l“ Maxims i," 0' L MERE Bulim- l!‘ keep yourselves n“; [or good fastana just round thaosraar prisiolplea. she la nafflcleutly m- MAXIMSV 01A MERE MAN Provided a bride comes with good _ dowel. __ . ,_ - Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ’,'::.“i;“........°“"&"..'.52'..“"=.."’o;.a CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1o, 1941 to PAGES S" ' ' "um" "W- ' ao-u $5.00. other Provinces a. u. s. a. sud IKM 5 MILLIOWKIS lloranila Mine Strike Settled NORANDA, Que. Feb. s .40?) 4pm Noranda strike which began l Nov. 22 for higher wages and a union checkoff ended tonisllt "hm l mo striking miners voted to accapt the latest offer of Nomnda Mines MT‘??? Me uire. district co-ord- lnator for o International Union oi Mine, Mill and smelter Work- m (61.00 said the miners would take the IS-cent hourly increase oiicrcfl saturday by J1me! Y Murdotli of Toronto. the company president. The Union had de- manded an increase of 16 cents. Storm Downs 0.ll.T. Wires 0n Mainland (By The Canadian Press) HALIFAX. Feb. 9—Canadian' National Telegraph! officials said here tonight that heavy snow on title wires near the Nova Scotla- ew Brunswick border had out some of their lines leading to, Prime Edward Island last night but they oxpected to be operat- l ing normally tn the morning. ln the meantime. they said. P. ll. points were being served by means of a Morse circuit follow- lrnr lllc railway lines. iifariilmc "Telegraph and Tele- phone Company officials said none of their circuits were in- tempted. VETERAN COMPOSER DIE! NEW YORK. Feb. B - (AP) - Jflhll W. Bniitton, 80-year-old sonawritcr and a opular coir.- poscr of the gay ‘s era, died Friday. Bratton kept no accurate count of the songs he wrote but estimrited them as "in the hun- dreds." His first hit was “Sun- shino oi’ Paradise Valley." fol- lowrtl hy others such as "Darling Sue" mid "Only Me." Ho coni- plelcd the lyrics for a new song the d-‘ty of his death. Coming Events "Movies at Bordm to-nigbt. “Races. Souris. Wednesday. Fob- ruary 121th. v "Dance. Emerald Hail. Monday. 10th. C. W. L. "Dance in St. Patrick's School. Li" 12- Monday. Feb. 10. "Dance in K. o! C. Hall. Sous-is. ‘Tuesday. February 11th. Clifford's Oroirr-stra. "Receiving l-logs at Crapaud for Canada Packers Ltd. every Tuesday until ll A. M. B. N. Dawson. "Debate and Dance. Barnscliffa school Tuesday. Feb 11th. Aid of Clllfll Relief Fund. "Loading Hogs for Canada Packers Ltd., Tuesday until further notice. Ding-well and Roeslter. "Ca-rd Party. Auction Sale. Darn- lty. Tuesday. February ilth. If not flue Wednesday. "Croki-nols Party, Pownar Garage lfail, Wednesday. Fdmlary 12th. ‘l-‘slilces Y. P. U. "New Glasgow vs. Milton at x1150? Rink tonight. Game starts - 5. "loading Hose at Cardigan ata- llion each Thursday for Canada Packers Ltd. Norman McKenzie. Cardigm "Horse races at Stanley Bridge WWW. Rb. 1f at I o'clock harp, "Hear and Discuss “Faun Him". susnrnerfiakl Hall. Monday atfitrtxge. February 10th. Everybody "Weaker. tonight. Mtlahelder. Buckley vs. 0on- Y"'- “time game: winsloa vs. "li- Clams starts ‘LU. "hiding flags every ‘ruasdal. n Albany. Writs cs llllfiflg fia- ‘mak- i" Service. road ooaaiilom hermit. Prompt and courtesan ass-t "°°~ Richest market prises. I. Ila mug”, a "Collectinl Hogs for Canada M hrs Ltd. every n-iday. so "L311. ass-i . Battle Of Controls To Open At Ottawa Jggslly reunited the middle-slid a. OTTAWA, Feb. 9 — (C?) — Th0 august House of Commons head Monday into what now is popularly known as the battle of controls, expected to be a long and perhaps bi-tter word-war over G vernmenvs plans to seek t ion of some 50 of its briskly- contested w-artlme restrictions. The signal for the political storm was given early this week when Prime Minister Mackenzie King moved that If the debate on the speech from the Throne was not concluded by this week- end that the House adjourn the debate from Feb. 0-—Monday-to Feb. 24 to deal w h the control measures. Some of these bills already have been introduced and given fir‘ reading but. generally speak- ing, they are minor measures dcal- ing with changes in the Wheat the Defence Act and other stat- utes to