I MAXIHS I or A Mane MAN uncouth-O flu iblftfla Iobeuavfed whnaepieqwouldnotgrovfwunaer armngflaerutnaofloag ‘he Guardian. Three Canto. Mornlna Dally Founded Iss1. a . Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1949 MAXIMS or A MERE MAN Iflwifilifllflflidli! wbdunaotlnguponhuunn expa- lmoaforf-habesaeditofthlllbllo. 16 PAGES Subscriptions Delivered $8.00, Mail $5.00; other Provinces it U. I. 01,01 EXPECT u. s. STEEL WALKOUT T0 BE FELT IN CANADA To Increase Judges In Supreme Court 0f Canada To Nine OTTAWA. Oct. 2 — (CP) — The Government is going to increase the number of judges in the Su- preme Court of Canada from seven to nine and give them all | boost in salary, lt has previously proposed mak- ing the court the final court of appeal for Canada. That power now rests with the judicial com- mittee of the Privy Council in London. Notice of the expanded court was given the Commons on its order paper Saturday by Justice Minister Garson. The salary of Chief Justice Rin- fret will be raised from $20,000 to 025.000. The eight other mem- bers of the court will get $20,000 instead of $10,000. The bill that will make this change also will conform with New Brunswick legislation that allows two judges of the Supreme Court of New Brunswick to be residents of Moncton. Dr. I. A. Donahue Acquitted In Traffic Case WAX-POLE. Mass, Oct, 3 _((;p) _Dr. Joseph A. Donahoe of Truro, NS. has been acquitted in district court on a charge of driving to endanger the lives and safety of the public in connection with the death of Lloyd (Laurie) O'Brien oi Charlottetown, P.E.l., his harness racing driver. O'Brien. 3s. died following head injuries suffered in an automobile collision at the entrance oi the Bay State Harness Raceway In Foxboro, Mass. Sept. 20. Michael Paulsls of Cambridge, Mass, driver of the other car, was found guilty on the some charge end was fined 3100. FIRST A BIRD The word musket, before being associated with a firearm, origin- \lly meant a male sparrow hawk. Coming Events "Dance, new school, Iona East, Oct. 5th. "Mall you: Films to Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. Souris, "Dance, K. of C. Hall, Wednesday. October 5th. "Buying live and dressed poultry daily. Parker Canilcld, Crapaud. "Dance Long River Hall every Wednesday. Good music. Door prize. "Show. "Drums Along the Mohawk" at Cape Traverse w- miht it 8.30. "Now buying Timothy Seed, Reg- istered. Cleaned or Uncleaned. Mc- Gulgan and Doyle. Peter's Legion "Dance in St. Cliff Hall every Tuesday night. Petal‘! Orchestra, "Hunter River Starch Factory i! Wen for full season. Apply for op- laintmanto at factory. an” Breeze". Victoria. each dev. Danohq 0 till 1. "Annual Thanksgiving Otilclren ular Dance at the "Se! Wednes- lupper, wellington Halli. Monday- gctohaa- 10th. Supper starts 4.30 - M. "Coma to the hot flicker: lup- Der and bazaar at Cross Roads Church Wednesday. Oct. I. Sui)- Dlr carved from 4.80. "Coming, Armourles, Charlotte- "In. Oct. 25 to 2'1, Trade and In- dustries Exhibition. featuring Don Heller's Road Party as enter- tainment. A Y's Men's Pffllflt- "Regular Dance Dost Milli!’ Rink Hail. ‘mu-fey. October 4th. llltam Rhythm Boys. Dancing 9-30 3x00. Bus leaving I. M. T. at " ear In. A. r. Baker mark on the lfow Approach to the Lia- uor Problem" at Hearts nail. Char- tho annual ‘limp!!- at a P. at Wednes- lotto g anoe do. ‘Ewan RUTH COMFORT Most Ilagrattairle, Says Ii. S. GEOFFREY PEARSON Ruth Comfort. University oi Toronto co-ed, has received an apology from the U.S. slate department for being detained on Ellis Island 2i hours. Miss Comfort was returning from Holland with a group of Cana- dinn students including Geoffrey Pearson, son of Lester B. Pearson, Min- ister of External Affairs, aboard the Dutch steamer Volendam when tak- ' en into custody and accused of making an "inflammatory" pro-Commun- ist speech aboard ship. Geoffrey Pearson, a third-year student at Trin- ity college, also aboard the ship, said "the whole thing was an annoying mistake." Miss Comfort said an Ellis island guard had told her she was believed to have "made a speech aboard the ship evidently in favor of Communism." Later he told her five secret service agents bad been put on the boat at Rotterdam. N0 Figures On. Cost , Of Making Margarine Miss Canada IV Sets North America Speed Butt Record PICPON. 