MAY 9., 1950 D EXCEISIOR I-' I conmn T HEAD OFFICE (( I) STEWART G. IVES, Disrlct Manager, 181 Queen St., Currie Building TORO 0, CANIIDA Charlottetown This Year's Rookies look PrLising Dy RALPH BODEN NEW YORK. May 7 - (AP) -- The early line on the major league rookie crop for the first few weeks of the 1960 season is encouraging. Sam Jethroe, Boston Braves' Negro outfielder and the most pub- licized pre-season rookie of the National League, is going great nuns. .' roe, who stole 89 bases and burned .326 for Montreal in the international League last year, is hitting .300 and has a generous sprinkling of extra base hits to his credit. , Brooklyn Dodgers believe they have come up with one or the fin: cat third-base prospects in years in Bobby Morgan, 3. shortstop who also played for Montreal last year! " hovering around the .300 LINER. SAILB FOB HALIFAX LIVERPOOL. England, May 7 - :CP)-The 27.000-ton liner Georg- ie, which sailed for Halifax and ule, is expected to reach Halifax May 11, Cunard officials said to- day. En route to New York the Georgie will land some 500 pass- engers at Halifax. mark. has come through with a number of timely hits. On the other hand, Luke Easter of Cleveland Indians, the Ameri- can League's winter-book favorite for rookie of the THF GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN P. W. C. Graduates JANE BONNELL JOHNSTONB, GEORGE EDWARD LUND. son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Lund, Charlottetown. This year Eddie has been President of the Social daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Johnstone, Charlottetown. This New York 24 hours behind sched- GUESS WHAT! Smith MacFarlanc will sell his property of 150 acres in Harrington, 71,4; miles from Charlottetown. House, barn and outbuildings equipped with electricity and running water. Located on Brackley Point road which is the shortest route to the National Park and rumors suggest it will be paved at the earliest possible moment. This is an opportun- lty for anyone wishing to get a farm within easy driving distance of Charlottetown, summer or winter. AUCTION SALE AT FRENCH RIVER WEDNESDAY, MAY 10th AT 2 P.M. I an: inatructad by the executive of the lato William H. Profttt to nail by Public Auction nu his household effects including some of the following articles: 2 bedroom suites: beds; bedding; 2 toilet sets: chairs: six rocking chairs: 5 tables, including kitchen and room tables; Congoleum squares: sets of dishes: and a large quantity of other dishes. Also cream separator. practically new: cream can: cracks; wood sleigh: wheel-barrow; harness, and a lot of other articles too numerous to mention. o If not fine, first fine day following. . A IITHUB STEWART, Auctioneer. AUCTION SALE OF FARM PROPERTY, MACHINERY AND SOME HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE AT CENTRAL ROYALTY, TUESDAY, MAY 9th AT 2 P. M. I am instructed by the executors of the estate of the late James Easton to sell by Public Auction his 48 acres of land in high stato of cultivation. Good barns and a modern 9-room house, electric lights, running water and toilet. This property is just two miles from Charlottetown and 34-mile from school. This is a rare opportunity to purchase a farm on the paved highway and so near the city. MACHINERY:-1 manure spreader, 1 hey rake, grain seeder, 1 disc harrow, 1 spike barrow. 1 E”-in l'-l'll8llel'. 1 threshing outfit, I Monarch gas engine, 1 riding horse 1109. 1 spring-tooth harrow, 1 hey mower. 2 sans plows. 1 single plow, 1 driving sleigh, 1 cart, 1 team wagon, 2 ving wagons, 2 express wagons, cart wheels and axle, Ill cll':&I'llI separator, 1 pair clippers. harness. My "P9 and 0” lmy an-rier, carpenter tools, forks. shovels, hoes and 0 or small articles. FURNITURE:-3 bedroom suites, dining room table and chairs, 1 stove, 1 organ, 1 bookcase, sofas. tables and other articles. zrumus: CASH. W. 11- llEAT0N- Auctioneer. Auction Sale FARM IN POWNAL Notice is hereby iven that ill Plll'9"3"”9 9' '”' Order of the Court of: Chancery in matter Or clllllll No. 669, and in exercise of other authorities to us give. we will offer for sale by public auction on the premises on