bring them into conform- ity with practire under wartime orrlers-in-councll. These bills, which the Prime Minister" played i-n the first cate- gory of control measures ‘~ be in- troduced, will come up for second reading end debate Monday and Tuesday. Some may be debated and oth- ers may be carried with little ols- sent but the battle proper- is not expected to start until the Gcv- ernment comss Q with a glngle bill which the Prime Minister has said will "provide for the con- tinuation for a limited period of certain transitional measures to the number of about 50." That slufzlc bill. which will dcftl largely with control of prices, sup- plies and rentals, is expected to bs the one which will have to withstand the full shock of n Opposition attack. mainly from the Progressive Conservative benches, on the Government's post-war stabilization program. Individual Progressive Conser- vative members already have come out in the Throne Speech debate with demands for the removal of controls on the grounds that they are hamperin production and em- ployment. Tie official opposition may also derive some support. from the Social 'Credlt group whllo the C. C. l". Party likely will side with the Government. H Suspect Held In “Black Dahlia” Death FORT DIX, N. J.. Fob. 9-1110 United States Army announced Saturday night it is holding Cpl. Joseph Dumals in charge of sus- picion of murder after he signed a statement saying “it was pos- sible" he committed the mutil- ation slaying in Los Angeles last Jan. l5 of attractive Elizabeth Short. called "The Black Dahlia." An official said the 20-year-old Dumals signed s statementwhich included a SO-pagc document scrawled in his own longhand and a lengthy series of questions and answers bearing directly upon the slaying. Dumals stated. an official said, that vhe was with the slain girl Jan. l0. The soldier insisted thro ghout that his mind "blank- ed t" while drinking with the girl and that he remembered no- thing until he found himself in‘) New York some time later. Officials said the Dumais state- ment told how he had "blank spells" ln previous dealings with women when iie had been drink- ,ing heavily. The statement included a re- mark that when with a girl and drfflng his "craving and passion became 11ncontro""e." He lid ha became "rough and brutal." ‘The Olaremont. N. 11.. soldier had been questioned _for almost a week -~fo1lowing his apprehension on an embezzlement charge. \ Dunials’ statement, officials said. declared he had known Miss Short since rm and had several dates with her. fly The Canadian Prod) ‘ mammals. no. fl-Reunlted with the husband whom aha be- lieved had died in a German eon- eentratiosroamp. happy MIT-J“ Harper left llpmtltosrs luprsme Court building with him Satur- day after Kr. Justice Keillor fishy annular! ,a second mar- riage slia had contracted siaos the war. With l stroke cf fill lien the ihsdga l ll! restored Ilr. Har- per to lfa. annuled Mrs. Harper's abound mars-tale. contracted in the belief Jack had died. and pfiht dd thi! ‘diendbnosateruufor tlis first time’: Btu-all“ '1 have than seven years-in three will he ex- Board Act. the Canada Grain Act. r GIRL. 19. WOULD WED CONVICTED MUBDEREII One of two youths sentenced to die in the electric chair for the slaying of a motorist, John T. Kelly, 20. is embraced by Ramona Coy, 19. in prison at Nashville, Tenn. Former waitress and night club hostess, ahe travelled from Lewiston. lVLinn., to see Kelly and marry him before he cites. "if they'll let us." Cairn when sent- enced. Kelly subbed after seeing her. He and his companion. James D. Sandusb. l0, said they would like to roll dice to see who would go to the chair first. Shipbuilding Boom In Great Britain LONDON. Feb. 9 — (Reuters) — Though coal and materials short- ages threaterl it, as every other phase of the national effort. Brit- ain's shipbuilding industry is ex- perenclng its biggest boom since 1922. and 1947 is likely to shatter launchlngs in. British yards that were a feature of 1048 will be sur- passed in the coming months if coal and materials shortages can be slaved off. . British shipbuilding effort was six times that o! the United Stlt” Of 1.074 ships now building in the world's yards, 454 are within the United Kingdom. Tonnage figures were even more impressive. Of a world construction of 3.878.491 tons Bfltish yards were handling 1.037.