0nt., Oct. I -(qp)_.. Miss Canada IV set a North Amer- ican speed boat record of 138.648 miles an hour today and missed cracking the 10-year-old world mark of 141.7 mph by a whisker. There were a couple of ironic twists to the run over Picton Bay. Driver Harold Wilson of Ingersoll. Ont., had only to lop less than a second off the total time of 51.0 seconds over the two one-mile runs to become the fastest water pilot In the world. The boat had it but Wilson "throttied her down" due to a red-hot engine. "Miss Canada. was so high over the water chops that the breather pipes weren't sucking in enough water to keep the engine cooled," he explained later. Ho had no way of knowing he was so close to climbing over the world reoord. It was ironic also that the prev- ious North American tltleholder was Such Crust, owned by Jack Shaefier of Detroit. an easy win- her over Miss Canada in the In~ ternational liarmsworth Races at Detroit this summer. Such Crust set the record. 1286 miles an hour. over Gull Lake. Mich, in August. Under American Power at As- sociation regulations, Ml Canada is allowed one more attempt before sundown Tuesday to break the world record set - by the late Sir Malcolm Campbell. over Lake Coniston, England. Aug. 19,1939. And Wilson is sitting tight until conditions are "just right" because he la confident "shefan do it." ltivousn noaurx \ ‘no purple emperor ta ell I la largest and mostrtchly colored oi British butterflies. The wing span ia from 2% to 3% inches. Singer“ Buddy Clark Dies OTTAWA. Oct. 2—(Specla.l) — Agriculture Minister Gardiner told W- Ohw-er B. McLure, Progressive Conservative MP. for Queen's, that he could not give production cost per pound either oi butter or mar- garine. Ho assured Mr. McLure prior to the weekend adjournment on Friday that with a floor price for butter of 5d cents a. pound, “a fanner should make a profit." The Minister would express no opinion of the Prince Edward Is- land member's suggestion that mar- garine could he produced in Canada at the present tLma for 20 cents a pound. implying that its manufact- urers at present are amassing high profits. “Margarine is manufactured from oils which are imported." ‘Mr. Mc- Lure told the House in debate on agricultural estimates. "It should be easy to find out the cost of a pound of margarine. The depart- m nt oi Agriculture must know th t it. is different from manufact- uring a pound of butter. "These people. (the margarine manufacturers) are buying the oils. The Minister knows the setup. The Government took all the duties off so that they could make it as cheaply as possible and get as high a margin oi profit on it as they could. If we had the figures, this committee would learn that it does not cost 20 cents to manufacture the finest margarine on the mar- ket." In reply. Mr. Gardiner had no information as to margarine production costs. He told the coni- mittee: "I can only assume that when the margarine manufacturers re- duced the price somewhere in the forties down to somewhere in the thirties they would still get their costs of production. I do not think they would have reduced the price below that. I aasume that it is somewhere in that neighborhood. I am not in a position to any how .much. I am boundto aay that it would be very difficult to state what the cost of producing a pound of butter is. It is certainly much less in the summer time than in the winter time." From, Injuries In Crash I! L06 ANGIIB, Oct. I — (Al?) -Popula_r singer Buddy Clark wee killed Saturday nllht and five oth- ers including radio commentator sam Hayes were injured in a plane craah in a Loo Ania!" "ll- idential area. Clark. 4-4, one of North Amari- en's favorite oroonora for a decade or so, died at a police hospital. degpitO oxygen and transfusion efforts, about an hour after the crash. Death vraa caused a skull fractures. The hora were pot believed critically hurt. whesruhcameaethevilttfl the oha-rterdd piano attempted a rowan...’ rat V‘ . m. naahma footsuii game at Pale Al“. others iniurod were June: L. multiple Calliiil!“ flayter, m, the pilot, of Promo, ' we, lolly. as; am two NBC executivll. Prank Ber- end. 40, Beverly mile, and Jen- nings Pierce. H, North Hollywood. Hayter said the plane was at- tempting tn land at auburba-n Bur- bank because of a low Iupply of fuel when it ran into overcast. When it emerged, he laid, he didn't know when he wal. “ I figured were were out of sas. 1 iillt Wild a If»! 