Monday. May win. 1950. at 2 P-M-- the mm l"”' party in Pownal of the heirs of Robert Enman. beinil the lands following: arccl of land sltuaio, lying and belllt on TldwLI?sl'ltll;)aiVb,mbcr Forty-nine in Queen's County Ill Prince Edward Island, bounded and described sled fol; lows: By a line commencing on the Northern st and the Georgetown Road in the Eastern boundasy 0 ll, formerly in possession of David Jones an now 0 Robert W. Jones, and running thence Northwardly in said Eastern boundary to the Southern boundary of thirty acres of land formerly in possesaio:Ih of -lhlolalglil Wood, thence Eastwardiy in the said Sou ern I In dary to the Western boundary 0' WW5 '”""”"y possession of Richard McMillan, and now or lately of Ambrose McMillan, thence Southwardl in gllghsalg Western boundary to the road aforess .'a.n sh”. Westwardly along the same to the place ioholammeimle ment. containing SIXTY-TWO ACRES o n . I v more or less. Such sale to be subject to the approval of the Court of Chancery. Charlottetown. May 8rd. 1950- ull; EASTERN TRUST COMPANY l Committee, etc. year honors. is having trouble. ' Elllter. expected to supply need- ed Indian batting punch. is hitting in the lower .200 bracket but his followers believe it won't be long before Big Luke asserts himself. St. louis Browns have come up with an early season sensation in K93 W004. a strong-armed out- fielder. Wood. who sacked 32 home runs for Baltimore last year, had four to his credit in his first nine Bames. In adltlon he has perhaps the best throwing arm in the bus. lness, Newcastle Disease Ui'I'AWA, Delete - Vlg- orous action by neterinarians of the Canada Department of Agrlcul. ture in the slaughter of all infected birds as well as of those known or suspecteu to lime been exposed to infection. is rapidly bringing under control the Qlltbreak of Newcastle Disease among the poultry flocks in the Fraser Valley of B.C. The incidence appears to have diminish- ed from a pest: reached on April I2, Dr. Thomas Childs, Veterinary Director Genera- said recently. The Canadian Government, said 737- Chllds. ha-d adhered to its ac- cepted policy of slaughter of in- fected and exposed anmals and compensation therefor, as opposed 90 I Sllszested program using vac- cine. It was actually far more eco- nomical in the long ,run, he ex- plained, to stamp out the disease completely rather than adopt 3 vaccination policy which would com- mit the poultry lndustry to per- petual use of this control medium. The present policy. he pointed out, had been eminently successful in complete eradication from Canada of dourine, rabies, glanders, and hog cholera and was rapidly doing the same with oovine tuberculosis. "Newcastle Direase", Dr. Childs explained, is a serious virus disease affecting the nervous and respi. ratory systems of birds. It is highly contagious and may result in heavy mortality or seriously impaired egg production such as eggs without shells and so forth. The disease is prevalent in the . United States and may be carried by wild birds, and through infected poultry and egg crates, or through introduction of new breeding stock from infected sources. A few out- breaks in Eastern and Western Canada have been stamped out in the past. The use of vaccine, Dr. Chllds further explained, would seriously interfere with laboratory diagnos- tic work in that a vaccinated bird would exhibit approximately the same blood reactions to laboratory tests as a bird. actually carrying the disease, It is conceded, he said, that properly prepared vaccine may have some value as a protective agent. However, use of vaccine would not be compatible with present policy. The present outbreak in BC, he declared, while considered serious enough to warrant radical control measures. has by no means reached alarming proportions and involves less than one and one half per cent of the poultry populnticn of the Fraser Valley. IT PAYS TO CLEAN AND TREAT YOUR SEED GRAIN OTTAWA. May 7 i950 - Year in and year out officials of the Canada Department of Agricul- ture have stressed the importance of using graded clean seed, pro- perly treated to control disearc. A somewhat newer note in this regular warning was sounded rc- oenly by J. E. Langllle of the tx- perimentul Farm at Nappan, N 5. He states that 'while many or the cl.