- 062 Britain's best-customer is France with the British demlnlonz, Nor- way. Iceland. Denmark and l-lol- land followng in that order. Toronto Youth Freak Electrical Storm Saturday At Liverpool, ll. S. LIVERPOOL, 10.5., lab. O - CP) — A freak electrical storm kept wire crews busy making re- pairs to South Shore power lines today but outside o! dllnlgg to transmission equipment there was llltle other loss. ‘ The storm struck Saturday af- ternoon. knocking out fuses on the l3,000-volt line leading into Liverpool, cutting off poms to Liverpool industrial local sleet- Plfllllls bad to fix 22 broken street lights. la Lunenhurg, 45 miles up the shore, a flash of llghfnlng struck the spire of the Zion Lutheran Church. stripping it of shingles and causing shock to Mrs. John l. Knlekls vvlso was sitting in her horns across the street at the s. Ken Miller of nearby Port Mouton said one flash struck the ground near his car, lifting a heavy atone which dented the hood and grill of the machine. British Await y Effsitswilf Power Blackout Today By John Dauphiuse LONDON. Feb. 9 -(CP)—-A confused, snowbound England tried h 1945 "be " ut t of lPfleiCllHlf-fi VeSélslllS. evcr c p“ l? calculate tonlght the probable Shipbuilding circles here are “m” °‘ ‘°'“°"°“’5 Wldttsvmd wmldem m" the Oneida!’ industrial shutdown which will throw 11111110115 into temporary idle- ness and a shaken Socialist Gov- ernment awaited anxiously the re- action in Parliament from its own members and the Opposition. Effective at midnight tonight. all but a fcw "essential" industries in London, the Southeast. the Mid- lands and the northwest-densest factory concentration in the Brit- ish Isles-have been instructed to pull their main power switches. House-holders in the same zones have been put on their honor to turn off all lights and electric ap- pliances for five hours daily. An estimated 4,000,000 persons will liC thrown out of work. More Snow Overnight, a new general snow- fall struck the United Kingdom. bringing more rauway and highway tieups. Four lnohcs= of wot snow Sentenced To Hang TORONTO. Feb. 0 — (C?) -— A beetle-brewed youth whom a medi- cal authority described in court as a "moron" is to be hanged May S for fatally beating a Toronto to- bacco dealer who had taken him into his shop and given him a job as night clerk in o, downtown to- 43. over the head with a metal insecticide container which weigh- aids Parliament who left London's streets s slushy mass. The fall was much deeper than in other areas when wind built up heavy drifts. Snow and sleet pre- vailed along the English Channel and rail lines were blocked Ln the north whore vital coal traffic ready was virtually at a standstill. al- Tlacre was among no feeling labor Party officials on tho whole that the present crisis andansars “ca, ‘hm tho Attica Government. thouail He n Rayman Hamilton, is, than was several contestant "i" e convicted Saturday by an Anwe repetition of a similar situation Court jury on a charge of murder. next winter might be a diifoflilit Evidence was that on the night of ‘Qgfy, - last Nov. 1B h beat Alfred Hui. It is possible to find people out- say these ad two rob Hui Jury deliberated an hour and 1B minutes. recommended mercy. in Bavaria. pounds after he set out to It t Believed Dead. Mass llosaniteefWith ‘Wife of which Mr. Harper lived through a lifetime of horror in a German concentration camp-after he had completed a BJOO-mtla trip from Newoastleon-‘Iyne Galveston. Texas. to rejoin has. When the Germans ed Guernsey, in the Giannel Islands, Ir. Harper was taken prisoner and sent to the Noeiligan Camp where ha suffered‘ the chslnings, beatings and kick- ing! typical of German camps. Meanwhile. Mrs. Harper. who heard that her huabaand had died’; entered into a secon "marriage. “We want to be together again‘ was Harper's staple statement to Mr. Justice Macks). {he put the documents i and». WWI! prison speedily should be another election