8M set her down." Clark, whole reoordllll and radio work during the Iaat few ears had booctcd him into the Iitghar income braeheta, leaves a wife, the former modal fledra clash. and a denllhter, Penny. six. 3y e provloua marriage to a fnuiao Iliugbea, he had two chi d- ren. 1110M". ti. and Katherine, nine. In a support auit bmqht by his first wife earlier this year. said ha earned 0100.01!) a year. Ha testified, however. t his 1040 earning! were 35,80. ‘ Stalin's words ‘h’ dictatorship in the Action liad i Been Expected By Observers LONDON, Oct. 2 - (AP) -'I'he Moscow radio announced todisy that Russia has recognized the Chinese Communist Government. The broadcast, recorded here by the Soviet Monitor, said tho So- viet Government has broken off relations with the Chinese Ne.- tionalist. Government in Canton. Russia's recognition of the Peo- ple's Republic was announced by zirei Gromyko, Deputy Foreign Minister, in a telegram to Chou En-Lai, Foreign Minister in the new Chinese Communist Govern. ment. Chou, who is also Prime Minis- ter ln thhe People's Republic Gov- ernment, earlier today was report- ed to have notified diplomatic re- presentatives of foreign countries in China, of the official proclama- tion by Communist lcader Mao Tse-Tung of the establishment oi the new government. China's Communists Saturday formally proclaimed their new government. at Peiping with Gen, Chou En Lai as Premier and For- eign Minister, and the Soviet Un- ion followed a day later with rec- ognition of the new regime. Russia's quick recognition of the Communist regime, as an- nounced Sunday night by Moscow radio, had been anticipated by in- formed observers ln China. 3 Busloads 0t Potato Pickers Arrive Tonight What _. has become an annual movement of potato pickers from Nova Sootla and New Brunswick to Prince Edward Island will be under way this wee-k. Last week a vanguard oi one busload of young men arrived in the Coar- lottetown area. via. the Wood Is- sland ferry from Cape Breton Is- land. About the same time up- wards of I00 pickers were distribut- ed from Summcrslde after being recruited from the Moncton dist- rict. Tonight three more busloads will cross by the Wood Island route and one bus will leave immediately for Souris where the men h been booked to work at surrounding farms. The other two buslnztds will ccme directly to Charlottetown and will be allotted to farmers adjacent to the City. It was pointed out by officials of the National Employment Office Charlottetown that the transpor- tation methods in handling the movement have been "streamlined" and wherever possible pickers are delivered almost at the formers gateway. In former years, men coming from Cape Breton came by rail, involving an overnight trip and the necessity of meeting them at the railroad station and then forwarding them by bus from Char- lottetown to their various destin- ations. Quite often smie of the (Continued on Page 5 fol. 2) Guide To (Moscow has published recently a new volume of the worka of Stalin. This story, giving quota- tions from the Stalin writings and Pravdah comments, ‘has just reached tho United States by mail after paaaing through Soviet censorship. (The interpretation placed upon can be examined with these events in mind—in the search for clues ms to how the mind of the Soviet leadership is working.) (By Eddy Gilmore) MOSCOW, Oct. 2—(AP)- The 11th volume of the worka of J. V. Stalin has just been published. It haa been greeted as a freah re- minder of the xoal of world re- volution and of the loyalty the Soviet Union demands of Corn- muniata elsewhere in tho world. While this volume covers pro- nouncements of Stalin in the per- iod from January, 1920, to March. 1920, ita application to today's complicated international situa- tion la evidenced by comment of Pegvde, the official Communist Party newspaper. In one chapter Stalin aaya the socialist revolution in the Soviet Union la in enanco "part of the world revolution, tha baae and in- strument of the world revolution- ary movement."