Marshal G. O.Joliiiscf.i. over- seas R. C. A. F. chicf rcturiiid to begin his repatriation leave after WlIlCllTlg up the overseas force 158 war organization. Dean C. J. MacKenzi-e. president of the National Research Couitit-il returned with a group of Canad- ian scientists who attended the nyal Society Empire scientific conference in London. Among passengers hound fnr the United States was Bruce Bai-rnsfathcr. creator of the first great war‘s famous cartoon char- actor “Old Bill". With Mrs. Baiifnsfather he will makc a lecture tour of American cities. The Aqultania landed a total of 1.158 officers and men and 1.082 wives and children. POPUIAM i. . DICREASES LOB ANGELLJ Jilly 2B--(AP)-- People still arc living in parks. automobiles and garages, but the Chamber of Commerce announced happily Saturday that Los Ang- eles is breathing down Detroit! neck in their population race. The city's population now is 1.805.687. only 9.195 behind Detroit which uhad a load ct 120.090 in i940. l.) t 1'\ - FLO -BlaS FOR Rik‘ so" QADA UR BFITFQ _ EASIFR 1O U55. l1'.\D'CAKES" PIE", -(.'.OOKIESA i tion Board here. lthe sailors union of the Pacific ihas asked the government to aip- on the farm of Ovide St. Jean at 11111311111 595111911- and Calmdlim.‘ recovered o conference and w Dock Workers May Strike 0n Thursday By NORMAN WALK]; WASHINGTON. Julv 28-¥A_P)_ 11011111111: union rivalrv and de. mands on the maritime industry 2113:)’upfllgilliénoilgQneWvflllgfgor ctloud? i- thIe United states. on a o mmediately ahead is a, strike CLO. dock workers have voted or. next’ Thursday which they "1311",, 1118i’ '11e 11o the whole west coast unless an agreement inter. venes. 'I‘0d11y. the Ameri of Labor disclosed ctalilatpigsgiaitlooxf unions are prepared to band to. nether in a National Maritime Council. This group would rival the newly-formed C.I.O. commit. ice for maritime unity, the Orggn. izvatlon involved 1n the barely. alerted maritime crisis or mid. June. Still another cause of concern amonizurovcrnmerrt officials striv. lug lo kccp maritime peace 15 me 1181311111 pattern of maritime wag- 115 recently developed. An agree. me-nt worked out here Jung 15 for 9-1-0- 111110115. preventing a serious Slrlke then. provided a. $11.50 llltilllihlydifige increase plus short- er working hours at sea and iii _i)0rt. administrat- The war shipping ion. uihich operates most pg the merchant fleet. agreed to thoge terms as did the Wage Stabilize- Now. however. prove a $22.50 monthly pay boost worked Obit With WCSt coast 5111p- bers. In addition. the Seafarers Un- were killed today when an RCA. 1°11 (RF-la). now negotiating with F. Harvard training aircraft from 95st C4185! shippers, has 81118611 011 nearby Uplands Airport wen-t iiito "e11 111111" 11911115’ W388 1116168186 including a $27.10 boost for able- Heading up the C. M. U. a5 eo- ctiairmen are Harry Bridges, pre- sident of the Longshoreanen’; and Warehousemens Union (C.I.O.). and Joe Curran. president of the Among several eye-witnesses was National Maritime Union (CJLOJ Bridges has called on his ship. dock and walking bosses number- ing about 1.000 to strike next Thursday if thev have not won an agreement by than with the Wat- erfront Employers Association of the Pacific Coast. Both Bridges’ Union and the Marine Engineers Beneficial Asso- ciation (C.I.O.) have other strikes scheduled for Sept. 30 in behalf of new contract demands and C. M.U. is pledged to support them. Rumor Bevin May Resign By ED CREAGH LONDON, July 28-—lAP)—A new crop of rumors that Ernest Bevin might resign sprouted tonight as the harased British foreign sec- retary lay tired and ill and Prime Minister Aitlee took his place at the Paris peace conference. Official indicatioiu of such a Cabinet shift were ‘lacking. A For- cign Office source-reporting Mr. Bevin was feeling better-said it was “expect-ed” the foreign secre- farv would go to Paris if he had sufficiently after a week's enforced rest. Some quarters said recent re- marks and actions of Mr. Bevin. however. suggested that he is fed up with his exposed “iarget“ post in the Cabinet. which he has said frankly he never wanted. As recently as last Thursday in the House of Commons. Mr. Bevin said rather snappishly that Paris meeting ivasrrt a real peace expressed weari- ness at trying to make the Pors- dam agreement work through dealing with the Russians. There have been other indicat- ions that