-.'eal varieties possess resistance to some forms of smut this dons not mean that seed treatment should be neglected". Here again are the imusts' when it comes to handling and choosing your cereal seed: Choose clean graded sound seed -- Use organic mercury csmpounds to kill the disease unganisme of the various types of smut -- Treat the seed just before seeding unless storage is available. cool dry year, Jane is a member of The Times Staff and Welshman Staff: and is secretary of the Student's Council and the Graduating Class. Her plans for the future are un- certain. Committee, secretary-treasurer of the A.A.A., chairman of the Con Committee, goalie on the hockey team, and to top his honors "King of the Campus." He hopes to con- ltinue in the study of medicine. Photo by Craswell. See End Of By George Boultwood BONN, Germany. May 5 -(APD -Anti-Communist feeling surged across West Germany today as the stunned populace realized the full import of Russia's announcement that all German war prisoners have been returned. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer bitterly charged that 1.500.000 Germans - including "lens of thousands of deported civilians” - still are missing in the Soviet Union. He demanded, in the name of humanity. that the Kremlin ac- count for their fate. The Chan- cellor made a special appearance before the West German Parlia- ment. The United States High Com- missioner, John J. Mccloy, said at his Frankfurt headquarters that Russia has failed to account for "many hundreds of thousands of German prisoners of was." "I think the world should know what happened to them and to the many thousands of German civil- ians who also disappeared into the Soviet"Union," Mcciloy sa.id.. U. S. officials in Fkamkfurt said Mccloy and Dean Acheson. U. S. Secretary of State, will discussthe Genman war prisoner situation when they meet in Paris Sunday. State Department officials lin Communist Party In West Germany Washington labelled Russia's an- nouncement "fantastic and absurd." They estimated the Soviets are still holding "at least" 200.000 Ger- man troops in forced labor and prisoner of war camps. The announcement by Toss news agency said the last group of war prisoners-17,538 of them-had been returned to Germany. Adenauer used soviet figures to support his declaration that 1.500,- 000 are missing. . The Chancellor said that in 1945 Tess reported 3,500,000 Germans held in Russia. The Tass an- nouncement said 1,939,063 had been repatriated. He said that still leaves more than 1.500.000 unac- counted for. The announcement brought fore- casts from West German leaders that the Russians had spelled the end of the Communist Party in Germany. Socialist leader Kurt Schumacher predicted a move to ban the Com- munist Party. His cry was picked up by Adenauer's own Christian Democrats and by the Liberal Democrats. the second ranking party. Franz Bleuoher, right wing vice chancellor. said "those few Ger- mans who so far have been de- ceived by Communism surely now at long last see the truth.” NEWINGTON. Ont... Mlay 5 - (OP)--Ominous threats of ven- geance chanted around a blazing '25-foot cross have ruffled the calm of this usually-placid Eastern Ontario village. Three times in the last month Newingtou. ll village of 300. 1185 been invaded at nlg'ht by a band Of -10 to 50 vigilantes, determined to discourage a young woman's a.f- fection for a married man from a nearby community. The Ontario Provincial Police detachment at Comwall. 