- “There la not‘ any doubt that the international nature of our revolution iaya on the proletariat USSR. eer- tain obligations with regard to the proletariat and oppressed masses of the world." Book By Stalin May Be ' RU$$lA RECOGNIZES RED REPUBLIC IN, CHINA v—— An important business transec- tion was completed Saturday when the Hughes Drug Company, with goodwill. fixtures, stock and other assets, was sold by Mr. G. Gordon Hughed to Mr. Earle C. Baker of Charlottetown, The Hughes Drug Company in its present location, corner of Queen and Grafton Streets, which is considered the best in Charlotte- town, has a, very long and useful record in the public service. In fact it can probably claim the honour of being the oldest estab- lishment to be carried, on contin- uously as a drug store in Canada. Founded In 1310 in the Weekly Recorder oi Prince Edward Island of Dec. 24, 1810, appeared a notice that Thomas DesBrisay, Junior, had opened an Apothecary Shop and intended to supply “the wants of the inhabit- ants in general with a stock of genuine drugs and medicines." Families in the country remote from medical assistance, the not- ice read. would be supplied "with medicines together with written directions as to their uses and application." The following year. in the same paper, heads of families were in- formed that Mr. DesBrisay had received a, supply "of genuine mat- ter to administer as cow-pox in- ooulation." Mr. DesBrisay from the first did a. good business, and as the years went by the Apothecaries Hall-a name which the drug store con- tinues to bear -- was known far and wide for its large stock oi good medicines, and its reliability. Mr. Hughes Acquires Businela The years crawled up on Mr. DrsBrlsay. and he had about de- iContinued on Page h Col. 3) 0.N.It. Appointments In Atlantic Region MONCTON, N.B., Oct. 1 - The appointment of I-LB. Titus an div- ‘and 50 lay brothers Sale 0f Hughes Drug Co. To Mr. Baker Announced Mr. G. Gordon I-lughea Iiedemptorist Superior Visits City Monastery Very Rev. Daniel Ehman, pm- vincial Superior of the English speaking Redemptorists in Canada, accompanied by Rev. E. Meyer, Provincial Consultor, were visiting the Redemptorist Monastery at 73 Euston St. during the past few days. Father Ehman sang 10.30 Mass at the Church of the Most- Holy Redeemer yesterday mornlng. The sermon was preached by Father Meyer. Father Ehman has 190 priests under his charge in the Canadian Houses which reach from Charlottetown to Vancouver in Canada and in- elude new houses in Japan which are served by five priests. Father Ehman and Father Meyer left this morning for saint John, New Brunswick where they will ad lslon engineer, Canadian National Railways, Halifax. and of RB. Delong as division engineer, Mono- ton, were announced today by TzL. Lenders, chief engineer for tho Atlantic region of the company, The changes which are effective today, follow the retirement of Alexander Scott as divisional en- gineer at Halifax. Born at Digby, NS, Harrison Burrell Titus, a graduate oi Mount Allison University, Sackville, brings to his new post more than 77 years experience in civil engineering. One of the first projects he had a hand in was the construction of the original car ferry terminals at Cape Tormentine, N.B., and Bor- den, P.E.I., which began in‘1012, as an engineer with the Depart- ment of Public Works at Ottawa. Soviet Policy wrote. _ On this, Pravda commented: "The Soviet Union ia pursuing ltl' foreign policy consistently, The words spoke by Stalin in 1028 ring out with tremendous power today." Stalin then went on to enun- clate the principle of loyalty to the Soviet Union's revolution. The chapter includes this speech to the central committee in 1928. published in the worka for the first time. Thia is the principle: “These obligations (oftha in- ternatlonai proletariat) conliat in support of the proletariat of the USSR. in it: struggle against internal and foreign foes, in the war against a war directed to- ward stifling the proletarlan dic- tatorship of the U.S.S.R., and preaching a direct transference of the armiea of lmperlaliam to the aide of the proletarian dictator- ahip in the U.S.S.R. in the Went of attack of the USSR." Of this, Pravda said: "Any deviation from it la a be- trayal of the cause of socialiafh and a paaalng over to the camp of the bourgeoise. This haa hap- pened today to the Tito clique