Mr. Bevin does not rei- 15h hi5 much-publicized clashes with Foreign M)nlster V. M. Mol- otov of Russia. or the comment they provoke in this country. During the Labor Party's recent Bournemouth conference. the 65- year-old foreign secretary said his job was no picnic and anybody could have it who wanted it. He looked humorously and menacing- lv at Hugh Dalton. Chancellor of the Exchequer. A. V. Alexander. First Lord of the Admiralty. a political favorite of the Prime Minister and his No. l aide at Paris also is mentioned as a possible successor should Mr. Bevin stcn down. Mr. Atilees aides will be the same Mr. Bruin planned to take- A. V. Alexander. First lxird of the Admiralty. the Foreign Aflnirs under-secretary Hector McNeill. and the Financial Secretary ‘of the Treasury. Glenvil Hall. LONDON. Julv 29 --- iMondayi ~- (Reuters) ~- The. Daily Herald. i-f- ficlal newspaper of the Labor party..reportcd tnday that Pbrclzn Secretary Bevin collapsed in House of Commons last Thursday and had to be given oxygen. The Herald said hc is being nursed back t health by his wife at their London apartment. and quoted Mrs. Bevin for the state- ment that the burly foreign secre- taia was too iii even to read. owever. the Hera-id said Mr. Bevin" to take leadership of‘ thmttsh "w? conference deleMion nest . . [b8 T Ceiling Price 0f Fertilizer lip 7 Per Cent UITAWA. July 20 — (OP) —- An increase of five to seven oe cent. in the ceiling price of fer” izers in eastern Canada. will re- sult from removal of a subsidy. the Prices Board announced to- night. The Board said the change would bring the price lrto line with the level existing in 19411. and that the adjustment. was necessary to enable mar-zifacturers to prod-Ice at prices in line with the current cost of materials. Manufacturers in the Marltimes will continue to receive subsidy payments. however. to keep the price there the same as in Ontario and Quebec. This was r-ecessziry due to the high cost of shipping. Forest Fires Out 0f Control (By The Canadian Press) MONQTON. N. B.. July 28—'I‘W0_ _smclderiniz forest fires. sprung up from smoldering remains o! chi-lie;- blazes. bumed out of control 40 miles apart along the northeast- ern New Brunswick coast near Richtbucto and Shediac tonight 59111-11111! families fleeing from their nonies. More than 1.000. including most men and boys in the district. were out fighting the Shedlac fire which was advancing on a 10-mile front. No homes were reported destroyed but several lav in the fire‘s path. Téhe road from Moncton was clos- e . Fire fighting apparatus from Moneton. Shediac and the RCA. 1i‘. No. 5 Equipment Depot bat- tled the balze. The other fire. burning "defin- iteiv out of conuol" a few miles from Ricihibucto. covered an area of 20 square miles and was re- sistlng the battle put up by a force of 800 men. The heroism of an unidentified "bulldozer” opermor was reporter‘. as having saved the village of Richlbucto from the blade. The man. a. construction company em- ployee. was said to have run his LLIAN CE r SpeaksJCn Eve 0f Peace Conference French Leader Sees . Possibility Of Third \Vorld “fir. BAR-LE-DUC. France. Jul 2.8 —(APJ——GeIl. De Gaulle urge ta- dny rapid conclusion of a Britlslr French alliance as the keystone o! an eventual bloc of waste-m Eur- opean countries bound together for self-preservation in a world Whose security he pictured as de- pendent upon the “future relat- ions of America and Russia." Using some of the frankcst. language of his career. Gen. (ie Gaulie prcvtrayed France as dwarfed between two great pow- ers and already able to forsea the possibility of a third world war. This war could come about if Germany is given a chalice "to find again hcr grandeur in joining her ambition wiih that of some- one else." Geri. de Gaulle’s speech came on the eve of the European peace conference in Paris,. and many observers said they felt it reflected the results cf the recent meeting nf the founpower foreign minist- ers council. Russia's announce- mceit of he] German policy at that conference spread gloom in France and touched off comment in the Paris press on the possibil- ity of an eventual Russo-German. alliance. “America and Russia—~rich men and resources. compact in in territory. naturally protected. one by immense oceans. the other by her own expanse-are. by virtue of their size. drawn into an ex- pansion that cloaks itself under the robes of doctrines, but which is. in the last analysis, an unfurl- ing of power." Gen de Daulle told (Continued on Page 5 Col. A) i 3A SELF-HAN‘. MAN. L dNWWWT B! $0 Fir- iii-Jo ontx Kese, ~ i $111.1. About‘ 3 it" 1 machine tr-to the flames and plow- lumiber piles at the village out- skirts Not far away stood a num- ber of oil tanks A Headquarters ca-mip of the Provincial Forestrv Service near the site was endangered at. one time. But it was lay-passed. Equip- ment. including 8.000 feet of hose. was saved. The blaze. believed to have start.