12 miles southeast of here. sent a constable to this tiny farming community to- day to investigate the burnings of fiery crosses in front of the wom- an-'s home. Latest episode in the cross-burn- mg was Wednesday night when a blazing cross pierced the darkness and revealed the forms of a grouli of men chanting threats of What would happen to the woman if she continued to see the married man. This isn't the first time the band of men, who describe them- selves as members of the Ku Kiux Klan without hoods and cloaks. have used the fiery-Cmss method of putting a stop to what they be- lieve are immoral actions. Twice last fall they burned F iery-Cross Burnings . Alarm Town In Ontario 400 people 10 miles north of here They claimed the devrnonsi-mllollb fulfilled their DU1'P0!9- Residents of this villaze are div- ided on how serious they believe the demonstrations are. . A. W. Loverln, town councilman. thinks it was "just a prank" 115 all over now. he said. ”and I be- lieve the pair concerned learned a lesson. All that was being done was to scare the people-.," He said "all we want to do is forget about it; after all. it was only a small cross." ' One Newington man said mem- bers of the organization. who come from many parts of stormont County. hold regular meetings to map out their strategy. He said they made no attempt to hide their identity. A witness to the most recent demonstration said he saw men marching around the burning cross chanting warnings about justice being done. "At intervals one or more of the men broke ranks to hurl some kind of fluid at the burning cross. The lady who lives in the house came out and screamed at the men- They colntlnued their orderly march around the cross and a"1it- tle while later they dispersed. crosses in Avonmore, a village of The new 1950 Standard Vanguard four door deluxe sedan, seatsi six people comfortably with plenty of headroom and lots of luggage space. its uncluttered. streamline styling conforms to Canadian taste. Standard Canadian 3-speed gear shift and powerful Standard "Steel- Sleeved" engine make it ideal for Canadian use. The new 1050 standard Estalc Car boasts the beautiful streamlin- ing and deluxe appointments of the Standard VANGUARD sedan plus all round utility with 6 doors, and flat folding rear seat. Standard Canadian 3-speed gearshift and powerful Standard "Steel-Sleeved' engine make it ideal for Canadian use. 'Pea Vines liooll Livestock Feed Pea-vlns silage and hay made from the vlnes and empty pods of canning peas ha.'e become important livestock feeds in many parts of Canada. Up to 200.C00 tons of the silage or its equvslent in hay become available for feed every year. Recent experiments carried out at the Dominion Experimental Station, Lethbridge, Alia., provide useful information on the value of these feeds in comparison with other more common feeds and indicate how they may be preserved and fed to the best advantage, In most areas in Canada where canning peas are grown, the green vines and pods are simply piled into circular stacks as they come from the viners and are allowed to ensila in the stack. If the stack is built carefully and quickly a good quality silage usually rcxtults. But even so about one foot on the outside and about one and a half feet on the top usually decom- poses very badlv and is unfit for feed, thus making the percentage of spoilage in small stacks quite high. when a silo is available, this 11 can be avoided. Another way of dodging spoilage losses is by spi-ead"ng the green vines back to the field to let them dry, then stacking or ballng them like any other kind of hay. This method means a lot more work. there is always some loss through shattering in gathering up the dried material and there is also danger of spoilage if the vines are caught by heavy rains whfle drying in the - A H" g" PAGE THIRTEEN HAVE vou mun THE REMINGTON (foam-riter MAKE we gym-riter savmos TEST m voun OFFICE room! liiilii field. Canning pen. aye lggumeg and no i Results of these experiments ind!- relatlvely higher in protein, caiclumlclim that both D88-Ville 1155' 5'10 carotene-when cu;-ed 35 . hay 0,-lpea-vine silage were sllzhtly suparlof silage-than are grass hgyg such "to alfalfa buy as a feed for fatten- lacme or timothy. On a. similar ins yearling ulcer-. 51-Inlllr expo!!- moisture basis, they have a Chemical ments with fattening lambs pro- lwuull nu Ill "" uh III" '” we'- isl New-;o1?Y'5”wy can-V” roughage once. composition very like that of dulled Slmu” l'95"”5' , medium quality, first-cutting alfalfa EXP9l'lll'l9'll-S lll the Ummd slat" hay. show that growing dairy stock of Feeding experiments were con- i milking cows Will thrive on pea-vlnl ducted over a period of three years hay and D98-V'I'e 511336 85 W6-1: to determine the value of pea.