in Yugoslavia. "Having betrayed international- iam, the bourgaola nationalistic Tito clique haa gone over finally from the camp of dcmoc Bu] and, socialism to the camp of the sworn foe: of the Soviet Union. the countries of the peoplea’ de- mocracy ond the whole world Communist movement, to the camp of imperialism and fascism." visit St. Peter's Rectory. INDIAN MEDICINE Peruvian Incas are believed to have used coca. leaves, which con- tain cocalne, as an at aesthetic for skull operations done centuries ago. One Seriousl One man was seriously injured, and two others escaped with cuts and bruises when a bus and a car collided in Summerside last night. Most seriously injured is Ira Campbell of Int 16, driver of the " car, who is in the Prince County Hospital with possible injuries to his spine. Also in hospital are Reginald Desliochcs and Eldon Vino, both of Miscouche. They have cuts and abrasions, Canada's Eirports Increased In August .._._._. (YPPAWA. Oct. 2 -—(OP) —- A boost in shipments to the United Kingdom and Latin-American countries was partly responsible for a. lz-per-cent hike in Canaries Aug- ust exports. The Bureau of Statistics Satur- day rwported that export: in Allaat were valued at $251,700,000. a. gain of $27,600,000 over‘ August last year. News In Brief BRISTOL, England, Oct. 2 —— (AIP) _ The world's largest com- merciai airplane, the new 130-ton Bristol Brabazon, flew a two-hour speed test Saturday. Results were described as “very satisfactory." MEXICO CITY. Oct. 2 -— (AP) - The Interior Department today seized the film "Kit Carson," whose showing caused a patriotic outbreak in Puebla Friday night. Shouting students caused cancell- ation of the showing of the film, which deals briefly with the Mex- . ican army and shows the Mexican flag being lowered over Califor- nla. NEW YORK, Oct. 2 - (AP) — Oswald Garrison Viliard, ‘T7, news- paper and magazine editor and writer, died Saturday, II.E.A. Convention At Amherst This Week BAOKVTLLE. N.B., Sept. 29 — The Home Economics Association of the Maritimes, including New- foundland, will open s. three day convention in the new Fort Cum- berland Hotel in Amherst on Fri- day, October '1. This convention which usually takes place as three separate an- nual conventions in N.B., N.S., and P.E.I., this year includes for the first time Canada's new Province, Newfoundland, and ls being held as a joint Maritime Convention. A busy three-day program of lect- ures, discussion groups, executive and business meetings, dinners and luncheons is planned. Among the speakers from out- side the Maritime Provinces who will address the convention are Dr. Margaret McCready, Dean of Home Economics, Macdona-ld Col- lege, Quebec, and President of the Canadian Home Economics, As- sociation, Dr. Margaret Hockln. Rural Welfare Officer, Women's Division. F.A.O. of the United Na- tions with headquarters at. Wash- ington D.C., Miss Ella Brett of the (Continued on Page 0 Col. 0) y Injured In b Accident At S’side The car was in collision with a bus from Charlottetown, driven by James Peterson. The car was said to have been travelling south on Russell Street and the bus west on Harvard. A stop sign is on Russell Street. The car was said to have been very badly damaged. A fourth man in the vehicle was not hurt. The accident occurred about 10.46. Tito, East D LONDON, Oct. 2 — (AP) -—The iron curtain between Yugoslavia and her eastern neighbors was drawn a little tighter today with Romania's announcement that she too has severed her friendship treaty link with Marshal Tito‘: country. The formal as well as the fac- tual isolation of Yugoslavia from the Communist east now Ia com- plete except ln the case of Czecho- slovakia. Poland, fliulgaria and Hungary all have followed the lead of Rus- sia in denouncing their alliances and friendship pacts with tha de- iiant Communist atate on the Adriatic. The action of the Romanian Government was announced by Ana Pauker, Romanian Foreign Minister, in Bucharest. She charg- ed that the Yugoslav Government has been trying to agitate against Russia on Romanian territory. The other Cominform Govern- ments, in ‘ ouncing their alli- ances with Yugoislavla, said Tito had been plotting against them or uaipg their territory for anti- Soviet intrigue, apying and sabot- I80. Iron