- ed from fires in the vicinity sev- eral days ago. raged through hezwy timber. Crews uncler county direc- tion first tackled it. but. later the New Brunswick Forest Service was called in. Richard Black o‘. Ham-p- ton. N 13., district forester. was n charge. In the Shullac area also. the blaze was believed lo have sprung from near-dormant minor fires. It burst forth. with renewed vigor under a stiff breeze With their homes menaoed. mos‘. residents of the area were reported moved out or packed and ready to move. G.L. Miller, chief forester". was in charge of fire-lighting opera- tions there. Forecast Low Food Supply WASHINGTON. July 28-4141‘)- The United St ates Agric uliure Department forecast today an "uncofnfortably low" world food supply in the 1946-47 crop year. In a report to the President's emergency famine committee, the Department said crops will be Isl-gei- than in the lites-AG year but the increase will be largely owet by a sharp reduction m bread grain and‘ other carry-overs. The Far East was termed lhe "darkest spot" in the food pic- tore with many deaths exrpected before the fall rice harvest. Wheat prospects. theYeport said. point to a crop almost equal to the orc-vrar average of 5.900.000.- 000 bushels. compared with last years 5200000000 bushels. A near- record crop is in prospect. it said. for North America. with increased production in Europe. North Af- rice and ‘Turkey. In war-wasted Europe. the De- partment reported crops will leach almost 90 pcr cent of their ore-war average. compared to 8U per cent in the 1945-46 year. Though cereaLs are still scarce. large crops of garden vegetables have increased European food sub- plies. the report said. The world sugar crow W111 111- crease over last» year. with the United States expected to‘ raise its production one~foiirth. but sup- 131195 hi fats and oils will continue far below requirements. World supplies of meats. dairy products and eggs wobablv wlll be ‘small-er than in the 1060-40 con- sumption year due to feed short- ed a fire line in front. of pulp and ' HALIFAX. n; as - (Monday) -—(CP) —- Official inland forecast! issued by the Dominion public wem ther office at Halifax at. 12:15 sari... A.D.T.. Monday, Jilly 20 Forecasts valid until midnight: Prince Edward Island. E8699"! coiirries. Inwer Saint John River Vailey—Cl-2ai' becoming clvlldv $1119 afternoon Little change in term» erroture Light winds increasing this afternoon to southwest ll m.p.h. High lodav at Charlotte- town 7.8. Monctun 7B. Fredericton 7B. Saint John '73 Summary: Cloudy. Little change in temperature. TORONTO. July 38 Minimum and ma. ' turcsz-Vaiiccuvoi 84' ion as. aai; Regina n. in: Win- nipeg 50. 82; Toronto 56. M; Oi» tau-a 53, FA; Ainiiireal M. 8i; Quo- Monday -bec 40. 80; ltirmcion l4. 0!: Hali< fax s1. so: $111111. John mlesinwfi Charlottetown 5n —-; Swans-l 46- 46; Yarmouth H, 69 High l-ltllf morning at. 11.50 and ton Izi u 1. sim sets this evening at 8.31 and rises tomorrow morning at 5.42. First quarter moon August 40h 4.55 P. M. _ Summerside tide eigihlren mtn utes inter than Charlottetown. AIR SCHEDULE Charlottetown-Mansion - Leavl Charlottetown l A. M.. 10.30 A. M.. 5-15 P. M. Arrive Giarlottetown i2 P. M.. 5.55 P. M._ 7.35 P. M. Charlottetown-Halifax — Leave Charlottetown 12.55 P. M. Arrive Charlottetown 4.55 P M. Charlottetown -- New Glasgow — Leave Charlottetown 12.45 P. M. Arrive Charlottetown 5 P. M. Standard Time throughout- CAR FERRY EDWARD ISLAND” standard Time Leave Borden at 9.05 AM- 1 PM- and 4.30 P. M Leave Tormentine 10.30 A. M.. 3 P. M-. 7.30 P. M. Extra trips are made between. on which automobiles are carried. SUNDAY SERVICI Frhm rlordcn. 1 P M.. 6. 45 P. N. From Teimentlne, 3P M.. l P- M. WODD ISLA N DS-Cflllflou Daylight Saving Leave Wood Islands. daily ‘l Lad. A. u. u A. M..1 P. mar. siiasinxJascai-ieeustsuil "earner: 88H- 1' hGlII-