now to clear the air. but they are a mwfl handful. No section of the press ha! "pm-ted any such comment. so far. lat along to suggest such action. METHODIST! CELEBRATE LONDON. Feb. o -- (Reuterai-r British Methodists are celebrating the centenary of the birth of Rev. R h Price Rushes-born Itch. l. 18a. at Oarmarthen, Wales-one of the greatest evangelists Meth- odlam ever had in Britain. Ba was a foypder of the "Forward Mova- men . OTTAWA, Feb. B—(Special)— The National Dairy Council of Canada. butter factories in all the Provinces. dairy companies and milk producers are assemb- ling their forces to defeat a bill Senator Euler of‘ Kitchener pro- poses to introduce in the Senate 1° Permit the importation of oleo- margarine into Canada. Last session the Ontario Sen- ator introduced a similar bill which was defeated on second reading in the Senate with all Prince Riward Island Senators opposing it. The vote was 43 to 80. but as conditions have altered since last year. Senator Euler be- lieves he can convince a sufficient number of his colleagues this year to turn last year's defeat into :2 i947 victory. First steps against the oleo- margarine lsill have already been initiated by the Canadian Feder- ation of Agriculture whose presi- dent, RH. Hannam described the bill as "impractical" and "unfair to butter producers" in a public statement issued over the week- and. ‘The Federation's stand is being re-ec-hoed widely in the dairy industry in all parts of the Do- minion. Robert C. Smellle, prc- sident of the National Dairy Council of Canada told the Guar- dian today that the Council en- tirely concurs with the stand of the Federation of Agriculture in opposing the margarine bill. Wifosaly Unfair" "We have taken this matter up with the oils and fats adminis- trator of tho Wartime Prices and Trade Board," he said. "Besides being grossly unfair to the Can- adlan butter producer. the bill if passed by tho Senate and by t-ho Commons would do nothing to improve our overall food posit- ion. “Canado receives only such fats and oils as are allocated un- (ler the International Emergency itContinued on Page 5 C0l~ 7) Predict Bhinese Gov’t To Be Reorganized By SPENCER MOOSA SHANGHAI. Feb. B~(AP)— China's deepening economic crisis resulted today in an. anti-Amer- ican raiiy~whioh broke up in a riot. and brought a prediction from a high quarter of an immi- nent government reorganization. , In Nsnklng Generalissimo Chl- ang Kst-Shek ordered a new five- year economic plan started im- mediately, but its nature was not disclosed. The shanghai mass meeting was called by employees of vari- cus Chinese department stores to instigate a boycott against Amer- ican imports as a means to "save Chinese industry from bankrupt- Cy" Tlie' American boycott idea grew out of a Chinese Government plan to tax imports 50 per cent and use the money to subsidize exports 100 pcr cent. This sib- sldy. announced Wednesday, would l have given Chinese exporters 6.- 700 Chinese dollars for each Am-' rm Bead. to m_‘ —Five seamen who were at a party aboard trar-apcrt Thursday when alcohol was served are dead and l0 others are in hospital. five in ser- ious condition. A spokesman said wood alcohol was stored aboard the ship for use in machinery malnt- ll alflnce. but there was no immed- alcol-rol at the party. AT STAKEDIN FREIGHT H Flash Fire Sweeps Berlln' Dance Hall By RICHARD IQASISCHKE BERLIN. Feb. 9 _ (AP) H A masquerade bail became a holo- caust last night when rm estimated 100 to 150 masked merrymakers were burned or trampled to death in a flash fire that engulfed the Ksristust Dance Hall in the Brio ish zone of Berlin A mass of bodies was piled be- fore the entrance. Imuch as in the COMB-nut Grove fire in Boston four Winters aso where nearly 50o per- ished. Survivors told of women being trampled to death and of others being stripped naked as they fought vainly to reach the main exit. The exact toll was not known. when darkness forced abandonment of the search through the ruins until tomorrow. A British fir; control officer blamed overheated stoves. A Ger- man civilian familiar with the structure said a short circuit was to blame because