Curtain Between rawn Tighter Reports from Belgrade said the reaction of Yugoslavs was one of incrcasirg alarm. Though there are no signs of an imminent out- break of a shooting war, uncon- firmed reports said Tito was shifting troops from the West - \vhere they faced little Albania- to the east. An Associated Press correspondent who toured the western parts of the country said he noted iew troops in that part of the country. On the diplomatic front the Governments reaction was a bit- ter note to Russia Saturday. It called Russia's severance of the Soviet-Yugoslav alliance a bluster- ing. war-mongering act. The network of alliancs link- ing Yugoslavia with ‘the Soviet bloc had become a dead letter to an increasing extent following the action o the Communist Interna- tional nformation Bureau 15 monthl ago in reading Tito out of the Communist group on charges that he was a nationalist anti- Snvir . Tito Yugoslav note accused the Soviet Union of being an oppres- sor of small countries and a coun- try which reduced its treaties to worthless scraps of paper. One In Tfie Tons 0f Steel lised lien: Comes from II. S. One Million Cool And Steel Workers Idle: No Sign Of Settle- ment. By Harold Morflson OTTAWA. Oct. 2 -— (CP) -—- Tentacles of a prolomed United States steel strike may dig into every aspect of Canadian industry, Government officials said today. Officials said there was enough sieol 0n hand so that repercussions of the strike will not be felt. in Can- ada for another week or 10 days. If the strike is prolonged, tho Government may have to move into the picture to reinstituta vrartitma controls on the distribution of steel to protect such vital industries as construction and. public utilitiex development. Reason for the G-ovar eat‘: concern in the events which have seen 528.000 U. S, steelwonkers walls out of their jobs, is the fact that one out of every three tons of steel Canada uses comes from U.S. mills. Added to the Government's wor- ries is the anno-uncemen‘ by tho National Policy conference of the 50,000-member Canadian branch it U.S.W.A. <C.I.C.-C.C.L.) voting support of the Amer-loan lteel strike. While it waa unknown juat what: form this support would take, the conference said hero “Canadian ateeiworkers stand prepared to render whatever assistance may be within our power in this struggle.” A Government official said he did not know what the Canadian ateol- workers had in mind-whether they were thinking of walking out in sympathy or slowing down product- (Contlnuod on Pogo I 00L l) » ‘A sutcessi-ftib. . mantihiiue. Moat Mobififjrifl}! its‘, - ison _ Afltottcigi, can Sauna-gt , TORONTO. Oct. I — (OP) - Minimum and maximum tomww tures: Victoria 42, —; Bdmfillwh 40, 53; Regina 36, 66; WIHXIIPB: 33- 69; Toronto 52, 68; Ottawa 34. 531 Montreal 38, 58; Quebec 3i 553 Saint John -, 54; Moncton 28. 50'. Halifax so, so; Charlottetown a1. as; Sydney 41. 45; Yarmouth 3'7. 52; st. John's 40. 44. HALIFAX, Oct. 2 - (C?) -or- ficlal inland forecasts issued tr" night, by the Dominion Publio Weather office at Halifax: Synopsis: Sunday evening tho weather was clear and cool over most of tho Maritimes. Temperatures were m the 30a in parts 0i NOVB- 540"“ and New Brunswick and in the low 40s in Prince Edward island. Frost can be expected l" all "- gions during the night. A; g high pressure arefl MOVE away from the coast it will cause southerly winds- over the district. This will result in svarmer wea- ther Monday. Regional forecasts, midnight Monday: Prince Edward Island - Clea! during the night with wldespreac frost. Clear and much warmer Monday. Light winds. Low early Monday morning and hi!!! m u“ afternoon at Charlotteto n I) and 00. __________. High tide today at 7.33 A. M. and 9.04 P. M. Sun rises this morning at 6.10 and sets at 5.01. Summeraide tide eightcon nah- utea later than OhI-TIOtI-tlillffl- ___________._... BURDEN - TOBMENTINE I'll!‘ WEEK valid unti- DAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Cope Tormasntlna 9.10 AM. 10.05 AM. 1.00 RM. 2.40 PM. 6.00 P-M. 1.00 EM. SUNDAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Cape Tonnonthm 0.10 AM. 10.00 AJI. 1.00 RM. 1.00 PM 6.45 PM. 8.00 PM. WOOD ISLANDS _ CABIIOU DAILY IEIRY Leave Wood lalanda ' I LII-t l1 AM» 1 7.1L, I PM Leave Caribou I All, 11 A-M.‘ l LI, If.‘