-vine hut P93 Vine sllave--like most Other 8119.88 and pea.-Vine hay as compared silages-should not comprise more with medium-to-good quality l1r:t- l than one-half of the .'a ly roughest cutting alfalfa hay as the sole allowance and slloulrl be fed as soon roughage for fattening yearling c after milking as pnssl ale if Offr steers. Grain was fed twice daily, flavors in the mm are to be avoided. By Ni-IA Foreign Service ROME, Italy-(NEA)-Roms is already alive with pilgrims, her.- to observe Roman Catholici.-am'.s 25th Holy Year. The celebration is held once every 25 years. and is expected to attract 2,000,000 visitors from every part of the world. What each of the pilgrims must do is visit the four great churches of Rome. First, he goes to St. Peter's, where he crosses the threshold of the Holy Door, 'wall- ed up by a slab of white marble between Holy Years. This act symbolizes that the pilgrim has stepped into a new, cleaner life. Most pilgrims go, in order, from St. Peter's to St. Paul's-Outside- the-Wall to St. John Lateran and finally to St. Mary Major. In each of these four basilicas, the peni- tent must say three Our Fathers, three Hail Marys, and repeat three times the prayer, "Glory be to the Father, to the Son and to the Holy Ghost. As it was in the beginning. is new and ever shall be, world without end. Amen." Americans are more numerous in Rome this Holy Year than they were in 1925, the last Holy Year. In December, 1924, when the Holy Door was opened to symbolize the beginning of the Holy Year of 1925, there was not a single Am- erican present at the observance. Last December, however, when the Holy Year of 1950 was offi- cially inaugurated, 188 Americans were witnesses. Similarly, Americans, particular- ly women, are flocking to the city. They range in age from child- ren to women like Mrs. Katherine Sheridan. an 80-year-old grand- mother from Pasadena, Calif. Mrs. Sheridan travelled to Italy on a slow freighter, making the voyage from California in 27 days. i The Catholic Travel League of the American Express Company, which is organizing pilgrims-ges. estimates that l5,000 Americans will visit Rome in '50. "That may sound small.” says David Lee of the League, refer- ring to other estimates that have ranged as high as 800,000, "but bear in mind that that would still be the all-time high as far as Am- erican pilgrims acr concerned. Another big travel agency, Thomas Cook 8: Son. places the figure at 50.000. and adds that the only thing that will hold the num- bar down is lack of space. Prac- tically all existing ship space on boats to Europe this summer. says a Cock spokesman. is booked up. And space is getting increasingly light, already, for boats sched. uled to sail in the fall. 0 O O 0 United States Pilgrims Set a Record In Rome Holy Year Estimates iiun From 15,000 to 300,000 American Visitors PILGRIMS: In Home to observel Kathleen Walsh of Los Angeli, Holy Year, American visitors walk down the steps of St. Peteris. Mrs. Katherine Sheridan (right) l first of four basilicas each pilgrim of Pasadena, Calif., and Mrs. must visit. cans will want such rugged ae- commodations. A central commiticc. controlling hotel space. has been careful to keep price incroasrs at a mini- mum. guarding agrainst gouging of desperate pilgrims. At a med- ium-priced hotel. a visilor can pilgrims are coming to Europe by plane. One airline, Air France, has inaugurated special flights which permit pilgrims to stop over in France. where they can see France's religious shrines, on their way to Rome. Air France also will begin special thrice- from Paris to Besides ship travel, hundred; of weekly flights Lourdes on April 6. Hotel reservations in Rome. n-aturally, are at a premium. Au- thorities are erecting hostels-icn: cities-in outlying sections. but the probability is that new Agmgi. obtain food and lodging for N00 lire rs-ififil a day. . 'But. at some of Rome's exclu- sive hotcls. prices range as high as 315 to 520 a day. wlth ills serv- ice typically coniznenial and lux- ux-mus. 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