the flames first broke in the ceiling and the lights wen‘, out immediately. At least three British soldiers were among the dead, the British Army said. Others were among the 30 severely burned persona who fiscal! SEEK RABBITS. BAG BIG BAD WOLF, $25 While hunting rabbits, Don Beatty, left. anrhvalent Kamcnar were in a party which shot this 34-pOlilld wolf three milcs arcs‘, of Fort Erie, Out. The men will ipiit (Continued on Page 5 Col. 7) the $25 bounty offered by the gov- ernmcnt. Clear Weather 0n Prairies WINNIPEG, Feb. 9 — (CPJ Clear weather, broken only by ne- casionai snowflurries, ruled across the Prairies tonight in the wake of the worst blizzards lri years but scores of communities still lacked food and fuel, most transportation moved haltingly, if at all, and flour mills and stockyards faced shirt- dowus because of scanty deliveries. May Sliletrack Arms Limitation NEW YORK, Feb. 9 -- (AP) —— The United Naticm program for world-wide arm5 limitation, firmly deadlocked by a basic American- Russian disagreement, may be sidetracked temporarily for z. cool- ing-off period, authoritative sources said today. ‘The Security Council meanwhile could plunge into discussion of the Greek case p.121 the long-hanging British complaint against Albania. From Wood Alcohol NORFOLK, Va., Feb. 9 - (AP) a United States Navy wood ate explanation of the use of the 1 Lord Wooitoi‘. Brunswick and train traffic. Plow crews were till- oble to cope with the storm last night but managed to open some town roads today. Rural roads re- mairied blocked. About two feet of snow fell after a heavy stoma ear- Britossa Displeased With Deal In Food By JAMES ltlcCflUK LONDON. Feb. 9 - tCP) —Brit.- ish willingness to sacrifice -- dis- played during the ivsr and after- wards -i5 showing sign; of strain under the inllmct cf a second peace- time winter r~,( increasing cold. re- ductcd rations and bleak predic- (ions. The average Briton - and some of his representatives in Parlia- ment — row is questioning whe- ther Britain receives a fair deal in the allocation of world food sup- plies. Reports of suffering of Germans in the war‘s aftermath do not drown out new; from other European coun- tries that some at least live in a state of plenty unknown here. That Ellfvlvean focd may be black market but it does not seem lo exist in Britain in any form or tr. a mark- et of any hue. The Labor Government knows painfully that the public mind is responsive to flllflSlltllls raised by Food Minister dur- ing the war, and others among the (Continued or Page 5 Col. d) Blizzard In ll. B. Ties llp Truth camramarron, ma. no. o- (CP) — A week-end blizzard left a heavy snowfall in northern New lied up road and ler in the week. Failure of power and telephone ines for a time added to the dif- ficulties here. ericsn dollar's worth of goods. approximately the black market rate of that time, compared with the official government rate of 3.350 to 1. The black money market re- acted immediately. however. and yesterday was offering more than 11,000 Chinese dollars to t1 U. S. Since Wednesday, retail prices have doubled and there has been a rush of speculative buying, with gasoline s prised item. Motorists in Shanghai and Nanklng quickly drained filling stations. even though operators said supplies were adequate to meet true needs. I l.‘ 0830 f." 7i N ft l) A FLOUR h’ rl ti l’ fl" i; treaties will be signed tomorrow for Italy. Romania, liulgariaJlun- gar-y and Finland. all sadly dis- illusioned satellites of Germany in the Second World War. famous Clock Room of the French Foreign Ministry will not flnalLv bring peace -to these vanquished states. treaties are brought into force. they must be ratified by each of the major powers-by the United States Senate. for instruments of zlnistry here. Finland all lose territory in the treaties although Romania recov- ers ‘Transylvania from Hungary. Bulgaria survived territorlally in- tact Greece. ltlons O00.000.000 was granted to Bus- Axis Satellites To Sign Treaties Today PAR-TB. Feb. B — (AP) —~Peace But even the signing in the Before the long-debated instance-and ratification must deposited with the Foreign Italy. Romania. Hungary and and covering s part of A total of 11.380.000.000 repar- “was assessed of which sis. Armed forces of all five states were reduced and all were prohibited from using atomic en- ertly. rockets, bombers. submarines or torpedo boats. Silent and attended by only one adviser. the Italian picnipoten- tiary. Marquis Antonio Mell Lupi di Soranga, arrived today to affix his signature to the Italian treaty. The treaties for Romania. Bul- garia. Hungary and Finland will be signed latcr. ' The treaties first were drafted by the Big libur foreign, minis- ters a year ago. disputed all last summer in the Paris peace eon- ference and finished by the for- eign ministers in New York last fall. The signatories will vary ac- cording to the countries which were officially at war wll.h the former enemy states. The United states. which never was at war with Finland. will be missing from that treaty. France will sign only the Italian treaty. EARIN G I150 DIE AT COSTLJME BALL Dairymen Watching Oloomarga Probe Will Resume At Ottawa Tuesday By JOHN Le-BLANC OTTAWA. Feb. 9—-(OP)-—Thd fute of $85,000,000 a year of Mr. and Mrs. Canada's money will go into the scales here Tuesday. That sum-about one-fifth oil what it costs to run the Domin- ion Government in pre-wan, years—wll1 bc at stake as the Board of Transport Commission- er's opens hearings on the applic- ation of the railways for general.‘ increases in freight rates. And the effect of the hearings ,—des-crlbed as the most important; on~n railway ‘issue in a quarter oi a century-will touch on every home in the country as the board considers whether or not to authorize an action that would ‘add something to the cost of ivlriually every commodity uscd. !in the Dominion. i Twenty-three railways, includ- ‘in; the two National lines have united in the move to obtain the first general rate boosts in 2i years. They seek a 30-per-ceiili raise in rates on all freight with- in the jurisdiction of the board; txccpt coal and coke, on whicls increases on a graduated scale averaging about 20 per cent are‘ asked. i Expect Bitter Bottle r Evpcctatlons are that the treat"- lings will see a prolonged and bit- ter battle against the increases. A battery of legal talent has been: lined up by seven of the Provin- (Continued on Page 5 Col. or“ ........ _ Retired Truro Train Conductor lll_es_ At 92 (By The Canadian Press) TRURD. N. S., Feb. B——.lan1.~s Munro MacDonald, 92, retired Canadian National Railways cori- ductor and one of the town's old? cst citizens, died today after s. two-months illness. He served as a wnductor for 46 years during which time he was in charge of the first passenger train to oper- ate over the old Intercolonial Railway route between Plctcu and. Oxford Junction, N. B. i u: Nita: An ABSENT-MiNDED Preseason aotteo UNDER 111E Bro AN’ wmtto FOR ins cotton Button ‘to Fine Hm TORONTO. Fob. 9 — _ (C?) Minimum and maximum temper?!‘ lures: Vancouver 25. 46; Edmon- ton llb. 10: Regina l. 4; Winni- peg 2, B; Toronto 7, 24; Ottaxsn. 9. l7; Montreal 6, i6; Quebec l0. l5; Saint John 21. 25‘ Moncton 24. so; Halifax 2r. so: Charlottetown g9, 29; Sydney 31, 34: Yarmouth i. 29. HALIFAX. Fab. 9 — (OP) -- Wcather synopsis and official in- lam-d forecasts issued by the D0- minion Public Weather Office at Halifax at 11.15 p.m., Sunday. Synopsis: Not much change in the weather is expected for tonight and Mon- day over the Msrltlmaa. A storm centre is located in southern Que- bec and it will continue to give strong southwesterly winds with snow flurrles and not much change in temperature. Forecasts valid until Monday midnight: ' Prince Edward Island: Variable cloudiness with widely scattered snow flurrles. Not much charge in temperature. Bouthrucsterly Winds l5. increasing in the afternoon to as, gusty. High today at Char- lottetown, 2i). High tide this afternoon at 2.30 and tonight at 2.45. Susi sets this afternoon at $.10 and rises tomorrow morning at 1.08. Last quarter moon February 12th. 4.50 P. M. Silnmeralde tide eighteen min- utes ister than Charlottetown. CAI IIIIY “PIINCI IDIAID ISLAND” Dally axcapt Sunday. Leave Borden at 0.00 AM. Leave Tonnenttne at 3 PM.